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                  <text>Grandparents
are not
cool?

Lady
Eagles
win title

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

41°

57°

53°

Sunny to partly cloudy and windy today.
Patchy clouds tonight. High 64° / Low 40°

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 10

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 168, Volume 73

Mark Porter
wins National
Recognition

Wednesday, October 23, 2019 s 50¢

A new chapter

Community Service
and Industry
Accomplishments
recognized

Financial.
The
TIME
Dealer of
the Year
award is
one of the
Porter
Staff Report
automobile industry’s most prestigious
NEW YORK — The
and highly coveted
nomination of Mark
honors. Recipients are
Porter, president of
among the nation’s most
Mark Porter Chevsuccessful auto dealers
rolet Buick GMC in
who also demonstrate
Pomeroy, Ohio, for the
a long-standing com2020 TIME Dealer of
mitment to community
the Year award was
announced this week by service. Porter, 63, was
chosen to represent the
TIME.
Ohio Automobile DealPorter is one of a
ers Association in the
select group of 49
national competition
dealer nominees from
across the country who — one of only 49 auto
dealers nominated for
will be honored at the
the 51st annual award
103rd annual National
from more than 16,000
Automobile Dealers
nationwide.
Association (NADA)
“Business growth and
Show in Las Vegas on
recognition is very gratFeb. 15, 2020. The
ifying,” nominee Porter
announcement of this
said. “But, ultimately,
year’s annual award
the ability to assist my
was made by Susanna
local community is the
Schrobsdorff, chief
most rewarding piece of
partnerships ofﬁcer,
my automotive career.”
TIME, and Doug Timmerman, president of
See PORTER | 5
Auto Finance for Ally

Pomeroy Council
discusses finances,
upcoming events
By Kayla Hawthorne

the vehicle fund.
Baker noted that
these accounts are
not payroll related.
POMEROY — The
Pomeroy Council autho- The overall ﬁnancial
rized the reallocation of situation and the future
funds within the police operation of the police
department during their department are not
directly related to this
meeting on Monday
reallocation.
evening.
During the meeting,
On the recommendaMayor Don Anderson
tion of Fiscal Ofﬁcer
Sue Baker, council real- asked council for their
recommendations about
located $900 from the
the upcoming Treat
vehicle expense fund
Street on Thursday,
to the telephone fund.
Council also reallocated Oct. 24. Anderson said
$1,300 from the vehicle he has heard that there
is a parade, organized
expense to the operatby Wolfe Mountain
ing supply fund. Baker
Entertainment, schedsaid the telephone and
operating supply funds uled for 7:30 p.m. on
Thursday, which is
were running low and
they did not expect to
See COUNCIL | 5
have many expenses in

Special to the Sentinel

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Comics: 8
Classifieds: 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.

Dean Wright | OVP

Holzer Health System supporters and employees cut a ribbon in front of the system’s new Holzer Wound Care Center on the Gallipolis
campus off Jackson Pike.

Holzer Wound Care Center opens

know what’s coming in…
We got into it and saw
our ﬁrst patient and
another one and another
we’d have a successful
Staff Report
one and we’re seven
one here.”
Dr. Glenn Fisher, medi- years down the road…
GALLIPOLIS —
cal director of the wound Short story, we needed
Holzer Health System
to do it. We needed this
care center, was invited
supporters and guests
attended the opening and by Canady to make a few kind of a facility here for
ribbon-cutting ceremony comments about the con- the patients who can’t
walk or drive or ride or
struction project.
of the system’s new Hol“This from a physician’s however or for whatever
zer Wound Care Center
reason can’t get ﬁve to
on its Gallipolis Campus standpoint, profession10 minutes down the
off Jackson Pike, Monday. ally and personally, is a
road without it being an
highlight,” said Fisher.
Holzer Health System
undue tax on their ability.
“We got into wound
Chief CEO Dr. Michael
We have state-of-the-art
care at Holzer not quite
Canady welcomed visiequipment. We have the
seven years ago. Seven
tors.
training and are up-toyears this November,
“This is a long day in
date with all of our staff.”
we opened in Jackson.
coming and we’ve been
Matt Owens, HealogI remember being one
working for the better
ics area vice president of
of the ﬁrst docs there to
part of two years with
see patients. I remember operations, was asked to
Healogics to get this
speak next.
being unbelievably nerproject off the ground,”
“It’s not always easy to
vous. I knew we’d been
said Canady. “We knew
ﬁnd physicians solely dedtrained well. Healogics
we had the market for
icated to wound care the
does a great job of trainmore and better wound
way Dr. Fisher is,” said
care in Gallipolis and our ing docs when they go
Owens. “It’s an honor for
down to Jacksonville for
program was successful
him to have a facility like
a week. You just never
in Jackson so we knew

this and an honor for us
to work with somebody
like him.”
Holzer’s center consists of two Hyperbaric
Oxygen (HBO) Therapy
Chambers, as well as
specially trained professionals available to assist
patients with their wound
care needs. To provide
this service, Holzer
Health System partnered
with Healogics, Inc., a
national leader in wound
care treatment centers.
According to a press
release from Holzer, “Hyperbaric Oxygen
Therapy is an essential
part of chronic wound
treatment plans. This
type of medical treatment
increases the amount of
oxygen in the patient’s
blood, allowing oxygen
to pass more easily
through the plasma into
See CHAPTER | 5

Cancer survivor Trick or Treat,
dinner to be held Halloween events
playing Bingo for door
prizes. Door prizes are
donated from local busiROCKSPRINGS
nesses.
— The annual Meigs
The main dinner
County Cancer Survivor
funder is Ann Mordinner will be held on
ris Cancer Awareness
Friday. Nov. 1 in the
Poker Run. The event is
Meigs High School Caforganized by the Meigs
eteria.
County Cancer Initiative
The theme for the
event is “No One Fights (MCCI).
Founded in 1993,
Alone” and will be patriMCCI was established
otic in nature. The dinthrough the Appalachia
ner begins at 6:30 p.m.
Leadership Initiative on
on Nov. 1.
Cancer (ALIC), funded
The guest speaker is
cancer survivor and vet- by the National Cancer
eran Del Pullins. Cancer Institute to improve cancer awareness and consurvivor and veteran
trol in Appalachia. MCCI
Scott Warner will be
focuses on increasing
singing.
awareness, providing
The dinner is for any
education on ways to
Meigs County Cancer
prevent cancer, promotSurvivor and a guest. A
ing cancer prevention
survivor is anyone who
has heard the words “You and the importance of
early detection of cancer
have cancer” regardfor long-term survival.
less of their location on
MCCI’s grassroots efforts
the cancer journey. The
catered meal is free.
See CANCER | 5
New this year will be

Staff Report

By Sarah Hawley

(corner of Main Street
and Butternut Avenue).
The parade, beginning
at 5:30 p.m., will then
MEIGS COUNTY —
Trick or Treat and many travel up Main Street,
ending at the parking
other Halloween activities are planned through- lot at the baseball ﬁelds.
The parade is open to
out the county over the
all members of the comnext several days.
munity to participate
Reedsville, Rutland
and Tuppers Plains will including businesses,
each hold Trick or Treat clubs, sports teams, and
civic groups. The theme
from 6-7 p.m. on Oct.
is kid-friendly in nature
24.
so participants are
Pomeroy’s annual
advised against extreme
Treat Street will take
costumes which would
place from 6:30-8 p.m.
be too frightening for
on Oct. 24. The event
kids. (NOTE: This is
will include costume
a time change from the
judging at 7:30 p.m. in
originally announced
O’Brien Park just off
event).
Court Street.
On Oct. 31, Trick or
In addition, new for
Treat will take place
2019 will the Jack-OLantern Jubilee Hallow- from 6-7 p.m. in Chester,
een Parade in Pomeroy. Middleport and Racine,
Lineup for the parade with Trick or Treat in
will be at 5 p.m. on Oct. Syracuse from 6-7:30
24 in the employee park- p.m.
ing lot of the Farmers
See EVENTS | 5
Bank Corporate Building

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

�2 Wednesday, October 23, 2019

OBITUARIES
MARGARET ‘MARGIE’
DELANO FOSTER CLEEK
COLUMBUS — With
grace, Margaret “Margie”
Delano Foster Cleek, 86,
passed away at Dublin
Retirement Village, Oct.
20, 2019, surrounded by
love and greeted by those
who called her home.
Born July 8, 1933 in
Plants, Ohio. Long time
Columbus (Clintonville)
resident and devoted
member at North Broadway United Methodist
Church, member of TriVillage La Sertoma and
Clintonville Women’s
Club.
Surviving are her
children, Lori (Cleek)
Graves, John (Jacqueline) Cleek and Heather
(Cleek) Minor; sisters,
Mary Jane (Matt) Carr,
Edna “Dee Dee” (Ted)
Grindley and Miriam
(Dale) Compliment;
brother, Waid (Shelba)
Foster; grandchildren
Zach (Cathleen) Graves,
Vincent (Ally) Graves,
Garrison (Maggie)
Graves, Noah Minor,
Mason Minor and Mav-

erick Minor; great-grandchildren, Penelope Graves
and Luma Jane Graves.
Preceded in death by
her admiring husband
of 60 years, Carroll D.
Cleek; brother, Charles
“Chuck” (Ginny) Foster;
sister Joy (Charles) Gibson; her doting parents
and extended members
of the Foster/Cleek family.
Services to be held
Friday, Oct. 25, 2019, at
2 p.m. with calling hours
from noon-2 p.m. at
North Broadway United
Methodist Church, 48 E
North Broadway Street,
Columbus, Ohio 43214.
Burial service to follow at Union Cemetery.
Shaw-Davis Funeral
Home has been entrusted
with the arrangements.
To sign the online
guest book, please visit
www.Shaw-Davis.com.
Family would appreciate any contributions to
be made to Capital City
Hospice, Columbus, Ohio
in Margie’s memory.

