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                  <text>8 AM

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Partly sunny today. Partly cloudy tonight.
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More
Southern
Senior Awards

Lady
Eagles
fall

WEATHER s 3

LOCAL s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 80, Volume 73

Tuesday, May 21, 2019 s 50¢

Southern receives
Champion of School
Breakfast Award
Ohio schools
recognized
Staff Report

RACINE — The
Southern Local School
District recently
received the prestigious
Champion of School
Breakfast Award from
the Ohio School Breakfast Challenge. Schools
and their administration were recognized
for their innovative and
collaborative school
breakfast practices,
including their commitment to increasing
school breakfast participation and empowering students to
make healthy choices.
Southern received an
engraved crystal breakfast bowl and a letter
of commendation from
the Ohio Department
of Agriculture for their
excellence and innovation of school breakfast
service.
It was also
announced at the award
banquet that Southern
was a Gold Star winner
in the Breakfast Week
challenge, one of only
two schools honored
to achieve such an
honor. Southern will
receive a banner in
the fall. Ohio’s First
Lady Fran DeWine and
Stephanie Siddens,
senior executive director of the Center for
Student Supports at
the Ohio Department
of Education, presented
award winners with an
engraved crystal breakfast bowl on behalf of
the Ohio School Breakfast Challenge and a
letter of commendation
from the Ohio Department of Agriculture.
Also involved in the
presentation was Cathy
Corbitt with Ohio
Department of Agriculture, who is the Deputy
Director of Children’s
Initiatives.
In the fall of the
2018-19 school year,
the Southern Local
School District implemented the Breakfast in
the Classroom program
district-wide to its 740
students. This came
after a trial run of the
program in the kinder-

garten and pre-school
the previous year.
The Southern Local
School District is
dedicated to ensuring that all students
start their day with a
healthy breakfast. The
Partners for Breakfast
in the Classroom grant
provided equipment,
and updates to the
menu enabling students
to have easy access to
breakfast and more
breakfast choices.
Eating breakfast in
the classroom eliminated common barriers
such as the time needed
to pick up a breakfast
in the cafeteria, and the
obstacle of students
electing to socialize
with friends rather than
eat breakfast before
starting the school day.
Southern Supt. Tony
Deem said, “We had
two goals we wanted
to accomplish: to make
sure that every kid had
a chance to get a nutritious, healthy start to
the school day, and
to continue our quest
to improve preparedness to learn. The two
goals went together
very well. Research has
shown that kids that
are not hungry learn
better than kids that
are hungry.”
Incorporated into
the Breakfast in the
Classroom concept is
that students are having breakfast in the
classroom after the bell,
when the actual school
day begins. Some classroom teachers choose
to do “Bell-ringer”
activities to start the
day, while others simply begin their regular
lessons all while students eat.
Southern’s program
emphasizes an improvement in access. Food
Service Director Scott
Wolfe said, “We knew
we had many kids that
were not eating breakfast. We also knew that
some weren’t eating
because of peer pressure, it wasn’t the cool
thing to do, or that it
wasn’t convenient. So,
we set out to eliminate
those barriers and
improve access.”
Wolfe added, “Mr.
See SOUTHERN | 3

INDEX
Obituary: 2
Weather: 3
Opinion: 4
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Eastern High School Class of 2019 President Sharp Lee Facemyer crosses the stage after giving the welcome during Sunday’s
commencement exercises.

Class of 2019 receives diplomas
66 become EHS Alumni

By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

REEDSVILLE —
“There are two lessons
that I would like to
share with you that continuously have solidiﬁed
themselves throughout
my limited experiences,”
said Eastern High School
Class of 2019 Valedictorian Chase Matthew
King in his Valedictorian
Address.
King, along with Salutatorian Mollie Elizabeth
Maxon, addressed their
fellow graduates from
the Class of 2019 as part
of the commencement
exercises Sunday afternoon in the Eastern High
School gymnasium.
“First, although it’s a
difﬁcult trait to actually
possess, feigning self-

conﬁdence is essential in
most social and professional settings. If people
think you are 100 percent
behind what you’re saying or doing, they are
more likely to show you
respect and admire you,”
said King.
The Valedictorian
quoted a mantra from
the show “Las Chicas del
Cable” as something to
remember regarding self
conﬁdence.
“The line goes ‘cabeza
alta, orgullo y amor propio.’ This translates to
‘head high, pride, and
self-love.’ For me, this is
something very concise
and easy to remember
when faced with a difﬁcult situation. A little bit
of belief in yourself goes
a long way,” added King.
As for his second les-

Allison Barber and Cera Grueser give a thumbs up before entering
the gymnasium on Sunday at Eastern High School.

son to remember, King
said, “My belief is that
how much you embarrass
your future self is a monument to your personal

growth.”
“There can be no
growth without change
See DIPLOMAS | 2

SHS Class of 2019 receives scholarships, awards
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE — Members
of the Southern High
School Class of 2019
received more than
$200,000 in scholarships
and awards on Friday
during the school’s annual Senior Awards Day.
Among the scholarships were a total of
$20,600 which are handled under the Racine
Area Community Organization (RACO).
Additionally, Valedictorian Marissa Brooker
received the Jewell
Cutler Scholar Award
which is valued at
more than $80,000 and
includes four summer
experiences as part of
the program. The award
was presented by former
Jewell Cutler Scholar
Courtney Manuel.
Graduates from the
Class of 2019 to receive
Honors Diplomas at the
graduation ceremony
on May 25 are Austin
Baker, Noah Diddle,
Alex VanMeter, Logan
Drummer, Baylee
Grueser, Reece Reuter,
Austin Arnold, Brayden
Cunningham, William
Harmon, Kathryn Mat-

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The Southern High School Class of 2019 received numerous awards and scholarships on Friday.
Pictured are all of the award and scholarship recipients.

son, David Dunfee, Peyton Anderson, Madison
Lisle, Mallory Johnson,
Weston Thorla, and
Marissa Brooker.
The Top 10 of the
Class of 2019 are Marissa Brooker, Valedictorian; Mallory Johnson,
Salutatorian; Madison
Lisle, Peyton Anderson,
David Dunfee, Kathryn
Matson, William Harmon, Brayden Cunningham, Austin Arnold, and
Reece Reuter.
Class of 2019 graduates entering the military are Austin Lee
Arnold, Army Reserves;
Mallory Johnson and Jensen Anderson received the Larry R.

See SHS | 5 Morrison Female and Male Athlete Awards, respectively.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, May 21, 2019

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

Diplomas

LOIS ROBERSON

From page 1

POMEROY — Lois
Roberson, 96, of Pomeroy, died Sunday, May
19, 2019 at Overbrook
Rehab Center in Middleport.
Born April 26, 1923,
in Pomeroy, she was
the daughter of the
late William and Susan
Bradley Venable. Lois
was employed by the
Department of Health,
Education and Welfare in
Washington D.C. for over
30 years and returned
home to end her career
at Ohio University.
She is survived by her
daughter, Edwina Bell, of
Middleport; one grandson, Keith Scott; a great
grandson, Sean Scott;
and a great granddaugh-

ter, Shania Scott.
Besides her parents,
she was preceded in
death by a grandson,
Tony Scott; and three
brothers, Denzil, Oran,
and Bertram.
Funeral services will
held at 11 a.m. on Thursday, May 23, 2019 at
Ewing-Schwarzel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy with
Dave Hopkins ofﬁciating.
Burial will be in Meigs
County Memory Gardens
in Pomeroy.
Friends are encouraged
to sign the online guest
book at ewingfuneralhome.net.
Arrangements are
being provided by the
Ewing-Schwarzel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy.

OGIER JR.
POINT PLEASANT — Larry Ray Ogier Jr., 62, of
Point Pleasant, died Saturday, May 18, 2019 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant.
A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m., Thursday,
May 23, 2019 at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant with Pastor Joe Nott ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow at Henderson Cemetery in Henderson. The
family will receive friends one hour prior to the funeral service, Thursday at the funeral home.
SNYDER
LETART — Horton Gareth Snyder, 80, of Letart,
died May 17, 2019 in Ravenswood Care Center,
Ravenswood.
The service will be held at 4 p.m., Tuesday, May 21,
2019 in the Casto Funeral Home, Evans with Pastor
Chip Bennett ofﬁciating. The American Legion Post
#140 New Haven and the V.F.W. Post #9926 Mason
will provide military honors at the funeral home. Visitation will be from 2 p.m. until time of service at the
funeral home.
MCINTYRE
RAVENSWOOD — Linda Lee McIntyre died on
May 17, 2019, after a long battle with dementia.
A celebration of Linda’s life will be held on Sunday,
May 26 at Casto Funeral Home in Evans with a visitation from 2-4 p.m.
Arrangements have been provided by Casto Funeral
Home, Evans.
HAMMACK
LEON, W.Va. — Audrey Belle Hammack, 86, of
Leon, W.Va. died on May 18, 2019 at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Services will be at the Deal Funeral Home at 1 p.m.
on May 21, 2019 with Rev. David Washington ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in the Forest Hills Cemetery,
Flatrock, W.Va. Friends may visit the family on Tuesday, May 21, 2019 from 11 a.m.- 1 p.m.
REED
RIPLEY — John Rex Reed, 77, of Ripley, died May
16, 2019 at his home, following an extended illness.
Memorial services will be announced at a later date.
Burial will be in the Parsons Cemetery, Gay.
Arrangements have been provided by Casto Funeral
Home, Evans.
TOLER
MILLWOOD — Karen Ann (Sikorski) Toler, 71, of
Millwood, died May 18, 2019 in Camden Clark Medical Center, Parkersburg, following a brief illness.
There will be no public services at this time.
Arrangements have been provided by Casto Funeral
Home, Ravenswood.

