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                  <text>On this
day in
history

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

31°

48°

47°

Intervals of clouds and sun today. Partly
cloudy and cold tonight. High 53° / Low 33°

NEWS s 3

Today’s
weather
forecast

Meigs
competes
at relays

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 57, Volume 72

Tuesday, April 10, 2018 s 50¢

Meet the
Candidate:
Danny Davis
Candidate for
Commissioner
Editor’s Note: As
early voting kicks off
for the upcoming May
Primary Election, The
Daily Sentinel will be
Danny Davis
running articles allowing the local candidates here all my life. I am
a graduate of Meigs
in contested races to
High School Class of
introduce themselves
1984 and a University
and tell the voters why
of Rio Grande Alumni.
they are running for
Married to my wife,
ofﬁce. Each candidate
Kim Hudson Davis,
is asked, in their own
for 29 years and have
words, to respond to
two questions — tell us four children and one
about yourself and why grandson.
I was employed at
are you running for
Meigs County E.M.S.
this ofﬁce.
RUTLAND — Danny for 31 years, and for
the past two years have
Davis is one of two
been employed with
Republican candidates
for Meigs County Com- Mason County E.M.S.
I am a member of the
missioner.
Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department and have
Tell us about yourself:
been for 34 years, 24 of
My name is Danny
which I have been the
Davis, born in GalliAssistant Chief. I also
polis, Ohio, but raised
have been a member of
in Meigs County. I am
a resident of Rutland
See DAVIS | 5
Village and have lived

FOR THE RECORD
Meigs County Sheriff’s Office
Day Shift
March 17
Day shift deputies served three summonses to
appear papers.
Deputy Sizemore responded to a report of a
small silver vehicle near Alligator Jacks that was
allegedly driving erratically. The deputy located a
vehicle matching the description in the parking lot
and spoke with the driver of the vehicle. The call
was cleared, and no further action was taken.
March 18
Sgt. Stewart served nine summonses to appear
papers.
Deputy Sizemore responded to an alarm call on
Eagle Ridge Road. Deputy Sizemore arrived on
the scene and found everything to be secure at the
residence. No further action was taken.
March 19
Deputies responded to a report of a trespassing
on Rowe Road. Deputies spoke with the complainant and the suspect of the trespassing. It was
found that the suspect lived on a neighboring
property owned by the complainant. The home
owner was advised of the eviction process and the
suspect was advised to stay off of her neighbor’s
property.
See RECORD | 3

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Deputy Ian Fennell, second from left, was presented with a Certificate of Appreciation for Outstanding Service during Sunday evening’s
ceremony.

Remembering the victims

By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — With
the theme of “Expand
the Circle; Reach All Victims,” Sunday evening’s
annual National Crime
Victims’ Rights Week
ceremony was a time to
pay tribute to those gone
too soon, honor those
impacted by crime and
learn about what can be
done to help the youngest victims of crime.
Prosecutor James K.
Stanley, in welcoming
those in attendance,
noted the importance
of the event to honor all
victims, primarily those
taken too soon.
Stanley thanked the
advocates who work
through the Meigs County Victim Assistance
Program who “are truly
dedicated to protecting
the rights of all victims”
and making sure “their
voices are heard.”
The prosecutor also
spoke brieﬂy about
Marsy’s Law which gave

constitutional rights to
victims of crime in the
state of Ohio. The Meigs
County Prosecutor’s
Ofﬁce was one of the
ﬁrst to endorse the ballot
measure which was overwhelmingly approved by
voters last fall. Marsy’s
Law formalizes many of
the things which the Victim Assistance Program
has been doing prior,
while also providing
guidelines and assistance
to law enforcement to
help victims.
Stanley spoke of the
452 shoe display representing the new victims
of crime in Meigs County
in 2017, victims who are
“our friends, our family,
our neighbors, they’re
our children, our grandchildren, our elderly,
they’re a signiﬁcant portion of our community,”
stated Stanley. The display will remain outside
the courthouse throughout the week.
Victim Assistance
See VICTIMS | 4

A total of 452 shoes line the sidewalk and wall around the Meigs
County Courthouse to represent the victims of crime in Meigs
County in 2017.

Meigs Community Fund awards grants
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Community Fund distributed its
ﬁrst grants last week,
while announcing the
“Endow 200” campaign
for future grant opportunities.
Jennifer Sheets,
who serves as the
Meigs County Community Fund President,
explained that the group
recently reorganized
with the help of the
Foundation for Appalachian Ohio to meet a
broad range of needs in
the county.
The goal of the fund
is to allow for Meigs
County people to support projects in Meigs
County.
The Meigs County
Community Fund Family
of Funds includes:The
Meigs County Commu-

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Members of the Meigs County Community Fund Advisory Board are pictured with grant recipients.
Pictured (from left) are Charlene Rutherford, Jennifer Sheets, Paul Reed, Susan Clark, Ian Blache,
AMber Johnson, Courtney Midkiff, Michelle Willard, Heather Keesee (Foundation for Appalachian
Ohio), Abby Harris, Linda Warner and John Hoback.

nity Fund
Forrest Bachtel Scholarship Fund
Chester Shade Historical Association Fund
New Haven School
Fund
The Karr-Aanestad
K-9 Fund
In addition to the

established funds,
Endow 200, Celebrating our Past, Building
our Future, has been
launched in conjunction
with Meigs County’s
200th birthday in 2019
to build an endowment
for future grant opportunities in the county. The

goal of Endow 200 is to
have 200 gifts of $3,000
by 2022.
Those gifts would
build an endowment of
$600,000, which would
allow for $24,000 in
grants to be awarded
See GRANTS | 5

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, April 10, 2018

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.

Trump threatens
Syria strike, suggests
Russia shares blame
By Robert Burns,
Zeke Miller
and Matthew Lee
Associated Press

Tuesday, April 10
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 6 p.m., Acoustic
Night at the Library. Bring your acoustic instruments for this informal jam session. This group
meets on the second Tuesday of each month at 6
p.m.
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.
SUTTON TWP. — The regular monthly meeting
of the Board of Trustees of Sutton Township will be
held beginning at 7 p.m. in the Racine Village Hall
Council Chambers.

Wednesday, April 11
SCIPIO TWP. — Scipio Township Trustees regular
monthly meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. at the Harrisonville Fire House.

Thursday, April 12
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 6 p.m., Tie-Dye
Program. Bring in white clothing articles to transform. Dye and supplies will be provided. All ages
welcome.
WELLSTON — The GJMV Solid Waste Management District Board of Directors will meet at 3:30
p.m. at the district ofﬁce in Wellston.

Friday, April 13
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 10:30 a.m.,
Inspirational Book Club. Read and discuss “Last
Light” by Terri Blackstock with us. Light refreshments will be served.
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 5 p.m., Movie
Night. Watch Star Wars: The Last Jedi on the big
“screen” at the library. Popcorn and lemonade will
be provided by the Friends of the Library.

Wednesday, April 18
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 11 a.m., Gardening Series. Meigs County OSU Extension Agent,
Kevin Fletcher, will be presenting information on
Soil &amp; Plant Nutrition in this session of an ongoing
series of programs.
RUTLAND — Rutland Volunteer Fire Department will hold a soup supper from 4-7 p.m. The
menu will include vegetable soup, bean soup, chili,
hot dogs, roast beef and drinks. Price is by donation.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Sunday, April 15
HEMLOCK GROVE — The Coolville Unity Singers, under the direction of Martha Sue Matheny will
present “God’s Amazing Grace” at 7 p.m. at Hemlock
Grove Christian Church.

Story Law Office
Steven L. Story
Attorney at Law

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WASHINGTON —
Promising a decision
within hours, President Donald Trump
threatened a military
strike against Syria
and declared on
Monday that Russia or any other
nation found to share
responsibility for
Saturday’s apparent
chemical weapons
attack on civilians
will “pay a price.”
The White House
sharply rejected
any suggestion that
Trump’s own words
about pulling U.S.
troops out of Syria
had opened the door
for the attack, which
killed more than 40
people, including
children.
Trump, asked
whether Russian
President Vladimir Putin bore any
responsibility,
responded, “He may,
yeah, he may. And if
he does it’s going to
be very tough, very
tough.” He added,
“Everybody’s gonna
pay a price. He will.
Everybody will.”
Amid the tough
talk from the White
House, the U.S. military appeared to be
in position to carry
out any attack order.
A Navy destroyer, the
USS Donald Cook,
was underway in the
eastern Mediterranean after completing a port call in
Cyprus. The guided
missile destroyer is
armed with Tomahawk cruise missiles, the weapon
of choice in a U.S.
attack one year ago
on an airﬁeld in Syria
following an alleged
sarin gas attack on
civilians.
The Russian
military, which has
a presence in Syria
as a key Assad ally,
said its ofﬁcers had
visited the weekend
site in a suburb of
Damascus, the Syrian
capital, and found no
evidence to back up
reports of poison gas
being used.
However, Trump
said there was little
question that Syria
was responsible for
the apparent weekend attack, although
the government of
President Bashar
Assad denied it. “To
me there’s not much
of a doubt, but the
generals will ﬁgure it
out,” Trump said.
He promised a
decision on a possible military response
within 24 to 48
hours, “probably by
the end of today.”
Emphatic in his
condemnation of the
apparent gas attack,
Trump noted graphic
pictures of the dead
and sickened, calling
the assault “heinous,”
‘’atrocious,” ‘’horrible” and “barbaric.”
Fielding questions
at the White House,
Trump press secretary Sarah Sanders
said it would be
“outrageous” to say
that Trump’s recent
announcement that
he intends to remove
all U.S. forces from
Syria in the coming
months had emboldened Assad. “I think
that it is outrageous
to say that the president of the United
States green-lit some-

thing as atrocious as
the actions that have
taken place over the
last several days,” she
said.
Defense Secretary
Jim Mattis, in separate remarks at the
Pentagon, also suggested Moscow bore
some blame. He criticized Russia for what
he suggested was its
failure to ensure the
elimination of Syria’s
chemical weapons
arsenal under terms
of a 2013 agreement.
Trump was to
meet late in the day
with senior national
security aides, and
no action was “off the
table,” the president
said. Monday was the
ﬁrst day on the job
for his new national
security adviser,
John Bolton, who
has previously advocated military action
against Syria.
Trump said, “If it’s
Russia, if it’s Syria, if
it’s Iran, if it’s all of
them together, we’ll
ﬁgure it out.”
The United States,
meanwhile, urged the
U.N. Security Council to adopt a resolution that would condemn the continuing
use of chemical weapons in Syria “in the
strongest terms” and
establish a new body
to determine responsibility for chemical
attacks. The draft
resolution, obtained
by The Associated
Press, was circulated
ahead of an emergency Security Council
meeting.
An American ofﬁcial said the U.S.
was discussing with
allies whether they
would participate in
a retaliatory strike.
If Trump decides to
proceed quickly, the
most likely partner
would be France
rather than Britain,
because of concerns
about obtaining
permission from
Parliament, said the
ofﬁcial, who wasn’t
authorized to discuss
the planning publicly
and requested anonymity.
Acting Secretary of
State John Sullivan
spoke by phone Monday with British Foreign Secretary Boris
Johnson. Sullivan and
Johnson agreed that
based on reports in
the media and from
the ground, “this
attack bore hallmarks
of previous chemical
weapons attacks by
the Assad regime,”
the British foreign
ofﬁce said.
The White House
deliberations came as
Russia and the Syrian
military blamed Israel for a pre-dawn missile attack on a major
air base in central
Syria, saying Israeli
ﬁghter jets launched
missiles from Lebanon’s air space. A
group that monitors
Syria’s civil war said
the airstrikes killed
14 people, including
Iranians active in
Syria.
Syria’s state news
agency SANA initially said that attack
on the T4 air base
was likely “an American aggression,” but
Pentagon spokesman
Christopher Sherwood quickly denied
the United States
was behind the strike
and the agency then
dropped the accusation, blaming Israel
instead.

