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                  <text>Ohio
Valley
Business

Rain
likely
70/59

Lady
Eagles
soar

BUSINESS s 3

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s�6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 147, Volume 71

Thursday, September 14, 2017 s 50¢

Running and remembrance

Officials
updated on
Mothman
Festival
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The annual Chase Roush Memorial Run, with a 1K and 5K, was held on Saturday morning at Racine’s Star Mill Park. The event benefits the Chase Roush Memorial
Scholarship which was created in memory of Chase who passed away in 2013. In addition to the race, a co-ed softball tournament is held in October each year to benefit
the scholarship. (Left) Chase Roush Memorial 5K winners Sydney Roush (first place), Trey McNickle (second place) and Cade Anderson (third place) are pictured with
Chase’s mom Fallon Roush after Saturday’s 5K race. (Top right) Runners take off for the start of the Chase Roush Memorial Run leaving from Star Mill Park on Saturday
morning. (Bottom right) Participants in the 1K race, from left, Jackson Glaze, Katelyn Wickline, Layla Glaze and Jake Wickline are pictured after receiving their medals.
Jake Wickline came in first, followed by Jackson Glaze. More photos from the event on Page 4.

Locals rally to help with Irma relief
Supplies, donations still being accepted
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — While Meigs
County may not be in the path
of hurricanes, residents and
businesses in the region are no
strangers to ﬂooding.
So when seeing the effects of
hurricanes like Irma and Harvey those along the river are
here to help those impacted by
the ﬂooding and other damages
as a result of the storms.
Dave Neutzling and Rick Patterson came up with the idea to
load donations in Neutzling’s
truck to take to Florida to help.
“We understand water damage,” said Pam Patterson, noting that in the last major river
ﬂood in 2004 they had three
feet of water in the basement

By Mindy Kearns
Special to the Register

Erin Perkins photo

See PARTY | 4

Thunderstruck performs on Friday evening at
Racine’s Party in the Park.

See PRAYER | 2

ing supplies, paper towels and
many other items were lining
the store front along the side-

walk. Items were also placed
See RELIEF | 2

By Erin Perkins
Special to the Sentinel

What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

‘Prayer walk’
offers love
and support

RACINE — Racine does not disappoint when adding the emphasis on
“party” in the annual Party in the
Park.
Friday night was not just noise
pollution, it was a combination of
grooves that shook the audience all
night long. To begin the evening a
local area band Blitzkrieg took the
stage playing an array of rock n’ roll
covers by KISS, Black Sabbath, and
Def Leppard. They also played some
original tunes, one being Groove
which got some of the audience up
and dancing.
Two women shimmied their way

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Local residents, business and organizations are coming together to send truck
loads of donations to Florida as the residents of the state work to recover from
the effects of Hurricane Irma. Pictured are (from left) Larry Byer and Terri Ingels
of Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services, Pam Patterson and
Brandon and Rana Bartee.

Party in the Park brings the rock

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION

See FESTIVAL | 2

NEW HAVEN — If
there’s one thing that can
be said about living in a
small community, it’s that
when one member of it is
hurting, nearly everyone
is affected.
Evidence of that was
seen Sunday afternoon,
when over 350 people
joined in a prayer walk for
a New Haven woman who
is battling cancer.
Amanda Lieving was
recently diagnosed with
ovarian cancer. Known
throughout the Bend
Area for her participation
in various walks to raise
funds for cancer awareness, it was her turn to be
the recipient of not a walk
for money, but one of love
and support.
Rhonda Wood, one of
the walk organizers, said
the walk was announced
on Facebook Thursday.
She asked people to share
the social media post, and
by Sunday, the hundreds
appeared.
“So many people wanted to show their support
and love,” Wood said.
“We knew the only thing
we could do was pray.”
And pray, they did. All
350 people stopped in the
roadway in front of the
Lieving home with Amanda on the front porch, to
recite the Lord’s Prayer
aloud. Walkers then continued the 5K trek, which
began and ended at the
ﬁre station. Cards and
posters were signed by
those attending to

of their house. Store fronts in
Pomeroy are often impacted
when the river ﬂoods, leading
to days of cleanup.
Rick’s wife, Pam, said that
when Hurricane Harvey hit
Texas Rick said that if they had
their RV they would have been
heading to Texas.
Then came Irma and a plan
to help those in need.
The idea quickly spread with
Brandon and Rana Bartee of
Bartee Photography becoming
involved in spreading the message through social media.
By Tuesday, donations began
arriving at the doorstep of the
Bartee’s studio and residence,
with multiple other locations
joining as drop off locations.
By Wednesday afternoon
cases of water, diapers, clean-

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
News: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 7
Comics: 8

POINT PLEASANT
— The countdown is on
to the Mothman Festival
which is expected to
bring 10,000, or more,
people into Point Pleasant over two days this
weekend.
“It was an eyeopener
last year when we all
realized just how many
people come to our great
city (for the festival),”
Mayor Brian Billings said
at Monday’s regular meeting of Point Pleasant City
Council.
Also at the meeting
was Jeff Wamsley, festival
organizer, updating council members on efforts to
keep the event safe and
fun for those who live
here and those who make
the trip to Mason County.
“Thanks to the mayor
and Randy (Hall) and
everyone with the city for
helping,” Wamsley said.
“When Carolin (Harris)
and I started the festival
back in 2003, we did it
for the ﬁrst ﬁve or six

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Thursday, September 14, 2017

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICE
PENNINGTON
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Hannah Elizabeth
Pennington, 21, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Saturday, September 9, 2017. Services will be Thursday,
September 14, 2017 at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home
from 4-6 p.m., funeral service will begin at 6 p.m.,
burial will follow at Sand Hill Cemetery in Point
Pleasant.

Prayer

as the “Avon 39: The
Walk to End Breast Cancer,” this past summer in
Chicago.
From page 1
Amanda and her husband, Dr. Wes Lieving,
support Amanda in the
also initiated and sponsor
journey ahead.
the “Wahama Run for
Participants ranged in
age from three-month-old Education” each year. The
run provides scholarships
stroller riders to some
who were almost 90 years for Wahama seniors.
Many members of the
old, Wood said. They
wore teal ribbons in sup- school’s organizations
also took part in the walk,
port of “Team Amanda.”
including the National
Lieving has been a
Honor Society, Rho
longtime supporter of
Kappa History Honor
cancer research. She has
Society, varsity cheerleadwalked in a number of
ers, and others.
fundraisers, including
those for Nationwide
Mindy Kearns is a freelance writer
Children’s Hospital in
for Ohio Valley Publishing, email her
at mindykearns1@hotmail.com.
Columbus, Ohio, as well

Beth Sergent | Register

The 16th annual Mothman Festival is this weekend with activities starting Friday evening. The City of Point Pleasant has been
working with festival organizers on logistics like parking and security for this year’s expected crowd.

Festival
From page 1

Courtesy

Over 350 people joined in a prayer walk Sunday afternoon in
New Haven for Amanda Lieving, who was recently diagnosed with
cancer. Lieving is well-known throughout the Bend Area for her
longtime participation in walks for cancer research.

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years just on a wing and
a prayer. We did it on
our own with some help
from (the city) but now
we couldn’t pull it off
without the help we do
get from the city.”
Wamsley said he felt
the crowds would at
least match last year’s
record attendance. He
added though the festival kicks off at 10 a.m.
Saturday and continues
into Sunday until around
5 p.m., the festival has
added a “kickstarter”
event on Friday evenings to accommodate
those who arrive early.
This year’s kickstarter
event is a showing of
“The Mothman of Point
Pleasant” at the State
Theater, starting at 8
p.m., admission is free.
In fact, admission is free
to the entire festival.
Wamsley said the
festival is about promoting landmarks in the
area, not just the statue
or the museum, with
hayrides taking place
at the West Virginia
State Farm Museum and
bus tours of the TNT
Area planned, as well
as encouraging visits
to local museums and
shops.
Wamsley explained
the people who travel to
the festival all compliment Point Pleasant and
“want to come here.”
He said the ﬁrst person
through the Mothman
Museum last year at
the festival was from
Australia. He said the
man traveled all that way
with his son as his birth-

“It was an eyeopener last year when we all
realized just how many people come to our
great city (for the festival).”
— Brian Billings,
Point Pleasant mayor

day present.
“These people are just
passionate about Point
Pleasant,” Wamsley said.
Councilman Rick
Simpkins complimented
Wamsley’s efforts and
talked about at least one
person who approached
him in the last six
months who said the
Mothman isn’t real.
“I said, ‘I don’t care if
he’s real or not but the
festival’s real and brings
10,000 people to my
town,” Simpkins said.
“I learned a long
time ago, I’m not in
the business of trying
to convince anybody
of anything,” Wamsley
said. “I get cornered by
these TV shows, asking
me ‘What do you think?’
I tell them, ‘you know
what, I don’t know but
let’s just keep the book
open.’ No one will be
able to ﬁgure out what it
was, everybody has their
own opinion. I’m not in
the business to sit down
and say this is what it
was, or I know that’s
what it was because I
don’t. I just know something happened here and
even if we had a press
conference tomorrow
and said those people
made the whole story
up, it’s not going to
matter. People are still
going to come because
they want to see for
themselves….so let them
come.”
As for some of the
logistics of the festival,

it will start at Sixth and
Main Streets and continue down Main Street
to about Second Street.
Wamsley said this will
help with the congestion around the Mothman Statue which also
becomes a safety hazard
when too many people
become crammed in
that small space at Gunn
Park.
“We want to start at
the State Theater and go
clear to the end (of Main
Street)…we can’t go any
other direction, it has to
go that way,” Wamsley
said.
The city also beneﬁts
from the festival by
vendors paying a permit
fee and it receives B&amp;O
taxes. Wamsley said the
vendor fee he gets for
the festival helps pay
for event insurance and
expenses which can add
up.
“I lose money,” Wamsley said. “The bigger it
gets, the more expensive
it gets. Insurance goes
up every year.”
Mayor Billings
reported the Point Pleasant Police Department
would be operating with
a full staff during the
festival and the Mason
County Sheriff’s Department would be assisting
with any calls the city
receives during the festival.
In addition, the city,
like last year, is stepping up to assist with
parking. There will be

parking lots at Krodel
Park and the Mason
County Board of Education Ofﬁce, as well as at
Point Pleasant Junior/
Senior High School for
a fee. The majority of
those attending the festival are from out of town
and a parking fee of $10
per car will be charged
with all proceeds going
to the Krodel Park
Splash Pad project. Volunteers from the City
of Point Pleasant will
be parking the cars in
shifts. Last year, the city
volunteers parked 800
cars at Krodel and ran
out of room. Assisting
with parking management will be personnel
with the Mason County
Division of Homeland
Security and Emergency
Management. Shuttles
from the parking lots
to the festival, and
back, will be provided
as will bottles of water
for those waiting on a
lift to downtown. The
clubhouse will be used at
Krodel for a shelter for
anyone who would like
to get out of the sun, as
the weather is supposed
to be warm this weekend.
Wamsley added this
year’s festival will be
dedicated to Harris and
she will be honored during the opening “mayor’s
welcome” speech at 10
a.m. on Saturday at the
Mothman Statue.
Note: Downtown is
expected to be extremely
congested, especially
Saturday. If you’re not
attending the festival,
this area should be
avoided.
Beth Sergent is editor of Ohio
Valley Publishing.

