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                  <text>Adventures
in substitute
teaching
OPINION s 4

Lady
Eagles hold
off Meigs
SPORTS s 6

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

64°

72°

66°

Variable clouds today; nice. A star-studded
sky tonight. High 77° / Low 50°

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 10

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 153, Volume 73

FOR THE RECORD
Middleport Police Department
The Middleport Police Department reports
early Monday morning, Gabe Hill, 28, Middleport, was arrested and charged with two counts
of obstructing justice and two counts of receiving
stolen property. Hill is also charged with being
a fugitive from justice due to three felony indictments from Mason County, W.Va., according to a
press release from the Middleport PD. Middleport
ofﬁcers had been searching for Hill for approximately three weeks in reference to the West
Virginia charges. Hill is currently housed in the
Middleport Jail awaiting arraignment in Meigs
County Court.
In a separate incident, the Middleport PD also
reports, at approximately 9 p.m. on Monday
night, Middleport ofﬁcers conducted a search
warrant at a residence in the 140-block of Cole
Street. While on scene, ofﬁcers reportedly recovered several items of stolen property related to
several breaking and entering incidents. Ofﬁcers
also reportedly recovered alleged felony level narcotics and drug paraphernalia. Charges are pending at this time in this case. Further information
will be released when available.

Mother faces
arson charge
in fatal fire
day. She was
arraigned before
Mason County
LEON, W.Va.
Magistrate Mel— A Leon
anie Sang who
woman is facing
set her bond at
a ﬁrst-degree
$100,000. Young
arson charge in
was incarcerated
connection with Young
at the Western
a 2016 house ﬁre
Regional Jail as
that claimed the
of Wednesday evening.
life of her 10-year old
According to the
son.
criminal complaint ﬁled
Maria R. Young,
34, was arrested and
See FIRE | 2
charged on Tues-

Staff Report

Thursday, September 26, 2019 s 50¢

The future of space

Dean Wright | OVP

Past astronaut Dr. Garrett Reisman addresses visitors at Gallia Academy High School about the importance of perseverance.

Evening with an astronaut
By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.
com

CENTENARY — Dr.
Garrett Reisman, formerly an astronaut with
NASA, shared stories
and questions with visitors Tuesday evening at
Gallia Academy High

School as part of a
complementary event
with Bossard Memorial
Library’s hosting of the
space technology exhibit
SPACE: A Journey to
Our Future.
The Gallia-Vinton Educational Service Center
also sponsored the event.
Library Director Deb-

bie Saunders introduced
Reisman and his background before inviting
him to take the ﬂoor of
the GAHS gymnasium to
share his experiences.
According to background information
previously provided to
Ohio Valley Publishing,
Reisman was selected
by NASA as a mission
specialist astronaut in
1998. His ﬁrst mission

Special to the Sentinel

All-inclusive
women’s cancer
screenings set
RACINE — Through
its Breast Education
Screening &amp; Navigation
Program, the Ohio University Heritage College
of Osteopathic Medicine Community Health
Programs (CHP) has
long provided mobile
women’s cancer screening clinics around
southeastern Ohio as
part of its mission to

improve women’s health
in the region.
In collaboration with
Holzer Meigs Clinic,
the Heritage College
CHP will also offer
same-day mammography at the Meigs County mobile clinic. The
next mobile clinic will
be held Tuesday, Oct.
1, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
at Racine Library, 210
See CANCER | 5

See SPACE | 5

Tales and Tidbits: Surveying the land
By Lorna Hart

Staff Report

was aboard the Space
Shuttle Endeavour, in
2008, which dropped him
off for a 95-day mission
aboard the International
Space Station after which
he returned to Earth
aboard the Space Shuttle
Discovery. His second
mission was aboard the
Space Shuttle Atlantis,
in 2010, and returned

Courtesy Photo

Historian Zac Cunningham, pictured, is manager of
Educational Programs at George Washington’s Ferry
Farm.

MEIGS COUNTY — With
the opening of the Northwest
Territory, surveyors were
needed to measure boundaries
and make maps in order for
property to be sold and recorded. Upon arriving, surveyors
found a wilderness difﬁcult to
traverse and to measure, and
the number of requests made
it almost impossible to keep
up with the demand.
The profession of surveyor
was considered a gentlemanly
one and often taken up by men
in the Colonies who were not
landed gentry as a way of making an income and establishing
themselves in the community.

There was no formal training, so young men interested
in pursing the profession could
read books to familiarize
themselves with the job, but
hands-on practice was the
best way to learn, and many
became apprentice to established surveyors.
President Thomas Jefferson
began the process of selling
land in the Northwest Territory to pay for debts of the
newly formed United States.
The land was sold in plots of
160 acres for $2.50 an acre or
80 acres for $1.25 an acre.
1786 marked the beginning
of the formal survey of lands
in the Northwest Territory
See TALES | 5

Harada, Goodman take Ariel Opera House stage
Staff Report

INDEX
Obituary: 2
Opinion: 4
News: 5
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
Weather: 10

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

GALLIPOLIS — Maestro Keitaro Harada returns to the podium
twice this season on Oct. 26 in
“The Fabulous Flute” with soloist Lindsey Goodman, OVS’s own
piccolo and ﬂutist, who performs
an Ohio premiere of Nancy Galbraith’s “Concert for Flute.”
The show starts Oct. 26 at 7:30
p.m. at the Ariel Opera House in
Gallipolis.
“Independent Streams” for
percussion and strings is another
Ohio premiere – written by the
OVS’s principal percussionist
Roger Braun. “Mozart’s Symphony
No. 35” and de Fall’s much loved
“Three Cornered Hat” round out
the program.
Conductor Harada continues to
be recognized at the highest levels
for his artistic abilities and passion for musical excellence. As a
three-time recipient of The Solti

File photo

The Ohio Valley Symphony makes its home at the Ariel Opera House on Second Avenue
in Gallipolis.

Foundation U.S. Career Assistance Award (2014, 2015, 2016),
Bruno Walter National Conductor
Preview (2013), the Seiji Ozawa

Conducting Fellowship at Tanglewood Music Festival, a student of
See ARIEL | 5

�2 Thursday, September 26, 2019

OBITUARIES

OBITUARIES/NEWS
JOHN N. IHLE

ANNA MARIE PARKER
TUPPERS
PLAINS — Anna
Marie Parker
joined her savior,
Jesus, on Tuesday,
Sept. 24, 2019.
Anna was such a
bright spot in this
world with her loving and
kind spirit, giving heart,
and infectious smile and
laugh. Anna loved her
husband and her kids
ﬁercely. She loved all her
family, church, community and all her employees
of Parker Corporation.
She continually bragged
on all of them and told
them they were the best.
Anna and Greg worked
hard, everyday, with their
company and farm to provide for their family and
friends and to show them
that love never fails. But
most of all, she loved her
Jesus and her faith never
wavered. She not only
instilled values into her
children, she also taught
them to always keep Jesus
ﬁrst, as he will never
fail you. One of Anna’s
greatest joys was to teach
children about Jesus at
Vacation Bible School
(VBS) at Faith Harvest.
Anna loved all of her
VBS kids and loved blessing them. Anna touched
everyone’s hearts that
she came in contact with.
She would give the shirt
off her back if she needed
to. She enjoyed watching
her kids, nieces, nephews
and grandkids play sports
and show livestock. She
will be incredibly missed
and though the pain being
felt by her loved ones is
indescribable they are
rejoicing with the fact
that she is in heaven with
her Jesus and sometimes
some barn time is needed.
Anna was born on Dec.
17, 1962. She is the wife
of Greg Parker. She is survived by her husband; her
BRUMFIELD

busy with many life pasRACINE — John N.
Ihle, of the Morning Star sions. He loved God and
kids, Justin (Jamie) area of Racine, passed
served in many capacities
Robertson, Katie
at First Baptist Church in
into heaven on Monday,
(Kevin) Holter,
Racine. He was an avid
Sept. 23, 2019 at OverJacob (Taylor)
carpenter spending countbrook Center. John was
Parker and Jordan 90 years old and lived a
less hours in the workParker; and grand- full and rewarding life
shop. John was a leader
children, Makenzie with family and friends.
in the Democrat Party
and Kendra Robertand served various terms
He was preceded in
son and Hunter and Riley death by his parents,
as county chair of the
Holter.
Meigs County Democrat
Charles and Irma Ihle;
She is also survived
Executive Committee and
his wife of ﬁfty years,
by her mother, Darlean
Mary Lou Ihle; and a son, as chairman of the DemoWelch; her sisters, Teresa Nicholas R. Ihle.
crat Central Committee.
(Harry) Long and Linda
He served many years on
His surviving children
(Joel) Day; and her
the Meigs County Board
include Michael Ihle,
brother, Curt (Amber)
of Elections. John kept
Patricia (Michael) StruWelch; her brother-in-law, ble and Diana Norris Ihle; his mind sharp by readJeff (Jodi) Parker; many
grandchildren, Nikki Ihle ing and at eighty bought
nieces and nephews,
and learned to operate a
Whobrey, Kevin (Alicia)
Brant (Lexy) Day, Patcomputer. John’s life was
Ihle, Evan Struble, Kimrick (Kate) Day, Katelyn
berly (Jesse) McKendree a true example of a “joy”
Welch, Tyler (Dakota)
bracelet, Jesus, others
and Erin (Jim) Heater;
Welch, Cole Welch, Dane six great-grandchildren
and yourself.
Long, Bailey Welch, JesVisitation will take
survive as well, Landen
sica Parker and Jennifer
place from 5-8 p.m.,
Woods, Elle Marie Ihle,
Parker; and great nieces
Elise and Liam McKend- Thursday, Sept. 26 at
and nephew, Paisley,
Anderson McDaniel
ree and Ryan and Owen
Tripp and Palmer.
McCabe. Other surviving Funeral Home in PomeShe is preceded in
roy. Masonic Services will
family members include
death by her father, Curt
Corey, Alison, Christian, take place at 7:45 p.m.
Welch; father-in-law, Jan
Services are scheduled at
and Brayden Woods,
Parker; mother-in-law,
11 a.m., Friday, Sept. 27
Issac Blaettnar and Eli
Dona Parker; grandparat First Baptist Church
Barton, Megan, Colton,
ents, Reva and Ivan Welch Grace, and Lydia Heater; in Racine with visitation
and Spike and Anna
as well as cousins, nieces, thirty minutes prior.
Boyer. She is also preIn lieu of ﬂowers, conand nephews.
ceded in death by loving
John spent most of his tributions may be made
cousins, Carla Matlack
to the Organization For
life working at Kaiser
Fonte and Johnny King.
Autism Research or the
Aluminum. After his
Funeral services will
RACO Scholarship Fund.
retirement, he became
be held at 1 p.m., Monday, Sept. 30, 2019 at
WILLIS
Faith Harvest Church in
Coolville with Pastor Joe
MILLFIELD — Tina (Hupp) Willis, 52 years old,
Beasley ofﬁciating. Burial died at home on Sept. 24, 2019, after a courageous 12
will follow in the Meigs
year battle with breast cancer.
County Memory Gardens.
Tina has requested no viewing or funeral service.
Visitation will be held
She requested a Celebration of Life, in remembrance
Sunday from 4-8 p.m. at
of her 52 years of life, which will be held on Saturday,
White-Schwarzel Funeral Sept. 28 at 4 p.m. at Rocky Top Barn located at 15844
Home in Coolville.
Linscott Run Road in Amesville.
In lieu of ﬂowers, in
Arrangements have been entrusted to Whitehonor of Anna’s memory, Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville.
donations can be made
to Faith Harvest Church
for the VBS, 41484 SR 7,
Reedsville, OH 45772.
MEIGS BRIEFS
Guests are invited to
sign the online guest book
at www.whiteschwarzelfh.
Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs will only list event
com.
information that is open to the public and will be
printed on a space-available basis.

