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                  <text>Scenes
from the
livestock sale
FAIR s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

71°

80°

74°

Humid today with showers and t-storms.
Mostly cloudy tonight. High 83° / Low 67°

Today’s
weather
forecast

OU a
MAC
threat

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 133, Volume 72

Pomeroy man
arrested on
drug charges
the vehicle where
he then allegeldy
resisted arrest
POMEROY —
and fought with
A Pomeroy man
deputies.
was arrested on
Taken into cusSunday after a
tody was Michael
short pursuit.
J. Hankinson, 36,
Meigs County Hankinson
of Pomeroy, for
Sheriff Keith
failure to comply
Wood reported,
with the order and sigin a news release, that
the Meigs County Sher- nal of a police ofﬁcer
and resisting arrest.
iff’s Ofﬁce received a
Hankinson has also
call on Sunday about
been charged with posa male slumped over
session of heroin, a
the steering wheel of a
third-degree felony for
white BMW at the end
being a bulk amount
of Howell Hill Road at
after deputies reportthe cemetery.
edly located a plastic
Deputy Campbell
baggy containing
and Sgt. Stewart were
alleged powder heroin
dispatched to the cemin Hankinson’s pants
etery and upon their
pocket and alleged
arrival the vehicle
Xanax pills concealed
began to ﬂee the area.
in his undergarments.
Deputies initiated a
Deputies recovered
pursuit of the vehicle
approximately $1,000
which came to an end
in cash from the susnear the State Route 7
pects pants pocket as
intersection on Howwell.
ell Hill Road. When
The Meigs County
deputies approached,
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce will
the suspect reportconsult with the Meigs
edly refused multiple
County Prosecutor
commands to exit the
James K. Stanley’s
vehicle and show his
Ofﬁce regarding further
hands. At this time the
male was removed from charges in this case.

Tuesday, August 21, 2018 s 50¢

Investing in the youth

Staff Report

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Grand Champion Beef Steer shown by Jess Parker; Purchased by Parker Corporation.

Buyers spend
thousands at
livestock sale
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Courtesy of the Meigs County Sheriff’s Office

A photo of evidence recovered during Sunday’s arrest.

Pomeroy man
arrested on felonious
assault charges

ROCKSPRINGS — It
is not just buying an
animal, it’s investing
in the youth, explained
Auctioneer Dean L.
Blackburn before Saturday’s Meigs County Fair
Livestock Sale.
Buyers did just that,
spending thousands on
animals from cattle to
chickens, hogs, rabbits,
lambs and goats.
In addition to the
winning bidders, others
“bumped” the purchase
prices, giving the youth
more for their hard work
on their projects.
Purchase prices and
buyers, not including
bumps (listed separately
at the end), were as follows:

Staff Report

POMEROY — A Pomeroy man was arrested on
Saturday on two counts of felonious assault after
allegedly attacking a vehicle, with two women
inside, using a machete and ball bat.
Robert M. Kauff, age 38, of Pomeroy, was arrest
on two counts of felonious assault and one count
of criminal damaging for the alleged incident.
See ASSAULT | 5

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Fair: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 7-8
Comics: 9

Market Commercial Beef
Feeder
Olivia Harris (Grand
Champion), $2,150,
Burke Farms; Mackenzie Newell (Reserve
Champion), $2,400,

Grand Champion Hog shown by Jenna Jordan; Purchased by Stanley Logging and Meigs County
Prosecutor James K. Stanley.

Reed and Baur Insurance and Ohio Valley
Plumbing; Lucas Finlaw,
$1,200, Holzer Health
System Meigs; McKayla
Nelson, $1,450, Reed
and Baur Insurance and
Ohio Valley Plumbing;
Preston Ervin, $1,500
Shelly Material; Allison Hatﬁeld, $2,300,
Jackson Ag Service;
Owen Johnson, $1,300,
Holzer Health System
Meigs; Alexis Ervin,
$1,700, Farmers Bank;
Kylie Gheen, $1,700,
Mark Porter AutoPlex;
Brayden Ervin, $1,700,
Pomery Express Care or
Pleasant Valley Hospital