PARK
BIDWELL — John Park, 69, Bidwell, Ohio, died
Tuesday, October 22, 2019 at his home.
Funeral service will be held noon, Friday, October
25, 2019 in the Morgan Center Christian Holiness Church, Bidwell with Reverend Ted Russell
ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Morgan Center
Cemetery, Bidwell, with Full Military Graveside
Rites conducted by Gallia County Veterans Funeral
Detail. Family and friends may call on the family at
the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton Chapel,
Thursday evening from 5 to 7 p.m. McCoy-Moore
Funearl Home is assisting the family with arrangements.
GILMORE
CHESHIRE — Lionel L. Gilmore, 78, of
Cheshire, Ohio, died Tuesday, October 22, 2019 at
Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center. The
funeral service for Lionel will be held at 1 p.m. on
Saturday, October 26, 2019 at Willis Funeral Home
with Pastor Steve Little ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends may call from
6 - 8 p.m. on Friday, October 25, 2019 at the funeral
home. A complete obituary will be published in
Thursday’s paper.
ROBERTSON
ASHTON — Ronnie Dale Robertson, 72, of Ashton,
died on Oct. 19, 2019.
Funeral services will be held at Deal Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant, Thursday, Oct. 24, 2019 at 1 p.m.
Burial will follow in Pete Meadows Cemetery in Glenwood. Friends may visit the family on Thursday from
11 a.m.-1 p.m., prior to the service.
ALLBRIGHT
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Robert Edward
“Bob” Allbright, 86, of Point Pleasant, W.Va. died
on Monday, Oct. 21, 2019 at Holzer Senior Care
Center in Bidwell.
A funeral service will be held at 2 p.m., Friday,
Oct. 25, 2019 at New Hope Bible Baptist Church
in Point Pleasant with Pastor Mel Mock and Pastor Todd Godby ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at
Suncrest Cemetery in Point Pleasant. The family
will receive friends two hours prior to the funeral
service Friday at the church.
Arrangements are under the direction of Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)

OBITUARIES/NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Meigs County Retired Teachers meet
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Retired Teachers group
met at the Meigs Senior Center
on Oct. 17 for lunch and a program. The president, Gay Perrin,
opened the meeting with the
welcome and led in the Pledge
of Allegiance. Linda Lear had
devotions, reading “Thank you,
God, for the little things” and
giving the prayer before the
meal. Information was presented
from the Meigs Humane Society
about the proposed animal shelter levy to build a feline shelter.
It was announced that the
Habitat for Humanity house in
Middleport is ﬁnished and the
dedication service will be at 5
p.m. on Nov. 4. Members will
attend to present household
items to the family. The next

meeting will be on Dec. 5 at
Trinity Church, with the Eastern bell choir playing. Members
are asked to being in children’s
books and art supplies as Christmas gifts.
The program was presented
by John Matson, associate director of the Blakeslee Center,
showing before and after photos
of the old school building which
has, over several years, been
renovated into a multi-generational facility. This new facility
is set to open by spring, and will
be a great asset for all of Meigs
County, with many programs
for all ages. The building was
purchased in 2014 after being
vacant for several years. The
transformation has been truly
amazing, and has required much

work on the part of the center
staff. There will be a kitchen
and dining area for lunches,
game and craft rooms, an extensive Wellness Center, a training
center for classes and seminars,
and an adult day care center.
There is a beautiful banquet
and reception room, where the
cafeteria was, available for large
dinners and reception events.
The old school auditorium has
become a theater with new seating for 500, with state of the art
lighting and sound. Both ﬂoors
of the building will be used and
an elevator installed. The group
was very impressed with the
presentation, and is looking forward to having such a facility.
Submitted by Gay Perrin.

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 spaceavailable basis and in
chronological order.
Events can be emailed
to: TDSnews@aimmediamidwest.com.

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.

are serving cheesy potato &amp; sausage casserole,
salad, roll, and dessert.

Saturday,
Oct. 26

MIDDLEPORT —
Middleport Fire Department will host a ﬁsh fry
with serving beginning
at 11 a.m.
CHESTER TWP. —
The Meigs County Ikes
RACINE — An Ameri- monthly meeting at 7
p.m. at the clubhouse on
can Red Cross Blood
Sugar Run Road.
Drive, sponsored by
the Southern National
Honor Society, will be
held at Southern High
School from 8:30 a.m.
to 1:30 p.m. To schedule
MIDDLEPORT —
Ash Street Church at 398 an appointment call
REEDSVILLE —
Ash Street in Middleport 1-800-RED-CROSS or
South Bethel Comis having Fall Fellowship visit redcrossblood.org
munity Church will
and enter SouthernLoc- host Homecoming with
at 6 p.m. There will be
a corn hole tournament, alHS to schedule. WalkSunday school at 9 a.m.,
ins are welcome.
campﬁre, chili cook-off,
church at 10:30 a.m.,
MIDDLEPORT —
music, and more. For
donner at noon, and an
The monthly Free Com- afternoon program at
questions call 740-742munity Dinner at the
2665.
1:30 p.m. Guest singers
Middleport Church of
will be Delivered. Pastor
Christ will be held at 5
Linda Damewood invites
p.m. Everyone is welthe public to join for a
come. This month they
fun day of fellowship.

Friday,
Oct. 25

Wednesday,
Oct. 23

Sunday,
Oct. 27

Thursday,
Oct. 24

Monday,
Oct. 28
POMEROY — Book
Club “Rabbit Cake” by
Anne Hartnett will be
discussed. Pomeroy
Library at 6 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT —
The meeting of the
Meigs County Veterans
Service Commission
will be held at 9 a.m.
at the ofﬁce located at
97 North Second Ave.,
Suite 2, in Middleport.

Friday,
Nov. 1
MARIETTA — The
Buckeye Hills Regional
Council Executive
Committee, which also
serves as the RTPO
Policy Committee, will
meet at 11:30 a.m.
located at 1400 Pike
Street, Marietta, Ohio.
If you have any questions regarding this
meeting, please contact
Jenny Simmons at 740376-1026.

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.

Trick or Treat times
Oct. 24 — Reedsville, 6-7 p.m.; Rutland, 6-7 p.m.;
Pomeroy Treat Street 6:30-8 p.m. with costume
judging at 7:30 p.m. in O’Brien Park; Jack-O-Lantern Jubilee Halloween Parade in Pomeroy at 7:30
p.m.; Tuppers Plains, 6-7 p.m.
Oct. 31 — Chester, 6-7 p.m.; Middleport 6-7 p.m.;
Racine 6-7 p.m. with party at the ﬁrehouse after;
Syracuse 6-7:30 p.m.

Cancer survivor dinner
ROCKSPRINGS —The 2019 Meigs County Cancer Survivor Dinner will be held on Friday, Nov. 1 at
6:30 p.m. in the Meigs High School Cafeteria. Guest
speaker will be military veteran and cancer survivor
Del Pullins. The event includes entertainment, a
free catered meal and prizes. Please RSVP to Courtney Midkiff at 740-992-6626 ext. 1028 or courtney.
midkiff@meigs-health.com by Oct. 25.

Coin exhibition
POMEROY — OH-Kan Coin Club will be having
their Coin Exhibition on Nov. 1 from 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
in the Farmers Bank Lobby, 640 E. Main St., Pomeroy. There will be local coin, currency, postcards,
and photos. Meigs County tokens from Pomeroy
National &amp; Citizens from the 1800’s will be on display. Come by and see a part of Meigs County his-

tory (not for sale). Free evaluations will be offered if
you have old coins. There will also be an actual Lazy
Duce ($2 bill from the Pomeroy National Bank) on
display.

Open mic gospel sing
POMEROY — Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church
will host an open mic gospel sing the ﬁrst Saturday
of each month at 6 p.m. Singers are invited to bring
their music and join in. Those who play an instrument can come and play with other musicians. A
potluck meal will follow the service. The church will
provide the table service. For more information call
740-992-0916 or 740-591-8190.

Road closures
MEIGS COUNTY — State Route 124 will close
on Monday, Sept. 9 to allow crews to replace a
culvert that carries the route over Forked Run.The
closure will be between the entrance to Forked Run
State Park and Curtis Hollow Road. During the
work, trafﬁc will be detoured via SR-248, SR-7, and
SR-681. The project is scheduled for completion in
mid-November, weather permitting.
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport Hill”
is closed due to a slip until further notice. Tickets
will be issued to those who drive through the closed
portion of the road.
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs County Road 3, New
Lima Road, will be closed beginning Monday, Oct.
28, to allow county forces to repair a slip just north
of T-369A, McMurray Road. This closing will be in
effect for approximately three weeks.

Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
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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
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Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
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109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

IN BRIEF

Nike CEO to step down
NEW YORK — Nike said Tuesday that its longtime CEO Mark Parker is stepping down early next
year.
He will be replaced by board member John Donahoe, who formerly ran e-commerce company eBay.
Parker will become executive chairman of the board.
Nike’s sales have been on the rise as the company focuses on selling more of its swoosh-branded
sneakers online and on its apps. The company’s ﬁrst
quarter earnings last month soared past expectations. But Nike has also been plagued by scandals
recently.
Three weeks ago, renowned track coach Alberto
Salazar was banned from the sport for four years
by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency for running experiments with supplements and testosterone that
were bankrolled and supported by Nike, along

with possessing and trafﬁcking testosterone. Nike
announced that it was shutting down its elite
Oregon Project track and ﬁeld program overseen by
Salazar in the wake of the scandal.
Parker said in a TV interview with CNBC Tuesday that the scandal had “absolutely nothing” with
him leaving the top job.

Proud Boys get 4 years
NEW YORK (AP) — Two members of the farright Proud Boys were sentenced Tuesday to four
years in prison for their roles in a street ﬁght after a
speech last year at New York’s Metropolitan Republican Club.
Judge Mark Dwyer said the lengthy sentences
should deter people from engaging in what he called
“political street brawls.”

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 23, 2019 3

Trump likens House impeachment inquiry to ‘a lynching’
By Darlene Superville
and Jay Reeves
Associated Press

OH-70146972

WASHINGTON —
Stirring up painful memories of America’s racist
past, President Donald
Trump on Tuesday compared the Democratic-led
impeachment inquiry
to a lynching, a practice
once widespread across
the South in which angry
mobs killed thousands of
black people.
The use of such inﬂammatory imagery to lash
out at the House investigation into Trump’s
dealings with Ukraine
triggered an outcry from
Democratic legislators,
some mild rebukes but
also some agreement
from the president’s
Republican allies and condemnation from outside
the Washington Beltway.
A woman whose father
was killed by Ku Klux
Klansmen in Alabama in
1957 called the comment
“unbelievable.”
Trump has spent recent
days pressuring Republicans to give him stronger
support in countering the
impeachment investigation.
His tweeted suggestion that they “remember
what they are witnessing
here — a lynching” came
a day after Trump said
the GOP needs to “get
tougher and ﬁght” against
the fast-moving inquiry
into whether he tried to
withhold U.S. military aid
until Ukraine’s government agreed to investigate Democrat Joe Biden
and his son.
The White House
said later Tuesday that
Trump was not comparing impeachment to “one
of the darkest moments
in American history.”
Spokesman Hogan Gidley said Trump sent the
tweet to point out what

he feels is his continued
mistreatment by the news
media.
Trump, who has been
complaining about unfairness in the impeachment
process being led by
House Democrats began
his tweet: “So some day,
if a Democrat becomes
President and the Republicans win the House,
even by a tiny margin,
they can impeach the
President, without due
process or fairness or any
legal rights.”
It was the latest
instance in which Trump
has tried to advance
his political interests
by unleashing racially
inﬂammatory language.
Over the summer, he
told four Democratic congresswomen of color to
go back to their “broken
and crime-infested” countries, although the four
are U.S. citizens. Earlier
in his presidency, Trump
unleashed a ﬁrestorm by
saying there were “very
ﬁne people” on both sides
of a 2017 white supremacist rally and counterprotest in Charlottesville,
Virginia, that resulted
in the death of an antiracism demonstrator.
The reference to a
lynching struck a deep,
painful chord for black
people whose relatives
died in racially motivated
killings.
Malinda Edwards,
whose father was forced
to jump off an Alabama
river bridge in 1957 by
Klansmen who heard that
he had smiled at a white
woman, said Trump was
making light of the horror
experienced by victims.
“Either he’s very ignorant or very insensitive
or very racist and just
doesn’t care,” Edwards,
66, of Dayton, Ohio,
said of the president.
Her father’s name is now
among those on a memo-