ASHTON, W.Va. — Betty Lois Brumﬁeld, 91, of
Ashton, W.Va. died while at St. Mary’s Hospital on
Sept. 24, 2019.
Funeral services will be held on Saturday, Sept. 28,
2019 at 1 p.m. at Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Burial will follow in Pete Meadows Cemetery in Glenwood, W.Va. Friends may visit the family
at the funeral home Friday evening, Sept. 27 from 6-8
p.m.

Church to host car giveaway
POMEROY — As a part of their local outreach
program, The Refuge Church in Pomeroy, will be
giving away a car during their 7 p.m. service on
Saturday, Sept. 28, 2019. Pastor Jordan and Mrs.
Mindy (Chancey) Bradford would like to invite
the community to share in this fun ﬁlled evening.
The Refuge Church is located at 121 West 2nd
Street in Pomeroy.

Meet the Author

ROUSH
POMEROY — Elijah Clay Roush, 37, of Pomeroy,
died on Sept. 20, 2019.
Funeral services will be held on Saturday, Sept. 28,
2019 at 1 p.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Visiting hours will be on Saturday
from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. at the funeral home.

For your many
sides, there’s
.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — “Two Rivers, A
World Apart” tells the story of Dr. Mel Simon as a
young boy who spent most of his life by the banks
of the Pigalo River in his native country, the Philippines, and as a young man by the banks of the
Ohio River, both rivers serving as the backdrop of
a young boy searching for the American dream.
Members and guests of the Point Pleasant Writers Guild will be hearing the rest of his story from
Simon himself when he appears Oct. 2, from 1 – 3
p.m. at the Mason County Library in Point Pleasant. Light refreshments will be offered. The event
is open to the public.

Life Chain Sunday

OH-70145994

AUTO | HOME | BUSINESS | LIFE

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

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

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

109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

POMEROY — A Life Chain event will be held
Sunday, Oct. 6, from 2-3:30 p.m. in Pomeroy (in
front of ball ﬁelds ). The Life Chain is to take a
stand for life. Organizers will have signs for people
to hold as we take a peaceful stand for LIFE. “We
believe that God is God, and that Babies or the
Elderly should not have to die until God Himself
calls them home,” is the message of the event.
Contact Meigs County Life Chain Coordinator:
Pastor Brenda Barnhart at 740-508-1327 with any
questions. See Lifechain.net for a listing of Life
Chains all across the U.S.

Benefit Dinner
ROCKSPRINGS — A spaghetti dinner beneﬁt
is planned for Oct. 6 with the proceeds to beneﬁt
Olivia Wood and her family following her recent
surgery and long recovery. The dinner will be held
beginning at 1 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 6 at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds in the new Rutland Bottle Gas
Building. The dinner will go until 5 p.m. or until
the food is gone. There will be split the pot, door
prizes and more. For more information contact
Alyssa Fitch at 740-516-7605 or Tammi Goeglein
at 740-541-3706.

Craft Show
RACINE — Southern High School will be hosting a craft show on Saturday, Oct. 19 from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. Interested vendors and crafters may contact Alan at 740-444-3309 to get an application or
visit southernlocalmeigs.org and click forms and
links.

Daily Sentinel

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

Thursday, Sept. 26
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil &amp; Water Conservation District Board of Supervisors will hold their
regular monthly meeting at 11:30 a.m. at the district ofﬁce. The ofﬁce is located at 113 E. Memorial Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE — The Ladies of the Meigs County
Republican Party will meet at 6 p.m. at the Carleton School in Syracuse, Ohio. Everyone is welcome. Please come join us in discussing how we
can make money to support our local candidates.
We will welcome any and all input.

Friday, Sept. 27
MIDDLEPORT — The monthly Free Community Dinner at the Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center at 5 p.m. This month they are
serving chicken and noodles, green beans, roll,
and dessert. Everyone is welcome.

Saturday, Sept. 28
MIDDLEPORT — The last chicken BBQ of
2019 will be held at the Middleport Fire Department with serving starting at 11 a.m. at the BBQ
pit.
ATHENS — Area residents are invited to join
TEAM 53 from Meigs County at the annual Walk
to End Alzheimer’s, at the Athens Community
Center, 701 East State St. Registration begins at 9
a.m. The walk will start at 10:30. Register online
at alz.org/walk, or register at the event.

Sunday, Sept. 29
EAGLE RIDGE — The Eagle Ridge Community
Church will hold its Homecoming with Sunday
school at 10 a.m. followed by pot luck lunch at
noon and singing by “Charles Daily Jr. and John”
and “New Picture”. Preaching by Lester Morgan
will follow.
MIDDLEPORT — Ash Street Church, hosting
special singers, Adam and Miranda Roush (Faith’s
Promise), at 6:30 p.m

Monday, Sept. 30
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Veterans
Service Commission will meet at 9 a.m. at the ofﬁce
located at 97 North Second Avenue in Middleport.

Thursday, Oct. 3
POMEROY — Friends of the Library Book Sale
9 a.m.-6 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. Items are
not pre-priced, donations are accepted.
RUTLAND — Rutland UM Church yard sale,
starting today through Oct. 5, 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
each day, food also available for sale.

Friday, Oct. 4
POMEROY — The regular meeting of Meigs
County Public Employee Retires Inc., (PERI),
Chapter 74 will meet at 1 p.m. at the Mulberry
Community Center, located at 260 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy. Meigs County Council on Aging Supportive Service Representative Rhonda Rathburn
will be guest speaker. She will be providing information on Durable Medical Power of Attorney and
Living Wills along with other programs available
to seniors through their agency. District 7 Representative Greg Ervin will be present to provide
members with updates on current state level
issues effecting public employees. All Meigs County Public Employee Retires are urged to attend.

OVP STOCK REPORT
Wendy’s Company(NASDAQ).….............................$20.18
Walmart Inc(NYSE).…............................................$118.47
Big Lots, Inc(NYSE).…............................................$24.20
Harley-Davidson Inc(NYSE)……........................…..$35.04
PepsiCo, Inc.(NASDAQ)....................................….$135.09
Peoples Bancorp Inc.(NASDAQ)….........................$32.64
Kroger Co(NYSE)….................................................$25.77
BB&amp;T Corporation(NYSE)…...................................$52.85
City Holding Company(NASDAQ).….......................$77.35
American Electric Power(NYSE)….........................$94.23
Ohio Valley Bank Corp(NASDAQ).…......................$36.92
Century Aluminum(NASDAQ)……........................….$7.00
Rocky Brands Inc(NASDAQ)…............................…$32.26
Apple(NASDAQ)….................................................$221.03
The Coca-Cola Co(NYSE)…...............................…..$54.17
Post Holdings….....................................................$105.79
Far Eastern New Century Corp (TPE) …............….$28.70
McDonald’s(NYSE)...........................................….$212.63
Stock reports are the closing quotes of transactions on
Sept. 25.

Fire
From page 1

in magistrate court, Young is accused of allegedly
setting ﬁre to the home she was renting located on
Charleston Road in Mason County, W.Va., on Aug.
21, 2016. The ﬁre killed Young’s son, Dominick
Young, according to investigators.
If convicted of ﬁrst-degree arson in West Virginia, defendants face prison time for not less than
two nor more than 20 years.
Investigating this case are the West Virginia
State Fire Marshal’s Ofﬁce and the Mason County
Detachment of the West Virginia State Police.

�Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 26, 2019 3

Event Schedule

Festival
show, craft
craft brew
brewgarden,
garden,live
livemusic
musicand
andrecreation
recreation
Festivalactivities
activitieswill
will include
include food
food vendors,
vendors, car
car show,

FRIDAY,SEPT.
SEPT. 27
FRIDAY,
27
5:00 pm

Band
toto
pĞƌform
5pmRvHS
RvHS
Band
perform

5:00 to 10:00 pm
5pm to 10pm Bounce Houses,
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�Ɛ

Concessions
and Crafts
5:00 to 1:00
am
�ƌĂŌ���ƌĞǁ�'ĂƌĚĞŶ

5pm to 1am Craft Brew Garden
6:00 pm

Cloggers (on stage)
6pmRiverside
Riverside
Cloggers (on stage)

7:00 pm MUSIC

Stonestreet
Band Band
7pm MUSIC:
Stonestreet

pm
MUSIC
9pm 9:00
MUSIC:
Ben
Davis Jr.
Ben Davis Jr.

