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                  <text>Get your
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OPINION s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

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73°

75°

Times of clouds and sun today. Partly cloudy
and mild tonight. High 81° / Low 57°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Russ
Parsons
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WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 61, Volume 73

Wednesday, April 17, 2019 s 50¢

New program
geared
toward teens
Kick-off to be held Thursday
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MIDDLEPORT — A new program for area
youth will hosts its kick-off event this Thursday.
R.I.S.E. (Resiliency Initiative for Student
Empowerment) will hold an open house event
from noon to 2 p.m. on Thursday at the Middleport Church of Christ Family Life Center. The program is geared toward teens, and is open to youth
age 10 and up, unless accompanied by a parent.
The program is a partnership between the
Meigs Prayer Task Force and Hopewell Health
Centers with grant funding through the GalliaJackson-Meigs ADAMHS Board.
Stacy Dodson from the Prayer Task Force
explained that the R.I.S.E. program, following
Thursday’s kick-off, will be held on Tuesdays and
Thursdays from 3-5 p.m. through the end of the
school year with different dates and times to be
planned during the summer.
The program will include hot meals, tutoring
help, recreational activities, counseling services
See TEENS | 2

Pomeroy
hears water,
park updates
By Kayla Hawthorne
Contributing writer

POMEROY —
Parks, houses falling
in and water issues
were among the items
discussed during the
Pomeroy Village Council meeting on Monday
night.
A full meeting could
not be held because
there were only three
council members in
attendance — Brian
Young, Maureen
Hennessy, and Nick
Michael. In order to
conduct votes, four
members have to be
present. Despite not
having a formal meeting, council, the mayor
and residents were able
to discuss issues n the
village.
Mayor Don Anderson
mentioned the water
issues many in the
village experienced

Monday morning,
including some having
no water. Anderson
said he does not think
the village had a very
good response to the
issue. The pumps were
not working, but they
were cleaned and put
back together, which
resolved the problem.
The village was placed
on a 24-hour boil advisory after the water
was turned back on.
Council discussed
a grant they received
through the Meigs
County Health Department for playground
updates to the Mechanic Street Park. Anderson said the basketball
court will be modiﬁed.
They are also waiting
on a bid for parking and
a handicap ramp. The
grant will also cover
smaller projects in the
See UPDATES | 2

Holzer | Courtesy

Holzer Health System recently honored outstanding local high school science graduates at its 36th annual High School Science Awards
Banquet, including students from Gallia, Meigs and Mason counties. A complete list of honorees appears in the adjacent story.

Awards banquet honors students
Staff Report

Holzer Health System recently honored
outstanding local high
school science graduates
at its 36th annual High
School Science Awards
Banquet.
The scholars, their
parents and school representatives were invited
to attend, where each
student was presented
with a certiﬁcate and
monetary award. A representative from each
high school who attended
the event was presented
a check to further their
efforts in their respective school’s science

programs. The Science
Awards Program encompasses high schools from
Athens, Gallia, Jackson,
Meigs, Lawrence, Pike
and Vinton Counties in
Ohio; and Mason County
in West Virginia.
John Cunningham, MS,
MBA, FACMPE, executive vice president, Holzer Health System, served
as Master of Ceremonies
and delivered the introductory remarks. Michael
Canady, MD, MBA, CPE,
FACS, FAAPL, chief
executive ofﬁcer, Holzer
Health System outlined
the history of the Science
Awards Program.
Dr. Canady com-

mented, “Holzer sees
the Science Awards as
an opportunity to give
back to the community
and formally recognize
the achievements of our
students and educational
systems.”
The Science Awards
Program honors a student selected by the
high school based on
outstanding achievement
in science and a desire to
pursue a higher education.
The featured speaker
for the program was
Jonathan Mathis, MD,
Holzer pediatrician. Dr.
Mathis is Board Certiﬁed by the American

Academy of Pediatrics
and a graduate of the
Morehouse School of
Medicine in Atlanta,
Georgia. He completed
his pediatrics residency
at the Medical University of South Carolina in
Charleston, South Carolina. He joined Holzer in
2018.
Dr. Mathis spoke to
the group about thinking
outside of the box and
striving toward achievable goals.
He remarked, “As you
move forward, you will
come across resistance.
It is your job as thinkers,
See STUDENTS | 2

Astronaut to speak at Rio Commencement
By Jessica Patterson
Special to OVP

RIO GRANDE — The University of Rio Grande and Rio
Grande Community College
is preparing to host the 143rd
Commencement Ceremony.
Each year, Rio invites a commencement speaker to offer
the graduating class words of
wisdom as they begin their
lives after higher education.
The Spring 2019 commencement speaker will be Ohio
Native and NASA Astronaut
Dr. Don Thomas. Thomas
served as a mission specialist
on four space shuttle missions
as well as serving as NASA
director of operations at the
Gagarin Cosmonaut Training
Center in Star City, Russia.
Courtesy photo
Rio Interim President Dr.
NASA Astronaut Dr. Don Thomas will be the
commencement speaker for the 143rd commencement Catherine M. Clark said she is
ceremony at the University of Rio Grande and Rio excited to hear the insight he
will share with the graduating
Grande Community College.

class.
“I am very pleased to
announce the selection of Dr.
Donald A. Thomas as the
speaker for the 143rd Anniversary Commencement at the
University of Rio Grande and
Rio Grande Community College,” Clark said. “Dr. Thomas
became a NASA astronaut
in 1991. He is a veteran of
four space shuttle missions,
making a total of 692 orbits
of the earth. Dr. Thomas has
an important message for our
graduates, families, friends and
classmates about persistence
and success.”
Thomas is from Cleveland,
Ohio, and has an extensive
background with NASA
including spending 44 days in
space, completing 692 orbits
of the Earth, and serving as
International Space Station
See RIO | 2

Community Book Club focuses on Civil War

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Comics: 8
Classifieds: 9

Rio professor to host
By Jessica Patterson
Special to OVP

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CONVERSATION
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thoughts.

RIO GRANDE — The University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande
Community College works to connect the community to educational
opportunities outside of the classroom.
To continue this effort, Professor of History Dr. Sam Wilson is
teaming up with Bossard Library
in Gallipolis to begin a book club
focusing on Civil War history. The
round-table book club will meet
quarterly at Bossard Library with
the ﬁrst meeting set for 10 a.m.
Saturday, May 11. Wilson said

he believes it is important for
Rio to provide opportunities for
educational discussion off campus
as a way to connect with the community.
“The faculty, staff and administration here at Rio take any
opportunity we can to give back
to our community and are heavily
involved in a number of groups in
the area. We feel it’s important to
share our work as educators and
form networks between Rio and
different organizations within the
region,” Wilson said. “We hope the
community will continue to join
us as the book club progresses and
they will take pride in the books
they’ve read and look forward to
it. Opportunities like this book
club really can make a difference

to people, and as an educational
institution, Rio wants to make
activities like this accessible to the
community.”
The ﬁrst book the club will
discuss is “The War that Forged
a Nation,” by James McPherson.
The book gives in depth looks into
the impact the war has had on the
history of the United States and
the inﬂuence it still has generations later. Wilson said he feels
this is an important starting point
because of the work’s signiﬁcance
in scholarly research regarding the
Civil War area.
“McPherson is a Pulitzer Prize
winning author and is considered
very renowned in the ﬁeld of Civil
See BOOK | 2

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, April 17, 2019

OBITUARIES
CARLOS R. (RUDY) KITCHEN

Books
From page 1

WEST JEFFERSON
— Carlos R. (Rudy)
Kitchen, age 73, of West
Jefferson, Ohio, passed
away on Sunday, April 14,
2019, at Mount Carmel
West Hospital. He was
born Sept. 25, 1945, in
McAndrews, Ky., to Clarence and Irene Kitchen.
He is survived by his
loving wife, Rosanna
(Goff) Kitchen of 47
years; son, Todd Kitchen;
daughter, Shawna (Mike)
Ray; grandsons, Blake,
Bryce and Brayden Bailey.
Rudy is also survived
by sister, Linda Hall;
brother Tommy (Diana)
Kitchen; his sisters-inlaw, Darlene (Earl) Dill,

Gloria Oiler, Yvonne Goff,
Hazel Kitchen; and brother-in-law, Delmas Goff, as
well as numerous nieces
and nephews.
In addition to his parents, Rudy was proceeded
in death by his brother,
George; sister, Betty Jane;
father-in-law and motherin-law, Darrel and Mabel
Goff; and his brothers-inlaw, Ronnie Hall, Buddy
Howell, Keith Oiler, and
Marlin Goff.
Visitation will be held
on Thursday, April 18,
2019 at Birchﬁeld Funeral
home, 212 Main Street,
Rutland, Ohio, from
noon-2 p.m. with services
following. Burial to follow
in Danville Cemetery.

NIBERT
HENDERSON, W.Va.— William Earl Nibert, 86,
of Henderson, W.Va. died Monday, April 15, 2019 at
home.
Visitation will be held from 1-3 p.m., Thursday,
April 18, 2019 at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant, W.Va. A graveside service and burial will
follow at Zion Cemetery in Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
with Pastor Josh Fisher ofﬁciating. Military graveside
honors will be presented by the West Virginia Army
Honor Guard.

War history. His work
over the last forty years
has been instrumental
in fully understanding the war itself. We
thought this would be
an appropriate book to
start the club because
the focus of this book is
to explain why the Civil
War still matters and
why we need to learn
about it,” Wilson said.
“This book club is a way
we can bring people
with similar interests
together for an entertaining and educational
discussion. It’s also a
great way to share the
signiﬁcance of our area
during the Civil War.
One of the two major
Civil War battleﬁelds in
the north is Bufﬁngton
Island in Meigs County
and routes of the Underground Railroad ran
through this area, so the
war hits closer to home
than many people realize.”
Both the Davis and
Bossard Libraries work
to bring a variety of

Daily Sentinel

educational opportunities and resources to the
community. The Bossard
Library’s Adult Programing Associate Lynn
Pauley said she believes
it is important to connect with the community
through collaboration
and offering a variety
of activities covering a
wide variety of interests.
“Rio and the Bossard
Library service many of
the same people and we
want them to be able to
take advantage of the
services we both offer.
Sometimes the best
way to do this and help
our patrons is for us to
be present in the community and collaborate
with each other as well
as other organizations in
the area,” Pauley said.
“It’s important to help
spread awareness and
interest of history and
the impact it has had
on our local area. I love
learning about history,
so I’m personally very
excited for the ﬁrst
meeting. The library is
a central location in a
community, and events
like this book club are
a fun way for people to
get out and meet others

Rio | Courtesy

Professor of History Dr. Sam Wilson is teaming up with Bossard
Library in Gallipolis to begin a book club focusing on Civil War
history. The round-table book club will meet quarterly at Bossard
Library with the first meeting set for 10 a.m. Saturday, May 11 to
discuss The War that Forged a Nation, by James McPherson.

who have similar interests.”
“The War that Forged
a Nation” is available
to borrow at Bossard
library or through
interlibrary loans at the
Davis Library. Anyone

interested in more
information about the
book club can contact
Sam Wilson at swilson@rio.edu or Lynn
Pauley at the Bossard
Library at 740-446-7323
ex. 229.

WILLET JR.
HENDERSON — Larry Eugene Willet Jr., 47, of
Henderson, died April 15, 2019.
At his request, there will be no visitation. Services
and burial will be at the convenience of the family.