Pablo Martinez Monsivais | AP

President Donald Trump, shown during a Cabinet meeting Monday, on Tuesday compared the Democratic-led impeachment inquiry to
a lynching.

rial in Montgomery,
Alabama, honoring more
than 4,000 lynching victims.
Janet Langhart Cohen
told The Associated Press
that Trump is among too
many whites who have
disrespected lynching
victims and their descendants. Her distant cousin,
Jimmy Gillenwaters, was
lynched in Kentucky in
the early 1900s.
Trump “knows what
he’s doing. He knows
how to hurt and divide,”
Cohen, the wife of former
Republican Sen. William
Cohen of Maine, told The
Associated Press.
Bernice King, a daughter of the Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr., tweeted
that Trump’s comparison
“is a reﬂection of the
very real trajectory of
our nation and the very
repugnant evil of racism, which still permeates both legislation and
language in the United

States.”
Former Maryland Lt.
Gov. Michael Steele, a
black Republican, went a
step further by tweeting
a graphic black-and-white
photo of a black man
hanging from a tree and
said: “This is a lynching.
Trump this is not happening to you and it’s
pathetic that you act like
you’re such a victim.”
Trump’s closest Republican backers in Congress
agreed with him, though
others rejected his comparison.
“This is a lynching in
every sense,” said Sen.
Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.,
who is close to Trump.
But Senate Majority
Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., criticized
Trump’s “unfortunate
choice of words,” saying
it’s better to describe the
impeachment process as
“unfair.”
Democrats expressed
outrage that Trump

would equate impeachment to a lynching and
called on him to delete
the tweet or apologize.
“That is one word
no president ought to
apply to himself,” said
Democratic Rep. James
Clyburn of South Carolina, the highest-ranking
African American in Congress. “That is a word
that we ought to be very,
very careful about using.”
Added Rep. Bobby
Rush, D-Ill., who is also
black: “Do you know
how many people who
look like me have been
lynched, since the inception of this country, by
people who look like you.
Delete this tweet.”
Sen. Doug Jones,
D-Ala., tweeted to
Trump: “No sir! No, @
realDonaldTrump: this
is NOT a lynching, and
shame on you for invoking such a horriﬁc act
that was used as a weapon to terrorize and mur-

Mark Porter
Chrysler Dodge
Jeep and Ram

we make car dreams come true

der African Americans.”
The Congressional
Black Caucus encouraged Trump to visit
the National Memorial
for Peace and Justice
in Montgomery, also
known as the “Lynching
Museum.”
Trump often tries to
portray himself as the
victim of any controversy
he is embroiled in. His
tweet came one day after
he lashed out at critics of
his now-rescinded plan to
schedule a major international summit for 2020 at
one of his own properties
in Florida.
He complained about
people who invoke the
“phony emoluments
clause” — a section in
the Constitution that
forbids presidents from
receiving gifts or payments from foreign
governments without the
consent of Congress. The
impeachment process is
also in the Constitution.

�Opinion
4 Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Good to
the last
bad drop
September was a very bad month for anyone
concerned about the environment and anyone
who lives in it. That, you understand, is us.
In the first salvo, a 1973 law
enacted during the Nixon administration, the Endangered Species
Act, is itself now endangered. A
new series of rollbacks have conservationists worried about the
survival of at-risk species. It’s difficult for a casual environmentalist
Marla
to become too enraged over the
snail darter or any of the small,
Boone
Contributing un-beautiful creatures found in
columnist
streams. (The professionals, of
course, have been worried sick for
years). Unfortunately, most people
do not sit up and take notice until more majestically endowed animals such as the bald eagle
or grizzly bear or California condor are threatened. But even the most minute piece of the
environmental chain is still a piece. It impacts
the chain above it and below it. To paraphrase
John Donne, no man and certainly no other animal is an island.
The effectiveness of the Endangered Species
Act (ESA) is reflected in the fact that ninetynine per cent of the animals protected by the
act did not go extinct. This is astonishing, especially in the face of out-of-control population
growth of humans and loss of habitat for animals. The ESA is administered by the secretary
of the interior. Presiding Secretary David Bernhardt says it’s time to bring the ESA “into the
21-century.” According to Time, new rules for
implementing the act will no longer give threatened species the same protections as endangered species. In an especially alarming turn of
events, government officials are now instructed
to give weight to economic issues before including a species as threatened or endangered.
Anyone who takes 30 seconds to read that last
sentence can see how patently ridiculous it is.
A species is either in trouble or it’s not. And
most species that are in trouble are in trouble
because of negative human interference. Leah
Gerber, an ecologist at Arizona State University
put it well. “Recovering a species is a biological
question, not an economic question,” she said.
Saving the animals while we ourselves survive
is great right up until none of us have clean
water to drink. In the second salvo, the current administration has taken it upon itself to
rescind a vital provision of the Clean Water Act.
The CWA was also enacted during the Nixon
administration. Say what you will about Richard Nixon (and I have said plenty), the man
was very forward-thinking when it came to the
environment. He took two important steps to
protect the nation’s water and threatened animal groups.
The Clean Water Act is the primary federal
law in the United States governing water pollution. Its objective is to “restore and maintain
the chemical, physical and biological integrity
of the nation’s waters.” It is administered by the
Environmental Protection Agency. The EPA is
headed by its third administrator in three years.
The first was an acting director. Then, just to
prove irony isn’t dead, Donald Trump nominated Scott Pruitt to lead the agency. Pruitt,
while Attorney General of Oklahoma, came
out against all environmental regulations. He
described himself as a leading advocate against
the EPAs activist agenda and sued the EPA 14
times. He rejects the overwhelming scientific
consensus that human-caused carbon dioxide
emissions are the primary contributor to climate change. This is the man thought by the
president best-suited to lead the agency … an
agency Mr. Pruitt clearly disdained. Mr. Pruitt
resigned his office when faced with a flurry of
indictments for corruption. The irony continues
with the current administrator, Andrew Wheeler, who is a former coal industry lobbyist.
The act that was revoked in September is the
Waters of the United States provision of the
CWA. The Waters of the United States placed
limits on polluting chemicals that can be used
near streams, wetlands, and other bodies of
water. These restrictions are now lifted, giving industrial polluters a green light to dump
harmful chemicals into our water system. Anyone who has waded a stream or visited a fastdisappearing wetland lately knows these waters
are already in jeopardy. Much of the small end
of the food chain (such as crawdads) is almost
gone. When the small end of the food chain
goes, the large end inevitably follows. That, you
understand, is us.
Marla Boone resides in Covington and writes for Miami Valley Today.

THEIR VIEW

Grandparents are not cool?
One of our granddaughters turned 13 this week,
and the topic of discussion for my wife and I
the past couple of weeks
has been taking an inventory of how many of our
grandchildren still want
to hang out with us.
Alarmingly, so it seems
anyway, the list is shrinking.
I don’t know how it
happened or when it happened, I only know that
it has happened that the
cries like “I want to stay
at Papa and Mamaw’s!”
have not yet become,
“Please don’t make me go
to those people’s house!”
But it is one step away
from it. And that step is
silence.
Oh, maybe four out of
11 want to come hang
out, but now we, well,
especially I, have to go
into Super Papa mode
to win over the ones I’ve
lost, and retain the ones
who still think I’m cool
— or at least tolerable.
I discovered this weekend that plying them
with their favorite food
(pizza), and ice cream
still does the trick for at
least two that are teetering back and forth on the
“Are Papa and Mamaw
still cool?” see-saw.
OK, I must admit,
Papa generally loses

about it, had visthem ﬁrst because
its become more
he’s no fun.
frequent, the glamTo this moment
our would have
I don’t understand
worn off much
why 2-, 5-, 7-, 9-,
more quickly than
10- or 11- through
it did. Further,
13-year-olds don’t
I guess had we
think watching
Herb
encountered a
football or old
Day
Porter Wagoner
Contributing pirate ship invasion from the
reruns is not cool! columnist
Boston Harbor, or
However, I do have
had we come runa 16-year-old who
ning from a briar patch
digs Porter Wagoner,
That Nashville Music and in Chavies, Ky. with copperheads and rattlesnakes
the Gaither reruns.
hanging on our arms by
I always thought my
their fangs, our enthusigrandparents were cool,
asm would have lessened
but in all fairness, one
set of grandparents lived sooner.
Since I have just now
in Boston, Mass. right
on the harbor where you turned over a new leaf of
honesty, my wife, their
could watch the ships
Mamaw, is still cool to
come and go, and when
them. I think probably
we would visit (maybe
dealing with a not always
once each year, or every
cooperative Papa makes
other year) it was food
much different than what even an angelic Mamaw
we were used to down on lose some of her attracthe farm, and a lot of that tion to the grandkids.
Naw, who am I kidwas jelly-ﬁlled donuts!
ding. She is still the
The other grandparcool one. I’m the stuffy,
ents lived on the side of
smelly old man watching
a mountain in the hills
of Kentucky, cooked on a those old music shows.
wood-burning cook stove, I have heard them ask
their Mamaw “Why does
had a roaring ﬁreplace,
he watch those awful
no television but lots of
shows?”
animals and unexplored
I suppose that in retrorattlesnake and copperhead infested thickets to spect, I should consider
changing my ways and
roam through on each
becoming more fun.
visit. How cool.
Maybe I should consider
I guess to be honest

going to the roller rink,
or to the one of hundreds
of fun places that Mamaw
thinks to take them to.
Maybe I should look
upon this reﬂection as an
Ebenezer Scrooge experience. Well, that ain’t
gonna happen.
I’ll let Mamaw be the
fun one, and I’ll catch
the hugs and kisses from
them when they return.
That may not work forever, but for now, it’s
pretty nice.
They gather round
when Papa opens the guitar case or chases them
through the house with
monster claws out and
growling like a grizzly
bear.
I may not be the coolest of the grandparents,
but I think they dig the
old man just ﬁne. See, a
good reﬂection session is
good for all of us once in
a while. I’m much cooler
than I thought.
Now let’s work on
Mamaw.
On second thoughts,
I’d best leave well enough
alone, if you know what
I mean.

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.