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bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

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60732901

Relief
From page 1

Items can be dropped off through Tuesday at Bartee Photography
studio in Pomeroy, Pizza Dan’s in Rutland, the Tire Barn, FISH
CrossFit and Bethel Worship Center.

inside the studio as the
collection continued to
grow into the afternoon
and into the evening
on Wednesday. One of
the trailers was being
loaded up on Wednesday evening to allow
more drop off space at
the studio.
Meigs County
Department of Job
and Family Services
employees brought
$200 in donations on
Wednesday morning,
including water, cleaning supplies and nonperishable items. Larry
Byer explained that the
employees at DJFS have
a “Pay Day Jeans Fund”
in which the employees
can pay to wear jeans
on pay day. The money
in that fund is used for
times such as this to
help others.
Kyger Creek donated
a pallet of water to
the cause, while many

other local businesses
have jumped in and collected items or made
monetary contributions
to the trip.
Students at Meigs,
Eastern and Southern
Local schools are also
assisting with the collection of supplies as
are churches and the
Los Cuervos Motorcycle Club.
While there are donations spots locally,
Rana Bartee explained
that there are friends
from out of the area
who also want to help
with the donation
drive. A couple of
those individuals have
ordered items through
Amazon Prime to be
delivered to the studio
at 212 East Main Street
in Pomeroy.
While the initial plan
was to load the back of
a pickup truck, at least

two and likely three
trucks and trailers are
going to be utilized
to transport the donations.
Pam Patterson said
that if there were
enough donations and
vehicles to transport it
was possible some of
the supplies could be
taken to the Houston
area for Hurricane Harvey relief.
As many trucks and
trailers as are needed
to take the collected
supplies will be found,
rented if needed, to
take the items to those
in need, said Patterson.
The volunteers who
will be making the
trip to Florida will be
spending a few days in
the region to help with
the recovery in addition to the taking of the
supplies. They have a
house in the region to

stay in free of charge
which will help with the
cost of the trip, leaving
gas money as the main
expense for the group.
Needed supplies
which are being taken
to Florida include
water, cleaning supplies, diapers, wipes
and hygiene items.
Clothing is not being
accepted. Cash donations are also being
accepted to offset the
fuel costs for the multiple transportation
vehicles.
Items can be dropped
off through Tuesday
at Bartee Photography
studio in Pomeroy,
Pizza Dan’s in Rutland,
the Tire Barn, FISH
CrossFit and Bethel
Worship Center.

Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 14, 2017 3

‘Walk With a Doc’ returns

Supporting the Mothman Pageant

Submitted story

and answer questions during the
walk. In addition,
GALLIPOLIS
a free orthotic
— Holzer Health
screening will be
System will host
held following the
the Walk With a
walk at the Holzer
Doc walking proTherapy and Wellgram on Saturday, Roush
ness Center.
Sept. 23, from 11
Walk With a Doc is
a.m. to noon, beginning
a national nonproﬁt
at the Wellness Center.
organization whose
Walkers will start at
mission is to encourage
the Holzer Therapy and
Wellness Center, located healthy physical activity
in people of all ages, and
at 735 Second Avenue
and continue around the reverse the consequences
Gallipolis City Park. The of a sedentary lifestyle
in order to improve the
walk will feature Kelly
Roush, DC, CCSP, ATC, health and well-being of
the country.
Chiropractic Care and
Holzer encourages
Sports Medicine Proanyone in the community
vider, who will provide
to join the walk. This
support to the walkers

Sponsors of this weekend’s Mothman Pageant included, top left, Siders Jewelers, represented
by Deloris Blake and JoAnne Siders, sponsor of Jr. Royalty crowns (10 year sponsor); top right,
Handley Law Office represented by Tanya Handley, sponsor of Teen &amp; Miss Princess sashes; middle
left, Peoples Bank, represented by Valerie Johnson, Brittany Burnett, and Roxanne Weaver, Teen &amp;
Miss crown sponsor (10 year sponsor); middle right, Deal Funeral Home, represented by David Deal,
owner, sponsor of Ms. &amp; Mrs. sashes (10 year sponsor); bottom left, Bravo Company, represented
by Paul Simon, Ms. &amp; Mrs. crown sponsor; bottom right, Jon Parrack Nationwide Insurance,
represented by Jay Parrack, sponsor of Teen Miss &amp; Miss sashes (10 year sponsor). Pageant Director
Delyssa Edwards is also pictured in the collage.

Submitted story

ABOUT FARM BUREAU
BUCKHANNON,
W.Va. — West Virginia
Farm Bureau and John
Deere announce a new
partnership that will give
Farm Bureau members
special access to John
Deere’s GreenFleet Loyalty Rewards program,
providing members with
a free two-year Platinum
membership.
This new member
discount program will
strengthen the existing
partnership between John
Deere and Farm Bureau,
and continue to grow
John Deere’s dedication
to strengthening their
support of America’s
farmers and ranchers.
“John Deere is committed to the success of
customers whose work
is linked to the land.

Buckeye Rural to help Georgia
RIO GRANDE —
Buckeye Rural is sending
four linemen to Georgia
to assist in power restoration efforts resulting
from Hurricane Irma.
BREC’s linemen are
among the 69 linemen
from Ohio electric coops who will be helping
restore power in the service territories of Georgia co-ops Tri-County
Electric Membership
Corporation (EMC) and
Jackson EMC. As of

Tuesday morning, TriCounty EMC had 17,600
of their 21,000 members
without power, while
Jackson EMC had 63,000
of their 220,000 members without power.
“One of the fundamental principles of electric
co-ops is what we call
cooperation among cooperatives, which stipulates
that co-ops come to
each other’s aid in times
of need,” said Tonda
Meadows, general manager of Buckeye Rural.
“When we heard that our

Submitted by Holzer Health
System.

Farm Bureau and
John Deere partner

Courtesy

Submitted story

is a free program and
pre-registration is not
required. Future walks
will be announced via the
Walk with a Doc website,
www.walkwithadoc.org,
as well as at www.holzer.
org and Holzer’s social
media channels.
Gallipolis joins a growing list of communities
nationwide that have
created local Walk With a
Doc (WWAD) programs.
For more information
about the Walk With a
Doc program, contact
David Stout at 740-3392502 or email dstout@
holzer.org.

co-op friends in Georgia
needed our help, we
didn’t hesitate to answer
the call.”
Mutual aid efforts are
being coordinated by
Columbus-based Ohio’s
Electric Cooperatives,
the statewide trade
association for Ohio’s 25
electric co-ops.
Buckeye Rural, a Touchstone Energy® Cooperative, serves 18,500 members in nine counties of
southeastern Ohio.
Submitted by Buckeye Rural.

West Virginia Farm Bureau was founded in 1919 to
provide leadership, education, information, training
and economic services to county farm bureaus to
enhance the quality of life for members. For more
information on WVFB, visit our website at www.
wvfarm.org.

Together with Farm
Bureau, we are strengthening our agricultural
communities and building for the future,” said
Steve Geick, John Deere
director of ag industry
relations, US/Canada.
“The GreenFleet Loyalty
Rewards program for
Farm Bureau members
is John Deere’s way of
rewarding those who
cultivate, harvest, transform, enrich and build
upon the land.”
To participate, Farm
Bureau members can
visit www.wvfarm.org or

www.JohnDeere.com/
FarmBureau. Once the
registration is complete,
the member will receive
their GreenFleet member
number and can instantly
access program beneﬁts.
Members can simply
purchase online at JohnDeere.com/BuyOnline or
by visiting a local John
Deere dealer.
To ﬁnd out more
about GreenFleet Loyalty Rewards, visit JohnDeere.com/GreenFleet.
This article submitted by West
Virginia Farm Bureau, Inc.