10:30
pmLuke
MUSIC
10:30pm
MUSIC:
Sadecky
Luke Sadecky &amp; Allison L’Ecuyer
&amp; Allison L’Ecuyer

SATURDAY, SEPT. 28
8:00-8:45 am

SATURDAY, SEPT. 28

�ŚĂƌŝƚǇ��ŚĂůůĞŶŐĞ�ϱ&lt;�ZĞŐŝƐƚƌĂƟ�ŽŶ

9:00 am

8am-8:45am
Charity Challenge
Charity Challenge
5K Walk
5K am
Registration
10:00
to 10:00 pm
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OH-70148566

9am Charity Challenge 5K Walk

10:00
am Houses,
10am
to 10pm
Bounce
Charity Challenge Prizes
Concessions and Crafts
11:00 am to 1:00 am
�ƌĂŌ���ƌĞǁ�'ĂƌĚĞŶ

7:30 pm
MUSIC
6pm Jonny
MUSIC:
Brewin
Company
Staats Poject

7:30pm MUSIC:
Jonny
Staats Project
9:00 pm
MUSIC
'ŽůĚƚŽǁŶ

10am Charity Challenge Prizes

9pm MUSIC: Goldtown

Performance
11amEvole
to 1am
Craft BrewTeam
Garden

10:30am Unbrakeable
MUSIC: Unbrakeable

11:30 am

12 pm (Noon)

11:30am
Evole Performance Team�Đ�
WƌŽĨĞƐƐŽƌ��ƵďďůĞŵĂŬĞƌ͛Ɛ��ĐůĞĐƟ
Entertainment

12pm (Noon)
Professor Bubblemaker’s
1:00 pm to 4:00 pm
Eclectic�ƌƚ�^ŚŽǁ
Entertainment
2:00 pm

1pm to 4pm Art Show
�ĂƌͬdƌƵĐŬͬDŽƚŽƌĐǇĐůĞͬ'ŽůĨ��Ăƌƚ�^ŚŽǁ
1:30
pm MUSIC
2pm
Car/Truck/Motorcycle/
'ĞŶĞƌĂƟ�ŽŶ�'ĂƉ��ůƵĞƐ��ĂŶĚ
Golf Cart Show
3:00 pm MUSIC
3rd Rock

1:30pm MUSIC: Generation
4:30 pm MUSIC
Gap
Band
TheBlues
Simpletons
5:00 MUSIC:
pm to 3rd
1:00
am
3pm
Rock
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4:30pm6:00
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10:30 pm MUSIC

SUNDAY, SEPT. 29
12:00 pm (Noon)
SUNDAY,
SEPT. 29
Professor Bubblemaker’s
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12:00 pm (Noon) to 6 pm
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12pm (Noon)
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For more information
City
Councilorabout
Denise
(304)
532-7259
Mayor Josh Miller at (304) 377-1376.
Forcall
more
information
theToler
eventat
please
email:
info@cityofravenswood.com

�Opinion
4 Thursday, September 26, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Being
amongst
the stars
My wife and I had the pleasure of attending the
concert by Glenn Bowles (formerly of the VanDells) at the Hillsboro Church of Christ last Friday
night, a beneﬁt for Operation Shoe
Box. What a wonderful evening of
music, and may I add for a very worthy cause!
After the concert, long-time friend
Dayne Puckett arranged for he, Patty
and me to dine with Glenn and his
wife Lynn. Before going into happenHerb
ings of our dinner with the Bowles
Day
family, let me explain that Dayne has
Contributing been arranging meetings with me
columnist
and musical stars for many years!
For example, in May of 1977, the
telephone rang just prior to my radio show and a
sweet female voice answered and asked to speak
with Herb Day. “That is me”, I responded. “Well,
hello Herb, this is Dolly Parton, and…”
“Sure it is!” I shot back, and hung up, knowing
this was someone pulling a prank. Two minutes
later, the young lady called back and explained
that Dayne Puckett had asked her to call, and she
was just getting home from the road and making plans to enjoy her wedding anniversary, she
thought she would call.
When she mentioned Dayne, I knew I had just
hung up on the REAL Dolly Parton! All I could
think to say besides apologizing was, “Do you
know who you are?” Well, she did.
I explain that just to point out that Dayne Puckett has always been so kind to bring me together
with artists and celebrities down through the
years, and Friday night was no exception. Being
huge Van-Dells fans, Patty and I were thrilled.
Glenn shared that he spent the better part of 25
years with the musical group, and in recent years
retired from road work, and without regret. He
now does solo engagements, a lot of which are
gospel in nature.
He shared that prior to joining up with the VanDells he enjoyed quite a lucrative musical career
doing an Elvis Presley tribute show throughout
the country, and he even won the ﬁrst ever World
Champion Artist when he won the “Images of the
King Contest” in 1987 competing against over
100 impersonators from around the world. He had
played Vegas with his tribute show several times
by the time he was 18 years old.
With all that on his side, you would think that
there would be much in that arena to attribute to
his notoriety, but sometimes fate can be cruel to
the ego.
Glenn shared that he and his wife Lynn attended
a Rod Stewart concert one year, and during
Stewart’s concert he would kick autographed volleyballs into the audience, one of which Glenn had
caught.
Later that same year, he was in Memphis singing at some of the Elvis tribute concerts during
Elvis week in the King’s hometown. Just as he was
either entering or exiting one of the events, an
admiring fan reached through the window of the
car Bowles was riding in, took his cheeks into her
hands and exclaimed, “Look Mom! This is Glenn
Bowles! You know, the guy who caught the volleyball at the Rod Stewart concert!”
You could almost hear the ego deﬂating all over
again as he related the story to us.
Having been a Van-Dells fan as well as fans of
Glenn’s vocal talents for many years, not only was
it a thrill to break bread with he and his wife, but
equally thrilling was it to realize that he felt comfortable enough with us to share such a humbling
experience.
Patty and I expected a terriﬁc evening of music,
but we were blessed additionally with the company of the star of the show and his wife, and the
company of our dear friend Dayne Puckett.
We are blessed.
Herb Day is a longtime local radio personality and singer-musician.
You can email him at HEKAMedia@yahoo.com and follow his work at
http://www.HerbDayVoices.com and http://www.HerbDayRadio.com.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Retired baseball All-Star Bobby Shantz is 94.
Actor Richard Herd is 87. Country singer David
Frizzell is 78. Actor Kent McCord is 77. Television
host Anne Robinson is 75. Singer Bryan Ferry is
74. Actress Mary Beth Hurt is 73. Singer Olivia
Newton-John is 71. Actor James Keane is 67.
Rock singer-musician Cesar Rosas (Los Lobos) is
65. Country singer Carlene Carter is 64. Actress
Linda Hamilton is 63. Country singer Doug
Supernaw is 59. Rhythm-and-blues singer Cindy
Herron (En Vogue) is 58. Actress Melissa Sue
Anderson is 57. Actor Patrick Bristow is 57. Rock
musician Al Pitrelli is 57.

THEIR VIEW

Adventures in substitute teaching
When I retired from
UNC and came back to
Wilberforce I was asked
by the then Dean of the
School of Education to
teach a class in teacher
preparation, so I did.
One of the things that
had troubled me was that
the students, and many
of the teachers, I worked
with during the ﬁeld
experiences all told me
that I did not understand
teaching had changed
since I last taught in public school in 1994, that
the students had become
much more problematic.
They used words like
demanding, entitled, disrespectful, etc. Some of
the people telling me this
were teachers that I had
taught when they were
in high school who were
now teaching.
I decided after my
re-retirement, I stopped
teaching teacher prep
in 2015 as the workload
kept increasing, that I
needed to check out the
schools and see for myself
if it was true that in about
30 years kids had taken
a drastic turn to the dark
side. So, I got my license
to substitute teach. I
found out kids have
changed very little. They
have cell phones, they are

to be just a classmore assertive, but
room assignment?
not necessarily in a
I mean the word
bad way. One of the
science was in the
complaints of my
title.
teachers was that
I arrived at
the kids challenged
the facility early
them. I replied that
, when a lady
any teacher worth Cookie
his or her salt
Newsom arrived to open up
would be delighted Contributing in she informed
me her name was
to be challenged,
columnist
Paula and she
it meant the kids
was the teacher¹s
were actually
assistant. This was a
engaged. I did not ﬁnd
them very different at all. relief. Someone would
Last Thursday evening know what was going on
I was watching television and what to d. The kids
arrived, juniors ﬁrst,
when my phone dinged
to let me know there was seniors later in the day.
a sub job available. It was I informed them that
teaching Equine Science they would be the teachat the GCCC Agricultural ers today since I knew
absolutely nothing about
Research Center, which
is on Brush Row Road, 4 horses. They took to the
minutes from my house, job with gusto. They
brought the horses into
the next day. My ﬁrst
the stables, fed them,
reaction was, of course,
no. I know nothing about watered them, brushed
them, pulled hay bales
horses at all. Then, I
and for them, swept
remembered what I
always told my students, up debris and horse
poop. All the time with
never pass up an opporrunning commentary.
tunity to learn. So I
They vied for my attenclicked on the response
tion pulling me from
that I would take the
one stall or another to
assignment.
tell me about the horse
On Friday morning I
they were assigned to. I
approached my assignment with some trepida- met Ace, Callie, Ginger
tion, having ﬁrst mulled among other horses and,
long and hard over what eventually, Bob, the barn
cat. The students were
to wear. Was this going