(PVH); Samuel Bauerbach, $1,700, Heritage
Co-Op; Ethan Mullen,
$1,800, RVC Architects
and Pat Mullen Construction; Dalton Ervin,
$1,550, Athens Livestock and Ervin Family Farms; Ryan Parker,
$1,400, Peoples Bank
and Roush Brothers;
Conner Ervin, $1,700,
Holzer Health System
Meigs; Madison Johnson, $1,350, Mark Porter Chevrolet; McKenzie
Long, $1,550, Ridenour
Gas Service; Cassidy
Bailey, $1,450, Home
National Bank; Austin
Rose, $1,500, Farm-

ers Bank; Ryan Ross,
$1,500, Heritage Co-Op;
Megan Ross, $1,300,
Precision Fabrication.
Dairy Feeder
Allison Barber (Grand
Champion), $1,500, Hendrix Heating and Cooling
and Hendrix Contracting; Raegan Jones
(Reserve Champion),
$1,500, State Representative Jay Edwards; Caelin
Seth, $1,000, White’s
Sanitation.
Market Goat
Jessica Parker (Grand
See YOUTH | 3

Painting winners announced
By Lorna Hart
Special to the Sentinel

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

Lorna Hart | Courtesy

Danny Carter from Vinton, Ohio, is a regular at the
Meigs County Fair with his detailed pencil drawings
inspired by his wife’s photography.

ROCKSPRINGS — Dozens
of paintings were on display
last week at the Meigs County
Fair.
Results of the amateur,
experienced and junior painting contests were as follows:
Amateur Painting-Adult
Department-X Amateur
Painting:
Division 2-Adult Painting: Class 15-Landscape
— 1st Bob Ball, Pomeroy;
2nd Shirley Hamm, Racine;
Class 16-Animal Study —
1st Elizabeth Bird, Racine;
2nd Bob Ball, Pomeroy; 3rd
Shirley Hamm, Racine; Class
17-Floral Study — 1st Bob
Ball Pomeroy; 2nd Shirley

Hamm, Racine; Class 18-Miscellaneous — 1st Bob Ball,
Pomeroy; 2nd Elizabeth Bird,
Racine; 3rd Shirley Hamm,
Racine; Class 19-Landscape
— 1st Josephine L. Hill,
Long Bottom; 2nd Sharon
Dean, Racine; 3rd Shirley
Hamm, Racine; Class 20-Animal Study — 1st Elizabeth
Bird, Racine; 2nd Shirley
Hamm, Racine; 3rd Sharon
Dean, Racine; Class 21-Floral Study — 1st Josephine
L. Hill, Long Bottom; 2nd
Sharon Dean, Racine; 3rd
Shirley Hamm, Racine; Class
22-Miscellaneous — 1st Josephine L. Hill, Long Bottom;
2nd Shirley Hamm, Racine;
Class 23-Landscape — 1st
See WINNERS | 5

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, August 21, 2018

OBITUARIES

MEIGS BRIEFS

RICHARD G. WOOD
POMEROY — Richard
G. Wood, 86, of Pomeroy,
Ohio, went to his eternal
reward, Aug. 18, 2018, at
Kobecker House, Columbus, Ohio.
Born Aug. 22, 1931, at
Augusta, Kansas, to late
Albert and Fern Mason
Wood. A former minister,
member Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel, Pomeroy, Ohio,
and Army, veteran of
Korean Conﬂict.
Survived by children,
David (Lisa) Wood, and
Cindy (Mark) Linden;
sister, Carroll Mach;
eight grandchildren, Julie
Wood, Travis (Emily)
Wood, Ashley (Justin)
Kisor, Matthew (Rache-

insurance cards, if applicable. Shingles and pneumonia vaccines are also available. Call for eligibility
determination and availability or visit our website at
www.meigs-health.com to see a list of accepted commercial insurances and Medicaid for adults.
The Ohio Department of Health (ODH) does
NOT recommended for routine Hepatitis A vacPOMEROY — A Back-to-School Bash will be held cination of Healthcare Workers. Additionally, the
at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 25 at the Refuge Church Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices
(ACIP) does NOT recommend routine Hepatitis
on West Second Street in Pomeroy. For a ride or
A vaccination for Food Workers. Currently, ODH
more information call Lisa at 740-416-5277.
is strongly recommending the following groups to
get the Hepatitis A vaccine: men who have sex with
men, persons who inject drugs and person who use
illegal non-injection drugs. These are the highest
risk groups for transmission of Hepatitis A. Call
GALLIPOLIS — The Sept. 17, 2018 meeting of
740-992-6626 for vaccine availability.
the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug
Addiction and Mental Health Services has been
cancelled. The Board will hold a Special Meeting on
Aug. 27, 2018 at 6 p.m. The Board typically meets
on the third Monday of each month at the Board
Ofﬁce (53 Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis) at 6 p.m.
RACINE — Meigs County Road 28, Bashan
Road, will continue to be closed between C-31,
Bald Knobs-Stiversville Road, and T-109, Carmel
Road, for an additional 2 weeks in order to complete
repair work on the slip in this area. This pushes the
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Depart- projected completion date back to Thursday, Aug.
ment will conduct an Immunization Clinic on Tues- 30.
MEIGS COUNTY — A culvert replacement projday, from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m., at 112 E. Memorial
ect begins on July 27, on State Route 681 in Meigs
Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/ County. The project is taking place between US 33
legal guardian. A $30.00 donation is appreciated for and Markham Road (Township Road 652). One lane
will be closed in this area. Temporary trafﬁc signals
immunization administration; however, no one will
be denied services because of an inability to pay an and an 11 foot width restriction will be in place. The
estimated completion date is Aug. 31, 2018.
administration fee for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please bring medical cards and/or commercial
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.