Legislation would expand EIC
WASHINGTON,
D.C. – U.S. Sen.
Sherrod Brown
(D-Ohio) and
U.S. Rep. Ro
Khanna (D-Calif.) Brown
introduced joint
legislation in the Senate
and House this week
that they say would give
working families a muchdeserved wage boost to
compensate for 40 years
of wage stagnation.
The Grow American
Incomes Now (GAIN)
Act would expand the
Earned Income Tax
Credit (EITC) so that
more working families
and childless workers are
eligible to receive it. It
would also let workers
claim a one-time advance
EITC payment so workers don’t have to turn
to predatory, expensive
payday loans.
“Americans are working longer hours, but
too many aren’t seeing
that hard work reﬂected
in their pay. And worse
– our tax system can
actually tax workers
into poverty. That’s not
how we grow our middle
class or our economy,”
said Brown, who is
introducing the bills as
part of his plan to make
hard work pay off again.
“Updating the EITC will
make sure all workers
can keep more of the
money they earned for
their work.”
“The EITC is already
proven at lifting people
out of poverty. By
strengthening it to
reach more families and
individuals, it can have
a lasting impact on our
economy,” said Khanna.
“In today’s age of auto-

mation and globalization, where
work is sometimes seasonal
and hours are
often curtailed,
this bill provides
every hard-working American
with a fair income for
their labor.”
The GAIN Act
roughly doubles the
EITC for working
families and increases
the credit for childless
workers almost sixfold.
Under the proposal, the
maximum tax credit
available increases to
$12,131 for families
with three or more qualifying children; $10,783
with two qualifying
children; $6,528 with
one qualifying child;
and $3,000 with no
qualifying children. Currently, a family of three
can receive a maximum
credit of $6,318 and
someone with no children can receive at most
a $510 tax credit.
The proposed EITC
expansion would also
be phased out at higher
income levels and
remain fully refundable.
It would allow for a
worker with no children who makes up to
$37,113 annually to still
be eligible to receive

the tax credit and covers a family with three
or more children making up to $75,940 a year
to receive the EITC.
The current maximum
qualifying income to
receive the EITC is
$15,010 for childless
workers and $48,340 for
families with three or
more children.
The bill also recognizes many Americans live
paycheck to paycheck
and includes a provision
that would provide an
Early Refund EITC as
an alternative to payday
loans and other predatory lending products,
which typically carry
exorbitant fees and
charges. Payday loans
are generally made to
individuals who are
working and often eligible for the EITC. The
average payday loan is
about $375. This provision of the bill aims
to breaks the cycle of
debt by offering workers to annually claim a
one-time, $500 advance
on the EITC for the
following taxable year.
The bill also lowers the
qualifying age for the
EITC from 25 years old
to 21 years old.
Submitted by the office of U.S.
Senator Sherrod Brown.

Christopher E. Tenoglia
Attorney at Law

Help Right Here At Home

Mesothelioma • Lung Cancer
Wrongful Death

60732756

Submitted story

740-992-6368

200 E. 2nd�6WUHHW�3RPHUR\��2+�Ř�WHQODZ#VXGGHQOLQNPDLO�FRP

60720838

�4 Thursday, September 14, 2017

NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Chase Roush Memorial Run
Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Fallon Roush sounds the horn for the start of the race at Star Mill Park on Saturday morning. The annual race is held in memory of Roush’s son Chase.

Sydney Roush is the first to cross the finish line during the Chase Roush
Memorial 5K run on Saturday morning at Star Mill Park.

A group of runners lead the way on the 1K race.

Dozens of participants of all ages took part in the Chase Roush Memorial 5K and 1K races on Saturday
morning at Star Mill Park.

Two runners race to the finish
during Saturday’s 5K at Star
Mill Park in Racine.

Runners take off toward Yellowbush Road for the start of the Chase
Roush Memorial 5K on Saturday morning.

Party
From page 1

to the front of crowd. The
Sentinel took this opportunity to speak with them.
Grace Andrew and Tracy
Freeman have been avid
Blitzkrieg fans since the
beginning. Andrew has
followed the band to many
shows for over 20 years.
She has attended The
Party in the Park for about
four years and delights in
listening to the musical
performers they invite.
Andrew had never heard
of the headliner of the
night Thunderstruck perform, but she was eager to
witness their talent.
Thunderstruck is an
AC/DC tribute band and
they rocked Racine with
high voltage energy. The
lead singer clad all in
black encouraged the audience to make their way to

Blitzkrieg performs on Friday evening at Racine’s Party in the Park.

Erin Perkins photos

Crowds of people gathered at Star Mill Park on Friday and Saturday evenings to listen to live music
at Party in the Park.

the front of the stage to
get the full face melting
experience. They played
some of AC/DC’s most
popular songs such as
“Thunderstruck”, “Shoot
to Thrill,” and “Back in
Black.”
Many audience members were unfamiliar with

the band, but were eager
to hear them perform.
When speaking with
Becky Lakea who frequents Party in the Park
every year she was interested in their performance
as she enjoys Blitzkrieg’s
performances. Lakea and
her husband sat in the

front row and takes pictures of the bands. They
both enjoy watching the
performers who bring the
party while delighting in a
delicious snack from one
of the many vendors.
Erin Perkins is a freelance writer for
The Daily Sentinel.

Thunderstruck performs on Friday evening at Racine’s Party in
the Park.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS BRIEFS

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
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.

Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel
appreciates your input to the community
calendar. To make sure items can receive
proper attention, all information should
be received by the newspaper at least ﬁve
business days prior to an event. All coming events print on a space-available basis
and in chronological order. Events can be
emailed to: TDSnews@civitasmedia.com.

Health screenings State Route 124
set for Sept. 27
slip repair begins
RACINE — Heritage College
Community Health Programs
will be offering a women’s cancer screening clinic with sameday 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
1-800-844-2654 to schedule an
appointment.

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.

Genealogy Fair
set for Sept. 16

Humane Society
bag sale upcoming

CHESTER — A Genealogy
Fair will be held from 9 a.m. to
4 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 16
at the old Chester Academy
in Chester. It is sponsored by
the Chester-Shade Historical
Association and Bedford-Lodi
Historical Group.

MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs
County Humane Society Thrift
Shop in Middleport will have a
bag sale Sept. 13-15.

Thursday, Sept. 14
SYRACUSE — The Star Mill Park Board
will be holding basket, purse, cookware,
etc… Luau Games at the Syracuse Community Center. Doors open at 5 p.m. with
games beginning at 6 p.m. All proceeds go
into expenses at the Star Mill Park. Food
will be served by the Syracuse Community
Center.
POMEROY — Alpha Iota Masters will
meet at 11:30 a.m. at New Beginnings
United Methodist Church. Carol Adams
and Jean Powell hostesses.

WEATHER

Saturday, Sept. 16

day School at 10 a.m., Worship Service 11:30
a.m. with preaching and singing. Speaker will
MIDDLEPORT — Old Bethel FWB will be be Evangelist Corey Carroll. Carry in dinner
at 1 p.m. No evening service.
having a hymn sing from 1-5 p.m. Preacher
POMEROY — Zion Church of Christ
Wendy invites all to attend. A love offering
will be taken up to beneﬁt the Family Connec- Homecoming will be held with a program
tion from the Church of Christ in Middleport. from 10-11:30 a.m. with a dinner to follow.
There will be no normal evening service that
day.

65°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

Trace
2.57
1.29
35.98
31.54

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:09 a.m.
7:38 p.m.
1:06 a.m.
3:51 p.m.

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
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.

Major
7:22a
8:16a
9:08a
9:57a
10:46a
11:33a
12:21p

Minor
1:08a
2:02a
2:54a
3:44a
4:33a
5:21a
6:09a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
7:52p
8:45p
9:36p
10:25p
11:11p
11:58p
12:45p

Minor
1:37p
2:31p
3:22p
4:11p
4:58p
5:45p
6:33p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Sept. 14, 1984, lightning struck
during a soccer game in Chester
County, Pa., killing one player and
injuring 26 other people on the ﬁeld.

SATURDAY

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Lucasville
70/58

Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

Portsmouth
70/59

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
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.98 -0.16
Marietta
34 15.83 -0.30
Parkersburg
36 21.63 +0.01
Belleville
35 12.97 -0.02
Racine
41 12.92 +0.20
Point Pleasant
40 24.84 +0.01
Gallipolis
50 12.95 +0.20
Huntington
50 25.49 -0.20
Ashland
52 34.18 -0.36
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.04 -0.09
Portsmouth
50 15.30 -0.10
Maysville
50 34.10 -0.10
Meldahl Dam
51 14.40 none
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

MONDAY

85°
62°

81°
63°

82°
62°

Sunny to partly cloudy Periods of sun with a Pleasant with times of
and humid
thunderstorm
clouds and sun

Marietta
69/58

Murray City
69/56
Belpre
69/58

Athens
69/57

St. Marys
70/59

Parkersburg
69/57

Coolville
69/58

Elizabeth
69/59

Spencer
69/59

Buffalo
69/60
Milton
69/59

St. Albans
70/60

Huntington
68/58

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
73/51
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
72/59
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
76/65
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

WEDNESDAY

Sunny

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
70/59

Ashland
69/59
Grayson
69/59

TUESDAY

85°
63°

Wilkesville
69/57
POMEROY
Jackson
70/58
69/57
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
70/59
70/59
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
72/59
GALLIPOLIS
70/59
70/59
70/59

South Shore Greenup
70/59
69/57

17

Logan
69/56

McArthur
69/56

Very High

Primary: ragweed, grass, elm
Mold: 1654

Partly sunny and
pleasant

Adelphi
70/57
Chillicothe
71/57

SUNDAY

83°
60°

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

Waverly
70/57

Pollen: 10

Low

MOON PHASES
New

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

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.

RUTLAND — Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church Homecoming will be held with Sun-

Fog in the morning;
some sun, warmer

3

Primary: cladosporium
Fri.
7:10 a.m.
7:37 p.m.
2:05 a.m.
4:45 p.m.

Sunday, Sept. 17

FRIDAY

66°

ALMANAC
78°
60°
80°
58°
96° in 1939
39° in 1902

Wednesday, Sept. 20

78°
59°
61°

Thursday, Sept. 21

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

EXTENDED FORECAST

Mostly cloudy today with a shower. Mainly clear
tonight. High 70° / Low 59°

LEBANON TWP. — The Lebanon Township will hold their regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the township garage.