Students

POPE

dreamers, to push past that resistance. Regardless of what people
say, it is your responsibility to
move forward and pursue your
passion. You have the ability to
do what you set your mind to.”
Through the Science Awards
Program, Holzer has contributed thousands of dollars to
area schools and students for
the betterment of education in
our region. For more information, visit www.holzer.org or call
1-855-4-HOLZER.
Holzer Health System Science
Awards recipients:

BIDWELL — Chad Edward Pope, 43, Bidwell, Ohio
passed away Monday, April 15, 2019.
Graveside services will be conducted Thursday,
April 18, 2019 in the Vinton Memorial Park immediately following a visitation at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton Chapel, 11 a.m. - noon.
DENNEY
GALLIPOLIS — Thomas G. “Tom” Denney, 66,
Gallipolis, died Saturday, April 13, 2019 in the Arbors
at Gallipolis. Memorial graveside services will be at 2
p.m., Saturday, April 20, 2019 in the Reynolds Cemetery, Addison. There are no calling hours. CremeensKing Funeral Home is assisting the family.

Updates

From page 1

Eryn Dael Alexander High
School, Anru Tian Athens High
School, Dakota Doss Buckeye
Hills Career Center, Andrew
Mayenschein Chesapeake High
School, Parker Fraley DawsonBryant High School, James Pennington Eastern Local (Beaver)
High School, Hannah Damewood
Eastern Local High School, Abigail Morgan Naegele Fairland
High School, Faith Laughlin
Federal Hocking High School,
Elijah Baird Gallia Academy
High School, Dylan Collier Hannan High School, John Higgins
Ironton High School, Haley
Webb Jackson High School,
Allison Hanstine Meigs High
School, Madison Campbell,
Nelsonville-York High School,

on programs to build
resiliency in youth. The
Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
Board received funding
From page 1
for both Jackson and
Meigs counties.
through Hopewell, and
Harris explained
yoga and mindfulness
that the board put out
activities.
Dodson explained that a request for proposals
the plan to model it after for the funding and was
contacted by the Prayer
the former God’s NET
Task Force.
which was in Pomeroy
Unlike much of the
for teens, but to grow
funding handled through
and expand from what
was offered through that the board which requires
certiﬁed treatment
program.
providers to receive
“We want this to be a
safe place for teens with the funding, this fundpositive interactions and ing was allowed to be
a place to have fun,” said awarded to agencies and
programs which included
Dodson.
non-proﬁt organizations,
The kick-off event
faith-based organizawill include inﬂatables,
Rockin’ Reggie, and cook tions and programs such
as the YMCA, which
out and more.
received funding in JackGallia-Jackson-Meigs
son County.
ADAMHS Executive
When looking to
Director Robin Harapply for the funding
ris explained that the
the Prayer Task Force
state Mental Health
was given the idea to
and Addiction Services
partner with Hopewell
agency allocated fundHealth Centers to assist
ing to 11 counties. The
counties were identiﬁed with the handling for
the grant funds. Harris
based on poverty rates,
noted the Hopewell is
overdose rates, suicide
good to work with other
rates and other factors
which put children at an agencies and programs
increased risk. The fund- in the community.
Shannon DeWeese of
ing was to be focused

Hopewell Health Centers
explained that Hopewell
will be facilitating four
weeks of intensive
group programs over
the summer, including
sessions on social and
emotional interactions,
grief, suicide awareness
and for children effected
by drugs or grief. The
services will be offered
at the Family Life Center
along with the rest of the
R.I.S.E. program to cast
a wide net of the services available through
the program.
Harris said the hope
is that if there is a good
response to the program, and that the need
for something such as
R.I.S.E. can be seen,
then additional funding
would be available in
the next state budget to
continue the program.
She was optimistic that
the funding would be a
possibility, adding that
Governor Mike DeWine
and the current state
legislature seem to be
willing to allow communities to put funding
toward programs which
are designed to meet the
needs of local residents
and the community as a

whole.
For adults interested
in helping with the
R.I.S.E. program, a
volunteer training will
be held for mentors and
tutors to work with the
youth.
The Meigs Prayer
Task Force was formed
in 2012 and became a
501(c)3 organization in
2015. The mission of
the Prayer Task Force
is coming together in
Christian faith to make
a better community by
offering prayer, education and love. The
purpose of the Prayer
Task Force is to provide
support and education
to the community on
drug/alcohol addiction.
To facilitate training and
events on how to help
those who are struggling
with addition. To look
at the problem areas of
the community and work
diligently to make it better.
For more information
visit RISE-Resiliency
Initiative for Student
Empowerment on Facebook.

Rio

astronauts because
for years, more astronauts came from Ohio
than any other state. I
remember being a sixyear-old sitting in class
watching the ﬁrst American space launch. As
soon as our astronaut
was in space, I knew
that’s what I wanted to
do. It was a moment
of inspiration that forever changed my life,”
Thomas said. “Now in
education, it’s my goal
to inspire the next generation to achieve their
dreams in life just like
I was able to do. I’m

excited to visit Rio and
my home state as well as
to meet the hard working students there. I
look forward to sharing
with them the importance of following their
dreams and passions in
whatever they want to
do with their futures.”
The Commencement
Ceremony will take
place Saturday, May 4
at 1 p.m. with 357 students set to walk across
the stage.

Teens

From page 1

future for benches, drinking fountains, and a split
rail fence.
Annie Chapman, a village resident, asked council
if they would consider entering into the process to
take over ownership of properties with houses that
are falling in. Chapman said she has seen several
houses with no windows, half burnt out and/or collapsed garages. Anderson said the village does not
have the money to go through the process and the
county has to set up a land bank, not the village.
Chapman said she will go to the commissioners
meeting to ask them about getting the process
started.
“We’re not going to try, we’re going to do it,”
Chapman said. “I cannot believe the condition of
our village.”
Brenda Barnhart approached council about the
upcoming National Day of Prayer on May 2. She
asked the mayor to sign a proclamation to participate and announce a day of prayer in Pomeroy on
that day.
The next meeting of Pomeroy Village Council is
scheduled for Monday, May 6 at 7 p.m
Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance writer for The Daily Sentinel.

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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.

Katelyn Jones Oak Hill High
School, Trevor Blank Ohio Valley
Christian School, Katelyn Elizabeth Roush Point Pleasant High
School, Isabella Marie Moore
River Valley High School, Kelsey
Marie Olderham Rock Hill High
School, Maria Calhoun South
Gallia High School, Katelyn
Mundy South Point High School,
Marissa Brooker Southern High
School, Isaac Andrew Whaley
St. Joseph High School, Kara
Saunders Symmes Valley High
School, Ryan Richmond Trimble
High School, Kiara Pickell Vinton County High School, Jacob
Lloyd Wahama High School,
Logan Huber Waverly High
School, Dray Remy Wellston
High School.

from Cornell University.
He was awarded two
patents for inventions
From page 1
related to the packaging
of semiconductor devicProgram Scientist from es during his time as a
2003-2006. In this posi- senior member of the
tion he was responsible technical staff at Bell
for selecting and sched- Laboratories in Princeton, New Jersey from
uling experiments to
1982-1987. Thomas said
be performed aboard
he is grateful for the
the ISS. He received
his Bachelor of Science opportunity to speak
to this spring’s Class of
degree in physics from
2019.
Case Western Reserve
“I’m honored to have
University, and continbeen invited to be the
ued with his education
commencement speaker
to receive his master
this year. I’m very proud
and doctorate degrees
in materials engineering to be one of the Ohio

Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Jessica Patterson is a
communications specialist with
the University of Rio Grande.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Apple, Qualcomm settle dispute
By Michael Liedtke
AP Technology Writer

SAN FRANCISCO — Apple
and mobile chip maker Qualcomm
have settled a bitter ﬁnancial
dispute centered on some of the
technology that enables iPhones
to connect to the internet.
The surprise truce announced
Tuesday came just as the former
allies turned antagonists were
facing off in a federal court trial
that was supposed to unfold over
the next month in San Diego. The
resolution abruptly ended that
trial, which also involved Apple’s
key iPhone suppliers.
The deal requires Apple to
pay Qualcomm an undisclosed
amount. It also includes a six-year
licensing agreement that likely
involves recurring payments to
the mobile chip maker.
Investors reacted as if it were
a resounding victory for Qualcomm. The San Diego company’s
stock soared 23% to close Tuesday at $70.45. Apple shares edged

up 2 cents to $199.25.
Neither Apple nor Qualcomm
would comment beyond a brief
statement announcing they had
resolved their differences. Details
about how much Apple and its
iPhone suppliers will be paying
Qualcomm could emerge in court
documents or when the companies announce their latest ﬁnancial results. Apple is due to report
its quarterly results on April 30
while Qualcomm is scheduled to
release its numbers on May 1.
Apple had been seeking at least
$1 billion for money that Qualcomm was supposed to rebate
as part of an earlier licensing
agreement. Apple had begun to
have misgivings about that deal
as it added more features to its
increasingly popular line-up of
iPhones.
Qualcomm was seeking $7
billion for unpaid royalties it
contended it was owed for its
patented technology in the
iPhone. Apple’s iPhone suppliers,
including Foxconn and Pegatron,

wanted another $27 billion from
Qualcomm.
The dispute was clearly beginning to hurt all parties involved,
motivating them to settle, said
technology industry analyst Patrick Moorhead of Moor Insights
&amp;amp; Strategy.
“Both Apple and Qualcomm got
deeper into this than they wanted
to,” Moorhead said.
Apple had already lost an earlier battle with Qualcomm last
month when a federal court jury
in San Diego decided the iPhone
maker owed Qualcomm $31 million for infringing on three of its
patents.
Qualcomm still faces other
potential fallout from its
demands to be paid royalties in
addition to the fees it charges
for its mobile chips. The Federal
Trade Commission has accused
the company of using its royalty
system to stiﬂe competition in
the mobile chip market in another case in which Apple played a
central role.

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.

Road Closure
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport Hill”
is open but restricted to one lane. Portable trafﬁc
controllers are installed near the area of the slip.
Please obey all signs and lights.
CHESTER — A bridge rehabilitation project
begins on March 25 on State Route 248 in Meigs
County. The project is taking place between Bashan
Road and Locust Grove Road. One lane will be
closed in this area and temporary trafﬁc signals will
be in place. The estimated completion date is June
15, 2019.
DEXTER — Meigs County Road 10, Dexter
Road, will be closed for approximately two weeks
beginning Monday, April 8, and continuing through
Thursday, April 18. This closing is necessary in
order for county forces to repair a slip located
approximately 0.3 miles southeast of Township
Road 47, Jr. Ward Road.

Color Run
RACINE — The 3rd annual Southern PTO Color

Run, 5K run/walk will be held on Saturday, April
20 at Star Mill Park. Registration begins at 8 a.m.,
with the run at 9 a.m. rain or shine. Preregistration
ends April 1. For more information contact Heather
Daily-Johnson at 740-949-4222 or heather.daileyjohnson@southernlocal.net.

Immunization clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department will conduct an Immunization Clinic on Tuesday from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s
shot records. Children must be accompanied by a
parent/legal guardian. A $30 donation is appreciated for immunization administration; however, no
one will be denied services because of an inability
to pay an administration fee for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please bring medical cards and/or
commercial insurance cards, if applicable. Those
who are insured via commercial insurance are
responsible for any balance their commercial insurance does not cover for vaccinations. Pneumonia
vaccines are also available as well as ﬂu shots. Call
for eligibility determination and availability or visit
our website at www.meigs-health.com to see a list
of accepted commercial insurances and Medicaid
for adults.

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, April 18
POMEROY — Maundy Thursday service will be held at St. Paul
Lutheran Church in Pomeroy at 7
p.m. We will celebrate with Holy
Communion. As always the public
is invited.
POMEROY — Maundy Thursday service will be held at Trinity
Congregational Church in Pomeroy at 7 p.m. The public is invited.