Daily Sentinel

OBITUARIES
MICHAEL PAUL SALSER
RACINE — Michael
Paul Salser, 61, of Racine,
Ohio, passed away on
April 6, 2018, at Holzer
Meigs Emergency Department in Pomeroy, Ohio.
He was born on Nov.
12, 1956, in Gallipolis,
Ohio, son of the late Grover Salser, Jr. and Dorotha Mae Pearson Salser.
He was a 1974 graduate
of Southern High School.
He was a member of the
Racine Gun Club and the
F.O.E 2171 in Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Michael is survived

by his son, Gregory Pullins; sister, Rita LaValley (Bern); two nieces,
Marcy and Jyl; two great
nephews; several aunts,
uncles, cousins, and
many, many friends.
No service is scheduled
at this time but a memorial service will be held at
a later date.
Condolences may be
expressed to the family at roush94@yahoo.
com; www.facebook.com/
roushfuneralhome; or
on our website at www.
roushfuneralhome.net.

WILBUR A. RUSSELL
WICHITA
FALLS, Texas —
Wilbur A. Russell,
87, of Wichita
Falls passed away
Saturday, April 7,
2018.
Funeral Services will be held at 10
a.m., Wednesday, April
11, 2018, at the chapel
of Owens and Brumley
Funeral, Wichita Falls
with Reverend Gary
Leonard ofﬁciating.
Interment will follow at
Highland Cemetery, Iowa
Park with military honors rendered by the U. S.
Air Force Honor Guard.
The family will receive
friends from 5-7 p.m.,
Tuesday at Owens and
Brumley in Wichita Falls.
Mr. Russell was born
Nov. 22, 1930, in Warren, Ohio, to Norman A.
and Hattie Bell (Collins)
Russell and graduated
high school in Pomeroy,
Ohio. He enlisted in the
U. S. Air Force in 1951,
and retired as a Tech

Sergeant in 1971.
He served in Viet
Nam during that
time. Wilbur married Ruth Geoghagan on April 9,
1955, and they
were residents
here since 1966. Wilbur
was Methodist by faith.
His favorite activities
were traveling, golﬁng,
bowling and watching
the world go by, always
together with his loving
wife of sixty years, Ruth.
Wilbur was preceded
in death by his parents,
his wife Ruth in 2015
and by their son, Steven
E. Russell in 2002.
Surviving is his grandson, Austin Russell of
Austin, Texas.
It is suggested that in
lieu of ﬂowers, donations
be made to Hospice of
Wichita Falls, 4909 Johnson Rd., 76310
Condolences may be
sent to the family at
www.owensandbrumley.
com.

BRAND
SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. — Jessie Irene (Beard) Brand,
88, of Southside, W.Va. died Sunday, April 8, 2018 at
Broadmore Senior Living, Hurricane, W.Va.
A funeral service will be 1 p.m., Thursday, April 12,
2018 at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant,
W.Va. with Pastor David Radcliff ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow at Suncrest Cemetery in Point Pleasant.
The family will receive friends two hours prior to the
funeral service Thursday at the funeral home.
SMALL
CROWN CITY — Evelyn Small, 83, of Crown City,
died on Sunday, April 8, 2018 at her residence.
The funeral service will be at 1 p.m. Thursday, April
12, 2018 at Willis Funeral Home with Pastor Dean
Warner ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Crown City
Cemetery. Friends may call on Wednesday, April 11,
2018 from 6-8 p.m. at Willis Funeral Home.
JOHNSON
GALLIPOLIS — Audrey G. McCall Johnson, 97, of
Gallipolis, died Sunday, April 8, 2018 at Holzer Medical Center.
The funeral service will be Friday, April 13, 2018
at 1 p.m. at Willis Funeral Home. Burial will follow in
Centenary Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
home one hour prior to the service from noon 1 p.m.
The full obituary will be published later in the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
GRIMES
MILTON — Rev. Melvin Lee, “Jack,” Grimes, 91, of
Milton, died April 8, 2018, at his home following an
extended illness.
Services will be 7 p.m., Wednesday, April 11, 2018
at the Henson-Kitchen Mortuary, Huntington. Military honors by Milton American Legion, Post #139
will be held following the service. Visitation will be
from 5 p.m. until time of service at the funeral home.
Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Gardens,
Barboursville. Arrangements are being provided by
Casto Funeral Home, Evans.
TAYLOR
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Keith A. Taylor, 44, of
Columbus, Ohio died Friday, April 6, 2018 at Grant
Hospital in Columbus.
A graveside service will be held on Wednesday,
April 11, 2018 at 1:30 p.m. at the Pine Grove Cemetery in Leon. Burial will follow. Family will receive
friends from noon-1 p.m. at the Deal Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant on Wednesday prior to the service.
ROBINSON
ASHTON — William (Bill) H. Robinson, 70, of
Ashton, died Sunday, April 7, 2018 in Huntington.
Funeral services will be held Friday, April 13, 2018
at 1 p.m. at the Ball’s Chapel Church in Ashton.
Burial will follow in Apple Grove Memorial Gardens
in Apple Grove. Friends may visit the family at the
church Thursday evening from 6 p.m.-8 p.m. Deal
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant is serving the family.
A full obituary will run in the Wednesday edition of
the Register.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April 10, 2018 3

MEIGS BRIEFS

TODAY IN HISTORY

begin May 1. Trustees are asking and 1-3 p.m. at 112 E. Memothat all ﬂowers and grave blankets rial Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring child(ren)’s shot records.
be removed by the end of April.
Children must be accompanied
by a parent/legal guardian. A
$30 donation is appreciated for
immunization administration;
however, no one will be denied
services because of an inability
to pay an administration fee for
Gallipolis Elks Lodge 107
state-funded childhood vaccines.
scholarships are now available
POMEROY — The Pomeroy
Please bring medical cards and/
Firemen’s Association will be hav- for graduation seniors in high
or commercial insurance cards,
schools in Gallia and Meigs
ing a spaghetti dinner fundraiser
if applicable. Zostavax (shinCounties in Ohio and Mason
on Saturday, April 14, from 11
gles); pneumonia and inﬂuenza
a.m. to 2 p.m. The dinner will be County, W.Va., Scholarship
vaccines are also available. Call
applications are only available
hosted by the Pomeroy Fraterat guidance counselor ofﬁces in for eligibility determination and
nal Order of Eagles Aerie 2171,
availability or visit our website
which is located at 224 East Main these schools. Awards will be
at www.meigs-health.com to see
based on the applicant’s ﬁnanStreet in Pomeroy. Dinners are
a list of accepted commercial
cial need and scholastic and
$7 each and consist of spaghetti,
insurances and Medicaid for
leadership qualities. Deadline
salad, bread, and drink. Dine in
adults.
for return of the application
and carryout is available with
to the Gallipolis Elks Lodge is
delivery available to locations
Friday, July 6, 2018. Completed
where ﬁve or more dinners are
applications should be sent to
purchased. The Firemen’s Association invites all members of the Past Exalted Ruler’s Associacommunity to attend this spaghet- tion, Gallipolis Elks Lodge #107,
408 Second Avenue, PO Box
ti dinner. For more information,
or to order dinners, contact Derek 303, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
Narcotics Anonymous groups
Miller at (740) 416-1830 or (740)
meet at St Peter’s Episcopal
992-2663.
Church on Second Avenue in
Gallipolis Mondays at 6 p.m.,
Wednesday at noon, Thursday
at 7:30 p.m., Friday at noon and
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. Alcoholics
Anonymous meetings also meet
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Health Department will at the church Tuesday at 8 p.m.,
conduct an Immunization Clinic Wednesday at 8 p.m., Thursday at
OLIVE TWP. — Cemetery
noon and Friday at 8 p.m.
on Tuesday from 9-11 a.m.
Cleanup in Olive Township will

Today is Tuesday, April 10, the 100th day of 2018.
There are 265 days left in the year.

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.

Spaghetti
Fundraiser

Elks’ scholarship
applications

NA and AA
meetings

March 29
Deputy Campbell and
Sgt. Stewart were called
to Spring Avenue in
From page 1
Pomeroy to assist the
Pomeroy Police DepartDeputy Sizemore,
ment with multiple
Deputy Riley, and Sgt.
subjects in a vehicle on a
Stewart responded to an
assault on Johns Road in trafﬁc stop.
Sgt. Stewart responded
Racine. Both parties were
to Reedsville in referseparated, and charges
were ﬁled on the suspect ence to a resident hearing gunshot behind
for assault.
their residence. Stewart
Deputy Sizemore and
Sgt. Stewart assisted the arrived at the residence
and searched the woods
Syracuse Police Departbehind the residence.
ment on a possible
Nothing was found, and
domestic violence call.
no further action was
The call was handled
taken.
by the Syracuse Police
Department and no
arrests were made after it March 30
was determined that no
Deputies responded to
threats were made, and
Racine after receiving a
no physical altercation
call of an alarm activation
took place.
coming from a local busiDeputy Sizemore and
ness. Deputies arrived on
Sgt. Stewart conducted
scene and found the busia trafﬁc stop on Bradness to be secure.
bury Road for an equipDeputies responded to
ment violation. Deputy
Kingsbury Road in referSizemore found that the
ence to two dogs being
driver of the vehicle had
tied up in the backyard of
a suspended driver’s
a residence and the ﬂood
license. Upon a search
waters were beginning to
of the vehicle deputies
rise. Sgt. Stewart arrived
located alleged drug para- and found the water to be
phernalia. Both charges
approximately 10-15 feet
were misdemeanors and
away from the dogs. The
the suspect was issued
situation was monitored,
a summons to appear in
and the water receded
County Court.
prior to making it to the
area of the dogs.
March 25
Sgt. Stewart assisted
March 31
Meigs County Child
The Meigs County
Protective Services on a Sheriff’s Ofﬁce processed
home visit on South Sec- two concealed carry
ond Avenue in Middleweapon applications.
port.
A deputy responded
Deputy Sizemore and to State Route 681 in
Sgt. Stewart responded
reference to three horses
to Peach Fork Road in
being in the roadway in
Pomeroy in reference
Darwin. The deputy was
to an alarm activation.
able to locate the owner
Deputies arrived on the of the horses and they
scene and found the
were taken back in posback door open to the
session of the owner.
residence. The residence
was checked, and nothApril 1
ing was found.
The Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce processed three
concealed carry weapon
March 26
applications and registered
Deputies took Danny
two sex offenders.
Morgan, 53, of RutSheriff’s Deputies conland into custody after
ducted numerous trafﬁc
he was convicted on
stops for speeding along
charges of attempted of
State Route 33 between
murder and felonious
Five Points and the
assault by a jury. The
Ravenswood Bridge.
case took place in the
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court before Judge April 2
I. Carson Crow.
Deputies Fennell and
Deputy Sizemore con- Sizemore responded to a
ducted a trafﬁc stop on
report of an unruly juveNoble Summit Road for nile on Apple Grove Dora trafﬁc infraction. Upon cas Road. The deputies
speaking with the driver, arrived at the residence
Deputy Sizemore found and spoke with the juvethat his driver’s license
nile and his parent and
was suspended. The
the situation was resolved
male was issued a sumfor the evening. No furmons to appear in Meigs ther action was taken.
County Court from drivSgt. Stewart processed
ing under suspension.
two applications for concealed carry.