Tuesday, Sept. 26

US 33 pavement
repairs continue

8 PM

Wednesday, Sept. 20

Saturday, Sept. 16

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.
MIDDLEPORT — Entry
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
forms and guidelines for the
annual Art in the Village on Oct. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
records. Children must be
7 sponsored by the Riverbend
accompanied by a parent/legal
Arts Council are now available
guardian. A $15.00 donation
at Farmers Bank, Pomeroy and
is appreciated for immunizaRiverbend Arts Council’s Facetion administration; however,
book page. Entries must be in
by Sept. 27. Call Rhojean at 740- no one will be denied services
992-3842 for more information. because of an inability to pay
an administration fee for statefunded childhood vaccines.
Please bring medical cards
and/or commercial insurance
cards, if applicable. Zostavax
(shingles); pneumonia vacRACINE — A concrete
cines are also available. Call
pavement restoration project
began on Sept. 5, on US 33 in for eligibility determination
and availability or visit our
Meigs County. The project is
website at www.meigs-health.
taking place between Bashan
com to see a list of accepted
Road (County Road 28) and
Sandy Desert Road (Township commercial insurances and
Medicaid for adults.
Road 371). A 14 foot width

2 PM

LETART TWP. — The regular meeting of the Letart Township Trustees will
be held at 5 p.m. at the Letart Township
Building.

Friday, Sept. 15

Art in the Village
upcoming

8 AM

Monday, Sept. 18

MIDDLEPORT — Get Healthy Meigs!
will meet at 10:30 a.m. in the third ﬂoor
conference room of the Meigs County Dept.
of Jobs and Family Services in Middleport.
Anyone interested in improving the health
of County residents is invited to attend.
Lunch will be provided. Call Courtney at
740-992-6626 for more info or to RSVP by
POMEROY — The PHS Class of ‘59 will
be having their 3rd Friday lunch at Fox Pizza noon on Mon., Sept. 18.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Retired
at noon.
Teachers will meet at noon at Wild Horse
Cafe in Pomeroy. The speaker will be a
representative from Habitat fro Humanity.
Members are asked to bring in school supPOMEROY — The Veterans Memorial
Hospital Reunion will be held from 1-3 p.m. plies for students and/or items for classrooms such as tissues or hand cleaner.
at the Meigs Cooperative Parrish.
POMEROY — The Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter of the DAR will meet at
the Pomeroy Library at 1 p.m. Southeast
Director Rebecca Underhill will present a
POMEROY — Oh-Kan Coin Club will be
program “The Last Men of the Revolution”. meeting at 6:30 p.m. on the 2nd Floor of
Members are to bring school supplies for
the Farmers Bank on E. Main Street, Pomedonation to a local school.
roy. We will be making preparations for our
RUTLAND TWP. — The 22nd annual
October 8th coin show.

Immunization
Clinic on Tuesday

TODAY

St. Jude Trail Ride at the Dill Farm will be
held with the ride beginning at noon. A hog
roast and bean dinner will be held following
the ride.

Clendenin
69/59
Charleston
69/58

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
67/47
Montreal
80/57

Billings
57/40
Detroit
76/58

Minneapolis
89/68
Chicago
80/61

Denver
87/56

Toronto
78/58
New York
78/66
Washington
81/66

Kansas City
86/65

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

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
87/60/pc
55/49/r
80/66/s
79/67/t
80/64/t
57/40/r
72/50/pc
82/65/pc
69/58/c
81/61/pc
81/50/pc
80/61/pc
72/59/c
74/59/sh
71/58/c
97/73/s
87/56/pc
92/67/s
76/58/pc
87/75/pc
92/71/s
76/59/pc
86/65/s
90/69/pc
87/64/s
76/65/sh
77/62/pc
91/78/t
89/68/pc
80/62/pc
88/73/pc
78/66/t
92/70/s
90/74/t
80/67/t
100/75/s
68/57/sh
80/60/pc
82/64/pc
82/62/pc
87/64/s
82/58/pc
72/59/pc
73/51/pc
81/66/t

Hi/Lo/W
84/58/s
57/49/c
84/66/pc
79/66/c
81/63/c
45/37/r
66/42/c
77/63/c
76/57/pc
83/63/pc
73/38/pc
85/66/s
78/61/pc
79/58/pc
77/59/pc
94/74/s
82/49/s
89/70/pc
79/59/pc
87/75/pc
91/74/pc
83/62/pc
88/69/s
90/68/s
88/65/s
76/65/sh
82/63/pc
91/78/pc
86/70/pc
85/62/pc
86/73/pc
80/66/c
90/71/s
89/73/t
82/67/c
96/74/s
75/58/pc
73/57/pc
84/65/pc
81/64/pc
89/66/s
65/48/c
74/59/pc
75/52/s
82/67/c

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
80/66

High
Low

El Paso
96/72

106° in Needles, CA
29° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global
Chihuahua
91/61

High
122° in Mecca, Saudi Arabia
Low -30° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
92/71
Monterrey
99/66

Miami
91/78

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

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
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
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
RACINE
SYRACUSE
promise to make you feel right at home.
740-949-2210
740-992-6333

60701680

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.

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Thursday, September 14, 2017 5

�S ports
6 Thursday, September 14, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Marauders top Raiders in 4 games
Meigs rallies to win volleyball thriller
By Paul Boggs

senior-laden Lady Raiders.
In a contest in which it can
be argued that either team
could have won the opening
BIDWELL, Ohio — The
three games, the Marauders
Meigs Lady Marauders made
more than quite the comeback, rallied from a 10-2 deﬁcit in
while the River Valley Raiders the initial set — before battling
back from a 9-1 hole in the
had to believe they let one get
third.
away.
With a 2-1 advantage enterIn rallying in all three games
ing game four, Meigs got
it won on Tuesday night, the
youthful yet visiting Marauders behind again at 9-7, but then
captured an entertaining 25-17, scored the next three points to
push ahead — prior to build26-28, 26-24 and 25-20 Triing leads of 18-11 and 21-14 en
Valley Conference Ohio Division volleyball victory over the route to the win.

pboggs@aimmediamidwest.com

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

Meigs senior Paige Denney (4) goes up for a kill attempt during the Lady
Marauders’ Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division volleyball match against River
Valley on Tuesday night in Bidwell, Ohio.

The Marauders are now 6-5
overall, and improved to 3-1 in
the TVC Ohio.
The loss left the Lady Raiders at 2-9, as they remain winless in the league at 0-4.
But, truth be told, it was
a match in which either club
could have easily won.
Meigs coach Le Ann King
praised her squad’s ability, to
once again, rally.
“I’m just very proud of my
girls. In practice, we play these
See MARAUDERS | 9

Eagles boys golf
team wins league
finale at Oxbow
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

BELPRE, Ohio — Ending the league campaign
on a high note.
In its ﬁnal Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division golf match of the year, Eastern earned a
45-stroke victory over a quartet of competitors at
Oxbow Golf Course in Washington County.
In the play six, count four format, the Eagles
had a team total of 174, recording the six best
scores on the course.
Wahama and Belpre both recorded team totals
of 219, with the White Falcons winning the tiebreaker by two strokes their ﬁfth score.
South Gallia recorded a 243 and ﬁnished fourth
on the day, while Federal Hocking rounded out the
ﬁeld with a 274.
Eastern was led by co-medalists John Harris
and Nick Durst, both ﬁring rounds of 42. Jasiah
Brewer and Ryan Harbour had matching scores of
45 to round out the EHS total. The Eagles’ noncounting scores were a 47 by Kaleb Honaker and a
49 by Nathan Hensley.
“I am really proud of the entire gold team’s
effort this year,” EHS head coach Jeremy Hill said.
“There are some that do not get to play in every
varsity match, but when they have been called
upon, they have stepped right in and helped the
team be successful. We had three players compete
in every match, Ryan Harbour, Jasiah Brewer and
Kaleb Honaker. They have not always preformed
to their ability, but down the stretch they have
played a more consistent game. Hopefully that will
bode well during tournament play.”
The Eagles will ﬁnish third in the overall league
standings with a 32-2 record.
“Successful teams always have one ingredient
in common, unity,” Coach Hill said. “This group
gets along. They play throughout the offseason,
as well as off days during the season. The camaraderie within the team is exceptional. I also want
to show gratitude towards the golf parents. They
are extremely supportive with whatever may come
their way, and with golf, there are always changes
made at last moments to tend with.”
See GOLF | 9

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, Sept. 14
Volleyball
Wahama at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Chesapeake, 6:30
Meigs at Nelsonville-York, 7 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 7 p.m.
Vinton County at River Valley, 7 p.m.
South Gallia at Eastern, 7 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Gallia Academy at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Huntington St. Joe, 5:30
Boys Golf
Waterford, Trimble, Miller, Southern at Federal Hocking,
4:30
Gallia Academy at Vinton County, 4 p.m.
Girls Golf
Gallia Academy at Vinton County, 4 p.m.
Meigs at Waterford, 4 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 15
Football
Chesapeake at Gallia Academy, 7 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 7:30
Manchester at South Gallia, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 7:30
River Valley at Nelsonville-York, 7:30
Southern at Miller, 7:30
Vinton County at Meigs, 7:30
Wahama at Belpre, 7:30
Volleyball
Calvary Christian at OVCS, 6 p.m.

