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                  <text>2019
Eastern
Homecoming
LOCAL s 4

Beavers
power past
Point
SPORTS s 6

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

47°

62°

62°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Fog in the morning; otherwise, mostly sunny
today. Clear tonight. High 70° / Low 50°

WEATHER s 10

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 159, Volume 73

Tuesday, October 8, 2019 s 50¢

Southern Homecoming set for Friday

Animal
shelter
levy to be
decided on
in November
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Courtesy photo

The 2019 Southern High School Homecoming King and Queen will be crowned prior to Friday evening’s Homecoming football game in Racine. Queen candidates are
(front, from left) Baylee Wolfe, Mickenzie Ferrell, Valerie Ritchhart, Phoenix Cleland, Sydney Adams; King candidates are (back from left) Austin Rose, Josiah Weaver,
Mark Eblin, Landen Hill, and Frankie Bunce.

Southern Board approves agenda items
Staff Report

RACINE — The Southern
Local Board of Education
approved several agenda items
and recognized STORM Students of the Month during its
recent meeting.
STORM Students of the
Month were Alexa Dill (kindergarten), Libby Yonker (ﬁrst
grade) and Caden Hupp (ﬁfth
grade).
In personnel matters, the
board approved FMLA for
Autumn Lisle and Chris Stout.
Supplemental contracts
were approved as follows: Bill
Whitlock, yearbook advisor;
Kayte Manuel, Spanish Club;
Mandy Johnson, 9th grade
class advisor; Stephanie Allen,
10th grade class advisor; Jenna
Meeks, 11th grade class advisor; Jordan Pickens, 12th grade
class advisor; Tim Prange, Science Olympiad and assistant
track coach; Meg Guinther,
lead mentor; mentor program
year one, Wyatt Jarrell with
mentor Jody Norris, Kayte

Manuel with mentor Marcia
Weaver, Hazel Knotts with
mentor Ann Ohlinger; mentor
program year two, Garrett Hall,
Audra Wilkinson and Jordan
Huddleston with mentor Misty
Rogers; mentor program year
three, Tim Prange with mentor Beth Bay; mentor program
year four Amanda Rinaldi,
Heather Dailey Johnson, Olivia
Hawley and Jordan Pickens;
7-12 BLT Ann Ohlinger, Ryan
Davis, Adam Phillips, Marcia
Weaver, Russ Fields, and David
Maxson; K-6 BLT Beth Bay,
Meg Guinther, Megan Hendrix,
Shelly Barr, Courtney Manuel,
and Rachel Hupp.
Temporary supplemental
bus route driver and handicap
transportation aide positions
were approved for Kathy Miller
and Cheryl Smith.
The board approved a resolution in accordance with board
policy regarding amenities for
participants at meeting and
other occasions.

Courtesy photo

See BOARD | 5

STORM Students of the Month recognized were Libby Yonker, Alexa Dill and Caden
Hupp.

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3-5
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
Weather: 10

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

Megan Ross was
crowned the 2019
Eastern High School
Homecoming Queen
on Friday evening
during halftime of
the football game
against Wahama. Ross
(back row, center) is
pictured with escort
Colton Reynolds, 2018
Queen MacKenzie
Smith, Flower Girl
Abbie Bartlett and
Crown Bearer Kash
Gheen. Additional
photo from the
2019 Eastern High
School Homecoming
appear inside today’s
edition and online at
Photo courtesy of Bartee Photography mydailysentinel.com.

MEIGS COUNTY
— The Meigs County
Humane Society, in partnership with the Meigs
County Commissioners,
is seeking a 1 mill tax
levy which would beneﬁt
the Meigs County K9
Adoption and Rescue
Center and a proposed
feline shelter for the
county.
The levy would provide the funding for the
construction of the feline
shelter adjacent to the
current canine shelter,
which would be able to
house cats, as well as conduct adoptions similar to
that of the canine shelter.
John Musser and Dixie
Sayre, who volunteer
with the Humane Society,
explained that the idea
for the levy came after
the humane society was
awarded 50 cats by the
court earlier in the summer. Musser and Sayre
spoke with Commissioner
Randy Smith about the
matter and ﬁnding the
way to care for those animals. Smith asked if they
had considered a levy
which could provide the
funding for a shelter.
The following day
Musser and Sayre submitted a letter to the
commissioners with the
levy request and met with
them later that week. The
commissioners took the
required steps, submitting the levy request to
the auditor and ultimately
to the Board of Elections
for placement on the ballot.
The levy would be a 1
mill levy, which according
to ﬁgures from the Meigs
County Auditor’s Ofﬁce
would cost the average
homeowner in the county
(average home value
is $87,400) $2.58 per
month.
The ballot language for
the levy reads,
An additional tax
for the beneﬁt of Meigs
County for the purpose
of partnering with the
humane society for the
expansion of the K9 center to include feline and
a rate not exceeding one
mill for each one dollar of valuation, which
amounts to ten center for
each one hundred dollars
of valuation, for 5 years,
commending in 2019,
ﬁrst due in calendar year
2020.
See SHELTER | 3

HOMECOMING
COVERAGE
Coverage of the
2019 Meigs Local
Alumni Association
Reunion on the River
and Meigs High
School Homecoming
will appear in the
Wednesday edition
of The Daily Sentinel
and online at
mydailysentinel.com.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, October 8, 2019

OBITUARIES
PATSY SPIRES
CHESHIRE — Patsy
Spires of Cheshire passed
away on Friday, Oct. 4,
2019, at the Overbrook
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Middleport. She was born on
Jan. 15, 1940, in Pomeroy
to the late Henry and
Alda (Hudson) Doerfer.
She loved studying her
Bible and attending the
Twin Rivers Kingdom
Hall.
She is survived by her
children, Rodney Spires
Jr., Timothy (Julie Ann)
Spires and Diana (Dayrl)
Wears; sister, Coleene
Fields; brother, Henry
(Brenda) Doerfer; grandchildren, Star Spires,
Daryl (Ruby) Wears Jr.,
Rodney “Buddy” Spires

III, Shauna Spires, Amanda (Jim) Jolly, TJ Spires
ans Jesse Johnson; nieces
and nephews; and special
friend, Mona Tabor.
She is preceded in
death by her parents, husband, Rodney Spires; and
sister, Sally Fowler.
Funeral services will
be held on Tuesday, Oct.
8, 2019, at noon at the
Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Keith Bartimus
ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow at the Kyger Cemetery. Visitation for family
and friends will be held
two hours prior to the
service.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

EADES
GRIMMS LANDING, W.Va. — Dawn Marie
Eades, 63, of Grimms Landing, W.Va. died on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2019 at her home, following a long
illness.
The funeral service will be held at 2 p.m.,
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 2019 at Raynes Funeral Home,
Buffalo, W.Va. with Rev. Randy Parsons ofﬁciating.
The family will receive friends one hour prior to
the service at the funeral home. In accordance with
her wishes, her body will be cremated.
Raynes Funeral Home, 20072 Charleston Road,
Buffalo is in charge of her arrangements.
UMBARGER
BIDWELL, OHIO — Roberta Aline (Brady)
Umbarger, 85, of Bidwell, Ohio, died on Sunday, Oct.
6, 2019 at home.
A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m., Thursday,
Oct. 10, 2019 at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant with Rev. Alfred Holley ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow at Kirkland Memorial Gardens in Point
Pleasant. Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m., Wednesday
at the funeral home.
KINNIARD
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — Richard Kinniard,
91, of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. died on Saturday, Oct. 5,
2019 at Mt. Carmel East Hospital in Columbus.
There will be no visitation. The family will hold a
private graveside service and burial.
Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. is serving the family.
JORDAN
THURMAN — Seaford Marlin Jordan, 82, of Thurman, passed away on Monday, October 7, 2019 at his
residence.
In accordance with his wishes, there will be no calling hours. Private graveside services will be held at a
later date. Arrangements are under the care of Willis
Funeral Home of Gallipolis.
HASKINS
GALLIPOLIS — Naomi E. Haskins, 91, of Gallipolis, passed away on Saturday, October 5, 2019 at
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
The funeral service for Naomi will be held at 1 p.m.
on Wednesday, October 9, 2019 at Willis Funeral
Home with Pastor Bob Hood ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may
call prior to the funeral service from noon-1 p.m. at
the funeral home.
MULLINS
GALLIPOLIS — Charlotte Fern Mullins, 64 of
Gallipolis, died Saturday October 5, 2019 at her
home.
Friends may call at the Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home on Friday October 11, 2019 from 11
a.m. to 1 p.m. Burial will follow in Campaign Cemetery.