M

ariana

or without mistakes. For
that reason, it is prudent that we all employ
a microcosm of this
mechanism in our daily
lives. If there’s some
choice that you want to
make but is also out of
your comfort zone, do
it,” said King.
King concluded by
acknowledging and
thanking some of those
who have helped him
along the way.
“There are a few
people without whom
I would either not be
alive or not be nearly as
hard-working. Because
of this, I would like to
thank my sister and
SpongeBob for teaching
me everything I know.
Additionally, I would like
to thank my mom for
being my full-time prepreschool teacher and
for buying me books and
video games that I was
too dumb to understand
so that I would develop
the reading skills to
do so. My dad for the
countless hours of playing with building blocks
and stuffed cats from
fast food kids meals; my
grandparents for always
believing in me; and
every teacher I’ve had
for teaching me to adapt
to new ideas,” added
King.
In her address, Maxon
said, “These last 13
years have gone by faster
than anyone could have
imagined. The valuable
lessons we have learned
in school from our teachers and peers are something that I will never
forget. Thank you to the
community for supporting each student whether it is sports or academics or just Eastern High
School in general, your
support is cherished by
all of us.”
While graduation is a
happy occasion, it is also
a sad time as Maxon
noted.
“It saddens me to say
that after today, most
of us will be going our
separate ways, venturing
out into what our parents refer to as the real
world. … But for today,
be sure to hold onto this
moment because a day
like this only happens
once in your lifetime. Do
not let yourself become
caught up in the little
things, but take in the
big picture and enjoy,”
said the Salutatorian.
Maxon offered a piece
of advice to her classmates as they venture
out into the real world.
“William Arthur Ward
once brilliantly quoted,
‘If you can imagine it,
you can achieve it; if you
can dream it, you can
become it,” said Salutatorian Mollie Maxon.
“We all must remember
that our dreams will help

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Graduates Dylan Ash, Jon Bollweg, Samuel Jones, Nicholas Browning and Brayden Sanders pose
for a photo before graduation on Sunday.

The Class of 2019 makes their way to the stage for the commencement exercises on Sunday
afternoon at Eastern High School.

Graduates Cierra Smeeks, Alyson Bailey, MacKenzie Smith, Hannah Hill, Kylee Tolliver and Alexus
Metheney gather for a photo before graduation on Sunday.

to achieve our greatest
goals in life. The potential to succeed is beyond
imaginable for Eastern’s
Class of 2019.”
Maxon concluded
by saying, “I want to
wish everyone the best
in everything you do,
and always remember
that your dreams can be
accomplished with the
things we have learned
from Eastern.”
The Top 10 of the
Class of 2019 (from
ﬁrst to tenth) are King,
Maxon, Jessica Ruth
Parker, Garrett David
Rees, Blaise Landon
Facemyer, Ally Landon
Durst, Hannah Marie
Damewood, Rhiannon
Michelle Morris, Ciara
Nicole Browning, and
Emmalea Nicole Durst.
Receiving an Honors
Diploma on Sunday were
Allison Barber, Ciara
Browning, Kelsey Casto,
Hannah Damewood, Ally
Durst, Emmalea Durst,
Blaise Facemyer, Sharp
Facemyer, Cera Grueser, Hannah Hill, Chase
King, Mollie Maxon,
Brooke Mays, Rhiannon
Morris, Jessica Parker,
Anna Pierce, Garrett
Rees and Kylee Tolliver.
Eastern High School

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Members of the Class of 2019 make their way toward the
gymnasium for Sunday’s commencement exercises at Eastern
High School.

Class of 2019 graduates
are Dillon Lee Aeiker,
Israel Alexander Arix
Michael, Dylan Phoenix Ash, Alyson Renay
Bailey, Allison Casey
Barber, Jacob Randall
Barrett, Evin Michael
Bauer, Jordan Michael
River Benedum, Jonathan Henry Bollweg,
Jasiah Andrew Brewer,
Andrew Robert Brooks,
Ciara Nicole Browning,
Nicholas Scott Browning, Noah Scott Browning,
Shelby Kay Carter,
Kelsey Ann Casto, Taylor Danielle Chevalier,
Austin Ryan Combs,
Jacob Dylan Creath,
Hannah Marie Damewood, Katheryn Alexandria Downey, Ally
Landon Durst, Emmalea
Nicole Durst, Nathen
Tanner Durst, Nicholas
Allen Edwards, Lisa
Marie Evans, Blaise
Landon Facemyer, Sharp
Lee Facemyer, Katlin
Elizabeth Fick, Isaiah
Edward Fish,
Caden Alvin Goff,
Natasha Marie Graham,

Ryan Justice Harbour,
Johnathan Dale Harris,
Brandon Scott Hart,
Hannah Grace Hill,
Michael Reece Hooper,
Samuel Gean Jones,
Madison Leigh Keney,
Chase Matthew King,
Kennedy Anne Lantz,
Donald Preston Lauria,
Ashley Mae Long, Lillian Ann Marcinko,
Mollie Elizabeth Maxon,
Brooke Elizabeth Mays,
Dustan Lee McBenge,
Alexus Marie Metheney,
Rhiannon Michelle Morris,
Jessica Ruth Parker,
Ryan Thomas Parsons,
Anna Rochelle Pierce,
Colten Edward Rayburn,
Garrett David Rees,
Jessica Kaye Rees, Katherine Noel Ridenour, Jordan Paul Riley, Brayden
Dean Sanders, Carter
Alan Sharp, Devin Lee
Small, Cierra Marie
Smeeks, MacKenzie
Nicole Smith, Kylee
Danielle Tolliver, Tiffany
Ann Tripp, and Brayanna Mae Wells.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

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109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
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Dustan McBenge and Brandon Hart prepare to become Eastern
High School graduates.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 21, 2019 3

Southern

energy level. Kids are
Challenge. For more
Ohio School Breakfast
choolBreakfastChallenge.
in the Classroom. The
much more focused before Walmart foundation is a
information about the
Challenge, visit OhioScom.
lunch. I’ve seen students
key sponsor in the initiamore productive academi- tive.
From page 1
cally and students that are
The Ohio School
less needy.”
Breakfast Challenge is
Deem and I accepted the
a statewide challenge
award, but the praise goes
Southern was selected
to increase and sustain
out to the Southern teach- to participate in the
student participation
ing and kitchen staff and
fourth phase of the Partin the School Breakfast
support staff as well as the ners for Breakfast in
Program, ensuring Ohio
students. This is a great
the Classroom program,
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day for Southern Local.”
which is a joint initiative students start each day
ready to learn. The Ohio
The Ohio School Break- from the Food Research
fast Challenge’s mission
&amp; Action Center (FRAC), Department of Education,
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American Dairy Associais to increase and sustain National Association of
tion Mideast, Children’s
student participation
Elementary School Prinin the School Breakfast
cipals Foundation (NAES- Hunger Alliance, Ohio
Submit your favorite photo
Program, ensuring Ohio
PF), the School Nutrition Action for Healthy Kids
and Ohio School Nutristudents start each day
Foundation (SNF), and
of Mom &amp; child at:
tion Association are
ready to learn. The Ohio
The NEA Foundation –
Department of Education, collectively known as the proud sponsors of the
Ohio School Breakfast
American Dairy AssociaPartners for Breakfast
tion Mideast, Children’s
Hunger Alliance, Ohio
Action for Healthy Kids
and Ohio School Nutrition Association are proud
sponsors of the Ohio
School Breakfast Challenge.
Submissions accepted until
Research shows that
students who eat breakCourtesy photo
fast perform better in
The Southern Local School District recently received the
school, get higher test
prestigious Champion of School Breakfast Award from the Ohio
scores and show better
School Breakfast Challenge. Pictured presenting and accepting
behavior. Students who
the award are (left to right) Cathy Corbitt with Ohio Department
eat school breakfast have
of Agriculture, and Deputy Director of Children’s Initiatives;
Stephanie Siddens, senior executive director of the Center for
been shown, on average,
to attend 1.5 more days of Student Supports at the Ohio Department of Education, First Lady
school per year and score Fran DeWine, Tony Deem, Scott Wolfe, and Sonja Powell of the
Children’s Hunger Alliance of Ohio.
17.5 percent higher on
standardized math tests.
School principals report
invites you
that tardies are down and
to their
attendance is up by an
average of two percent
CUSTOMER APPRECIATION DAY
over the past three years’
data. They also noted
Friday May 24th 8am-5pm
that overall referrals were
PRIZE GIVEAWAYS!
fewer the ﬁrst semester,
1st: Modern Home Products Gas Grill
down nearly 100 for each
building in comparison
2nd &amp; 3rd: $25 Visa gift card
to the previous year. The
school nurse reports
FREE HOT DOGS &amp; REFRESHMENTS
IF YOU OR A LOVED ONE HAS BEEN
that ofﬁce visits have
DIAGNOSED WITH OR DIED FROM LUNG CANCER
decreased, especially prior
We
May 24th Specials! ��%��
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to lunch when she felt
20 lb cylinder refill-$8.00
many students that were
hungry came to the ofﬁce
Heater Sale: 50-70% off select models ��&amp;�
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with reported tummy
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10% off all floor models
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Southern 6th grade
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teacher Katie Ash noted,
“Kids look forward to
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licensed in Ohio and West Virginia
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Mommy&amp;Me

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TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

51°

64°

66°

Partly sunny today. Partly cloudy tonight. High
72° / Low 48°

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. Mon.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.01
4.75
2.96
18.85
16.34

SUN &amp; MOON
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

New

May 26 Jun 3

First

Full

Jun 10 Jun 17

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

Today
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.