excited and bubbling
over with enthusiasm to
give me a crash course in
horses.
I learned a lot, got to
pat a lot of horses and
watched kids blossom
when they had someone
to teach. They also gave
presentations on different kinds of horseshoes,
which was news to me.
I decided after seeing
them take to giving information rather than getting it that we may need
to let them teach more
and listen to them more
often.
Paula kept us all on
track. Thanks to the
GCCC Equine Science
department for giving
me a great day and teaching me a lot. I appreciate
you.
Subbing is a delightful
way to keep in touch,
make a few bucks and get
all kinds of experiences
you otherwise would not
have. I recommend it
highly and subs are desperately needed. If you
want to be of service to
our community sign up
to sub, never know what
you will learn!
Dr. Cookie Newsom is a retired
teacher-professor. Contact her with
comments at drcookie317@gmail.
com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
went from being a colony to a dominion within
the British Empire.
Today is Thursday,
In 1955, following
Sept. 26, the 269th day of
word that President
2019. There are 96 days
Eisenhower had suffered
left in the year.
a heart attack, the New
Today’s Highlight in History York Stock Exchange
saw its worst price
On Sept. 26, 1789,
decline since 1929.
Thomas Jefferson was
In 1960, the ﬁrst-ever
conﬁrmed by the Senate to be the ﬁrst United debate between presidenStates secretary of state; tial nominees took place
as Democrat John F.
John Jay, the ﬁrst chief
Kennedy and Republican
justice; Edmund RanRichard M. Nixon faced
dolph, the ﬁrst attorney
off before a national TV
general.
audience from Chicago.
In 1964, the situaOn this date
In 1777, British troops tion comedy “Gilligan’s
Island” premiered on
occupied Philadelphia
CBS-TV.
during the American
In 1977, Sir Freddie
Revolution.
Laker began his cut-rate
In 1892, John Philip
“Skytrain” service from
Sousa and his newly
formed band performed London to New York.
publicly for the ﬁrst time (The carrier went out of
business in 1982.)
at the Stillman Music
In 1986, William H.
Hall in Plainﬁeld, New
Rehnquist was sworn in
Jersey.
In 1907, New Zealand as the 16th chief justice
The Associated Press

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Pity the meek, for they shall inherit the
earth.”
— Don Marquis
American journalist-author (1878-1937)

of the United States,
while Antonin Scalia joined the Supreme
Court as its 103rd member.
In 1990, the Motion
Picture Association of
America announced it
had created a new rating,
NC-17, to replace the X
rating.
In 1991, four men
and four women began
a two-year stay inside a
sealed-off structure in
Oracle, Arizona, called
Biosphere 2. (They
emerged from Biosphere
on this date in 1993.)
In 1996, President
Clinton signed a bill
ensuring two-day hospi-

tal stays for new mothers
and their babies.
In 2003, President
George W. Bush and
Russian President Vladimir Putin (POO’-tihn)
opened a two-day summit at Camp David.
Ten years ago: Film
director Roman Polanski
was arrested by Swiss
police on an international warrant as he arrived
in Zurich to receive a
lifetime achievement
award from a ﬁlm festival. (Polanski had ﬂed
the U.S. in 1978, a year
after pleading guilty to
unlawful sexual intercourse with a 13-year-old
girl.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 26, 2019 5

MEIGS BRIEF

Tales

RACO games set

From page 1

SYRACUSE — RACO games will take place on
Thursday, Sept. 26 at the Syracuse Community
Center. Event begins at 6 p.m., doors open at 5
p.m.

Ariel

Map of Meigs County and its townships.

from his journal reads:
“Walked part of bottom
land in Great Bend of the
Ohio, (Lebanon Township, Meigs County), the
land as high, dry, and level
as one could wish.”
The same tools and
skills used by Washington were brought to the
Northwest Territory and
included a surveying
compass on a tripod with
“sighting vanes”.
“A surveying compass
included sighting vanes”
used to point the compass by peering through
the slit in one of the
vanes and lining up the
horsehair or wire in the
oval of the other vane
with a target or object
along the boundary line.
These targets were often
just trees (sometimes
marked in some fashion
with a hatchet), boulders,
steams, or any other landmarks.”
The distance between
these targets was measured using chains carried
by the surveyor’s assistants known as chainmen.
A full surveyor’s chain
was 66 feet long and 100
links and eighty of these
chains equaled one mile.
By measuring the distance
between targets the property’s boundaries were
set, as well as its acreage.
Necessity altered the
original chain length in
the Colonies.
“Dragging a sixty-sixfoot chain through the
brush of colonial Virginia’s
forests was impractical,”
Cunningham said. “These
long chains snagged on
trees and other vegetation
so surveyors in the colonies used a chain that was
only 33 feet long with 50
links.”

According to Cunningham, it was not unusual
for the lead chainman to
ﬁnd it necessary to clear
his way straight through
brush and undergrowth.
“To measure the distance, the rear chainman
held one end of the chain
at the starting point while
the lead chainman walked
a straight line toward the
ending target,” he said.
“Keeping the line straight
sometimes meant the
lead chainman hacked
his way straight through
brush and undergrowth.
Once the he reached the
end of the chain, the lead
chainman pinned it to the
ground and the rear chainman brought up the other
end. They then repeated
the process until the ending point of the line was
reached. The rear chainman picked up the pins as
they walked.”
Once the ﬁeldwork was
completed, the surveyor
drew a map or plat with
a description of the property which were then copied and entered into the
county survey book.
The group carried their
own supplies and equipment, learning from earlier explorers the need to
be self-sufﬁcient.
There were at least
seven members of the surveying compliment, the
surveyor, two chainmen,
two to hold the poles,
horse and wagon with a
driver, and a Long hunter
for security.
The job was often
romanticized with dangerous exploits that took the
men into the “wilds of the
back country.” What they
found was an often a dangerous, unforgiving place
that required prepared-

Courtesy Photo

ness and self - reliance.
SURVEYING
DEFINITIONS:
Cadastral Survey:
Operational program
within the Bureau of Land
Management, Department
of the Interior whose mission and focus includes
performing legal boundary surveys for the Federal Government.
Chaining arrows or
marking pins: Used
to mark a point on the
ground.
Colonial Tally Belt:
Used to keep track of
the number of chaining
arrows.
Compass: Used to
determine the bearing of a
survey line.
Felling axe, hatchet,
and Fascine knife: Used
for clearing trees and
brush from the survey
line.
Gunter chain: Two
33-foot poles with ﬁfty
links used to measure distances.
Gunter Scale: Best
described as a two-foot
long ruler speciﬁcally
designed to solve trigonometry problems common to surveying.
Longhunter (or long
hunter): 18th-century
explorer and hunter who
made expeditions into the
American frontier wilderness
Tree Scribe: knife for
marking Witness trees.
Range Pole: Sighting
point for the compass and
drafting instruments for
plat drawings.
Witness Trees: Documented trees that rested
at the imaginary corners
and angles of the parcels
to mark their boundaries.

Space

Reisman said that
Reisman explained the
the hard work to make
the only reason he was
physical sensations of
it happen. Just being
launching in a shuttle to able to accomplish his
inspired is nice to start,
goals in his career was
what it was like ﬂoating
but it’s not enough.”
From page 1
because of inspiration
in space. He noted that
Reisman lauded the
and determination. He
work of SpaceX and its
Reisman to the Space Sta- the countdown often
encouraged the audience 2018 launch of the Falshared in movies is not
tion.
to remember the value of con Heavy as a partly
During these missions, the same for astronauts
Reisman performed three in a cockpit as they won’t hard work and dedication reusable heavy-lift launch
vessel. He showed video
spacewalks, operated the hear a countdown. They to reaching ones goals.
of repeated failures
Space Station Robot Arm may hear technical com- He said he had consistently pinned a poster
munications, but after
of SpaceX before it
and was a ﬂight engithey have been strapped of a view of Earth from
achieved the success of
neer aboard the Space
space above his desk in
in for launch and are
being able to bring the
Shuttle. After leaving
college and on into his
given the go, they take
Falcon Heavy design
NASA in 2011, Reisman
career now as a college
off. The countdown is
back to Earth after
joined SpaceX where he
professor.
more for the technical
launch tests. Reisman
worked for Elon Musk
“It’s not enough to be
noted that previous
and prepared SpaceX for crews’ needs. He noted
inspired,” said Reisman. rocket launches had
human spaceﬂight as the that a rocket would go
“A lot of us get inspired
allowed for shuttles to
Director of Space Opera- from 0 to 17,500 miles
every single day by some- enter space, but that
an hour within 8.5 mintions. Currently he is a
thing. What you need to rockets were designed to
utes on takeoff and that
Professor of Astronautiastronauts would sustain couple with inspiration
carry a shuttle into space
cal Engineering at USC
a consistent force of
and then disconnect from
and a Senior Advisor at
is determination. You
“three-g’s” as they accel- need to get inspired to
the shuttle to end up as
SpaceX.
erated before acceleratwaste, outside of reach of
“Being up there for
do something great but
ing no longer.
recovery. This was why
that amount of time was
then you got to put in
fantastic and I called it
the Goldilocks mission
because if you’re on a
(space) shuttle for two
weeks, it’s over and done
with so fast and everyPyrenees Mix Female thing is just so surreal
you don’t even know what Black &amp; Tan
just happened, but when
you’re up there for at least White tip on tail
a month then everything
����� ����%��������
kind of becomes normal,”
said Reisman about space
Black &amp; Tan
living. “That sounds kind
of anticlimactic but it’s
1 Blue eye 1 Brown
not. It’s a really wonderful
eye
feeling because you fully
experience being in zero740 742-4204 or 740 444-2331
g (a gravity-free environ���!$�����'��#"�����'� ��!$����
ment).”
OH-70149605