ELECTION LETTERS POLICY
The deadline for The Daily
Sentinel to receive original, election-related Letters to the Editor
pertaining to issues or candidates
in the Nov. 5 general election is
4 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 29. Rebuttal
letters must be received no later
than 4 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 31.
Election-related Letters to the
Editor must be 300 words or less
and are subject to editing by the
Sentinel. Letters must maintain a

degree of civility and good taste.
Election-related letters are limited to one per household. Letters
from candidates or their families
will not be published. Due to
space restrictions, Sentinel staff
cannot guarantee that all rebuttal
letters will be published in the
print version of the newspaper,
though those meeting the above
criteria will be published online.
Letters should be emailed to

The Daily Sentinel at tdsnews@
aimmediamidwest.com and
include the writer’s name, community of residence, and a daytime phone number to verify
authorship (and to answer any
questions we may have). Signed
letters may also be dropped off at
The Daily Sentinel ofﬁce, located
at 109 West Second Street,
Pomeroy, during normal business
hours.

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Wednesday,
Oct. 23, the 296th day of
2019. There are 69 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On Oct. 23, 1973,
President Richard
Nixon agreed to turn
over White House tape
recordings subpoenaed

by the Watergate special woman to make a public
prosecutor to Judge John solo airplane ﬂight, reaching an altitude of 12 feet
J. Sirica.
at a park in Fort Wayne,
Ind.
On this date
In 1915, tens of thouIn 1707, the ﬁrst Parliasands of women paraded
ment of Great Britain,
up Fifth Avenue in New
created by the Acts of
York City, demanding the
Union between England
right to vote.
and Scotland, held its
In 1925, talk show host
ﬁrst meeting.
Johnny Carson was born
In 1910, Blanche S.
in Corning, Iowa.
Scott became the ﬁrst

In 1944, the World War
II Battle of Leyte (LAY’tee) Gulf began, resulting
in a major Allied victory
against Japanese forces.
In 1956, a studentsparked revolt against
Hungary’s Communist
rule began; as the revolution spread, Soviet forces
started entering the country, and the uprising was
put down within weeks.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

OHIO BRIEFS

Flags drop to
honor soldier
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Gov. Mike DeWine has ordered ﬂags in
parts of the state lowered
to half-staff to honor an
Ohio soldier killed in an
Army training accident in
Georgia.
Ohio’s Republican
governor on Tuesday
ordered U.S. and Ohio
ﬂags ﬂown at half-staff at
all public buildings and
grounds in Ashtabula
County and at the Ohio
Statehouse, the Vern Riffe
Center and the Rhodes
State Ofﬁce Tower in
Columbus to honor of
Cpl. Thomas Walker. The
Army says the 22-year-old
Conneaut man and two
other soldiers died Sunday when their armored
vehicle rolled off a bridge
and was submerged in a
stream during training at

Fort Stewart, Georgia.
DeWine’s order is
effective until sunset the
day of Walker’s funeral.
Details about the timing
of the funeral weren’t
immediately announced.

Gunman’s
records sought
CINCINNATI (AP)
— News organizations
seeking school records
of a gunman who killed
nine people in Dayton
have appealed to the Ohio
Supreme Court after a
lower court rejected their
bid for access to the ﬁles.
The organizations ﬁled
a notice of appeal Monday over the decision by
three 2nd District Court
of Appeals judges.
That Oct. 2 ruling
upheld Bellbrook-Sugarcreek Local Schools’ denial of access to Connor
Betts’ high school ﬁles.

Council
From page 1

during the trick-or-treat event. Council agreed that if
the organizers want a parade, it needs to be ﬁnished
by 6 p.m. Treat Street is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. to
8 p.m. (Editor’s note: Since the meeting, the time of
the parade scheduled for Oct. 24 in Pomeroy has been
moved to 5:30 p.m. with lineup at 5 p.m.)
Council entered into an executive session to discuss
“employee compensation.” No decision was made.
The next meeting of Pomeroy Village Council is
scheduled for Monday, Nov. 4 at 7 p.m.
Kayla Hawthorne is a freelance writer for The Daily Sentinel.

Events

will be “A Dinner to Die
for” themed dinner held
inside the haunted house
at Wolfe Mountain EnterFrom page 1
tainment. Enjoy dinner
inside the haunted house
In Racine, a party following Trick or Treat will (while it’s not operatbe held at the ﬁre station ing) in one of rooms on
with a costume contest to the tour. Food will be
take place. Prizes for the themed to the event and
contest are sponsored by served by some of the
ghoulish staff. Advanced
RACO.
Other Halloween activi- reservations are required.
“The More the Scarties include the annual
ier” will be presented
haunted house at Wolfe
Oct. 25 and 26 at 7 p.m.
Mountain, as well as
and Oct. 27 at 2 p.m. by
“A Dinner to Die for”
the River City Players in
themed dinner experithe Middleport Village
ence and the River City
Hall gymnasium. Tickets
Players production of
available at the door $10
“The More the Scarier”
each, or from The Fabric
for three shows.
Shop or any actor in the
The Haunted House
show.
Experience returns for
More on the River City
its 5th annual event. The
Players production will
event will be presented
at Wolfe Mountain Enter- appear in an upcoming
tainment on Oct. 24, 25, edition of The Daily Sentinel.
26, 30, and 31. General
admission is $5 per perSarah Hawley is the managing
son, per trip.
editor of The Daily Sentinel.
On Oct. 28 and 29

Cancer

tion, and promote cancer
prevention and the importance of early detection
for long-term survival.
From page 1
Among the supports
help residents to become for those battling cancer
are gas and food cards
more aware of when and
where to seek screening, for those traveling for
treatments. Those vouchhow to navigate through
the increasingly complex ers are purchased for gas
stations and restaurants
health care system, and
where to turn for commu- which can also be found
in areas where individunity resources.
MCCI works to address als are receiving treatment.
cancer health disparities
Those wishing to
in collaboration with
several health and human attend should RSVP by
Oct. 25 to Courtney Midservices organizations.
kiff at 740-992-6626 ext.
The objective of the
1028 or courtney.midcoalition is to increase
awareness, provide educa- kiff@meigs-health.com.

Chapter
From page 1

wounds. In the chamber, the patient is surrounded
with 100 percent oxygen at higher than normal
atmospheric pressure. Throughout the treatment,
the patient is supervised by a specially-trained physician and monitored by a technician. While a patient
is located in the chamber, there is the opportunity to
watch television or listen to music. In addition, the
technician can be available to speak to the patient
through the conveniently located phone available on
the chamber to answer any questions, or to provide
conversation during the treatment.”

Wednesday, October 23, 2019 5

Diplomat: Trump linked aid to probe demand
By Lisa Mascaro,
Mary Clare Jalonick
and Laurie Kellman
Associated Press

WASHINGTON —
Former U.S. Ambassador
William Taylor provided
lawmakers Tuesday with
a vivid, detailed and
what some called a “disturbing” account of the
way President Donald
Trump wanted to put the
new Ukraine president
“in a public box” by
demanding the quid pro
quo at the center of the
impeachment probe.
In a lengthy opening
statement to House
investigators, Taylor
described Trump’s
demand that “everything” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy wanted, including
vital military aid to
counter Russia, hinged
on making a public vow
that he would investigate
Democrats going back to
the 2016 U.S. election as
well as a company linked
to the family of Trump’s
potential 2020 Democratic rival Joe Biden.
Taylor testiﬁed that
what he discovered in
Kyiv was the Trump
administration’s “irregular” back channel to
foreign policy led by the
president’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, and
“ultimately alarming circumstances” that threatened to erode the United
States’ relationship with
a budding Eastern European ally.
Lawmakers who
emerged after hours of
the private deposition
were stunned at Taylor’s
account, which some

said established a “direct
line” to the quid pro
quo at the center of the
impeachment probe.
“It was shocking,” said
Rep. Karen Bass, a California Democrat. “It was
very clear that it was
required — if you want
the assistance you have
to make a public statement.”
She characterized it
as, “It’s this for that.”
Rep. Dina Titus, a
Democrat from Nevada,
said, “You can see how
damning this is.”
Titus said, “This certainly makes it pretty
clear what was going on.
And it was a quid pro
quo.”
The account reaches
to the highest levels of
the administration, drawing in Vice President
Mike Pence and Trump’s
acting chief of staff Mick
Mulvaney, and slices
the core of Republican
defense of the administration and president’s
insistence of no wrongdoing.
It lays bare the
struggle between former
National Security Adviser John Bolton and those
who a previous witness
described as the “three
amigos” — Giuliani and
two other diplomats
— who were leading
an alternative Ukraine
policy vis-a-vis Russia.
Taylor’s appearance
was among the most
anticipated before House
investigators because
of a series of text messages in which he called
Trump’s attempt to hold
back military aid to
Ukraine “crazy.”
His testimony opens

“As I said on the phone, I think it’s crazy
to withhold security assistance for help
with a political campaign.”
William “Bill” Taylor, charge d’affaires at the
U.S. embassy in Ukraine

–Sept. 9, 12:47:11 a.m.

“Bill, I believe you are incorrect about
President Trump’s intentions. The
President has been crystal clear no quid
pro quo’s of any kind. ”
Gordon Sondland, U.S. ambassador
to the European Union

–Sept. 9, 5:19:35 a.m.
SOURCE: House of Representatives

a new front in the
impeachment inquiry,
and it calls into question the account from
another diplomat,
Gordon Sondland, the
U.S. ambassador to the
European Union, who
told Congress last week
he did not fully remember some details of the
events and was initially
unaware that the gas
company was tied to the
Bidens.
Taylor told lawmakers
that Sondland, a wealthy
businessman who donated $1 million to Trump’s
inauguration, was aware
of the demands and
later admitted he made
a mistake by telling the
Ukrainians that military
assistance was not contingent on agreeing to
Trump’s requests.
“Ambassador Sondland told me that President Trump had told him
that he wants President
Zelenskyy to state publicly that Ukraine will

investigate Burisma and
alleged Ukrainian interference in the 2016 U.S.
election,” Taylor said
about a Sept. 1 phone
call between them.
Taylor apparently
kept detailed records of
conversations and documents, lawmakers said.
The retired diplomat, a
former Army ofﬁcer, had
been serving as executive vice president at the
U.S. Institute of Peace, a
nonpartisan think tank
founded by Congress,
when he was appointed
to run the embassy in
Kyiv after Trump suddenly recalled Ambassador Maria Yovanovitch.
Taylor testiﬁed that he
had concerns about taking over the post under
those circumstances,
but she urged him to go
“for policy reasons and
for the morale of the
embassy.” He had served
as U.S. ambassador to
Ukraine from 2006 to
2009.