Major
2:10a
3:09a
4:06a
5:00a
5:50a
6:37a
7:20a

Minor
8:24a
9:21a
10:18a
11:12a
12:02p
12:25a
1:10a

Major
2:37p
3:34p
4:31p
5:24p
6:13p
6:59p
7:41p

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
71/50

Very High

Minor
8:50p
9:47p
10:43p
11:36p
---12:48p
1:31p

WEATHER HISTORY
On May 21, 1894, Salton, Calif.,
roasted in 124-degree heat. This
is the hottest temperature ever
recorded in the United States in May
and only 10 degrees lower than the
nation’s all-time high of 134 degrees.

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. Mon.

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
12.01
17.72
22.85
12.84
12.80
25.24
12.08
29.03
36.06
13.01
26.80
36.10
27.80

Portsmouth
71/52

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.48
-1.49
+0.06
+0.31
-0.07
-0.40
+0.01
-1.33
-0.69
+0.03
-2.50
-0.50
-1.90

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

SATURDAY

91°
65°

88°
63°

89°
68°

Partly sunny, warm
and humid

Partly sunny, a
t-storm possible; hot

Warm with times of
clouds and sun

Very warm with some
sun

Marietta
69/49

Murray City
67/47
Belpre
70/49

Athens
68/47

St. Marys
70/49

Parkersburg
69/51

Coolville
69/48

Elizabeth
71/49

Spencer
71/48

Buffalo
72/49
Milton
72/51

St. Albans
73/50

Huntington
71/54

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
67/51
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
62/51
0s
-0s
-10s
T-storms
Los Angeles
65/53
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
73/53

Ashland
73/53
Grayson
73/53

SUNDAY

87°
67°

Wilkesville
69/48
POMEROY
Jackson
71/47
69/49
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
72/49
71/49
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
67/53
GALLIPOLIS
72/48
72/49
71/48

South Shore Greenup
73/53
70/51

31

Logan
67/48

McArthur
68/47

Very High

Primary: grasses/walnut/other
Mold: 2424

Variable clouds, a
t-storm in spots

Adelphi
67/50
Chillicothe
67/51

FRIDAY

89°
66°

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

Waverly
69/49

Pollen: 303

Low

MOON PHASES

THURSDAY

Warmer; a t-storm
around in the p.m.

0

Primary: ascospores, unk.

Today
Wed.
6:12 a.m. 6:11 a.m.
8:39 p.m. 8:40 p.m.
11:34 p.m.
none
8:27 a.m. 9:19 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

88°
64°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

79°
65°
76°
54°
95° in 1934
35° in 1907

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

www.taslg.com

Clendenin
72/49
Charleston
72/50

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
71/46

Billings
44/39

Minneapolis
58/48
Chicago
56/49

Denver
43/32

Kansas City
69/55

Toronto
65/43

Montreal
61/43
New York
71/55

Detroit
63/49
Washington
73/56

City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
67/45/s
57/44/pc
90/69/s
70/56/s
73/51/s
44/39/r
57/46/sh
68/52/pc
72/50/pc
87/65/s
35/28/c
56/49/r
69/56/pc
62/50/pc
66/51/pc
83/68/t
43/32/sh
56/53/t
63/49/pc
88/74/pc
89/78/c
66/56/pc
69/55/t
74/55/s
85/66/t
65/53/c
79/64/pc
89/76/s
58/48/r
90/70/pc
88/74/pc
71/55/s
77/54/pc
93/69/s
73/56/s
82/58/s
65/50/pc
62/47/pc
84/60/s
76/55/s
80/61/t
54/44/sh
62/51/r
67/51/c
73/56/s

Hi/Lo/W
75/51/pc
58/46/pc
90/70/pc
69/59/pc
76/59/pc
48/38/r
61/43/c
65/53/pc
86/64/pc
83/69/c
42/31/pc
80/64/pc
83/65/t
77/62/t
83/65/t
89/74/pc
55/35/pc
77/53/pc
72/58/sh
88/75/s
90/77/pc
81/65/pc
80/63/pc
67/54/pc
88/68/sh
69/56/pc
89/71/c
89/78/pc
71/53/pc
90/69/pc
89/73/s
74/59/s
82/67/t
93/69/s
75/60/pc
72/56/pc
77/63/t
65/48/pc
81/65/pc
78/62/pc
89/70/s
56/45/sh
67/53/pc
73/55/s
77/61/pc

EXTREMES MONDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states
Atlanta
90/69

El Paso
82/61
Chihuahua
93/58

High
Low

98° in Zapata, TX
18° in Gothic, CO

Global
High
115° in Bramhapuri, India
Low -8° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
89/78
Monterrey
95/72

Miami
89/76

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

OH-70107872

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
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w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Racine,
Syracuse,
Middleport

�Opinion
4 Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Choosing
and using the
right mulch
“You are what you eat” is an old saying, and it
points the way to picking the right mulch for your
landscape.
It’s common sense that if you add
several inches of anything to your
gardens each year it will affect the
soil quality over time. We like to say
that whatever you spread on your
landscaping each year, that’s what
your soil will become.
Good mulches turn into soil evenSteve
tually. Some mulches are much betBoehme
ter for your plants than others.
Contributing
For instance, most plants prefer
columnist
“acid” soils, so pine bark is healthier
for them than hardwood mulch,
and much healthier than dyed wood chips. Many
mulches contain recycled pallets and other waste
wood. These can be bait for termites, and actually
rob your soil of nutrients as they decompose.
The ideal mulch should improve your soil, turning into rich humus that can be tilled in to loosen
compacted soils and clay.
We’ve tried many mulches in our gardens over
the years, and we’ve settled on pine bark for our
own landscape.
We like to use shredded pine bark on new plantings, and then switch to larger pine bark nuggets
after a few years because it lasts longer and discourages weeds better.
Another thing we like about pine bark nuggets is
that even when they’re wet they “breathe” instead
of packing down, and they dry out quickly which
discourages fungus diseases.
Pine bark mulch has a low PH, which means it is
good food for evergreens, blueberries, dogwoods
and other acid-loving plants. Mulching your beds
with pine bark year after year will build your soil
very nicely.
Finely shredded, composted hardwood mulches
are next best. Proper composting kills weed seeds
and diseases, so you’re not importing problems
into your landscape. Poor quality mulches are
more likely to breed funguses and mushroom colonies.
All mulches are not equally effective at weed
control.
Fine-ground mulches are much like potting soils;
wind-blown weed seeds or blown grass clippings
will sprout and root easily. Course bark mulches
or “nuggets” aren’t so friendly to weed seeds, and
they last much longer before turning to soil so
they make better weed barriers for a much longer period. That makes them ultimately cheaper,
because you need less in future years.
Over the years we’ve seen mulch fads like
recycled shredded tires and ground cypress roots.
If spread thick enough, these by-products will suppress weeds, but they don’t bio-degrade so they
won’t improve you soil. Your plants won’t appreciate being smothered by non-compostable mulches.
These products work ﬁne for paths and play
areas, but they are poison for gardens.
The ﬁrst step in shopping for mulch is ﬁguring
out how much you need.
Figure out how many square feet of beds you
have to cover by multiplying how many feet long
times how many feet wide. For three inches thick
of cover you’ll need one cubic foot of mulch for
every four square feet of beds. One cubic foot for
every six square feet will give you a two-inch thick
mulch job.
Most mulches come in 2 Cubic foot bags,
although convenience stores and mass merchants
are now stocking smaller bags so they can advertise a lower price per bag.
All mulches are not equally good for your garden, and some can be downright harmful. There’s
no requirement for labeling to disclose what
exactly is in the bag. You get what you pay for
with mulch.
Smart gardeners choose mulch very carefully,
and don’t just buy the cheapest thing they can
ﬁnd. If you buy bulk mulch, pay attention to how
it’s stored and handled.
Are there lots of weeds going to seed in the
vicinity? Is the loader bucket and storage area
muddy and messy?
Likely there are weed seeds in the mulch
already, possibly even hard-to-control ﬁeld weeds
like thistle, and you could be importing them into
your yard.
Mulch suppresses weeds by preventing the sun
from reaching weed seeds. It won’t help with deeprooted perennial weeds that are already growing.
If you introduce weed seeds into or on top of the
mulch, for instance by blowing clippings onto it or
digging up the underlying soil, you’ll have weeds.
Most people don’t spread mulch thick enough,
or do the housekeeping to clean up the beds before
mulching. Think of weed seeds as germs, and do
your best to keep the mulch clean.
Your landscaping looks best with a blanket of
fresh, dark mulch. If you follow these tips, your
investment in new mulch will give you more than
just good looks. It will beneﬁt your plants and save
you many hours of work.