Chillicothe man killed in Gallia crash
Staff Report

GALLIA COUNTY — The
Gallipolis Post of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol is investigating
a motorcycle crash which killed
a Chillicothe man on Saturday
afternoon.

(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
CIRCULATION MANAGER
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.

According to a news release
from Highway Patrol, Jerry L.
Halcomb, 60, of Chillicothe, was
driving a 2006 Yamaha XBS1100
motorcycle southbound on Gallia
County Road 72 when he drove
off the right side of the roadway
and overturned.

The crash occurred at 2:25 p.m.
near the intersection of State
Route 233 and County Road 72.
The roadway was closed for
approximately one hour as a
result of the crash.
The crash remains under investigation by the Gallipolis Post.

Trump sends mixed signals on Syria, Turkey
By Lita C. Baldor,
Matthew Lee
and Robert Burns
Associated Press

WASHINGTON —
Facing unusually wide
criticism, President
Donald Trump sent out
strong but conﬂicting
signals on the “endless
war” in Syria and Middle
East on Monday. He
declared U.S. troops
would step aside for an
expected Turkish attack
on Kurds who have
fought alongside Americans for years but then
threatened to destroy the
Turks’ economy if they
went too far.
Even Trump’s staunchest Republican allies
expressed outrage at the
prospect of abandoning Syrian Kurds who
had fought the Islamic
State group with U.S.
troops. Trump’s decision
appeared to be the latest
example of an approach
to foreign policy that
critics condemn as
impulsive, that is sometimes reversed and frequently is untethered to
the advice of his national
security aides.
“A catastrophic mistake,” said Rep. Liz
Cheney of Wyoming, the
No. 3 House Republican
leader. “Shot in the arm
to the bad guys,” said
Sen. Lindsey Graham of
South Carolina.
Pentagon and State
Department ofﬁcials
held out the possibility
of persuading Turkey to
abandon its expected
invasion.
In recent weeks, the
U.S. and Turkey had
reached an apparent
accommodation of Turkish concerns about the
presence of Kurdish
ﬁghters, seen in Turkey
as a threat. American
and Turkish soldiers
had been conducting
joint patrols in a zone
along the border. As part
of that work, barriers
designed to defend the
Kurds were dismantled
amid assurances that
Turkey would not
invade.

Susan Walsh | AP

President Donald Trump, right, meets with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, left, during a
meeting on the sidelines of the G-20 summit June 29 in Osaka, Japan.

Graham said Turkey’s
NATO membership
should be suspended if it
attacks into northeastern
Turkey, potentially annihilating Kurdish ﬁghters who acted as a U.S.
proxy army in a ﬁve-year
ﬁght to eliminate the
Islamic State’s so-called
caliphate. Graham, who
had talked Trump out of
a withdrawal from Syria
last December, said
letting Turkey invade
would be a mistake of
historic proportion.
“It’s going to lead to
ISIS reemergence,” he
told Fox News.
U.S. involvement in
Syria has been fraught
with peril since it started
in 2014 with the insertion of small numbers of
special operations forces
to recruit, train, arm
and advise local ﬁghters
to combat the Islamic
State. Trump entered
the White House in 2017
intent on getting out of
Syria, and even before
the counter-IS military
campaign reclaimed
the last militant strongholds early this year, he
declared victory and said
troops would leave.
The strong pushback on Capitol Hill to
the late Sunday night
announcement prompted
Trump to recast his decision but with renewed
bombast, portraying it
as a threat to strangle
Turkey if it carries out
its announced intent to

invade.
“As I have stated
strongly before, and just
to reiterate, if Turkey
does anything that I, in
my great and unmatched
wisdom, consider to be
off limits, I will totally
destroy and obliterate
the Economy of Turkey,”
he tweeted.
Ofﬁcials suggested
that Trump’s threats
against Turkey on Monday morning were reactions to the overwhelming criticism of his earlier announcement that
the U.S. would withdraw
troops and get them out
of the way of the Turkish
forces. That announcement came after Trump
spoke by phone with
Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan.
One ofﬁcial described
a botched effort by
the White House on
Sunday night, putting
out a statement that
appeared aimed at making Trump look bold
for ending a war. The
ofﬁcial said attempts by
the Pentagon and State
Department to make
the statement stronger
in its opposition to
Turkey’s military action
were unsuccessful. But
in what the ofﬁcial
described as a “exercise
in damage control” Monday morning, the Pentagon made it clear to
the Turkish military that
“there will be a major
break in relations if you

do this.”
The ofﬁcial added
that Erdogan appeared
to be reconsidering his
earlier resolve because
he was relatively quiet
Monday. But the ofﬁcial
cautioned that even if
pressure from the U.S.
and Europe succeeds
in getting Erdogan to
back down, the damage
done to relations with
the Kurds may be irreparable.
An ofﬁcial familiar
with the Erdogan call
said the Turkish president was “ranting” at
Trump, saying the safe
zone was not working
and that Turkey couldn’t
trust the U.S. military
to do what was needed.
And in reaction, Trump
said the U.S. wanted no
part of an invasion and
would withdraw troops.
The announcement
threw the military situation in Syria into fresh
chaos and injected deeper uncertainty into U.S.
relations with European
allies. A French ofﬁcial,
speaking on condition
of anonymity on a sensitive topic, said France
wasn’t informed ahead of
time. A Foreign Ministry
statement warned Turkey to avoid any action
that would harm the
international coalition
against the Islamic State
and noted the Kurds had
been essential allies, but
entirely omitted any mention of the United States.

MEIGS BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs
will only list event information
that is open to the public and will
be printed on a space-available
basis.

Food drive
AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

Daily Sentinel

POMEROY —The Pomeroy
Firemen’s Association will host a
food drive on Saturday, Oct. 12
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Powell’s
Foodfair, 700 East Main Street
in Pomeroy. This is the 7th
annual “Feeding Our Friends”
Food Drive which beneﬁts the
Meigs Cooperative Parish Food
Pantry. Monetary donations will
be accepted in addition to nonperishable food items.

Plat books
available
POMEROY — The start of
hunting season is a great time
to get a Plat Book. The Meigs
County 4-H Committee has
Plat Books for sale for $25. The
books were printed in fall of
2018. Funds support the 4-H
program in the county by providing for supplies, camp and
college scholarships, learning
opportunities and more. To purchase a Plat Book, you can stop

by the Extension Ofﬁce at 113
East Memorial Drive in Pomeroy on Monday-Thursday from
8 a.m.-4 p.m. You could also
mail $30 (for book, shipping &amp;
handling) to Meigs County 4-H
Committee, 113 East Memorial
Drive, Suite E, Pomeroy, OH
45769 or visit the Meigs County
Recorder’s Ofﬁce in the Court
House to obtain a copy. Please
contact us at 740-992-6696 if
you have any questions.

Meeting change
POMEROY — All future meetings of DAV #53, beginning with
the meeting at 7 p.m. on Oct. 14,
will be held at Farmers Bank, 640
East Main Street in Pomeroy.

Road closures

POMEROY — Meigs County
Road 53, Wipple Road, will
remain closed between State
Route 7 and T-677, Ridgeway
Drive, to allow county forces to
complete a slip repair. This closPOMEROY — Laurel Cliff Free ing will be in effect beginning
Tuesday, Oct. 1, and continue for
Methodist Church will host an
approximately 3 weeks.
open mic gospel sing the ﬁrst
MEIGS COUNTY — State
Saturday of each month at 6 p.m.
Singers are invited to bring their Route 124 will close on Monday,
Sept. 9 to allow crews to replace a
music and join in. Those who
play an instrument can come and culvert that carries the route over
play with other musicians. A pot- Forked Run.The closure will be
luck meal will follow the service. between the entrance to Forked
The church will provide the table Run State Park and Curtis Hollow
Road. During the work, trafﬁc will
service. For more information
be detoured via SR-248, SR-7, and
call 740-992-0916 or 740-591SR-681. The project is scheduled
8190.
for completion in mid-November,
weather permitting.
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street
“Middleport Hill” is closed due to
RACINE — Southern Tora slip until further notice. Tickets
nado Craft Show will be held at
will be issued to those who drive
Southern Elementary School on
Saturday, Oct. 19, from 9 a.m. to through the closed portion of the
road.
3 p.m.