Records

Sgt. Stewart took a
report of a burglary in the
area of Blake Hill Road.
A list of stolen items and
photographs was collected along with serial
numbers to the missing
items. This case is still
under investigation and is
pending criminal charges
at this time.
April 6
Deputy Sizemore was
on patrol and noticed a
female slumped over the
steering wheel at the 124
Mart near the gas pumps.
Deputy Sizemore made
contact with the female
and upon a search of her
vehicle suspected crack
cocaine was allegedly
located. Deputy Sizemore
has sent the suspected
drugs off to BCI&amp;I to be
tested for a controlled
substance. If lab results
indicate the presence of a
controlled substance, the
case will be presented to
a Meigs County Ground
Jury.

checked the inside of
the house with the home
owner and everything
was found to be in order.
Several birds were nesting on the underside
of the balcony and had
ﬂown away while the
deputy was checking the
property. The female was
advised that they were
probably the source of
the noise she heard and
advised her to call him
back if needed. No further action was taken on
this call.
April 3
Dispatch received a

Midnight Shift
March 31
Dispatch received
a call of a prowler on
Happy Hollow Road. The
deputy arrived at the
scene, made contact with
the caller and checked
the property. No one was
found. No further action
was take on this call.
Dispatch received a
call from a female on
Loop Road advising she
had just heard several
gunshots in the area and
asked for a deputy to
check it out. A deputy
was sent to and patrolled
the area. No further shots
were heard, and nothing
was found. No further
action was taken on this
call.

had driven into the high
water by mistake and his
car is now broken down.
A tow truck was called
for the car and the deputy
waited at the scene until
it arrived. The driver was
not cited because he had
driven into the water by
mistake and the ofﬁcer
did not see the incident.
As a reminder always
be aware of the road conditions and your speed in
bad weather conditions.
A split-second mistake
may damage your vehicle
and cost you money and
even worse, it could cost
you your life.

call from Gallia County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce asking
if we could locate some
subjects on Bone Hollow
Road and have them call
their ofﬁce. They did
not have an address. The
dispatcher on duty was
familiar with the subjects
and a deputy was sent to
their home and delivered
the message.
April 4
While on patrol, a deputy came upon a vehicle
broken down in the middle of the road on State
Route 124 in Rutland.
The driver advised he

A complete wellness
blood profile for only

$25

Wellness blood profiles may be purchased at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital Laboratory starting Monday, April 2. Profiles are available
from the lab Monday through Friday (closed holidays) from 7:00 a.m.
to 11:00 a.m. Lab work should be performed while fasting 8-10 hours
beforehand. No appointment necessary. Those who purchase profiles
should register at the front desk before having lab work performed.
Profile includes:

April 1
Dispatch received a call
from a female advising at
the end of Noble Summit
Road near the Jehovah
Witness Church someone
was yelling. A deputy
was sent and patrolled
the area. He heard some
loud music in the area,
but it stopped before he
could locate it. No further
action taken on this call.
April 2
Dispatch received a call
from an elderly female
advising that someone
was trying to get into her
upstairs balcony door on
Ross Road. A deputy was
dispatched and arrived
on scene. He checked the
area, and nothing was
found, noting there was
no outside access to the
second ﬂoor door. The
deputy went inside and

On this date:
In 1790, President George Washington signed the
ﬁrst United States Patent Act.
In 1866, the American Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Animals was incorporated.
In 1912, the British liner RMS Titanic set sail from
Southampton, England, on its ill-fated maiden voyage.
In 1925, the F. Scott Fitzgerald novel “The Great
Gatsby” was ﬁrst published by Scribner’s of New
York.
In 1932, German President Paul Von Hindenburg
was re-elected in a runoff, with Adolf Hitler coming
in second.
In 1947, Brooklyn Dodgers President Branch Rickey purchased the contract of Jackie Robinson from
the Montreal Royals.
In 1953, the 3-D horror movie “House of Wax,”
produced by Warner Bros. and starring Vincent Price,
premiered in New York.
In 1971, a table tennis team from the United States
arrived in China at the invitation of the communist
government for a goodwill visit that came to be
known as “ping-pong diplomacy.”
In 1978, Arkady Shevchenko, a high-ranking Soviet
citizen employed by the United Nations, sought political asylum in the United States.
In 1981, imprisoned IRA hunger striker Bobby
Sands was declared the winner of a by-election to the
British Parliament.

Low-Cost
Blood Profiles

Complete Blood Count

Blood Chemistries

Lipid Profile

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��5HG�%ORRG�&amp;HOOV�
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��1HXWURSKLOV
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��(RVLQRSKLOV
��%DVRSKLOV

��*OXFRVH
��%81��� %ORRG�8UHD�1LWURJHQ
��Creatinine
��8ULF�$FLG
��Total Bilirublin
��6*27� $67
��Alkaline Phosphatase
��Total Protein
��Albumin
��Calcium
��Chloride
��Sodium
��Potassium
��Carbon Dioxide

��7RWDO�&amp;KROHVWHURO
��+'/��� +LJK�'HQVLW\��
Lipoprotein)
��7ULJO\FHULGHV
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Lipoprotein)
��9/'/��� 9HU\�/RZ�'HQVLW\�
Lipoprotein)
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Wellness Blood Profiles are available during the months of January, April, July &amp; October.
Optional testing is available for Hemoglobin A1C and Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone.
Cost is $7 per test.

For more information, please call 304.675.4340, ext. 1377.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Laboratory Services
OH-80002418

Cemetery
Cleanup

Immunization
Clinic

Today’s Highlight in History:
On April 10, 1968, “In the Heat of the Night” won
best picture of 1967 at the 40th Academy Awards; one
of its stars, Rod Steiger, was named best actor while
Katharine Hepburn was honored as best actress for
“Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner.”

�����9DOOH\�'ULYH��3RLQW�3OHDVDQW��:9������

�NEWS

4 Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Victims
From page 1

Director Theda Petrasko
spoke about the START
program, introducing
Inter-County START
Coordinator Bethany
Bolin who detailed the
program.
START, which stands
for Sobriety Treatment
And Reducing Trauma,
is a pilot program of the
Ohio Attorney General’s
Ofﬁce to help families
impacted by the opioid
epidemic.
Bolin noted that 75
percent of reports to
children services are drug
related. While the cases
are increasing, children
services funding in Ohio
has decreased. Ohio is
50th in the nation in funding for children services,
while the children are the
ones who suffer the most
in drug situations.
That is where the
START program comes
in. The pilot program is
a grant funded program
which provides for intensive case management,
support for the family by
peer mentors and trauma
counseling. The program
works toward sobriety for
the adults in the family,
while maintaining the
family relationship in the
home for the children.
The program which
began earlier this year
is currently serving two
families and hopes to
expand services.
Petrasko stated that
“START is a start in the
need to reach all victims,
with a focus on reaching
the children.” Making a
difference in the lives of
the children at a young
age can help break the
generational pattern
of individuals entering
the court system, noted
Petrasko.
“Addiction is like a
cancer, it effects everyone around them,” said
Petrasko. Petrasko noted
that children in a home
with an addict are four
times more likely to be
neglected, and three
times more likely to be
verbally, sexually or physically abused.
Petrasko spoke of a
training she recently
attended which talked
about collaborative services to help children
who are the victims in
the opioid epidemic. She
added that the vast majority of all criminal cases,
and therefore victims of
crime, relate back to the
drug epidemic.
Children in the homes
of addicts may witness
violence, suffer from
abuse, be kept up a night
with the things happening in the house, or have
their needs not being
met, said Petrasko.
In order to expand the
circle and reach all victims, Petrasko called on
agencies to come together and share information
to get the needed help
for children to break the
cycle. Working together
can help to identify the
needs of the children in
individual situations, as
well as the services that
are out there to assist
them.
“We can ﬁll these gaps
and we can ﬁnd solutions,” said Petrasko.
“We have a team of good
people that can make a
difference for these kids.”
Commissioner Tim
Ihle, before leading the
invocation, spoke about
the impact of being a victim of crime can have on
a family. Ihle noted that
his wife had twice been
the victim of an armed
robbery. “You don’t realize the domino effect it
can have on everyone,”
said Ihle. He noted that
he did not realize how
what they had experienced could channel into
making a difference for
others, something his

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Several members of the Eastern High School National Honor Society assisted with assembling the display outside the Meigs County Courthouse on Friday morning.
Pictured (from left) are Allison Barber, Jessica Parker, Katherine Ridenour, Kylee Tolliver, Hannan Hill, Prosecutor James K. Stanley, Morgain Little, Kaitlyn Hawk, Isaiah
Martindale and Ryan Harbour.

A display outside the courthouse pays tribute to Meigs County’s homicide victims.

Luminary bags line the courthouse steps with messages left by
friends and family who attended the ceremony on Sunday evening.

Bethany Bolin, Inter-County START Coordinator, speaks about the
pilot program which recently launched in the county.

children are doing in their
jobs. Ihle’s daughter is a
school counselor and was
one of the individuals to
launch Eastern’s Eagle
Pack Program, while his
son works in juvenile
court.
During the ceremony
Deputy Ian Fennell was
recognized with a certiﬁcate of appreciation for
outstanding service on
behalf of crime victims.
Stanley recalled the
events of Jan. 31 and the
actions of Fennell to end
a high-speed pursuit in
Pomeroy. Fennell, using
his cruiser, blocked the
sidewalk in the area of
Farmers Bank on East
Main Street as the driver
in the pursuit was driving
along the sidewalk. With
the pursuit taking place
in the middle of the afternoon there was a large
amount of trafﬁc on the
roadway, as well as school
buses letting kids off from
school, and pedestrians in
the area. Fennell stopping
the vehicle, taking the
impact of the crash himself, brought the pursuit
to an end.
Sheriff Keith Wood stated that Fennell, took the
message of to “Protect
and Save” to heart that
day, putting it into action
to save many potential
victims who may have
been hit by the suspect
vehicle.
Fennell’s ﬁancé Katie
Cretin accepted the
award on his behalf as he

was engaged in a trafﬁc
stop at the beginning of
the ceremony. Fennell
made it to the ceremony
after the trafﬁc stop concluded.
“Deputy Fennell put
his own safety on the
line to ensure that no one
became a victim during
that high-speed pursuit.
Deputy Fennell embodies what it means to be a
law enforcement ofﬁcer
sworn to protect and
serve. If you see Deputy
Fennell, thank him for all
that he does to keep our
community safe,” stated
Stanley.
Those in attendance
had the opportunity to
write messages, thoughts
and prayers to crime
victims in their families
on luminary bags which
were placed on the courthouse steps following the
ceremony.
The 452 shoes to represent the victims of crime
in the county in 2017 will
remain around the courthouse throughout the
week as a way to remember the impact of crime in
the county.
Homicide victims
remembered with a
moment of silence at the
ceremony, as well as a
display in front of the
courthouse, were as follows: Deborah Ellis, William Underwood, Todd
Johnson, Winﬁeld Hardiman, Tommy Parker,
Howard Lawrence, Bobbie Butcher, Christopher

Commissioner Tim Ihle spoke
about the impact crime can
have on a victim and their
family.