Friday, April 19
POMEROY — The PHS Class
of 1959 will be having their 3rd
Friday Lunch at Fox Pizza at
noon. Come join us.
POMEROY — Cookbook Club,
11 a.m., Pomeroy Library. Share
dishes prepared with the theme
“Oodles of Noodles” in mind.
POMEROY — Good Friday
service will be held at St. Paul
Lutheran Church at 7 p.m. The
public is invited to attend.
SUTTON TWP. — A special
meeting of the Board of Trustees
of Sutton Township will be held
at 3:30 p.m. in the Racine Village
Hall Council Chambers.
LONG BOTTOM — Good
Friday services at Long Bottom
United Methodist Church at 7
p.m. Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT — There will
be a Community Good Friday
Service at Ash Street Church, 398
Ash Street, Middleport, Ohio, at
7 p.m. Ann Moody, Pastor of the
Middleport Presbyterian Church,
will be the speaker.

Sunday, April 21

POMEROY — Trinity Congregational Church will host “The
Son Has Risen” service at 8:30
a.m. at the Pomeroy Amphitheater, with a pastry breakfast to
follow at the church. The Easter
service at the church will begin
at 10:25 a.m.
MIDDLEPORT —There will
be a Sunrise Service at Heath
United Methodist Church in
Middleport, Ohio, at 7 a.m.
There will be breakfast after the
service.

Monday, April 22
POMEROY — Book Club
Meeting, 6 p.m., Pomeroy
Library. Read and discuss “If the
Creek Don’t Rise” by Leah Weiss.
Refreshments are served.

Tuesday, April 23
POMEROY — Acoustic Night,
6 p.m., Pomeroy Library. Join
the group for an informal jam
session. Singers and listeners are
welcome.
MIDDLEPORT — Riverbend
Arts Council, 290 N. 2nd Ave.,
Middleport, Ohio, will present “Poets Night Out” from 7-9
p.m. in honor of National Poetry
Month. Read your own original
poem or your favorite poem or
come and listen to poetry. Light
refreshments will be served.
Donations welcome. Open to the
public.

Thursday, April 25
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Retired Teachers group
will meet at noon at Wild Horse
Cafe for lunch and a program.
Speaking on history tales of
Meigs County in connection with
the Bicentennial will be local
historian and former teacher
Mike Gerlach. Guests are always
welcome to attend. Members are
asked to remember donations
toward the Habitat for Humanity
house to be built in Middleport.
CHESTER — The weekly
Meigs County Commissioner

meeting will be held at 11 a.m. at
the Chester Courthouse.

Saturday, April 27
ROCKSPRINGS — Virginia
Wears will be celebrating her
100th birthday from 2-4 p.m. at
American Legion Post 39 (old
Salisbury School). No gifts please,
cards appreciated.
MIDDLEPORT — Middleport
Fire Department will hold a ﬁsh
fry at ﬁre station with serving to
begin at 11 a.m.

Sunday, April 28
POMEROY — A 100th birthday party for Elizabeth Mack
Harold Leighton will be held
following the second worship service (10:30 a.m.) at the Bradford
Church of Christ. Refreshments
will be served at approximately
noon. Come celebrate Mack
Leighton’s 1ooth birthday.

Monday, April 29
MIDDLEPORT — The Veterans Service Commission will meet
at 9 a.m. in their ofﬁce located at
97 North Second Avenue, Suite 2,
in Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT — Riverbend
Arts Council is offering Children’s
Paint Class from 4-5:30 p.m. $10
each covers all materials plus
snack. Children learn technique,
colors, equipment, famous painters, and more. RSVP 740-4164015.
RACINE — An American Red
Cross Blood Drive will be held
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Southern
High School. The blood drive is
sponsored by the National Honor
Society.

Wednesday, April 17, 2019 3

Name released
in death
investigation
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — The name of a man found dead
Monday at a home in the 700-block of Third Avenue
in Gallipolis was released by the Gallipolis Police
Department Tuesday.
Tyrone Q. Powell, Jr., 33, of Gallipolis was discovered dead at the residence and his body has been sent
to the Montgomery County Coroner’s Ofﬁce for an
autopsy as the investigation into the circumstances
surrounding his death continue.
GPD encourages anyone with information surrounding the event to call 740-446-1313 or the department’s tip line at 740-446-6020.

IN BRIEF

Abortion
‘reversal’ OK’d

Kingsland police ofﬁcer
after the shooting. Presley is scheduled to stand
trial Sept. 30 on charges
of voluntary manslaughOKLAHOMA CITY
ter and violating his oath
(AP) — Doctors who
perform medication abor- as an ofﬁcer.
The ex-ofﬁcer is white
tions could face felony
charges for not informing and the man he shot was
women about the possibil- black.
ity of reversing the process under a bill that is
heading to the Oklahoma
governor’s desk.
The state House voted
74-24 on Tuesday for the
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
bill . It requires abortion
— Bill Cosby’s insurance
providers to tell women
company has settled
who are taking medicaanother lawsuit ﬁled by
tion to terminate their
a female accuser a week
pregnancies that the pro- before the imprisoned
cess can be reversed after comedian was set to give
they take the ﬁrst of two
a deposition in the case,
pills.
prompting Cosby to call
Several Democrats
the insurer “complicit” in
argued the bill would
a scheme to destroy him.
force doctors to provide
Former model Chloe
scientiﬁcally dubious
Goins had accused Cosby
information to their
of drugging and molestpatients.
ing her at a party at the
The bill now heads to
Playboy Mansion in Los
the state’s new RepubliAngeles in 2008, when
can Gov. Kevin Stitt, who she was about 18.
previously has said he’d
Cosby in a statement
sign any anti-abortion bill Tuesday accused Amerisent to his desk.
can International Group
Inc. of “egregious behavior” in settling what he
called a “frivolous” suit,
and said he could prove
he was in New York at the
SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) time. Goins’ lawsuit was
ﬁled in state court in Los
— A former Georgia
Angeles.
police ofﬁcer charged
with manslaughter in the
fatal shooting of a ﬂeeing
man now faces a lawsuit
seeking monetary damages for wrongful death.
The suit ﬁled MonCAPE CANAVERAL,
day in coastal Camden
Fla. (AP) — Former
County says 33-year-old
astronaut Owen Garriott,
Tony Green was killed
who ﬂew on America’s
“without justiﬁcation
ﬁrst space station, Skylab,
or excuse” when he was
and whose son followed
shot multiple times June
him into orbit, has died at
20 even though he was
age 88.
“unarmed and did not
He died Monday at
pose an imminent threat.” his home in Huntsville,
Atlanta attorney Reginald Alabama, according to
Greene sued on behalf of NASA.
Green’s minor daughter,
“Dad had a great 88
identiﬁed in the lawsuit
orbits around the sun!”
only by the initials T.G.
tweeted son Richard, a
The suit seeks unspeci- computer game developer
ﬁed monetary damages
who paid the Russians
from the city of Kingsland $30 million for a ride to
and from Zechariah Prethe International Space
sley, who was ﬁred as a
Station in 2008.

Cosby insurer
settles suit

Officer sued in
fatal shooting

Ex-astronaut
Garriott dies

HOPE BAPTIST CHURCH
"HOPE BUILDS HOPE"
We invite you to our
Easter Services
Good Friday Service:
April 19 @ 3pm
Easter Egg Hunt
Saturday-April 20 @ 3 pm
Easter Sunday with our
Cantata Presentation
April 21 @ 11am

May 2-4
POMEROY — Friends of the
Library Book Sale: May 2, 9 a.m.6 p.m.; May 3, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; May
4, 9 a.m.- 1 p.m. Items are not
pre-priced; donations are accepted
for all material. New books available each day.

570 Grant Street
Middleport, Ohio
Pastor Ron Branch
1-304-593-1149
OH-70119874

�Opinion
4 Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Go out and
get your
daily paper
On each corner. Yep, on each corner of the
city, a newspaper boy was hawking papers
or there was a newspaper stand. I know, I’m
showing my age. There were also
shoeshine boys, buses on electric
cables, policemen walking a beat
and people wearing their Sunday
best. Dayton was a different place
back then. Most of all, I remember
the newspaper boys and their cry,
“Get your paper! Get your daily
Pamela
paper!”
L. Drake
The newspaper has always been
Contributing an important part of our society.
columnist
Besides the radio, it was the only
source of news. Local news was
only carried in the paper (and on a party line). I
remember a newspaper was always lying around
at our house and in those of my grandparents
as well. Dad always headed to the mailbox ﬁrst
thing in the morning. He and Mom read the
paper from page to page, column to column not
missing a thing.
We took the Greenville Advocate, the Arcanum Times and the Dayton Journal Herald.
Our household was up to date on all the news.
We grew up hearing Mom and Dad talk about
the news. And, it is where I learned to read the
paper and to take an interest in local, regional
and national news. I read the comics: Orphan
Annie, Blondie, Dick Tracy, Lone Ranger,
Nancy, Pogo, Li’l Abner. My favorite was Brenda Star. I followed it to ﬁnd out who sent the
black orchid. Could it be Basil St. John? Every
week I waited to see if the identity would be
revealed. Well, yes, that was the drama in my
life when I was little. Alley Oop came in for the
comedy. What fun! Yes, I grew up on the comics.
Every Saturday it was a battle to see who would
get the color comics ﬁrst.
When my kids were small, I was clipping
newspapers for major events for their scrapbooks. In looking back through family papers,
I ﬁnd obits tucked into the Bibles. News items
important at the time were saved, recipes ﬁled
away and newspaper birth announcements
tucked into birth announcements sent to our
home. Each part of the paper was important.
Things are changing with online news not to
mention all the other sources of news, i.e., TV,
computer and phone. (Oops, I guess I just mentioned them.) My oldest granddaughter Sydney
and I loved to watch the Today Show together.
Even apart, we both still watch it. Our favorite
part is the news. I learned about our political
world through the news and more about which
party I wanted to belong to. I watched our government in action through the newspaper then
progressively through other media. But nothing
has replaced the rustle of the newspaper and the
familiar warmth of reading the paper as I have
all my life.
Newspapers give us a broadened view of the
world. We can hold it in our hands and reread
it. We hold our newspapers to a high standard
expecting unbiased views and truthfulness. We
learn about our neighbors and ﬁnd out what
events are happening in our areas. We are
drawn closer through those paper pages.
In preparing to go home, I will go through
the old picture trunk and look for old news clippings. I will bring home pieces of the past. I
can’t do that on the TV, my phone or computer.
Sometimes progress isn’t nearly as good as the
past.
Get your paper! Get your daily paper!
Pamela Loxley Drake is a former resident of Darke County, Ohio and
is the author of Neff Road and A Grandparent Voice blog. She can
be reached at pamldrake@gmail.com. Viewpoints expressed in the
article are the work of the author.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Actor David Bradley is 77. Composermusician Jan Hammer (yahn HAH’-mur) is 71.
Actress Olivia Hussey is 68. Actor Clarke Peters
is 67. Rapper Afrika Bambaataa is 62. Actor
Sean Bean is 60. Former NFL quarterback
Boomer Esiason (eh-SY’-uh-suhn) is 58. Actor
Joel Murray is 57. Rock singer Maynard James
Keenan is 55. Actress Lela Rochon (LEE’-lah
rohn-SHAHN’) is 55. Actor William Mapother
is 54. Actress Leslie Bega is 52. Actor Henry
Ian Cusick is 52. Actress Kimberly Elise is
52. Singer Liz Phair is 52. Director/producer
Adam McKay is 51. Rapper-actor Redman is 49.
Actress Jennifer Garner is 47. Country musician
Craig Anderson is 46. Singer Victoria Adams
Beckham is 45. Actress-singer Lindsay Korman
is 41. Actor Tate Ellington is 40. Actor Nicholas
D’Agosto is 39. Actor Charlie Hofheimer is 38.
Actress Rooney Mara is 34. Actress Jacqueline
MacInnes Wood is 32. Actor Paulie Litt is 24.
Actress Dee Dee Davis is 23.