Russia, Turkey seal power in northeast Syria
By Suzan Fraser
and Vladimir Isachenkov

unleashed by Trump’s
decision two weeks ago
Associated Press
to remove the American
soldiers.
U.S. troops in Syria
ANKARA, Turkey
fought ﬁve years along— Russia and Turkey
side Kurdish-led forces
reached an agreement
in northeast Syria and
Tuesday that would
succeeded in bringing
cement their power in
down the rule of the
Syria, deploying their
Islamic State group there
forces across nearly
at the cost of thousands
its entire northeastern
of Kurdish ﬁghters’ lives.
border to ﬁll the void
left by President Donald Now much of that territory would be handed
Trump’s abrupt withover to U.S. rivals.
drawal of U.S. forces.
The biggest winners
The accord caps a dramatic and swift transfor- are Turkey and Russia.
mation of the Syrian map Turkey would get sole

control over areas of the
Syrian border captured
in its invasion, while
Turkish, Russian and
Syria government forces
would oversee the rest of
the border region. America’s former U.S. allies,
the Kurdish ﬁghters, are
left hoping Moscow and
Damascus will preserve
some pieces of their
autonomy dreams.
Meanwhile, the Americans are stumbling out
of Syria in a withdrawal
that has proved chaotic, its extent and goals
seeming to shift on the

ﬂy as they grasp to keep
some inﬂuence on the
ground.
In the latest hitch,
Iraq’s military said Tuesday the U.S. troops coming out of Syria do not
have permission to stay
in Iraq, contradicting
U.S. Defense Secretary
Mark Esper’s statement
a day earlier that they
would remain there to
ﬁght the Islamic State
group. Esper has also
spoken of keeping some
troops in eastern Syria
to protect oil ﬁelds held
by the Kurds.

Porter

lights for Trimble High
School in Glouster,
Ohio. And he supports
the March of Dimes,
4-H, FFA (Future Farmers of America), the
American Red Cross and
other local and national
organizations.
For his good works
and contribution to the
local economy, Porter’s
company has received
awards from the Meigs
County Chamber of
Commerce and the
Athens Area Chamber
of Commerce, to name
a few.
“The Porter family has
yearly involvements with
11 counties, and we are
proud to provide support
and assistance when
needed to local businesses and the community,”
Porter said.
Dealers are nominated
by the executives of
state and metro dealer
associations around the
country. The award is
sponsored by TIME in
association with Ally
Financial, and in cooperation with NADA. A
panel of faculty members from the Tauber
Institute for Global
Operations at the University of Michigan
will select one ﬁnalist
from each of the four
NADA regions and one
national Dealer of the

Year. Three ﬁnalists
will receive an additional $5,000 for their
favorite charities and
the winner will receive
an additional $10,000
to give to charity.
In its ninth year as
exclusive sponsor, Ally
will recognize dealer
nominees and their
community efforts by
contributing $1,000 to
each nominee’s 501(c)3
charity of choice. Nominees will also be recognized on AllyDealerHeroes.com.
“The award applauds
the incredible effort
each of these dealers
put into their businesses and their communities,” said Doug
Timmerman, President
of Auto Finance at Ally.
“They are inﬂuential
business leaders and
admired ambassadors
for worthy causes. It’s
an honor for Ally to recognize their generosity
and impact in cities and
towns across America.”
Porter was nominated
for the TIME Dealer of
the Year award by Zach
Doran, president of the
Ohio Automobile Dealers Association. He and
his wife, Theresa, have
two children.

out Ohio, turning around
sales and moving up the
management ranks. In
2006, he founded Mark
From page 1
Porter Auto Group,
which today encompassPorter served in the
United States Air Force es three Ohio new car
dealerships in Pomeroy
from 1975 to 1977 and
and Jackson and a used
the Ohio Air National
car “autoplex” in Athens.
Guard from 1977 to
1985. He began his auto His wife, Theresa, and
two sons, Chase and
career working as a
Chane, all contribute to
salesperson for Bobby
the family enterprise.
Layman Chevrolet in
“Due to my passion,
Columbus, Ohio, in
drive and the great
1978.
mentors who provided
“I have always had an
the tools, initiative and
afﬁnity for sales,” he
skills that allowed me
said. “Selling newspapers became a pertinent to understand and run a
dealership with optimum
source of money for my
department metrics,
family when my father
I was able to achieve
was in the military and
my dream,” he said. “I
deployed to Korea.
wake up every morning
Bobby Layman took an
blessed with the opporinterest in my drive as
tunity to work side by
well as my Eagle Scout
side with my sons and
designation and accomwife in this business that
plishments.”
Porter counts his expe- we all equally love and
rience at Bobby Layman live for.”
And he passes that
Chevrolet, where he
good will onto his comworked until 1987, as
sparking his passion for munity as well. Porter
sponsors area baseball
the car business. “The
teams, county fairs and
love for this job prohigh school fundraising
moted my ability to be
top salesperson within a initiatives. He donated
couple of years,” he said. toward the building of
a new football stadium
“And that ignited my
dream to be a dealer one for Meigs High School
in Pomeroy, a new ﬁeld
day.”
house for Alexander
Over the following
years, he moved to differ- High School in Albany,
ent dealerships through- Ohio, and new stadium

Information provided by TIME
Dealer of the Year.

�Sports
6 Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Lady Eagles win D-3 district title
By Bryan Walters

place as both squads posted
scores of 126.
Huntington Ross (144) and
Ironton (163) also qualiﬁed
RIO GRANDE, Ohio —
Eastern produced seven of the for regionals with top six
efforts.
eight local regional qualiﬁers
Ciara Colwell of Leesburg
and one team title on Saturday
at the 2019 Division III South- Fairﬁeld defeated the 142-competitor girls ﬁeld with a wineast District Cross Country
ning time of 20:00.83.
Championships held on the
Erica Durst led EHS with a
campus of the University of
fourth place ﬁnish of 20:39.99,
Rio Grande.
followed by Whitney Durst
After placing second a year
ago, the Lady Eagles picked up (21:54.82) and Ashton Guththeir eighth D-3 district crown rie (22:09.85) with respective
efforts of 14th and 20th.
in nine years with a winning
Alysa Howard (24:29.96)
tally of 94 points.
and Lexa Hayes (24:35.03)
Leesburg Fairﬁeld was the
completed the team tally with
overall runner-up out of 17
scoring teams with 125 points, placements of 44th and 45th
while West Union bested Coal overall.
Senior Sydney Roush was
Grove on a tiebreaker for third

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Submitted photo

Members of the Eastern girls varsity cross country team pose for a picture
after winning the 2019 Division III district championship on Saturday at the
University of Rio Grande.

the lone Southern entrant and
ﬁnished 37th with a mark of
24:04.47.
Alina Malyshevska paced
South Gallia with a 78th
place time of 26:26.81.
Gulnara Chepiyeva was also
128th overall with a mark of
32:52.51.
There were 18 teams and
140 athletes in the D-3 boys
event, but neither the Eagles
nor the Rebels had enough
competitors for a team score.
Each program did, however,
advance at least one athlete on
to the regional level — including both EHS competitors.
Freshman Brayden O’Brien
paced the Green and White
See EAGLES | 7

XFL releases its
debut schedule
for 2020 season
NEW YORK (AP) — Jim Zorn will return to the
sideline to coach the XFL’s Seattle team against
Washington’s when the new league kicks off on
Saturday, Feb. 8.
Zorn has ties to both cities. The longtime
quarterback for the Seahawks and head coach for
the Redskins for two seasons (2008-09) also is
general manager of Seattle Dragons, who face Pep
Hamilton’s DC Defenders in Washington when the
eight-team XFL begins play the weekend after the
Super Bowl.
The XFL released the schedule for its inaugural
season on Tuesday. ABC will broadcast the ﬁrst
game and Fox will have games on Saturday and
Sunday during the opening weekend.
“It’s a big moment for us,” XFL Commissioner
Oliver Luck said. “We’ve got great time slots on
the weekends. We think it’s a well-designed schedule in terms of competitive balance.”
The league is the second XFL backed by the
WWE’s Vince McMahon. McMahon has invested
nearly $400 million in the XFL and has started a
separate company, Alpha Entertainment LLC, to
operate it. The ﬁrst version of the XFL — a joint
venture of WWE and NBC — lasted just one season (2001).
This is the second consecutive year that a second pro football league will debut. The Alliance of
American Football folded after just eight weeks.
The XFL is divided into two four-team divisions,
East and West. The XFL East features teams in
Washington, New York, St. Louis and Tampa Bay.
The XFL West has teams in Dallas, Houston, Los
Angeles and Seattle.
Among the notable names involved in coaching
is former Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops, the head
coach and GM of the Dallas Renegades. Kevin Gilbride, who won two Super Bowls as the offensive
coordinator for the Giants, is the coach for the
New York Guardians. Longtime NFL and college
coach June Jones will coach the Houston Roughnecks, while former NFL and CFL coach Marc
Trestman is with the Tampa Bay Vipers.
Notable players include former Oklahoma and
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Landry Jones by
Dallas. Tommylee Lewis, best known for being the
intended Saints receiver on the key pass interference play in last season’s NFC title game, is also
with Dallas. Cardale Jones, who won a championship with Ohio State in the 2014 season, is on
DC and former Jets tight end Jace Amaro is with
Seattle.
The XFL announced in May that it had reached
agreements with ESPN and Fox Sports. All the
games will air on national television with doubleheaders on Saturdays and Sundays. Twenty-four
games will air on ABC or Fox. The remainder will
See XFL | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, Oct. 23
Volleyball
(2) Gallia Academy vs. (1)
Sheridan at Southeastern
HS, 6 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 24
Volleyball
Herbert Hoover, Roane
County at Point Pleasant,
5:30
(2) Southern vs. (3)
Peebles at Jackson HS,
7:30
Boys Soccer
Region IV, Section 1
championship at PPHS,
6:30

Girls Soccer
Region IV, Section
1 championship at
Sissonville, 6:30
Friday, Oct. 25
Football
Ironton at Gallia Academy,
7 p.m.
Hannan at Van, 7 p.m.
Athens at River Valley,
7:30
Man at Point Pleasant,
7:30
Belpre at Eastern, 7:30
Meigs at Wellston, 7:30
South Gallia at Miller, 7:30
Southern at Trimble, 7:30

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy freshman Laith Hamid watches a shot during a Sept. 5 round at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolis, Ohio.