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern senior Morgan Baer (15) sets the ball in front of Wahama’s Elizabeth Mullins (25) and Kelsey Billups (11) during the second game
of the Lady Eagles’ sweep of WHS on Tuesday in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

Lady Eagles soar past Wahama
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — By the third
game, the Lady Eagles
were simply tired of having to come back.
After come-from-behind
victories in the ﬁrst two
games of Tuesday evening’s Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
match in Meigs County,
host Eastern capped off
the sweep of visiting
Wahama with a decisive
wire-to-wire win in the
third game.
The Lady Falcons (2-3,
1-3 TVC Hocking) led by
as much as three points, at
10-7, in the opening game.
However, Eastern (5-4,
3-1) took the lead with an
8-0 run and never looked
back en route to a 25-17
victory.
Wahama controlled the
early part of the second
game, stretching its advantage to as many as four
points, at 10-6. The Lady
Eagles took their ﬁrst
lead of the second game
at 13-12, and never relinquished the advantage on
their way to a 25-19 win.
Highlighted by 12
straight service points
from Elayna Bissell, Eastern rolled in the third
game, taking the 25-10
victory to seal the 3-0
sweep.
“It is a win, but I think
there are a few things that
we can work on,” EHS
head coach Megan Cross
said. “I think Wahama
really is a lot better this
year. They’re scrappier
and they don’t give up on
the ball, that’s something
that we need to work on.
“The third game was

Wahama senior Madison VanMeter, right, passes the ball in front
of teammate Harley Roush (21) during the Lady Falcons’ loss on
Tuesday in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

the best thing that we
did,” Coach Cross added.
“I felt like our momentum
was good and they were
talking a lot. When we did
come back in the ﬁrst two
games, it was good. I hope
we can keep momentum
going throughout the season.”
The Lady Eagle service
attack was led by Bissell with match-highs of
12 points and four aces.
Allison Barber posted 11
points and one ace for
the victors, Morgan Baer
added nine points and
one ace, while Morgain
Little came up with seven
points. Kelsey Casto had
ﬁve points and one ace
for the hosts, while Jenna
Chadwell and Sydney
Sanders each had three
service points.
Wahama’s service
attack was led by Harley

Roush with seven points
and one ace. Madison
VanMeter had six points
and a team-high three
aces, Gracie VanMeter
added ﬁve points, while
Makinley Bumgarner had
two points. Hannah Billups and Elizabeth Mullins
each marked one service
point in the match, with
Billups earning an ace.
“Whenever we had good
sets and good down-balls,
they had a hard time playing them,” WHS head
coach Matt VanMeter
said. “We came out and
played good the ﬁrst two
sets, but we still had some
silly mistakes. Without
those mistakes it’s a different outcome. Things just
fell apart and there’s not
much you can do. That
last one, I think we were
mentally and physically
exhausted.

“Probably 80 percent of
the girls when they hear
that we’re playing Eastern,
already have the outcome
predetermined in their
head,” Coach VanMeter
added. “This is the ﬁrst
time I’ve ever been able to
say ‘I think we could have
beat Eastern.’ I don’t think
I’ve ever been able to say
that since our program
started, so I’m proud of
each and every one of
these girls.”
At the net, Eastern was
led by Mackenzie Brooks
with match-highs of nine
kills and four blocks. Barber ﬁnished with eight
kills and one block for
EHS, Chadwell chipped
in with seven kills, while
Little marked six kills.
Baer contributed four
kills, two blocks and 25
assists to the Lady Eagle
cause, while Barber had a
team-high 17 digs.
Wahama’s net attack
was led by Madison VanMeter, with team-highs of
four kills and ﬁve assists.
Mulllins, Billups and
Gracie VanMeter each
had three kills, with two
blocks by VanMeter and
one by Mullins. Roush and
Emma Gibbs both had one
kill for the Red and White,
with Gibbs also earning a
pair of blocks. Bumgarner
led the WHS defense with
six digs.
The Lady Eagles and
Lady Falcons will clash
again on Oct. 3 at Gary
Clark Court in Mason,
W.Va. Both teams continue league play on Thursday, with Eastern hosting
South Gallia and Wahama
visiting Waterford.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 14, 2017 7

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

CANTON, Ohio (AP) — Star linebackers Ray
Lewis and Brian Urlacher and game-breaking wide
receiver Randy Moss are among 11 ﬁrst-year eligible
players for the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Also part of the 108 early nominees who are eligible
for the ﬁrst time, having been retired for ﬁve years
when the class is chosen next February, are cornerback Ronde Barber, wideouts Donald Driver and
Steve Smith (former Giant, Eagle and Ram), offensive
linemen Steve Hutchinson, Matt Birk, and Jeff Saturday, and defensive linemen Richard Seymour and Kyle
Vanden Bosch.
The roster of nominees consists of 53 offensive
players, 38 defensive players, ﬁve special teams players and 12 coaches. Modern era nominees will be
reduced to 25 semiﬁnalists in November and, from
there, to 15 ﬁnalists in January.
During Super Bowl week, 48 voters will discuss
the ﬁnalists, plus senior nominees Robert Brazile
and Jerry Kramer and contributors nominee Bobby
Beathard. There is no set number for any class of
enshrinees, though between four and eight new mem-

bers will be selected.
Returning ﬁnalists from 2017 are receivers Isaac
Bruce and Terrell Owens; center Kevin Mawae; tackles Tony Boselli and Joe Jacoby; guard Alan Faneca;
safeties John Lynch and Brian Dawkins; cornerback
Ty Law; and coach Don Coryell.
Enshrinement will be next August in Canton.

Treadwell ran the team while Haynes was gone. The
48-year-old Haynes says he talked to Treadwell every
day.
The Golden Flashes play at Marshall on Saturday.

Kent State coach Paul Haynes
returns after cancer surgery
KENT, Ohio (AP) — Kent State coach Paul Haynes
has returned to the football program after undergoing
surgery for prostate cancer.
The school announced last month that Haynes was
taking a medical leave of absence but did not provide
details about his condition. He missed the Golden
Flashes’ loss at Clemson in their season opener, but
then he surprised the team by showing up before its
38-31 win against Howard on Saturday.
Haynes said Monday he was healthy again and back
full-time. After his news conference, he conﬁrmed
his diagnosis and treatment in an interview with the
Record-Courier.
Offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Don

Le’Veon Bell tweet leads to
Dairy Queen gig for a day
NEW KENSINGTON, Pa. (AP) — Pittsburgh Steelers’ running back Le’Veon Bell jokingly tweeted during his preseason contract holdout that he might have
to apply for a job at Dairy Queen.
On Tuesday, Dairy Queen obliged.
Bell spent some time at the chain’s New Kensington
store — about 20 miles (32.2 kilometers) northeast
of Pittsburgh — learning how to make Blizzards and
other treats.
Bell says his one-day gig was “harder than I thought
it was going to be” and that he doesn’t think “this job
is any easier than my job, and I don’t think my job is
any easier than their job.”
Jared Abraham, who co-owns the store, says Dairy
Queen reached out to Bell after his tweet. Abraham
says, “As excited as we were to have him, he seemed
just as excited.”

Lost &amp; Found

Wanted

Yard Sale

Money To Lend

Houses For Rent

Male Tri-Color Yorkie, 7 yo 14
lbs. Has a black strap with
elec. fence collar, lost between
Syracuse Pool &amp; Trailer court.
Call 740-992-3301 or
740-416-2758

Detailer needed.
Must have a valid driverҋs
license, be able to pass a
drug test, and be able to work
35+ hours per week
(including Saturdays).
Applications can be picked
up at Daveҋs Supreme
Auto Sales.

Fri Sept 15 and Sat 16
8am-4pm curtains, tools,
bedding , toys and much more
Thurman Oh "Centerville"
next to post office

Receptionist/ Dental Assistant
for part time position at
Dental Office,
we will train.
Mail resume to:
703 22nd St
Point Pleasant, WV 25550.

Garage Sale Sept 15 &amp; 16 9-?.
from Five Points 2 mi out
Flatwoods Rd on SmithGoeglein.

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)

House For Rent
1-Bath 1 Bedroom
call Gary Palmer
740-367-7412
deposit $150.00
$30.00 daily
$150.00 weekly
Near Holzer Hospital,
3 Br., kitchen, dinning rm.,
1 &amp; 1/2 baths, 2 car garage.
No smoking. No pets. Gas
heat &amp; air. $690 mo.
plus utilities &amp; deposit.
Available Sept. 20. Phone
740-645-3836

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

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.

Miscellaneous
Illinois"Bunn Special"
23 Jewell, 60-hour, Pocket
Watch $1100, Remington
Model 1100, 16- GA $600.
100 peace type silver dollars,
common dates $21.00
each must buy all,
Ironton, Ohio
740-533-3870

Help Wanted General
WANTED: Licensed Social Worker position available at a large
non-profit agency serving Individuals with intellectual disabilities
in Jackson. Bachelor's Degree from an accredited Social Work
program, a current license to practice Social Work in Ohio and
at least two years' experience working in a human services
related field required; experience working with individuals with
intellectual disabilities preferred. Must have a valid driver's
license, three years good driving experience and adequate
automobile Insurance, Travel Required. Salary; Negotiable.
Send resume to: Buckeye Community Services, P.O. Box 604,
Jackson, OH 45640; or email; beyecserv@bcs77.org.
Deadline for applicants: 9/20/17. Equal Opportunity Employer.

Rodney Community Ctr.
5 family yard sale
Friday-Saturday
9am-5pm

Yard Sale
September 11-15
11327 Jerry's Run Rd
Apple Grove WV
Christmas items, dolls, good
clothing and lots of misc items

Get the most

B
A
N
G

Apartments/Townhouses
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$425 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-5276
or 740-988-6130

Pleasant Valley Apartments
is now taking applications for
2, 3, &amp; 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.

MUMS variety of six colors
Quantity Discounts
Pumpkins, Gourds,
Indian corn
No sunday Sales
Troyer’s Green House
37770 Dye Road
Rutland OH 45775

Rentals

Safe and quiet!
HUD friendly!
Well maintained!
Great neighbors!
No application fees!
Call (740) 578-4177
Extension #1

Check out our
&amp;ODVVLÀ�HGV�
6R�PDQ\�EDUJDLQV�

Help Wanted General

for your buck...
ADVER TISE!
Help Wanted General

School Based Occupational Therapist

Pleasant Valley Hospital has a full-time opening
for a Certified Pharmacy Tech. Two years
pharmacy tech. experience preferred. Hospital
experience preferred. Must pass the National
Pharmacy Technician certification board test and
be registered with the WV Board of Pharmacy.

Pleasant Valley Hospital is actively seeking a

Contact Human Resources at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, 2520 Valley Dr., Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550,
fax to (304) 675-6975 or apply on-line at
www.pvalley.org.

Per Diem School Based
Occupational Therapist(OT)
The OT will be responsible for providing therapy
services to students of all ages.
New graduates welcome. Current state
certification as an Occupational Therapist.
Current registration with the
American Occupational Therapy Association.
EEOC/Drug Free Workplace.

