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                  <text>Stork
Project
takes off

Party in
the Park
returns

Eagles
take down
Caldwell

NEWS s 3A

NEWS s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com

Issue 36, Volume 56

Sunday, September 8, 2019 s $2

Jackson
man killed
in crash
By Sarah Hawley

off the left side of the
roadway before striking a tree and catching
CHESTER — A crash ﬁre, according to the
involving a dump truck release.
In addition to the
on Friday morning near
Chester resulted in the Gallipolis Post of the
death of a Jackson man. Ohio State Highway
Patrol, responding to
According to a news
the scene were Meigs
release from the Gallipolis Post of the Ohio County EMS, Olive
Township Volunteer
State Highway Patrol,
Fire Department, Meigs
James J. Howling, 49,
EMA, the Meigs Counof Jackson died at the
ty Coroner’s Ofﬁce,
scene.
The crash occurred at and White Schwarzel
Funeral Home.
8:01 a.m. on Friday on
The roadway was
State Route 248 near
closed for several hours
mile post 7 (near Sucwhile the vehicle was
cess Road).
recovered.
Howling was drivThe crash remains
ing a 2001 Kentworth
under investigation by
T800 southbound on
the Ohio State Highway
State Route 248 when
Patrol.
the vehicle reportedly
traveled left of center,
Sarah Hawley is the managing
overturned, and slid

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Photos by Dean Wright | OVP

Bossard Library guests get the opportunity to build a spaceship on an interactive computer display in the SPACE: A Journey to Our
Future exhibit in the Riverside Room.

A peek of SPACE: A Journey to Our Future
By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS — Bossard Memorial
Library held an introductory screening of
the SPACE: A Journey to Our Future exhibit Friday evening after greeting guests during a reception at the French Art Colony.
“I want to thank you for being with us
this evening as we celebrate the opening
of SPACE: A Journey to Our Future,” said
Bossard Library Director Debbie Saunders.
“What better time to host an amazing
exhibit in Gallia County with 2019 marking
the 50th anniversary of the ﬁrst lunar landing…”

editor of The Daily Sentinel.

City approves first
reading of dwelling
requirements

Library visitors inspect the curiosities of infrared technology.

See SPACE | 5A

By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis City Commission
recently approved a ﬁrst reading of dwelling structure requirements within municipal limits as well
as approved the appointment of an acting city
manager to serve as a substitute for the current
city manager.
Recently hired city project engineer Ted Lozier,
coming from Ohio’s Department of Natural
Resources, was appointed by a vote of three to
two to serve as acting city manager when current
City Manager Gene Greene is away representing Gallipolis on business, when he is on medical
leave or taking personal time. Commissioners
Cody Caldwell, Steven Wallace and Mike Fulks
approved the measure while Commissioners Tony
Gallagher and Beau Sang voted against.
Commissioners also approved the ﬁrst reading of a new ordinance aiming to set standards
of construction for new buildings intended to be
utilized as residences within municipal limits after
a trend of discussion over past meetings regarding
concerns with tiny houses moving into the area,
property value and quality of living areas.
Should a second reading be approved by the
commission, dwellings within Gallipolis would
need to be constructed on a permanent foundation
and structures must be comparable to surrounding
adjacent dwellings.
See CITY | 5A

A NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Editorial: 4A
Weather: 8A
B SPORTS
Classifieds: 5B
Comics: 6B

‘The Firehouse 12’
Loyalty is Forever
begins fundraiser
for local fire
departments
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MEIGS COUNTY —
After beginning in 2013
as a way to help the
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce with the start of
their K9 unit, Loyalty is
Forever is expanding with
its latest campaign.
“The Firehouse 12”
campaign through Loyalty is Forever will beneﬁt
Meigs County’s 12 volunteer ﬁre departments
as they work to serve
the residents of Meigs
County.

Lori Miller | Courtesy

Photos for the calendar, as well as head shot photos of the individual firefighters, were recently taken
by Bartee Photography. They are pictured here taking the photo of Bob Wood who has 58 years of
service as a volunteer firefighter.

“We have been talking for a couple of years
about doing something
for the ﬁre departments,”
said Tina Richards of

Loyalty is Forever.
Richards and Lori
Miller said that there was
a time a year or so ago
when the Rutland Vol-

unteer Fire Department
needed life jackets for
water rescues.
See FIREHOUSE | 8A

Mothman Festival returns Sept. 21-22
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailytribune.com or
www.mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Kick-off event set
for Sept. 20
By Erin (Perkins) Johnson
eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT — The
evenings are starting to get a chill
in them and the annual celebration
of the Mothman is just around the
corner.
The 18th annual Mothman Festival which takes place on Main
Street in Point Pleasant is set for
Saturday, Sept. 21 and Sunday,

Sept. 22, with a kick start to the
event happening on Friday evening, Sept. 20 at the Point Pleasant
Historic State Theater.
The Mothman Festival, held the
each year during the third weekend in September, increases in the
numbers of guests steadily every
year.
“Every year’s Mothman Festival
brings new challenges,” said festival founder Jeff Wamsley. “We have
a great team with the city crew and
year after year they help us pull
off a successful festival. We always
estimate 10-12 thousands of festival attendees between the two days
and see an increase each year.”

This year, the event will have
some new guest speakers and
bands as well as youtube celebrities in attendance. Also, street
entertainers will be featured along
with the bands who perform on the
Riverfront Park stage. On Saturday, festival goers will also have a
chance to participate in a costume
contest which will be take place
from noon- 2 p.m. at the Riverfront
Park stage, registration for the
event will be held from 11-11:45
a.m.
This festival originally began as
a way to attract people to Main
See MOTHMAN | 5A

�NEWS/OBITUARIES

2A Sunday, September 8, 2019

OBITUARIES
VOIERS
LANGSVILLE — Rita Marie Voiers, 75, of Langsville, died on Sept. 5, 2019.
Funeral services will be held at Deal Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant, W.Va., Monday, Sept. 9, 2019 at 11
a.m. Burial will follow the service in Concord Cemetery in Henderson, W.Va. Friends may visit the family
at the funeral home on Sunday evening, Sept. 8 from
4-6 p.m.
ANGLES
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Lea Nicole Angles,
30, of Point Pleasant, W.Va. died on Sept. 5, 2019
unexpectedly from injuries sustained in an accident.
Services for Lea will be held on Monday, Sept. 9,
2019 at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home from 11 a.m.noon.
STOWE
GALLIPOLIS — Helen M. Stowe, 90, of Gallipolis,
died September 6, 2019 in the Overbrook Center,
Middleport. Arrangements will be announced by the
Cremeens-King Funeral Home, Gallipolis.

Dennis couple celebrate 50
year anniversary

Sunday Times-Sentinel

CARL LEE ROBINSON
RACINE — Carl Lee
Robinson, 68, of Racine,
went to his Heavenly
Home, at 12:45 a.m. on
Friday, September 6,
2019, after a short battle
with cancer. Born August
25, 1951, in Gallipolis he
was the son of the late
Howard Robinson and
Eleanor Powell Davis,
who survives in Racine.
He loved to hunt, ﬁsh
and spend time with his
family and friends.
Carl was a twenty
year United States Navy
Veteran having retired at
the rank of Chief Petty
Ofﬁcer. After his retirement from the Navy he
worked twenty two years
for the Army Corps of
Engineers. He retired as
the head of maintenance

at the Belleville
Locks and Dam in
Reedsville.
Carl was a
member of the
Racine United
Methodist Church,
he was a Master
Mason and Past Master
of Shade River Lodge
# 453 F. &amp; M. of Ohio,
and a Scottish Rite 32nd
Degree Master Mason of
the Valley of Columbus.
He was also a member
of the Racine American
Legion Post # 602, and
the Tupper Plains Post #
9053 Veterans of Foreign
Wars.
In addition to his mother, Carl is survived by his
wife of 45 years Carolyn
Manuel Robinson, whom
he married on June 16,

1974 in Apple
Grove, Ohio, a
daughter, Nikki
(Jeremy) Northup,
of Racine, and a
brother, Bryan
(Annie) Robinson,
of Ridgeﬁeld, Connecticut. Sisters-in-law,
Jane (Dave) Graham,
Joan Manuel, Carmen
Manuel, Jenny Manuel,
all of Racine, Joyce
Manuel (Morris) Wolfe,
of Anderson, South
Carolina, and Charlotte
Skender, of Moundsville,
West Virginia, a brotherin-law, Charles (Brenda)
Manuel, of Racine,
nieces, Shauna Manuel
Leahy, and Jennifer
Skender Burns, nephews,
Chase and Cole Graham,
B.J. and Mark Robinson,

and James Skender, Jr.
also survive.
In addition to his
father, Carl is preceded in
death by a brother, Raymond Robinson.
Funeral services will be
held at 11 a.m. on Tuesday, September 10, 2019
in the Cremeens-King
Funeral Home, Racine.
Pastor Larry Fisher and
Pastor Duke Holbert will
ofﬁciate. Interment with
Military Honors provided
by the Racine American
Legion Post 602 will be
in the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call
from 4-7 p.m. on Monday
with Masonic funeral services provided by Shade
River Lodge # 453 following calling hours at the
funeral home.

Watson and McComas reunion
Submitted

PERRY TOWNSHIP
— The Watson and
McComas reunion was
held on Aug. 11, 2019,
at Raccoon Creek Park
Shelterhouse Two with
102 in attendance.
New cousins met for
the ﬁrst time which
include: Judy and Don
Wolfe, New Jersey,
Ralph, Rebecca and
Mary Swenson, New
York, Mary McComas
and Brenda Darst, Corning, Ohio, Dan, Eileen,
Dave, Pam and Doug
Dillon, Dayton, Ohio,
Scott, Kayla and Liam

McComas, Florida, Julie
and Mike Ertz, Iowa.
Others in attendance
were: Neil, Jimmy,
Sabrina, Emerald,
Ryan, Donovan, Gloria,
Maralene, Tim and Bob
Watson, Braxton Payne,
Frieda Erwin, Kelly
Haner, Meiki Wyant,
David and Liz (Watson)
Walters, Doyle and Joyce
McDonald, Brittany Cox
and Bentley, Karlee Cox,
Beverly Sullivan, C.J.,
Dalton and Abby Mayse,
Patsy Stanley, Denise
and Shelby Richards,
Judy Barcus, Donna,
Elizabeth, David, Phil-

lip, Jill, Boston, Briston,
Owen and Ayvah Massie,
Jana and Jeffrey Garnes,
Keaton Houck, Barry
and Brenda Bowman,
Michael, Bridget, and
Dillon Conrad, Tonya
Chapman, Barbara and
Linda McComas, Kenny
and Carolyn McComas,
Stephanie, Kamren, and
Komer Eplin, Peyton
Jackson, Karen Nicholas,
Micaela, Kaitlyn and
Christopher Meade,
Mary, Jerry and Cody
Christian, Michael,
Maddie, Ayden, Kently,
Braylor, Easton and Allyonna Wolford, Dorothy

(Watson) Hunt, Rich
Doucette.
Cousin Julie Ertz, who
was adopted at birth,
was united with her family (the Watsons) after
60 years. Through her
cousins Judy Wolfe and
Patsy Stanley, she got to
meet her brothers Donovan and Gloria Watson,
Phillip and Lois Barry
and lots of new cousins.
Barry Bowman gave
the blessing over the
food. Door prizes were
given and blessing plates
to cousins. The next
reunion will be held
August 9, 2020.

GALLIA, MEIGS CALENDAR
Courtesy photo

Kevin and Sandy Dennis will be celebrating 50 years of
unconditional love on September 21. They will be having an
open house for friends and family from 2 to 6 p.m. on Sept. 21 at
their residence, 841 Shoestring Ridge, Gallipolis, OH 45631. They
have requested no gifts are necessary but cards and words of
encouragement are appreciated.

Card shower

Rose family reunions will be held
at 1 p.m. at the Carmel Sutton
Church, Pleasant View Road,
Racine, Ohio. For information call
740-508-2529 or 740-949-1055.
RUTLAND — Rutland Freewill Baptist Church will hold
Homecoming with Sunday school
beginning at 10 a.m., followed by
RACINE — Evangelist Randy
Carter of Set Free Ministries will preaching by Corey Carroll and
singing by Jimmy Howson.
be the guest speaker at the Mt.
GALLIPOLIS — The Evans
Moriah Church of God Homecoming.The church is located on Mile and Pennyfare Supermarket
Reunion will be held at 56 AbeHill Road, Racine. Services will
laide Drive, Gallipolis, with
start at 10 a.m. with the speaker
beginning around 10:15 a.m. Rev. lunch served at 1 p.m. All former
Carter is on television every Sun- employees are invited.
MERCERVILLE — The Waugh
day at 8 a.m. on DirecTv channel
30. A dinner will follow services. Family Reunion will be held at 1
p.m. Comers are asked to bring
Everyone is welcome.
a covered dish. The event is
RACINE — The Holter &amp;
Pearl Burger turns 99 on Sept.
10. Cards may be sent to 7694
County Road 107 Apt. 505, Proctorville, Ohio 45669.

Sunday, Sept. 8
AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-446-2342
A companion publication of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Times Daily Sentinel. Published Sunday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
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937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 2102,
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631
Periodical postage paid at Gallipolis, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
Sunday Times-Sentinel, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH, 45631.

Monday, Sept. 9
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford Township trustees will hold
their regular monthly meeting at
7 p.m. at the Bedford Town Hall.