Prosecutor James K. Stanley presents Deputy Ian Fennell’s fiance
Katie Cretin with Fennell’s Certificate of Appreciation. Fennell was
on a traffic stop at the time of the presentation, arriving at the
ceremony later in the evening.

Meigs County Victim Assistance
Program Director Theda
Petrasko speaks during Sunday
evening’s ceremony.

Victim advocate Alexis Schwab
reads the names of the
homicide victims.

Roush, Rebecca Ackerman, Keitha Whitlatch,
James W. Gardner, Stephanie Ramey, Stephanie
English, Jefferey Halley,
Jefferey Shannon Halley,
Diana Brewer, Ericka
Brown, Walter Chafﬁn,
Kenneth Rizer Sr., Doris
Jackson, Robert Harrison,
Joshua Starcher, Brett
Pierce, Dyle Bay, Dale
Miller, Brandon Lupardus, Sidney Wise, Christa
Nitz and Jesse Carr.
“The colors for this
year’s National Crime
Victim’s Rights Week are
teal, navy, and pink. Wear
these colors this week

Shoes are labeled with a tag stating what the individual represented
was a victim of.

and advise others of the
reason you are wearing
these colors so that others
are made aware of your
support of victim rights.
Take time this week to
reﬂect upon those among
us who have been victims
of crime and remember

them and their families
in your prayers,” stated
Stanley on the prosecutor’s ofﬁce Facebook page
Monday.
National Crime Victims’
Right Week continues
through the remainder of
this week.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Hosting a community baby shower

Grants

dents are not able to go
to college tours on their
own, and this will allow
for the group of students
From page 1
to travel together for
annually across the areas the tours of Ohio State
of arts and culture, com- University, Capital University, Shawnee State
munity and economic
development, education, University, Marshall University and Wright State
environmental stewardUniversity. The trip is
ship and health and
planned for mid-May.
human services.
The Meigs County
Last week, the ﬁrst
Health Department
grants were awarded in
a total amount of $8,000 received $4,000 in grant
funding to be used for
with the money comthe implementation of
ing from $5,000 in seed
money from the Commu- the Community Health
Improvement Plan.
nity Improvement Corporation and $3,000 from Meigs County Health
Department AdministraJo Ellen Yeary, Sheets
told those in attendance tor Courtney Midkiff
and the University of Rio
at the awards reception.
Grande’s Ian Blache, who
Three projects were
worked on the CHIP,
selected from a total of
spoke about the needs of
16 applications.
Hopewell Health Cen- the county and the path
ters was awarded $1,000 to implementing prowhich will go toward pro- grams to help with those
needs. “Public health is a
viding a day camp summer program for children direct investment in the
community,” said Blache.
with challenges in their
The Meigs County
lives related toward the
Community Fund is led
opioid epidemic. This
by a volunteer committee
will allow for children
with similar experiences with strong ties to the
Meigs County commuto spend time together
nity. Meigs County Comand share their feelings
munity Fund committee
to know they are not
members include: Ryan
going through the chalBuckley, Susan Clark,
lenges alone.
John Hoback, Tom HuntThe Meigs High
er, Barb Musser, Paul
School Counseling
Reed, Charlene RutherProgram was awarded
ford, Jennifer Sheets, and
$3,000 which will allow
for 50 students from the Linda Warner.
To learn more about
school to spend two days
touring colleges and uni- the Meigs County Community Fund visit www.
versities in the region.
AppalachianOhio.org or
Counselor Abby Harris
explained that many stu- call 740-753-1111.

Davis
From page 1

the Rutland Emergency Squad
for going on 34 years.
I have been involved in the
community for many years
including coaching summer
league softball and baseball
for Rutland, ﬂag football,
big bend football, and both

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

31°

48°

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.

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

0.12
1.46
1.00
15.85
10.94

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:00 a.m.
8:01 p.m.
4:13 a.m.
2:41 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

First

Full

Apr 15 Apr 22 Apr 29

Last

May 7

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

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

Major
8:19a
9:02a
9:43a
10:24a
11:06a
11:51a
12:15a

Minor
2:07a
2:50a
3:31a
4:12a
4:55a
5:39a
6:28a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
8:43p
9:25p
10:06p
10:47p
11:30p
---12:11p

Minor
2:31p
3:13p
3:55p
4:36p
5:18p
6:03p
6:53p

WEATHER HISTORY
So much dust became airborne in
Kansas and Iowa on April 10, 1935,
that schools and highways closed.
The “Dust Bowl” of the 1930s is
blamed on land misuse and climate.

ideologue in Europe’s
neo-Nazi movement,
has died at 76.
The Austria Press
Agency reports Honsik
died Saturday at his
home in Hungary. APA
cited “multiple independent sources” in its
report Monday.
Honsik was convicted
of taking part in farright attacks in Vienna
in the 1960s and later
joined the since-banned
Austrian far-right party
NDP.

Duckworth
has baby

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

EXTENDED FORECAST
WEDNESDAY

Partly sunny

THURSDAY

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.39 +0.21
Marietta
34 25.00 -0.43
Parkersburg
36 26.20 -0.68
Belleville
35 12.55 +0.01
Racine
41 12.88 -0.25
Point Pleasant
40 28.63 -5.49
Gallipolis
50 13.88 -6.68
Huntington
50 39.05 -5.78
Ashland
52 44.20 -5.12
Lloyd Greenup 54 17.35 -4.52
Portsmouth
50 43.50 -4.90
Maysville
50 45.80 -3.30
Meldahl Dam
51 46.50 -2.70
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

54°
38°

Warmer with periods
of sun

Very warm with sun
and some clouds

A shower and
thunderstorm around

Cooler; chance of a
little a.m. rain

Clouds and sunshine

Logan
50/29

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
50/31

Murray City
50/29
Belpre
52/32

Athens
51/30

St. Marys
51/31

Parkersburg
51/32

Coolville
51/31

Milton
53/34

Spencer
52/32

Clendenin
53/30

St. Albans
53/33

Huntington
52/33

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
58/46
100s
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
San Francisco
0s
64/52
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
84/59
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Elizabeth
52/31

Buffalo
53/32

Ironton
52/31

Ashland
52/32
Grayson
53/32

MONDAY

56°
39°

Wilkesville
51/30
POMEROY
Jackson
52/31
52/31
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
53/33
53/32
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
49/32
GALLIPOLIS
53/33
53/32
53/33

South Shore Greenup
53/31
51/30

38

SUNDAY

74°
46°

McArthur
51/29

Portsmouth
53/31

SATURDAY

81°
59°

Adelphi
51/29
Chillicothe
50/31

FRIDAY

would travel throughout the
state attending meetings to
beneﬁt Meigs County in many
ways including economically.
As your commissioner, I would
work to make the most out of
the budget and to improve the
county as one. As a full time
commissioner, I will continue
to dedicate my services to
this county as I have for many
years.

75°
52°

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

Lucasville
51/30
Very High

BERLIN (AP) —
Gerd Honsik, an Austrian author who was
considered a leading

be to work with the grant
writer to help the community
and various groups acquire
more funding. Working alongside the other commissioners, I
hope to establish a more stable
Why are you running
infrastructure throughout the
for this office:
The reason I am running for county.
Another one of my goals is to
Meigs County Commission is
work to enhance the commuto work hand and hand with
nication throughout numerous
the community and help it
prosper. One of my goals would organizations in our county. I

Very High

Primary: maple and other
Mold: 50

Holocaust
denier dies

my knowledge of the county
would be beneﬁcial to me as
your next Meigs County Commissioner.

Waverly
50/28

Pollen: 4

Low

MOON PHASES

She says she’s grateful to friends and
family and “our wonderful medical teams
for everything they’ve
done to help us in our
decades-long journey to
complete our family.”

IN BRIEF

0

Primary: cladosporium
Wed.
6:58 a.m.
8:01 p.m.
4:49 a.m.
3:39 p.m.

ing well and asked for
privacy.
Duckworth, a 50-yearold veteran who lost
her legs in the Iraq War,
CHICAGO (AP) —
Sen. Tammy Duckworth is one of only 10 lawmakers who have given
has given birth to a
birth while in Congress.
baby girl, making her
Her ﬁrst daughter, Abithe ﬁrst U.S. senator
gail, was born in 2014.
to give birth while in
Duckworth says
ofﬁce.
Maile’s middle name
The Illinois Demois in honor of Duckcrat announced she
worth’s husband’s great
delivered her second
aunt, Pearl Bowlsbey
daughter, Maile (MYlee) Pearl Bowlsbey, on Johnson, who was an
Monday. Her ofﬁce says Army ofﬁcer and nurse
in World War II.
Duckworth is recover-

OHIO VALLEY —
The Spring Baby Shower is returning next
weekend.
The Mason County
Baby Pantry and Pleasant Valley Hospital
(PVH) will be hosting a
baby shower Saturday,
April 14, 3 p.m.- 5 p.m.
at PVH.
Bree Ramey of the
Mason County Baby
Pantry, said the event
is for women who are
pregnant or have a baby
up to three months old
and are in need of baby
items. Ramey said the

47°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

(in inches)

ments such as the health
and human resources
department, job and
family services, and
churches. Ramey added
that if a resident is outside of Mason County
and is not referred to
the baby pantry, they
will still be provided
with clothes ranging
from sizes suited for
infants to adults.
Ramey shared the
baby pantry is regularly open on the second
Monday of every month
from noon – 2 p.m. and
the fourth Monday of
every month from 5
p.m. to 7 p.m. at Bellemead United Methodist
Church.