THEIR VIEW

… And all that jazz
I have always taken
pride in the fact that I
appreciate many types of
music. While my musical
preference has always
rested in the country
ﬁeld, I also love the fun
oldies like The Beatles,
Herman’s Hermits, Jay
and the Americans, the
Motown artists, doowoppers, Neil Sedaka
and others within those
genres.
Back in the 90s, I
worked for a public radio
station owned by Miami
University (Ohio), and
discovered a deep appreciation for big band and
jazz. It was from that
experience that I ﬁrst
became acquainted with
the broad deﬁnition of
the term “jazz.” The
musical genre’s origins
are rooted in the late 19th
and early 20th century
in the African-American
communities of New
Orleans, where it sprung
forth from blues and ragtime.
When charged with
the task of programming a musical format
of big band and jazz, I
discovered that often
both genres were inter-

say that after havtwined as much of
ing experienced
the big band tunes
the Branford
from Glenn Miller,
Marsalis Quartet,
Tommy Dorsey and
I admire their
others are also conartistry, their presidered jazz, as well
cision and their
as the Louis Armmastery of the art.
strongs and more
Herb
Being a musician,
improvisational art- Day
ists and styles.
Contributing I know that if I
played 23 hours
For those readcolumnist
out of a 24 hour
ers I am about to
day, I could never
lose in this bit of
musical dribble, hold on, perform my art with the
magniﬁcence of Marsalis.
because there is a point
However, we learned a
to all of this.
very valuable lesson from
Last week was my
attending this concert.
wife’s birthday, and she
That lesson is, while one
perhaps has an even
greater, broader apprecia- should always explore
new things and push the
tion of music than I do,
boundaries of comfort
so I wanted to surprise
here with a jazz concert. and taste, there are limIn doing so, I discovered its – and we found ours.
When I realized during
that Branford Marsalis
the encore that Patty was
and his quartet was
appearing in Cincinnati, heading for the exit, I
knew that at least dinner
so I captured tickets
was a hit (I think).
right away.
The walk to the parkI didn’t know a lot
about Branford, but I was ing garage was rather
quiet, and the sound of
somewhat familiar with
laughter that broke out
his brother Wynton and
his music, and I thought when I asked, “Well,
what did you think?”
dinner in the city and
was rather telling. Oh,
a night of jazz would
certainly rank me among the laughter was not in
disrespect to the artists
the heroes in her world.
we had just spent the
In all fairness, let me

musical evening with,
but it was for our feeble
attempt at pushing our
cultural boundaries.
Again, trying new things
is good, but sometimes
you discover that, well,
you are who you are.
To be clear, the Marsalis Quartet was outstanding, but very improvisational. A style that is less
about melody, and more
about precision, and an
acquired taste. And while
they excelled at their art,
we only recognized one
tune, which I have not
been able to get out of
my head.
All is not lost though.
In making future concert choices I know that
almost anything inside
the outer improvisational
jazz boundaries will be
acceptable. I’m already
looking at how close to
home Alan Jackson or
Garth Brooks are going
to be next year around
this time.
Well, so much for culture and all that jazz!

Herb Day is a longtime local radio
personality and singer-musician.
You can email him at HEKAMedia@
yahoo.com and follow his work at
www.HerbDayVoices.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Wednesday,
April 17, the 107th day of
2019. There are 258 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On April 17, 1972, the
Boston Marathon allowed
women to compete
for the ﬁrst time; Nina
Kuscsik was the ﬁrst ofﬁcially recognized women’s
champion, with a time of
3:10:26.
On this date
In 1492, a contract
was signed by Christopher Columbus and a
representative of Spain’s
King Ferdinand and
Queen Isabella, giving
Columbus a commission
to seek a westward ocean
passage to Asia.
In 1521, Martin Luther
went before the Diet
of Worms (vohrms) to
face charges stemming
from his religious writ-

ings. (Luther was later
declared an outlaw by
Holy Roman Emperor
Charles V.)
In 1861, the Virginia
State Convention voted
to secede from the
Union.
In 1924, the motion
picture studio MetroGoldwyn-Mayer was
founded, the result of
a merger of Metro Pictures, Goldwyn Pictures
and the Louis B. Mayer
Co.
In 1961, some 1,500
CIA-trained Cuban exiles
launched the disastrous
Bay of Pigs invasion
of Cuba in an attempt
to topple Fidel Castro,
whose forces crushed the
incursion by the third
day.
In 1964, Geraldine
“Jerrie” Mock became
the ﬁrst woman to complete a solo airplane trip
around the world as she
returned to Columbus,
Ohio, after 29 1/2 days

in her Cessna 180. Ford
Motor Co. unveiled the
Mustang at the New York
World’s Fair. The ﬁrst
game was played at New
York’s Shea Stadium; the
Pittsburgh Pirates defeated the Mets, 4-3.
In 1969, a jury in Los
Angeles convicted Sirhan
Sirhan of assassinating
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
In 1970, Apollo 13
astronauts James A.
Lovell, Fred W. Haise
and Jack Swigert
splashed down safely
in the Paciﬁc, four days
after a ruptured oxygen
tank crippled their spacecraft while en route to
the moon.
In 1973, Federal
Express (later FedEx)
began operations as
14 planes carrying 186
packages took off from
Memphis International
Airport, bound for 25
U.S. cities.
In 1986, at London’s
Heathrow Airport, a

bomb was discovered in
the bag of Anne-Marie
Murphy, a pregnant
Irishwoman about to
board an El Al jetliner to
Israel; she’d been tricked
into carrying the bomb
by her Jordanian ﬁance,
Nezar Hindawi. The bodies of kidnapped American Peter Kilburn and
Britons Philip Padﬁeld
and Leigh Douglas were
found near Beirut; they
had been slain in apparent retaliation for the
U.S. raid on Libya.
In 1991, the Dow
Jones industrial average
closed above 3,000 for
the ﬁrst time, ending
the day at 3,004.46, up
17.58.
In 1993, a federal jury
in Los Angeles convicted
two former police ofﬁcers of violating the civil
rights of beaten motorist
Rodney King; two other
ofﬁcers were acquitted.
Turkish President Turgut
Ozal died at age 66.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, April 17, 2019 5

Macron wants Notre Dame rebuilt within 5 years
By Samuel Petrequin
and Thomas Adamson

France, and this happened during building works,” said inﬂuAssociated Press
ential former Culture Minister
Jack Lang.
News that the ﬁre was
PARIS — The inferno that
probably accidental has done
raged through Notre Dame
nothing to ease the national
Cathedral for more than 12
mourning for the symbol of
hours destroyed its spire and
national pride. Hundreds of
its roof but spared its twin
people gathered for a vigil
medieval bell towers, and a
frantic rescue effort saved the prayer across the Seine from
the cathedral, singing and
monument’s “most precious
listening to music by a string
treasures,” including the relic
quartet.
revered as Jesus’ Crown of
Interior Minister Christophe
Thorns, ofﬁcials said Tuesday.
French President Emmanuel Castaner said there were still
Macron pledged to rebuild the some risks to the structure and
beloved Roman Catholic archi- that it was “under permanent
tectural landmark, and wanted surveillance because it can still
to see it completed within ﬁve budge.”
A plan to safeguard the
years.
masterpieces and relics was
“We have so much to
quickly put into action after
rebuild,” Macron said in a
televised address to the nation. the ﬁre broke out.
The Crown of Thorns,
“We will rebuild Notre Dame
regarded as Notre Dame’s
Cathedral even more beautimost sacred relic, was among
fully. We can do it, and once
again, we will mobilize (to do the treasures quickly transported after the ﬁre broke out,
so).”
said Deputy Mayor Emmanuel
Authorities consider the
Gregoire. Brought to Paris
ﬁre an accident, possibly as a
by King Louis IX in the 13th
result of restoration work at
century, it is purported to have
the global architectural treabeen pressed onto Christ’s
sure that survived almost 900
head during the cruciﬁxion.
years of tumultuous French
Also saved was the tunic of St.
history but was devastated in
the blaze on the second day of Louis, a long, shirt-like garment from the 13th century,
Holy Week.
Paris prosecutor Remy Heitz said Culture Minister Franck
Riester.
said the inquiry into the ﬁre
The cathedral’s famous 18th
would be “long and complex.”
century organ that boasts more
Fifty investigators were workthan 8,000 pipes also survived.
ing on it and would interview
“The works of art, the
workers from ﬁve companies
most precious treasures were
hired for the renovations to
the cathedral’s roof, where the secured last night,” Riester
told reporters, thanking teams
ﬂames ﬁrst broke out.
from city hall, the culture
Heitz said an initial ﬁre
alert was sounded at 6:20 p.m. ministry, ﬁreﬁghters and the
Monday but no ﬁre was found. bishopric who worked to save
The second alert was sounded the items.
Some of the works were
at 6:43 p.m., and the blaze was
being transferred from City
discovered on the roof.
Hall to the Louvre, where they
Investigators have already
will be dehumidiﬁed, protected
questioned nearly 30 people,
and eventually restored. The
said a Paris judicial police
ofﬁcial, speaking on condition minister said the cathedral’s
of anonymity in order to com- greatest paintings would be
removed starting Friday. “We
ment on an ongoing probe.
assume they have not been
“Notre Dame has survived
damaged by the ﬁre but there
the revolutionary history of

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

55°

73°

75°

HEALTH TODAY
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. Tue.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.00
1.37
1.78
12.61
11.72

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:50 a.m.
8:07 p.m.
6:13 p.m.
6:06 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Last

Apr 19 Apr 26

New

First

May 4 May 11

SOLUNAR TABLE
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for ﬁsh and game.

Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.

Major
10:43a
11:30a
12:20p
12:47a
1:43a
2:41a
3:39a

Minor
4:30a
5:17a
6:07a
7:00a
7:56a
8:54a
9:52a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Lucasville
79/59

Very High

Major
11:09p
11:56p
---1:13p
2:09p
3:07p
4:06p

Minor
4:56p
5:43p
6:33p
7:26p
8:22p
9:20p
10:19p

WEATHER HISTORY
A severe squall line moved through
Indiana on April 17, 1963. Hail
reached 1.75 inches in diameter, and
two tornadoes destroyed 21 buildings, causing $650,000 damage in
Fort Wayne.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone
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. 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
12.27
22.28
23.96
12.91
13.18
26.19
12.14
27.61
34.85
12.51
26.00
34.50
24.40

Portsmouth
79/59

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.74
+4.22
+1.77
-0.09
+0.20
+0.64
-1.04
+2.06
+1.10
+0.60
+4.20
+0.20
+3.80

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

SUNDAY

54°
42°
Cloudy and cooler
with showers

Clouds and sun with a
few showers

80°
48°

Warmer with sunny
intervals

Warm; cloudy, then
clouds and sun

NATIONAL CITIES
Belpre
78/58

Athens
77/56

St. Marys
78/59

Parkersburg
78/56

Coolville
77/58

Elizabeth
79/57

Spencer
80/56

Buffalo
81/56
Milton
81/56

Ashland
80/58
Grayson
81/59

TUESDAY

77°
55°

Marietta
77/58

Murray City
76/57

Ironton
80/58

St. Albans
81/57

Huntington
81/57

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
60/51
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
66/49
0s
Los Angeles
-0s
74/56
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

67°
47°

Wilkesville
78/56
POMEROY
Jackson
79/55
78/57
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
81/57
79/57
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
75/59
GALLIPOLIS
81/57
81/56
80/56

South Shore Greenup
79/58
78/58

38

Logan
76/57

McArthur
77/55

Very High

Primary: oak/sycamore/others
Mold: 81

Cooler with rain and a
thunderstorm

Adelphi
76/58
Chillicothe
77/59

SATURDAY

66°
45°

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

Waverly
77/58

Pollen: 81

Low

MOON PHASES

Very warm with
clouds and sun

1

Primary: ascospores, unk.
Thu.
6:48 a.m.
8:08 p.m.
7:25 p.m.
6:40 a.m.