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS — The
latest livestock report
from United Producers,
Inc., 357 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, Ohio, 740-4469696.
Date of Sale: Aug. 28
Total Headage: 428
Feeder Cattle (#1
Cattle)
Yearling Steers 600700 pounds: $111.00

- $136.00; 700-800
pounds: $100.00$121.00; Yearling Heifers
600-700 pounds: $100.00$121.00; 700-800 pounds:
$90.00 - $107.00; Steer
Calves 300-400 pounds:
$140.00 - $159.00; 400500 pounds: $130.00 $153.00; 500-600 pounds:
$120.00 - $149.00; Heifer
Calves 300-500 pounds:

$120.00 - $140.00; 500600 pounds: $110.00$140.00; Feeder Bulls
250-400 pounds:
$130.00-$148.00; 400600 pounds: $102.00$143.00; 600-800
pounds: $100.00-$127.00
Cows &amp; Fat Cattle
Comm &amp; Utility:
$30.00 - $59.00; Canner/Cutter: $20.00

Banks Construction Company

OH-70145986

slated to be held at Hannan Trace
Elementary School.
GALLIPOLIS — The Harry
and Murlie Drummond Family
Reunion will be held at the First
Church of God shelterhouse on
Ohio 141 at noon. Food will be
served at 1 p.m. Visitors are asked
to bring two covered dishes. For
questions, call Larry Drummond
740-446-2811.
THURMAN — 89th annual
Richards Family Reunion, noon,
Tyn Rhos Church.

34070 SR #7 Pomeroy, Ohio banksconstruction.co

- $30.00; Bred Cows:
$550.00 $1050.00; Cow
Calf Pairs: $650.00 $1010.00
Bulls
By Weight: $66.00$83.50
Small Animals
Hair Lambs: $70.00;
Meat Type Kid Goats:
$27.50-$37.50; Aged
Goats: $100.00-151.00

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, September 8, 2019 3A

MEIGS HEALTH MATTERS

GALLIA, MEIGS BRIEFS

National Pain Awareness Month

Peace in the
Valley Gospel Sing

Pain. We know that we
feel it, but what causes us
to feel it?
When we are in pain,
it’s because the sensory
nerve ﬁbers in our bodies transmit pain signals
to the spinal cord. The
signal crosses the spinal
cord and then reaches
the brain. Our brain then
makes us conscious of
the pain. This seems like
such a simple explanation for a very complex
and, at times, debilitating
problem.
September is National
Pain Awareness month.
This means that a whole
month is set aside to
evaluate and educate

includes pulled
ourselves on what
muscles, broken
is causing our pain
bones, burns,
and how to deal
bruises, cuts, labor
with it. Our pain
pains and mencan be chronic,
strual cramps.
which means
In order to help
that it’s on-going.
those who suffer
Some examples of Laura
from chronic pain
chronic pain are
Grueser
headaches, arthri- Contributing manage their symptoms, the Meigs
tis, ﬁbromyalgia,
columnist
County Health
endometriosis,
Department will
diabetic neuropathy, sciatica and irritable be hosting Chronic Pain
Self-Management classes.
bowel syndrome.
These classes will be held
Acute pain is something that we’ve all expe- every Thursday evening
from 5-7:30 p.m. starting
rienced at some point in
our lives. Its existence is Sept. 26 through Oct. 31,
shorter in length, usually in the Health Department
no more than three to six Conference Room.
These classes will
months. This type of pain

focus on managing pain
through the mind-body
connection/distraction,
dealing with difﬁcult
emotions, breathing and
relaxation, healthy eating,
communication skills and
evaluation of treatments,
as will as, decision making and action planning.
The classes will be taught
by Certiﬁed Community
Health Workers Kiera
Frank and Laura Grueser.
For more information
and to register for the
classes, call the Health
Department at 740-9926626.

Laura Grueser is the Certified
Community Health Worker 1 at the
Meigs County Health Department.

Stork Project comes to Abbyshire
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Chamber
of Commerce recently
accompanied Ohio Valley
Home Health Marketing
Director, Donna Milliron,
to Abbyshire Place Skilled
Nursing and Rehab Center, with the assistance
of Abbyshire Marketing
Director Alicia Simpkins,
for a special donation.
Milliron and her team
have been visiting nursing home facilities over
the past few weeks
delivering baby dolls and
stuffed animals to elderly
residents. While this
isn’t a new idea, it’s new
to Gallia. The program,
Stork Project 2019, has
already brought gifts to
more than 60 residents
in Holzer’s Senior Care,
Arbor’s at Gallipolis, and

MIDDLEPORT —The Peace in the Valley
Gospel Sing will be held beginning at noon on
Saturday, Sept. 14 on Rife Road in Middleport.
The event will feature performances from Logan
Browning (WV State Banjo Champion), Larry
Wilson and Gods Country Band, New Salvation, Shiela and David Bowman, Rick and Marie
Alley, Ellen and Charles Rife, Ron Shamblin,
Jerry and Diane Fredrick, Just One More Praise
Band, The Grifﬁths, Rick Towe, The Zinns and
The Dolly’s. Bring your own chair. Concessions
available.

Square dancing lessons
CHESHIRE — Square dancing lessons, held
7 p.m., Sept. 9, Gavin Recreation Building,
Cheshire. For information call 740-517-6585,
740-446-4213 or 304-675-3275.

Road Closures
POMEROY — Meigs County Road 53, Wipple
Road, will be closed beginning Tuesday, Sept.
10, to allow county forces to replace several
large culverts between County Road 34, Pine
Grove Road, and State Route 7. This closing
will be in effect for approximately one month.
MEIGS COUNTY — State Route 124 will
close on Monday, Sept. 9 to allow crews to
replace a culvert that carries the route over
Forked Run.
The closure will be between the entrance to
Forked Run State Park and Curtis Hollow Road.
During the work, trafﬁc will be detoured via
SR-248, SR-7, and SR-681. The project is scheduled for completion in mid-November, weather
permitting.
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport
Hill” is closed due to a slip until further notice.
Tickets will be issued to those who drive
through the closed portion of the road.

Revival
Courtesy photo Stuffed animals and dolls were handed

The Stork Project shares gifts with Abbyshire Place out as part of Project Stork.
residents.

Abbyshire Place Nursing
and Rehab.
“Remember the feeling you had when your
baby was ﬁrst handed
to you, the love all over
your face, examining all
ﬁngers and toes and the

feeling of disbelief that
you were holding in your
arms something that was
all yours? That is exactly
what is seen in the eyes
of the ladies when I hand
them their baby,” said
Milliron. “It’s the great-

est blessing in the world.
They get to be mamas all
over again.”
If you’d like to donate
to Stork Project 2019,
contact Donna Milliron at
(740) 441-1391 or email
dwilliams@ovhh.org.

RUTLAND — A revival will be held Sept.
9-13, 7 p.m. each night, at Rutland Freewill Baptist Church with Evangelist Corey Carroll and
singing by Jimmy Howson.

Humane Society Bag Sale
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County
Humane Society Thrift Shop, 253 N. Second
Ave., Middleport, will be having a bag sale
starting Wednesday, Sept. 11 and continuing
through Friday, Sept. 13.

All vehicles rebuilt on site, over 100 years of combined experience. Selling the best used vehicles since 1989.

LUNSFORD’S
SARDIS AUTO

2571 Sardis Rd, Oak Hill, OH 45656

740-682-7232
Nothing like getting all your
automotive needs taken care of
in one stop! Quality, honest service you can rely on.

END OF SUMMER DEALS
REDUCED

2019 Honda Civic EX-T
Under 800 miles MUST SEE Accepting Bids..Call

2006 Mercury
Grand Marquis

OH-70146916

96K MILES Extra Clean $3,200
Must See

Leather, 3rd row seats, AWD, Rear
Entertainment $10,995

2014 Honda Accord EX

2014 Chevy Silverado
LTZ

2014 Honda Civic LX

40k miles $11,995

4x4 Loaded , 60k miles $24,995

58k miles $8,995

2017 Hyundai Elantra SE

2010 Chevy Aveo LT

2011 Honda Pilot Touring

1998 Chevy Astro
Lots Of New Parts,Tires etc.
$3,995

2013 GMC Terrain SLE

41k miles $11,995

Sunroof, Leather, Loaded 68k miles $4,995

2007 Nissan Murano SL

2011 Honda CRV

AWD Leather 102k miles $6,995

Extra Clean, Loaded 128k Miles $8,500

2016 Jeep Patriot
Latitude

EZ Go 2017 Golf Cart

2013 Chevy Silverado LT

41k miles $11,995

Street Legal Only 2hrs ...$6,500

78k miles. Call For Price

Stop by and see them before they are finished!
We always have photos of our cars &amp; trucks before repairs!

72k miles, Nice $8,995

Appointments for weekend and later hours are available!
Hours: Mon-Fri 8am-5:30pm

�Opinion
4A Sunday, September 8, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Stating the
obvious isn’t
good enough
Because I am apparently a glutton for punishment, have a macabre sense of humor, and
want to continue to expose the Ohio legislature
and the Ohio Department of Education (ODE)
for the inept bureaucracies they are, I like to
periodically read about the education initiatives
being discussed by the folks comprising both
bodies.
I stay abreast of legislative discussions even
though I long ago gave up any illusion that
our state politicians have the interest in or the
ability or courage to engage in meaningful discussions about how children attain success in
school and in life.
But, I had (kind of) maintained a slight hope
that at some point the Ohio Department of
Education (ODE), the sole purpose of which
is to provide quality educational leadership to
educators, parents, and community
members alike, might actually step
into the leadership void by presenting relevant, perhaps even groundbreaking ideas about how we can
help children become successful.
Okay, I just lied. I also long ago
gave up any notion that ODE would
Tom Dunn be a positive, driving force in eduContributing cation, and, as is the case with the
Ohio legislature, the ODE has not
columnist
disappointed me. Not only do they
not lead, but the simplistic discussions they engage in is embarrassing.
As if to prove my point, on the ODE web site,
the education “experts” populating that organization have apparently recently concluded that
there is a correlation between children coming
to school and succeeding in school. Now, since
this is apparently a groundbreaking discovery
that I’m certain never entered your mind, please
take a couple of seconds to allow this to sink in.
To reiterate, the ODE is actually proudly proclaiming, as if it has stumbled onto something
revolutionary, that for a child to succeed in
school, he or she must actually BE in school.
This is akin to an automobile mechanic telling
you that your car will travel better if you put gas
in the tank.
DUH!
Apparently fearful that those who read this
revelation may be leery of its validity, data is
posted on the ODE web site to convince us it is
true.
We are assured that chronically absent children are 89% less likely to graduate from high
school; they are 65 percent less likely to be
reading proﬁciently by the third grade; and
more than 260,000 school children in Ohio were
chronically absent during the 2017-18 school
year.
Nothing surprising there.
So as to not be left out of the foolishness, a
couple of years ago, the Ohio legislature, in its
inﬁnite wisdom, dumped more of its bureaucratic nonsense on school district personnel to solve
the attendance problem, because it has to be
the school’s fault, right? It can’t be the parents’
responsibility to get their kids to school.
The ODE web site also contains the following
statement: “Over the last decade, educators,
parents, community leaders, and other key players have come to recognize the importance of
shining light on what was once a hidden issue:
chronic absenteeism.”
Hidden to who? Certainly not to superintendents, principals, teachers, and anybody else
with at least two working brain cells. In the
more than four decades I spent as an educator,
not a single time was there any confusion about
the importance of kids coming to school if they
were to succeed in school. I would also wager
that the importance of good attendance has not
been lost on the multitude of parents who actually send their kids to school every day.
But, to members of the two entities that are
responsible for developing educational policies
in this state, apparently the revelation that coming to school is important for students to succeed has occurred only within the last decade.
In today’s vernacular, I can only say, “OMG!”
Apparently, my wife, whose entire career was
spent in the medical ﬁeld and whose last few
years were spent working in Dayton, had a better understanding of the importance of school
attendance than our so-called educational leaders were. Fifteen years ago, after several days
of seeing school-aged kids walking the streets
when school was in session, she asked me one
evening, “How can kids who don’t go to school
do any good in school?”
Exactly.
According to the ODE’s own website, she ﬁgured this out about ﬁve years before our “leaders” did.
How sad is that?
Tom Dunn is the former superintendent of the Miami County
Educational Service Center.

THEIR VIEW

Please save me from newer, faster, better
They promise Newer!
Faster! Better!
But all I get is grumpier.
I got a work email
on my phone the other
morning. Let me clarify:
I got a notiﬁcation of a
work email on my phone
the other morning. When
I tried to open it, I was
slapped with an update
notiﬁcation – that I can’t
do. So my email quit
working. But the email
notiﬁcations keep tempting me to update.
My smart phone is now
a laggard, slowly falling
farther behind the crest
of the technology wave as
its operating system cascades into antiquity.
My wake-up call should
have been my bank app,
which prodded me to
update and then stuck
me in an endless loop
of hope/despair when it
wouldn’t let me open the
update but continued to
prompt me to update.
That’s update cruelty 3.0.
We should have seen
this coming when Big
Brother told us to toss

ly/2lzMfwE). I use
all of our perfectly
links. I even say
good TVs into the
just “phone” now
landﬁlls so they
instead of “smartcould sell off the
phone.”
radio wave specThat’s almost
trum to private
hip, right?
industry. I’m sure
But do we really
it was good for
Gary
have
to update
TV manufacturPresley
ers, who now stop Contributing everything so
often?
supporting their
columnist
Sure, it’s good
“screens” before
for the economy
you can get them
if we replace everyout of the box, and TV
thing we own like it’s
stations that can add a
few channels to compete fashion (don’t get me
started) with an appliwith cable and satellite.
ance/car/watch/phone/
By showing us the
TV/#YouNameIt that’s
same old shows over
built to either break or
and over and over. But
that’s what we like, right? be unusable when #.0 is
Because that’s what they released.
But it’s not good for
give us, right?
our wallets, or the enviI’m not a luddite. I’ve
ronment, or my disposisurvived the transition
tion. We probably spend
from hot lead to deskmore money now when
top publishing in the
newspaper industry. I’ve we upgrade our phones
than we used to spend for
gone from processing
a lifetime of landlines.
black and white ﬁlm to
I’m not against
digital photography and
progress, but is there
love it. I microwave my
baked potatoes, and even something wrong with
choosing your own progAlton Brown says that’s
ress? Have we gone too
OK if you ﬁnish them
far when we chuckle at
in the oven (https://bit.