THEIR VIEW

It really wasn’t that great
If we are honest with
ourselves, our psyches
become stuck in a period
within our lives that we
have found to be most
pleasing, or most formative. For me, that period
was the 1970s.
I suppose it’s that time
of year when I see that
familiar look of excited
anticipation on the faces
of new graduates that
I allow my thoughts to
wander back and reminisce about those glory
days. However, I have
found that it has become
more and more difﬁcult
to imagine why I harbor
such an afﬁnity for a
decade that in many ways
was not all that terriﬁc
to me, or me to it. Let us
review.
First, the 1970s was a
decade in which my siblings and I lost our father.
Not a great start to the
10-year stretch, but it
was a period of rapid
change. I graduated high
school, began a career
in broadcasting, began
playing music semi-professionally, and thought
I was much more important than I really was and
took myself much more
seriously than I should
have.
It seems the country
was looking to forget the
woeful ways of the ’60s.

time. After that, I
Fashions changed,
was just one of the
and somehow, at
girls. I thought I
lest for a while,
looked cool back
I found myself
then, but when I
trapped with one
recently uncovfoot in the ’60s and
ered some of my
one in the ’70s.
old photos from
Beatle-mania of the Herb
back then, my ﬁrst
’60s had men dress- Day
ing in straightContributing impression was,
“Why did I take a
legged pants and
columnist
picture of a peaBeatle boots. The
cock? OMG! That’s
‘70s dressed guys
me!” Sometimes the kindin hip-hugging trousers
est thing your mind can
with huge bell-bottoms
do for you is to forget.
and platform shoes that
Can anyone who surwould remind you of a
vived the ’70s forget
stilt-walker at the circus.
polyester? Everything
Let me paint this diswas made of polyester.
gusting picture for you.
One night I was traveling
Trying desperately to
to a music engagement
establish my “style,” I
tried to combine the fash- wearing my polyester
shirt with huge ﬂower
ions of the two decades
with a pair of hip-hugging designs on it. Let me tell
skin-tight purple bell-bot- you, I was styling, or so I
thought. Anyway, it was
toms with Beatle boots!
The resounding laughter summertime, and rather
than running the aireverywhere I traveled
conditioning in my 1972
left me with the initial
Ford Ranchero, I opted to
impression that I had
missed the joke. Unfortu- roll down my window and
enjoy the wind blowing
nately, I was the joke!
through my curly locks.
As if all that were not
Back in those days, I was
enough, I discovered, as
many guys did in the day, a smoker, and the wind
blew the ﬁre from my
that curls were the rage
lit cigarette back in the
as the latest manly hair
window and onto a sleeve
style. For years, I would
of my gorgeous, ﬂowered,
march into Miss Linda’s
hair salon and enjoy a day polyester shirt. For those
who don’t know, or don’t
in curlers with the girls.
remember, polyester and
I found this to only be
ﬁre do not mix. My shirt
uncomfortable the ﬁrst

melted instantly and took
with it my upper layer
of skin. I almost drove
off the highway trying to
beat my chest out.
Not having a change of
clothing with me, I had
to buy a new shirt on the
way to my gig. You should
have seen the stares and
heard the snickers as I
marched down the isle
of that Kmart in my halfmelted plastic shirt, chest
hair still smoldering and
smoking while looking
for a blue-light special on
another (yes, I’m not that
smart) polyester shirt.
All night long the guys
in the band kept asking one another if they
smelled burning hair. I
remained silent.
Fortunately, I escaped
the ’70s alive, and managed to make some
brand-new adventures
and mistakes in the ’80s,
some of which I shall hold
in secrecy until my dying
day.
Sometimes the times
and memories we hold
dearest are the very ones
we need to release, forget
and just move on. Great
advice… not likely I will
take it though.
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 Tuesday,
May 21, the 141st day of
2019. There are 224 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On May 21, 1932,
Amelia Earhart became
the ﬁrst woman to ﬂy
solo across the Atlantic
Ocean as she landed in
Northern Ireland, about
15 hours after leaving
Newfoundland.
On this date
In 1542, Spanish
explorer Hernando de
Soto died while searching for gold along the
Mississippi River.
In 1863, the Seventhday Adventist Church
was ofﬁcially organized.
In 1868, Ulysses S.
Grant was nominated
for president by the

Republican national convention in Chicago.
In 1881, Clara Barton
founded the American
Red Cross.
In 1924, in a case
that drew much notoriety, 14-year-old Bobby
Franks was murdered in
a “thrill killing” carried
out by University of Chicago students Nathan
Leopold Jr. and Richard
Loeb (Bobby’s cousin).
In 1927, Charles
A. Lindbergh landed
his Spirit of St. Louis
monoplane near Paris,
completing the ﬁrst solo
airplane ﬂight across the
Atlantic Ocean in 33 1/2
hours.
In 1941, a German
U-boat sank the American merchant steamship
SS Robin Moor in the
South Atlantic after the
ship’s passengers and
crew were allowed to

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Originality does not consist in saying what
no one has ever said before, but in saying
exactly what you think yourself.”
— James Stephens
Irish poet and novelist (1882-1950)

board lifeboats.
In 1945, actors Humphrey Bogart, 45, and
Lauren Bacall, 20, were
married at Malabar
Farm in Lucas, Ohio (it
was his fourth marriage,
her ﬁrst, and would last
until Bogart’s death in
1957).
In 1972, Michelangelo’s Pieta, on display
at the Vatican, was damaged by a hammer-wielding man who shouted he
was Jesus Christ.
In 1979, former San
Francisco City Supervisor Dan White was

convicted of voluntary
manslaughter in the
slayings of Mayor
George Moscone (mahsKOH’-nee) and openly
gay Supervisor Harvey
Milk; outrage over the
verdict sparked rioting.
(White was sentenced
to seven years and eight
months in prison; he
ended up serving ﬁve
years and committed
suicide in 1985.)
In 1991, former Indian
Prime Minister Rajiv
Gandhi was assassinated
during national elections
by a suicide bomber.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 21, 2019 5

SHS
From page 1

and Tysen Scott Steven
Pullins, Air Force.
Scholarships presented during the awards
assembly were as follows:
John Gray Memorial
Scholarship ($500 each)
— Mallory Johnson and
David Dunfee;
American Red Cross
Scholarship ($250 each)
— Peyton Anderson and
Kathryn Matson
Chase Roush Memorial Scholarship ($1,000
each) — Austin Baker,
Jackie Dailey, Peyton
Anderson and Logan
Drummer;
In Memory of Chase
Roush Scholarship
($600 per semester for
two years) — Jensen
Anderson;
Cruisin’ Saturday
Night Car Show ($1,000
each) — Logan Drummer, Reece Reuter, and
Baylee Grueser;
RACO Scholarships
($1,000 each) — Noah
Diddle, Madison Lisle,
Peyton Anderson, Baylee Grueser, Kathryn
Matson, Mallory Johnson, Reece Reuter, David
Dunfee, Abby Cummins,
and Weston Thorla;
Jim Adams Memorial
Scholarship ($500) —
Madison Lisle;
Clarence and Ruth
Bradford Memorial
Scholarship ($600) —
Marissa Brooker;
Racine Enginuity
Scholarship ($500) —
Mallory Johnson;
Jean Alkire Memorial
Scholarship ($300 each)
— Kathryn Matson and
Emma Wolfe;
Carl B. Weese Memorial Scholarship ($500
each) — Tori Chaney,
Weston Thorla, Erica
Milliron, David Dunfee,
Brayden Cunningham,
and Kathryn Matson;
Southern Tornado
Nursing Scholarship
($500) — Alex VanMeter;
Kathryn Hart Memorial Scholarship ($500) —
Erica Milliron, William
Harmon, David Dunfee
and Abby Cummins;
Frank and Delores
Cleland Memorial Scholarship ($600) — Abby
Cummins;
Vinas Lee Educational
Scholarship ($1,000)
— Mallory Johnson and
Madison Lisle;
Miss Suzanne Scholarship — Kaylee Katona;
Rio Grande Community College Jake Bapst
Scholarship (two years
full tuition, approximately $12,000) — Kayla
Boyer;
Racine Party in the
Park ($500) — Marissa
Brooker;
Ohio River Producers
— Tori Chaney ($500);
Ethan Roberts ($750);
and Colton Hamm
($1,000);
FFA Scholarship honoring 1949 graduate
Howard R. Ervin Sr. —
Kayla Boyer;
Howard R. Ervin
Alumni Scholarship —
Baylee Grueser;
American Legion Post
602 Scholarship ($500
each) — Abby Cummins
and Austin Baker;
Racine-Southern
Alumni Scholarship
($500 each) — Rylan
Jarrell, Morgan Haines,
and Colton Hamm;
Gary G. Lee Memorial
Scholarship ($1,000) —
Reece Reuter;
Southern Local Education Association Scholarship ($500) — Baylee
Grueser;
Eastern Local Education Association Scholarship ($500) — Madison
Lisle;
Kyger Creek Science
Award (Highest ACT)
— Marissa Brooker;
Scholarship Award
sponsored by Jayme
Hill ($1,000) — Kayla

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Rhonda Dailey presents the Howard R. Ervin Sr. Alumni Scholarship
The Top 10 of the Southern High School Class of 2019 are Marissa Brooker, Valedictorian; Mallory
to Baylee Grueser.
Johnson, Salutatorian; Madison Lisle, Peyton Anderson, David Dunfee, Kathryn Matson, William
Harmon, Brayden Cunningham, Austin Arnold, and Reece Reuter.