$300 For Safe Return

and chamber concerts,
taught masterclasses,
and given presentations
at countless series, fesFrom page 1
tivals, and universities.
Lorin Maazel at Castle- Her “brilliant”, “bravura
performances” (Triton Festival and Fabio
bune-Review) “played
Luisi at Paciﬁc Music
with conviction” (New
Festival, Harada’s credentials are exemplary. York Times), “ﬂair, and
In his third season as emotion” (Gazette) have
been heard on three
Associate Conductor
continents, including
of the Cincinnati Symat Carnegie Hall, Eastphony Orchestra and
Cincinnati Pops, Harada man School of Music,
University of Cincinnati
regularly assists Music
College–Conservatory
Director Louis Lanof Music, Edinburgh
grée and conducts the
CSO, POPS, and World Festival Fringe, New
Piano Competition, and York City Electroacoustic Music Festival,
assists James Conlon
and Juanjo Mena for the Google headquarters,
several National and
May Festival. Keitaro
Canadian Flute Associaalso holds the position
of Associate Conductor tion conventions, and
across China.
of the Arizona Opera.
Goodman is principal
Goodman is a soloﬂutist of the West Virist, recording artist,
ginia Symphony Orcheschamber collaborator,
tra, solo ﬂutist of the
orchestral musician,
educator, and clinician. Pittsburgh New Music
Renowned for her “gen- Ensemble, adjunct lecturer at West Virginia
erous warmth of tone
State University and
and a ﬂuid virtuosity”
Marietta College, and
(Charleston Gazette),
third ﬂute/piccolo of
“impressive artistry”
The Ohio Valley Sym(Tribune-Review),
phony.
and “agility and emotion” (Pittsburgh PostInformation provided by the Ariel
Gazette), Goodman
Opera House.
has performed solo

Cancer
From page 1

Tyree Blvd. in Racine. Services are available to
all women, uninsured, underinsured or insured.
Appointments are required and women should call
740-593-2432 or 1-800-844-2654 for an appointment.
Services offered through CHP mobile clinics
include breast health education, PAP tests, breast
and pelvic exams, navigation through the continuum of care &amp; Susan G. Komen Columbus® grant
funding for ﬁnancial support for mammograms.
In addition to the mobile clinics, services are also
provided at the college’s Heritage Community
Clinic on the Ohio University Athens campus.
The most current dates, times and locations for
upcoming clinics to area counties are located on
the CHP online events calendar - https://www.
ohio.edu/medicine/community-health/community-clinic/calendar.cfm, or call 740.593.2432 or
800.844.2654.

the Falcon Heavy was a
signiﬁcant development
in space ﬂight, because
one could bring launch
equipment back to Earth
to be reused and thus
save resources.
He told the audience
that if one wanted to be
successful, individuals
could not be afraid of
failure.
Reisman said he felt
it was possible that

Americans would soon
be entering space again,
potentially as soon as
2020, with new space
vehicles created through
American private initiatives. Americans had not
entered space in such a
way since the closing of
the NASA shuttle program in 2011, he said.
Dean Wright can be reached at
740-446-2342. Beth Sergent
contributed to this report.

The New137Wayne’s
Place
N 2 Ave
nd

Middleport, Oh 45760 (740) 691-5136

Presents

Southern
Al
i
b
i
W/ Special Guest, Local Favorite
Bretton Lee Casto

Southern Alibi is one of
Columbus, OH’s top Country
and Southern Rock Bands
If You are in the mood for
some good outlaw music
and something more than
the usual, come on out
as these guys light up the
stage. Sat Sept. 28th music
starts at 8:00
Also Check out our
Facebook page. Posting
soon will be a Karaoke
contest with over $500.00 in
cash prizes

OH-70148377

that would become the
states of Ohio, Indiana,
Illinois, Michigan, and
Wisconsin. The survey
is claimed to be the ﬁrst
major cadastral survey
undertaken by any nation;
the marked point now lies
underwater on the state
line between Ohio and
Pennsylvania.
Zac Cunningham, a
Meigs County native and
Ohio University graduate,
is currently Manager of
Educational Programs at
Ferry Farm, George Washington’s boyhood home.
Cunningham provided
insight into early surveying in the Colonies and
George Washington’s connection to Meigs County.
The word surveyor ﬁrst
appeared in 1682. This
relatively new profession
used advanced technologically, and was essential
in deﬁning ownership
of the land and natural
resources.
“To Washington and
the other Europeans who
settled in British North
America in the 1700s,
land and its natural
resources were privately
owned commodities
or raw materials to be
bought or sold. Land was
used to create goods for
market or was sold for
proﬁt,” he said. “In other
words, land was valuable
and owning a lot of land
made you wealthy.”
Cunningham added it
was necessary for colonial-era farmers to have
legally deﬁned boundaries.
“They had to own land
and the land they owned
had to be deﬁned legally.
It had to have boundaries,
so they and other people
knew it belong to them.
If land was wealth, it
was vitally important to
know how much land you
owned.”
George Washington was
15 when he took up the
profession after purchasing a Gunter scale in1747.
In 1748 he was asked to
accompany a surveying
group on a month-long
trip across the Blue Ridge
Mountains and into Virginia’s frontier, part of
which is now West Virginia.
Washington again
explored the area in the
fall of 1750. An entry

�Sports
6 Thursday, September 26, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Lady Eagles hold off Meigs
By Alex Hawley

opener by a 25-21 count.
The Lady Marauders
answered with a wire-to-wire
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio — win in the second, leading by
as many as 11 on their way to
No sweep this time.
the 25-20 victory.
The Eastern volleyball team
The guests scored seven of
— which won in straight games
at Meigs on Aug. 22 — defeat- the ﬁrst eight points in the
third game, but EHS fought
ed the same Lady Marauders
back and took its second lead
in non-league play on Tuesday
at ‘The Nest’, this time in four of the set at 12-11. MHS tied it
up at 12, but didn’t regain the
games.
advantage and fell by a 25-18
Meigs (3-14) scored the
opening point of the match, but clip.
Meigs led initially in the
Eastern (8-7) claimed six of the
fourth, but Eastern took the
next seven markers. The Lady
edge at 5-4 and didn’t trail
Marauders fought back to tie
the game twice before taking a again on the way to the match20-18 edge, but scored just one clinching 25-16 triumph.
Leading the Lady Eagles,
more point, as EHS won the

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern junior Layna Catlett (19) attempts a spike, during the Lady Eagles’ 3-1
victory over Meigs on Tuesday in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

Brielle Newland posted 14
points, including one ace.
Olivia Barber was next with 13
points and three aces, followed
by Kylie Gheen and Haley
Burton with 10 points apiece,
including an ace by Gheen.
Sydney Sanders came up with
seven points and one ace in
the win, while Jenna Chadwell
added one marker.
Bre Zirkle led the Lady
Marauders with 13 service
points, including a pair of aces.
Hannah Durst was next with
11 points and an ace, followed
by Baylee Tracy with six markers. Mallory Hawley and Jewels
See EAGLES | 7

OSU prepares
for biggest test
yet vs. Nebraska
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The upcoming
game at Nebraska has been circled on the calendar
for a while as potentially the ﬁrst tough test for an
Ohio State team that entered the season with a lot
of questions.
The No. 5 Buckeyes are rolling, but they also
know Nebraska (3-1, 1-0 Big Ten) has better athletes than any of the teams they ﬂattened in the
ﬁrst four games. They will also be on the road
in a hostile environment Saturday and Huskers
quarterback Adrian Martinez is the most dynamic
player they’ve faced.
“We know what a challenge it will be on the
road, and we know how big it will be to get the
win on the road at a tough place to play,” Ohio
State coach Ryan Day said Tuesday. “They’re
going to be all jacked up, (ESPN’s) Gameday is
going to be there. We have to handle that. It’s our
ﬁrst big challenge as a team.”
Martinez, who was recruited by Ohio State
when Day was an assistant to Urban Meyer, is the
same big, dual-threat guy who accounted for 338
yards of offense and three touchdowns to keep the
game close in a 36-31 loss to the Buckeyes at Ohio
Stadium last season. In Nebraska’s win last week
over Illinois, he threw for 327 yards and three
touchdowns and ran for another, becoming the
second player in school history to throw for 300
yards and run for 100 in a game.
“When you combine his ability to run and throw,
along with his intelligence and game management,
he is by far the best quarterback we’ve seen,” Day
said.
The Buckeyes (4-0, 1-0) have a pretty good quarterback, too.
Justin Fields is shaping up to be everything Day
expected when he lured him from Georgia. He
threw for four touchdowns, bringing his season
total to 13, and ran for two more last week against
Miami. He started the game with a fumble in the
end zone for a safety but engineered 47 points
in the second quarter alone on the way to a 76-5
Ohio State victory. He has yet to throw an interception.
“He hasn’t made a lot of tough throws, and I
think that’s good on his part,” receiver Austin
Mack said. “I think he’s been very mature knowing when he needs to force a throw and when he
doesn’t. He can run, so he can take off and run.
See OHIO | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, Sept. 26
Volleyball
Waterford at Wahama, 6
p.m.
Ironton at Gallia
Academy, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at
Eastern, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Belpre, 6
p.m.
River Valley at Athens, 6
p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 6
p.m.
Point Pleasant at
Winfield, 5 p.m.
Soccer
South Point at Gallia
Academy boys, 5 p.m.
South Point at Gallia
Academy girls, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant girls at
Scott, 6:30
Golf
Point Pleasant at Twin

Silos, 4:30
Rio Grande Athletics
Women’s soccer vs.
Midway, 5 p.m.
Men’s soccer vs. Midway,
7 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 27
Football
Portsmouth at Gallia
Academy, 7 p.m.
Manchester at Hannan,
7 p.m.
Eastern at South Gallia,
7:30
Meigs at River Valley, 7:30
Belpre at Southern, 7:30
Federal Hocking at
Wahama, 7:30
Volleyball
Ohio Valley Christian at
Wood County, 6 p.m.
Rio Grande Athletics
Volleyball at Carlow, 7
p.m.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Ohio Valley Christian junior Lauren Ragan, right, hits a spike attempt during Game 2 of Tuesday night’s volleyball match against Point
Pleasant in Gallipolis, Ohio.