FRIDAY

84°
59°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

72°
33°
68°
45°
88° in 2002
25° in 2014

THURSDAY

Times of clouds and sun today. Partly cloudy
and mild tonight. High 81° / Low 57°

tor for Notre Dame.
“We have been able to salvage all the rest,” said Prades,
who watched the recovery
overnight. “All the 18th century steles, the pietas, frescoes,
chapels and the big organ are
ﬁne.”
The three large stained-glass
rose windows, among the most
famous parts of the cathedral,
were not destroyed, but might
have been damaged by the
heat and will be assessed by an
expert, he added.
“The task is — now the
risk of ﬁre has been put aside
— about the building, how
the structure will resist,” said
Junior Interior Minister Lau-

will eventually be damage from
the smoke,” he added.
The 3-meter-tall copper
statues that looked over Paris
from Notre Dame’s 96-meter
peak already had been
removed from the roof days
ago and sent to southwestern
France as part of a 6 millioneuro ($6.8 million) renovation
on the spire and its 250 tons
of lead.
Much was saved in the
interior too. The only major
work damaged inside was the
cathedral’s high altar, installed
in 1989 under Cardinal JeanMarie Lustiger. It was hit
when the spire collapsed, said
Laurent Prades, heritage direc-

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Dominique Bichon | AP

Flames and smoke rise as the spire of Notre Dame cathedral collapses in Paris
on Monday. French President Emmanuel Macron pledged to rebuild the beloved
Roman Catholic architectural landmark, and wants to see it completed within
five years.

rent Nunez.
UNESCO Director-General
Audrey Azoulay said work
must begin immediately to
protect the remaining structure.
The ﬁrst 24-48 hours were
crucial to protecting the stone
and wood structure from water
damage and assessing the next
steps, she told The Associated
Press, warning that parts of
the cathedral remain “extremely fragile,” notably hundreds
of tons of scaffolding around
the spire that collapsed. Notre
Dame is part of a UNESCO
heritage site and UNESCO has
offered its expertise.
Pope Francis offered his
prayers that Notre Dame, the
“architectural gem of a collective memory,” will once again
be a shrine to the Catholic
faith, a symbol of the French
nation and a spiritual and
architectural gift to humanity.
In a condolence note to
Paris Archbishop Michel
Aupetit, Francis said the ﬁre
was particularly devastating
given that it came during the
somber days leading up to Easter during which Christians
commemorate the death and
resurrection of Jesus.
Repairing the cathedral,
including the 800-year-old
wooden beams that made up
its roof, presents challenges.
The roof cannot be rebuilt
exactly as it was because “we
don’t, at the moment, have
trees on our territory of the
size that were cut in the 13th
century,” said Bertrand de
Feydeau, vice president of
preservation group Fondation
du Patrimoine, adding the roof
restoration work would have to
use new technology.
Also of concern, Feydeau
said, is the organ, “a very fragile instrument, especially its
pipes.”
“It has not burnt, but no one
can tell whether it has been
damaged by water. Nobody
knows if it is a functioning state or will need to be
restored,” he told AP.

Clendenin
82/57
Charleston
81/57

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
57/33
Montreal
55/36

Billings
59/44

Minneapolis
52/39

Toronto
53/42
Detroit
59/49

Chicago
68/56

Denver
57/36

New York
63/50
Washington
70/55

Kansas City
77/46

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
59/42/t
43/35/c
81/63/s
55/48/c
66/51/c
59/44/pc
63/43/pc
58/43/s
81/57/pc
81/60/s
54/34/c
68/56/c
76/59/pc
66/61/c
76/59/pc
77/58/t
57/36/c
74/44/r
59/49/r
86/71/s
78/67/c
75/59/pc
77/46/t
79/61/s
74/61/c
74/56/pc
79/62/pc
82/72/pc
52/39/r
78/61/pc
81/69/pc
63/50/pc
73/51/t
85/64/s
63/50/pc
80/61/s
73/57/c
58/35/pc
80/59/s
80/55/pc
79/62/pc
57/41/pc
66/49/s
60/51/c
70/55/c

Hi/Lo/W
69/44/s
43/34/r
79/61/pc
61/55/pc
78/62/pc
70/50/pc
71/52/pc
54/50/r
87/62/pc
81/65/pc
59/38/pc
59/42/r
73/45/pc
77/51/pc
78/50/pc
70/51/pc
63/40/pc
57/39/c
72/43/t
86/71/pc
77/55/t
66/42/t
60/41/c
84/65/s
70/45/t
81/59/s
73/49/t
86/77/pc
54/36/c
76/48/t
78/57/t
59/57/r
67/46/pc
91/72/pc
74/62/pc
90/65/s
80/61/pc
47/43/c
80/65/pc
82/64/pc
63/44/t
64/47/s
72/51/s
61/52/r
80/67/pc

EXTREMES TUESDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
81/63

El Paso
71/52

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

88° in Marathon, FL
14° in Cotton, MN

Global
Chihuahua
81/48

High
Low

Houston
78/67
Monterrey
99/70

Miami
82/72

113° in Matam, Senegal
-39° in Grise Fiord, Canada

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

OH-70107872

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�Sports
6 Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Wahama RedStorm sweeps Shawnee State
sweeps
Lancers
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

STEWART, Ohio — No luck needed for No. 7.
The Wahama baseball team picked up its seventh consecutive victory on Monday in Athens
County, as the White Falcons ﬁnished off the
season sweep of Federal Hocking with an 8-3
triumph in Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division play.
The White Falcons (15-3, 9-2 TVC Hocking)
— who also defeated FHHS by a 7-0 count on
March 29 in Mason — broke the scoreless tie
with one out in the top of the ﬁrst inning on
Monday, as Tanner Smith singled home Jonathan Frye. Smith, Antonio Serevicz and and
Tyler Bumgarner each scored later in the frame,
as Wahama went ahead 4-0.
The WHS lead grew to 6-0 with two more
RBIs by Smith, as he doubled home Frye in the
second and then brought David Hendrick home
on a sac-ﬂy in the fourth.
The Lancers ended the shut out in the bottom
of the fourth, but Wahama got the run back with
an RBI single by Jacob Fisher in the top of the
ﬁfth.
Federal Hocking pushed two runs across in
the bottom of the ﬁfth, but didn’t score again.
The White Falcons capped off the 8-3 win with
an RBI single by Ethyn Barnitz in the top of the
sixth.
Hendrick was the winning pitcher of record
in ﬁve innings for the White Falcons, allowing three runs, one earned, on six hits. Tyler
Bumgarner pitched the ﬁnal two frames without
surrendering a run or a hit, walking one batter.
Hendrick had four strikeouts in the win, while
Bumgarner struck out one.
Jackson took the loss in one inning for the
Lancers, allowing four earned runs on four
hits and two walks. Bond tossed three innings,
surrendering two earned runs on four hits
and a walk, Tate threw 1.2 frames, allowing
two earned runs on ﬁve hits and a walk, while
Carpenter pitched 1.1 perfect innings of relief.
Bond struck out two batters, while Tate and
Jackson earned a strikeout apiece.
Smith paced the WHS offense, going 3-for-4
with a double, two runs scored and three runs
batted in. Frye was 2-for-4 with two runs in
the win, Serevicz was 2-for-5 with a run, while
Fisher was 2-for-4 with two RBIs.
Hendrick singled once and scored once in
the win, Barnitz singled once and drove in a
run, while Gabe Roush and Cooper Peters had
a single apiece. Tyler Bumgarner and Brady
Bumgarner both contributed a urn to the winning cause.
Miller led the Lancers at the plate, going
3-for-3 with a double and two RBIs. Tate singled
once and scored once in the setback, while
Snedden had a hit and an RBI.
Wahama had three errors and stranded 11
runners in the win, while Federal Hocking committed two errors and left six runners on base.
Next for the White Falcons, South Gallia is
set to visit Claﬂin Stadium on Wednesday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, April 17
Baseball
South Gallia at Wahama, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Meigs,
5 p.m.
Ironton at Gallia
Academy, 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking at
Southern, 5 p.m.
Softball
River Valley at Meigs,
5 p.m.
Ironton at Gallia
Academy, 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking at
Southern, 5 p.m.
Tennis
Point Pleasant at
Huntington St. Joe,
4:30
Thursday, April 18
Baseball
Eastern at Wahama,
5 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 5 p.m.

Gallia Academy at
Coal Grove, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Miami
Trace, 5 p.m.
Wayne at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Softball
Point Pleasant at
Meigs, 5 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at
Coal Grove, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Wahama,
5 p.m.
Track and Field
Wahama at Erickson
INV, 4:30
SG, GA at Fairland
INV, 4:30
Point Pleasant at
Doddridge Co., 4:30
Tennis
Winﬁeld at Point
Pleasant, 4:30
Gallia Academy at
Ironton, 4:30

Courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Taylor Webb puts on the brakes after
rounding second base in Monday’s game one win
over Shawnee State University at Rio Softball
Park. Webb, a freshman from Willow Wood, Ohio,
had four hits and five runs batted in as the
RedStorm swept the Bears by scores of 6-2 and
10-2 in five innings.

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Taylor Webb fueled the University
of Rio Grande’s offensive attack,
while the duo of Kelsey Conkey
and Raelynn Hastings authored
strong pitching performances to
lead the RedStorm in a sweep of
rival Shawnee State University,
Monday afternoon, in nonconference softball action at Rio
Softball Park.
Rio Grande posted a 6-2 win
in the opening game and recorded a 10-2 mercy rule-shortened
victory in ﬁve innings, improving its overall record to 27-11 in
the process.
Shawnee State ﬁnished the
day at 18-15.
Webb, a freshman from Willow Wood, Ohio, homered - the
ﬁrst of her collegiate career

- doubled and drove in a pair
of runs in the opener, while
collecting two more hits and
driving home three more runs
- all on a double which capped
an eight-run, game-ending ﬁfth
inning uprising.
Conkey, a senior from Minford, Ohio, allowed seven hits
and fanned three in the opener,
collecting her 11th win in 15
decisions.
Hastings, a sophomore
from Commercial Point, Ohio,
allowed ﬁve hits and only one
earned run, while striking out
six over ﬁve innings in the
game two triumph.
Rio Grande scored three
times in the ﬁrst inning and
twice in the second inning
of the opener and was never
headed.

See REDSTORM | 7

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern junior Michael Letson runs the third leg of the 4x200m relay at the River Valley Open on April 2 in Bidwell, Ohio.