Intervals of clouds and sun today. Partly cloudy
and cold tonight. High 53° / Low 33°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

ers. The baby shower
will also have refreshments and door prizes.
Ramey shared the
baby pantry has been
providing residents
of Mason County and
surrounding counties
with baby supplies for
four years. Ramey said
residents of Mason
County and residents
from surrounding counties referred to the baby
pantry will be given
any sort of baby supplies they need such as
diapers, wipes, formula,
clothes, and more. She
explained residents
from surrounding counties can be referred to
the pantry by establish-

62°
45°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

46°
32°
66°
43°
88° in 1893
22° in 1997

baby shower is open
to women from West
Virginia and Ohio and
it does not matter if the
woman has attended a
baby shower before, she
is still welcomed. Registration is requested of
the mothers wishing to
attend providing their
name, address, due
date/ baby’s birth date,
baby’s gender to (304)
807-5557 or Jessica
Mcbp Legg on Facebook.
The mothers-to-be
and new mothers in
attendance will not only
be receiving gifts, but
will be provided with
information on area
local programs for moth-

eperkins@aimmediamidwest.
com

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

By Erin Perkins

Meigs middle school and high
school football. I also coached
high school wrestling and
was involved with starting
the biddy league wrestling in
Meigs County. I was a member
of the Rutland Village Council
for eight years and a current
member of the Local Emergency Planning Commission.
I believe my experience with
Meigs County E.M.S. and

TODAY

Tuesday, April 10, 2018 5

Charleston
52/33

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
38/21
Montreal
43/28

Billings
58/40

Toronto
43/28

Minneapolis
43/29

Detroit
48/33

Chicago
47/37

Denver
70/46

Kansas City
57/45

New York
50/37
Washington
57/38

Monterrey
67/56

Wed.
Hi/Lo/W
83/54/s
47/36/c
68/48/s
52/43/s
57/43/s
54/37/pc
60/37/c
48/39/s
61/45/pc
66/46/s
68/40/s
60/53/pc
61/50/pc
57/47/pc
59/49/pc
81/60/s
76/51/s
70/44/pc
57/47/c
82/73/pc
79/57/s
60/51/pc
71/51/s
90/60/s
73/52/s
73/54/s
65/54/pc
83/69/sh
50/37/c
68/50/s
73/54/s
54/44/s
77/61/s
77/58/s
56/44/s
98/66/s
54/45/pc
47/35/s
62/45/s
62/43/s
68/55/pc
70/51/pc
61/50/c
53/41/r
60/47/s

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

97° in Thermal, CA
2° in Raco, MI

Global

Houston
76/51
Chihuahua
82/56

Today
Hi/Lo/W
74/52/s
48/39/pc
67/43/pc
50/35/r
55/34/pc
58/40/pc
65/46/c
44/33/c
52/33/pc
66/43/pc
66/43/pc
47/37/pc
50/31/pc
44/32/pc
49/33/pc
71/50/s
70/46/pc
56/41/pc
48/33/pc
81/73/pc
76/51/s
49/33/pc
57/45/pc
92/69/pc
61/39/s
84/59/pc
55/36/pc
88/71/pc
43/29/sf
59/35/pc
73/54/s
50/37/pc
66/47/s
81/61/t
52/36/r
97/68/s
46/31/pc
43/30/c
62/38/pc
61/35/pc
52/42/pc
75/54/pc
64/52/c
58/46/r
57/38/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

Atlanta
67/43

El Paso
84/61

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

High
Low
Miami
88/71

114° in Nawabshah, Pakistan
-32° in Shepherd Bay, Canada

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

You’ll Feel Right At Home.

Racine 740-949-2210
Syracuse 740-992-6333
Middleport 740-691-5131

w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
OH-70030880

OH-70003248

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 bank needs, we
promise to make you feel right at home.

�Sports
6 Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Meigs competes at Mingo Relays
By Alex Hawley

sprint medley. The 4x200m
relay team of Jacob Perry, Cole
Adams, Zach Bartrum and
Cole Betzing posted a time of
LOGAN, Ohio — The
Marauders took seventh, while 1:38.25, while the 800m sprint
medley team of Perry, Adams,
the Lady Marauders were
Bartrum and Landon Acree,
eighth at the Mingo Relays,
had a time of 1:43.21.
hosted by Logan High School
The duo of Lane Cullums
on Friday in Hocking County.
and Matthew Jackson was
The boys team competition
fourth in the shot put relay
had Logan and Reynoldsburg
tie for ﬁrst place with 88 points with a combined distance of
71-3, while the team of Acree
apiece. Warren was third
and Brody Hawley was fourth
with 80.5, followed by Mariin the pole vault relay at 9-00.
etta (65), Athens (62.5) and
The 1600m sprint medley
Morgan (38). Meigs was sevteam of Cullums, Cole Betzing,
enth with a total of 31, while
Theo McElroy and Magnus
Maysville rounded out the
McDaniel was ﬁfth with a time
eight-team ﬁeld with 16.
The best ﬁnish for the MHS of 4:24.87, while the 4x100m
quartet of Perry, Adams, Barboys was third place, in the
4x200m relay and in the 800m trum and Devon Hawley was

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Meigs junior Cole Adams runs in the Rocky Brands Invitational on March 31 in
Nelsonville, Ohio.

ﬁfth with a time of 47.48.
The long jump duo of Adams
and Perry posted a sixth place
distance of 33-7.25, while the
distance medley team of Christian Jones, Levi Chapman,
Brody Hawley and Joseph Cotterill had a sixth place time of
15:14,04.
Athens won the girls team
title with a 105, while Warren
and Logan tied for second with
78 apiece. Marietta was fourth
with a score of 70, followed
by Maysville (64), Morgan
(31), and Reynoldsburg (24.5).
The Lady Marauders ﬁnished
eighth with a score of 19.
The Meigs girls’ best ﬁnish
was third place in the long
See RELAYS | 7

Pioneers finish
off sweep of
Rio baseball
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

BUTLER, Pa. — In Saturday’s come-frombehind win over the University of Rio Grande, No.
14 Point Park University did its best to break the
RedStorm’s spirit.
With a doubleheader sweep on Sunday, the Pioneers took a step toward breaking the RedStorm’s
back.
Point Park posted another late rally for a 7-4
victory in game one, while pulling away down
the stretch for a 7-2 win in game two to sweep
the twinbill and the weekend series from the RedStorm at Kelly Automotive Park.
The Pioneers ﬁnished the day at 29-2 overall and
18-0 in the River States Conference.
Rio Grande dropped to 16-22 overall and 9-9 in
league play with the two losses.
The RedStorm now ﬁnd themselves tied with
Indiana University Kokomo for fourth place in the
RSC standings just one game ahead of Brescia University and two games in front of WVU-Tech, who
currently sit in sixth and seventh place, respectively. Only the top six teams will advance to the
conference tournament beginning May 3 at VA
Memorial Stadium in Chillicothe.
Rio Grande coughed up a pair of two-run leads
in the opener. The RedStorm led 2-0 after one
inning and, after PPU tied the game in the third, a
pair of fourth inning markers made it 4-2.
The Pioneers pushed across single markers in
the ﬁfth and sixth innings to knot the score at 4-4
and then scored three times in the seventh inning
to set the ﬁnal score.
The go-ahead runs in the seventh inning were all
unearned as a result of a pair of Rio errors.
Chris Hernandez had three hits and drove in
two runs for Point Park, while Stefan Mrkonja had
two hits and and a run batted in and Yuri Sucart
ﬁnished 2-for-3 with two runs scored.
Ben Herstine and Billy Kidd also drove in one
run each for the Pioneers.
Felix Castillo picked up his seventh win in as
See BASEBALL | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, April 10
Baseball
Wahama at Eastern, 5
p.m.
Point Pleasant at Gallia
Academy, 5 p.m.
Marietta at Meigs, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Sciotoville
East, 5 p.m.
Teays Valley Christian at
Hannan, 6 p.m.
Softball
Wahama at Eastern, 5
p.m.
Marietta at Meigs, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Sciotoville
East, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Eastern, Southern at
Athens, 4:30
Meigs at Jackson, 4:30
Gallia Co. meet at GAHS,
4:30
Wahama at Roane County,
4:30
Hannan at Huntington, 5
p.m.
Tennis
Lincoln County at Point
Pleasant, 4:30
Unioto at Gallia Academy,

4:30
Wednesday, April 11
Baseball
Eastern at South Gallia,
5 p.m.
Waterford at Southern, 5
p.m.
River Valley at Wellston,
5 p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County,
5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Rock
Hill, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Wayne,
7 p.m.
Softball
Eastern at South Gallia,
5 p.m.
Waterford at Southern, 5
p.m.
River Valley at Wellston,
5 p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County,
5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Rock
Hill, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Wayne,
5 p.m.
Tennis
Huntington St. Joseph at
Point Pleasant, 4:30

David J. Phillip | AP

Patrick Reed reacts to his birdie on the 12th hole during the fourth round at the Masters golf tournament Sunday in Augusta, Ga.

No one laughing at Reed after Masters win
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)
— Patrick Reed got some
laughs a few years back
when he declared himself
a top ﬁve player, with
little on his resume to
back it up.
No one is laughing
now.
Reed’s breakthrough
win in the Masters didn’t
ofﬁcially move him into
the top ﬁve — he’s now
No. 11 in the world —
but it certainly moved
him into the conversation
when the debate turns to
major championships.
As well it should, after
Reed handled not only
the golf course but the
suffocating pressure of a
Sunday at the Masters to
win his ﬁrst major. Playing in the same group as
four-time major winner
Rory McIlroy, he didn’t
ﬂinch even as Jordan
Spieth and Rickie Fowler
made late runs at him.
The player known for
a sometimes prickly attitude may have even won
a few fans over in the
process.
They cheered for
McIlroy on the ﬁrst tee,
certain that he was going
to overcome a three-shot
deﬁcit and win his ﬁrst
green jacket. But it was
Reed who got the ﬁnal
cheers when he calmly
sank a 3-footer on the
18th green for a ﬁnal
round 71 to win by a shot
over Fowler and two over
Spieth.
“I walked up to the

ﬁrst tee and had a really
welcoming cheer from
the fans, but then when
Rory walked up to the
tee, you know, his cheer
was a little louder,” Reed
said. “But that’s another
thing that just kind of
played into my hand. Not
only did it fuel my ﬁre a
little bit, but also, it just
takes the pressure off of
me and adds it back to
him.”
Known as “Captain
America” for his play
in the Ryder Cup, Reed
added a far more important title: Masters champion. He did it by playing
steady to protect a threeshot lead as some of the
biggest names in golf
tried to chase him down.
And if he wasn’t exactly lacking for conﬁdence
before, winning the green
jacket should give him
even more of a strut.
“He’s not scared. I
think you guys have seen
that previous from the
Ryder Cups and the way
he plays,” said Fowler,
who closed with a 67.
“He won’t back down. I
don’t necessarily see him
as someone that backs
up and will let you come
back into the tournament. You have to go
catch him.”
Only Spieth managed
to do that on a cool but
sunny afternoon on an
Augusta National course
that was giving up birdies in bunches. Spieth,
who started the day nine

strokes down, brieﬂy
drew into a tie for the
lead with a long birdie
putt on No. 16, but Reed
birdied No. 14 behind
him to retake the lead
and held on for the win.
Had Spieth pulled it
off it would have been
the greatest comeback in
Masters history, but he
bogeyed his ﬁnal hole for
a 64 that was one shot off
the course record.
“I think I’ve proven
to myself and to others
that you never give up,”
Spieth said. “I started the
round nine shots back
and I came out with the
idea of just playing the
golf course and having a
lot of fun doing it and try
to shoot a low round and
ﬁnish the tournament
strong and see what happens, if something crazy
happens.”
The 27-year-old Texan
also survived a late move
by Fowler, whose ﬁnal
hole birdie forced Reed
to make par on No. 18 to
win. He did just that, rolling a 25-foot putt down
the scary slope on the
ﬁnal green, then calmly
sinking the putt to win.
“I knew it was going
to be a dogﬁght,” Reed
said. “It’s just a way of
God basically saying,
‘Let’s see if you have it.’
Everyone knows you
have it physically with
the talent. But do you
have it mentally? Can
you handle the ups and
downs throughout the

round?”
McIlroy, meanwhile,
will have to wait another
year for a shot at the
career Grand Slam after
his disappointing round.
Trailing by three shots
to start the ﬁnal round,
he closed to within one
shot after two holes. That
was as close as he came.
McIlroy’s putter betrayed
him — he missed four
putts inside 10 feet on
the front nine — and he
was never a factor on the
back nine. He closed with
a 74 and tied for ﬁfth.
“Tough day, but I’ll be
back,” McIlroy said. “And
hopefully, I’ll be better.”
Reed is old-school
among his generation,
with a brash attitude and
a willingness to speak
his mind. He has never
been terribly popular in
this state, mainly because
of allegations of bad
behavior while playing
for Georgia that led to an
early departure from the
Bulldogs. He transferred
to Augusta State and
led the outmanned Jaguars to a pair of NCAA
titles. His parents live in
Augusta, but were not
at the tournament. They
weren’t at his wedding in
2012, a relationship Reed
chooses not to discuss.
“I’m just out here to
play golf and try to win
golf tournaments,” Reed
said.
He did both on Sunday
on the biggest stage in
golf.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Eagles suffer first loss to Toronto