Grandpa because he’s
so quaint with his ﬂip
phone?
Update: My phone
is now purring along
with the newest, fastest, “betterest” version
of its operating system.
It looks like I didn’t lose
anything, and now I can
bank 2.0 with my phone
again AND check my
email.
Contact me at gpresley@aimmediamidwest.
com and tell me about
a possession of yours, a
physical thing, that you
can’t imagine not owning. Whether it brings
you money (your Uber
car), love (a wedding
ring) or fond memories
(that teddy bear), tell me
about it in a few sentences, and send a picture.
I’ll talk about them in a
future column.

Gary Presley is pagination director
for AIM Media Midwest. The cranky
technological views he expressed
by typing into a computer more
powerful than all the Apollo lunar
module computers combined are
solely his own, and don’t reflect the
views of this newspaper.

TODAY IN HISTORY
By The Associated Press

Today is Sunday, Sept.
8, the 251st day of 2019.
There are 114 days left
in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Sept. 8, 1892, an
early version of “The
Pledge of Allegiance,”
written by Francis Bellamy, appeared in “The
Youth’s Companion.”
It went: “I pledge allegiance to my Flag and
the Republic for which it
stands, one nation, indivisible, with liberty and
justice for all.”
On this date:
In 1565, a Spanish
expedition established
the ﬁrst permanent European settlement in North
America at present-day
St. Augustine, Fla.
In 1664, the Dutch surrendered New Amsterdam to the British, who
renamed it New York.
In 1900, Galveston,
Texas, was struck by a
hurricane that killed an
estimated 8,000 people.
In 1935, Sen. Huey P.
Long, a Louisiana Democrat, was shot and mortally wounded inside the
Louisiana State Capitol;
he died two days later.
(The assailant was iden-

tiﬁed as Dr. Carl Weiss,
who was gunned down
by Long’s bodyguards.)
In 1941, the 900-day
Siege of Leningrad by
German forces began
during World War II.
In 1943, during World
War II, Gen. Dwight D.
Eisenhower announced
Italy’s surrender; Nazi
Germany denounced
Italy’s decision as a cowardly act.
In 1964, public schools
in Prince Edward County, Virginia, reopened
after being closed for ﬁve
years by ofﬁcials attempting to prevent courtordered racial desegregation.
In 1974, President
Gerald R. Ford granted
a “full, free, and absolute pardon” to former
President Richard Nixon
covering his entire term
in ofﬁce.
In 1985, Pete Rose of
the Cincinnati Reds tied
Ty Cobb’s career record
for hits, singling for hit
number 4,191 during a
game against the Cubs in
Chicago.
In 1986, “The Oprah
Winfrey Show” began
the ﬁrst of 25 seasons in
national syndication.
In 1994, USAir Flight

Thought for Today:
“We shall seek the
truth and endure the
consequences.”
— Charles Seymour,
American educator and
historian (1884-1963).

427, a Boeing 737,
crashed into a ravine
as it was approaching
Pittsburgh International
Airport, killing all 132
people on board.
In 2017, Hurricane
Irma regained Category
5 status, battering Cuba
with 160-mph winds
and taking aim on the
Miami area; the death
toll across the Caribbean
climbed past 20. In one
of the country’s largest
evacuations, ofﬁcials in
Florida told more than
5 million people to leave
their homes ahead of
the hurricane; parts of
interstates 75 and 95
northbound were bumper-to-bumper. Singer
Troy Gentry, half of the
country music duo Montgomery Gentry, died in a
helicopter crash in Medford, New Jersey; pilot
James Robinson was also
killed.
Ten years ago: In a

nationally broadcast pep
talk from Wakeﬁeld High
School in Arlington, Virginia, President Barack
Obama challenged the
nation’s students to
take pride in their education. Justice Sonia
Sotomayor ceremonially took her seat at the
Supreme Court in front
of a packed courtroom
that included President
Obama and Vice President Joe Biden. A U.N.backed commission said
it had found “convincing
evidence” of fraud in
Afghanistan’s presidential election. Veteran Hollywood columnist Army
Archerd, 87, died in Los
Angeles.
Five years ago: The
European Union shied
away from slapping new
economic sanctions on
Russia right away over
its actions in eastern
Ukraine, saying the punitive measures would
come into force “in the
next few days” depending on how well a ceaseﬁre agreement in eastern
Ukraine held. Croatia’s
Marin Cilic won his ﬁrst
Grand Slam title by beating Japan’s Kei Nishikori
6-3, 6-3, 6-3 at the U.S.
Open.

�NEWS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, September 8, 2019 5A

SPACE

When someone asks how was
your trip back to Gallia County, the answer we want is ‘You
won’t believe what they have
From page 1A
at our county library, the space
exhibit that was produced in
The library previously hosted another large museum-style collaboration with NASA and
featured with the Smithsonexhibit in 2016 titled Bodies
ian.’”
Revealed. The attraction garSaunders went on to say that
nered nearly 20,000 visitors
it can take two years to plan
on human anatomy and the
library was the ﬁrst institution such an exhibit’s visit to Gallia
County.
of its kind to host the exhibiThe exhibit will be featured
tion in a small town library as
it had previously been reserved at Bossard from Sept. 7 to
for larger venues. Visitors from January 5, 2020 at no charge
to visitors. Reservations may
59 of Ohio’s 88 counties saw
the exhibit along with visitors be made a www.bossardlibrary.
org. They are not required
from 34 states.
but are encouraged for those
“Just think, most folks that
are here visit Gallia County to planning a visit. The exhibit
is self-paced and self-guided
visit family at Thanksgiving
with guests taking as long as
or Christmas,” said Bossard
wished to observe the displays.
Library Board President RobAccording to a previous
bie Jenkins. “They come to see
the library’s exhibit, and upon release from Evergreen Exhibitions, the organizer of the
returning home the conversaSPACE exhibit,“‘SPACE: A
tion probably goes like this.

Dean Wright | OVP

A library visitor inspects a Mars meteorite.

Journey to Our Future,’ an
interactive exhibit produced
by Evergreen Exhibitions in
educational collaboration with
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA)
and as seen at the Smithsonian National Air and Space
Museum will be on display

at the library through Jan.
5, 2020. The 5,000-square
foot SPACE exhibition has
traveled to major science
centers and museums across
North America. The purpose
of SPACE is to present educational elements in scenic
environments that will fuel

one’s imagination in the future
of space exploration. SPACE
examines amazing discoveries and explorations from the
past and introduces visitors to
today’s explorers who are shaping our future destiny in the
universe. Most of the emphasis
in the content relates to current and future exploits in
human spaceﬂight. The exhibit
features child-friendly interactives, immersive environments
and state-of-the-art technology to bring this epic story
to life. Highlights will include
opportunities to touch pieces
of the Moon and Mars, ride a
self-powered centrifuge, tour a
full-scale future Moon habitat
and work station, get an upclose view of next-generation
spacecraft and technology and
interactively plan a trip to
Mars.”
Dean Wright can be reached at 740-4462342.

Mothman
From page 1A

People flock to the Mothman Museum for a visit during the Mothman Festival.

Krodel Park. Along the
street parking near the
Several festival goers are seen taking their picture with the festival is an option, but
Mothman statue throughout the Mothman Festival.
spots will ﬁll quickly.
All of the events for
the festival are subject to
change, to keep up with
File Photos

SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 14, 2019 @ 10:00 A.M.
Pictured are festival goers in line for the Mothman Hayride that
takes place at the West Virginia State Farm Museum.

day festival goers will
see people dressed up in
their favorite costumes.
All are welcome to participate in the cosplay
fun. The cosplay groups
Star Wars - The 501st
Legion and The Ghostbusters - W.Va. and Ohio
Chapters will be in attendance.
The fun does not end
there, festival goers will
be able to enjoy live
entertainment, guest
speakers, and a wide
array of Mothman/paranormal themed vendors
such as artists, authors,
merchants, hobbyists,
handcrafted artists/
boutique owners, food

trucks, food carts, food
booths, lemonade stands,
ice cream trucks, etc.
will be set up along Main
Street on both Saturday
and Sunday of the event.
Optional paid parking
for the festival, handled
by the City of Point
Pleasant, on Saturday
will be at Krodel Park for
$5 with a shuttle service
available for tips. Due to
bridge construction near
Mcdonalds, the pick up
and drop off locations for
shuttles will be near the
old Point Pleasant River
Museum and Learning
Center building commented Wamsley. On
Sunday, parking is free at

ordinance, notwithstanding limitations imposed
by other provisions of
the Codiﬁed Ordinances
From page 1A
of Gallipolis, Ohio, is a
size that prevents the
Dwellings would need
constructed or assembled construction of a dwelling, single family as
on-site. No structure of
described in section (c)
temporary “character,”
with required setbacks,
trailer, mobile home,
then the square footage
motor home, basement,
tent, shanty, garage, barn, of heating living space
storage shed, outbuilding shall be, at a minimum,
equal to or larger than
or similar-type structure
the square footage of
may be erected or used
the lot’s previous dwellfor a place of residence.
ing’s ﬁrst ﬂoor heated
For a dwelling, single
family: the square footage living space. The new
structure must adhere to
of the ﬁrst ﬂoor, heating
all required setbacks as
living space shall be a
deﬁned in the Codiﬁed
minimum of 850 square
Ordinances of Gallipolis,
feet.
Ohio.”
Ordinance language
For residences built
also states that, “If a lot
for two or more family
of record at the date of
effective date of adoption structures, the ordinance
proposes the square
or amendment of this

footage of the ﬁrst ﬂoor
of heating living space
be a minimum of 480
square feet per dwelling
unit and a total square
footage of heating living
space for each dwelling
unit shall be a minimum
of 850 square feet.
Housing structure
proposals that aren’t
described in the proposed ordinance would
need brought before the
Gallipolis Planning Commission.
Structures already
existing in Gallipolis
before the potential passage of the ordinance
would not be affected by
the new ordinance as it
is geared to target new
construction.

City

https://www.mothmanthese updates on the
festival, a free Mothman festival.com.
app is available for download at the App Store or Erin (Perkins) Johnson is a staff
writer for Ohio Valley Publishing.
Google Apps. Also, for
Reach her at (304) 675-1333,
more information on the extension 1992.
Mothman Festival, visit

ESTATE
AUCTION

Dean Wright can be reached at
740-446-2342.

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SELLING THEIR FARM AND MOVING.
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Aluminum Trailer; JD HX 10 Pull Type 10’ Rotary Cutter; Bush Hog RDTH 72” Finish
Mower; Keencutter Rototiller; Bush Hog Heavy Duty Blade; 3 Pt Rock Rake; 3 Pt
Post Hole Digger; 3 Pt Bale Spear;Cattle Working Station W/Scales; Steer Stuffer;
Farm Gates.
KAYACS, TOOLS, POWER EQUIPMENT
Craftsman 175 PSI Upright Air Compressor; Honda &amp; Stihl Weed Eaters; Stihl MS
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Kayacs; Paddle Boat; Cable; Plastic Pipe; 2 Garage Doors; Water Quest Canoe; New
Canoe; Trailer Balls; Hitches; Die Hard Battery Charger; Craftsman Blower Vac; 2
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Grinder; Shelving; 1” Socket Set; DeWalt Grinder; Preditor Call; Plus More.
GUNS
SELL AT 11:00 A.M.
Sig-Saver M400 556 Nato
New Mossberg 270 Bolt Action w/Scope
Ruger 10-22 SS w/Bull Barrel &amp; Scope
New Ruger 10-22 Break Down In Bag
Savage Model 93 R 17 w/Nicon Scope &amp; Laminated Stock
Rem Model 710 30-06 w/Scope
Mossberg International 715 P (AR 15 Style)
Berretta ARX 160 22 Auto in Case
Walther P 22 Target Pistol
Beretta Neo’s 22 Auto
Benelli Super Vinci Semi Auto Shot Gun
Pellet Guns &amp; RSW Diana
DPMS Prairie Panther Riﬂe 223
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Leopold MK 4 Scope; Game Whisper; Benjamin Trail NP x 2; Scopes; Case C;eaning
Supplies; Ammo; Shooting Targets; Clays; Champion Wheely Bird Auto Feed Trap;
Plus more; Caldwell Lead Sled;

OH-70146875

Street in a unique way,
commemorating the
West Virginia Mothman
sightings that happened
in 1966 around Point
Pleasant. When this all
began the event organizers never dreamed it
would grow as large as it
has. Recently, because of
the increase of folks coming to the city on Friday
before the festival, a kick
start event was added to
the agenda and is returning this year.
Beginning at 7 p.m.,
on Friday evening, at the
historic state theater, two
features, Terror in the
Skies and MOMO: The
Missouri Monster, from
the Small Town Monsters will be shown with
free admission.
The day begins early
on Saturday with the
Mothman 5K at 8 a.m.
Registration will begin at
7 a.m. at the Mothman
Museum located at 400
Main Street and line up
is between 8th and 9th
streets on Main Street.
For festival goers wanting to explore, the TNT
area guided bus tours
will begin at 10 a.m. on
Saturday, lasting until
10 p.m.. Each tour lasts
approximately 60-75 minutes at $20 per person.
The tour bus will leave
from the Mason County
Courthouse and those on
the tour are advised to
arrive 15 minutes early.
The TNT bus tours are
also offered on Sunday
beginning at 10 a.m.
and ending at 4 p.m.
On Saturday evening,
festival goers can take a
Mothman Hayride starting at the West Virginia
State Farm Museum. The
hayrides begin around
7 p.m. and end around
11 p.m., tickets cost $5,
cash only. The tickets
will go on sale Saturday
morning of the festival
and are sold on a ﬁrst
come, ﬁrst serve basis.
Also, throughout the

TERMS: CASH OR CHECK W/VALID ID
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY: RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66
304-593-5118
www.autionzip.com for pictures