The Top 10 of the Southern High School Class of 2019 stands on the stage after receiving their medals.

Michelle Kennedy of the University of Rio Grande presents the Jake
Bapst Scholarship to Kayla Boyer.

Fallon Roush presents the In Memory of Chase
Roush Scholarship to Jensen Anderson, a close Tonja Hunter presents the Jim Adams Memorial
cousin of Chase Roush.
Scholarship to Madison Lisle.

Jewell Cutler Scholar Marissa Brooker, right, is pictured with
Courtney Manuel, who as a former Jewell Cutler Scholar, presented
Brooker’s award on Friday.

Boyer;
Jewell Cutler Scholar
Award (four years
tuition, plus summer
experiences) — Marissa
Brooker;
Helen Coast Hayes
Memorial Scholarship
($500 each) — Kathryn
Matson and Marissa
Brooker;
Wayne Roush Memorial Scholarship ($500)
— Mallory Johnson;
George M. Sayre
Memorial Scholarship
($500) — Madison
Lisle;
Dave Diles Memorial
Scholarship ($500 each)
— Weston Thorla and
Peyton Anderson;
Maude Sellers Scholarship ($500 each) — William Harmon and Baylee
Grueser;
Edith Jividen Memorial Scholarship ($500
each) — Reece Reuter,
Alex VanMeter, and
David Dunfee;
Hilton “Fooze” Wolfe
Jr. Scholarship ($500)
— Jensen Anderson;
Reconnecting Youth
Scholarship ($500 each)
— Kayla Boyer and
Brayden Cunningham;
Shelly R. Thorla Scholarship ($500) — Weston
Thorla.
Agriculture/FFA
awards presented during the awards assembly
were as follows:
Agribusiness Productions Systems Concentrators — Auston
Colburn, Colton Hamm,

Jordan Knotts, Trey
Wood, Rylan Jarrell,
Mark Eblin, Cameron
Powell, Raven Reedy;
3-plus Ag Courses
— Auston Colburn,
Colton Hamm, Mikayla
Hoschar, Jarrett Hupp,
Rylan Jarrell, Jordan
Knotts, Dalton Layne,
Ryan Mills, Ethan Roberts, Trey Wood;
Outstanding Placement SAE — Colton
Hamm;
FFA Community Service — Colton Hamm;
Ag Scholastics —
Kayla Boyer;
Outstanding FFA
Senior — Ethan Roberts;
State FFA Degree —
Colton Hamm.
Additional awards
presented on Friday
were as follows:
4-H Awards/Cords —
Peyton Anderson, Jackie
Dailey, Morgan Haines
and Jacynda Glover;
Red Cords for Blood
Donations — Dalton
Layne, Kayla Boyer,
Hannah Lyons and Alora
VanCooney;
Larry R. Morrison
Male Athlete Award —
Jensen Anderson;
Larry R. Morrison
Female Athlete Award
— Mallory Johnson;
Agriculture Key —
Colton Hamm;
Social Studies Key —
David Dunfee;
Home Economics Key
— Emily Hall;
Science Key — Maris-

Tara Roberts presents the Ohio River Producers
$1,000 scholarship to Colton Hamm.

sa Brooker;
English Key — David
Dunfee;
Spanish Key — Mallory Johnson;
Mathematics Key —
Mallory Johnson;
Work Study Key —
Elaina Rifﬂe;
Band Key — Declan
Theiss;
Citizenship Key —
Marissa Brooker; David
Dunfee;
Activities Key —
Marissa Brooker;
Quiz Bowl Key —
Declan Theiss;
John Phillip Sousa
Award — Declan Theiss;
WSAZ Best of Class
— Marissa Brooker;
OHSAA Scholar Athlete Award — David
Dunfee; Mallory Johnson;
OHSAA Scholar Athlete Scholarship Nominee — Austin Baker;
David Dunfee; Madison
Lisle;
OHSAA Archie Grifﬁn
Sportsmanship Award —
Logan Drummer; Baylee
Grueser;
OHSAA Courageous
Student Award —
Weston Thorla;
NFHS Award of Excellence — Peyton Anderson and Austin Baker.
Scholarships and

Tonja Hunter presents the Jean Alkire Memorial
Scholarship to Emma Wolfe.

awards reported by
students, in addition to
those presented on Friday were as follows:
Jensen Anderson —
Rio Grande Athletic
Grant, $3,000;
Peyton Anderson —
Scholarship America
Award (Woodmen Life
Insurance), $500; OHIO
Promise Award, $1,000;
OHIO Distinction
Scholar, $1,000; OHIO
Success Scholarship,
$2,000;
Marissa Brooker
— AEP Scholarship,
$8,000; Holzer Science
Award, $300; Franklin
B. Walter All Scholastic
Award;
Brayden Cunningham — OHIO Promise
Award, $1,000; OHIO
Distinction Scholarship,
$1,000; Green and White
Scholarship, $1,000; Dill
Arnold Cutler Scholarship, $472;
Logan Drummer —
Rutland High School
Alumni Scholarship,
$750; OHIO Promise
Award, $1,000; OHIO
Distinction Scholar,
$1,000; OHIO Success
Scholarship, $3,000; and
OHIO Pathway Scholarship, $1,500;
Baylee Grueser —
National Society Daugh-

ters of American Revolution 2018-19 DAR Good
Citizen Certiﬁcate, pin
and $50; 1967 Brownell
Avenue Scholarship; and
MU Opportunity Grant,
$2,000;
Mallory Johnson —
OHIO Promise Award,
$1,000; OHIO Distinction Scholar, $1,000;
OHIO Success Scholarship, $3,000; Creed
Janes Scholarship,
$2,000; Russ Vision
Scholarship, $4,000;
Madison Lisle —
Fraternal Order of
Eagles #2171, $750;
Grand Lodge of Free
and Accepted Masons,
$1,200; Asbury United
Methodist Church, $500;
Kathryn Matson —
Shawnee Achievement
Award, $6,000 per year
for four years;
Ryan Mills — OHIO
Pathway Award, $1,000;
Reece Reuter — Constellium Aluminum
Scholarship, $500;
Alora VanCooney —
Nurse Aid Training and
Competency Evaluation
Program Certiﬁcate;
Alex VanMeter —
Robert S. Wood Sr.
Scholarship, $3,000.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

�Sports
6 Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Daily Sentinel

15 local athletes advance to Region 11 Championships
By Alex Hawley

relay team of Ally Durst, Rhiannon Morris, Ashton Guthrie
and Whitney Durst, along with
Caterina Miecchi and Layna
LONDONDERRY, Ohio —
Catlett in the shot put from
After reserving ﬁve spots in
the ﬁrst day of competition,
the Region 11 track and ﬁeld
the Lady Eagles claimed three
championships from the ﬁrst
more spots on the second day.
day of the Southeast District
Miecchi and Catlett — who
meet at Southeastern High
were second and third respecSchool, the Ohio Valley Pubtively in the shot put — ﬁnlishing area secured 10-more
ished in the same spots in the
regional berths on Saturday.
Wheelersburg won the girls discus throw, with Miecchi
posting a mark of 115 feet, 6
team title with a score of
inches, and Catlett throwing
94.5, 7.5 ahead of runner-up
Peebles. Crooksville was third 111 feet, 5 inches.
Morris also punched a ticket
with 69.33, while Eastern took
to the regionals in an individfourth at 48. The Lady Torual event, as she was fourth in
nadoes were in a tie for 16th
the 3200m run at 12:31.67.
with Federal Hocking, with
The Southern girls’ only
each team scoring 12. The
regional qualiﬁer came from
Lady Rebels were held scoreDay 2 of competition, as Sydless in the district meet.
After advancing the 4x800m ney Roush claimed fourth in

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern senior Rhiannon Morris competes in the 400m dash at the River Valley
Open on April 2 in Bidwell, Ohio.

the 800m run with a time of
2:33.9.
Minford was the champion
of the boys’ North Division
with a score of 104, 23 ahead
of Coal Grove in second, and
30 in front of Nelsonville-York
in third. Eastern took sixth
with a score of 52, South Gallia was 13th with 13, while
Southern claimed 14th with
10.
With the 4x800m relay team
of Nick Browning, Bryce Newland, Colton Combs and Noah
Browning, as well as discus
throw champion Mason Dishong advancing from the ﬁrst
day of the meet, the Eastern
boys claimed three more spots
from the Day 2.
EHS senior Noah Browning
See ATHLETES | 7