Submit resumes or apply online
at www.pvalley.org

EOE: M/D/F/V

60734108

If a request for a hearing is not timely made, the Commission may enter an order granting the relief requested in the
Temporary Order without a hearing. A Respondent may
request a he ring pursuant to A.R.S. § 44-1972 and A.A.C.
RI4-4-307 by delivering or mailing a written request referencing
Docket Number S-20985A-16-0329, along with eight copies,
to Docket Control, Arizona Corporation Commission, 1200 W.
Washington, Phoenix, Arizona 85007 by October 16,2017.
Filing instructions may be obtained from Docket Control
on the Commission's web site at:
http://www.azcc.gov/divisions/hearino-s/docket.ash
or by calling (602) 542-3477.

Fall Decorations

Rents starting at
$425 per month!

BEFORE THE ARIZONA CORPORATION COMMISSION

The Securities Division of the Arizona Corporation Commission
("Commission') alleges that Respondent DELTA FX TRADE
has engaged in acts, practices, and transactions that constitute
violations of A.R.S. § 44-1841, A.R.S. § 44-1842, and A.R.S. §
44-1991. To obtain a copy of the Temporary Order filed in this
proceeding, contact James Burgess bye-mail at
jburgess@azcc.gov or in writing at ACC Securities Division,
1300 W. Washington, 3rd floor, Phoenix, AZ 85007.

Troyers Greenhouse

SEEKING TENANTS
For 55+ Community
2 and 3 bedrooms.
Water and trash paid.
In city limits; walking
distance to stores and
restaurants.

FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Notices

Docket No. S-20985A-16-0329, Temporary Order to Cease and
Desist and Notice Of Opportunity For Hearing ("Temporary
Order"):

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

60733232

Lewis, Moss, Urlacher among
first-year nominees for HOF

60733695

�COMICS

8 Thursday, September 14, 2017

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 &amp; Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

"Y $AVE 'REEN

�

By Hilary Price

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Hank Ketcham’s

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Today’s Solution

By Bil and Jeff Keane

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

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���� #ONCEPTIS 0UZZLES $IST� BY +ING &amp;EATURES 3YNDICATE )NC�

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tomcats sweep
South Gallia
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@aimmediamidwest.com

MERCERVILLE, Ohio
— A second consecutive
Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division home
match, a second consecutive three-set loss by the
Lady Rebels.
Unfortunately for the
South Gallia High School
volleyball team, it fell
victim to a sweep by the
visiting Trimble Tomcats
on Tuesday night, as the
Rebels lost 25-18, 25-16
and 25-18.
The loss left the Lady
Rebels at 1-7 — and 1-4
in the TVC Hocking.
After sweeping host
Belpre last Thursday for
its only win, South Gallia

Lady Jackets sting Southern
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

lost to visiting Federal
Hocking on Monday in a
straight-set sweep as well.
Against Trimble, Erin
Evans paced the Lady
Rebels with four kills and
four assists, as Rachal
Colburn collected three
kills and three blocks
from her middle hitting
spot.
Olivia Hornsby had
three assists, while Christine Grifﬁth had three
blocks and a pair of service aces.
The Rebels return to
the road, and return to
TVC Hocking Division
action, on Thursday night
at Eastern.

WILLIAMSTOWN,
W.Va. — Not a bad
start, and not a bad ﬁnish either.
The Southern volleyball team fell by three
points apiece in the ﬁrst
and third games of its
straight games loss to
non-conference host Williamstown on Tuesday
night in Wood County.
The Lady Tornadoes (3-7) controlled
the early part of the
opening game, leading by as much as six.
Williamstown tied the
game four times before

Marauders
From page 6

Wahama girls basketball
holding softball tourney

different things about
coming from behind. If
we’re behind, the goal
is to not give up and
keep working hard,” she
said. “These girls are
really learning to persevere and work toward
the goal of winning the
game.”
In the fourth game,
the Marauders played
from ahead for the most
part — last trailing at
9-8 and after eight ties.
Meigs broke an 11-11
tie on a Raider service
error, then six straight
service points by Kassidy Betzing —consisting of four Raider errors
sandwiched around
back-to-back Betzing
aces —got the Marauders going for good.
“In that game, I told
the girls to just play
our game and not their
(Raiders) game,” said
King. “These girls know
they can play. It’s just
getting it through their
heads that they can play.
They are gaining conﬁdence, little by little,
which is something they
don’t have a lot of. We

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. — The Wahama girls basketball team will be holding a co-ed slow-pitch softball
tournament at the New Haven ball ﬁelds on Saturday,
Sept. 16.
The tournament will be a double elimination format
and each game will have a one hour time limit. Games
begin at 8 a.m. and will continue until a champion is
determined.
The cost is $125 per team, plus each team must
supply two softballs. The tournament will be limited
to 10 teams.
For more information, contact Wahama girls basketball coach John Arnott at 304-674-5956.

MLB
GB
—
20
22½
25
33
GB
—
2
2½
11
16½
GB
—
10
13
28
37

Tuesday’s Games
Atlanta 8, Washington 0
Philadelphia 9, Miami 8, 15 innings
Milwaukee 5, Pittsburgh 2
Chicago Cubs 8, N.Y. Mets 3
Minnesota 16, San Diego 0
St. Louis 13, Cincinnati 4
Colorado 4, Arizona 2
L.A. Dodgers 5, San Francisco 3
Wednesday’s Games
Atlanta at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Miami at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
San Diego at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Cincinnati at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
Colorado at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Cincinnati (Garrett 3-7) at St. Louis (Weaver 5-1), 1:45 p.m.
Colorado (Bettis 1-2) at Arizona (Godley
7-7), 3:40 p.m.
Atlanta (Foltynewicz 10-12) at Washington
(Roark 12-9), 7:05 p.m.
Miami (Urena 13-6) at Philadelphia
(Thompson 1-2), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Lugo 6-4) at Chicago Cubs
(Montgomery 5-8), 8:05 p.m.
Friday’s Games
St. Louis at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Oakland at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Miami, 7:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 7:35 p.m.
San Diego at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.
Arizona at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.

Golf
From page 6

Wahama was led by
Gage Smith with a 51.
Anthony Ortiz and Dalton Kearns both recorded
rounds of 55, while
Kyher Bush posted 58
for the White Falcons’
fourth score. Isaac Roush
recorded the tie-breaking
59 that Wahama needed
to take second place on
the day.
Curtis Haner led the
Rebels with a 51, Noah
Spurlock was next with
a 61, followed by Layne
Ours with a 63. Dustin
Bainter and Caleb
Condee both shot 68 for
South Gallia, but only one
counted toward the team

ﬁnally taking their ﬁrst
lead, at 18-17. Southern
battled back to tie the
game at 21, but never
regained the advantage,
falling by a 25-22 ﬁnal.
The Lady Yellow
Jackets scored the ﬁrst
six points and never
trailed in the second
game, eventually winning by a 25-12 ﬁnal.
Southern also controlled the beginning
portion of the third
game, leading by as
much as four. WHS tied
the game three times
before ﬁnally taking
the lead at 14-13. The
Lady Yellowjackets
never relinquished the

advantage, leading by
as many as eight points
en route to the 25-22
victory.
The Lady Tornadoes
were led by Jane Roush
and Baylee Grueser,
each posting six points
and one ace. Marissa
Brooker had four
service points in the
setback, Baylee Wolfe
added three, while Jaiden Roberts and Paige
VanMeter both marked
two service points.
Wolfe led the guests
at the net with teamhighs of six kills and
ﬁve blocks. Phoenix
Cleland marked two
kills and three blocks

for the Purple and
Gold, VanMeter added
two kills and one block,
while Jolisha Ervin and
Sydney Cleland had two
kills apiece. Roush and
Roberts both earned
one kill for SHS, while
Shelbi Dailey contributed a block.
This is the lone
meeting between these
non-conference foes
this season. Southern
gets back to work in
the Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
at home on Thursday
against Miller.

have some awesome
players out there, but
they need to know they
can hit and not worry
about hitting the ball out
or making mistakes.”
Betzing, the junior
standout hitter, made
few mistakes on Tuesday.
She amassed a massive 26 kills, including
nine in the opening
game and seven in the
closing tilt.
Her thunderous 26th
kill ended the match,
as she also collected
24 digs including 10 in
game two.
She spearheaded the
Marauders’ comeback in
the ﬁrst game, as River
Valley scored the opening seven points prior to
leading 10-2 on an Isabella Mershon ace.
But buoyed by Betzing’s four straight service points to make it
10-6, Meigs amounted
18 of the next 23 game
points.
From there, they
closed the game with
ﬁve of the ﬁnal seven
markers.
In game three, the
Raiders raced out to
leads of 6-0, 9-1 and
13-7, but the Marauders
began chipping away

at that deﬁcit — and
eventually pulled even at
22-22.
From there, the two
teams traded leads three
times and tied twice
more, before the Maroon
and Gold gained the win
with a pair of Marissa
Noble kills.
By the end of game
three, the Raiders
believed they could have
— or even should have
— completed the sweep.
“This one easily could
have went our way, but
we’re still learning how
to win. After a couple
of rough outings, this
was kind of a comeback-together moment. I
think the girls are starting to see that they can
play with most teams
and I think it will turn,”
said RVHS coach Brent
Smith. “We still have
to keep working on our
passing and our hitting.
I really think it’s about
belief, but that belief is
coming. Our girls played
well tonight, and even
though I don’t believe in
moral victories, this was
at least a hard-fought
loss. Had we not let that
ﬁrst one get away from
us, the night might have
been different.”
The second set went

River Valley’s way —and
was a thrilling game
with nine lead changes
and 12 ties.
In fact, six lead
changes and ﬁve ties
took place after a 21-21
deadlock, as Meigs even
gained a 26-25 advantage on a Raider attack
error.
But River Valley
pulled off the ﬁnal three
points for the 28-26
triumph, which was
capped off by a Carly
Gilmore kill.
Gilmore garnered
a team-high 13 kills
and 10 blocks, as she
matched up at the net
against Betzing.
Kelsey Brown added
seven kills and Rachel
Horner had ﬁve, as
Caterina Gattinara
notched nine blocks —
three apiece in sets one,
two and four.
Mershon set for 15
assists, as Meigs’ Madison Fields ﬁnished with
31 assists and 19 digs.
Both teams return
to TVC Ohio action on
Thursday, as Meigs travels to Nelsonville-York
while River Valley welcomes Vinton County.

Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct
x-Washington
88 56 .611
Miami
68 76 .472
Atlanta
65 78 .455
New York
63 81 .438
Philadelphia
55 89 .382
Central Division
W L Pct
Chicago
78 66 .542
St. Louis
76 68 .528
Milwaukee
76 69 .524
Pittsburgh
68 78 .466
Cincinnati
62 83 .428
West Division
W L Pct
Los Angeles
93 52 .641
Arizona
83 62 .572
Colorado
80 65 .552
San Diego
65 80 .448
San Francisco
57 90 .388
x-clinched division

Thursday, September 14, 2017 9

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB
Boston
82 62 .569 —
New York
78 66 .542 4
Tampa Bay
72 74 .493 11
Baltimore
71 74 .490 11½
Toronto
68 77 .469 14½
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Cleveland
90 56 .616 —
Minnesota
75 69 .521 14
Kansas City
72 72 .500 17
Detroit
60 85 .414 29½
Chicago
57 87 .396 32
West Division
W L Pct GB
Houston
87 57 .604 —
Los Angeles
73 71 .507 14
Texas
72 72 .500 15
Seattle
72 73 .497 15½
Oakland
63 81 .438 24
Tuesday’s Games
Kansas City 4, Chicago White Sox 3
Toronto 3, Baltimore 2
Boston 11, Oakland 1
Cleveland 2, Detroit 0
Tampa Bay 2, N.Y. Yankees 1
Seattle 10, Texas 3
Minnesota 16, San Diego 0
Houston 1, L.A. Angels 0
Wednesday’s Games
Cleveland 5, Detroit 3
N.Y. Yankees vs. Tampa Bay at Citi Field,
1:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Kansas City, 2:15
p.m.
Baltimore at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
Oakland at Boston, 7:10 p.m.
Seattle at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
San Diego at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Houston at L.A. Angels, 10:07 p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Chicago White Sox (Shields 3-6) at Detroit
(Bell 0-2), 1:10 p.m.
Oakland (Gossett 4-8) at Boston (Pomeranz 15-5), 1:35 p.m.
Baltimore (Miley 8-12) at N.Y. Yankees
(Tanaka 11-11), 7:05 p.m.
Kansas City (Junis 7-2) at Cleveland (Tomlin 9-9), 7:10 p.m.
Seattle (Hernandez 5-4) at Texas (Cashner 9-9), 8:05 p.m.
Toronto (Anderson 3-3) at Minnesota
(Berrios 12-7), 8:10 p.m.
Houston (Peacock 10-2) at L.A. Angels
(Nolasco 6-13), 10:07 p.m.
Friday’s Games
Baltimore at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Oakland at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
Boston at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Detroit, 7:10 p.m.
Kansas City at Cleveland, 7:10 p.m.
Seattle at Houston, 8:10 p.m.
Toronto at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Texas at L.A. Angels, 10:07 p.m.

total. The Rebels still
have one league match
remaining this season,
scheduled for Wednesday
at Ohio University.
Belpre’s top golfer was
Britteny Shaffer with a
50, followed by Jeremiah
Stitt with a 54 and Maddie Roby with a 56. Brady
Shriver carded a 59 for
the Golden Eagles’ fourth
score, while Dalton
Kimble’s 61 served as the
BHS tie-breaking score.
Mitchell Clem led the
Lancers with a 67, followed by Shane Fredricks
with a 68. Brandon Bond
and Taylor Clemons
rounded out the Federal
Hocking totals with 69
and 70, respectively.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

THURSDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

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Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14
7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune (N) (N)
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Jeopardy!
Fortune (N) (N)
Entertainm- Access
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events. (N)
News at 6
ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm(N)
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ent Tonight
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
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at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
Fortune
2 Broke Girls Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
News (N)
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PBS NewsHour Providing inNews:
Business
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events. (N)
America
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition

7 PM

7:30

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8:30

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9:30

10 PM

10:30

American Ninja Warrior "Denver City Finals" The 'Mile
Chicago Fire "Telling Her
High City' hosts the final stop.
Goodbye"
American Ninja Warrior "Denver City Finals" The 'Mile
Chicago Fire "Telling Her
High City' hosts the final stop.
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20/20 Truth and Lies "The Murder of Laci Peterson" A
look at the murder of Laci Peterson. (N)
Song of the Mountains
Secrets of Highclere Castle Forgotten Ellis Island Elliot
"Bill and Maggie Anderson" Behind-the-scenes look at
Gould hosts this historic look
Highclere Castle.
at Ellis Island.
20/20 Truth and Lies "The Murder of Laci Peterson" A
Celebrity Family Feud
look at the murder of Laci Peterson. (N)
Big Brother (N)
Zoo "West Side Story" (N)
The Big Bang Mom
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Beat Shazam "Episode
Fourteen" (SF) (N)
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Vicious
extraordinary discovery of a 2,000-year-old "Wedding"
"Vietnam"
body reveals a new lead in a case.
The Big Bang Mom
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Zoo "West Side Story" (N)
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8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Cops
18 (WGN) Cops
24 (ROOT) Football (N) Knockout
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interrupt (N)
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
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37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
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52 (ANPL)
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58
60
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(TVL)

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

Cops
Cops
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Cops
UFC UFC 195 Site: MGM Grand Garden Arena
UFC Main Event
NCAA Football Count (L)
NCAA Football New Mexico vs. Boise State Site: Bronco Stadium -- Boise, Idaho (L)
SportsCenter (N)
WNBA Basketball Playoffs (L)
WNBA Basketb. Playoffs (L)
Grey's Anatomy "Oh, the
Project Runway "A Leap of Project
(:50) Project Project Runway "Descending into Good
Runway (N)/
(:45) Runway
Guilt"
Innovation!"
Runway (N) Runway (N) and Evil" (N)
(5:15)
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Harry, Ron
Home Alone (‘90, Com) Macaulay Culkin. A young boy must fend
and Hermione return to Hogwarts to find the last of the horcruxes. TVPG off burglars after his family accidentally leaves him home alone. TVPG
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
The Dark Knight Rises (2012, Action) Christian Bale, Tom Hardy, Anne
Hathaway. Batman makes his return to Gotham when the city is threatened. TVPG
Loud House H.Danger
H.Danger
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Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles William Fichtner. TV14
Full House
NCIS "Agent Afloat"
NCIS "Capitol Offense"
NCIS "Love Boat"
NCIS "Shell Game"
NCIS "Enemy Combatant"
Seinf. 1/2
Seinf. 2/2
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
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The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang TheGuest (N)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
Bones
Bones
Vacation (‘15, Com) Ed Helms. TVMA
Vacation TVMA
(5:30)
The Italian Job (2003, Action) Charlize Theron,
Tombstone (1993, Western) Val Kilmer, Michael Biehn, Kurt Russell. Wyatt Earp
Donald Sutherland, Mark Wahlberg. TV14
comes out of retirement and forms a group to fight a gang of unruly outlaws. TV14
Naked and Afraid
Naked and Afraid
Naked and Afraid "Battle of the Fans" (N)
The First 48 "Bad
The First 48 "The
The First 48 "Love Kills" Three murders are recounted in this enhanced episode. (N)
Medicine"
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Lone Star Law "Gator Bait" L. Star Law "Gator vs. Dog" Yukon Men: Roughing It
Yukon Men: Roughing It
Yukon "The Ice Bridge"
CSI: Crime Scene
CSI: Crime Scene
CSI: Crime Scene "Spark of CSI: Crime Scene
CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation "King Baby" Investigation "Big Middle" Investigation "Compulsion" Life"
Investigation "4x4"
Law &amp; O: CI "Unchained" Growing Up Hip Hop
Growing Up Hip Hop
Growing Up Hip Hop (N)
(:10) Growing Up Hip Hop
The Kardashians
E! News (N)
Look Book
Look Book
Look Book
Look Book
Eric &amp; Jessie Eric &amp; Jessie
(:25) MASH "Picture This"
M*A*S*H
(:35) MASH
(:10) MASH
(:50) Ray
(:25) Ray "Jealous Robert"
Loves Ray
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Secret Brazil "Jaguar
Secret Brazil "Cannibal
The Last Lions A lioness risks everything to keep her
Swamp Lions
Rising"
Caimans"
family alive.
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Caf./ Octane Caf./ Octane Grudge (N) Grudge Race AMA Motorcycle Racing
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
Beyond the Wheel "2017" ARCA Auto Racing SCOTT 150 (L)
MLB Whiparound (L)
Mountain Men "Race to
Mountain Men "Waste Not, Mountain Men "Long Shot" Mountain Men: Fully
(:05) Ice Road Truckers
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Loaded "High and Dry" (N) Ruin" (N)
"Meltdown Blues" (N)
Flipping Out
Flipping Out
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Girlfriends' Guide (N)
(5:35)
Nutty Professor II: The Klumps TV14
The Wedding Ringer (‘14, Comedy) Josh Gad, Kaley Cuoco-Sweeting, Kevin Hart. TVPG
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop FlipFlop ATL FlipATL (N) Flippers (N) H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
G.I. Joe: Retaliation (‘13, Act) Channing Tatum. The G.I. Joes are
The Book of Eli (‘09, Adv) Denzel Washington. A drifter in a postforced to contend with threats from within their own government. TV14 apocalyptic society protects the last copy of the Bible from a gang. TV14

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

(5:50) Sully (‘16, Bio) Tom Hanks. After

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

7:30
Vice News
Tonight (N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Hidden Figures (‘16, Dra) Octavia Spencer, Taraji P.
(:10) Insecure (:50) Ballers
"Rickygliding his plane into the Hudson River,
Henson. A team of African-American women provide NASA "Hella
Captain Sully faces an investigation. TV14
with mathematical data for a space mission. TVPG
Perspective" Leaks"
(:05) Criminal (2016, Drama) Gary Oldman, Tommy Lee
The Vanishing Kiefer Sutherland. A (:50)
Alien III Ripley continues to be
Jones, Kevin Costner. A convict has a dead CIA agent's
man searches for his girlfriend while her
stalked by a savage alien after her pod
skills and memories transplanted into his brain. TVMA
abductor watches and taunts him. TVMA
crashes on a planet. TVMA
(5:00)
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(:35)
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�10 Thursday, September 14, 2017

SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

URG honored
by NAIA for 16th
straight year
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

Courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Patricia Dennis, left, and Abigail Grasso (9) attempt to block Kentucky Christian University’s Sarah Grindrod during
Tuesday night’s non-conference volleyball match at the Newt Oliver Arena.