EXECUTOR: DALE DURST

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66

304-593-5118
www.autionzip.com for pictures

�A long the River
6B Sunday, September 8, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Party in the Park set for Sept. 12-14
By Sarah Hawley

ell, lead vocals; Mark
Corbitt, lead guitar and
back up vocals; Robbie
Cundiff, bass and back
RACINE — Racine’s
Party in the Park returns up vocals; and Brian
Collins, drums and back
this week with three
up vocals.
days of entertainment,
Thunderstruck: Amerrides and much more.
ica’s AC/DC recreates
Party in the Park will
take place Sept. 12-14 at the spirit and energy of
Star Mill Park in Racine. a live AC/DC show the
way you remember it.
Live music is planned
Dave Moody screeches
for each evening, as well
out the ball breaking
as a parade, the annual
vocals of Bon Scott and
9-11 Memorial CerBrian Johnson, coveremony, the 15th annual
Cruisin’ Saturday Night ing all the hits and deep
Photo from the artist Facebook page
Photo from the artist Facebook page
Brandon Lay
The Wayfarers
cuts from 1975’s “High
Car Show, a kiddie
Voltage,” to 2014’s
tractor pull and several
“Rock or Bust.”
other activities on SatCaleb White brings
urday.
Carnival rides, as well the sound and image
of Angus Young to the
as several vendors, will
stage, complete with a
be set up at the park
school boy uniform and
throughout the three
Gibson SG.
day event.
The rhythm section of
Admission to the
event, which includes all the band is comprised of
drummer Jerry Lawson,
concerts, is free.
bassist Chris Jones, and
rhythm guitarist Kevin
Thursday, Sept. 12
Feller, who keeps the
Bluegrass music will
highlight Thursday eve- music rocking and solid
ning at Party in the Park with smooth precision.
Striving to stay true
with performances by
to the AC/DC way,
the Sour Mash String
Thunderstruck obsesses
Band (7 p.m.) and The
over the tones and
Wayfarers (8:30 p.m.).
Photo from the artist Facebook page
Photo from the artist Facebook page
The Sour Mash String structures of each song’s
Next
Level
Sour
Mash
String
Band
studio
and
live
versions,
Band is described as a
also using all the gear
“cutting edge bluegrass
band playing everything necessary to bring the
from Truegrass to New- power and entertaingrass with a slight twist ment of a genuine AC/
DC show. Thunderof the hillbilly funk.”
struck can bring the
The band includes
High Voltage Rock n’
Josh Moody, guitar and
Roll to any theater, ballvocals; Cody Nutter,
room, festival or special
mandolin and vocals;
Patsy Brookover, upright event.
bass and vocals; Marianne Barnett, vocals;
Saturday, Sept. 14
and Greg Settle, banjo
Saturday at Party in
and vocals.
the Park will begin with
Hailing from rural
the parade at 11 a.m.
Southeast Ohio, The
Lineup will take place
Wayfarers emerged
between 10 and 10:30
onto the scene in early
a.m. at the Southern
2010 playing their own
Local Schools District
form of American Roots campus.
music, according to
Following the parade
their website. While
will be the annual 9-11
much of their repertoire Memorial Ceremony at
is drawn from the Appa- noon.
File photo
lachian tradition they
The dedication for the The 9-11 Memorial Ceremony is held each year during Party in the Park.
revere, The Wayfarers
newly opened Splash
on lead guitar and Jill
fuse tight musicianship
Pad will be held at 1:30
Nelson on Vocals.”
— centered largely by
p.m.
Headliner Brandon
the ﬁddle — with the
The Kiddie Tractor
Lay will close out the
high energy that charac- Pull is scheduled for 2
musical portion of the
terized early mountain
p.m. at the park.
three day event.
music
The crowning of the
According to his
The Wayfarers have
2019 Party in the Park
been featured on the
Queen will take place at biography, Growing up
in Jackson, Tennessee,
national PBS televi4 p.m.
Brandon Lay lived out
sion series “Song of
The 15th annual
the Mountains”, toured
Cruisin’ Saturday Night the songs of John Mellencamp, Alan Jackson
much of the Midwest
Car Show will take
and Bruce Springsteen.
and Southern Appalaplace from 11 a.m. to
He played sports during
chians, released four
3 p.m. with judging
the day, ﬁxed up cars
studio albums, and have from 2-5 p.m., followed
after school and evenshared the stage with
by awards. A total of
tually wrote down his
some of the biggest
46 trophies will be
experiences in song, tellnames in bluegrass and
presented at the show.
country music includProceeds from the event ing not only his story,
but the story of other
ing Ricky Skaggs, Ralph go to fund scholarships
Stanley, Marty Stuart,
for local graduates each kids raised in small
Connie Smith, Dailey
year. For more informa- town America.
Now signed to EMI
&amp; Vincent, Lonesome
tion on the car show call
River Band, Doyle
740-949-2217 (7 a.m. to Records Nashville, he’s
File photo
The Southern Marching Band marches in the 2018 Party in the Park parade.
Lawson &amp; Quicksilver,
4 p.m.) or 740-985-4263 able to share those
songs on a grand
Rhonda Vincent, Marty
(after 5 p.m.)
he’ll unveil somewhere
Raybon, Jerry Douglas,
Local band Next Level scale, beginning with
down the road – for the
his autobiographical
and many more.
(6:30 p.m.) will take to
time-being, he’s building
debut single “Speakers,
Band Members
the stage on Saturday
an audience by releasBleachers and Preachinclude Josh Hartevening as the opener
ing a series of two-song
ers.” Inspired directly
man, guitar; Brandon
for raising country
EPs, beginning with
by Brandon’s life, the
Bankes, mandolin; Matt music singer Brandon
the one-two punch of
song spells out right in
Opachick, ﬁddle; JusLay (9 p.m.).
“Speakers, Bleachers
its title the three chief
tin Rayner, banjo; and
Next Level describes
and Preachers” and the
Nathan Zangmeister,
themselves with the fol- inﬂuences that shaped
thumping cruising jam
him. There was always
upright washtub bass.
lowing quote: “We’re a
“Let It.”
country music on the
band that plays music
Following Lay’s
radio, he played basketfrom every genre, from
Friday, Sept. 13
performance will be a
ball, football and basethe 60’s through today.
Friday evening will
ball, and his dad spread ﬁreworks display at the
include performances by Our shows are upbeat
park.
the gospel on Sundays
Dragons Eye (6:30 p.m.) and fun and we always
Artist photos and
play your favorite songs. as a minister.
and Thunderstruck (9
Lay is expert at detail- information from the
We started as a duo and
p.m.).
ing the small-town exis- artist/band Facebook
have now grown into
Dragons Eye plays
tence in his songwriting. pages and websites.
a band. We have Barry
heavy metal, rock, clasFile photo
Taylor on keyboard and He wrote or co-wrote
sic rock, and southern
2018 Party in the Park Queen Marissa Brooker (center) is pictured
Sarah Hawley is the managing
with Runner Up Kayla Boyer and 2017 Queen Nikita Wood.
all of the tracks on his
rock. The band includes vocals, BJ Kreseen on
editor of The Daily Sentinel.
lead vocals, Rich Rogers debut album, a project
members Roger Dowshawley@aimmediamidwest.com

�Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, September 8, 2019 7A

Mark Porter
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2019 RAM 1500 CLASSIC
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2019 KIA SORENTO LX
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2015 RAM 1500 BIG HORN
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2019 RAM 1500 LARAMIE
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2012 GMC SIERRA 1500
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2019 JEEP CHEROKEE TRAILHAWK
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2015 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 1500
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2016 BUICK REGAL
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2017 CHRYSLER PACIFICA
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2013 GMC TERRAIN
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2018 MAZDA CX-5
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2018 JEEP RENEGADE SPORT
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2013 GMC TERRAIN
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2016 JEEP WRANGLER 75TH ANNIVERSARY
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2019 JEEP CHEROKEE LATITUDE
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2019 JEEP CHEROKEE LIMITED
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Monday - Thursday
9am to 7 pm
Friday
9am - 6pm
Saturday
9am - 5pm
Closed on Sunday

�NEWS/WEATHER

8A Sunday, September 8, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

departments in Meigs
County are honored to
have the Loyalty is Forever group work with us
on this fund raiser. Their
group has done amazing
work in our community
with our law enforcement friends,” said
Meigs County Fireﬁghter
Association President
Derek Miller.
“With the continued
support of Loyalty is
Forever, along with that
of the Farmers Bank
Board of Directors, will
allow the participating
departments to continue
providing the excellent
service that our citizens
have come to expect.
These extra funds are
deﬁnitely appreciated
and we thank all citizens
in advance for their purchase of the calendar,”
said Derek Miller.
“They do so much, but
ask for so little,” said
Farmer Bank’s Dru Reed
of the ﬁreﬁghters and the
bank getting on board
with the campaign.
Reed added that many
people do not realize
what all the ﬁreﬁghters do, putting their
own lives on the line
for the safety of their
community. Volunteer
ﬁreﬁghters answer calls
for everything from ﬁres
to wrecks, water rescues,
ﬂood cleanup, search and
rescue and much more.
While the money
raised will be helpful to
meet the needs of the
departments as they
work to serve their communities, Lori Miller
noted that one of the
main needs they found in
meeting with the departments is the need for
more volunteers.
“They need people.
They have volunteers
who have shown their
dedication for a very
long time and are still
active,” said Miller.
Many of those volunteers
are multi-generational,

Firehouse
From page 1A

“That’s what sparked
the interest,” said Lori
Miller. She explained
that when Loyalty is Forever began it was about
providing the sheriff’s
ofﬁce with a tool in their
tool box that they needed
and would otherwise not
have been able to have.
Loyalty is Forever’s
Lori and Shannon Miller
met with the Meigs
County Fireﬁghter’s
Association to learn
more and to come up
with ideas of ways to
help.
Farmers Bank, Bartee
Photography, Loyalty
is Forever and Meigs
County Fireﬁghter’s
Association President
Derek Miller met to
discuss ideas, and joined
forces on the campaign
for this year with producing a calendar.
The campaign goal is
to raise $12,000, which
would give each department $1,000. In order to
reach this goal, the group
has been working to put
together a 2020 calendar
which will soon be available for purchase for $12
($1 for each department
for each calendar sold).
In order for the entire
purchase price of the
calendar to beneﬁt the
departments, the Farmers Bank Board of Directors is paying for the
cost of producing the
calendars, while Brandon and Rana Bartee of
Bartee Photography have
taken the photos for the
calendar.
In addition to photos
representing each of
the departments, the
calendar will include
important dates for each
of the departments, as
well as safety quotes and
information.
“All 12 volunteer ﬁre

Lowest Hourly
Rates in the Area

Guaranteed!

Providing in-home care
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Now accepting: Private Payment, Veterans Benefits, WV Medicaid
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24/7 Phone: 304-857-8422 Fax: 304-857-6531
&amp;&amp;&amp;����������"���%� ���!��(�� �!����������"���%� ���!�

Voted Best in the Tri-State
keep your heart at home

What We Offer
Companion Services:
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medications by providing medication
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212 5th Street,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

Breaking news at mydailytribune.com
TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

59°

74°

72°

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)

Friday
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.00
Trace
0.62
34.46
30.87

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:03 a.m.
7:49 p.m.
4:53 p.m.
1:45 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Last

New

Sep 14 Sep 21 Sep 28

First

Oct 5

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

Today
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.

Major
8:10a
8:56a
9:40a
10:22a
11:04a
11:45a
12:07a

Minor
1:58a
2:44a
3:28a
4:11a
4:53a
5:35a
6:17a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
79/59

Moderate

High

Very High

Major
8:36p
9:21p
10:04p
10:45p
11:26p
---12:27p

Minor
2:23p
3:09p
3:52p
4:34p
5:15p
5:56p
6:37p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Sept. 8, 1943, widespread smog
was noted around Los Angeles for
the ﬁrst time. In Los Angeles, cool air
from the Paciﬁc is capped by warm
air aloft which traps pollutants.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
300

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates
Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. Fri.

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
12.73
15.92
21.36
12.89
13.17
25.08
12.93
25.08
33.92
12.26
15.40
33.90
13.40

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.29
+0.14
+0.30
+0.34
+0.29
+0.22
+0.20
-1.02
-0.69
-0.56
-0.30
none
-1.30

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Hot and humid with
clouds and sun

Belpre
79/57

Athens
77/56

88°
65°

An afternoon
Warm and humid with
thunderstorm possible
partial sunshine

St. Marys
79/57

Parkersburg
78/56

Coolville
78/57

Elizabeth
79/57

Spencer
80/58

Buffalo
80/58
Milton
81/59

St. Albans
82/59

Huntington
79/59

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
71/59
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
73/59
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
79/64
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SATURDAY

88°
63°

Marietta
78/57

Murray City
76/55

Ironton
81/60

Ashland
80/60
Grayson
80/60

having joined because
their father, grandfather,
uncle or another family member were on the
department.
In addition to the calendars, there is currently
a social media contest
through the Loyalty is
Forever Facebook page
in which one ﬁre department will receive and
additional $500. To
participate in voting,
individuals can go to the
Facebook page and ﬁnd
the post with the photos
of the 12 ﬁre departments (each one has
its own photo). Simply
“like” the photo which
you want to vote for on
the original post. Voting
will end at 5 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 20.
“This is our way of
trying to say thank you,”
said Lori Miller.
Local businesses interested in ordering in bulk
to have available in their
businesses may contact
Tina Richards at 740416-9073 or Lori Miller
at 740-992-4156 in order
to request a speciﬁc
amount.
Donations for The
Firehouse 12 campaign
may be sent to Loyalty
is Forever, c/o Farmers
Bank with a note or
memo stating that it is
for The Firehouse 12
campaign.