Point Pleasant
lands two state
championships
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Some crazy eights.
The Point Pleasant boys and girls each came
away with eight podium ﬁnishes on Friday and
Saturday at the 2019 WVSSAC Class AA Track
and Field Championships held at Laidley Field on
the campus of the University of Charleston.
The Lady Knights landed the program’s only
two state titles this weekend and placed third
overall in the girls competition with 44 points,
while the Black Knights had a trio of runner-up
efforts en route to a ninth place ﬁnish of 30 points
on the boys’ side.
Winﬁeld won the girls Class AA crown with 124
points, while Bridgeport was second out of 23
scoring teams with 121 points.
The Point girls had a dozen competitors in 10
different events, including a quartet of relays and
three other events with multiple entrants.
The ﬁnal results were, well, rather remarkable
given the performances in two days of down-pouring rain and scorching heat.
The Lady Knights landed their ﬁrst state championship on Saturday as freshman Addy Cottrill
pulled off a bit of shocker by upending favorite
Brooke Burns in the shot put ﬁnal. Cottrill’s winning throw of 36 feet, 2.75 inches was less than
three inches better the Scott senior’s best effort.
Burns ended up winning the discus event on
Friday, with Cottrill placing third in that ﬁnal with
a throw of 121 feet, 4 inches.
Given that Cottrill was a Region IV runner-up in
both events at Winﬁeld High School a week prior,
the freshman was both humble and awe-struck
with how her ﬁrst state meet ended up turning
out.
“This is very overwhelming and really exciting
because I have worked really hard for this, but I
didn’t really know what to expect coming into the
weekend,” Cottrill said. “It’s a great way to start
my high school career at the state meet and I’ll
have more time to get even better over the next
few years. For now though, I’m just going to take
in the moment and enjoy this great weekend for
what it is.”
Cottrill joined Alea Hipes as the only freshmen
to ever win a state title in Point Pleasant girls’
track and ﬁeld history. Hipes also won the shot
put in 2007 with a winning throw of 34 feet, 1
inch.
See STATE | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, May 21
Baseball
Wahama at Huntington St.
Joe, 6 p.m.
Scott at Point Pleasant,
6:30 p.m.
(2) Southern vs. (3) Green
at VA Memorial, 7 p.m.
Wednesday, May 22
Baseball
EHS-HHS winner vs.
Waterford-Whiteoak
winner at VA Memorial,
5 p.m.
Huntington St. Joe at
Wahama (if needed), 6
p.m.
Point Pleasant at Scott (if
needed), 6:30 p.m.
SHS-GHS winner vs.
Clay-S. Webster winner at

VA Memorial, 7:30
Track and Field
D-3 Regionals at Fairfield
Union HS, 4:30
Thursday, May 23
Track and Field
D-2 Regionals at
Muskingum University, 5
p.m.
Friday, May 24
Track and Field
D-3 Regionals at Fairfield
Union HS, 4:30
Saturday, May 25
Track and Field
D-2 Regionals at
Muskingum University,
11:30

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern sophomore Kennadi Rockhold catches a flyball in center field, during the Lady Eagles’ 9-0 setback in the district championship
game on Saturday in Rio Grande, Ohio.

Lady Eagles bounced by Peebles
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The one thing you
don’t want to run into in
the postseason, a team
with momentum.
The Eastern softball
team had its 2019 campaign come to a close in
the Division IV district
championship game on
Saturday at RedStorm
Softball Park in Gallia
County, as the fourthseeded Lady Eagles
dropped a 9-0 decision
to third-seeded Peebles,
which has now won seven
games.
Eastern (14-8) — the
third team that PHS
(22-2) has shut out this
postseason — recorded
the game’s ﬁrst hit in the
bottom of the ﬁrst inning,
but didn’t reach base
again until the fourth
inning.
The Lady Indians broke
the scoreless tie with
two outs in the top of the
second frame, using backto-back two-run singles to
take a 4-0 lead.
After a scoreless third
inning, Peebles went
ahead 7-0 with two outs
in the top of the fourth,
scoring on an RBI single,
a bases loaded dropped
third strike, and a passed
ball.
The Lady Eagles made
it into scoring position
for the ﬁrst time as Cera
Grueser doubled to lead
off the bottom of the
fourth. Eastern was in
scoring position again
after a pair of singles in
the following inning, but
had its ﬁnal seven batters

EHS freshman Megan Maxon fires the ball in from left field, during
the Lady Eagles’ 9-0 loss to Peebles at RedStorm Softball Park on
Saturday in Rio Grande, Ohio.

retired in order.
PHS tacked on a run
apiece in the ﬁnal two
innings, capping off the
9-0 victory.
Following the seasonending setback, sixth-year
EHS head coach Bryan
Durst talked about the
second inning setting the
tone for the Lady Indians, as well as the Lady
Eagles’ offensive challenges in the contest.
“There were a lot of
big plays in that four-run
second, it just turned
out that all those plays
went against us,” Durst
said. “That’s softball, it
happens fast, and it’s like
I told our kids, ‘overall,
we just weren’t special
enough today.’ We did
some nice things, but

we couldn’t piece hits
together. We played a
very good team, I give a
lot of credit to that team,
I think they’ll represent
this district well.”
Alexus Metheney
took the pitching loss
in 3.2 innings for the
Lady Eagles, allowing
ﬁve earned runs on six
hits and a walk. Tessa
Rockhold struck out four
batters in 3.1 frames for
EHS, allowing four runs,
two earned, on four hits
and three walks.
Madison Pierce was the
winning pitcher of record
with a complete game
shut out for PHS, striking
out 10 batters, walking
none, and giving up four
hits.
Grueser led the EHS

offense, going 2-for-3 with
a double, while Emmalea Durst and Kennadi
Rockhold came up with a
single apiece.
Leading Peebles at the
plate, Brycelyn Short
singled twice and drove
in three runs, while
Marissa Moore and Hope
Brown both singled twice
and scored twice. Price,
Christian Reed, Jerilin
Toller and Mackenzie
Farahay each singled once
for PHS, with Farahay
earning two RBIs, while
Pierce and Reed drove in
a run apiece. Kylie Sims
contributed a run and an
RBI to the winning cause.
This marks the ﬁnal
game in the prep careers
of EHS seniors Alexus
Metheney, Ally Barber,
Mollie Maxon, Cera Grueser, Kelsey Casto and
Emmalea Durst.
Coach Durst discussed
the impact the seniors
have had on the Eastern
softball program, and
what the underclassmen
will have to do in order
to return to the district
ﬁnal.
“When I think about
our group of seniors, I
think about their league
championships and I
think about them when
they were young,” Durst
said. “They brought a
lot to our program and
made things a lot of fun,
we just came up short
today. I have a lot of fond
memories of them and all
that they’ve accomplished
throughout their careers.
“We’re losing those six
seniors, but I told the
See EAGLES | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Wilder KOs Breazeale

State

NEW YORK (AP) — Deontay Wilder believes
they are coming, the mega matchup with Anthony
Joshua and the rematch with Tyson Fury.
Until then, he moved onto some business with
Dominic Breazeale.
He took care of it quickly and emphatically.
Wilder got back into the win column Saturday
night, knocking out Breazeale with an overpowering right hand in the ﬁrst round to defend his
heavyweight title.
“There’s been a lot of animosity and a lot of
words that were said and it just came out of me
tonight,” Wilder said.

From page 6

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Junior Golf Schedule
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The schedule for the
2019 Frank Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf
League has been released.
The tour ofﬁcially begins on Wednesday, June
5, at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolis. Age
groups for both young ladies and young men are
10 and under, 11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
The remaining tournaments, courses and
dates of play are as follows: Wednesday, June
12, at Riverside Golf Course in Mason; Tuesday,
June 18, at Meigs County Course in Pomeroy;
Wednesday, June 26, at Riverside Golf Course
in Mason; and Tuesday, July 9, at Meigs County
Golf Course in Pomeroy.
The fee for each tournament is $12 per player.
A small lunch is included with the fee and will
be served at the conclusion of play each week.
Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. with play starting at 9 a.m. Please contact Jeff Slone at 740256-6160, Jan Haddox at 304-675-3388, or Bob
Blessing 304-675-6135 if you can contribute or
have questions concerning the tour.

Youth basketball camp
CENTENARY, Ohio — The Gallia Academy
boys and girls basketball staff will be conducting a youth basketball camp for boys and girls
entering grades 3-8. The camp will be held from
June 10-12 from 1-3 p.m. each day. The camp will
be held at Gallia Academy High School. Camp
participants will be instructed by both staff and
players.
The cost of the camp is $40 per student if registered by June 3 and $50 per child after June 3.
Families with additional children can attend for
$25 per child. Students can register the ﬁrst day
of camp. All campers will receive a T-shirt. Water
will be provided but a water bottle is recommended.
For questions or to register, please contact
Coach Gary Harrison at 740-441-7856 or Coach
Jordan Deel at 740-853-2654.