Open mic gospel

Craft show

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Shelter

Tuesday, October 8, 2019 3

RACO discusses events, yard sale plans

From page 1

RACINE — On Sept. 24,
the Racine Area Community Organization (RACO)
held its monthly meeting at
the Kathryn Hart Community Center. Duke Holbert
prayed before the meal.
The secretary read the
minutes and details from
the last RACO meeting.
Afterwards, the treasurer’s
report was presented and
approved.
The president began the
meeting by discussing old
business which included
her gratitude for a successful Fall Yard Sale, held
Thursday, Sept. 5 through
Saturday, Sept. 7. Having
the sale extended to Saturday morning was appreciated and helpful for many, so
a plan to continue that was
decided. Potential dates for

Musser said that the levy would provide
a start for ﬁxing the current feline issue in
several parts of the county.
“We can’t solve it overnight, but this is a
start,” said Musser.
The levy and cat shelter could be a long
term solution to help with the issue.
The Meigs County Humane Society
currently has a low cost spay and neuter
program for low income families, providing
182 vouchers during one year.
The spay and neuter program could be
expanded with the shelter in order to help
control the cat population in the county.
Sayre explained that unspayed cats can
quickly multiply, going from one cat with
four kittens to 16 cats/kittens in a 12
month span and continuing to multiply in
large numbers each year.
In the past, a mobile unit has been
brought in to locations in the county for
a spay and neuter clinic, but it is difﬁcult
without a permanent location for the clinics to be held. The shelter would also open
up the possibility to partner with a local
veterinarian or even university veterinary
school to provide spay and neuter and
other services, said Sayre.
The levy would not only be used for the
feline part of the shelter, but would provide
funding for the canine shelter as well.
Currently, explained Smith, the canine
shelter is funded through the sale of dog
tags as is established by the state, but those
funds are not enough to completely fund
the shelter. By around August each year,
the dog tag funds run out with the county
supplementing the shelter through county
general funds for the remainder of the year.
Smith, Musser and Sayre all noted that
the support of the local residents for the
canine shelter has been tremendous, with
donations of food and many other items
brought into the shelter on a regular basis.
“The dog shelter has been a tremendous
success,” said Smith. “We have attempted
to show the county that we are good partners with the canine shelter and hope to be
able to do the same with the feline shelter.”
Musser and Sayre have visited other
shelters and plan to visit others to see what
design could work best for a cat shelter
should the levy pass. They are also looking into grant funding for which the levy
funds would serve as a match in order to
help keep the cost of construction at a minimum.
For more information on the animal shelter levy visit “Meigs County Animal Shelter
Levy” on Facebook or contact the Meigs
County Humane Society.

the Spring sale were discussed, and included April
7-9, 2020, but nothing was
conﬁrmed.
The president went on
to express her gratitude for
all those that participated
in the RACO Rafﬂe, which
was held at the annual
Party in the Park. Also
mentioned was the ofﬁcial
dedication, by Mayor Scott
Hill, of the Splash Park,
which has also been named
Kathryn’s Cove, after
RACO founder Kathryn
Hart. The Splash Park has
been well received by the
public and has been considered a great addition to
Star Mill Park.
On to new business,
the president discussed
the then upcoming RACO
Games, which were held

on Thursday, Sept. 26
at the Syracuse Community Center. Finally, the
president reminded the
members of the upcoming
Halloween costume judging that will take place
at the Racine Fire House
immediately following
Racine’s trick or treat.
A motion was made and
approved to provide prizes
for the event. There will
be monetary prizes given
for ﬁrst, second, and third
place for ages 0-6, 7-12,
and 13-adult.
RACO members made
a motion and approved
for a new canopy to be
purchased. RACO is currently accepting donations
for our Spring Yard Sale.
To donate you may contact Tonja Hunter (740)

508-0044, Sherry O’Brien
(740) 416-1324, and Kim
Romine (740) 992-2067
or (740) 992-7079. RACO
appreciates such wonderful community support.
All money made from the
yard sales will be used to
provide scholarships to our
current graduating class at
Southern.
RACO’s next meeting is
set for Tuesday, Oct. 22, at
the Kathryn Hart Community Center at 6:30 p.m..
New members are always
welcome. Once ﬁnished,
a motion to close was
approved and the Pledge
of Allegiance, led by Dale
Hart, ﬁnalized the gathering.

Information submitted by the RACO
reporter.

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.

Tuesday, Oct. 8
POMEROY — Acoustic Night at
the Pomeroy Library, 6 p.m. All skill
levels and listeners are welcome.
Bring an instrument and play along!
OLIVE TWP. — Olive Twp Trustees will hold regular meeting at 6:30
p.m. at the township garage on Joppa
Road.
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Board of Health meeting will take
place at 5 p.m. in the conference
room of the Meigs County Health
Department, which is located at 112
E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy, Ohio.

Wednesday, Oct. 9
SCIPIO TWP. — Scipio Township

Trustees regular monthly meeting
at 7 p.m. at the Harrisonville Fire
House.
SUTTON TWP. — The Board of
Trustees of Sutton Township will
hold their regular monthly meeting
at 7 p.m. in the Racine Village Hall
Council Chambers.

Township trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at
the Bedford Town Hall.
POMEROY — Meigs County
Health Dept. will be closed in observance of Columbus Day. Normal business hours resume at 8 a.m. on Oct.
15.

Thursday, Oct. 10

Tuesday, Oct. 15

WELLSTON — The GJMV Solid
Waste Management District Board
of Directors will meet at 3:30 p.m. at
the district ofﬁce in Wellston.

RACINE — Grazing Management
and Pollution Abatement Workshop
at the Lee Farm (Keith &amp; Becky
Bentz), Racine. No cost to attend.
Call 740-992-4282 to register by Oct.
9. Dinner and refreshments provided.

Friday, Oct. 11

Thursday, Oct. 17

POMEROY — Inspirational Book
Club will discuss “Dangerous Illusions” by Irene Hannon. Pomeroy
Library at 10:30 a.m.
POMEROY — Family Movie
Night, 5 p.m., Pomeroy Library. Toy
Story 4 will be shown.

POMEROY — Pumpkin Painting,
6 p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. All
materials are supplied.
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Retired Teachers chapter of the
ORTA will meet at noon at the Meigs
Senior Center. Guests are welcome.
Call in lunch reservations to 740-9923214 by Oct. 15. A representative
from the senior center will discuss
the new Blakeslee Center presently
under ﬁnal renovation in Middleport.

Monday, Oct. 14
MEIGS COUNTY — All Meigs
Library locations will be in observance of Columbus Day.
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedford

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�LOCAL

4 Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Scenes from Eastern Homecoming
Courtesy of Bartee Photography

The 2018 Queen MacKenzie Smith crowns 2019 Queen Megan
Ross as Colton Reynolds looks on during halftime of Friday’s
Homecoming game at Eastern.

Courtesy of Bartee Photography

The 2019 Eastern High School Homecoming Court is pictured prior to the Homecoming game on Friday evening. The Homecoming Court
included Flower Girl Abbie Bartlett and Crown Bearer Kash Gheen, Freshmen Attendant Ella Carleton, Sophomore Attendant Sophia Dye,
Sarah Hawley | Sentinel
Junior Attendant Faith Smeeks, Queen Candidates Tressa Bartimus and Hannah Faulisi, Queen Megan Ross, Freshman Escort Trenton
Morrissey, Sophomore Escort Bradley Bailey, Junior Escort John Hobbs and Senior Escorts Isaac Lopez, Brayden Bush, and Colton The Chester Volunteer Fire Department led the parade through the
school parking lot as students looked on.
Reynolds.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The junior class float had the theme of “Flush the Falcons”.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The sophomore class float had a “Wipeout” theme.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The cheerleaders and flag corp took part in the parade on Friday.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Members of the flag corp make their way through the parade.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Eastern youth football players and junior high football players ride in the Homecoming parade.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Members of the junior high football team took part in the parade on Friday morning at Eastern Local.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The Eastern senior class members take part in the parade.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The freshman class float had the theme “The Greatest Show on Turf”.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 8, 2019 5

Scenes from Eastern Homecoming

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Eastern 7th grade volleyball players are pictured in the Homecoming parade.

Eastern High School football players ride in the Homecoming parade.

The cheerleaders and flag corp took part in the parade on Friday.

Eastern volleyball players ride in the Homecoming parade.

Members of the Eastern High School football team are pictured in the Homecoming parade on Friday
morning.
Cheerleaders and flag corp members pass out candy to elementary students.