FRIDAY

90°
67°

Wilkesville
78/57
POMEROY
Jackson
79/58
78/57
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
79/58
79/59
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
76/59
GALLIPOLIS
79/59
80/58
79/59

South Shore Greenup
80/60
78/58

25
0 50 100 150 200

Portsmouth
79/59

A thunderstorm
around in the
afternoon

— Derek Miller.
Meigs County Firefighter
Association President

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
77/56

Very High

Primary: ragweed/grass/other
Mold: 1589

Logan
76/55

THURSDAY

91°
68°

Times of clouds and
sun, hot and humid

Adelphi
75/56
Chillicothe
75/57

WEDNESDAY

92°
67°

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

Waverly
76/58

Pollen: 114

Low

MOON PHASES

Partly sunny

1

Primary: cladosporium
Mon.
7:04 a.m.
7:47 p.m.
5:38 p.m.
2:37 a.m.

TUESDAY

Some sun, then turning cloudy today. A passing
shower tonight. High 79° / Low 59°

Statistics for Friday

81°
54°
82°
60°
100° in 1954
45° in 1962

MONDAY

84°
60°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

“With the continued
support of Loyalty is
Forever, along with
that of the Farmers
Bank Board of
Directors, will allow
the participating
departments to
continue providing
the excellent service
that our citizens have
come to expect.”

Clendenin
83/59
Charleston
82/58

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
66/46

Billings
72/53

Minneapolis
61/58

Chicago
68/59

Denver
80/57

Montreal
65/45

Toronto
67/48
Detroit
72/57

New York
77/60
Washington
84/68

Kansas City
82/68

Today

Mon.

Hi/Lo/W
85/63/pc
62/54/c
95/73/s
79/65/s
83/66/pc
72/53/c
66/50/t
77/57/pc
82/58/pc
91/69/s
74/51/t
68/59/sh
77/61/pc
72/53/c
75/57/pc
98/74/s
80/57/t
71/62/t
72/57/c
91/80/sh
98/76/s
71/61/sh
82/68/c
98/73/s
95/74/s
79/64/pc
83/67/pc
91/80/sh
61/58/sh
89/67/s
97/77/s
77/60/s
95/70/s
95/74/s
81/62/pc
101/80/s
75/55/pc
71/47/pc
88/70/pc
84/65/pc
80/69/t
78/55/c
73/59/pc
71/59/r
84/68/pc

Hi/Lo/W
87/63/pc
64/51/sh
98/76/pc
76/67/pc
79/64/pc
74/49/c
71/50/pc
70/56/pc
86/61/pc
93/73/pc
80/51/pc
76/68/pc
84/65/pc
74/55/pc
80/61/pc
95/75/s
85/56/s
82/71/pc
73/60/pc
92/79/sh
95/77/pc
82/66/pc
90/73/pc
97/73/s
97/74/s
79/65/pc
90/70/pc
91/79/sh
69/67/r
96/71/s
95/76/pc
74/62/pc
93/70/pc
93/73/t
77/63/sh
98/75/pc
77/58/pc
68/48/pc
87/69/t
83/67/r
92/75/pc
80/63/s
73/58/pc
67/58/sh
81/68/sh

EXTREMES FRIDAY

Atlanta
95/73

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

El Paso
93/71
Chihuahua
86/64

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

115° in Death Valley, CA
23° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global
High
121° in Failaka Island, Kuwait
Low -22° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
98/76
Monterrey
88/71

Miami
91/80

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

OH-70107875

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
promise to make you feel right at home.

w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Racine,
Syracuse,
Middleport

�S ports
Sunday Times-Sentinel

#?8.+CM�#/:&gt;/7,/&lt;��M� ����s�#/-&gt;398��

White Falcons outlast Miller, 24-20
By Bryan Walters

every second of all four quarters to secure their ﬁrst win
of the 2019 campaign.
The Red and White used
MASON, W.Va. — There
12 plays and eight plays to
were just enough fumes left
in the tank to reach the ﬁnish produce a pair of 61-yard
scoring drives on their ﬁrst
line.
The Wahama football team two possessions, giving WHS
a sizable 16-0 cushion with
stormed out to a 24-6 ﬁrst
3:06 remaining in the opening
half lead and ultimately held
on while snapping a six-game stanza.
Trevor Hunt scored the ﬁrst
losing skid Friday night during a 24-20 decision over vis- touchdown with 7:54 left in
the ﬁrst on a 3-yard run, then
iting Miller in the Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division added a 6-yard scamper at
the 3:06 mark. Abram Pauley
opener for both programs at
added a 2-point conversion
Bachtel Stadium in Mason
run on the initial score, then
County.
The White Falcons (1-1, 1-0 Hunt successfully found the
�&lt;C+8�'+6&gt;/&lt;=n�&amp; �#:9&lt;&gt;=
end zone for another 2-point
TVC Hocking) led wire-toWahama senior Trevor Hunt (5) breaks away from a Miller defender during a first
conversion following the secwire
in
the
48-minute
affair,
quarter run Friday night in a Week 2 TVC Hocking football contest at Bachtel Stadium
ond TD run.
but the hosts also needed
in Mason, W.Va.
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

The Falcons (1-1, 0-1) —
who did not manage a single
ﬁrst down in the ﬁrst quarter
— appeared to be in serious
trouble until Nathan Thompson recovered a fumble on the
opening play of the second
frame, giving MHS possession at its own 49-yard line.
The Purple and White did
muster their ﬁrst ﬁrst down
of the night with over 10 minutes left in the half, but were
eventually forced to punt the
ball away after coming up
with that ﬁrst turnover.
WHS started its ensuing
drive at its own 11 and ultimately ended up looking at
a fourth-and-ﬁve situation at

See FALCONS | 2B

Marauders
roll past Rock
Hill, 44-28
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

PEDRO, Ohio — It took a while to warm up,
but once the Marauders got going, there was no
slowing them down.
The Meigs football team trailed non-conference
host Rock Hill by an 8-0 count 16 minutes into
Friday’s bout in Lawrence County, but the Maroon
and Gold found the end zone seven times after
that en route to the 44-28 victory.
The Redmen (0-2) broke the scoreless tie 3:20
into the second quarter, as Hayden Harper capped
off a 62-yard 11-play drive from two yards out.
RHHS was successful on the two-point conversion
pass for the 8-0 lead.
The Marauders (1-1) responded in just 1:23,
with Coulter Cleland completing a six-yard touchdown pass to Wyatt Hoover at the end of a sixplay, 44-yard drive. MHS failed its two-point pass,
however, and still trailed by two.
The Maroon and Gold were in front for the ﬁrst
time with 3:30 left in the half, as Landon Acree
returned an RHHS punt 63 yards for the touchdown. Caleb Burnem made his ﬁrst of two pointafter kicks to give the guests a 13-8 advantage.
Meigs got the ball back with 1:41 to go in the
half and 70 yards to paydirt. The Marauders
needed just three plays to go ahead 19-8, with
Cam Burnem catching a 40-yard touchdown pass
from Cleland.
The Redmen cut their deﬁcit back to one score,
at 19-14, on the opening drive of the second half,
as Brayden Friend scored from one-yard out.
The Marauders got those six points back on
their ensuing drive, with Cleland tossing a 27-yard
pass to Abe Lundy with 7:39 left in the third.
Meigs was ahead 31-14 by the end of the third
See MARAUDERS | 2B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

Monday,
Sept. 9
Volleyball
Wahama at Eastern,
6 p.m.
South Gallia at River
Valley, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at
Meigs, 6 p.m.
Southern at Federal
Hocking, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian
at Covenant, 6 p.m.
Golf
Point Pleasant at
Ravenswood, 4:30
Quad at Wahama,
4:30
Gallia Academy girls
at Jackson, 4:30

Tuesday,
Sept. 1
Volleyball
Athens at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at
Wahama, 6 p.m.
Miller at Southern,

6 p.m.
Alexander at Meigs,
6 p.m.
Wood County at Ohio
Valley Christian, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Belpre, 6
p.m.
Gallia Academy at
Fairland, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at
Cross Lanes, 6 p.m.
Soccer
Nitro at Point Pleasant girls, 7 p.m.
Point Pleasant boys
at Scott, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy boys
at Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy girls
at Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Golf
Eastern, Wahama,
South Gallia at Belpre,
4:30
TVC Ohio at Vinton
County, 4:30
Point Pleasant home,
4:30
South Point, Fairland
at Gallia Academy, 4
p.m.

�6/B��+A6/Cn�&amp; �#:9&lt;&gt;=

Eastern senior Mason Dishong (24) fights into the end zone on his game-winning six-yard touchdown catch in front of teammate Jayden
Evans (22), during the Eagles’ 20-14 victory over Caldwell on Friday in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

Eagles take down Caldwell, 20-14
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — The touchdown
combination so nice, the
Eagles used it twice.
The Eastern football
team trailed non-conference guest Caldwell by a
seven points headed into
the fourth quarter of Friday night’s bout at East
Shade River Stadium, but
EHS freshman Brady Yonker tossed a pair of touchdowns passes to senior
Mason Dishong in the
ﬁnal period, giving the
Eagles a 20-14 victory.
The Eagles (2-0) —
winners of back-to-back
games to start the year
for the ﬁrst time since
2003 — started the game
on the right foot, marching 65 yards on 10 consecutive running plays.
Blake Newland gave the
hosts their ﬁrst lead of
the night, scoring from
a yard out, on a run to
the left with 6:42 remaining in the ﬁrst quarter.
Dishong made his ﬁrst of
back-to-back extra-point
kicks to give EHS the
edge 7-0.
Caldwell (0-2) was held
to a single ﬁrst down in
the opening quarter, but
got things going on its
ﬁrst drive of the second.
A 47-yard run by Caden
Moore put the Redskins
inside the Eagle 10, and
four plays later, CHS
freshman quarterback
Braxton Dudley found
paydirt on a four-yard
run. Alejandro Poza made
his ﬁrst of two point-after
kicks, tying the game at
seven with 4:11 left in the

Eastern freshman Brady Yonker completes a pass, during the
Eagles’ 20-14 victory over Caldwell on Friday in Tuppers Plains,
Ohio.

ﬁrst half.
Eastern came up with
the game’s lone takeaway
with 3:57 left in the third
quarter, as Blake Newland
intercepted a pass on the
EHS 39. However, the
Eagles went three-and-out
for the third time in four
drives and punted the ball
back to the Redskins.
Caldwell took a 14-7
lead just two plays later,
as Dudley scampered 65
yards for the touchdown
with 1:50 left in the third.
Eastern answered with
a 65-yard drive of its own,
featuring ﬁve carries by
Steve Fitzgerald for 48
yards. On the seventh
play of the possession,
a fourth down from the
CHS 10, Yonker found
Dishong for the game-

tying touchdown pass
with 10:24 to play.
After a trio of punts
— two by Caldwell and
one by Eastern — the
Eagles started their
game-winning drive at
the CHS 31. A trio of
carries by Fitzgerald
moved the Eagles down
to the six-yard line, where
Yonker completed his
game-winning touchdown
pass Dishong with 1:46
remaining.
Caldwell’s last-ditch
effort was stymied by a
pair of penalties, Eastern
regained possession and
sealed the 20-14 victory with a pair of kneel
downs.
Following the triumph,
Eastern head coach Pat
Newland talked about his

team’s ability to battle
back after losing starting
quarterback Conner Ridenour to injury early in
the ﬁrst half.
“That’s just the deﬁnition of tough,” Coach
Newland said. “Our quarterback goes down, we
have a freshman come in
and he throws two touchdowns in the second half.
Our offensive line took
care of him.”
Coach Newland also
commended his team’s
defense, which allowed
just two ﬁrst downs in
the entire second half.
“Our defense, the way
we played in the second
half was amazing,” Coach
Newland said. “(Dudley)
got away from us once.
We knew that he could
run, we we’re trying to
get our defensive ends
out wide, and that hurt
us a little bit in the ﬁrst
half. Basically, we told
our defensive line, ‘we’re
just going to have to play
normal.’ We told our
outside backers, that’s
Blake Newland and Steve
Fitzgerald, ‘you’re just
going to have to man-up,
we’re going to have to
play,’ and they did in the
second half.”
For the game, the
Eagles held a 12-to-5
advantage in ﬁrst downs.
EHS outgained its guest
by a 221-to-193 clip for
the game, including 183to-154 on the ground.
Eastern was penalized
ﬁve times for a total of
40 yards, while Caldwell
was sent back seven
times for 55.
See EAGLES | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Sunday, September 8, 2019

Falcons
From page 1B

its own 40. The White
Falcons elected to try
a fake punt, but Miller
stopped them short of
the marker and took over
possession after a loss of
downs.
On the very next play,
the guests were on scoreboard as Colby Bartley
found Kylan McClain
on a 42-yard bomb that
closed the gap down to
16-6 with 6:38 remaining
in the half.
The White Falcons,
however, needed three
plays and three MHS
penalties to cover 62
yards on their next
drive, which resulted in
a 2-yard TD run from
Nick Brewer. Hunt
added another successful
2-point conversion run
while giving the hosts a
24-6 advantage with 5:40
left until halftime.
The Falcons responded
on their ensuing drive
by covering 61 yards in
eight plays, with Hunter
Wellspring hauling in

Marauders

a 10-yard TD pass on
fourth-and-nine with
1:48 remaining — making it a 24-12 contest at
the break.
Both teams traded
punts on the ﬁrst six
possessions of the
second half, but Miller
ﬁnally managed a breakthrough with 19 second
left in third. Bartley
scrambled 21 yards to
paydirt, capping a 7-play,
59-yard drive that closed
the gap down to 24-18
entering the ﬁnale.
Wahama followed by
driving the ball down to
the Miller 28-yard line,
but fumbled the ball
away as Trey McCoy
recovered at the MHS 18
— giving the guests possession 25 seconds into
the fourth.
The White Falcons
forced a punt, then
drove the ball down to
the Miller 12 before
ultimately losing possession on downs with 4:24
remaining.
The Purple and White
retaliated with a sustained drive that covered
85 yards in 17 plays
before ultimately ending