Errors doom RedStorm in loss to KCU
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE,
Ohio — Errors — both
physical and mental,
some forced and others
unforced — have been
the constants in a season
full of struggles for the
University of Rio Grande
volleyball team.
Tuesday night’s return
home following a weekend road swing to northern California proved to
be the latest chapter in
the RedStorm’s book of
frustration.
Despite ﬁnishing with
two more kills than visiting Kentucky Christian
University, Rio Grande
proved to be its own
worst enemy in a 3-1
non-conference loss to
the Knights at the Newt
Oliver Arena.

The Knights — who
had just seven players see
action — earned their
seventh win in eight outings with a 25-13, 24-26,
25-18, 25-19 victory.
Rio Grande slipped to
3-11 with the loss.
The RedStorm ﬁnished
with a 38-36 edge in kills
over the course of the
four-set affair, but came
unwound as a result of
61 total miscues (20
attack errors, eight service errors, 14 reception
errors, nine blocking
errors and 10 ball-handling errors).
Rio Grande trailed just
12-8 midway through the
opening set before KCU
used a 7-2 run to blow
things open and grab an
early lead.
The RedStorm
rebounded in set two,
though, scoring nine of

the ﬁnal 13 points in the
period to rally from a
20-17 deﬁcit and even the
match at 1-1.
Set three was deadlocked at 10-10 before an
8-2 run gave KCU all the
momentum it would need
to regain the advantage,
while a 6-1 spurt in set
four produced a commanding 20-14 advantage
for the Knights and
an eventual win of the
match.
Kiahna Holmen had a
team-high 12 kills to go
along with 14 digs in Kentucky Christian’s winning
effort, while Reilly Hack
ﬁnished with a matchbest 34 assists and Olivia
Barrett had 15 digs.
Avery Crum and Sarah
Grindrod added 12 digs
apiece for the Knights,
while Crum had ﬁve service aces and Grindrod

tallied four aces of her
own.
Senior Aleah Pelphrey
(Piketon, OH) had a
match-high 17 kills in
a losing cause for Rio,
while freshman Carly
Shriver (Gallipolis, OH)
and freshman Ryanne
Stoffel (Englewood, OH)
had 16 and 13 assists,
respectively, and sophomore Katie Hemsley
(Jackson, OH) had 16
digs.
Pelphrey and Shriver
tacked on 12 and 10 digs,
respectively, for the RedStorm.
Rio Grande will enjoy
a week-long hiatus before
traveling to Ohio Christian University for its
River States Conference
opener Tuesday.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Indians chase win streak record
CLEVELAND (AP)
— As they climb toward
baseball history with
every win, the streaking Cleveland Indians
are chasing a hallowed,
101-year-old record that
includes an asterisk.
A major league asterisk.
The 26-game winning
string by the 1916 New
York Giants includes a
tie.
“I think I knew that,”
Indians closer Cody Allen
said.
Not everyone is aware
of the peculiarity. And
as the Indians, who on
Tuesday night became
the fourth team since
1900 to win 20 straight,
have moved into position
to threaten the Giants’
revered mark, questions
have arisen as to why a
team that won 12 consecutive games, played
a tie and then ripped off
14 more wins in a row
would have the record.
It’s simple. It’s complicated. It’s baseball.
“A tie was never an
acceptable result of a
baseball game,” explained
Steve Hirdt, executive
vice president at the
Elias Sports Bureau,
Major League Baseball’s
ofﬁcial record keeper. “If
one happened because of
darkness or rain or some
certain circumstance, the
game was played over.
“Sports fans are used
to the nuance in hockey
and football of the difference between a winning
streak and an unbeaten

KANSAS CITY, Mo.
— For the 16th consecutive year, the University of Rio Grande has
been named a Champions of Character FiveStar Institution by the
National Association of
Intercollegiate Athletics
(NAIA).
Every year, each
NAIA institution and
conference demonstrates their progress
in pursuing characterdriven athletics. The
Champions of Character Scorecard measures
growth in training,
promotion, conduct in
competition and commitment in ﬁve key
areas with a possibility
of 100 points. Institutions can be recognized
as Champions of Character Five-Star Institutions at three different
levels: Gold (90-100
points), Silver (75-89
points) and Bronze (6074).
Rio Grande, which
has been recognized
each year since the
program’s inception
in 2001-02, was recognized as a Silver Level
institution.
“It’s great recognition for our institution
and what our studentathletes represent,” said
Ken French, Rio Grande
head men’s basketball
coach and liaison to
the NAIA’s Champion
of Character Initiative.
“Each program in our
athletic department
focuses on developing
student-athletes and
helping them to mature
as young adults. We
take a lot of pride in
how our athletes represent our University.”
The River States Conference, of which Rio
Grande is a member,
was also recognized
with the NAIA Champions of Character
Five-Star Conference
designation. Ten of the
13 conference members
made the list and two Midway University and
Ohio Christian University - received perfect
scores.
Institutions are
measured on a demonstrated commitment to
Champions of Charac-

ter and earned points
in character training,
conduct in competition,
academic focus, character recognition and
character promotion.
Institutions earned
points based on exceptional student-athlete
grade point averages
and by having minimal
to no ejections during
competition throughout
the course of the academic year.
New to the Scorecard
this year was the opportunity use a teachable
moment to offset an
ejection for ﬁghting,
profanity, or dissent.
More than 50 institutions took advantage of
this opportunity.
For 2016-17, 183
NAIA institutions
earned the Five-Star
Institution Award
which included 66 gold
level winners, 76 silver
level winners, and 41
bronze level winners.
NAIA Five-Star Conference Awards are also
given in part based on
the number of schools
within the conference
that earn the Five-Star
Institution Award. This
year, 18 conferences
earned the Five-Star
Conference Award.
The NAIA’s Champions of Character
program provides training for student-athletes
and professional development for coaches
and staff. The values
of integrity, respect,
responsibility, sportsmanship and servant
leaderships are put into
play and accounted for
at NAIA schools.
“Being a Champion
is about seeing the big
picture. It’s about being
prepared for life,” said
Rio Grande athletic
director Jeff Lanham.
“The vision of the
NAIA Champions of
Character program is
to change the culture of
sport. As our student/
athletes develop the
approach of Champions of Character, they
are becoming better
teammates, students,
athletes, friends, community members and
eventually a better
employee.”
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Lakers to retire 2
numbers for Kobe

Ron Schwane | AP

Cleveland Indians fans cheer for their team to win a 20th straight game during the fourth inning
against the Detroit Tigers on Tuesday in Cleveland. The fans got their wish as the Indians won 2-0 to
tie the AL record for consecutive wins held by the 2002 Oakland Athletics.

streak or consecutive
games streak without a
loss. Baseball has never
had those two different
records. They would
replay the game until a
legitimate won or loss
result was achieved.”
The 1916 Giants, 1935
Chicago Cubs (21), 2002
Oakland Athletics (20)
and 2017 Indians are
the only teams in the
modern era to post winning streaks of at least 20
games. Cleveland joined
the exclusive club when
ace and Cy Young Award
co-favorite Corey Kluber
tossed a ﬁve-hitter in a
2-0 win over the Detroit
Tigers.

Now that they’re at
20, the Indians have ﬁve
more home games to
pull closer to a record
— albeit with its slight
abnormality — that has
endured.
Perhaps because of
confusion over the tie,
New York’s 26-game
streak has been absent
from lists on some
baseball websites and
elsewhere. The omission
could be because some
databases only recognize
wins and losses and when
the Giants’ 1916 season
is calculated, there is an
interruption in a streak
that is widely known to
hardcore baseball fans as

the one to beat.
“The Giants’ 26-game
winning streak has existed since the beginning
of time,” Hirdt said. “I
do not know why certain
people are looking at the
21 now and holding that
up as the record or alternately trying to parse
language so that they can
somehow exclude the 26.
“It’s the longest winning streak, it’s the
record for most consecutive wins, etc., because a
tie game breaks neither a
winning streak or losing
streak for a team because
it always gets replayed
unless the season ends
ﬁrst.”

LOS ANGELES
(AP) — One retired
jersey number just isn’t
enough for Kobe Bryant
and the Los Angeles
Lakers.
The Lakers will retire
Bryant’s No. 8 and
No. 24 in a ceremony
Dec. 18 during their
game against Golden
State, the franchise
announced Tuesday.
Bryant wore No. 8
from 1996 to 2006,
when he switched to
No. 24 for the remainder of a 20-year career
spent entirely with the
Lakers. He will be the
10th player honored
by the Lakers with a
retired number hung
high on the Staples
Center wall, but the
ﬁrst in NBA history
to have two numbers
retired by the same
team.
“Kobe’s jerseys are
taking their rightful
home next to the greatest Lakers of all time,”
Lakers owner Jeanie
Buss said. “There was

never any doubt this
day would come. The
only question was
when. Once again, Lakers fans will celebrate
our hero, and once
again, our foes will envy
the legendary Kobe Bryant.”
The ﬁve-time NBA
champion and 18-time
All-Star selection is the
Lakers’ franchise leader
in points (33,643),
games played (1,346),
3-pointers (1,827),
steals (1,944) and free
throws (8,378), among
countless superlatives.
Bryant is the thirdleading scorer in NBA
history after becoming
the ﬁrst player to spend
at least 20 seasons
with one franchise. He
retired in 2016 with a
bravura 60-point performance in his farewell
game against Utah.
Bryant scored almost
exactly as many points
in his No. 8 jersey
(16,777) as he did
while wearing No. 24
(16,866).

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