OVP lands 12 district golfers
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

The Ohio Valley Publishing area had a dozen
people chosen to the
Southeast Ohio District
Golf Coaches Association teams, as voted on
by the coaches within
the district.
Leading all local
teams with three selections were the Lady
Marauders with three.
On the Division II girls
ﬁrst team for Meigs is
junior Caitlin Cotterill,
who was an honorable
mention selection a year
ago. Also representing
the Maroon and Gold,
Kylee Robinson was
named to the second
team, and Mikayla Radcliffe landed on the honorable mention list.
The Gallia Academy
girls team earned a pair
of all-district spots, with
Bailey Meadows on the
ﬁrst team and Lilly Rees
as honorable mention.
Meadows was a secondteam choice for the Blue
Angels last season, while
Rees was also an honorable mention in 2018.
Representing the Lady
Raiders on the Division
II girls honorable mention list is Erika Justus.
The Gallia Academy
boys claimed a pair of
spots on the Division
II boys list, with Laith
Hamid on second team
and Cooper Davis on
honorable mention.
Davis was also an honor-

Denzel Endicott, Piketon Sr.
Jacob Lemley, Chesapeake Jr.
Josh Tipton, Fairﬁeld
Union Jr.
Landon Roberts, Fairland Fr.
Levi Gerber, Unioto Sr.
Honorable Mention
Blaine Cline, River
Valley; Bobby Musser,
Meigs; T.J. Vogt, Alexander; Cole Robertson,
Waverly; Austin Hulse,
Circleville; Nate Roy,
Zane Trace; Brayden
Easterling, Ironton; Tanner Stevenson, Wheelersburg; Jaren Stover,
Logan Elm; Devon Muer,
Fairﬁeld Union; Mason
Manns, Fairland; Cooper
Davis, Gallia Academy;
Jack Workman, Portsmouth; Owen Salyer,
Vinton County; Logan
Cummins, Piketon.
Coach of the Year
Dan Drummond,
Meigs junior Caitlin Cotterill watches putt go in on the sixth hole
during an Aug. 29 dual golf match with Vinton County at Meigs Golf Unioto.
Course in Pomeroy, Ohio.

able mention last fall.
Repeating as an honorable mention for Meigs
is Bobby Musser. Also
on the Division II boys
honorable mention list
is River Valley’s Blaine
Cline.
Southern and Eastern
picked up a selection
apiece on the Division III boys honorable
mention list, with Joey
Weaver representing the
Tornadoes and Nicholas
Durst as the Eagles’
choice.

Division II Boys
First Team
Ty Shoeblock, Unioto
Sr.
Connor Hefner, Waverly Sr.
Clayton Thomas, Fairland Jr.
Blake Raineger, Fairﬁeld Union Sr.
Whit Byrd, Alexander
Sr.
Trevon Mault, Wheelersburg Jr.
Second Team
Laith Hamid, Gallia
Academy Fr.

Division III Boys
First Team
Broc Jordan, Western
Sr.
Owen Carney, Crooksville Jr.
Blake White, Crooksville Jr.
Hunter Dutiel, Miller
Sr.
Dalton McDonald,
Manchester So.
Luke Hayslip, Manchester So.
Second Team
Eric Dotson, Belpre Sr.
See OVP | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Zion Williamson out 6-8
weeks after knee scope
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Zion Williamson will
miss the start of the season after the No. 1 overall
draft pick by the New Orleans Pelicans had right
knee surgery, sidelining the hyped rookie for
nearly two months.
Williamson had his torn right lateral meniscus
repaired on Monday. The club says his recovery
will last six to eight weeks.
The 6-foot-6, 285-pound former Duke star averaged 23.2 points in four preseason games. He
missed New Orleans’ ﬁnal exhibition game in New
York last Friday night.

XFL

will last 10 weeks. Each
team will host ﬁve
home games and play a
From page 6
schedule that features a
home-and-home series
against division rivals
air on ESPN, ESPN2,
and one game against
FS1 and FS2.
each team in the other
“If you think about
football in this country, division. The regular
season ends on April
I think you’d certainly
12. The division ﬁnals
have to think about
will be the following
ABC and ESPN and
week and the winners
FOX with what they
do, so I think these are will play for the championship on Sunday, April
trusted broadcasters,
26 on ESPN.
they’ve broadcast liter‘“This a killer schedally hundreds of thouule with four national
sands of NFL games,
games each week,” said
major college games,”
Luck said. “So their tal- Jeffrey Pollack, the
XFL’s president and
ent that they’ll assign
chief operating ofﬁcer.
will be top-notch talent. So we think there’s “Every XFL game will
be on national television
never been quite honand presented by media
estly a startup league
that’s had these kinds of companies that know
football inside-out,
windows, this kind of
know how to tell great
exposure.”
stories.”
The regular season

Eagles
From page 6

with an 11th place effort of 17:35.45. Senior
Colton Reynolds also advanced by ﬁnishing 18th
overall with a mark of 17:53.00.
SGHS junior Garrett Frazee moved into the
regional round after placing 13th overall with a
time of 17:45.36. Grifﬁn Davis was also 128th for
the Rebels with a mark of 24:19.90.
Leesburg Fairﬁeld won the boys team title with
47 points. Rock Hill (64) was the overall runnerup, while Trimble (102), Belpre (116), Adena
(200) and West Union (234) wrapped up regional
berths with top six efforts.
Eli Fullerton of Belpre came away with top
individual honors after posting a winning mark of
16:24.64.
The Division III regional tournament will be
held Saturday at Pickerington High School North.
Visit baumspage.com for complete results of the
2019 Division III Southeast District Cross Country Championships held at the University of Rio
Grande.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Gallia County sends 9 to D-2 regionals
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— Gallia County had
nine athletes qualify for
regional competition on
Saturday at the 2019 Division II Southeast District
Cross Country Championships held on the campus
of the University of Rio
Grande.
The River Valley girls
earned the last qualifying spot in D-2, placing
seventh out of 19 scoring
teams with a ﬁnal tally
of 236 points. The Lady
Raiders are advancing all
seven of their entrants to
the regional level.
The Gallia Academy
girls, who were 16th overall with 365 points, also
had one individual qualify
as junior Sarah Watts was
10th overall with a mark
of 20:50.20.
There was only one
local regional qualiﬁer on
the boys side of the D-2
tournament, with River
Valley junior Dylan Fulks
placing 29the overall with
a time of 17:54.29.
Fairﬁeld Union won the
girls team title with 65
points, with Vinton County (82), Athens (123),
Sheridan (155) and Rock
Hill (183) rounding out
the top ﬁve spots. Unioto
also advanced to regionals with a sixth place
effort of 197.
Madison Eyman of
Fairﬁeld Union bested the
130-competitor girls race
with a winning time of
18:54.33.
Lauren Twyman led the
Lady Raiders with a ﬁfth
place ﬁnish of 20:10.99,
followed by Savannah
Reese (23:12.73) and
Emma Lucas (24:14.81)
with respective placements of 47th and 61st.
Ruth Rickett (24:25.74)
and Kate Nutter
(24:26.05) completed
the team scoring by
ﬁnishing 65th and 66th.
Sydney Blouir (26:47.93)
and Nakeisha Shriver
(27:13.44) also placed
101st and 105th overall
for RVHS.
Krystal Davison fol-

fall So.
Bailey Meadows, Gallia Academy Sr.
From page 6
Brooklyn Tolle, North
Adams Jr.
Riley McKenzie,
Zach Harless, WhiteoCrooksville Fr.
ak Sr.
Caitlin Cotterill,
Cameron Young,
Meigs Jr.
North Adams Sr.
Second Team
Brooks Suprano,
Ella Seeley, Westfall
Waterford Sr.
Sr.
Clayton Jones, West
Emily Lott, Unioto Jr.
Union Jr.
Ellie Patterson, FairAndrew Cochenour,
ﬁeld Union Sr.
Pike Eastern Sr.
Elizabeth Hart, WestHonorable Mention
fall Sr.
Tanner Colfens,
Madison Fulton, West
Crooksville; Joey WeavUnion Sr.
er, Southern; Ryland
Aliana Collins, ChesaDouley, Fairﬁeld;
peake Sr.
Nicholas Durst, EastKylee Robinson,
ern; Chase McDonald,
Meigs Jr.
Manchester; Blaceton
Honorable Mention
Moore, Trimble; Clay
Natalie, Zane Trace;
Risner, Whiteoak; Ryan
Hendershot, Waterford; Bela Delawdor, IronMason Jackson, Federal ton; Mikayla Radcliffe,
Hocking; Trey Hettich, Meigs; Linda Lynch,
West Union; Kileigh
Miller; Maveric FernMitchell, Manchester;
eau, Western; Oakley
Lauren Bevins, Eastern
Burba, Peebles; T.J.
Pike; Allison BaughHolt, North Adams;
man, Crooksville; Lilly
Trenten Brown, Pike
Rees, Gallia Academy;
Eastern; Jacob Ferrier,
Belpre; Andrew Smith, Emily Cook, Westfall;
Erika Justus, River
South Webster; JonaValley; Addi Speed,
thon McDowell, West
Fairland; Makenzie
Union.
Radabaugh, Vinton
Coach of the Year
Brian Carney, Crooks- County; Hayleigh Risner, Piketon.
ville.
Coach of the Year
Kevin Shoults, WestDivision II Girls
fall.
First Team
Hanna Shrout, FairAlex Hawley can be reached at
land Sr.
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.
Maddi Shoults, West-

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy seniors Calista Barnes (275) and Taylor Facemire (279) hit full stride at the 2019
Skyline Bowling Invitational held Sept. 3 In Centenary, Ohio.

lowed Watts for the Blue
Angels by ﬁnishing 70th
with a time of 24:42.66.
Brooke Hamilton
(26:16.85) and Taylor
Facemire (26:38.85) were
95th and 99th, while Kristen Jamora completed
the team tally by placing
109th with a mark of
27:41.42.
Eliza Davies (29:36.19)
and Calista Barnes
(29:39.66) also ﬁnished
121st and 122nd for
GAHS.
Meigs did not have an
entrant in the Division II
girls event.
There were 20 scoring teams and 160 competitors in the D-2 boys
event, with Unioto coming away with top team
honors with a winning
tally of 38 points.
Northwest (82), Waverly (95), Sheridan (102)
and Fairﬁeld Union (140)
rounded out the top
ﬁve spots, while Warren
(172), Logan Elm (218)
and Vinton County (236)
also secured regional

berths with top eight
efforts.
William Wilke of Sheridan defeated the boys
ﬁeld with a winning mark
of 16:03.83.
The Blue Devils ended
up ﬁnishing 12th overall
with 367 points, while the
Raiders were 14th after
dropping a tiebreaker to
New Lexington. Both
teams ﬁnished with 393
points, but the sixth
NLHS runner came in
one spot ahead of River
Valley’s sixth man.
Todd Elliott paced
GAHS with a 39th place
time of 18:29.77, followed
by Ian Hill (19:46.28)
and Logan Nicholas
(20:17.01) with respective ﬁnishes of 74th and
88th.
Tristan Crisenbery
(20:20.92) and Camden
Maddux (21:02.17)
completed the Blue and
White tally by placing 90th and 106th
overall. Garytt Schwall
(21:43.26) and Grant
Smith (21:56.10) also ﬁn-

WEDNESDAY EVENING
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ished 120th and 126th for
Blue Devils.
Cody Wooten followed Fulks for RVHS
with a 69th place time of
19:39.68. Nathan Young
(20:53.19) and Ryan
Lollathin (21:09.45)
were next with efforts of
101st and 110th, while
Ryan Snyder (22:13.63)
completed the scoring by
ﬁnishing 130th.
Kade Alderman also
placed 142nd for the Silver and Black with a time
of 23:21.43.
Meigs junior Jarod Koenig ﬁnished 100th overall
with a mark of 20:49.99.
The Division II
regional tournament
will be held Saturday at
Pickerington High School
North.
Visit baumspage.com
for complete results of
the 2019 Division II
Southeast District Cross
Country Championships
held at the University of
Rio Grande.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23
7 PM