Board
From page 1

The resolution states, in part,
that the board recognizes the value
of providing meals, refreshments
and other amenities for staff,
students, citizens, and advisory
groups, who participate in meeting and staff development sessions
or other occasions. Identiﬁed
amenities could include teacher
or student recognition gifts, gift
cards $25 or less, caps, clothing,
educational items, books or other
similar items. Events identiﬁed
include professional “waiver days”,
staff in0-service, parent-teacher
conference, DLT and BLT meetings, open houses, staff orientation
and staff appreciation days.
In other business, the board,
Approved the minutes, bills,
ﬁnancial statements, bank reconciliation statements and all checks
as presented.
Approved revised and annual
appropriations in the amount of
$13,006,761.34.
Approved creating a student
wellness and success fund.
Approved transferring $150,000
from the general fund to the permanent improvement fund and
$30,00 to the termination/severance fund.
The next meeting of the Southern Local Board of Education is
scheduled for 6:30 p.m. on Oct. 28
in the Kathryn Hart Community
Center.

TODAY IN HISTORY
In 1956, Don Larsen
pitched the only perfect game
in a World Series to date as
Today is Tuesday, Oct. 8,
the 281st day of 2019. There the New York Yankees beat
the Brooklyn Dodgers in
are 84 days left in the year.
Game 5, 2-0.
In 1982, all labor organizaToday’s Highlight in History
On Oct. 8, 1998, the House tions in Poland, including
Solidarity, were banned.
triggered an open-ended
In 1985, the hijackers of
impeachment inquiry against
the Italian cruise ship Achille
President Bill Clinton in a
momentous 258-176 vote; 31 Lauro killed American passenger Leon Klinghoffer,
Democrats joined majority
who was in a wheelchair, and
Republicans in opening the
threw his body overboard.
way for nationally televised
In 1997, Scientists reported
impeachment hearings.
the Mars Pathﬁnder had
yielded what could be the
On this date
In 1871, the Great Chicago strongest evidence yet that
Fire erupted; ﬁres also broke Mars might once have been
hospitable to life.
out in Peshtigo, Wisconsin,
In 2002, A federal judge
and in several communities in
approved President George
Michigan.
In 1934, Bruno Hauptmann W. Bush’s request to reopen
West Coast ports, ending a
was indicted by a grand jury
10-day labor lockout that was
in New Jersey for murder in
costing the U.S. economy an
the death of the kidnapped
son of Charles and Anne Mor- estimated $1 to $2 billion a
day.
row Lindbergh.
In 2004, thirty-four people,
In 1944, “The Adventures
most of them Israelis, were
of Ozzie and Harriet,” starkilled when suicide bombring Ozzie and Harriet Nelson, made its debut on C-B-S ers blew up the Taba Hilton
Hotel in Egypt.
Radio.
In 2005, a magnitude 7.6
In 1945, President Harry S.
earthquake ﬂattened villages
Truman told a press conferon the Pakistan-India border,
ence in Tiptonville, Tenneskilling an estimated 86,000
see, that the secret scientiﬁc
knowledge behind the atomic people.
In 2017, Harvey Weinstein
bomb would be shared only
was ﬁred from The Weinstein
with Britain and Canada.
The Associated Press

Company amid allegations
that he was responsible for
decades of sexual harassment
against actresses and employees. Vice President Mike
Pence left the 49ers-Colts
game in Indianapolis after
about a dozen San Francisco
players took a knee during
the national anthem.
Ten years ago: An Arizona
sweat lodge ceremony turned
deadly as some participants
became ill and collapsed
inside the 415-square-foot
structure; three died. (Motivational speaker James
Arthur Ray, who’d led the
ceremony, was convicted in
2011 of three counts of negligent homicide and served
20 months in prison.) A
powerful car bomb exploded
outside the Indian Embassy
in Kabul, killing 17 people.
Romanian-born German
writer Herta Mueller won the
Nobel Prize in literature.
Five years ago: President
Barack Obama told top
military commanders at the
Pentagon that he was conﬁdent the U.S. would keep
making progress in its ﬁght
against the Islamic State
group. Thomas Eric Duncan,
a Liberian man who was the
ﬁrst person diagnosed with
Ebola in the United States,
died at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas 10

days after being admitted.
U.S. researchers Eric Betzig
and William Moerner and
German scientist Stefan Hell
were named recipients of the
Nobel Prize for chemistry for
giving optical microscopes
much sharper vision than was
thought possible.
One year ago: President
Donald Trump said he had no
plans to ﬁre Deputy Attorney
General Rod Rosenstein. The
Nobel Prize in economics
was awarded to American
researchers William Nordhaus of Yale University and
Paul Romer of New York
University; Nordhaus was
honored for his work on the
economics of climate change,
and Romer had produced
research showing how governments can advance innovation. The New York Yankees
lost by the largest margin in
the team’s long post-season
history, 16-1, to the Boston
Red Sox; Boston’s Brock
Holt became the ﬁrst player
ever to hit a single, double,
triple and home run in the
same post-season game. New
Orleans Saints quarterback
Drew Brees became the NFL’s
all-time leader in yards passing during a 43-19 win over
the Washington Redskins.
Today’s Birthdays: Entertainment reporter Rona Barrett is 83.

�Sports
6 Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Beavers power past Point Pleasant
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant sophomore Zander Watson (right) recovers a Bluefield fumble,
during the Beavers’ 49-14 victory on Friday in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
— Regardless of the result, it
has to be nice to be home.
The Point Pleasant football
team suffered a 49-14 setback
at the hands of non-conference
guest Blueﬁeld on Friday at
Ohio Valley Bank Track and
Field, in the Big Blacks’ ﬁrst
home game of the season.
The Beavers (4-1) — winner of back-to-back games for
the second time this season
— broke the scoreless tie 6:07
into play, with Jahiem House
catching a 25-yard touchdown
pass from Carson Deeb. Kaulin
Parris made his ﬁrst of seven
extra-point kicks to give the

guests a 7-0 edge.
Point Pleasant (1-2) trailed
14-0 with 4:27 left in the opening quarter, as Deeb found
Brandon Wiley for a 42-yard
touchdown pass. Deeb hooked
up with Wiley again with 4:34
left in the half, this time for a
12-yard touchdown pass.
Blueﬁeld added on to its 21-0
lead 45 seconds into the second
half, with Javon Davis capping
off the quick drive with a fouryard touchdown run.
The Big Blacks lost a pair of
fumbles in the third quarter,
with Blueﬁeld’s Juwaun Green
returning the second one 30
yards for the touchdown and
the 35-0 lead.
Point Pleasant found itself
in the end zone for the ﬁrst

time with 42 seconds left in the
third quarter, as senior Logan
Southall intercepted a pass and
returned it 45 yards for the
score. Elicia Wood made her
ﬁrst of two point-after kicks,
cutting the BHS edge to 35-7.
The PPHS offense came
through for its ﬁrst points with
7:38 left in regulation, as Brady
Adkins punched in from one
yard away, trimming Blueﬁeld’s
lead to 35-14.
However, the guests got both
scores back, with a 67-yard
touchdown run by Jacorian
Green and a 68-yard touchdown pass from Ryker Brown
to Gaige Sisk, capping off the
49-14 win.
See BEAVERS | 7

Thundering Herd
falls at Middle
Tennessee, 24-13
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — The turnover bug
ended up taking a big bite out of the Herd.
Host Middle Tennessee State forced four
turnovers and gained seven points from those
takeaways en route to a 24-13 victory over the
Marshall football team Saturday in the Conference
USA East Division opener for both programs at
Johnny ‘Red’ Floyd Stadium.
The Blue Raiders (2-3, 1-0 CUSA East) never
trailed in the contest as the Thundering Herd
(2-3, 0-1) felt the bite early on after throwing an
interception on the opening play of their second
possession.
MTSU needed only ﬁve plays to cover the
39-yard distance as Chaton Mobley bowled his
way through from a yard out for a 7-0 edge with
8:35 remaining.
The guests, however, responded quickly as
Armani Levias hauled in a pass from Isaiah Green
and rumbled 75 yards to paydirt — tying things
up at seven with 8:22 left.
The Blue Raiders countered with a 10-play,
72-yard drive that ended with a Crews Holt
21-yard ﬁeld goal, giving the hosts a 10-7 cushion
with 4:06 remaining in the ﬁrst.
The guests committed their second turnover
on the ensuing drive, but Marshall’s defense came
up with a quick 3-and-out before taking over at its
own 14.
The Green and White covered 78 yards in 11
plays before converting a Justin Rohrwasser
24-yard ﬁeld goal with 10:45 left in the half for a
10-all tie.
The Blue Raiders decided on 22-yard ﬁeld goal
attempt on a fourth-and-goal, but Holt pushed the
ball wide left to keep things knotted up with 7:42
left.
MU was forced to punt on its next drive, then
Middle Tennessee capped a 6-play, 53-yard drive
with an Asher O’Hara 4-yard scamper that resulted in a permanent lead at 17-10 with 3:42 left in
the half.
The Herd countered with a 13-play, 68-yard
drive that ended with a successful 24-yard ﬁeld
goal by Rohrwasser, making it a 17-13 deﬁcit with
three seconds left.
The hosts punted the ball away on the opening
drive of the second half, then Marshall covered 82
yards on a dozen place before facing a fourth-and-1
at the MTSU 7.
The guests, however, were unable to pick up the
three feet needed, and a turnover on downs gave
the Blue Raiders possession.
See HERD | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Oct. 8
Volleyball
Eastern at Wahama, 6
p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at
South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at
Southern, 6 p.m.
Fairland at Gallia
Academy, 6 p.m.
Vinton County at River
Valley, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Athens, 6 p.m.
Soccer
Huntington at Point
Pleasant boys, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy boys at
Fairland, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy girls at
Fairland, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant girls at