Athletes

After missing by one
spot in the long jump
in Day 1, SGHS junior
Kyle Northup earned
From page 6
his regional trip with
earned the Eagles’ only a fourth place ﬁnish of
championship from the 5 feet, 8 inches in the
second day of competi- high jump. Northup was
tion, winning the 400m also one spot away from
another event at the
dash with a time of
49.23, a district record, Region 11 meet, as he
placed ﬁfth in the 400m
surpassing the 2011
dash at 55.3.
mark of 50.31 by EastSHS senior David
ern’s Kyle Connery.
Dunfee — who was a
Noah Browning also
spot away from qualifyclaimed a silver medal
on Saturday, turning in ing in the discus throw
on Wednesday —
a time of 23.06 in the
punched his ticket to
200m dash.
the next round with a
The Eagles’ 4x400m
third place ﬁnish and a
relay will also be movdistance of 43 feet, 5.75
ing on, as the team of
inches in the shot put
Combs, Nick Brownon Saturday.
ing, Noah Browning,
The Region 11 Chamand Jayden Evans was
pionships will take
fourth with a time of
place on Wednesday
3:41.33.
EHS came up just shy and Friday at Lancaster
High School.
of three-more regional
Visit www.baumberths, as Nick Brownspage.com for complete
ing was ﬁfth in the
results of the Southeast
800m run at 2:09.23,
Newland was ﬁfth in the District Championships
3200m run at 11:23.79, at Southeastern High
School.
while Dishong took
ﬁfth in the shot put at
Alex Hawley can be reached at
42-2.5.
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Cottrill also became the
ﬁrst PPHS state champion since Aislyn Hayman
won both the shot put
and discus titles in 2017
at the Class AA tournament.
Point’s second state
championship also took
a bit of an odd turn as
junior Samantha Saunders claimed gold in the
high jump with a winning
height of 5 feet, 4 inches.
The double-AA high
jump ﬁnal was originally
scheduled for Friday evening, but rain and lightning forced the event to
be delayed until Saturday
afternoon.
The difference, as Saunders noted afterwards,
was huge, mainly given
how much better she felt
competing in the second
go-around.
“Yesterday was pretty
rough because I was
messing up in warmups
and couldn’t get any of
my timing down. Luckily, the weather came
and moved the event to
today,” Saunders said.
“For some reason, I just
felt good about them
postponing the event
last night because of
the weather. I had more
energy and more bounce
today, and my timing
was great. I knew when
I was clearing all of my
ﬁrst attempts that I had a
good shot at winning, and
that was the biggest thing
for me.
“Everything worked
out for me in the end,
and this is truly a remarkable feeling. After all the
work and everything that
I have accomplished here
so far, this is deﬁnitely a
great way to close out my
junior year.”
Along with her ﬁrst
state championship,
Saunders was also the
pole vault runner-up (100) and placed ﬁfth in the
long jump with a distance
of 16 feet, 6.75 inches.
It was the third time in
her career that Saunders
earned top-six ﬁnishes in
both the high jump and

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underclassmen, ‘I’d like to make it a tradition
to come back here every year’. With the players we have to replace, it’s going to take a lot of
hard work, a lot of heart and a lot of dedication.
Anything can happen, we can be right back here
next year, and even go beyond, it’s just a matter of
everybody coming together and working hard.”
The six EHS seniors have helped the team earn
67 victories in their four years.
Peebles moves on to the Region 15 semiﬁnal
against Portsmouth Notre Dame on Wednesday at
Pickerington High School Central.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

pole vault events, as well
as her second podium ﬁnish in the long jump.
Saunders had the thirdhighest point total of any
Class AA girls competitor
with 20 points. Saunders
has ﬁnished on the podium in eight of her nine
career event appearances
and has accumulated 39.5
points at the state level
through three seasons.
Both Cottrill and
Saunders accounted for
36 points combined, but
the remaining eight Lady
Knight points also came
from the shot put and
high jump ﬁnals.
Freshman Elicia Wood
made a solid state debut
by tying for third place
in the high jump with a
cleared height of ﬁve feet
even.
Freshman Kayla Butler
was ﬁfth in the shot put
(32-9.75) and sophomore
Tristan Wilson was sixth
in the same event with a
heave of 33 feet, 4 inches.
Wilson was also 10th
overall in the discus ﬁnal
(92-7).
The quartet of seniors
Madison Hatﬁeld, Allison
Henderson and Sydnee
Moore, as well as freshman Kady Hughes,
just missed the podium
after placing seventh in
both the 4x400m relay
(4:20.14) and 4x800m
relay (10:26.81) events.
Moore, Hatﬁeld, senior
Teagan Hay and junior
Ashley Staats collectively
ﬁnished eighth in the
4x200m relay (1:52.47)
and were also 11th overall
in the 4x100m relay with

a mark of 53.37 seconds.
Henderson was 10th in
the 800m run (2:34.26)
and Hay did not have a
qualifying distance in the
long jump ﬁnal. Junior
Hannah Gleason was also
14th in the discus ﬁnal
with a heave of 85 feet,
10 inches.
The Lady Knights have
scored at least one point
at the state tournament
for 16 consecutive postseasons.
Allie Germann of Winﬁeld was the top individual scorer in the Class AA
girls meet with 28 points.
Winﬁeld won the boys
Class AA title with 80
points, while Fairmont
Senior (62) and Weir
(52.33) rounded out the
top three spots of 26 scoring teams.
The Point boys had 16
competitors in a dozen
different events, including a quintet of relays and
three other events with
multiple entrants.
The Black Knights
received a career-best
effort from senior Luke
Wilson, who ﬁnished as
the runner-up in both
the 1600m run (4:24.95)
and 3200m run (9:37.41)
ﬁnals. Wilson — who
scored 17 of his 25 career
points at state this weekend — was also sixth in
the 800m run (2:03.30).
The junior quartet
of Kaydean Eta, Brady
Adkins, Logan Southall
and Nick Leport ﬁnished
as the runners-up in the
4x110m shuttle hurdles
relay with a time of 58.31
seconds.

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

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From page 6

Courtesy photo

Point Pleasant senior Luke Wilson, left, sprints out to the front
during the start of the 2019 Class AA 800m final held Saturday at
Laidley Field in Charleston, W.Va.

Eta was ﬁfth in the
110m hurdles (15.62) and
Adkins was sixth in the
300m hurdles (42.01),
while junior Steven Trent
placed sixth in the pole
vault with a height of 11
feet, 6 inches.
Senior Trevon Franklin
was sixth in the shot put
with a heave of 47 feet
even, while junior Gabe
Hall was eighth in the
same event with a throw
of 44 feet, three-quarters
of an inch.
Due to tiebreakers,
junior Logan Southall
tied for eighth and freshman Luke Derenberger
was 10th in the high
jump ﬁnals with identical
clearing marks of 5 feet, 8
inches. Southall was also
12th in the 110m hurdles
with a time of 16.41 seconds.
Juniors Jovone Johnson, Nick Leport and
Garrett Hatten, as well as
freshman Preston Taylor,
combined to place 10th
in the 4x100m relay with
a time of 45.31 seconds.
Johnson, Taylor, Hatten
and Adkins were also
15th in the 4x200m relay
with a mark of 1:41.13.
The 4x400m squad of
Wilson, Leport, Hatten
and Adkins were 14th
overall with a time of
3:54.34. Leport was also
14th in the 400m dash
with a time of 57.47 seconds.
Johnson was 15th overall in the 200m dash with
a time of 24.54 seconds.
Taylor committed a false
start in the 100m dash
semiﬁnals and was therefore disqualiﬁed.
Juniors Alberto Castillo, Peyton Hughes and
Ethan Scott, as well as
freshman Hector Castillo,
collectively ﬁnished 15th
in the 4x800m relay with
a mark of 9:13.62.
Aaron Withrow of
Winﬁeld was the top individual scorer in the Class
AA boys meet with 32.5
points.
Visit runwv.com for
complete results of the
2019 WVSSAC Track and
Field Championships held
Friday and Saturday at
Laidley Field.

TUESDAY EVENING

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Tuesday, May 21, 2019 7

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Indiana Jones and his father must fend off Nazis while searching for the Holy Grail. TV14
Loud House Loud House Loud House Substitute
SpongeBob SpongeBob Full House
Full House
Friends
Friends
SVU "Disappearing Acts"
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Outcry" WWE Super Smackdown
Miz (SF) (N) Chrisley (N)
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Last O.G.
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time (N)
Town Hall (N)
(5:30)
Contraband ('12, Act) Mark Wahlberg. TV14
NBA Tip-Off NBA Basketball Playoffs Milwaukee Bucks at Toronto Raptors (L)
(4:30)
The Last Samurai (2003, Drama) Ken
O Brother, Where Art Thou? Three prisoners on a chain gang
The
Watanabe, Billy Connolly, Tom Cruise. TVMA
escape to find hidden loot in the South during the 1930s. TV14
Departed R
D. Catch "Shifting Stack"
Deadliest Catch (N)
Deadliest Catch (N)
Deadliest Catch "Winter Is Here" (N)
Intervention "Family of Addicts: Tom and John"
Intervention "Young and Addicted" Morgan and Brett are Kids Behind Bars: Life or
both battling addiction. (N)
Parole "Bobby" (N)
Lone Star Law
Lone Star Law
LoneStar "Stray Bullets" (N) Lone Star Law (N)
L. Star Law "Justice Served"
Chicago P.D. "Call It
Chicago P.D. "Get My
Chicago P.D. "The Weigh
Chicago P.D. "Chicken,
Chicago P.D. "An Honest
Macaroni"
Cigarettes"
Station"
Dynamite, Chainsaw"
Woman"
Law &amp; Order "Deadbeat"
Law&amp;O. "Family Business" Law &amp; Order "Entrapment" Law &amp; Order "Legacy"
Law &amp; Order "Menace"
Chrisley
Chrisley
E! News (N)
Remember the Titans ('00, Dra) Denzel Washington. TVPG
Movie
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Locked Up Abroad "Peru" Locked Up Abroad
Locked Up Abroad
Locked Up Abroad "The
Locked Up Abroad "Prison
"Thailand"
"Teenage Drug Smuggler" Real Goodfella"
Nightmares"
Indy500
OffGrid (N) NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs San Jose Sharks at St. Louis Blues (L)
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
MLB Best (N) NHRA 30
NHRA Drag Racing Virginia Nationals Site: Virginia Motorsports Park -- Richmond, Va.
The Curse of Civil War
Civil War Gold "A Void At The Curse of Civil "The
The Curse of Civil War
(:05) American Pickers "On
Gold "The Return"
Gold "Tunnel Visions"
All Costs" (N)
Pritchard Connection" (N)
the Fritz" (N)
Beverly Hills
Beverly "Grilling Me Softly" Beverly Hills
Beverly Hills (N)
Texicanas (N)
I Can Do Bad All by Myself ('09, Com/Dra) Taraji P. Henson, Tyler Perry. TVPG
Games People Play (N)
Ladies "Hot Coko" (N)
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Good Bones (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(4:00) Orphan (:35)
Underworld: Awakening (2012, Action) India
Underworld ('03, Fant) Kate Beckinsale. A beautiful vampire
Eisley, Michael Ealy. TVMA
warrior is torn when she falls in love with a werewolf. TVMA