OVCS falls to Lady Knights
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
It just took a little time
to get going.
The Point Pleasant
volleyball team stumbled
out of the starting
blocks, but ultimately
remained undefeated
following a 25-18, 25-10,
25-11 victory over host
Ohio Valley Christian on
Tuesday night in a nonconference matchup in
the Old French City.
The Lady Knights
(6-0) found themselves
in early holes of 4-0 and
9-4 in Game 1, but the
guests rallied with eight
consecutive points and
secured a permanent
lead at 12-9.
The Lady Defenders
(4-9) kept things within
two points for most of
the opener and closed
to within 16-15 at one
point, but the Red and
Black broke away from
a 19-17 edge by scoring
six of the ﬁnal seven

points to wrap up a
7-point win while building a 1-0 match advantage.
PPHS never trailed
in Game 2 after storming out to a 15-1 lead,
and the Blue and White
ultimately never came
closer than 11 points the
rest of the way. Point
Pleasant broke away
from a 21-10 cushion by
scoring the ﬁnal four
points and took a 2-0
match cushion with the
15-point decision.
OVCS mustered the
ﬁrst point of Game 3,
but the Lady Knights
countered with seven
straight points and led
by at least four points
the rest of the night.
The guests took their
ﬁrst double-digit lead
at 20-10 and scored ﬁve
of the last six points to
wrap up the 14-point
win for a 3-0 match triumph.
Peyton Jordan led the
Lady Knight service
attack with 15 points

and six aces, followed
by Addy Cottrill with
11 points and ﬁve aces.
Olivia Dotson chipped
in nine points and four
aces, with Brooke Warner also adding seven
points.
Baylie Rickard was
next with ﬁve points and
two aces, while Haley
Milhoan completed
things with two points
and one ace.
Tristan Wilson led the
PPHS net attack with 10
kills, followed by Milhoan and Rickard with
respective efforts of ﬁve
and four kills. Dotson
and Cottrill added three
kills apiece, with Warner
also recording two kills.
Dotson had Point’s
lone block and also
dished out a team-high
19 assists. Cottrill also
had three assists in the
triumph.
Christina Dong led
the OVCS service attack
with ﬁve points, with
Micah Hughes and Lauren Ragan each contrib-

uting four points. Ragan
also had the lone ace for
the hosts.
Madison Beaver
and Marcie Kessinger
completed the service
scoring with one point
apiece.
Beaver and Ragan led
the Lady Defenders with
three kills each, with
Dong adding two kills
and Leah Sturgeon also
recording a kill. Beaver
also had the lone block
for OVCS.
Dong handed out a
team-high three assists,
while Ragan, Beaver and
Kessinger also handed
out an assist apiece.
Point Pleasant returns
to action Thursday when
it travels to Winﬁeld for
a tri-match at 5 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian
hits the hardwood again
on Friday when it travels
to Wood County Christian for a contest at 7
p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Lady Tornadoes sweep Belpre
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

BELPRE, Ohio — The winning
streak makes it another week.
The Southern volleyball team
won its sixth consecutive match on
Tuesday in Washington County, as
the Lady Tornadoes picked up a

straight games victory over Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
host Belpre.
Southern (10-5, 8-2 TVC Hocking) — now two weeks since tasting defeat — began the night with
a wire-to-wire 25-14 win.
The Purple and Gold scored the
ﬁrst six points of the second and

led by as many as 14 points on
their way to the 25-12 triumph.
Belpre’s ﬁrst lead of the night
came at 17-15 in the third game,
but Southern was back in front at
18-17. The Lady Golden Eagles
took the next three markers and
See BELPRE | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Blue Devils advance to districts

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Browns coach Kitchens calls
Mayfield criticism ‘asinine’

By Bryan Walters

tive efforts of 96 and
100. Augustus Kennedy
also shot a 114 for the
Maroon and Gold.
Not quite as easy as
Joel Horner paced
1-2-3.
the Raiders with a 126,
Three Ohio Valley
while Blaine Cline and
Publishing area teams
Dalton Mershon foltook part in a pair of golf
lowed with respective
tournaments … and one
rounds of 128 and 129.
squad is moving on folJordan Lambert completlowing the completion
ed the team score with
of Tuesday’s Division II
a 131, with Alex Euton
sectional matches held
also ﬁring a 154 for the
at Jaycees Golf Course
Silver and Black.
in Chillicothe and Elks
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
Nate Roy (84) and
Country Club in McDerGallia Academy sophomore Hunter Cook hits a chip shot during Carsyn Forcum (89)
mott.
a Sept. 5 golf match at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolis, Ohio.
of Zane Trace, Gabe
Gallia Academy is
MyCroft (87) of Hillsﬁnish of 79, followed by Marauders and Raiders
headed to its second
placed seventh and 14th boro, Trenton Newkirk
consecutive district meet Reece Thomas with an
(87) of McClain, and
82 and Laith Hamid with overall.
— its 10th in 11 years
Jaren Stover (88) of
Unioto won the team
as well — after ﬁnishing an 85. William Hendrickson completed the team title in Chillicothe with a Logan Elm were the
second at Elks Country
individual district qualiﬁnal score of 324, while
tally with a 94, while
Club with a ﬁnal team
ﬁers from the Chillicothe
Fairﬁeld Union (341),
Hunter Cook added a
tally of 340.
Jaycees sectional tournaAlexander (364), New
103 for the Blue and
Three-time reigning
Lexington (370) and Cir- ment.
White.
Ohio Valley ConferThe Division II district
cleville (378) also secured
Kameron Maple (78)
ence champion Fairland
boys tournament will be
district berths with top
of Oak Hill, Denzel
won the D-2 team title
held at Crown Hill Golf
Endicott (79) and Logan ﬁve team efforts.
at Elks CC with a 329,
Ty Schobelock of Unio- Club in Williamsport on
while Chesapeake (357), Cummins (85) of PikeWednesday, Oct. 2. The
ton, and the Portsmouth to won medalist honors
Waverly (359) and
event starts at 9 a.m.
with a 1-over par round
Wheelersburg (361) also West duo of Eli Adkins
Visit baumspage.com
(85) and Roark Brynden of 73. Luken Hoffman of
secured district berths
(86) were the individual New Lexington was the for complete results from
with top ﬁve team ﬁnthe 2019 Division II
overall runner-up with
district qualiﬁers from
ishes.
sectional golf matches on
the Portsmouth Elks sec- a 77.
Clayton Thomas of
Tuesday at Portsmouth
Bobby Musser led
tional tournament.
Fairland and Conner
Elks Country Club and
Both Meigs and River Meigs with a 92 and
Heffner of Waverly
Chillicothe Jaycees Golf
Cole Arnott followed
Valley had their respecshared medalist honors
Course.
with a 93, while Auswith identical rounds of tive seasons come to
tin Mahr and Dawson
an end Tuesday at the
3-over par 75.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
Justice completed the
Chillicothe Jaycees secCooper Davis paced
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
team
score
with
respectional
tournament
as
the
GAHS with a ﬁfth place

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Browns coach Freddie Kitchens called former NFL coach Rex Ryan’s criticism of
quarterback Baker Mayﬁeld “asinine.”
Ryan, who now works as a TV commentator, called
Mayﬁeld “overrated as hell” earlier this week and
slammed other elements of the second-year QB’s
game.
One of Ryan’s biggest peeves is that Mayﬁeld is a
“one-read quarterback,” meaning he can see only one
receiver before bailing on a play.
Kitchens said he appreciates Ryan’s opinion, but
“he’s not in our building, he has no idea what we’re
doing. … Is he a one-read quarterback? No, he’s not. I
mean, that’s asinine to even say.”
Mayﬁeld has had some struggles through three
games for the Browns (1-2), who play at Baltimore on
Sunday. His completion percentage has dropped from
his rookie season and he’s thrown just three touchdown passes and ﬁve interceptions.
Kitchens remains conﬁdent the 24-year-old will
improve and said he’s “not panicking” about Mayﬁeld.

With McDonald hurt, Steelers
add Seahawks TE Vannett
PITTSBURGH (AP) — The Pittsburgh Steelers
have acquired tight end Nick Vannett from the Seattle
Seahawks for a ﬁfth-round pick in the 2020 draft.
Pittsburgh is in need of help at tight end with
veteran Vance McDonald nursing a shoulder injury
that will likely sideline him for Monday night’s game
against Cincinnati and perhaps longer.
Vannett, a third-round pick in 2016, had 48
receptions for 463 yards and four touchdowns in
three-plus seasons with the Seahawks, including
four catches for 38 yards so far in 2019. The trade
announced Wednesday will be completed once Vannett passes a physical.

Belpre

and one ace respectively.
Kassie Barton wrapped
up the SHS service attack
with two markers.
From page 6
Hardwick’s 13 kills and
two blocks led the Lady
led 20-18, but the Lady
Tornadoes at the net.
Tornadoes ﬁnished with
night with a 7-to-1 run for Wolfe contributed eight
the 25-21 win and the 3-0 kills and two blocks to the
winning cause, Roderus
sweep.
chipped in with six kills,
Leading the Lady Tornadoes, Phoenix Cleland while Evans added two
kills.
and Sydney Adams had
Southern also claimed
10 service points apiece,
a straight games win over
with a trio of aces by
Cleland. Cassidy Roderus BHS in Racine on Sept. 2.
The Lady Tornadoes
earned eight points and
have the rest of the week
three aces for Southern,
off and will host Wahama
Baylee Wolfe added six
points and one ace, while on Monday.
Kayla Evans and Jordan
Hardwick had ﬁve points Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.
apiece, with two aces

Eagles

Hawley — who paced
the MHS defense with
25 of digs — also led the
Maroon and Gold at the
From page 6
net with 16 kills. Durst
claimed seven kills and
Conley had four points
one block for the Lady
apiece, including an ace
Marauders, Conley added
by Hawley, Maci Hood
six kills, while Hood had
added two points, while
ﬁve kills and a block.
Meredith Cremeans
Morgan Denney ended
claimed one point.
with a pair of kills in the
Layna Catlett led the
setback, while Zirkle
Green and White at the
earned one kill and a
net with six kills and
match-best 35 assists.
a block. Chadwell and
Both teams get
Barber had ﬁve kills and
back to work in their
a block apiece, Megan
Maxon added three kills respective leagues on
and a block, while Gheen Thursday, with Eastern
claimed a pair of kills and hosting Federal Hocking
and Meigs visiting Alexa trio of blocks. Sandander.
ers led the Lady Eagle
defense with 11 digs,
while Newland claimed a Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.
team-best 17 assists.