Nicholas County, 6 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 10
Volleyball
Southern at Eastern, 6
p.m.
River Valley at Meigs, 6
p.m.
Ross County at Ohio
Valley Christian, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Rock
Hill, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Miller, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Waterford,
6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca,
5:30
Soccer
Gallia Academy boys at
Jackson, 5 p.m.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Ohio’s O’Shaan Allison carries the ball for a gain, during the Bobcats’ season-opening victory over Rhode Island on Aug. 31 in Athens,
Ohio.

Bobcats clip Buffalo, 21-20 in OT
By Alex Hawley

down run as the eighth
play of the 78-yard drive.
Louie Zervos made his
ﬁrst of three extra-point
BUFFALO, N.Y. —
kicks to tie the score at
Back in the win column
7-7 with 10:44 left in the
by the narrowest of marthird.
gins.
The hosts regained the
The Ohio football team
ended its three-game skid lead on their ﬁrst play
on Saturday afternoon in of the fourth quarter,
the Empire State, as Bob- with Vantrease tossing a
34-yard touchdown pass
cats opened Mid-American Conference play with to Antonio Nunn.
After a punt by each
a 21-20 overtime victory
team, Ohio tied the game
over host Buffalo.
Ohio (2-3, 1-0 MAC) — at 14 with a four-play,
48-yard drive, resulting
winning in UB Stadium
in a one-yard touchdown
for the ﬁrst time since
run by O’Shaan Allison
2009 — was scoreless
with 10:39 left in regulaafter just three offensive
tion.
drives in the ﬁrst half,
Each team missed a
punting, losing possession on downs and having ﬁeld goal in the ﬁnal 10
minutes, and UB got the
time run out.
ball ﬁrst in overtime. It
Buffalo (2-4, 0-2) —
took the hosts ﬁve plays
which began conference
play with a loss to Miami to get to the Ohio three,
where Vantrease ran in
— missed a ﬁeld goal
for a 20-14 lead. The
on its ﬁrst possession
Bulls missed the pointof the game. The Bulls
after kick, however, leavbroke the scoreless tie
on their second offensive ing the door open for the
Bobcats.
try, however, with Kyle
Ohio went to Allison
Vantrease tossing a fourfor ﬁve consecutive caryard touchdown pass to
ries in overtime, with the
Domini Johnson at the
end of a 90-yard, 15-play Bobcat freshman ﬁnding
the end zone and tying
drive. Jackson Baltar
the game at 20 from ﬁve
made his ﬁrst of two
point-after kicks and the yards out. Zervos then
hosts led 7-0 at halftime. made the point-after kick
to give the Green and
The Bobcats offense
White the 21-20 triumph.
broke through on the
The Bobcats claimed
ﬁrst possession of the
second half, with Nathan a 23-to-19 advantage in
Rourke’s ﬁve-yard touch- ﬁrst downs in the win,

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

despite being outgained
by a 378-to-341 tally in
total offense. The guests
gained 186 of their yards
on 47 carries, while UB
ended with 181 yards
over its 43 rushes.
Ohio committed two
turnovers — one fumble
and one interception
— while punting three
times. UB also punted
three times, but only
turned the ball over
once . OU was penalized
twice for 15 yards, while
Buffalo was ﬂagged four
times for 30 yards.
Rourke — who carried
the ball 16 times for a
net gain of 63 yards and
one touchdown in the
win — completed 12-of19 passes for 155 yards,
while being sacked four
times.
Allison had 96 yards
and two touchdowns on
27 carries to lead the
guests on the ground.
Isiah Cox had 33 total
yards, combining two
catches with one carry,
while De’Montre Tuggle
had 30 yards with three
rushes and one reception.
Ryan Luehrman,
Cameron Odom, Jerome
Buckner and Ty Walton
each had two catches in
the win, gaining 30, 25,
18 and 12 yards respectively. Shane Hooks also
added a 34-yard reception for the Green and

White.
The Bobcat defense
was led by Jarren Hampton with eight tackles,
followed by Javon Hagan
with seven. Hagan also
had a fumble recovery
for the guests, with Eric
Popp forcing the loose
ball.
For Buffalo, Vantrease
was 16-of-23 passing for
197 yards and two touchdowns, while carrying
the ball six times for 19
yards and another score.
Kevin Marks led the
hosts on the ground with
112 yards on 22 carries,
and also caught two passes for 12 yards. Jare Patterson added 52 yards on
13 rushes, to go with one
61-yard reception. Nunn
caught four passes for 53
yards and a touchdown
in the setback, Carlton
Todd added four grabs
for 34 yards, while Ron
Cook caught three passes
for 33 yards.
Leading the UB
defense, Tyrone Hill had
15 tackles, Taylor Riggins added two sacks
and recovered a fumble,
while Kadoﬁ Wright
intercepted a pass.
Ohio returns to Peden
Stadium next, as the
Bobcats host Northern
Illinois at 3:30 on Saturday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Ehlinger leads Texas over WVU

Cardinals get
1st win over
Bengals, 26-23

MORGANTOWN,
W.Va. (AP) — Before
he took a knee on the
ﬁnal play, quarterback
Sam Ehlinger ﬂashed the
“Hook’em Horns” sign
toward the Texas fans in
West Virginia’s stands.
He got his payback,
even if he insists he’d put
aside last year’s deﬁant
celebration by several
Mountaineers on his
home ﬁeld.
Ehlinger threw two
touchdown passes and
ran for two more scores
while No. 11 Texas converted three turnovers
into TDs in a 42-31 victory over West Virginia
on Saturday.
Ehlinger and Texas
(4-1, 2-0 Big 12) beat the
Mountaineers (3-2, 1-1)
on the road for the second straight time.
“I’m really proud of the
way that everyone kind
of kept our heads down
and kept swinging,” he
said.
Ehlinger and several
Texas players were upset
last year after West
Virginia players ﬂashed
“horns down” signs during West Virginia’s 42-41
win in Austin, Texas.
Ehlinger had noted in
a tweet that was later
deleted: “Do not think it
will be forgotten.”
Maybe it wasn’t forgotten, but it wasn’t the
inspiration behind Saturday’s win, either.
“I don’t think any of
it was motivation, honestly,” Ehlinger said.
“We’re focused on being
the best that we can be
and external forces don’t
matter.”
Ehlinger ﬁnished 18
of 33 for 211 yards. He
threw just his second
interception of the season that West Virginia
turned into a third-quarter ﬁeld goal.
The Texas defense
showed no signs of slowing down despite injuries
that have decimated the
secondary. The Longhorns intercepted Austin
Kendall four times, twice

CINCINNATI (AP) — Exactly 2 minutes left. Half
a ﬁeld to cover. Fans in half-empty Paul Brown Stadium were creating as much of a din as they could,
roused by a stunning Bengals comeback that forged a
tie.
Kyler Murray’s moment had arrived, and everybody
was watching to see how the rookie would respond.
“I just looked at him and said, ‘This is what we
drafted you for,’” Cardinals running back Chase
Edmonds said.
Murray threw a 24-yard pass — perfect, right down
the sideline — and scrambled 24 yards to get Arizona
in position for its long-awaited win Sunday. Zane
Gonzalez completed the drive win a 31-yard ﬁeld goal
on the ﬁnal play for a 26-23 victory over Cincinnati,
the Cardinals’ ﬁrst win under coach Kliff Kingsbury .
“That’s who he is,” Kingsbury said. “He doesn’t
blink. He just made plays with his arm and his legs.”
In a matchup of winless teams, the Cardinals (1-31) were a little bit better, with their Heisman Trophy
winner making the difference.