Sunday Times-Sentinel

“I really want to commend our guys for
coming out and giving a real team effort. We
needed this win and this program needed
this win in the worst way. This one really
helps us moving forward.”
— James Toth
WHS coach

nine feet away from the
goal line.
Facing a fourth-andone with 8.3 seconds
left at the WHS three,
Bartley was stopped for
no gain — allowing the
hosts to take over possession with 1.3 ticks
remaining on the scoreboard.
Wahama quarterback
Brayden Davenport
went under center for
the ﬁnal snap, then
made sure that the game
clock expired before
falling down in the end
zone — which resulted
in a safety. Those two
points allowed Miller to
close to within the ﬁnal
4-point margin as time
ran out.
The win allowed
the White Falcons to
snap a two-game losing skid against Miller

Rock Hill claimed a 19-to-17
edge in ﬁrst downs, but Meigs
held a 405-to-302 advantage in
total offense, including 180-toFrom page 1B
50 through the air. MHS committed the game’s only turnover
quarter, as Lundy scored on a
and was penalized four times
four-yard run at the end of a
for 20 yards, while RHHS was
seven-play, 66-yard drive.
sent back three times for 25
Rock Hill kept hope alive,
yards.
moving to within 11 points
Cleland — who carried the
with 10:56 left in regulation,
as Harper scored on a one-yard ball seven times for 39 yards
and two touchdowns — was
run.
The Marauders went 54 yards 10-of-19 passing for 180
yards and three scores for the
in ﬁve plays on their next posMaroon and Gold.
session, with Cleland scoring
Jake McElroy led the
on a two-yard run to give the
Marauder ground attack, gainguests a 38-20 advantage.
ing 130 yards on 10 carries,
RHHS trimmed its deﬁcit
while catching one pass for
to 10 with 4:26 to play, with
eight yards. Lundy combined
Hunter Massie scoring from
56 yards and a touchdown on
one-yard out. However, Meigs
nine carries with one 27-yard
slammed the door just 22 sectouchdown catch.
onds later, as Cleland capped
In addition to his punt return
off the 44-28 victory with a
for a touchdown, Acree led the
four-yard touchdown run.

while also picking up
their ﬁrst victory in a
league opener since the
2014 campaign. Both
Wahama and Miller are
exiting the TVC Hocking Division at the end
of this school year for
different conference
afﬁliations.
WHS coach James
Toth wore a well-earned
smile after releasing a
long-overdue sigh afterwards. As he noted, this
hard-fought victory was
key to getting things
headed in the right
direction for this onceproud football program.
“I thought we played
a really good ﬁrst half,
but then we got a little
banged up and a little
cramped up there in
the second half. It did
seem to take some
momentum away from

Marauder receiving unit with
three grabs for 51 yards. Cam
Burnem had two catches for 68
yards and a touchdown, Hoover
added 15 yards and a touchdown on two grabs, while Wes
Metzger caught one pass for 11
yards.
Friend — who was 2-of-5
passing for 31 yards, — carried the ball a dozen times for
a team-best 90 yards, with one
touchdown for the Redmen,
while also hauling in a 19-yard
pass. Logan Hankins had 82
yards on 17 carries and two
receptions for 31 yards in the
setback.
Meigs is now a perfect 3-0 in
all-time meetings with the Redmen.
Next for the Marauders, a
trip to Warren on Friday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2100.

us,” Toth said. “To our
credit, our guys fought
through it and made the
plays we needed when
we needed them. In
the end, a win is a win
… and we are going to
take it.
“To get serious for a
second, we started ﬁve
freshmen tonight and
people say you cannot
win varsity football
games when you start
freshmen. I really want
to commend our guys
for coming out and giving a real team effort.
We needed this win and
this program needed
this win in the worst
way. This one really
helps us moving forward.”
Wahama outgained
the guests by a 345-324
edge in total yards and
also posted a 21-14
advantage in ﬁrst
downs, with 11 of those
coming in the ﬁrst quarter alone. Miller did
ﬁnish the night plus-2
in turnover differential
and did not commit a
single turnover.
Hunt led the White
Falcons with 102 rush-

ing yards on 18 carries,
followed by Pauley
with 92 yards on 13
attempts.
Davenport completed
5-of-10 passes for 33
yards and also ran for
57 yards on 12 totes.
Pauley hauled in three
passes for 14 yards,
while Hunt snagged
two passes for 19 yards.
Bartley paced MHS
with 194 rushing yards
on 25 carries and also
completed 8-of-23 passes for 102 yards and
two TDs. Wellspring
led the Miller wideouts
with six catches for 57
yards.
WHS was ﬂagged
ﬁve times for 40 yards,
while Miller was penalized seven times for 51
yards.
Wahama returns to
action Friday when it
makes its ﬁrst road trip
of the season to Racine
for a TVC Hocking contest against Southern.
Kickoff at Roger Lee
Adams Memorial Field
is slated for 7:30 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Redskin ground attack
with 80 yards and two
touchdowns on nine carries — completed 5-ofFrom page 1B
15 passes for 39 yards.
Moore had 71 yards on
Leading the EHS
ground attack, Fitzgerald 16 carries for the guests,
toted the ball 13 times for while Whyatt Parks
110 yards. Blake Newland caught a team-best four
passes for 28 yards.
picked up 74 yards and a
Eastern ﬁnishes its nontouchdown on 20 carries,
league slate at 2-0, the
and caught one pass for
ﬁrst regular season EHS
no gain. Brayden Smith
is unbeaten out of conferhauled in two passes for
ence since 2001. It’s also
22 yards and ran twice
the Eagles ﬁrst winningfor two yards, while Disrecord in non-conference
hong’s two grabs totaled
play since 2009.
16 yards and two touchNext for the Eagles, a
downs.
Yonker completed 4-of- trip to Trimble on Friday
12 passes for 38 yards and for their Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
two touchdowns, while
opener.
Ridenour was 1-for-1 for
no gain before leaving the
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740game.
446-2342, ext. 2100.
Dudley — who led the

Eagles

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�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Southern stymies Lancers, 31-0

Blue Devils fend
off Fairland, 3-0

By Alex Hawley

By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.
com

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

CENTENARY, Ohio — All Blue Devils, all night.
The Gallia Academy boys soccer team accounted
for all-16 shots on goal in Thursday night’s Ohio Valley Conference match at Lester Field in Gallia County,
with the Blue Devils defeating guest Fairland by a
3-0 count. The Blue Devils (2-3-1, 2-0 OVC) broke
the scoreless tie at the 16-minute mark of the ﬁrst
half, with Maddux Camden scoring on an assist from
Dalton Vanco. GAHS — which came up empty on a
ﬁrst-half penalty kick — added its second goal just
32 seconds before the break, as a Brody Wilt header
found the back of the net off an assist from Emanuel
Valadez. The Blue and White put the cherry on top
of the 3-0 victory around the ﬁve-minute mark of the
second half, with Evan Stapleton playing a rebound
off the keeper. Gallia Academy ﬁred 34 shots in the
contest, with Fairland saving 13 of the 16 that were on
goal. GAHS keeper Bryson Miller had an uneventful
evening, as the Dragons’ lone shot was off target.
The Blue Devils are set to clash with Fairland again
on Oct. 8 in Proctorville. The Blue and White return
to action on Tuesday at Chesapeake.

STEWART, Ohio —
The Tornadoes took
control in all-3 phases
of the game.
After returning
the opening kickoff
for a touchdown, the
Southern football
team scored twice
on offense and twice
on defense on Friday
night in Athens County, as the Purple and
Gold rolled to a 31-0
victory over Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking
Division host Federal
Hocking.
Southern (2-0, 1-0
TVC Hocking) —
starting 2-0 for the
fourth year in a row
— was up 6-0 on the
ﬁrst play of the contest, as Trey McNickle
returned the opening
kickoff 75 yards for the
touchdown.
McNickle gave the

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

Waterford rolls
past Rebels, 40-8
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

WATERFORD, Ohio
— The ﬁrst 15 seconds
went really well. Then
the Wildcats went on the
prowl.
Waterford’s Holden
Dailey accounted for ﬁve
touchdowns as part of
40 unanswered points
on Friday night as the
South Gallia football team
dropped a 40-8 decision
in the Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
opener for both programs
in Washington County.
The visiting Rebels
(0-2, 0-1 TVC Hocking)
started the night with
a bang as Kyle Northup
returned the opening
kickoff 85 yards while
giving SGHS its only lead
of the night. Northup
added a successful 2-point
conversion run, making it
an 8-0 contest with 11:46
remaining in the opening
stanza.
From there, the Wildcats (2-0, 1-0) simply
took control as the hosts
received a 25-yard touchdown run from Dailey
to close to within 8-6
just two minutes into
regulation. Zane Heiss
added a 9-yard run at the
7:08 mark, then Dailey
converted a successful
2-point conversion run
that led to a permanent
cushion of 14-8. Dailey
tacked on an 8-yard run
and hauled in a 38-yard
score from Heiss at the
end of the ﬁrst quarter,
giving the Green and
White a sizable 26-8
advantage. Dailey added a
21-yard scoring run in the
second frame, with Nick
Fouss hauling in a successful 2-point conversion

pass from Heiss to secure
a 34-8 lead at the break.
Dailey tacked on his
fourth and ﬁnal rushing
score in the third quarter
with a 1-yard run to wrap
up the 32-point outcome.
WHS outgained the
Red and Gold by a substantial 366-103 overall
margin in total yards,
which included a 196-0
advantage through the air.
The hosts also came up
with three interceptions
and ﬁnished the night
plus-3 in turnover differential.
Waterford claimed a
20-5 edge in ﬁrst downs
and was also ﬂagged
seven times for 55 yards,
while the guests committed four penalties for 20
yards. Northup led SGHS
with 40 rushing yards
on 10 carries, followed
by Kenny Siders with 35
yards on a single tote.
Saber ﬁnished the night
0-for-6 passing, including
three interceptions.
Dailey paced Waterford
with 74 rushing yards on
eight attempts, followed
by Joe Pantelidis with 42
yards on eight carries.
Heiss completed 10-of16 passes for 206 yards
and also rushed ﬁve times
for 39 yards. Fouss led
the wideouts with 140
yards on seven receptions. Waterford scored
40 points for a second
consecutive week, but did
surrender its only points
allowed in the young
season.
South Gallia returns
to TVC Hocking action
Friday when it welcomes
Federal Hocking for a
7:30 p.m. kickoff.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Sunday, September 8, 2019 3B

Tornadoes a 12-0 lead
later in the opening
period, breaking a
45-yard run for the
touchdown.
Still in the ﬁrst
quarter, SHS senior
Gage Shuler picked
off a Lancer pass and
returned it 25 yards
for the touchdown, giving the guests an 18-0
lead.
McNickle scored
another rushing touchdown in the second
quarter, this time from
the Lancer 34-yard
line. After failing on
two-point conversion
tries on all-3 of their
ﬁrst quarter touchdowns, the Tornadoes
made 1-of-2 extra-point
kicks in the second
period.
Southern went ahead
31-0 before the half, as
Shuler had a second
pick-6, this time from
29 yards out.
With the clock running and the defense

standing tall, the Tornadoes didn’t need to
add on in the second
half and claimed the
31-0 victory.
Southern had a 277to-103 advantage in
total offense for the
game, including 231to-66 on the ground.
Each team had a pair
of turnovers in the contest, and SHS earned
a 17-to-11 edge in ﬁrst
downs. The guests
were ﬂagged nine
times for 74 yards.
McNickle ﬁnished
with 192 yards and
two touchdowns on 13
carries, to go with his
75-yard kickoff return
for a touchdown and a
two-yard reception.
Shuler — who carried the ball three
times for a net gain of
11 yards — was 5-of-9
passing for 46 yards in
the win. Jonah Diddle
combined four carries
for 42 yards with one
catch for 19, Andy

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Doczi ran twice for
seven yards, Will Wickline caught two passes
for 28 yards, while
Colton Walker had one
grab for 12 yards.
Leading the Lancers,
Donnie McCain was
4-of-9 passing for 47
yards, while carrying
the ball 10 times for
37. Jacob Flynn had a
game-best three receptions for 38 yards in
the setback.
This marks the
Tornadoes ﬁrst shut
out win since Week 3
of last season. Southern has now started
league-play on the
right foot for ﬁve
straight seasons.
Next for the Purple
and Gold, their homeopener against 1-1
Wahama.
That game will be
played on Friday in
Racine.