7:30

Jeopardy!
(N)
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(N)
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(N)
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
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13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
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WSAZ News
3 (N)
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(WTAP)
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(WSYX)
at 6pm (N)
Arthur
(WSAZ)

3

6

OVP

Wednesday, October 23, 2019 7

Wheel of
Fortune (N)
Wheel of
Fortune (N)
Columbus

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Chicago Med "Got a Friend
in Me" (N)
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in Me" (N)
Goldberg (N) Schooled (N)

Chicago Fire "Buckle Up" Chicago P.D. "Brother's
Kidd must prove herself. (N) Keeper" (N)
Chicago Fire "Buckle Up" Chicago P.D. "Brother's
Kidd must prove herself. (N) Keeper" (N)
SingleParent Harry and Meghan: An
Modern
"Sport" (N) African Journey (N)
Family
Nature "Okavango: River of Nova "Look Who's Driving" Life From Above "Moving
Dreams - Paradise" (N)
Self-driving cars may one
Planet"
day be big business. (N)
SingleParent Harry and Meghan: An
Goldberg (N) Schooled (N) Modern
"Sport" (N) African Journey (N)
Family
Survivor "Don't Bite the
SEAL Team "The Strength of S.W.A.T. "Immunity" (N)
Hand That Feeds You" (N)
the Wolf" (N)
MLB Baseball World Series Washington Nationals at Houston Astros Game 2 Site:
Minute Maid Park -- Houston, Texas (L)
Nature "Okavango: River of Nova "Look Who's Driving" Life From Above "Moving
Dreams - Paradise" (N)
Self-driving cars may one
Planet"
day be big business. (N)
SEAL Team "The Strength of S.W.A.T. "Immunity" (N)
Survivor "Don't Bite the
Hand That Feeds You" (N)
the Wolf" (N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Dog B.H. "Family Business"
24 (ROOT) (5:00) DFL Soccer
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
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37 (CNN)
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39

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40 (DISC)
42

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52 (ANPL)
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58
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62 (NGEO)
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68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Bounty Hunt. Bounty Hunt. Dog's Most Wanted
Dog's Most Wanted (N)
Dog's Most Wanted
Immortal (N) Shortlist (N) Inside Pirates Baseball
The Dan Patrick Show (N) WPT Poker
Countdown NBA Basketball Boston Celtics at Philadelphia 76ers (L)
NBA Basketb. Den./Por. (L)
Baseball T. NFL Live
Sat./ South "Part Eight: 2010-Present" (N) The Greatest C. Football
A Very Merry Daughter of the Bride (‘08, Com/Dra) Christmas in the City (2013, Family) Beverly Leech,
(:05) Wish Upon a
JoAnna Garcia Swisher, Helen Shaver, Luke Perry. TVPG
Ashanti, John Prescott. TVPG
Christmas TVPG
(5:30)
Moana (2016, Animated) Voices of Dwayne The
The
The
The
The
The
Simpsons
Simpsons
Simpsons
Simpsons
Simpsons
Simpsons
Johnson, Alan Tudyk, Auli'i Cravalho. TVPG
Two and a
Top Gun (‘86, Act) Kelly McGillis, Tom Cruise. Personal tragedy
Con
Two and a
Two and a
Two and a
Half Men
Half Men
Half Men
Half Men
leads a cocky, undisciplined navy pilot to reassess his career. TVPG
Air TVMA
Afraid of the Dark?
Dare (N)
SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob
Ice Age Ray Romano. TVPG
Friends
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Goliath" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Design" WWE NXT (N)
(:10) Temptation Island
Family Guy Family Guy Bob'sBurgers Bob'sBurgers The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Frontal (N)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(5:30)
San Andreas Dwayne Johnson. TV14
All Elite Wrestling: Dynamite (N)
MiseryIndex Misery (N)
Ghost Ship (2002, Suspense) Julianna Margulies, Ron
Thirteen Ghosts (2001, Horror) Matthew Lillard,
Final Destination 2 (‘03,
Eldard, Gabriel Byrne. TVMA
Shannon Elizabeth, Tony Shalhoub. TVMA
Thril) Ali Larter. TVMA
Expedition Unknown
Expedition Unknown
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Expedition Unknown (N)
Building Off the Grid (N)
Ghost Hunters "You've
The First 48 "Spree Killer" Ghost Hunters "Suicide
Ghost Hunters: Most
Ghost Hunters "Blood on
Hotel"
Haunted (N)
Been Warned" (N)
the Bayou" (N)
(5:00) Extinct or Alive
Extinct or Alive
Extinct-Alive-Eviden
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Giants (N)
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Snapped "Shelly Arndt"
Snapped "Verginia Turner" Snapped "Opal Williams"
Snapped "Cynthia Alvarez" Snapped "Deborah Perna"

Criminal Minds
Temptation Island (N)
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Wild Russia "The Hidden
Kingdom"
Mecum10
Mecum10
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
Forged in Fire "Karabela"

Criminal Mind "Plain Sight" C.Minds "Broken Mirror"
Criminal Minds "L.D.S.K." Criminal Minds "The Fox"
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Coyote Ugly (‘00, Com/Dra) Piper Perabo. TV14
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Loves Ray
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Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Gordon Ramsay: Uncharted Life Below Zero "HandLife Below Zero "Hard
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Made"
Knocks"
the Water"
NHL Live! (L)
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MLS Soccer Playoffs To Be Announced vs. New York City FC (L)
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Forged in Fire "The Greek Forged in Fire "General
Forged in Fire "The Jian Sword/ The Rock-throwing
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Patton's Saber"
Crossbow" Two smiths must recreate the Chinese Jian. (N)
Atlanta "The Model Bride" Housewives Atlanta
Housewives Atlanta (N)
Real Wives Dallas (N)
The Real Housewives
(:05)
The Family That Preys (‘08, Com) Sanaa Lathan, Alfre Woodard. TV14
The Oval "The Pilot" (P) (N) Sistas "The Pilot" (P) (N)
Buying "Going to the Dogs" Buying and Selling
Property Brothers
Property Brothers (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House
(5:30)
Gremlins 2: The New Batch (1990, Horror)
Texas Chainsaw 3D (2013, Horror) Dan Yeager, Trey
Leatherface (‘17, Hor) Lili
Zach Galligan, Christopher Lee, Phoebe Cates. TVPG
Songz, Alexandra Daddario. TVMA
Taylor, Stephen Dorff. TVPG

6 PM
(4:35) Mary

6:30

7 PM

(:40) Catherine the Great

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Bad Times at the El Royale (2018, Mystery) Cynthia Erivo,
24/7 College Football
400 (HBO) Queen of
Dakota Johnson, Jeff Bridges. Stranges have a chance meeting at El
"Washington State"
Scots
Royale, each of them holding on to a dark past. TVMA
Deadpool 2 (‘18, Act) Josh Brolin, Julian Dennison,
Due Date Zach Galifianakis. A man
(:40)
Ocean's 8 Sandra Bullock. Ex-con
450 (MAX) Ryan Reynolds. Deadpool assembles a new team of
must drive cross-country in order to make it Debbie Ocean puts together a crack team to
mutants called X-Force to protect the life of a child. TVMA to his child's birth on time. TVMA
pull of the heist of the century. TV14
(3:15)
(:45)
A League of Their Own (1992, Comedy/Drama) Tom Hanks, On Becoming a God in
When Harry Met
500 (SHOW) Apocalypse Madonna, Geena Davis. Two sisters join a female professional baseball
Central Florida "Go Getters Sally (‘89, Rom) Meg Ryan,
Now Redux league during the Second World War. TVPG
Billy Crystal. TV14
Gonna Go Getcha"
(:35)

�COMICS

8 Wednesday, October 23, 2019

BLONDIE

Daily Sentinel

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 23, 2019 9

Steelers QB Rudolph won’t ‘think twice’ about concussion
expect it to affect the
way he approaches his
job when he returns to
work on Oct. 28 against
Miami.
“I’m going to go play
the game I’ve always
played and play with the
aggressiveness and if I
need to extend the play,
that’s what’s going to
happen,” Rudolph said
Monday, his ﬁrst full day
of practice after being
cleared from the NFL’s
concussion protocol.
“I’m not going to think

twice about worrying
about getting hit in the
right spot. That’s just
the luck of the draw. It
happened. It was a freak
thing.”
One that provided
a violent reminder of
how Rudolph makes
his living. Rudolph had
just released a pass
to James Washington
when Thomas slammed
into him, the safety’s
helmet connecting with
Rudolph’s chin.
“The specialist said

it kind of shut off my
brains, not my spinal
cord, but STEM (or)
some high-ranking term
above my pay grade,”
Rudolph said. “Shut me
off real quick and it was
the sweet spot. Shut
me out black. Probably
been hit like that many
times but that’s never
happened. Kind of weird
deal.”
Medical attendants
ended up unscrewing
Rudolph’s helmet while
essentially giving him a

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REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
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Notices
Morgan Township
Accepting sealed bids for
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6:30 am November 16, 2019
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cart not working, but I
wouldn’t have needed to
be in the cart because I
had passed the tests on
the ground,” Rudolph
said. “I would have
walked off regardless of
whether the cart was
operational or not.”
Thomas was ﬂagged
for unnecessary roughness on the play and
later ﬁned $21,000.
Rudolph said he heard
from Thomas afterward, calling it “a classy
thing.”

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diagnostics test as he lay
on the Heinz Field turf.
Though a cart was summoned to take Rudolph
to the locker room, he
ended up very slowly
walking off the ﬁeld on
his own. That the cart
needed to be pushed
off the ﬁeld when it
wouldn’t restart had
nothing to do with the
decision to let Rudolph
be escorted to the sideline.
“There was plenty
of memes about the

OH-70149531

PITTSBURGH (AP)
— Mason Rudolph faintly remembers walking off
the ﬁeld in a daze. His
brain deleted everything
else leading up to the hit
the Pittsburgh Steelers
quarterback took from
Baltimore’s Earl Thomas
on Oct. 6 that left
Rudolph unconscious.
Not that it matters.
Rudolph watched the
replay enough times
over the last couple of
weeks that it’s imprinted
in his memory. Just don’t

CALL TODAY!