Herd

ries, followed by Green
with 95 yards on 16 carries. Green — who had
a fumble late in the ﬁrst
From page 6
canto — also completed
24-of-40 passes for 365
MTSU again punted
yards, including one
the ball away, and Martouchdown and three
shall again was left lookinterceptions.
ing at a fourth-and-3 at
Broc Thompson and
the hosts 24. An incomXavier Gaines each
plete pass gave the Blue
hauled in four passes for
and Gray the ball back
53 and 32 yards, respecwith 22 seconds left in
tively. Levias and Willie
the third canto.
Johnson added three
Middle Tennessee
grabs apiece for 94 and
needed eight plays to
79 yards. Ten different
cover 76 yards as Zack
Herd receivers caught
Dobson hauled in a
36-yard pass from O’Hara at least one pass in the
setback.
with 12:43 left in regulaOmari Cobb led the
tion, making it a doubledefense with 12 tackles,
digit contest at 24-13.
including two for loss.
Marshall’s ensuing
Kereon Merrell and
drive ended in a loss of
Koby Cumberlander also
downs at the MTSU 22,
recorded a sack apiece for
and the Herd’s ﬁnal two
the Herd.
possessions resulted in
O’Hara paced the Blue
a pair of Green intercepRaiders with 76 rushing
tions inside Blue Raider
yards on 17 carries and
territory — the last of
which came at the 13-yard also completed 17-of-30
passes for 261 yards. Jarline with 23 seconds left
rin Pierce led the hosts
in the game.
The missed opportuni- with four catches for 74
yards.
ties showed in the ﬁnal
Jovante Moffatt led the
stats as the Green and
MTSU defense with 14
White outgained the
hosts by a sizable 578-401 tackles and two interceptions. Tyshun Render also
margin in total yards of
picked off a pass, while
offense, as well as runReed Blankenship recovning 15 more offensive
snaps (82-67) during the ered a fumble.
After dipping below
contest.
the .500 mark for the ﬁrst
The Herd outrushed
MTSU by a 202-140 mar- time this fall, Marshall
gin on two extra chances returns to action Saturand also posted a 376-261 day when it welcomes
Old Dominion to Joan
advantage through the
C. Edwards Stadium for
air. MU also claimed a
7:34 advantage in time of a CUSA East contest at
2:30 p.m.
possession.
Brenden Knox led the
Bryan Walters can be reached at
Marshall ground attack
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
with 99 yards on 19 car-

BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)

13 (WOWK)

From page 6

The Beavers claimed a 14-to-11 edge in ﬁrst downs,
as well as a 392-to-158 advantage in total offense. The
hosts picked up 83 of their yards on 35 carries, while
BHS earned 135 yards on its 27 totes. Both teams
turned the ball over three times in the game. Point
Pleasant was penalized six times for 50 yards, while
Blueﬁeld was backed up 95 yards on nine ﬂags.
PPHS signal caller Hunter Bush completed 10-of14 passes for 75 yards. Adkins had 85 yards and one
touchdown on 21 carries, while catching one pass for
a net loss of one yard. Nick Leport ﬁnished with 31
yards on three receptions, while Southall and Zander
Watson had two receptions each, for 10 and seven
yards respectively.
Jovone Johnson combined ﬁve carries with one
catch for 23 total yards, while Trey Peck picked up 15
yards on one grab. Evan Roach and Nick Parsons both
had two carries in the setback, earning 17 and 11
yards respectively.
For Blueﬁeld, Deeb was 14-of-19 passing for 189
yards and three touchdowns, while Brown was 1-of-1
for 68 yards and a score.
Jacorian Green ended with 118 total yards and one
touchdown, combining six receptions and two carries.
Wiley posted 54 yards and two touchdowns on six
receptions, House added 74 yards and a score on two
grabs, while Sisk caught one 68-yard touchdown pass.
Davis ended 60 yards and a score on 18 carries in
the win, while Jacob Martin came up with 23 yards on
three totes.
Point Pleasant will be back at OVB Track and Field
on Friday against Linsly.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

to catch the ball or ran
the wrong route.
“I had a pretty good
eye on the ﬁeld and I
thought the kid played
well, played his best
game,” Brown said. “We
were in the game offensively because of him.”
The takeaway
Texas: The Longhorns
were making their ﬁrst
trip outside of the state
of Texas this season and
showed they were not
looking ahead to next
week’s Red River Rivalry
game against No. 6 Oklahoma.
“We did a good job on
staying focused on the
task at hand,” Ehlinger
said.
West Virginia: The
Mountaineers started a
brutal October stretch
with a bust. They also
have Iowa State, No. 6
Oklahoma and Baylor on
the schedule this month.

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

WVU redshirt freshman Sam James (13) makes a diving
touchdown catch, during the Mountaineers’ 42-31 setback to
Texas on Saturday at Milan Puskar Stadium in Morgantown,
W.Va.

Texas junior Sam Ehlinger (11) attempts a pass over West
Virginia’s Dante Stills (55) and Darius Stills (56), during the
Longhorns’ 42-31 victory on Saturday in Morgantown, W.Va.

by cornerback D’Shawn
Jamison.
Texas needed those
turnovers to break open
a close game, too.
Texas coach Tom Herman praised his defense
for making key plays
when West Virginia had
a chance to retake the
lead after halftime. That
came as the Longhorns’
offense sputtered, punting on four of its ﬁrst
ﬁve drives in the second
half while also having
Ehlinger’s interception.
“We knew this was
going to be a really
tough environment,”
Herman said.
B.J. Foster’s pick early
in the fourth quarter
led to Devin Duvernay’s
13-yard scoring run.

Kendall was intercepted
on the next drive by
Jamison at the West
Virginia 18, and Ehlinger
threw a lateral to offensive lineman Samuel
Cosmi, who rumbled 12
yards into the end zone
for a 35-17 lead.
Kendall threw three
TD passes, including
pair of fourth-quarter
scores, and had a 1-yard
scoring run. He ﬁnished
31 of 46 for a career-high
367 yards.
West Virginia coach
Neal Brown came to
Kendall’s defense. He
said the Oklahoma graduate transfer’s ﬁrst interception was a misread
but the other three were
the fault of the receivers,
who either had a chance

Running Roschon
Texas freshman
Roschon Johnson, a
converted quarterback,
ﬁnished with career
highs of 121 yards on
21 carries. He was used
extensively after starting running back Keontay Ingram injured his
neck in the ﬁrst quarter
before returning later in
the game.
Poll implications
Texas could creep back
into the top 10 with the
road win.
Up next
Texas: The Longhorns
play the Sooners next
Saturday in Dallas. Texas
beat the Sooners 48-45
during the 2018 regular season at the State
Fair of Texas, though
the Sooners won the
rematch in the Big 12
title game.
West Virginia: The
Mountaineers host the
Cyclones next Saturday
after Iowa State embarrassed the Mountaineers
30-14 a year ago.

TUESDAY EVENING

12 (WVPB)

Beavers

Tuesday, October 8, 2019 7

CABLE

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The Voice "The Blind
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8 PM

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Retro Report Uncover crime Frontline "On the
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9 PM

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The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002, Fantasy) Ian McKellan, Viggo Mortensen, Elijah Wood. TV14
The Lord of the Rings: Th...
18 (WGN)
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The King of King-Queens King-Queens
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(5:30)
Ghostbusters II (1989, Comedy) Sigourney
Iron Man (2008, Action) Gwyneth Paltrow, Jeff Bridges, Robert Downey Jr.. Tony
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Stark creates a suit of high tech armor to fix his mistakes and defend the innocent. TVPG
Ink Master: Grudge Match
(5:30)
The Goonies (1985, Adventure) Corey
Beetlejuice (1988, Comedy) Geena Davis, Alec
Feldman, Josh Brolin, Sean Astin. TVPG
Baldwin, Michael Keaton. TV14
"Targeted" (N)
Loud House Loud House Smarter
Smarter
To Be Announced
Friends
Friends
Law&amp;O: SVU "Redemption" Boo! A Madea Halloween (‘16, Com) Tyler Perry. TV14
(:15) Boo! A Madea Halloween Tyler Perry. TV14
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The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
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Movie
National Lampoon's Vacation (‘83, Com) Beverly
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group travels to an island inhabited by dinosaurs to study their behavior. TV14
Sea Gold "Double Down" Bering Sea Gold
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Chicago P.D. "Sisterhood" Chicago P.D. "Profiles"
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Ballers "Who Isn't It Romantic Rebel Wilson. After
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�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Daily Sentinel