Rio women take second in season opener
By Randy Payton

Junior Stephany Detrick (Ashville, OH) gave Rio its best individual ﬁnish, ﬁnishing 10th with
659 pins in four games for an averCOLUMBUS, Ohio — The
University of Rio Grande women’s age of 164.75. Her top single-game
showing was a team-best 190.
bowling team earned a second
Also representing the RedStorm
place showing in the Ohio Bowling
varsity was sophomore Brianna
Conference Tournament #1, Saturday afternoon, at Wayne Webb’s Eberle (St. Marys, OH), who was
13th with 628 pins in four games
Columbus Bowl.
for a 157 average; sophomore
The RedStorm knocked down
Tylor Orr (Chillicothe, OH), who
5,481 pins over the course of ﬁve
ﬁnished 15th with 600 pins in
rounds of team play and 12 baker
four games for an average of 150;
games as a team to ﬁnish as the
sophomore Brittany Freytag (St.
runner-up to Muskingum University, which took down 5,859 pins. Marys, OH), who was 22nd with
477 pins over three games for a
Ancilla College took third place
159 average; sophomore Serenity
with 5,336 pins.
For Ohio Valley Publishing

Kirts (London, OH), who took
24th place with 464 pins over
three games for a 154.67 average;
and freshman Erika Stohr (Cincinnati, OH), who was 33rd with
247 pins in two games for a 123.5
average.
Freshmen Ashley Morris (Vinton, OH) and Kaci Bell (Portsmouth, OH) each rolled a 127 in
their only game and tied for 35th
place.
Rio Grande returns to action
next Saturday and Sunday at the
Cardinal Classic hosted by Ball
State University in Muncie, Ind.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director at the University of Rio Grande.

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From page 6

39

Dwyane (Haskins) didn’t have that ability too much.
A guy like (Fields), he’s very mature, and he’s really
good at making pretty good decisions.”
Scott Frost’s team so far hasn’t been as dominating
as many predicted. After a season-opening win over
South Alabama, Nebraska lost to Colorado and then
had to rally to beat Illinois on the road last week. The
Buckeyes were listed as a 17-point favorite on Tuesday.
Frost said Ohio State is his team’s biggest challenge
since he got to Lincoln.
“They have future Sunday players all across their
lineup,” Frost said.
Martinez said the Huskers are ready .
“Our guys are focused, and that’s what we’re going
to continue to be,” Martinez said. “Stacking good
days. There’s not much else to it. The guys know the
task at hand and realize that we have to be dialed in
and focused this week.”
NOTES: Ohio State junior safety Isaiah Pryor
intends to transfer after being listed as unavailable for
the game last week. … Nebraska has lost nine straight
games to Top 5 teams since knocking off Oklahoma in
2001.

Thursday, September 26, 2019 7

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500 (SHOW)

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Notting Hill (1999, Romance) Julia Roberts,
Rush Hour 2 Jackie Chan. Two police The
(:05) Room
Night School
Righteous
104 "Animal Kevin Hart.
James Dreyfus, Hugh Grant. The press tests the relationship officers uncover a counterfeiting ring in
between a Hollywood star and a London shopkeeper. TVPG Hong Kong and try to bring it down. TVPG Gemstones for Sale"
TVPG
(:20) The Getaway (‘18, Thril) Emily Ratajkowski, Aaron
The Prestige (‘06, Drama) Hugh Jackman, Michael (:15) Replicas (2018, Crime
Paul. A couple spends weekend at vacation rental home
Caine, Christian Bale. The rivalry between two magicians Story) Alice Eve, Emily Alyn
but homeowner has sinister plans. TV14
leads them on a life-long battle for supremacy. TV14
Lind, Keanu Reeves. TV14
The Affair
American Assassin (‘17, Act) Michael Keaton, Dylan
Dead Presidents (‘95, Susp) Keith David, Chris
O'Brien. A vengeful man is recruited by the CIA to take
Tucker, Larenz Tate. A distressed Vietnam War veteran
down a terrorist intent on starting a war. TVMA
turns to crime and begins plotting a major theft. TVMA
(:55)

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, September 26, 2019

Teams say NCAA using them as examples

Lady Rebels fall to Miller
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

LAWRENCE, Kan.
(AP) — The University
of Kansas wasted little
time issuing a forceful
response to the NCAA
after it received a notice
of allegations that leveled serious accusations
against its storied men’s
basketball program and
its Hall of Fame coach.
Not only did the
school deny many of
the charges, and seek
to diminish others, it
also attempted to shift
the narrative to one of
victim by suggesting the
NCAA is trying to make
an example out of the
Jayhawks.
“It’s no secret that
there is tremendous
pressure on the NCAA
to respond to the federal
court proceedings involving college basketball,”
said Jayhawks coach Bill
Self, who was singled
out in the NCAA notice.
“Compelled to reassure
member institutions and
the general public that
it can police its member
institutions, the NCAA
enforcement staff has
responded in an unnecessarily aggressive manner.”
The reason is simple:
The NCAA also is under
intense scrutiny.
The organization
announced in late 2017,
shortly after an FBI
probe revealed a seedy
underbelly of college
basketball, the formation of a commission to
provide recommendations on cleaning up the
sport. Chaired by former
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, the panel

MERCERVILLE, Ohio — This time it was the second.
The South Gallia volleyball team — which dropped
a 3-1 decision to Miller on Sept. 3 in Perry County,
winning the third game — fell to the same Lady
Falcons in four games again in Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division action on Tuesday in Gallia County,
with the Lady Rebels winning the second set.
Miller (10-5, 8-2 TVC Hocking) claimed its ﬁrst of
the night at 3-2 in the opening game, but South Gallia
(4-11, 2-9) was back in front at 11-9. The Lady Falcons tied it up four times before ﬁnally regaining the
lead at 19-18 on their way to the 25-20 win.
The guests took the ﬁrst for markers of the second
game, but the Lady Rebels rallied back to take their
ﬁrst lead at 8-7. Miller won the next two points, but
wound up giving the edge back to SGHS at 12-11.
MHS brieﬂy regained the edge at 14-12, but South
Gallia scored the next four points and led the rest of
the way to the 25-18 victory.
The Lady Rebels lone lead in the third game was
at 3-2. Miller scored the next three points, fought
through ties at nine and 12, and then moved up 2-1 in
the match with a 25-14 victory.
The hosts charged out to a 7-4 advantage in the
fourth, but Miller scored the next four points and
never trailed again. The Lady Rebels tied it up at
eight, but the Lady Falcons took the next eight points
and didn’t look back on the way to the match-clinching 25-17 win.
Leading the Red and Gold, Christine Grifﬁth had
14 service points, including a pair of aces. Kiley Stapleton was next with seven points, followed by Amaya
Howell with ﬁve points and an ace. Alyssa Cremeens
contributed four points to the Lady Rebel cause, Jessie Rutt chipped in with three points, while Emma
Shamblin had two points and an ace.
At the net, Rutt posted a team-best seven kills, to
go with one block, while Grifﬁth earned six kills and
six blocks. Stapleton came up with ﬁve kills, Katie
Bowling added four kills, Olivia Johnson chipped
in with four blocks, while Howell had one kill and a
team-best 19 assist.
Howell and Grifﬁth led the Lady Rebel defense with
nine digs apiece out of the team’s 40.
Miller was paced by Taylor Hinkle with 15 points,
followed by Josie Crabtree with 13 and Alaina Boyden
with 11. Brooke Dillinger claimed nine points in the
victory, while Askya McFann had four.
Next for the Lady Rebels, a trip to Belpre on Thursday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

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

returned a number of
suggestions ranging from
the reformation of AAU
and youth basketball to
addressing the NBA’s
one-and-done rule.
But the commission
also called for the NCAA
to enact “signiﬁcant
increases in penalties
imposed on institutions
and individuals for violations of NCAA rules.”
In the case of Level I
violations, the panel said,
schools should be subjected to ﬁnancial penalties, postseason bans and
other penalties.
Now, many schools
believe the NCAA is taking those suggestions to
an extreme.
“In its haste and
attempt to regain control
(of college basketball),”
Self said, “the enforcement staff has created a
false narrative regarding
me and our basketball
program.”
That accusation in
some ways is just as
damning as those leveled
by the NCAA against one
of college basketball’s
bluebloods.
It’s also a common one
for schools that have run
afoul the rules.
In January, the NCAA
banned Missouri’s football, baseball and softball
programs from postseason play for a year while
placing the entire athletic department on probation following a two-year
inquiry that revealed
academic misconduct
involving a former tutor.
The school has
appealed the decision
with Chancellor Alexan-

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

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

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: LV KHUHE\ JLYHQ WKDW RQ Friday, September 27, 2019
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2014 KIA SOUL VIN#KNDJN2A23E7702278
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AUCTIONS
Auto Auction
The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, September
27, 2019 at Dave's Supreme
Auto Sales LLC, 1393
Jackson Pike Gallipolis, OH
45631, at 1:00 pm.

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schools have made for
many years,” said Gene
Marsh of the Alabama
law ﬁrm Jackson Lewis
and chairman of the
NCAA’s committee on
infractions from 2004-06.
“When schools get on
the wrong end of the
gun,” Marsh said, “they
often complain they are
being singled out or used
for a larger purpose. It
really doesn’t matter.
The NCAA penalty system provides no debit or
credits should a decisionmaker — a hearing panel
or judicial body — think
the school has been especially targeted.”
Among the charges
leveled at Kansas on
Monday were multiple
Level 1 violations tied
primarily to recruiting, a
lack of institutional control and a responsibility
charge Self will be forced
to answer.
While the NCAA
notice does not detail
what the basketball
program is accused
of doing, Kansas was
among the most prominent programs swept up
in an NCAA probe into
a pay-for-play scheme
that began with an
FBI investigation into
apparel company Adidas. A former Adidas
employee testiﬁed he
made payments to the
family of one recruit and
the guardian of a current
player, and text messages presented in court
back up the accusation
that Self and his coaching staff had a close
relationship with the
employee.