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�SPORTS

4B Sunday, September 8, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Southern storms past Lady Eagles
By Alex Hawley

Jenna Chadwell paced
Eastern with a dozen service
points. Haley Burton was
next with 11 points, followed
RACINE, Ohio — A midby Brielle Newland with nine
match turnaround.
points and a match-best ﬁve
The Southern volleyball team
aces. Olivia Barber posted
dropped Thursday’s opening
eight points and an ace in the
game to Tri-Valley Conference
setback, Sydney Sanders added
Hocking Division guest Eastﬁve points, while Kylie Gheen
ern, but the Lady Tornadoes
ended with two points and an
stormed back to win the next
ace.
three and stay unbeaten in
Leading Southern at the
league play.
net, Wolfe had 14 kills and two
Eastern (3-4, 1-1 TVC Hockblocks, while Hardwick posted
ing) never trailed in the open12 kills and two blocks. Evans
ing game, ﬁghting through ties
contributed ﬁve kills to the
at one, four and ﬁve, before
winning cause, while Roderus
cruising to the 25-16 win.
and Cleland chipped in with
The Lady Eagles scored the
three kills each.
ﬁrst eight points of the second,
Chadwell also led Eastern’s
but Southern (4-3, 3-0) claimed
net attack with 11 kills. Barber
its ﬁrst lead of the night at
claimed six kills for the guests,
12-11. After three more lead
Gheen added ﬁve, while Layna
changes, the teams were tied at
Catlett had two and Sanders
20. EHS earned the next point,
Alex Hawley|OVP Sports
ﬁnished with one.
but the hosts scored the next
Southern senior Baylee Wolfe (center) blocks an EHS spike attempt, during the Lady Tornadoes’ 3-1 victory over Eastern
These teams are scheduled
ﬁve and evened the match with on Thursday in Racine, Ohio.
to meet again on Oct. 10 in
a 25-21 win.
points, while Kayla Evans came Tuppers Plains.
triumph.
took the advantage at 5-4, but
Eastern scored the ﬁrst two
On Monday, Eastern will
up with nine points and three
The Lady Tornadoes were
points of Game 3, but the Lady the Lady Tornadoes claimed
host Wahama, while Southern
aces. Baylee Wolfe ﬁnished
Tornadoes scored the next ﬁve the next seven points. Eastern led by Cassidy Roderus with
visits Federal Hocking.
with seven points and three
and never trailed again en route tied the game at 13, but South- 16 points, including an ace.
aces, while Jordan Hardwick
Sydney Adams had 11 points
ern answered with a 6-0 run
to the 25-15 victory.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446earned two service points in
and three aces for the victors,
and never trailed again on its
SHS went up 3-0 in the
2342, ext. 2100.
the
win.
Phoenix
Cleland
added
10
way to the match-sealing 25-21
fourth game, the Lady Eagles

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Lady Raiders outlast Meigs Lady Rebels fall
By Alex Hawley

regained the edge at
12-11, but the Silver and
Black were back in front
BIDWELL, Ohio — A at 24-23. The teams
swapped leads twice
marathon match.
more, before the hosts
The River Valley and
ﬁnally won the game by
Meigs volleyball teams
a 30-28 count.
battled through ﬁve
The Maroon and Gold
games — three of which
were decided by just two avoided the sweep with
a 25-23 win in the third
points — in Tri-Valley
game, ﬁghting through
Conference Ohio Division action on Thursday four lead changes, the
last of which came at
night in Gallia County,
with the host Lady Raid- 15-14.
After a pair of early
ers winning the deciding
lead changes, the hosts
game by seven.
opened up their biggest
The Lady Raiders
lead of the fourth, at
never trailed in the
14-10. Meigs rallied back
opening game, ﬁghting
to take the edge at 21-20
through just one tie,
and then scored three
at 4-4, en route to the
straight points for its
25-18 win.
largest lead of the game.
Meigs’ ﬁrst lead of
RVHS tied the game at
the night came at 1-0
24, but surrendered the
in Game 2, but River
next two points, as the
Valley claimed the next
guests forced a Game 5
four markers. MHS

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

with a 26-24 triumph.
The guests led 1-0
and 2-1 in the ﬁnale, but
River Valley scored the
next seven points and
never looked back on the
way to the 15-8 matchsealing victory.
Alexandria Wood led
the Lady Raiders with
17 service points. Jaden
Bradley had 11 points
for the victors, Mikenzi
Pope added 10, Lora
Kinney came up with
six, while Kasey Birchﬁeld ﬁnished with ﬁve.
Breanna Dodrill and
Madison Hall claimed
four points each in the
contest, while Hannah
Jacks, Taylor Huck and
Javan Gardner ﬁnished
with one each.
Bre Zirkle led the
Maroon and Gold with
17 points and four aces.
Baylee Tracy earned

nine points for the
guests, Jewels Conley
added eight, while Hannah Durst had seven
points and an ace. Mallory Hawley and Maci
Hood ended with four
points apiece, while
Kylee Mitch earned two.
Hawley led the guests
at the net with 15 kills.
Durst was next with
eight kills, Mitch added
six kills and a block,
Hood had a pair of kills,
while Zirkle earned a
team-best 20 assists.
Meigs and River Valley
will meet again on Oct.
10 in Rocksprings.
Both teams host nonconference matches on
Monday, with RVHS
welcoming South Gallia,
and MHS hosting Gallia
Academy.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Tornadoes 2nd, White Falcons 3rd at Riverside
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

MASON, W.Va. —
The Tornadoes took
silver, the White Falcons
claimed bronze on a
tie-breaker, while the
Golden Eagles remained
true to their name.
The Belpre golf team
claimed a 13-stroke victory over four teams in
Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division action
on Wednesday at Riverside Golf Club in Mason
County.
Belpre posted a fourman total of 175, with
all-4 scores between
7-and-11 over-par. Southern’s second-place total
was 188, ﬁve strokes
ahead of Wahama and
Federal Hocking. The
White Falcons and Lancers also were knotted up
after the ﬁfth-score tiebreaker, but the Red and
White bested FHHS by
one stroke on the sixth
score. Miller rounded
out the ﬁve-team ﬁeld
with a 220.

By Alex Hawley

Rebels, Amaya Howell
had eight service
points and an ace.
MERCERVILLE, Ohio Isabella Cochran, Emma
Shamblin and Kiley
— As the night went
Stapleton had three
on, the Lady Rebels
points apiece, with two
kept getting closer.
aces by Cochran, and
The South Gallia
one each by Shamblin
volleyball team hosted
and Stapleton.
defending Tri-Valley
Rounding out the SGHS
Conference Hocking
service attack, Christine
Division champion
Waterford on Thursday, Grifﬁth posted two
points and Alyssa
with the Lady Rebels
Cremeens added one.
falling by 12, then by
Grifﬁth paced SGHS
seven, and ﬁnally by
at the net with six kills
just three.
and ﬁve blocks. Jessie
SGHS scored the
Rutt earned ﬁve kills
opening point of the
and one block in the
night, but Waterford
setback, Katie Bowling
claimed the next seven
markers and led the rest added three kills, while
Stapleton ﬁnished
of the way to the 25-13
win. The Lady Wildcats with two kills. Olivia
Johnson added four
led wire-to-wire in the
blocks for the hosts,
second game, moving
while Howell had a
ahead 2-0 in the match
team-best 11 assists.
with a 25-18 victory.
South Gallia will try
WHS scored the ﬁrst
to ﬂip the script when
four points in the third
game, and South Gallia these teams meet at
WHS on Oct. 10.
fought back to within
Next for the Red and
a point at 20-19, 21-20
Gold, a non-conference
and 23-22. However,
the guests never trailed trip to River Valley on
in the ﬁnale and sealed Monday.
the 3-0 win with a 25-22
Alex Hawley can be reached at
victory.
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.
Leading the Lady

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Lady Marauders
top RVHS in dual
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
Alex Hawley|OVP Sports

Southern’s Tanner Lisle putts on the third green at Riverside Golf Club on Wednesday in Mason,
W.Va.

Leading the Purple
and Gold, Joey Weaver
and Landen Hill both
ﬁred 10-over par rounds
of 45. Southern’s other
two counting scores
were both 49s, recorded
by Tanner Lisle and
David Shaver. Also
competing for the Tornadoes, Jacob Milliron had
a 50 and Grant Smith

shot a 60.
Conner Ingels led the
White Falcons with a
nine-over par 44. Ethan
Mitchell posted a 47,
Ty White added a 50,
while Mattie Ohlinger
ﬁnished with a 52. Casey
Greer’s 62 was Wahama’s
ﬁfth score, while Jillian
Love’s 66 won the tiebreaker for Wahama.

Miller’s Hunter Dutiel
was match medalist with
40. Eric Dotson paced
Belpre with a 42, while
Mason Jackson’s 45 led
the Lancers.
The Tornadoes are
slated to have their other
home league match on
Wednesday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Southwestern Community Action Council
ƐĞĞŬŝŶŐ�ƋƵĂůŝĮĞĚ�ĐĂŶĚŝĚĂƚĞƐ�ĨŽƌ�ƚŚĞ�ĨŽůůŽǁŝŶŐ�ƉŽƐŝƟŽŶƐ͗

Part Time and Full Time Team Member

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AUTO | HOME | BUSINESS | LIFE
OH-70145994

OH-70146924

to Waterford

Jeff Warner
113 West 2nd Street . Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-992-5479 . warnerj1@nationwide.com

POMEROY, Ohio —
Another solid effort for
the Lady Marauders.
The Meigs girls golf
team posted ﬁve of the
top six individual scores
on Thursday evening
during a dual match with
visiting River Valley at
Meigs Golf Course.
The host Lady
Marauders ended the
event with a team score
of 189, but the Lady
Raiders had only two
competitors … and therefore did not have enough
entrants for a team tally.
Caitlin Cotterill led
Meigs by claiming
medalist honors with
a 5-over par round of
39. Teammate Mikayla
Radcliffe joined River
Valley’s Aislyn Bostic for
runner-up honors after
each posted matching
totals of 48.

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Meigs junior Kylee Robinson
sinks a putt during an August
29 match at Meigs Golf Course
in Pomeroy, Ohio.

Kylee Robinson was
next for MHS with a 49,
while Olivia Haggy completed the team score
with a 53. Shelby Whaley also shot a 49 for the
Maroon and Gold.
Sophia Gee ﬁred a 71
to complete the day for
the Lady Raiders.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday, September 8, 2019 5B

Blue Angels win tri-match at Cliffside
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— If two out of three
ain’t bad, then ﬁve out
of six must be pretty
decent.
The Gallia Academy
girls golf team recorded
the four lowest individual scores on Thursday
Bryan Walters|OVP Sports
during a tri-match held
Gallia Academy junior Avery Minton, right, watches a tee shot
take flight during a match Thursday at Cliffside Golf Course in at Cliffside Golf Course

in the Old French City.
The Blue Angels were
the only program that
had enough players for a
team, with the hosts ﬁnishing the evening with
a ﬁnal tally of 205.
GAHS also produced
ﬁve of the top six individual rounds against
the likes of Chesapeake
and Ironton, which had
only one and three competitors respectively.

Bailey Meadows
captured medalist honors with a 12-over par
round of 49, with the
trio of Bella Bonzo,
Avery Minton and Lilly
Rees sharing runner-up
honors with identical
rounds of 52 while completing the ﬁnal team
tally.
Josie Cremeans was
next for Gallia Academy
wit a 59, while Kylee

Gallipolis, Ohio.

RedStorm slips past Racers
By Randy Payton

Reinford, a senior from
McAlister, Pa., gathered
in a crossing pass from
the right win by junior
LIMA, Ohio — Spenteammate Samuel Pedercer Reinford’s goal with
sen (Aldershot, England)
just over 12 minutes
remaining snapped a 1-1 and pushed a shot past
UNOH keeper Mark
deadlock and lifted the
University of Rio Grande McMillian with 12:03
remaining to give the
to a 2-1 victory over the
University of Northwest- RedStorm a lead it would
ern Ohio, Thursday after- never relinquish.
Rio Grande grabbed
noon, at Racer Field.
a 1-0 lead just over 24
Rio Grande, ranked
No. 5 in the NAIA coach- minutes into the contest
when sophomore Nicolas
es’ poll, improved to 5-0
Cam Orellana (Santiago,
with the win.
Chile) scored his seventh
UNOH, which was
among the schools receiv- goal of the season off of
a touch from junior Silas
ing votes in the same
Machado (Sao Paulo,
poll, dropped to 1-1-1
Brazil).
with the loss.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

The host Racers tied
the match with 27:33
remaining in the second
half when Devin Morgan
scored off an assist by
Luka Pekovich, ﬁring a
shot from the left side of
the 18-yard box into the
upper right-hand corner
of the net.
The goal was just the
second of the season
scored by a Rio opponent
and snapped a scoreless
streak of 400:17, covering the ﬁnal 67:50 of the
RedStorm’s season-opening win over St. Xavier
(Ill.) on Aug. 17, three
straight shutout wins and
the ﬁrst 62:27 of Thursday’s match.

Senior net-minder
Richard Dearle (Castle
Donington, England)
recorded four saves for
Rio in the win. His quartet of stops including a
dazzling denial of a penalty kick by the Racers’
Marc Skelton with 12:49
left before halftime.
McMillan had one save
for UNOH, which actually outshot the RedStorm,
10-5, in the contest.
Rio Grande returns to
action next Wednesday
when it travels to Mount
Vernon Nazarene University.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Trent Roush wins Riverside
Club Championship

champion was Harry Queen with a 163, and the net
winner was James MacKnight with a 131.
A total of 36 players competed in this year’s event.

MASON, W.Va. — Trent Roush, of Point Pleasant,
defeated Adam Krawsczyn, of Cincinnati, and John
Smith, of New Haven, in a three-hole sudden death
playoff to win the 2019 Riverside Club Championship.
For the 36-hole event, the trio were tied at six-over
par 146. Roush and Krawsczyn both made par on
the second playoff hole, eliminating Smith. Roush
birdied the following hole to win the championship.
The net winner was John Ridenour, of Chester,
with a three-under 137. In the ﬁrst ﬂight, the gross

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

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ROGERS BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Riverside records
10th ace of the season
MASON, W.Va. — Jimmy Wilson, of Point Pleasant, has made the 10t hole-in-one at Riverside
Golf Club for 2019. Wilson achieved the feat on
the 142-yard sixth hole, using a six-hybrid club.
Wilson’s seventh career ace was occurred on Aug.
30, and was witnessed by Mitch Mace and Tim
Maloney.