OSU, Georgia tied at No. 3 in AP poll
By Ralph D. Russo
Associated Press

Ohio State and Georgia
are tied at No. 3 in The
Associated Press college
football poll, and Florida
surged to No. 7 after a
big victory.
No. 1 Alabama and
No. 2 Clemson held their
spots Sunday after a week
off for both, but the Buckeyes caught up to the
Bulldogs in the AP Top
25 presented by Regions
Bank.
The Crimson Tide
received 32 ﬁrst-place
votes and 1503 points
and the Tigers had 15
ﬁrst-place votes and 1,433
points. Georgia got three
ﬁrst-place votes and 1,393
points. Ohio State, which
was fourth last week,
received 10 ﬁrst-place
votes and 1,393 points.
The last time there
was a tie in the top three
was Sept. 20, 2015, when
TCU and Mississippi
shared third.
No. 5 LSU received two
ﬁrst-place votes. Oklahoma stayed No. 6.
Florida moved up
three spots after beating
Auburn on Saturday. The
Tigers slipped ﬁve to No.
12.
Poll points
No. 22 Baylor is ranked

for the ﬁrst time since
2016, the season following the offseason ﬁring
of coach Art Briles. The
school let Briles go amid
a scandal related to the
handling of sexual assault
claims on campus. An
investigation led to the
president of the university and athletic director
also departing.
Bears coach Matt Rhule
told the AP on Sunday
that he congratulated his
team on being 5-0 after a
convincing win at Kansas
State the day before and
senior linebacker Jordan
Williams corrected him.
“He said, ‘No coach.
We’re 1-0 this week,’”
Rhule said. “That was
good to hear him correct
me.”
The third-year coach
stepped into rebuild that
was anything but normal.
The Bears started the
‘16 season ranked under
interim coach Jim Grobe
and rose all the way to
No. 8 in the country
with a 6-0 start. They
then lost their last six
regular-season games and
the program descended
even further from there.
After the 2016 regular
season, Rhule was hired
away from Temple, where
he had taken a typically
downtrodden team and
won double-digit games

cellar-dweller. Whether it
could be more than that
without him was an open
question.
“The program could
have gone the other way,”
Rhule said. “But a lot of
people’s efforts, starting
with the players, kept that
from happening.”
Baylor returns home
this week to face Texas
Tech.
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

in each of his ﬁnal two
seasons. With no Texas
connections, the former
Penn State player and
NFL assistant seemed
like an odd ﬁt in Waco,
Texas.
He hired several Texas
high school coaches to
bridge the gap in recruiting, but just getting
through Year 1 was a
major challenge.
With a depleted roster,
Baylor went 1-11 in 2017.
“I remember thinking
after the (season-ending)
TCU game, ‘It will never
be this bad again,’” Rhule
said.
The Bears improved
to 7-6 with a bowl victory last year, but the
defense was still one of
the worst in the nation.

That’s turned. Baylor
is 16th in the nation in
yards per play allowed
(4.49). Many of the players who were forced onto
the ﬁeld before they were
ready during the ﬁrst two
seasons under Rhule are
now juniors and seniors.
The personnel ﬁts the
three-man front defensive
coordinator Phil Snow
prefers to use.
Offensively, Rhule has
adapted to the talent
available. The sidelineto-sideline, up-tempo
spread used by Briles has
been replaced by a more
methodical and conﬁned
approach, though not
quite so fullback-reliant as
Rhule’s Temple teams.
Before Briles, Baylor
was a perennial Big 12

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REQUEST FOR BOND
RELEASE
PERMIT NUMBER D-0463
MINING YEAR 12
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In/out

The American Athletic
Cincinnati quarterback Desmond Ridder (9) hands the ball off to
Michael Warren (3) during the first half of a Sept. 28 football game Conference lost one team
against Marshall at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington, W.Va. in the ranking but gained
two.
Central Florida is
unranked for the ﬁrst
time since the Knights
moved into the Top 25 on
Oct. 1, 2017. UCF saw
its 19-game conference
winning streak snapped
by Cincinnati on Friday
night. The 25th-ranked
Bearcats were rewarded
with their ﬁrst ranking of
the season. No. 23 Memphis also is ranked for the
ﬁrst time this season.
Sliding out of the ranking after losing for the
second time this season
along with UCF were
Washington, Oklahoma
State and Michigan State
(which was tied for 25th).
Conference call
For the ﬁfth straight
week, the Southeastern

Conference has three topﬁve teams.
SEC — 6 (Nos. 1, 3, 5,
7, 12, 24).
Big Ten — 5 (Nos. 3, 8,
10, 16, 17).
American — 3 (Nos.
21, 23, 25).
ACC — 3 (Nos. 2, 19,
20).
Big 12 — 3 (Nos. 6, 11,
22).
Pac-12 — 3 (Nos. 13,
15, 18).
Mountain West — 1
(No. 14).
Independent — 1 (No.
9).
Ranked vs. ranked
This week’s slate has
the most games matching
ranked teams so far this
season.
No. 1 Alabama at No.
24 Texas A&amp;M. The
Aggies will face the
top-ranked team for the
second time this season,
which has happened 28
times previously (including postseason games).
The last time that happened in the regular
season was Tennessee in
2009, when it lost to both
Florida and Alabama.
No. 7 Florida at No. 5
LSU. Gators will play in
consecutive top-10 matchups.
No. 11 Texas vs. No. 6
Oklahoma. Red River is
cool again.

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, October 8, 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

By Hilary Price

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Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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�SPORTS/WEATHER

10 Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Bengals nip Rio men in 2OTs

Black Knights
rally past
Sissonville, 4-3

By Randy Payton

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The
sport of soccer is commonly
referred to as “the beautiful
game”.
But make no mistake about
it, there was nothing beautiful
about Saturday night’s men’s
non-conference match between
the University of Rio Grande
and the University of Maine at
Fort Kent.
A combined forty-two common fouls, 11 yellow card
cautions and two red card
disqualiﬁcations extinguished
the ﬂow of play and provided
the backdrop to the Bengals’
2-1 double-overtime upset of
the RedStorm at Evan E. Davis
Field.
Maine Fort Kent, a member
of the United States Collegiate
Athletic Association, improved
to 8-1-2 with the victory, which
capped off a ﬁve-game road

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

SISSONVILLE, W.Va. — Goals when they were
needed most.
The Point Pleasant boys soccer team let a 2-1 halftime lead slip away, but junior Adam Veroski scored
with 27 seconds left in regulation en route to a thrilling 4-3 victory over host Sissonville on Saturday in a
non-conference friendly in Kanawha County.
The visiting Black Knights (7-3-5) stormed out to
a 2-goal advantage in the ﬁrst eight minutes of play,
but the Indians (10-4-1) rallied for three consecutive
scores while building their only lead with 25 minutes
remaining.
In the 65th minute, however, freshman Colton
Young managed to knot things up at three on a run-in
shot from the front.
Entering the ﬁnal minute, Veroski collected a loose
ball dead center from 23 yards out. He touched the
ball to the right side and drove a shot to the left corner — which found the net for a 4-3 advantage in the
90th minute.
“We played outstanding soccer for the ﬁrst 15
minutes and the last 25 minutes, and we looked very
composed and dangerous during that 40-minute
span,” PPHS coach Chip Wood said afterwards. “We
played with purpose and passion today, and it worked
itself out in the end. This is a very good win for us at
this point the season.”
The Black Knights outshot the hosts by a 15-13
overall margin, with both squads putting 10 shots
apiece on goal. Point also claimed a 4-2 edge in
corner kicks and was whistled for 20 of the 28 fouls
called.
Garrett Hatten gave the guests a 1-0 lead in the 4th
minute after playing a pass from Cohen Yates into
the right corner post, then Braxton Watkins-Lovejoy
volleyed a crossing pass from Hatten into the net for
a 2-0 cushion eight minutes into regulation.
SHS closed the deﬁcit in half as Jaxson Haynes
headed in a pass from Wyatt Ervin in the 20th minute, making it a 2-1 contest headed into the intermission.
Sissonville tied things a minute into the second
half as Haynes blasted a left-to-right shot past Hunter
Bonecutter, then Ervin scored on a drop pass from 20
yards out — giving the Indians a 3-2 lead in the 45th
minute.
Point Pleasant — which has won two straight and
3-of-4 overall — returns to action Tuesday when it
hosts Huntington in a non-conference contest at 6
p.m.

WEATHER

2 PM

By Randy Payton

62°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

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.