MLB

Boston
Toronto
New York
Baltimore
Tampa Bay

W
8
6
5
4
1

L
1
4
5
6
8

Minnesota
Detroit
Cleveland
Chicago
Kansas City

W
4
4
4
3
2

L
3
4
5
5
5

Houston
Los Angeles
Seattle
Oakland
Texas

W
8
7
4
4
4

L
2
3
3
7
7

New York
Atlanta
Washington
Philadelphia
Miami

W
7
6
4
3
3

L
1
3
5
5
6

Pittsburgh
Chicago
Milwaukee
St. Louis
Cincinnati

W
7
5
5
4
2

L
2
4
5
5
6

Arizona
Colorado
San Francisco
Los Angeles
San Diego

W
7
5
4
3
2

L
2
5
4
6
8

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.889
—
—
.600
2½
—
.500
3½
1
.400 4½
2
.111
7
4½
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.571
—
—
.500
½
1
.444
1
1½
.375
1½
2
.286
2
2½
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.800
—
—
.700
1
—
.571
2½
½
.364 4½
2½
.364 4½
2½
___
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.875
—
—
.667
1½
—
.444
3½
1
.375
4
1½
.333 4½
2
Central Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.778
—
—
.556
2
—
.500
2½
½
.444
3
1
.250 4½
2½
West Division
Pct
GB WCGB
.778
—
—
.500
2½
½
.500
2½
½
.333
4
2
.200
5½
3½

L10
8-1
6-4
5-5
4-6
1-8

Str Home
W-8
3-0
W-1
4-3
L-1
3-3
W-1
1-2
L-8
1-3

Away
5-1
2-1
2-2
3-4
0-5

L10
4-3
4-4
4-5
3-5
2-5

Str Home
L-1
1-1
W-3
1-4
W-1
2-1
L-3
0-3
L-1
0-2

Away
3-2
3-0
2-4
3-2
2-3

L10
8-2
7-3
4-3
3-7
4-6

Str Home
W-2
5-1
W-1
4-2
W-1
2-1
L-1
3-5
L-1
2-5

Away
3-1
3-1
2-2
1-2
2-2

L10
7-1
6-3
4-5
3-5
3-6

Str Home
W-5
4-1
W-1
4-2
L-5
0-3
L-1
2-1
W-1
2-4

Away
3-0
2-1
4-2
1-4
1-2

L10
7-2
5-4
5-5
4-5
2-6

Str Home
W-1
4-2
W-2
0-0
L-2
2-5
L-1
1-2
L-1
1-3

Away
3-0
5-4
3-0
3-3
1-3

L10
7-2
5-5
4-4
3-6
2-8

Str Home
W-1
5-1
L-1
1-2
L-1
2-2
W-1
2-2
L-2
1-6

Away
2-1
4-3
2-2
1-4
1-2

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
Seattle at Minnesota, ppd.
Baltimore 8, N.Y. Yankees 7, 12 innings
Boston 8, Tampa Bay 7
Cleveland 3, Kansas City 1
Detroit 1, Chicago White Sox 0
Houston 4, San Diego 1
Toronto 7, Texas 4
L.A. Angels 6, Oakland 1
Monday’s Games
Tampa Bay at Chicago White Sox, 2:10
p.m.
Detroit at Cleveland, 6:10 p.m.
Toronto at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
L.A. Angels at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Houston at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Seattle at Kansas City, 8:15 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
Tampa Bay (Snell 0-1) at Chicago White
Sox (Fulmer 0-0), 2:10 p.m.
Detroit (Boyd 0-1) at Cleveland (Tomlin
0-1), 6:10 p.m.
Toronto (Sanchez 0-1) at Baltimore
(Cashner 1-1), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Severino 2-0) at Boston
(Sale 0-0), 7:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Skaggs 1-0) at Texas (Perez
1-0), 8:05 p.m.
Houston (Keuchel 0-1) at Minnesota
(Odorizzi 0-0), 8:10 p.m.
Seattle (Hernandez 1-1) at Kansas City
(Skoglund 0-0), 8:15 p.m.
Oakland (Manaea 1-1) at L.A. Dodgers
(Ryu 0-0), 10:10 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Houston at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Chicago White Sox, 2:10
p.m.
Seattle at Kansas City, 2:15 p.m.
Detroit at Cleveland, 6:10 p.m.
Toronto at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Boston, 7:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels at Texas, 8:05 p.m.

Oakland at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.
___
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
Miami 6, Philadelphia 3
Pittsburgh 5, Cincinnati 0
Chicago Cubs 3, Milwaukee 0
Houston 4, San Diego 1
Arizona 4, St. Louis 1
Atlanta 4, Colorado 0
L.A. Dodgers 2, San Francisco 1, 10 innings
N.Y. Mets 6, Washington 5, 12 innings
Monday’s Games
Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
Atlanta at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at St. Louis, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Miami, 7:10 p.m.
San Diego at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.
Arizona at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
Atlanta (Foltynewicz 1-0) at Washington
(Strasburg 1-1), 7:05 p.m.
Cincinnati (Bailey 0-2) at Philadelphia
(Nola 0-0), 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (deGrom 2-0) at Miami (Smith
0-1), 7:10 p.m.
Milwaukee (Suter 1-1) at St. Louis (Martinez 1-1), 8:15 p.m.
San Diego (Lucchesi 0-0) at Colorado
(Anderson 0-0), 8:40 p.m.
Oakland (Manaea 1-1) at L.A. Dodgers
(Ryu 0-0), 10:10 p.m.
Arizona (Corbin 2-0) at San Francisco
(Cueto 1-0), 10:15 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Atlanta at Washington, 1:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at St. Louis, 1:15 p.m.
San Diego at Colorado, 3:10 p.m.
Arizona at San Francisco, 3:45 p.m.
Cincinnati at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at Miami, 7:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m.

Relays

2:04.14.
The team of Caroline
Roush and Sydney Kennedy was sixth in the shot
put relay at 56-5, while
the quartet of Caitlyn
Rest, Carmen Doherty,
Kacie Ballard and Ariann
Sizemore was sixth in the
4x800m relay at 13:37.63.
Meigs is scheduled to
compete again on Tuesday at Jackson.
Visit www.baumspage.
com for complete results
of the 2018 Mingo Relays.

From page 6

jump relay, with the team
of Kassidy Betzing and
Madison Cremeans combining for a distance of
29-4.
The Lady Marauders’ team of Cremeans,
Kassidy Betzing, Lydia
Edwards and Madison
Fields was ﬁfth in the
1600m sprint medley
with a time of 5:14.03,
and sixth in the 4x200m
relay with a time of

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

By Alex Hawley

Eastern put two runners on
base with one out in the second
inning, and had one runner on
base in both the third and fourth
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio — A
third of the way through their reg- innings.
The Red Knights were retired
ular season schedule, the Eagles
on six consecutive strikeouts in
have ﬁnally tasted defeat.
the second and third innings, but
The Eastern baseball team
pushed across four runs on four
stumbled for the ﬁrst time this
hits and a pair of errors in the botspring in non-conference action
tom of the fourth.
on Friday at VA Memorial StadiAfter a 1-2-3 top of the ﬁfth,
um in Ross County, as the Eagles
fell to Toronto in a weather-short- Toronto pushed its lead to 8-0 in
the bottom of the inning, scoring
ened game.
two runs on two hits and three
Eastern (8-1) — the visiting
walks.
team in the contest — was sent
Ethen Richmond was the losdown in order in the top of the
ﬁrst inning. With two outs in the ing pitcher of record in 4 for
bottom of the ﬁrst, Toronto broke the Eagles, striking out nine
the scoreless tie, scoring two runs batters and allowing eight runs,
four earned, on eight hits, two
on three hits and an error.

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

and two RBI in the winning effort.
Nick Bucci allowed
seven hits, but just two
From page 6
runs over four innings
many decisions for PPU, to get his ﬁfth win in as
many decisions. Domingo
while Addison Domingo
allowed two hits and
- Saturday’s winning
pitcher in relief - recorded fanned four over 2-1/3
scoreless innings for his
his seventh save.
eighth save.
Senior Kameron HerShockley, seniors Cody
ring (Heath, OH) went
Blackburn (Amanda, OH)
2-for-4, including a twoand Ty Warnimont (Rio
run ﬁrst inning single,
Grande, OH) and junior
and sophomore Dylan
Shockley (Minford, OH) David Rodriguez (Santo
Domingo, D.R.) all had
drove in a run for the
two hits in a losing cause
RedStorm.
for Rio Grande. Shockley
Senior right-hander
and Warnimont both
Zach Harvey (Kenova,
WV) started and suffered drove in one run each.
Junior Dalton Wilburn
the loss in a route-going
(Ashville, OH) - the
performance for Rio.
Point Park scored once reigning RSC Pitcher
of the Week - started
in each of the ﬁrst two
and suffered the loss for
innings of the nightcap,
the RedStorm, allowing
but the RedStorm counnine hits and seven runs
tered with single runs in
the third and fourth to tie - six earned - over 5-1/3
innings.
the game at 2-2.
Rio Grande is schedThe Pioneers took the
uled to return to action
lead for good with a run
of their own in the home on Wednesday when
former Mid-South Conhalf of the fourth inning,
ference rival - and 20thbefore blowing things
ranked - Campbellsville
open with three runs in
the ﬁfth and another run University visits Bob
Evans Field for a non-conin the sixth.
Hernandez went 2-for-4 ference doubleheader.
First pitch is set for
with a double and three
1:30 p.m.
RBI, while Mrkonja was
3-for-3 with a triple and
two runs scored. Richard Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
Perez added a home run
University of Rio Grande.

walks and a hit batter. Kaleb Hill
pitched in relief and struck out
the only batter he faced.
Clegg earned a win in a complete game for the Red Knights,
striking out a dozen and allowing
two hits, two walks and a hit batter.
A double by Hill and a single
by Matthew Blanchard were Eastern’s only hits in the contest.
Eastern committed three
errors and left ﬁve runners on
base, while THS played errorless
defense and stranded six runners.
The Eagles are slated to return
to the ﬁeld on Tuesday when
Wahama visits Tuppers Plains.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.