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

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Cook and Savannah
Wilcoxon also posted
efforts of 63 and 67.
Makayla Collins led
Ironton with a 60 and
Beia Delawder was next
with a 61. Trinity Littleton also shot a 66 for
the Lady Tigers.
Alaina Collins ﬁred a
56 for Chesapeake’s lone
score.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Gallia Academy gets
past Lady Panthers
By Alex Hawley

age and a 45.4 side-out
percentage.
Leading the Blue and
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio White service, Maddie
Wright had three aces.
— A sweep is a sweep,
Maddy Petro earned
regardless of how close
a pair of aces, while
it is.
MaKenna Caldwell and
The Gallia Academy
Peri Martin had one
volleyball team claimed
each, with Caldwell
its 21st consecutive
earning the team’s only
straight games win in
perfect serve percentOhio Valley Conference
age.
play on Thursday in
Alex Barnes led the
Lawrence County, as the
charge at the net, postBlue Angels swept host
ing 12 kills and a quarChesapeake.
tet of blocks. Wright ﬁnGallia Academy (5-1,
ished with 10 kills and
5-0 OVC) — winner 48
straight league matches three blocks in the win,
and 64 consecutive OVC Petro added eight kills
and two block, while
sets — won 64 percent
of its serves in the open- Martin was responsible
for four kills, one block
er, a match-best on the
and 26 assists.
way to a 25-22 win.
Leading the GAHS
The Blue Angels’ had
defense, Barnes had 19
their best side-out perof the team’s 64 digs,
centage of the night at
65.0 in the second game, while Jenna Harrison
moving ahead 2-0 in the came up with 15.
Gallia Academy will
match with a 25-19 win.
look to top Chesapeake
GAHS came up with
again when these teams
match-bests of 13 kills
meet in Centenary on
and three aces in the
Oct. 3.
third game, capping off
After hosting River
the 3-0 victory with a
Valley on Friday, the
26-24 triumph.
For the match, GAHS Blue Angels will visit
had a 90.7 serve percent- Meigs on Monday.
age, and a 52.2 side-out
Alex Hawley can be reached at
percentage, while CHS
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.
had a 89.6 serve percent-

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

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

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�COMICS

6B Sunday, September 8, 2019

BLONDIE

Sunday Times-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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�SPORTS

Sunday Times-Sentinel

New era in Cincinnati begins
with test against Seahawks
SEATTLE (AP) —
Welcome to being an
NFL head coach, Zac
Taylor.
The newest member
of the NFL’s under-40
coaching fraternity will
make his debut on Sunday as the head man in
Cincinnati in perhaps the
most challenging circumstances possible.
Taylor and the Bengals
will open in Seattle, facing a Seahawks team
expected to be a contender in the NFC with the
new highest-paid player
in the NFL in quarterback Russell Wilson,
the highest-paid inside
linebacker in the league
in All-Pro Bobby Wagner
and a brand new shiny
toy to unveil after the
acquisition of pass rusher
Jadeveon Clowney.
With the challenge
ahead, Taylor hasn’t
taken much time to think
about the context of
his ﬁrst game as a head
coach.

“You don’t allow yourself to think about it, to
be quite honest,” Taylor
said. “There’s so many
other things on my mind
this week. … Right now,
that’s too hard to think
about.”
Taylor is taking the
reins after 16 seasons
where Marvin Lewis was
in charge in Cincinnati.
While Lewis was mostly
successful with the
Bengals, he could never
break the stigma of going
winless in seven playoff
appearances during his
tenure.
Seattle would be a
prime example of what
Taylor would like to see
the Bengals become.
Last year was supposed
to be a rebuild for the
Seahawks as the stars
of their championshipcontending teams from
earlier in the decade
cycled out of Seattle and
new, younger options
took over.
But Pete Carroll’s crew

Sunday, September 8, 2019 7B

Lady Knights win season opener
Point sweeps
Nitro, Ripley
in tri-match

proved ahead of the
curve and thanks to a
recommitment to being
a run-ﬁrst offense, the
Seahawks won 10 games
and earned a wild-card
berth in the NFC.
There were already
expectations for Seattle
to be in the playoff hunt
in the NFC this season,
especially after locking
up Wagner and Wilson
to long-term extensions.
Answering their biggest
lingering concern heading into the regular season by acquiring Clowney
has ampliﬁed the hopes
of how good Seattle could
end up being.
“It’s going to be pretty
exciting football,” Wagner said. “The offense
has a lot of weapons. Our
line is great, (Russell) is
great, our running backs
are great, receivers are
great, D-line is amazing, and our linebackers
are pretty good too. I’m
really excited to see all of
that come together.”

By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.
com

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Picking up
right where they left
off.
Following a
program-best 26-5
campaign last fall, the
Point Pleasant volleyball team made quick
work of both Nitro
and Ripley on Thursday night in a seasonopening tri-match held
at PPHS in Mason
County.
The host Lady
Knights (2-0) claimed
a 25-13, 25-9 victory
over Nitro in the opening match, then held
on for a 25-23, 25-21
triumph over Ripley in
the ﬁnale to wrap up
the tri-match sweep.
The Lady Vikings also
won in straight game
against Nitro in the
middle contest.
Point Pleasant
trailed 3-1 in 10-6 in
the game against the
Lady Wildcats, but rallied to score 19 of the
ﬁnal 22 points in taking a quick 1-0 match
lead in the opener.
The Lady Knights
led wire-to-wire in
Game 2 after surging
out to leads of 5-0 and
15-3, then added 10
of the ﬁnal 16 points
to wrap up the 2-0 triumph over NHS.
Peyton Jordan led
the PPHS service
attack with 12 points,
followed by Addy Cottrill and Baylie Rickard with eight points
apiece. Olivia Dotson
was next with six
points, while Brooke

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Gallia Academy freshman Laith Hamid hits a chip shot during Thursday night’s tri-match at Cliffside
Golf Course in Gallipolis, Ohio.

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

Point Pleasant sophomore Addy Cottrill (18) hits a spike
attempt during Game 2 of Thursday night’s match against
Ripley in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Warner added three
point for the victors.
Jordan recorded a
team-high four service
aces and Dotson was
next with three aces.
Cottrill and Rickard
also had an ace each.
Amy Welch led
Nitro with three
service points in the
opener.
After trading leads
out to a 5-all tie, Ripley started to break
away in Game 1 after
building an 18-11
advantage. PPHS,
however, rallied with
13 of the next 15
points en route to
its largest lead in the
opener at 24-20.
RHS broke serve
and cut the deﬁcit
down to 24-23 before
Point broke serve to
wrap up the minimal
2-point win and a 1-0
match lead.
The Lady Knights
never trailed in Game
2, although the Lady
Vikings rallied back
from a 3-0 deﬁcit to
pull even at 3-all.
The Red and Black
led by as many seven
points on three different occasions, but
RHS rallied from a
14-7 deﬁcit to twice
pull within two points
— the last of which
came at 23-21. PPHS
scored the ﬁnal two
points and closed the

door on the ﬁnal outcome with a 4-point
decision.
Dotson led the
hosts Point Pleasant
service attack with
nine points, followed
by Jordan and Warner
with seven and six
points respectively.
Rickard was next with
four points, while
Milhoan added two
service points.
Dotson recorded
three aces, with Jordan and Rickard adding an ace apiece.
Tristan Wilson led
the net attack with 11
kills and Cottrill followed with four kills
and a team-best two
blocks. Milhoan and
Warner also chipped
in two kills each.
Dotson dished out a
team-high nine assists
against Ripley, with
Warner also dishing
out three assists. Dotson also record a block
in the triumph.
Kyra Winler paced
the Lady Vikings
with seven service
points, followed by
Tori Hinzman with six
points.
Point Pleasant
returns to action Tuesday when it travels to
Cross Lanes Christian
for a 6 p.m. contest.
Bryan Walters can be reached
at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Blue Devils roll at Cliffside “When I grow up...
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
— There’s no place like
home.
The Gallia Academy
boys golf team posted a
16-stroke victory over
the ﬁeld on Thursday
during a tri-match at
Cliffside Golf Course in
Gallia County.
The host Blue Devils four of the top six
individual rounds while
cruising to a ﬁnal winning tally of 165.
Chesapeake placed

second with a ﬁnal score
of 181, while Ironton did
not have enough competitors for a team score
with only two golfers.
Laith Hamid and
Reece Thomas shared
medalist honors identical
round of 2-over par 39,
with Cooper Davis coming in right behind his
teammates with a 41.
Hobie Graham completed the winning tally
with a 46, while Will
Hendrickson and Beau
Johnson also added
respective efforts of 49
and 51.

Austin Jackson paced
the Panthers with a 42,
followed by Jacob Lemley and Christian Hall
with respective rounds
of 44 and 47. Jackson
McComas completed
the CHS team score
with a 48, while Jackson
Stephens and Dawson
Boster added efforts of
50 and 55.
Brayden Easterling led
the Fighting Tigers with
a 50 and Logan Price
added a round of 60.

I want to be a

Basketball Star! ”

Your children have dreams as big as their imaginations.
We know the care they receive today will help them
achieve those dreams tomorrow. In affiliation with
Nationwide Children’s Hospital, Holzer helps keep your
children healthy with specialized care so they can become
more than they could ever imagine.

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

Pridemore keeps senior league lead
Staff Report

MASON, W.Va. — With
just weeks remaining,
Kenny Pridemore, of
Point Pleasant, is still in
the lead of the second
half of the 2019 Riverside
Senior men’s golf league
held Tuesday at Riverside Golf Club in Mason
County.
Through nine weeks of
competition, Pridemore
has a total of 137.0, with
Carl Stone as current runner-up with 118.5 points.
A total of 69 players
were present on Tuesday,
making up 15 four-man

teams and three trios.
The low score of the
day was an 11-under par
59, ﬁred by the quartet
of Stone, Roger Putney,
Larry Legg and Tom
McNeely.
One shot back, there
was a three-way tie for
second place between the
team of Hook Hoffman,
Randall Thornhill, Mitch
Mace and Bill Yoho, the
team of Bobby Oliver,
Mike Wolfe, Mike Fetty
and Haskel Jones, and the
team of Bruce Hussell,
Tom Fisher, Bobby Watson and Rich Mabe.

The closest to the pin
winners were Thornhill
on the ninth hole, as well
as Larry Burns on No. 14.
The top-10 standings through six weeks
of the 2019 Riverside
Senior men’s golf league
are as follows: Kenny
Pridemore (137.0), Carl
Stone (118.5), Jimmy
Gress (117.5), Chuck
Stanley Sr. (117.0), Paul
Maynard (112.0), Carl
Cline (109.5), Charlie
Hargraves (101.5), Tom
Scarberry (99.5), Richard
Mabe (99.0), and Dewey
Smith (98.0).

Schedule an appointment!

1-855-4HOLZER

Steelers last team to beat Patriots in game that counted
ers missed the playoffs
while the Patriots went
back to the NFL title
game for the second year
in a row. Now, the only
other franchise to win
six Super Bowls will be
in town for the defending champions’ season
opener, as both teams

begin their quest for a
seventh.
“They are the world
champs and we have to
go to their place and do
our best,” Pittsburgh
quarterback Ben Roethlisberger said this week
as he prepared to start
his 16th NFL season.

(1-855-446-5937)

www.holzer.org/pediatrics

OH-70145751

FOXBOROUGH, Mass.
(AP) — When the New
England Patriots unveil
their sixth championship
banner on Sunday night,
the Pittsburgh Steelers
will have a close-up view.
The last team to beat
New England — in Week
15 last year — the Steel-

in
affiliation
with

�8B Sunday, September 8, 2019

Sunday Times-Sentinel

ENABLING
ADDICTION
are you
loving someone
to death?
YOU ENABLE THEM BY:

YOU LOVE THEM BY:

Giving Money/Financial Support

Offering Encouragement

Money of ANY amount can help them support
their habit. This includes food, gift cards, gas
cards, gifts, and medical expenses. Expect
them to plead, threaten, beg, and insist that
the need is critical.

Speak life. Each person is created by God
with great purpose. Remind them that their
identity is not addiction and that they are
loved unconditionally. Become their biggest
prayer warrior.

Paying For or Providing a Place
to Live

Participating in a Support Group

Providing money for rent, utilities, a hotel room,
or a room at your house gives them a place
to continue to use.

Your healing is an essential part of the process.
Find a support group to get involved in. Take
care of your needs and learn healthy ways to
set boundaries.

Paying for a Car or Phone

Providing Treatment Resources

A car, insurance, gas, or phone enables them
to call and meet dealers, transport drugs, and
endanger their life and the lives of others on
the road.

Don’t do the work for them but offer them a
list of treatment options and resources. There
are several places that offer free treatment
and resources. Encourage them to seek help.

Preventing Consequences/
Rescuing Them

Setting Healthy Boundaries
Love them by loving and respecting yourself
enough to set boundaries to keep yourself
and children healthy and safe. Be careful not
to assume responsibility for your addicted
loved one or their choices.

Bailing them out of jail, lying to cover their
actions, keeping secrets, or rescuing them
from the natural consequences of their
choices only furthers their addiction by
allowing them to continue their use.

Struggling with addiction? You are not alone! In recent years prescription
painkiller abuse has caused more deaths than cocaine &amp; heroin combined.
Opioid Addiction
Opioid rehabs specialize in supporting those recovering from opioid addiction. They treat those
suffering from addiction to illegal opioids like heroin, as well as prescription drugs like oxycodone.
These centers typically combine both physical as well as mental and emotional support to help
stop addiction. Physical support often includes medical detox and subsequent medical support
(including medication), and mental support includes in-depth therapy to address the underlying
causes of addiction.

Medication-Assisted Treatment
Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) is the use of medications along
with counseling and therapy to treat substance abuse. MAT is mainly
used to treat opioid addictions (i.e. heroin and/or prescription drugs like
OxyContin or Vicodin). Medications like buprenorphine are used in MAT
to help normalize brain chemistry, block the effects of alcohol and/or
opioids, relieve cravings, and stabilize body functions, making sobriety
easier to maintain. All medications used are approved by the FDA, and
every MAT program is tailored to the patient’s speciﬁc needs.

Their program’s strengths revolve around the ability of the counselor
to speciﬁcally design the course of treatment based upon the client’s
unique needs, beliefs, personality traits, experience in treatment
programs, as well as consideration of cultural implications that may
affect an individual’s experience in a treatment program.

OH-70146910

Individualized Treatment

ADDICTION HOLDING YOU DOWN?

Rise up, starting now.
CALL 304-674-6676 TO TALK TO SOMEONE ABOUT GETTING THE HELP YOU
NEED TO SUCCESSFULLY OVERCOME ADDICTION AND REGAIN CONTROL OF
YOUR LIFE.
Chemical Dependency���Substance Abuse Treatment���Counseling

!NXIETY�
$EPRESSION�
!DDICTION�

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809 Willow Lane Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
Mark W. Nolan, MD

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