64°
55°
71°
48°
93° in 1941
29° in 1964

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

2.62
2.77
0.61
37.24
33.64

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:31 a.m.
7:01 p.m.
4:55 p.m.
2:22 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Last

New

Oct 13 Oct 21 Oct 27

First

Nov 4

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

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

Major
8:33a
9:14a
9:53a
10:31a
11:09a
11:48a
12:09a

Minor
2:21a
3:03a
3:42a
4:20a
4:59a
5:38a
6:20a

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
70/49
Very High

Major
8:57p
9:36p
10:14p
10:52p
11:29p
---12:30p

Minor
2:45p
3:25p
4:04p
4:41p
5:19p
5:59p
6:41p

WEATHER HISTORY
Lead, S.D., had 36 inches of snow on
Oct. 8, 1982, but just 20 miles away
in Rapid City, which is at a lower
elevation, there was only a trace.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

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. Mon.

Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam

Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51

Level
13.16
16.78
21.52
12.95
13.02
25.27
13.13
25.56
34.41
12.88
15.60
34.10
13.90

Portsmouth
71/51

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.54
+0.92
-0.11
-0.05
+0.34
+0.25
-0.22
-0.43
-0.20
-0.32
none
-0.30
+0.10

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

81°
50°

SUNDAY

66°
36°

66°
41°

Warm with a blend of A couple of afternoon
sun and clouds
showers possible

73°
43°

Plenty of sunshine

Marietta
71/48

Murray City
70/45
Belpre
71/49

Athens
70/46

St. Marys
71/49

Parkersburg
72/51

Coolville
70/48

Elizabeth
71/50

Spencer
70/50

Buffalo
70/52
Milton
70/53

Ashland
70/54
Grayson
69/53

MONDAY

Mostly sunny

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
70/54

Clendenin
70/50

St. Albans
70/53

Huntington
70/54

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
52/40
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
73/52
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
83/60
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director at the University of Rio Grande.

SATURDAY

Wilkesville
70/47
POMEROY
Jackson
70/50
71/47
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
70/51
71/49
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
72/47
GALLIPOLIS
70/50
71/51
70/50

South Shore Greenup
70/53
69/50

37

Logan
70/44

McArthur
71/45

Very High

Primary: ragweed, other
Mold: 2390

Warm with clouds
and sun

Adelphi
70/44
Chillicothe
70/45

FRIDAY

79°
53°

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

Waverly
69/47

Pollen: 7

Low

MOON PHASES

THURSDAY

Nice with clouds and
sun

0

Primary: cladosporium
Wed.
7:32 a.m.
6:59 p.m.
5:27 p.m.
3:20 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

Fog in the morning; otherwise, mostly sunny
today. Clear tonight. High 70° / Low 50°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

62°

son, OH) ﬁnished with 17 digs
of her for the RedStorm, while
freshman Kacie Frame (Toledo,
OH) and senior Kinnison Donaldson (Jackson, OH) added 13
and 11 digs, respectively.
Kiara Rohrer had a match-best
15 kills in a losing cause for
Ohio Christian, while Autumn
Paugh and Katie Bush ﬁnished
with 27 and 10 assists, respectively.
Cayla Allen had 15 digs for
the Trailblazers and Jessica
Curry added 10 of her own in
the loss.
Rio Grande returns to action
Tuesday night when it travels to
Mount Hope, W.Va. for a match
at Appalachian Bible College.
First serve is set for 6:30 p.m.

a .184 attack percentage to the
RedStorm’s 20 attack errors and
.169 attack percentage.
But the Trailblazers were their
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — On
the heels of a tough loss to Indi- own worst enemy with 14 service errors on the afternoon.
ana University East on Friday
OCU’s only real bright spot
night, the University of Rio
on the day came late in the third
Grande volleyball reeled off a
set, scoring six of the set’s ﬁnal
solid comeback effort a little
eight winners to erase a 22-20
more than 12 hours later.
The RedStorm cruised to a 3-1 deﬁcit and extend the contest to
win (25-20, 25-19, 24-26, 25-13) a fourth stanza.
Junior Macy Roell (Farmersover Ohio Christian University,
ville, OH) had a match-high 32
Saturday afternoon, in River
assists and 23 digs to lead Rio
States Conference action at the
Grande in the winning effort,
Newt Oliver Arena.
while junior Rachel Gilkey
Rio Grande upped its record
to 12-5 overall and 3-2 in confer- (Nelsonville, OH) had 12 kills
and sophomore Jess Youse (Petence play.
tisville, OH) ended up with
The Trailblazers fell to 3-13
six solo blocks and three block
overall and 1-4 inside the RSC.
OCU actually outhit Rio at the assists.
Senior Katie Hemsley (Jacknet, ﬁnishing with 41 kills and

For Ohio Valley Publishing

76°
54°
47°

Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director at the University of Rio Grande.

Rio volleyball cruises past Trailblazers

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

8 AM

Orellana (Santiago, Chile)
tapped in the rebound of his
own missed shot - an attempt
which bounced off the hands
of UMFK keeper Glenroy
Osbourne - but the Bengals tied
the game with 15:17 left before
halftime on a penalty kick by
Travar McCollah.
Maine-Fort Kent ﬁnished
with a 19-13 advantage in
shots, including a 7-6 edge in
shots on goal.
Osbourne had four saves in
the Bengals’ winning effort.
Senior Richard Dearle (Castle Donington, England) had
ﬁve saves in the loss for the
RedStorm.
Rio Grande returns to action
on Thursday night when it
faces Cincinnati Christian University at Northern Kentucky
University.
Kickoff is set for 7:30 p.m.

swing against NAIA opponents
that also included an overtime
win at Lindsey Wilson College.
Rio Grande, ranked No. 6 in
NAIA, slipped to 10-2 with the
loss.
The RedStorm were whistled
for 20 fouls, seven of the cautions and both red cards,
playing the ﬁnal 44:36 of the
contest at a two-man disadvantage after freshman Sebastian
Borquez (Santiago, Chile) and
sophomore Cristobal Encina
(Santiago, Chile) were banished after both received multiple yellow cards.
Rio Grande hung tough
despite being short-handed and
appeared headed toward a tie,
but UMFK’s Nickalous Gayle
headed in a pass to the 18-yard
box by Alexi Sarmis for the
game-winner with 2:02 left in
the second extra session.
Rio grabbed a 1-0 lead just
6:44 into the contest when
sophomore Nicolas Cam

For Ohio Valley Publishing

By Bryan Walters

TODAY

Daily Sentinel

Charleston
70/53

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
66/44

Billings
69/25

Minneapolis
68/54
Chicago
68/49

Denver
80/47

Montreal
62/40
Toronto
63/46
Detroit
68/50

New York
69/54
Washington
70/58

Kansas City
70/52

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
75/52/s
49/43/r
84/62/t
67/60/r
70/57/r
69/25/pc
65/36/pc
67/53/pc
70/53/c
76/57/c
76/42/s
68/49/s
73/50/s
71/48/s
71/49/s
80/59/s
80/47/s
69/50/s
68/50/s
85/72/pc
82/62/s
73/48/s
70/52/s
91/64/pc
76/48/s
83/60/s
75/52/s
84/74/t
68/54/s
75/56/s
87/70/pc
69/54/sh
74/56/s
86/75/t
68/56/c
98/67/s
66/46/s
66/43/pc
74/59/c
71/59/r
74/50/s
76/48/s
73/52/s
52/40/pc
70/58/r

Hi/Lo/W
78/49/s
49/41/r
82/62/pc
64/57/r
68/54/sh
30/14/sn
49/24/pc
61/53/c
79/55/pc
79/60/c
66/15/pc
69/56/s
76/55/s
72/51/s
75/54/s
88/72/s
79/23/pc
70/53/pc
67/53/s
87/76/pc
87/71/pc
75/56/s
70/58/pc
89/56/s
78/61/pc
75/59/s
78/60/pc
88/76/t
70/53/pc
81/62/pc
90/72/pc
61/52/r
79/67/t
86/74/t
61/53/r
95/66/s
69/48/s
60/44/c
76/58/r
69/57/t
74/60/s
49/30/pc
71/55/s
54/36/s
70/57/sh

EXTREMES MONDAY

Atlanta
84/62

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

El Paso
84/64
Chihuahua
83/60

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

96° in Palm Springs, CA
8° in Antero Reservoir, CO

Global
High
Low

Houston
82/62
Monterrey
86/67

Miami
84/74

108° in Marble Bar, Australia
-16° in Ust-Omchug, Russia

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

OH-70107872

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