Minnesota Duluth beats Notre Dame 2-1
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP)
— Minnesota Duluth
squeaked into the NCAA
Tournament — and celebrated like crazy when
it was over.
Karson Kuhlman had
a goal and an assist, and
the Bulldogs beat Notre
Dame 2-1 Saturday night
to win the school’s second NCAA hockey championship.
Jared Thomas also
scored and Hunter
Shepard stopped 19
shots for the Bulldogs
(25-16-3). UMD also
won the 2011 title at the
Xcel Energy Center.
“We were fortunate
enough to make the tournament and we ran with
that opportunity,” Kuhlman said.
No kidding.
Minnesota Duluth
looked like a long shot
for the 16-team NCAA
ﬁeld after it dropped
its second game in the
National Collegiate
Hockey Conference
tournament on March
17. The Bulldogs needed
six conference ﬁnals that
evening to go their way.
They did, allowing
UMD to edge Minnesota
by .0001 in the formula
used to determine the

at-large teams. Notre
Dame’s overtime win
over Ohio State in the
Big Ten title game put
the Bulldogs in the tournament.
“One day you think
you owe them a little bit
like a thank you and the
next day you’re playing
them in the national title
game,” said Kuhlman,
who was named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player.
Andrew Oglevie
scored and Cale Morris
made 33 saves for Notre
Dame (28-10-2), winless in two national title
games. The Irish lost to
Boston College in 2008.
“They became that
team of destiny that
you’re always hoping
to be at the end of the
year,” Notre Dame coach
Jeff Jackson said.
Minnesota Duluth lost
to Denver in last year’s
championship. The Bulldogs had seven seniors
on that team, and then
three underclassmen
departed early for the
NHL, including the
starting goaltender.
Five of Minnesota
Duluth’s top six defensemen are freshmen, and
Shepard, a sophomore,

recorded a sub-2.00
goals against average
with eight shutouts.
“We felt our forward
group was pretty good.
We were replacing scoring, but we had some
good depth,” coach Scott
Sandelin said. “The job
that young group back
there did, I think it really
moved forward when
Shep grabbed the net
and played the way he
did. It gave our whole
team conﬁdence.”
UMD has played 11
consecutive one-goal
games in NCAA Tournament play, winning eight
of them.
For the second
straight game, the Bulldogs scored two ﬁrstperiod goals and held on.
They beat Ohio State 2-1
Thursday.
UMD took advantage
of two Irish turnovers.
Pressured by Kuhlman,
Notre Dame’s Jordan
Gross lost the puck in
the neutral zone. Jade
Miller poked the puck
ahead to Kuhlman at the
Irish blue line, and after
a brief hesitation in the
right circle, the captain
beat Morris with a rising
shot.
An aggressive fore-

check led to Thomas
knocking Andrew Peeke
off the puck in the right
corner. The puck went
to Kuhlman and back to
Thomas, who banked
a shot from near the
goal line off Morris and
in with 1:21 left in the
period.
Oglevie redirected a
pass from Cam Morrison
for a power-play goal in
the second period to get
the Irish on the board.
“There was never a
panic, there was never
any doubt in that room,”
Thomas said. “If we
needed to win the game
2-1, we were going to
win the game 2-1. You
saw it on third-period
play where we really
shut them down.”
Struggling to get
pucks deep, Notre Dame
had just ﬁve shots in the
ﬁnal 20 minutes.
Since Feb. 21, 2015,
UMD is 56-0-3 when taking a lead into the third
period, including 23-0-1
this season.
Notre Dame had won
its previous ﬁve postseason games by one goal,
with the game-winners
coming in the ﬁnal 31
seconds of regulation or
overtime.

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8 Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Criner leads RedStorm in sweep of Asbury
By Randy Payton

thanks to a two-out, two-run
double by Madison Mills.
That’s how things stayed
until Rio took the lead for
WILMORE, Ky. — The Unigood with ﬁve runs in the
versity of Rio Grande softball
fourth inning.
team brought out their collecCriner had a two-run single
tive whoopin’ sticks against
to snap a 2-2 deadlock before
host Asbury University, but
sophomore Lexi Philen (Tallit was sophomore shortstop
madge, OH) followed with a
Michaela Criner who played
two-run double to left-center
the role of lead bully in the
which gave the RedStorm a 6-2
beatdown.
cushion.
The Bremen, Ohio native
Rio ﬁnished things off
had six hits, including three
thanks to seven-run sixth
home runs, and drove in 10
inning against three Asbury
runs to lead the RedStorm in
pitchers.
a doubleheader sweep of the
Senior Mallory Powell (FlatEagles, Friday afternoon, in
woods, KY) and junior Kelly
River States Conference play
Fuchs (Williamsport, OH)
at Asbury Field.
delivered the big blows in the
Rio cruised a 17-1 ﬁveinning with a two-run double
inning win over its host in
and a two-run single, respecthe opener, before posting a
tively, while freshman Mary
six-inning 13-2 triumph in the
Pica (Minford, OH) had a
nightcap.
run-scoring double of her own
The RedStorm improved to
and Slutz drew a bases-loaded
22-9 overall and 9-1 in league
walk.
play with the two victories.
Powell and Fuchs both ﬁnAsbury dropped to 9-9 overished with two hits each in the
all and 2-4 in the RSC as a
win, while Conkey worked the
result of the sweep.
ﬁrst ﬁve innings in the pitchCriner ﬁnished 4-for-5 with a
pair of home runs - including a
Courtesy photo er’s circle to earn her second
grand slam - and seven RBI in Rio Grande’s Michaela Criner had six hits, including three home runs, and drove in 10 runs during the RedStorm’s win of the day.
Mills ﬁnished 2-for-2 and
the opening game victory. She doubleheader sweep of Asbury University on Friday in Wilmore, Ky. The RedStorm won the opener, 17-1 in five innings, and
posted a 13-2 triumph in six innings in the nightcap.
Phillips had a double in a loswas 2-for-3 with a home run,
ing cause for Asbury.
two walks and three RBI in the
Paige Hill started and took
innings en route to the win,
hits and four RBI in the win,
Skeese (Newark, OH) had a
nightcap.
the loss for the Eagles.
striking out ﬁve in the prowhile freshman Kayla Slutz
Rio followed up consecutive solo home run in the ﬁve-run
Rio Grande returns to action
(Navarre, OH) had three hits - cess.
third and Criner’s grand slam
ﬁve-run frames in the second
on Monday when it travels to
Deana Phillips started and
including two doubles - and a
and third innings of the opener headlined the six-run fourth.
Midway University for an RSC
took the loss for Asbury.
run batted in.
Criner added a towering
with a six-run fourth inning
Criner led off game two with doubleheader.
Freshman Aubrey Azbill
home run which hit the scoreexplosion.
First pitch for game one is
a solo home run to right ﬁeld
(Miamisburg, OH) also had
board beyond the center ﬁeld
Junior Kelsey Conkey
set for 4 p.m.
to give the RedStorm a quick
three hits and an RBI in the
fence in the ﬁfth inning to
(Minford, OH) had a threewinning effort. Conkey started lead, but Asbury rallied to take
close out the scoring.
run double to highlight the
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
a 2-1 advantage in the second
and tossed three perfect
Conkey ﬁnished with two
ﬁve-run second, junior Carly

For Ohio Valley Publishing

Director at the University of Rio Grande.

Canadian officials say body
in bus crash misidentified
Automotive

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Liam Richards | The Canadian Press via AP

Flowers are shown at center ice as preparations were made at Elgar
Petersen Arena for a vigil Sunday in Humboldt, Saskatchewan.
Multiple people traveling with the Humboldt Broncos SJHL hockey
team are dead, and many injured when their bus was collided with
a semi-trailer north of Tisdale, Saskatchewan.

tweeted that their son
was alive.
“This is one of the
hardest posts I have ever
had to make. Parker is
stable at the moment and
being airlifted to Saskatoon hospital,” Rhonda
Clarke Tobin wrote.
Meanwhile, Xavier
Labelle’s family had
conﬁrmed his death over
the weekend, with his
brother Isaac writing in
an Instagram post that
he was heartbroken.
Humboldt Mayor Rob
Muench called it “an
unfortunate mistake.”
“It’s hard to comprehend that,” he said.
Broncos club president
Kevin Garinger said he
was contacted by the
Royal Canadian Mounted
Police early Monday
about it and said the
error makes a difﬁcult
situation more challenging.
“At this point, I just
want to reach out and
support the families,”
Garinger said. “It’s not
about understanding
anything.”
People ﬁled into the
team’s home arena Sunday night for a vigil, ﬁling up entry steps piled
with ﬂowers, jerseys and
personal mementos in a
makeshift memorial.
At the vigil, Sean

Brandow, the local pastor and team chaplain,
described how he happened upon the horriﬁc
accident scene Friday
night and heard sounds
of people he knew dying
after a semi-trailer
slammed into the bus
taking the team to a
playoff game.
“We travelled up and
arrived at the scene
… and walked up on a
scene I never want to
see again, to sounds
I never want to hear
again,” Brandow said.
The small town’s disaster was a blow, too, for
Canada and its national
sport. Among the dead
were Broncos head coach
Darcy Haugan, team captain Logan Schatz and
radio announcer Tyler
Bieber.
Brandow said he was
on his way to the Broncos game and arrived at
the scene right after the
collision. He described
hearing the cries and
holding the hand of a
lifeless body.
“To sit and hold the
hand of a lifeless body,”
he said. “All I saw was
darkness and hurt and
anguish and fear and
confusion. And I had
nothing. Nothing. I’m a
pastor, I’m supposed to
have something.”