EHS girls 5th, boys 8th at Invite
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

PARKERSBURG,
W.Va. — The Eastern
track and ﬁeld team
competed in the Russ
Parsons Invitational
on Saturday in Wood
County, with the Lady
Eagles placing ﬁfth, and
the EHS boys coming in
eighth.
Buchtel won the girls
team title with a score
of 136, 28 ahead of
runner-up Martinsburg.
University was third
at 92, followed by host
Parkersburg at 80. The
Lady Eagles’ ﬁfth place
total of 67 was 36 ahead
of Caldwell and Athens
in a tie for sixth.
The Lady Eagles’ lone
championship came
from Layna Catlett, who
had a winning distance

of 107-9 in the discus
throw. Catlett also came
up with a fourth place
mark in the shot put
at 31-5, while Caterina
Miecchi was second in
both the the discus and
shot put with respective
distances of 104-4 and
32-2.
The EHS girls had a
pair of third place ﬁnishes in individual events,
with Rhiannon Morris
running the 3200m in
12:44.15, and Katlin Fick
clearing 7-00 in the pole
vault.
Whitney Durst earned
fourth in the 3200m run
at 13:55.11 for the Lady
Eagles, with Alisa Ord
took sixth in the 100m
hurdles at 18.00, and
sixth in the long jump
with a leap of 13-7.
EHS had two girls
relay teams take third,

with the squad of Morris,
Ally Durst, Ashton Guthrie and Whitney Durst
running the 4x800m in
11:15.24, and the quartet
of Ord, Miecchi, Jaymie
Basham and Sydney
Sanders running the
4x100m in 55.94.
The team of Ord, Basham, Guthrie and Brielle
Newland claimed fourth
in the 4x400m with a
time of 4:47.24, while
the team of Basham,
Newland, Sanders and
Guthrie was ﬁfth in the
4x200m at 2:02.75.
Parkersburg was boys’
champion with a score
of 139, 16 ahead of Martinsburg in second. Buchtel was third with a 94,
followed by University at
52, Athens at 50, Ravenswood at 47 and Caldwell
at 20. The Eagles’ total
of 17 was 11 ahead of

Parkersburg Catholic in
ninth.
The Eagles’ lone champion was Noah Browning, who set a pace of
51.03 in the 400m dash.
The EHS boys’ only
other individual placer
was Mason Dishong,
who was sixth in the discus throw at 125-00.
Eastern’s relay team
of Nick Browning, Noah
Browning, Michael
Letson and Jayden
Evans was fourth in
the 4x400m at 3:48.07,
while the team of Letson,
Evans, Noah Browning
and Colton Combs was
ﬁfth in the 4x100m with
a time of 48.29.
Visit www.runwv.com
for complete results of the
2019 Russ Parsons Invitational.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Lady Falcons flatten Federal Hocking, 24-5
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

STEWART, Ohio —
Score early, score often.
The Wahama softball
team crossed home plate
11 times in the ﬁrst
inning alone on Monday
in Athens County, as the
Lady Falcons rolled to
a 24-5 victory over TriValley Conference Hocking Division host Federal
Hocking.
Wahama (18-1, 12-0)
— winner of 14 in a row

— combined six hits and
six walks in the top of the
ﬁrst inning, which was
highlighted and capped
off by a three-run home
run from Tanner King.
Federal Hocking got
two runs back, scoring
once in the ﬁrst and once
in the second, but the
Lady Falcons plated ﬁve
runs on ﬁve hits and an
error in the top of the
third.
The WHS lead was
at 18-2 after a two-run
top of the fourth, but

the Lady Lancers scored
three times in the bottom
of the frame.
Wahama ﬁnished off
the 24-5 victory with six
runs on ﬁve hits in the
top of the ﬁfth, with King
blasting another threerun home run.
Hannah Billups was the
winning pitcher of record
in three innings for the
Lady Falcons, allowing three earned runs
on three hits and three
walks, while striking
out three. Emma Gibbs

struck out four in two
innings of work, surrendering two earned runs
on two hits and a walk.
Mayle took the pitching
loss in .2 innings for the
Lady Lancers, allowing
nine earned runs on three
hits and six walks. Wilkes
ﬁnished the game, allowing 15 runs, 12 earned,
on 15 hits and two walks,
while striking out ﬁve.
King led the WHS
offense, going 5-for-5
See FALCONS | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Blue Angels double up Fairland

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Cliffside Senior Golf
League Opening Day

By Bryan Walters

CENTENARY, Ohio
— From double down to
a double up.
The Gallia Academy
softball team scored 11
of the ﬁnal 12 runs of
regulation, turning a
6-3 deﬁcit into a commanding 14-7 victory
over visiting Fairland
on Monday night in an
Ohio Valley Conference
matchup at the Eastman
Athletic Complex in Gallia County.
The host Blue Angels
(4-7, 4-1 OVC) built a
quick 1-0 lead in the
bottom of the ﬁrst as
Alex Barnes scored on a
sacriﬁce ﬂy off the bat of
Malerie Stanley, but the
Lady Dragons countered
with two runs in the top
of the third as Judge
delivered a one-out
single that allowed both
Hoffman and Clark to
score for a 2-1 edge.
Kyla Miller received a
leadoff walk to start the
bottom of the third, then
Preslee Reed entered in
as a courtesy runner for
Miller. A pair of bunt
singles loaded the bases
with nobody out, then
Reed scored on a wild
pitch that tied the game
at two after three full
frames.
The Green and White,
however, got RBI singles
from Hoffman and Judge

RedStorm standout named
RSC Player of the Week
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio — University of Rio
Grande catcher Dylan Shockley collected 10 hits in
ﬁve games last week to earn River States Conference Baseball Player of the Week for April 8-14.
Shockley, a junior from Minford, Ohio, was
10-for-19 on the week to lead the RedStorm to a 4-1
record in ﬁve games. He hit safely in every game,
tallied three multi-hit games and also tripled, homered, drove in four runs and walked three times.
A big game for Shockley was going 4-for-5 with
a home run and three RBI in the series opener
against Ohio Christian, a 14-3 win. He had eight
hits in the series sweep, including a 2-for-4 showing
with a triple in the ﬁnale.
Shockley’s week also featured going a combined
2-for-5 with two runs and an RBI in a doubleheader
split at Campbellsville (Ky.).
Rio Grande is 30-15 overall and 14-7 inside the
RSC and will be at No. 21 Georgetown (Ky.) on
April 16.

By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

KOKOMO, Ind. —
The University of Rio
Grande women’s golf
team posted a sixthplace ﬁnish in the Indiana University Kokomo
Cougar Classic, Monday
afternoon, at the Kokomo Country Club.
The tournament was
shortened to just one
round after Sunday’s
scheduled play was

Freshman Kenzie Cremeens (Ironton, OH) went
3-for-3 and hit her team-best 11th home run in the
win, while Conkey went 2-for-3 with a double and a
run batted in.
Sophomore Mary Pica (Minford, OH) also had a
double and an RBI in the winning effort.
Haley Rawlins went 2-for-3 and drove in a run for
Shawnee State, while Stacy Trenholm also had a pair
of hits and Gracie Keplinger had an RBI double.
Marisa Brown added a double of her own in a losing cause for the Bears.
Paige Oldham started and took the loss for SSU.
Game two was a 2-2 deadlock until Rio Grande
exploded for eight runs in the ﬁfth to invoke the
mercy rule and secure the sweep of the twin bill.
Senior Carly Skeese (Newark, OH) homered and
clubbed a three-run double in the victory, while sophomore Aubrey Azbill (Miamisburg, OH) went 3-for-3
and drove in a run.
Conkey again was 2-for-3 with a double and a run
batted in, while Pica was 2-for-2 and Cremeens drove
in a run.
Ashtyn Saunders had two hits, including a double,
and drove in a run for Shawnee State, while Tori Bevington doubled twice and Brown had a double of her
own in a losing effort.
McKenzie Whittaker started and went the distance
in the loss for the Bears.
Rio Grande is scheduled to return to action on
Wednesday afternoon when it travels to Toledo, Ohio
to face Lourdes University.
First pitch for game one is set for 3 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the University of Rio
Grande.

with one away in the
fourth, then Clark scored
on a two-base error
that gave the guests 5-2
advantage.
Bailey Meadows
scored on a wild pitch in
the fourth and trimmed
the deﬁcit down to 5-3,
but the Lady Dragons
answered in the top
of the ﬁfth as Carroll
scored on a ﬁelder’s
choice while extending
the lead back out to
three runs.
GAHS made its ﬁrst
big push in the home half
of the ﬁfth after sending
nine batters to the plate,
which resulted in ﬁve
runs on ﬁve hits and an
error while reclaiming
the lead at 8-5.
After Stanley and
Meadows produced RBI
singles that cut the deﬁcit down to 6-5, Abby
Hammons delivered a
three-RBI single to left

that plated Bailie Young,
Meadows and Reed with
the tying and eventual
go-ahead runs.
Bowman led off the
top of the sixth with a
solo homer to center,
but the guests were ultimately never closer the
rest of the way.
Gallia Academy sent
another 10 batters to the
plate in its half of the
sixth, which led to six
runs on four hits, a walk
and two FHS errors. All
six runs also crossed
home plate with two
away in the frame.
The Blue Angels outhit the guests by a 12-10
overall margin and both
teams committed four
errors apiece. The Lady
Dragons stranded 11
runners on base, while
the Blue and White left
only ﬁve on the bags.
Hunter Copley was
the winning pitcher of

wiped out by inclement
weather.
Rio Grande ﬁnished
with a team score of
90-over par 382, taking
sixth place in the seventeam ﬁeld.
Indiana University East won the team
crown with a 39-over
round of 331, while
Grace (Ind.) College was
second at 338 and Purdue University-Northwest was third at 346.
Individually, Rio was

led by sophomore Rafaela Gioffre (Huron, OH),
who was part of a threeway tie for ﬁfth place
with a 10-over par round
of 83.
Among the others representing the RedStorm
were freshman Abby
Eichmiller (Vincent,
OH), who placed 29th
with a 22-over par 95;
freshman Hunter Rockhold (Clinton, OH), who
carded a 100; freshman
Elizabeth Leach (Water-

WEDNESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3
4
6

6

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)

13 (WOWK)
CABLE

6:30

PM

WSAZ News
(WSAZ)
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WTAP News
(WTAP)
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ABC 6 News
(WSYX)
at 6pm (N)
Arthur

12 (WVPB)

From page 6

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy junior Bailey Meadows (6) receives a throw at
third base in time for a force out during the seventh inning
of Monday night’s OVC softball contest against Fairland in
Centenary, Ohio.

Rio women place 6th in Cougar Classic

Falcons

RedStorm

record after allowing ﬁve
earned runs, 10 hits and
three walks over seven
innings while striking
out nine. Hoffman took
the loss after surrendering six earned runs, 13
hits and three walks over
six frames while fanning
six.
Meadows led the hosts
with three hits and three
runs scored, followed
by Barnes, Stanley,
Copley and Hammons
with two safeties apiece.
Hammons drove in a
team-high four RBIs and
Meadows also knocked
in three RBIs for the victors.
Hoffman, Bowman,
Judge and Blake paced
FHS with two hits
apiece, with Carroll and
Boling also providing
a safety each. Judge
knocked in three runs
and Hoffman also drove
in a pair of RBIs.
This contest was
originally scheduled to
be played at Proctorville,
but the game was moved
to GAHS due to the wet
conditions of the Fairland ﬁelds.
Gallia Academy returns to action
Wednesday when it
hosts Ironton in an OVC
contest at 5 p.m. The
Blue Angels will also
make up their rain-out
date with Coal Grove on
Thursday in Lawrence
County.

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Cliffside Men’s Senior
Golf League opens its 2019 season on Tuesday, April
30, at Cliffside Golf Course. Registration will begin
weekly at 8:15 a.m. with a shotgun start at 9 a.m.
There is a $5 fee for every competitor during each
week of play.
Players will be grouped in two or more ﬂights,
depending on the number of players for each week’s
play — with weekly pairing determined by a blind
draw.
The top three players from each ﬂight will receive
weekly prize money and each player will earn points
towards the overall league championship. Each player
uses their own ball and has to play in at least 10 of
the 19 weeks of competition to be eligible for end of
season prize money.
For more information, contact the Cliffside Golf
Course at 740-446-4653.