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

VIN: WDBRF61J23E009613
2003 Mercedes C240

VIN: 1G1ZA5E02AF111652
2010 Chevy Malibu

der N. Cartwright calling
the penalties “harsh and
inconsistent” and athletic
director Jim Sterk calling
them “simply unfair.”
“The Committee on
Infractions abused its
discretion in applying
penalties in this case,”
Sterk said at the time. “It
is hard to fathom the university could be cited for
exemplary cooperation
throughout this case,
yet end up with these
unprecedented penalties
that could unfairly and
adversely impact current and future Mizzou
student-athletes.”
North Carolina State,
which like Kansas was
linked to the FBI’s college basketball corruption case, was hit with
four charges that included two top-level counts
tied to former coach
Mark Gottfried, former
assistant coach Orlando
Early and departed oneand-done player Dennis
Smith Jr.
The school, which
is nearing its 90-day
deadline to respond to
its notice of allegations,
likewise made it clear in
a statement that it would
not blindly accept the
NCAA punishments.
“We are prepared to
be accountable where we
believe it is appropriate,”
Chancellor Randy Woodson said, “and vigorously
defend this great university and its athletics
program where we feel
necessary.”
Sounds a lot like the
response from Kansas
ofﬁcials.
“It is a point that

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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Daily Sentinel

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, September 26, 2019 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

Written By Brian &amp; Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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�SPORTS/WEATHER

10 Thursday, September 26, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Wahama wins quad

Pleasant Valley Hospital

By Bryan Walters

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

MASON, W.Va. —
Defending the home turf.
The Wahama golf team
claimed a 7-stroke victory
over the ﬁeld on Tuesday night during a nonconference quad match
at Riverside Golf Club in
Mason County.
The host White Falcons
recorded four of the top
nine individual efforts
on the day while posting
a winning tally of 193.
Calhoun County was the
runner-up with a 200,
with Point Pleasant taking third with a 212. Buffalo rounded out the ﬁeld
with a 227.
PPHS freshman Joseph
Milhoan secured medalist
honors with a 5-over par
round of 40. Teammate
Brennen Sang joined
Ethan Mitchell of WHS in
sharing runner-up honors
with matching efforts of
43.
Ty White followed
Mitchell for the White
Falcons with a 48, while
Conner Ingels and Mat-

Sona K. Shah, MD, is a neurologist who specializes in providing
care for adult and elderly patients, ages 18 and above, who suffer
from disorders of the nervous system. Dr. Shah has been practicing
Neurology for 13 years and possesses a vast range of experience.

DR. SHAH’S SPECIAL INTERESTS INCLUDE:
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Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant freshman Joseph Milhoan watches a chip shot
during an Aug. 29 match at Meigs Golf Course in Pomeroy, Ohio.

tie Ohlinger completed
the winning team score
with respective efforts of
50 and 52. Casey Greer
and Josh Roque also ﬁred
rounds of 56 and 62 for
Wahama.
Weston Higginbotham
followed Milhoan and
Sang for Point Pleasant
with a 59, while Kaden
McCutcheon completed
the team score with a 70.
Reagan Lynch and
Chase Blair both paced
CCHS with identical

rounds of 47, followed by
Jaden Swearinger with
a 51. Drew Goad completed the team tally with
a 55.
Chase Venes led the
Bison with a 48, followed by Dylan Luikart
and Emma Luikart with
respective efforts of 53
and 56. Jon Eads completed the BHS score
with a 60.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Dr. Shah provides care Monday through Friday from 8:00am
- 4:30pm in the Neurology Office located at 2420 Jefferson

Blue Jackets ready to move
past stars’ departures

Avenue, Point Pleasant, West Virginia 25550.

For more information or to schedule an
appointment with Dr. Shah, please call

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The
Columbus Blue Jackets played under a
cloud last season created by two stars
who didn’t want to be there.
The team still made the playoffs and
had a signature triumph for the franchise with a stunning ﬁrst-round playoff sweep of the Tampa Bay Lightning.
Goalie Sergei Bobrovsky and forward Artemi Panarin are now yesterday’s news in Columbus and the team
remains conﬁdent. That’s due to a
core of veteran players who have been
together for three consecutive playoff

OH-70146433

304.675.2551.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

64°

72°

66°

Variable clouds today; nice. A star-studded sky
tonight. High 77° / Low 50°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Wed.

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.

82°
49°
75°
53°
96° in 2007
35° in 1983

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
0.01
2.34
34.47
32.59

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:19 a.m.
7:20 p.m.
4:25 a.m.
6:29 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

Sep 28

First

Oct 5

Full

Last

Oct 13 Oct 21

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

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

Major
10:11a
11:02a
11:54a
12:21a
1:18a
2:16a
3:16a

Minor
3:56a
4:48a
5:41a
6:35a
7:31a
8:30a
9:30a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Lucasville
77/50
Very High

Major
10:39p
11:30p
---12:17p
1:44p
2:43p
3:44p

Minor
4:25p
5:16p
6:07p
7:01p
7:57p
8:57p
9:57p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Sept. 26, 1963, San Diego had its
hottest day ever with a high of 111.
San Diego has remarkably consistent
temperatures all year; it normally
stays in the 60s and 70s.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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. Wed.

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
12.70
15.76
21.66
13.10
12.91
25.06
13.04
25.80
34.58
13.09
15.80
34.50
14.00

Portsmouth
79/51

500

Primary pollutant: Ozone

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.81
-0.47
-0.02
-0.01
+0.01
-0.12
-0.25
-0.05
+0.02
-0.04
+0.20
+0.20
+0.70

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Clouds and sun; very
warm and humid

Logan
76/45

Ashland
79/53
Grayson
79/53

WEDNESDAY

89°
64°

Mostly sunny; very
warm and humid

Clouds and sun;
remaining very warm

93°
66°
Mostly sunny; hot

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
77/46

Murray City
76/45
Belpre
78/47

Athens
76/46

St. Marys
77/47

Parkersburg
79/46

Coolville
77/46

Elizabeth
78/47

Spencer
77/49

Buffalo
77/51

Ironton
80/53

Milton
78/51

Clendenin
79/51

St. Albans
79/52

Huntington
79/52

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
66/52
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
80/62
10s
0s
Los Angeles
-0s
80/65
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

89°
66°

Wilkesville
76/47
POMEROY
Jackson
77/49
77/47
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
77/49
77/49
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
77/52
GALLIPOLIS
77/50
78/50
77/50

South Shore Greenup
79/53
77/50

53

Partly sunny, a
t-storm in the p.m.

McArthur
77/45

Very High

Primary: mechanical issues
Mold: 0

MONDAY

87°
65°

Adelphi
76/46
Chillicothe
77/48

SUNDAY

88°
65°

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

Waverly
76/48

Pollen: 0

Low

MOON PHASES

SATURDAY

Clouds and sun;
warmer

1

Primary: mechanical issues
Fri.
7:20 a.m.
7:18 p.m.
5:40 a.m.
7:06 p.m.

FRIDAY

85°
65°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

appearances, and some ﬂashy prospects that appear ready to play in the
NHL.
“We’ve gone through everything:
expectation, counted out, wondering
what’s going to go on, Dumpster ﬁre,
whatever you want to call it, and we
found our way through it, we navigated
through it,” captain Nick Foligno said
. “I think we have really good stability
now in our locker room, I think our
core has been together awhile now and
really understands each other. I’ve got
great guys to lean on.”

Charleston
79/51

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
60/43
Montreal
67/48

Billings
70/41

Minneapolis
70/57
Chicago
71/59

Denver
89/52

Toronto
69/48
Detroit
71/50

New York
82/60
Washington
88/63

Kansas City
75/66

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
86/55/pc
50/37/s
94/74/s
82/62/s
87/56/s
70/41/sh
77/47/pc
81/58/s
79/51/pc
94/67/s
83/44/pc
71/59/s
79/55/pc
75/50/pc
78/50/c
96/74/s
89/52/pc
73/62/pc
71/50/s
86/76/sh
91/73/s
77/54/pc
75/66/pc
86/67/pc
84/68/pc
80/65/pc
83/60/pc
89/77/pc
70/57/pc
84/66/t
92/74/s
82/60/s
84/72/pc
92/71/s
86/58/s
83/68/t
74/46/c
74/51/pc
91/66/s
92/66/s
79/64/pc
81/57/pc
80/62/s
66/52/c
88/63/s

Hi/Lo/W
79/54/pc
50/43/c
95/73/pc
75/66/pc
82/64/pc
58/40/sh
70/41/c
74/59/s
89/67/pc
87/71/t
58/39/c
72/59/r
86/68/pc
82/69/pc
83/66/pc
92/75/pc
67/47/sh
73/51/r
75/65/pc
86/76/pc
89/77/pc
85/67/pc
84/57/t
92/68/s
89/70/pc
75/65/pc
91/73/pc
89/79/sh
66/45/c
95/73/pc
92/77/pc
76/64/s
87/70/pc
90/71/pc
80/64/s
86/70/pc
79/64/pc
72/51/s
86/67/pc
84/68/pc
88/68/pc
70/55/pc
71/56/pc
60/48/c
82/69/pc

EXTREMES WEDNESDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
94/74

High
Low

El Paso
90/65
Chihuahua
85/61

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

99° in Jacksonville, FL
25° in Bridgeport, CA

Global
High
Low

Houston
91/73
Monterrey
90/72

Miami
89/77

115° in Basrah, Iraq
2° in Summit Station, Greenland

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

OH-70107872

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
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

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