6

PM

6:30

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450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

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PM

7:30

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Tonight (N)

8

PM

8:30

9

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9:30

10

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10:30

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Real Sports With Bryant
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Holbrook. Genetically upgraded Predators return to Earth Gumbel (N)
to hunt humans to the brink of extinction. TVMA
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(:45)
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the military suspects them of committing a crime. TV14
in the body of an older man. TV14
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single blows up.
Butler. TVMA
down a terrorist intent on starting a war. TVMA

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Wahama ends year at Laidley Field
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Wahama junior MacKenzie Barr (239) takes off down the home stretch after receiving a baton
exchange from sophomore teammate Abbie Lieving during the Class A 4x100m relay finals held
Saturday at Laidley Field in Charleston, W.Va.

Lieving, Barr, Neal
and senior Skylar Rifﬂe
were 11th overall in the
4x100m relay with a time
of 54.36 seconds. Neal,
Lieving, and freshmen
Michaela Hieronymus
and Olivia Brooks ended
up 13th in the 4x200m
relay with a time of
1:56.93.
Senior Camryn Tyree
was 16th in the long
jump ﬁnal with a distance of 14 feet, 2.5
inches. Freshman Tori
Sigman did not register
a qualifying height in the
pole vault ﬁnal.
Ella Hesson of Williamstown was the top
individual scorer in the
Class A girls meet with
32.5 points.
The White Falcons
had a seven-year scoring streak end this past
Friday and Saturday
as three boys came up

(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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empty in four different
events.
Sophomore Aaron
Jordan just missed the
podium after ﬁnishing
seventh in the pole vault
with a ﬁnal height of 10
feet, 6 inches.
Sophomore Josh Frye
was eighth in the 400m
dash (52.73) and also
placed 13th in the 100m
dash (11.94). Senior
Jacob Lloyd was 12th
overall in the 800m run
with a mark of 2:09.88.
Doddridge County
claimed the Class A boys
crown with 84.33 points,
while Magnolia was just
behind in the runnerup spot with 82 points.
Ravenswood was third
out of 24 scoring teams
with 64 points.
Blake Jarrell of Ravenswood was the top
individual scorer in the
Class A boys meet with

26 points.
The Ripley girls and
Spring Mills boys both
edged out Wheeling
Park for the Class AAA
team titles. The Lady
Vikings (82) won by two
points and the Cardinals (71) won by three
points.
Mikah Alleyne of
Woodrow Wilson posted
40 points as top pointscorer in the Class AAA
girls division, while
Chris Barbera of Woodrow Wilson netted 30
points as the top scorer
for triple-A boys.
Visit runwv.com for
complete results of the
2019 WVSSAC Track
and Field Championships held Friday and
Saturday at Laidley
Field.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

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

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District is accepting applications for
the next two weeks with intentions of
ɪMMJOH�POF�³FME�NBJOUFOBODF�QPTJUJPO
within the next month.
The position is considered a distribution
maintenance position, but because of
the advanced changes in our systems
technology, computer knowledge and or
other trades will be given preference in
the applicant selection process. No prior
water system knowledge is required as
we will train to levels needed. You may
pick up an application at 39561 Bar
30 Road, which is three miles south of
Tuppers Plains just off State Route 7 or
print one off of our website www.tpcwd.org

OH-70126268

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
— It’s a less than traditional manner, but the
Lady Falcons still scored
at the state meet.
Wahama mustered
only half of a point this
past weekend at the 2019
WVSSAC Class A Track
and Field Championships
held at Laidley Field on
the campus of the University of Charleston.
The Red and White
managed their only mark
of the weekend when
sophomore Abbie Lieving tied for sixth place in
the high jump, giving the
Lady Falcons a ﬁnal tally
of one-half point en route
to a 26th place ﬁnish.
The Lady Falcons
— who had eight individuals competing in
six events — have now
scored at the state meet
two consecutive postseasons after going scoreless
the previous four campaigns. Lieving’s ﬁnal
height in the high jump
was 4 feet, 10 inches.
Wahama was the last
of 26 girls teams to
score points at the Class
A tournament, which
Williamstown won with
108.5 points. Ritchie
County was the overall
runner-up with 52 points,
while Wheeling Central
Catholic was third with
48 points.
WHS junior MacKenzie Barr was eighth in
the pole vault ﬁnal with
a cleared height of eight
feet even, while freshman
Lacey Neal placed 10th
in the 100m dash with a
mark of 13.22 seconds.

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Raptors beat
Bucks 118-112
in 2 OTs
TORONTO (AP) — Pascal Siakam felt guilty
about a pair of missed free throws and the extra
minutes they added to his teammates’ night.
Fortunately for Siakam and the rest of the
Raptors, Kawhi Leonard didn’t seem to feel any
fatigue.
Leonard scored 36 points, including eight in
the second overtime, and Toronto beat Milwaukee 118-112 on Sunday night to cut the Bucks’
lead in the Eastern Conference ﬁnals to 2-1.
Leonard made 11 of 25 shots and went 12 for
13 at the free throw line in more than 52 minutes
of action, a playoff career high.
“At the end of the game, Kawhi said he played
an hour of basketball,” Siakam said. “I told him
‘My bad.’”
Leonard had nine rebounds and ﬁve assists
despite appearing to be bothered by some leg
discomfort. He said he would keep ﬁghting and
playing.
“I mean, it’s 52 minutes and it’s in the playoffs,
so you deﬁnitely feel it. When you play 30 minutes, you feel it still,” Leonard said. “Just got to
not worry about it, get my treatment and move
on to the next one.”
Leonard’s previous career high in playoff minutes was 46, set with San Antonio against Miami
in Game 6 of the NBA Finals on June 18, 2013.
The Spurs lost that game in overtime, then lost
Game 7 two days later.
Siakam had 25 points and 11 rebounds, Norman Powell scored 19 points before fouling out,
and Marc Gasol had 16 points and 12 rebounds.
The Raptors will try to draw even when they host
Game 4 on Tuesday night.
Giannis Antetokounmpo had 12 points and 23
rebounds before fouling out with 4:24 to go in
the second overtime. Antetokounmpo shot 5 for
16.
“They were just playing better than us,” Antetokounmpo said. “Whenever we got close, they’d
hit some shots and take the lead back to seven
or eight. At the end of the day, it wasn’t our best
game. We can get a lot better.”
Toronto won despite guards Kyle Lowry and
Powell both fouling out in the fourth quarter.
Siakam also missed a pair of free throws with 7.4
seconds left in regulation that could have iced the
game for the Raptors.

(304) 675-1333 or fax to (304) 675-5234

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

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Apartments/Townhouses
Ellm View Apts.
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, May 21, 2019 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

Written By Brian &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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�10 Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

Brandon DeWees, FNP-C
Family Nurse Practitioner

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Brandon DeWees is a Certiﬁed Family Nurse Practitioner who was raised in the
town of Mason, West Virginia. Brandon is pleased to offer medical services to
the people who live in the community that raised him. Brandon has experience
in urgent care, emergency medicine, and psychiatry. He started his nursing career during his senior year at Wahama High School as a state tested nursing
assistant in a rehabilitation center. He then worked at an urgent care center
through college as he gained his Bachelor of Science in Nursing in 2009 with
a minor in psychology and a Master of Science in Nursing in 2013, both from
Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia.
“I’m excited to transition from the Express Care setting to an office setting.
As a primary care provider, patients can now establish medical care with
me. It’s my privilege to open new avenues of care for patients to help them
along their healthcare journey,” Brandon DeWees, FNP-C.
Brandon provides walk-in sick visits for newborns and older and will establish
care for people 13 years of age and older. While Brandon does schedule and
keep appointments, he’s also happy to take care of walk-in patients without
an appointment.

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2)),&amp;(�+2856��Monday - Friday: 8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.

OH-70123357

Call today to schedule an appointment with Brandon DeWees, FNP-C.
Appointments available beginning May 6th.

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