Miller added a single,
Billups chipped in with
a run and an RBI, while
Emily VanMatre came
From page 6
up with a run.
Gould led the hosts,
with two home runs,
going 2-for-3 with a doutwo doubles, four runs
ble and two runs scored.
scored and eight runs
Wilkes singled once and
batted in.
drove in two runs, while
Lauren Noble was
Starr had a single, a
3-for-3 with two runs
run and an RBI for the
and three RBIs for the
Maroon and Gold.
Lady Falcons, Gibbs
Federal Hocking was
was 2-for-2 with three
runs and one RBI, while responsible for both of
the game’s errors, while
Maddy VanMatre went
leaving four runners
2-for-3 with two runs
on base, one more than
and two RBIs.
Hannah Rose doubled Wahama.
WHS also defeated
once, scored twice and
drove in two runs for the FHHS on March 29
in Hartford by a 10-2
victors, Bailee Bumgarcount.
ner singled once and
After hosting Williamscored a game-best four
runs, while Victoria Van- stown in non-conference
Matre and Emma Fisher play on Tuesday, Wahama will get back to work
both singled once and
scored twice, with Fish- in the TVC Hocking
at home on Thursday
er earning two RBIs.
against Eastern.
Adrionna Bennett
contributed a single, a
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740run and an RBI to the
446-2342, ext. 2100.
winning cause, Deborah

Wednesday, April 17, 2019 7

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17
7

PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune (N) (N)
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune (N) (N)
Ent. Tonight Access
(N)
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
News at 6
ABC World Judge Judy Ent. Tonight
(N)
News (N)
(N)
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
(N)
Fortune (N)
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
Daily Mail
TV
News (N)
Theory
Theory
BBC World Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inNews:
Business
depth analysis of current
America
Report (N)
events. (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
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7:00 p.m. (N) Edition

6

NBC Nightly
News (N)
NBC Nightly
News (N)
ABC World
News (N)
Newswatch

PM

6:30

ford, OH), who tied for
34th at 104; and freshman Erin Fridley (Delaware, OH), who placed
37th with a 38-over
round of 111.
IU East’s Breanna
Nowak took medalist
honors by shooting a
1-over par 74.
Rio Grande will return
to action April 29-30
when it completes its season at the River States
Conference Championship in Florence, Ind.

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

Chicago Med "Can't Unring
That Bell"
Chicago Med "Can't Unring
That Bell"
The
Schooled "I,
Goldbergs
Mellor"
Nature "Big Birds Can't Fly"
This is the unique story of
flightless birds.
Schooled "I,
The
Goldbergs
Mellor"
Survivor "Blood of a
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Empire "A Wise Father That
Knows His Own Child" (N)
Nature "Big Birds Can't Fly"
This is the unique story of
flightless birds.
Survivor "Blood of a
Blindside" (N)

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

Chicago Fire "It Wasn't
About Hockey"
Chicago Fire "It Wasn't
About Hockey"
Modern
Single
Family
Parents
Nova "Secrets of Noah's
Ark" Explores a new version
of the Biblical flood story.
Single
Modern
Family
Parents
The Amazing Race "You're
In Our Race Now" (SP) (N)
Star "Lean on Me" (N)
Nova "Secrets of Noah's
Ark" Explores a new version
of the Biblical flood story.
The Amazing Race "You're
In Our Race Now" (SP) (N)

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Chicago P.D. "Ties That
Bind"
Chicago P.D. "Ties That
Bind"
Whiskey "Confessions of a
Dangerous Mind" (N)
Breakthrough: The Ideas
That Changed the World
"The Telescope" (P) (N)
Whiskey "Confessions of a
Dangerous Mind" (N)
SEAL Team "Payback" (N)
Eyewitness News at 10 (N)
Breakthrough: The Ideas
That Changed the World
"The Telescope" (P) (N)
SEAL Team "Payback" (N)

10

PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Cops
24 (ROOT) Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsC. (N)
26 (ESPN2) Horn (N)
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (PARMT)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)

Cops
Sleeping With the Enemy Julia Roberts. TVMA
Gone "Romans" (N)
Sleeping With the Enemy
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates at Detroit Tigers Site: Comerica Park -- Detroit, Mich. (L) Postgame
Pirates Ball Pirates Ball
MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox at New York Yankees Site: Yankee Stadium (L)
SportsCenter (N)
SportsC. (N) NCAA Softball Florida vs. Florida State Women's (L)
30 for 30 "Seau" (N)
Celebrity Wife Swap "Sean Celebrity Wife Swap
Celeb Wife Swap "Robert Celebrity Wife Swap
(:05) Celebrity Wife Swap
Lowe/ Jason Mesnick"
"Jackee Harry/ Traci Lords" Carradine/ Terrell Owens"
"Plaxico Burress/ DJ Paul"
(4:30)
Zootopia ('16, Family Guy Family Guy Pretty Little Liars "The
Jumanji (1995, Fantasy) Bonnie Hunt, Kirsten
Ani) Ginnifer Goodwin. TVPG
Dunst, Robin Williams. TVPG
Patchwork Girl" (N)
Mom
Mom
Mom
Mom
The Bourne Ultimatum Matt Damon. As government agents
The Bourne
continue to track him down, Jason Bourne searches for his identity. TV14 Ultimatum
Loud House Loud House Loud House H.Danger
Spy Kids (2001, Adventure) TVPG
The Office
The Office
SVU "Thought Criminal"
Modern Fam Modern Fam NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs Nashville Predators at Dallas Stars (L)
TBA
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan Borders "Australia"
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
Last O.G.
Last O.G.
NBA Basketball Playoffs Indiana Pacers at Boston Celtics (L)
NBA Basketball Playoffs Utah/Hou. (L)
(5:00)
The Fugitive (1993, Thriller) Sela Ward,
The Hangover Part III (2013, Comedy) Zach
(:05)
Lara Croft: Tomb
Tommy Lee Jones, Harrison Ford. TVPG
Galifianakis, Ed Helms, Bradley Cooper. TVMA
Raider Angelina Jolie. TV14
Expedition Unknown
Expedition Unknown
Expedition Unknown (N)
Expedition Unknown (N)
Mummies Unwrapped (N)
Storage
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Zombie House Flipping
Tiny House "Two Turntables
Storage
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Wars
"Justin Time"
"The Halfway House"
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and a Tiny House" (N)
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Lone Star Law
Lone Star Law: Uncuffed "Record-Setting Bust"
Lone Star Law "Deceived"
Chicago P.D.
NCIS: Los Angeles
NCIS: Los Angeles
NCIS: Los Angeles
NCIS: Los Angeles
(4:30) Kindergarten Cop

Mrs. Doubtfire (1993, Comedy) Sally Field, Pierce Brosnan, Robin Williams. TVPG (:55) Mrs. Doubtfire TVPG
E! News (N)
Botched
Botched
Botched
(:55) MASH
M*A*S*H
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Border Wars "3,000-Pound Border Wars "City Under
Bridges "Five-Million Dollar Meth Bust" A young woman
Coke Bust"
Siege"
from Cuba crosses the bridge. (P) (N)
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs Boston Bruins at Toronto Maple Leafs (L)
NHL Hockey
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
NCAA Lacrosse (L)
PBC Countdown
Inside PBC Boxing
Forged in Fire "The
Forged in Fire "Ngombe
Forged in Fire "Ring Hilted Forged in Fire "The
(:05) Forged in Fire
Qinglong Ji"
Ngulu"
Sword"
Javanese Kris" (N)
"Barbarian Sword" (N)
The Real Housewives
Housewives "Shark Bait"
The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives (N)
Housewives Atlanta
Blue Streak ('99, Com) Luke Wilson, Martin Lawrence. TVPG
Are We Done Yet? ('07, Com) Nia Long, Ice Cube. TV14
Buying and Selling
Buying and Selling
Property Brothers
Buying and Selling (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(4:30)
Push ('09, Thril)
Limitless (2011, Mystery) Anna Friel, Bradley Cooper. The Magicians "The Seam" Happy! "Blitzkrieg!!!" (N)
(SF) (N)
Chris Evans. TV14
TV14

Botched
(TVL) (:20) M*A*S*H
L.A. Gang Wars
(E!)

62 (NGEO)

64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

The Bourne Supremacy A
Vice News
The First Purge Marisa Tomei. To test (:45) Game of Thrones
(:45) Barry
400 (HBO) former assassin from a top secret project is Tonight (N) a sociological theory, all crimes are made
framed for a botched CIA operation. TV14
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Black Widow A beautiful young
(:45)
Cat People A sexually repressed
450 (MAX) Frances McDormand. A grieving mother puts up signs on
woman seduces, marries and kills wealthy young woman discovers that her urges turn
the edge of town accusing the police of inaction. TV14
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her into a panther. TVMA
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(:15)
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Harold Ramis, Warren Oates,
Ramirez, Melissa Leo. TVMA relives the same day over and over again. TVPG
Bill Murray. TVMA
(5:40)

�COMICS

8 Wednesday, April 17, 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 &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

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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

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jobmatchohio.com

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, April 17, 2019 9

Generals surge past Point, 10-2
By Bryan Walters

on March 15 — found
themselves in a cratersized hole after a halfinning of play as the
POINT PLEASANT,
Generals sent a dozen
W.Va. — No luck with
batters to the plate.
this seven.
The end result was
Visiting Winﬁeld plated seven runs in the ﬁrst a quick 7-0 cushion as
the Green and White
inning and ultimately
produced six hits, three
salvaged a season split
walks and a ﬁelder’s
with the Point Pleasant
choice in the opening
baseball team on Monframe. Nick Edwards
day night during a 10-2
delivered a bases-loaded
non-conference setback
single with one away
in Mason County.
that plated Sam Ingram
The host Big Blacks
with the eventual game(12-5) — who won the
winning run.
ﬁrst matchup at WinPPHS answered with a
ﬁeld by an 18-6 count

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008
XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

SERVICES

run in its half of the ﬁrst
as Brody Jeffers singled
with two outs, advanced
to second and eventually
scored on a double to
left by Joel Beattie.
A two-out error
allowed Peyton Moulder
to score in the top of the
third for an 8-1 edge,
but the Red and Black
answered in their half of
the third as Jeffers provided a two-out double
to to right-center that
plated Carter Smith for
a six-run contest.
The Big Blacks, however, were never closer

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Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

(304) 675-1333 or fax to (304) 675-5234
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Whitney had two hits
each for the guests, with
Moulder, Hunter Morris,
Landen Fairchild and
Hunter Vance also providing a safety apiece.
Gillispie knocked in a
game-high three RBIs
for Winﬁeld.
Point Pleasant hosted
Poca on Tuesday night
and returns to action
Thursday when it welcomes Wayne for a nonconference matchup at
7 p.m.

(740) 992-2155 or fax to (740) 992-2157

Other Services
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the winning pitcher
of record after allowing two earned runs,
ﬁve hits and two walks
over four innings while
striking out two. Miles
Williams took the loss
after surrendering seven
earned runs, six hits and
three walks in an inningplus of work.
Smith and Jeffers
paced Point Pleasant
with two hits apiece, followed by Williams, Beattie and Tanner Mitchell
with a safety each.
Ingram, Edwards,
Gillispie and Andrew

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Home of the Car Fairy

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as WHS tacked on a run
in each of the ﬁfth and
sixth frames, and the
hosts mustered only four
baserunners after the
third inning en route to
the eight-run ﬁnal outcome.
The Generals outhit
Point Pleasant by a 12-7
overall margin and also
played an error-free
contest, while the hosts
committed six errors.
The guests stranded
seven runners on base,
while PPHS left six on
the bags.
Peyton Gillispie was

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Amy Carter
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MOTOR ROUTE

amycarter@markporterauto.com

The following matters are the subject of this public notice by the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. The complete public
notice, including any additional instructions for submitting
comments, requesting information, a public hearing, or filing an
appeal may be obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk, Ohio
EPA, 50 W. Town St. P.O. Box 1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-3037 email: HClerk@epa.ohio.gov
Approval of Application for Water Pollution Control Loan Fund
Assistance
Meigs County General Health District
112 East Memorial Drive, Suite A, Pomeroy, OH 45769
Facility Description: CW Financial Assistance
ID #: HS391700-0004
Date of Action: 04/05/2019
This project is for the repair/replacement of household sewage
treatment systems in Meigs County.

Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor
under an agreement with
the Point Pleasant Register?
Gallipolis Daily Tribune?
The Daily Sentinel?
�
�
�
�
�

Be your own boss
5 Day Delivery
Delivery times is approx. 3 hours daily
Must be 18 years of age
Must have a valid driver’s license, dependable
vehicle &amp; provide proof of insurance
� Must provide your own substitute

Application Received for Air Permit
Apple Grove Plant
S.R. 338, Racine, OH 45771
ID #: A0063420
Date of Action: 04/05/2019
This application is to renew the facility's existing General Permit
GP10.1.

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE
EMAIL DERRICK MORRISON AT
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
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

Approval of Application for Water Pollution Control Loan Fund
Assistance
Middleport
237 Race St, Middleport, OH 45760
Facility Description: CW Financial Assistance
ID #: CS390597-0017
Date of Action: 04/09/2019
The project is to repair storm sewers and install sewer laterals,
manholes and catch basins.
4/17/19

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE EQUIPMENT AUCTION
Saturday April 20, 2019 AT 10:00 AM
34329 ROCKSPRINGS RD. POMEROY, OHIO 45769
1991 F-350 4X4 DUMP W/SPREADER BOX &amp;FRONT PLOW
lFDKF38G4MNA17706
1993 L-7000 FORD DUMP W/ROLL GATE
lFDXR72C1PVA25051
1994 INTERNATIONAL RESERVED SET AT $15000.00
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7 FT BRUSH HOG 28712-107705
5 FT BURM HOG SM 60 12-02373
WEED EATERS

OPERATE YOUR OWN
BUSINESS WITH
POTENTIAL REVENUE
$ ,

OVER 1 000
PER MONTH!

OH-70106342

TRUSTEES HAVE THE RIGHT TO REFUSE ALL BIDS
4/17/19, 4/19/19

CALL TODAY!

�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Dragons outlast Gallia Academy
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

CENTENARY, Ohio —
The one mistake came
back to cost them.
The Gallia Academy
baseball team played
a mistake-free game
through regulation, but
an error in the eighth
ultimately allowed visiting Fairland to score the
game-winning run in an
7-6 victory Monday night
in an Ohio Valley Conference contest at Eastman Ball Field in Gallia
County.
Both the Dragons (8-3,
6-0 OVC) and host Blue
Devils (5-5, 2-3) led on
two different occasions
over the course of seven
innings, which resulted
in a six-all contest headed
into extra frames.
FHS opened the eighth
with a leadoff single by
Brennan West, then West
moved to second on a
Gavin Hunt single before
making it to third on an
error — giving the Green
and White runners on
the corners with nobody
out.
Dacota Chapman followed with a double that
allowed West to come
home with the go-ahead
run, making it a 7-6
contest headed into the
home half of the eighth.
Colton Roe received a
one-out walk and stole
second to work himself
into scoring position,
but the Dragons came
up with consecutive outs
in the next two at-bats
to wrap up the one-run
triumph.
Fairland plated two
runs in the top of the
ﬁrst, but a Morgan Stan-

By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy junior Cade Roberts (17) hustles down the first base line after a dropped third strike
during the third inning of Monday night’s OVC baseball contest against Fairland in Centenary, Ohio.

ley single in the second
allowed Trent Johnson to
score for a 2-1 contest.
The guests countered
with a run in the top
of the third, but GAHS
plated three runs in its
half of the third to take
its ﬁrst lead of the game.
Brendan Carter scored
on a passed ball, then
Andrew Toler laid down
a squeeze bunt that
allowed Cade Roberts
to score for a tie game.
Stanley singled home
Justin McClelland one
batter later for a 4-3
advantage.
That lead, however,
was short lived as the
Dragons plated two runs
in the fourth for a 5-4
edge.
Wyatt Sipple scored in
the fourth to knot things
up at ﬁve, then Zane
Loveday singled home
Toler in the ﬁfth for a 6-5

Blue Devil lead.
Hunt singled home
Alex Rodgers with two
away in the sixth to tie
things up again at six-all.
Fairland outhit the
hosts by a 10-7 overall
margin and both teams
committed an error
apiece in the game. FHS
stranded 10 runners on
base, while the Blue Devils left eight on the bags.
Rodgers was the winning pitcher after allowing one earned run, one
hit and three walks over
ﬁve innings of relief
while striking out 10.
Cole Davis took the loss
after surrendering one
unearned run, ﬁve hits
and a walk in 1.1 innings
of relief.
Sipple and Stanley led
the hosts with two hits
apiece, followed by Carter, Johnson and Loveday
with a safety each. Stan-

ley drove in a team-high
two RBIs in the setback.
Hunt and Rodgers
paced Fairland with three
hits each, with Chapman
also adding two safeties.
West and Kyle Rankin
also had a hit apiece for
the victors. Hunt also
drove in two RBIs.
This contest was originally scheduled to be
played at Proctorville,
but the game was moved
to GAHS due to the wet
conditions of the Fairland ﬁelds.
Gallia Academy returns to action
Wednesday when it hosts
Ironton in an OVC contest at 5 p.m. The Blue
Devils will also make up
their rain-out date with
Coal Grove on Thursday
in Lawrence County.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Cincinnati stays in its backyard for next coach
CINCINNATI (AP)
— John Brannen played
pick-up games at Cincinnati’s on-campus arena
when he was growing up
and vividly recalls watching Kenyon Martin dunk

over another player. He’s
coached — and lost —
with visiting teams at the
same arena.
The local guy is now in
charge of the home team.
The Bearcats decided

Ohio Residents Only

OH-70118273

Lady Knights
take down
Winfield, 20-5

to stay in their backyard
for Mick Cronin’s replacement, choosing Brannen
— the head coach at nearby Northern Kentucky
— to try to extend their
American Athletic Con-

ference success and get
deeper into the NCAA
Tournament.
The 45-year-old coach
grew up in northern Kentucky and was at the top
of Cincinnati’s list when
Cronin — another Cincinnati-area native — left
for UCLA last week .
“Nobody trumped
John,” athletics director
Mike Bohn said Monday.
Brannen led Northern
Kentucky to unmatched
success in its ﬁrst three
seasons in Division I,
leading the Norse to a
pair of NCAA Tournament appearances and
winning the Horizon
League’s coach of the
year award. When he
arrived on the Norse
campus, many students
still rooted for the Kentucky Wildcats at tournament time.
That changed when
the Norse reached the
tournament in their ﬁrst
year of eligibility and
gave Kentucky a scare in
the ﬁrst round before losing 79-70. They reached
it again this season and
lost to runner-up Texas
Tech 72-57 in the opening round.

OH-70118878

WINFIELD, W.Va. — A deal too good to pass
up.
The Point Pleasant softball team found a 4-for-1
special on runs on Tuesday night in Putnam County, as the Lady Knights defeated non-conference
host Winﬁeld by a 20-5 count in three innings.
Point Pleasant (14-3) broke the scoreless tie in
just the second at-bat of the game, as Tayah Fetty
singled home Peyton Jordan, who tripled to lead
off the contest. PPHS added another run before
the end of the inning, as Hayley Keefer doubled
home Rylee Cochran with two outs.
The Lady Knights went ahead 10-0 with a
eight-run second inning, highlighted by a grand
slam home run by Emma Harbour and a three-run
home run by Julia Parsons.
Winﬁeld scored three runs in the home half of
the second, but Point Pleasant tallied 10 runs in
the top of the third, capped off by back-to-back
home runs by Jordan and Fetty, with Jordan’s coming with the bases loaded.
Winﬁeld got two runs back with a Gracie
Denisn homer in the bottom of the third, but
couldn’t avoid the 20-5 mercy rule setback.
Madilyn Keefer earned the pitching victory in
a complete game for PPHS, allowing ﬁve earned
runs on seven hits and a pair of walks.
Faith Gaylor took the pitching loss in two
innings for the hosts, surrendering 10 earned runs
on 12 hits and a walk. Elyssa Medley pitched the
ﬁnal inning and gave up 10 earned runs on eight
hits and three walks. Gaylor recorded the game’s
only two strikeouts.
Leading the Point Pleasant offense, Jordan was
4-for-4 with a home run, a triple, four runs scored
and four RBIs, and Fetty was 4-for-4 with a home
run, a double, three runs and three RBIs. Parsons
was 3-for-3 with a homer, two doubles, three runs
and ﬁve RBIs in the win, Harbour was 3-for-4
with a home run, two runs and ﬁve RBIs, while
Cochran was 3-for-4 with three runs and one RBI.
Hayley Keefer contributed a double, a single,
a run and an RBI to the winning cause, Amber
Hatﬁeld chipped in with a single and a run, Madilyn Keefer added two runs and an RBI, while Kit
Stroud scored once.
Denisn led the hosts, going 2-for-2 with a home
run, two runs and two RBIs. Elyssa Medley
doubled once and drove in two runs, while Naomi
Jarrell, K.K. Short and Mackenzie Hale each had a
single and a run in the setback.
Neither team committed an error in the game.
Winﬁeld stranded four runners on base, two more
than the Lady Knights.
Point Pleasant also defeated Winﬁeld by an 11-3
count on April 2 in Mason County.
After hosting Lincoln County on Tuesday, Point
Pleasant will return to action on Thursday at
Meigs.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Rio Grande 6th,
Lemaster one shot
off lead at tourney
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

FLORENCE, Ind. — The University of Rio
Grande ﬁnds itself in sixth place as a team, while
sophomore Jarod Lemaster is one shot off the lead
as an individual following Monday’s opening day
of the 2019 River States Conference Men’s Golf
Championship at Belterra Golf Course in Florence,
Ind.
The RedStorm carded a 36-hole total of 59-over
par 627 (318-309) and trails Brescia University by
21 strokes. The Bearcats shot rounds of 306 and
300 for a total of 606.
Brescia holds a nine-shot lead over Midway University in the team competition. The Eagles had
rounds of 312 and 303. Asbury University (315303) and Point Park University (313-305) are tied
for third place, while Indiana University Kokomo
(315-304) is in ﬁfth place.
Cincinnati Christian University’s Noah Lung is
the 36-hole leader individually at 3-over 145. He
opened up with a 3-over 74 and then ﬁred an evenpar 71 in the second round to take a 1-shot lead
over Lemaster at 4-over 146.
Lemaster, a native of Jackson, Ohio, started off
with a 76 and then had the low-round of the tournament with the 1-under 70 that followed.
Tyler Pearson of IU East shot 74-73 and is two
shots off the lead in third place. Gage Basiletti of
Point Park ﬁred 75-73 in fourth place, and Brescia’s Trevor Brown (74-75) and Point Park’s Matt
D’Amico (77-72) are tied for ﬁfth.
Others representing Rio Grande were freshman
Levi Chapman (Pomeroy, OH), who’s part of a
four-way tie for 27th after shooting 19-over par
161 (80-81); junior Logan Sheets (Bidwell, OH),
who is among four players tied for 34th at 21-over
163 (79-84); freshman Colton Blakeman (Piketon,
OH), who’s tied for 38th at 22-over par 164 (8381); and freshman Payton Bentley (Peebles, OH),
who is tied for 46th place in the 57-player ﬁeld at
26-over 168 (91-77).
The ﬁnal round of 18 holes takes place Tuesday
at 9 a.m.

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