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OH-70036824

HUMBOLDT, Saskatchewan (AP) — Saskatchewan’s Ministry
of Justice said Monday
one of the deceased in
the crash that killed
15 people en route to
a hockey playoff game
was misidentiﬁed, partly
because the players all
had blond-dyed hair and
similar builds.
The ministry said the
body of Parker Tobin
was mistaken for that of
Xavier Labelle.
It said Labelle is
injured but alive, and
Tobin is among the
deceased. The accident
occurred Friday. Drew
Wilby, spokesman for the
ministry, said the error
was discovered Sunday
night.
“The new information
came to light last night
that raised questions
with the health care professionals. In turn they
were able to identify
Xavier Labelle as Xavier
Labelle who of course we
had previously said was
Parker Tobin,” Wilby
said.
“A lot of these boys
looked alike. They had
the blond hair that was
supportive of their team
for their playoff run.
They had very similar
builds and all very similar ages.”
Wilby and the Ofﬁce of
the Chief Coroner apologized for the misidentiﬁcation.
“To ﬁnd who they had
thought was their loved
one wasn’t their loved
one I can’t even fathom,”
Wilby said. “I don’t know
enough could ever be
said. All I could do is
offer our sincerest apologies.”
The news comes as
this shattered town
mourned its revered
local youth hockey team,
trying to come to grips
with a devastating highway accident Friday that
also injured the other 14
people on their bus.
Over the weekend,
Tobin’s family had

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www.markporterauto.com

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Product Specialist
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, April 10, 2018 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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see what’s brewing on the

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10 Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Blue Angels 3rd at Chesapeake Invite No. 14 Point
By Bryan Walters

— two of which came in
relays.
The quartet of Brooke
Johnson, Brooke HamilCHESAPEAKE, Ohio
ton, Kristen Jamora and
— The Gallia Academy
Sarah Watts earned secgirls ﬁnished third and
ond place ﬁnishes in both
the boys placed seventh
the 4x400m (4:46.79)
overall on Friday at the
and 4x800m (11:04.92)
2018 Chesapeake Lions
relay events. Watts was
Club Invitational held in
also the 800m runner-up
Lawrence County.
with a mark of 2:32.36.
The Blue Angels
Trinity Eggers was
earned 10 top-ﬁve ﬁnthird in the 300m hurdles
ishes at the 17-event
with a time of 1:01.22,
track and ﬁeld meet,
while Jamie Steger came
which yielded 68 points
away with third place in
in the 13-scoring team
the shot put with a throw
ﬁeld. Spring Valley (98)
held off Huntington (96) of 28 feet, 1 inch.
The foursome of
by two points for the girls
Bethany Purdum, Brookteam title.
lyn Hill, Katie Queen
GAHS did not come
away with any individual and Gretchen McConnell earned a pair of
championships, but the
ﬁfth place efforts in the
Blue and White did land
a trio of runner-up efforts 4x100m (58.59) and

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

4x200m (2:04.51) relay
events. Hamilton was
also ﬁfth in the 400m
dash with a mark of
1:14.01.
Star Burns was ﬁfth in
the 300m hurdles with
a time of 1:03.26, while
Eliza Davies tied for ﬁfth
in the high jump with a
cleared height of 4 feet, 4
inches.
The Blue Devils ﬁnished in the top half of
the 14-team boys ﬁeld
with ﬁve top-ﬁve ﬁnishes
en route to scoring 47.5
points. Huntington won
the boys crown with 129
points, with Rock Hill
(100) and Chesapeake
(75) rounding out the top
three spots.
John Stout was Gallia
Academy’s lone event
champion after winning

the 200m dash with a
time of 22.95 seconds.
Kyle Greenlee also earned
a third place tie in the
pole vault event with a
cleared height of 10 feet
even.
Ryan Donovsky was
fourth in the long jump
with a leap of 18 feet,
10¾ inches. Cory Call
was also ﬁfth in the long
jump with a distance of
18 feet, 9½ inches.
The quartet of Logan
Blouir, Caleb Greenlee,
Kyle Greenlee and Spencer Harris also ﬁnished
ﬁfth in the 4x400m relay
with a mark of 3:56.74.
Visit baumspage.com
for complete results of
the 2018 Chesapeake
Lions Invitational.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Kyle Busch wins at Texas Motor Speedway
FORT WORTH, Texas
(AP) — Kyle Busch’s
return to Victory Lane
only 10 races after his
last win just seemed to
take much longer. There
were all those runner-up
ﬁnishes in between, one
in particular.
A runner-up ﬁnish in
the 2017 season ﬁnale
kept Busch from winning
another NASCAR Cup
Series championship,
something he had to
contemplate the entire
offseason. Then he had
three runner-up ﬁnishes
in the ﬁrst six races this
year, including two that
Kevin Harvick won.
On Sunday at Texas
Motor Speedway, points
leader Busch ﬁnished
ahead of Harvick and the
rest of the ﬁeld for Joe
Gibbs Racing’s ﬁrst victory this season.
“Certainly being that

close, it gets a little old a
little faster,” Busch said.
“If you’re ﬁnishing ﬁfth
or 10th or whatever, and
you’re just not capable
of winning, it certainly
will draw longer as well
too. … Being as close as
you are, that kind hurts
a little bit more, especially that ﬁnal one, that
Homestead one.”
Busch stayed in front
of Harvick the last
24 laps after the ﬁnal
restart, getting his third
win at Texas and 44th
of his career. The No.
18 Toyota led 116 of the
334 laps at the 1 1/2mile track.
“They were probably
just a tick faster overall,
but I just had to make
sure to do everything I
could to hit all my marks
and everything to focus
on making sure that I did
the right things to block

his air a little bit,” Busch
said.
Jamie McMurray
ﬁnished third, ahead of
Erik Jones. Ryan Blaney
was ﬁfth a day after winning the Xﬁnity Series
race.
Since ﬁnishing 25th
in the season opener at
Daytona, Busch has been
in the top seven the last
six races.
“We’ve just been on
a roll of ﬁnishing really
good and getting really
pumped and excited
about that and the
momentum we were able
to carry, but frustrated
at the same time trying
to get to Victory Lane,”
he said.
Harvick, who won at
Texas in November, led
87 of the ﬁrst 129 laps
and won the ﬁrst stage.
But he had issues on pit
road, including a strange

incident during a caution
when a lugnut popped
loose and into the jack.
He dropped from ﬁrst to
ninth on that stop, then
had to come back in a
few laps later because of
a loose wheel.
There was another
stop when Harvick, who
dropped back as far as
27th place and a lap
behind the leader, got a
penalty for an extra man
over the wall when a tire
got loose in the pit.
“We did overcome a
lot. … We had a pathetic
day on pit road, two days
on pit road, because of
pit guns,” Harvick said.
“When you have a pit
gun problem like we
have multiple times and
been able to overcome
it and then today we
couldn’t overcome it.
Time after time you can’t
get the lug nuts tight
because the pit guns
don’t work.”
A different 1.5 winner
Harvick and reigning
Cup Series champion
Martin Truex Jr. had
won the previous eight
Cup races on 1 1/2-mile
tracks.
Truex had won ﬁve
and Harvick the other
three, including the ﬁrst
two this season.
But Truex wasn’t even
around for the ﬁnish of
this one. The ﬁrst 85-lap
stage ended under caution after a front right
tire blew on his No. 78
Toyota, which shot up
the track and slammed
hard into the outer wall.
Truex, second to Harvick at the time, ﬁnished
last in the 37-car ﬁeld.
“Just blew a right-front
tire out of nowhere. Not
sure what happened
there,” Truex said. “All
in all we were going to
be in for a good day. We
were making the car better and still had room to
go. We were as fast as
anybody. At least that’s a
positive.”

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Tough but Fair!

warnerforjudge.com

For Ohio Valley Publishing

BUTLER, Pa. — Fourteenth-ranked Point Park
University scored a pair of runs in the bottom of
the eighth inning and then survived a rally by the
University of Rio Grande in the top of the ninth
for a 5-4 win over the RedStorm, Saturday afternoon, in River States Conference baseball play at
frigid Kelly Automotive Field.
The game was delayed by four hours at the start
as a result of snow.
The Pioneers improved to 26-2 overall and 16-0
in the RSC with the win.
Rio Grande dropped to 16-20 overall and 9-7 in
conference play as a result of the loss.
Point Park’s two-run eighth inning snapped a
3-3 deadlock.
Rio senior starter Osvaldo Duran (Guayanilla,
P.R.) hit Jake Horew with a pitch to begin the
inning and then threw a wild pitch to advance him
into scoring position.
Chris Hernandez then reached safely on a sacriﬁce bunt attempt, while Horew advanced to third,
but Horew was forced to hold at third moments
later as pinch-runner David Barefoot moved to
second when Duran induced Erik Montero into a
groundout to ﬁrst base.
Richard Perez was then intentionally walked to
load the bases to set up a force play at any base,
but the Pioneers spoiled the plan when Horew
scored as Rio failed to turn a would-be inningending double-play on Ben Hernstine’s grounder
to second.
Duran was lifted in favor of senior reliever Jacob
Hastings (Commercial Point, OH), who promptly
allowed a single by Billy Kidd which scored Barefoot to make it 5-3.
Hastings escaped any further damage by getting
Andres Herrera to hit into an inning-ending force
play.
Rio’s ninth-inning rally began with a one-out
walk to sophomore Caden Cluxton (Washington
Court House, OH). A wild pitch moved him into
scoring position and a single up the middle by
Dylan Shockley (Minford, OH) brought him home
to make it 5-4.
Junior Zac Morris (Heath, OH) came on to run
for Shockley, but the rally - and the game - ended
moments later when senior Cody Blackburn
bounced into a 3-6-3 double-play.
Rio Grande grabbed a 1-0 lead in the third
inning on a home run by junior David Rodriguez
(Santo Domingo, D.R.), but the Pioneers grabbed
the lead in the bottom of the frame on a Duran
wild pitch and an RBI groundout by Hernandez.
The RedStorm tied the contest in the fourth on
a triple and subsequent steal of home by sophomore Eli Daniels (Minford, OH) and regained the
advantage in the ﬁfth on another home run by
Rodriguez - his eighth of the season.
Point Park tied the game in the bottom of the
ﬁfth on a two-out single by Horew, setting the
stage for the dramatic ﬁnish.
Duran suffered the loss, allowing ﬁve hits and
four earned runs over 7-2/3 innings.
Addison Domingo picked up his fourth win in
as many decisions in relief for the Pioneers, while
Kidd had two hits and Montero added a double
for Point Park.
The two teams will close out their weekend
series with a doubleheader on Sunday beginning
at 11 a.m.
The series was originally set to be a doubleheader each day, with the ﬁnal game not counting
toward the RSC standings.
As a result of Saturday’s late start, ofﬁcials
decided to cancel the fourth (non-league) contest.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the University of
Rio Grande.

IN BRIEF

Chisenhall injured
CLEVELAND (AP) — Indians right ﬁelder
Lonnie Chisenhall is expected to be sidelined for
four-to six weeks after straining his right calf, an
injury similar to the one that caused him to miss
nearly two months last season.

FOR

DANNY

DAVIS
OH-70040121

ON MAY 8TH

By Randy Payton

VOTE MAY 8TH

As your Meigs County Common Pleas Judge, I would be working for ALL
of Meigs County. I am neutral and unbiased with no personal agenda, and
will ensure the Common Pleas Court is managed with honesty, integrity,
and fairness. I have a strong belief system that we are all God’s children
and should be given the protections guaranteed each of us as United
States Citizens. I will protect and defend the Constitution. My family and
I live in Meigs County, and Plan to stay in Meigs County. I will be a public
servant to all and will make sure, as your Common Pleas Court Judge, that
persons violating the law are swiftly and justly held accountable.
I am dedicated to Meigs County—past, present and future. Vote for me
and, TOGETHER, we can and will build a stronger community.

Choose the candidate who has a genuine passion for her home.

Park holds off
Rio baseball

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
FOR YOUR
MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
OH-70041767

pd for by the candidate-Danny Davis 145 Salem St. Rutland, Ohio

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