�SPORTS/WEATHER

10 Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Winston, Howard top AP preseason All-America men’s team
By John Marshall

announced Tuesday, a day
after Michigan State was
ranked No. 1 in the AP
preseason poll.
Cassius Winston had
He is joined by higha long list of accomplishments at Michigan State. scoring Marquette senior
guard Markus Howard,
He led the Spartans to
Louisville junior forward
Big Ten regular-season
and tournament titles and Jordan Nwora, Seton Hall
senior guard Myles Powinto the Final Four. He
was the Big Ten player of ell and Memphis freshman James Wiseman on
the year, an Associated
the ﬁve-player team.
Press All-American, one
“He is the straw that
of the nation’s best playstirs the drink and I think
ers.
deserves all the attention
No one would have
he’s been getting because
blamed the gritty guard
he is a special player,”
for bolting to the NBA.
Michigan State coach
His place in Michigan
State history was already Tom Izzo said of his star
player. “But I think he’s
secured.
handled it pretty well too
But Winston wanted
more, to add to his legacy with a lot of class and has
worked hard.”
in East Lansing, so he
Winston is rarely the
opted to return for his
tallest, fastest or most
senior season.
athletic player on the
Winston is the only
ﬂoor. He reportedly can’t
consensus selection on
The Associated Press pre- even dunk.
But the 6-foot-1 guard
season All-America team

Associated Press

leaving for the NBA after
high-scoring junior seasons.
Both opted to stay and
are expected to keep putting up big numbers.
The 5-11, 175-pound
Howard developed a
knack for getting off shots
against bigger players.
Through an array of stepback 3-pointers and crafty
drives to the basket, he
ﬁnished ﬁfth nationally
with 25 points per game
in 2018-19 and is the only
NCAA player the past
20 years with two career
50-point games.
Howard was a secondteam AP All-American
last season and led the
Golden Eagles to the
NCAA Tournament.
Powell was an AP honorable mention All-American last season after
averaging 23.1 points,
13th-best nationally, and
leading the Pirates to the
NCAA Tournament for
the fourth straight year.
The 6-2 guard was tabbed
Big East preseason player
of the year after deciding to return to school
to become the ﬁrst in his
family to earn a college
degree.
“I sit back and say for
me to be the ﬁrst one, no
one can take that for me,”
he said. “I have ﬁve little
brothers and sisters who
look up to me, and I can
set an example for them.

is often the best player
out there.
Smart and able to see
things before they develop, Winston has a feel for
the game that allows him
to beat players with more
size and athleticism.
Winston has steadily
progressed during his
time in East Lansing,
going from a reliable
backup as a freshman to
one of the nation’s best
ﬂoor leaders. He averaged 18.8 points and 7.5
assists as a junior, leading
the Spartans to the Final
Four for the eighth time
under Izzo.
Now Winston is back
for more, hoping to take
the Spartans even deeper.
“You’ve got little
taste of it. That’s never
enough,” Winston said.
“You want to take it
another step further.”
Like Winston, Howard
and Powell considered

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West Virginia opens
2020 football season

200 East 2nd Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Responsible attorney: Adam R.
Salisbury, licensed in Ohio and West
Virginia

OH-70152335

740-992-6368
www.taslg.com

8 AM

2 PM

41°

57°

53°

Sunny to partly cloudy and windy today. Patchy
clouds tonight. High 64° / Low 40°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Tue.

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.

67°
54°
66°
43°
85° in 1979
20° in 1952

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.47
3.84
1.94
38.31
34.97

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:46 a.m.
6:40 p.m.
2:06 a.m.
4:25 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

Oct 27

First

Nov 4

Full

Last

Nov 12 Nov 19

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

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

Major
8:13a
9:03a
9:50a
10:37a
11:26a
12:18p
12:47a

Minor
1:59a
2:49a
3:37a
4:24a
5:12a
6:04a
7:00a

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
65/42

Very High

Major
8:41p
9:30p
10:17p
11:03p
11:52p
12:44p
1:14p

Minor
2:27p
3:16p
4:03p
4:50p
5:39p
6:31p
7:28p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Oct. 23, 1991, northerly winds
sent cold air into the Dakotas.
Bismarck had 7 inches of snow.
Simultaneously, south winds sent
record warmth into the East; Buffalo,
N.Y., had a record high of 77.

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. Tue.

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

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

Level
13.11
16.21
21.57
12.99
13.19
25.28
12.93
25.59
34.37
12.82
15.40
34.30
13.20

Portsmouth
65/42

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.33
+0.30
+0.03
+0.08
+0.61
+0.09
-0.30
-0.32
-0.12
-0.22
-0.70
-0.20
-1.20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

SUNDAY

63°
45°
Mostly cloudy

63°
43°

Chance of a little rain
in the morning

Low clouds

Marietta
63/40

Murray City
63/40
Belpre
63/40

Athens
63/39

St. Marys
63/40

Parkersburg
62/40

Coolville
62/40

Elizabeth
63/39

Spencer
62/38

Buffalo
63/40
Milton
64/39

St. Albans
64/40

Huntington
64/41

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
58/43
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
77/60
20s
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
T-storms
Los Angeles
94/67
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

71°
46°
Cloudy

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
65/41

Ashland
65/41
Grayson
65/41

MONDAY

68°
51°

Wilkesville
63/38
POMEROY
Jackson
63/39
64/39
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
63/40
64/40
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
65/48
GALLIPOLIS
64/40
63/40
63/40

South Shore Greenup
65/41
64/41

30

Logan
63/41

McArthur
63/38

Very High

Primary: elm, ragweed, grass
Mold: 2113

Mostly cloudy with a
passing shower

Adelphi
63/43
Chillicothe
64/43

SATURDAY

62°
43°

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

Waverly
64/42

Pollen: 20

Low

MOON PHASES

FRIDAY

Nice with plenty of
sun

0

Primary: cladosporium
Thu.
7:47 a.m.
6:38 p.m.
3:18 a.m.
5:01 p.m.

THURSDAY

70°
42°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

West Virginia will play the Seminoles
on Sept. 5 in Atlanta.
The Mountaineers also have home
nonconference games against Eastern
Kentucky on Sept. 12 and against Maryland on Sept. 19.
West Virginia has Big 12 games at
home against Kansas State on Sept. 26,
TCU on Oct. 10, Kansas on Oct. 24,
Oklahoma on Nov. 7 and Baylor on Nov.
21.

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) —
West Virginia will open the 2020 football season in the Chick-ﬁl-A Kickoff
Game against Florida State and have
three home games in September.
The Big 12 released the Mountaineers’ schedule Tuesday.

WE ARE HERE TO HELP

TODAY

senior, 65 of 65 votes
(18.8 ppg, 3 rpg, 5.2 apg,
84.0 ft pct, 1.0 steals)
Markus Howard, Marquette, 5-11, 180, senior,
57 (25.0 ppg, 4.0 rpg,
3.9 apg, 40.3 3-pt fg pct,
89.0 ft pct, 3.5 3-pt fg/
game, 1.1 steals)
Jordan Nwora, Louisville, 6-7, 225, junior, 47
(17.0 ppg, 7.6 rpg, 1.3
apg)
Myles Powell, Seton
Hall, 6-2, 195, senior, 47
(23.1 ppg, 4.0 rpg, 2.9
apg, 36.0 minutes, 84.0 ft
pct, 2.0 steals)
James Wiseman, Memphis, 7-1, 240, freshman,
32 (Memphis East HS:
25.8 ppg, 14.8 rpg, 5.5
blocks, 1.3 steals)
Others receiving
votes: Kerry Blackshear
Jr., Florida, 23; Cole
Anthony, North Carolina,
10; Udoka Azubuike,
Kansas, 8; Jarron Cumberland, Cincinnati, 8;
Tre Jones, Duke, 6; Sam
Merrill, Utah State, 5;
Devon Dotson, Kansas,
4; Charles Bassey, Western Kentucky, 3; Mamadi
Diakite, Virginia, 3;
Anthony Edwards, Georgia, 1; Tyrese Maxey,
Kentucky, 1; Reggie
Perry, Mississippi State,
1; Payton Pritchard,
Oregon, 1; Lamar Stevens, Penn State, 1; Isaiah Stewart, Washington,
1; McKinley Wright IV,
Colorado, 1.

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Tenoglia &amp;
Salisbury
Law Group LLC

WEATHER

For me to be the ﬁrst to
say that in my family is
important.”
Nwora joined teammate
Steven Enoch in opting
to return to Louisville,
helping the Cardinals
earn a No. 5 preseason
ranking.
A 6-8 forward, Nwora
raised his scoring average 11.3 points from
his freshman season to
17 per game last year
while leading Louisville
in rebounding with 7.6.
He also led the Cardinals
with 77 3-pointers and
made 37% percent from
the arc as a sophomore.
The 7-1 Wiseman was
widely regarded as the
top prospect of the 2019
recruiting class and gave
Penny Hardaway a huge
boost in his second season as Memphis’ coach
by opting to play for his
hometown college. Wiseman has good mobility
for his size, can create
his own shot and has
been projected to be the
No. 1 in pick in next
year’s NBA draft.
The Associated Press’
2019-20 preseason AllAmerica men’s basketball team, with school,
height, year and votes
from a 65-member
national media panel
(key 2018-19 statistics in
parentheses):
Cassius Winston,
Michigan State, 6-1, 185,

Clendenin
63/38
Charleston
63/40

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
38/26
Montreal
57/42

Billings
46/29

Toronto
Minneapolis
53/42
47/32
Detroit
Chicago 59/47
58/40

New York
65/48
Washington
68/47

Denver
52/24
Kansas City
66/38

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
70/39/s
52/41/r
69/47/s
65/47/s
66/42/s
46/29/sf
59/30/s
67/49/r
63/40/s
70/40/s
43/19/sf
58/40/pc
67/47/s
62/49/s
65/46/s
79/60/s
52/24/pc
61/34/c
59/47/s
88/75/pc
80/59/s
64/49/s
66/38/pc
84/57/s
73/45/s
94/67/s
69/48/s
90/79/pc
47/32/c
70/42/s
74/60/s
65/48/s
77/46/s
84/71/s
65/44/s
91/63/s
58/44/s
63/42/r
68/40/s
69/42/s
72/48/s
57/32/pc
77/60/s
58/43/pc
68/47/s

Hi/Lo/W
44/30/sh
46/39/r
70/53/pc
66/49/s
68/44/s
50/39/pc
57/35/s
67/51/s
71/42/s
71/46/s
42/27/s
50/36/c
70/48/pc
65/45/c
69/47/c
71/48/r
43/24/pc
47/26/c
58/39/c
87/74/s
81/61/pc
62/45/c
48/33/sh
75/52/s
72/50/c
97/63/s
72/49/s
89/78/t
44/29/pc
73/47/s
77/66/pc
65/51/s
46/38/sh
87/75/c
68/49/s
86/61/s
66/43/pc
62/45/s
70/45/s
69/46/s
55/42/sh
53/33/s
85/58/s
62/46/pc
69/49/s

EXTREMES TUESDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
69/47

High
Low

El Paso
81/53
Chihuahua
86/54

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

97° in Camarillo, CA
9° in Alamosa, CO

Global
High
112° in Roebourne, Australia
Low -57° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
80/59
Monterrey
82/66

Miami
90/79

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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