al) Jackson, Sarah (Kyle)
Kosicki, Jonathan Varney,
Samantha Gilmore, and
Preston Gilmore; and
eight great-grandchildren. Preceded by wife,
Charlene Rae Wood; six
brothers and sisters.
Services are Wednesday, Aug. 22, 2018, at 11
a.m., at Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel, Pomeroy, Ohio,
with Rev Mark Nix. Visitation 10 a.m. until time
of services. Burial at Gallaway Cemetery, Gallaway, Ohio. Arrangements
with Birchﬁeld Funeral
Home, Rutland, Ohio.
Online condolences @
birchﬁeldfuneralhome.
com.

Back-to-school events

Meeting change announced

Road closures, restrictions

Immunization clinic

WALKER
VINTON, OHIO — Cheryl Ann (Stewart) Walker,
59, of Vinton, Ohio, died Saturday morning, Aug.
18, 2018 at the Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis,
Ohio.
The funeral service will be at 1 p.m., Monday,
Aug. 27, 2018 at the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home.
Interment will be conducted privately. Friends and
family may call at the funeral home from noon until
the time of the service.
JOHNSON

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

NEW HAVEN — Donald Eugene Johnson, 61, of
New Haven, West Virginia, died on Aug. 18, 2018.
Funeral services will be held on Thursday, Aug.
23, 2018, at 11 a.m. at Anderson Funeral Home in
New Haven with Pastor Donnie Dye ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow at Suncrest Cemetery. Visiting
hours will be on Wednesday from 6-8 p.m. at the
funeral home.

Please come and join us in discussing how we can
Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel appreciates
your input to the community calendar. To make sure make money to support our local candidates. We
will welcome any and all input.
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.
MIDDLEPORT — The monthly Free Community
Dinner hosted by the Middleport Church of Christ
will be held in their Family Life Center at 5 p.m.
This month they are serving sweet &amp; sour meatballs, macaroni &amp; cheese, green beans, and dessert.
POMEROY — American Red Cross will host a
The public is invited.
blood drive from 1:30-6 p.m. at the Mulberry Community Center in Pomeroy.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Community
Prevention Coalition will meet at 12:30 p.m. at the
Meigs EMS in Pomeroy. Meetings are held the 4th
Wednesday of each month.
MIDDLEPORT — Chicken BBQ will be held at
the Middleport Fire Dept. BBQ pit with serving
starting at 11 a.m.

Friday, Aug. 24

GILLS

Wednesday, Aug. 22

POINT PLEASANT — Mary Jo Gills, 67, of Point
Pleasant, died August 18, 2018 at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
At her request, there will be no visitation and a
memorial service date will be announced by Deal
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant at a later date.

Saturday, Aug. 25

WANDLING

Thursday, Aug. 23

GALLIPOLIS — Agnes Marie Edgar Wandling,
79, of Gallipolis, Friday, Aug. 17, 2018 at the O.S.U.
Medical Center.
The funeral service for Agnes Wandling will be
conducted at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 22, 2018
at Willis Funeral Home with Father Tom Hamm
ofﬁciating. Her burial will follow in Kirkland
Memorial Gardens. Friends may call on Tuesday,
Aug. 21, 2018 from 6-8 p.m. at Willis Funeral
Home.

POMEROY — The Meigs Soil &amp; Water Conservation District Board of Supervisors will hold their
regular monthly meeting at 11:30 a.m. at the district
ofﬁce. The ofﬁce is located at 113 E. Memorial
Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE — The Ladies of the Meigs County
Republican Party will meet at 6 p.m. at the Carleton
School in Syracuse, Ohio. Everyone is welcome.

TUESDAY EVENING
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America's Got Talent "Live Quarter Finals 2" (N)

Making It "All of the
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Making It "All of the
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Bachelor in Paradise The women are handing out the
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Betty White A warm look at the life and
The Tenors: Fan Favorites The popular and
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prolific trio The Tenors are back with a
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Bachelor in Paradise The women are handing out the
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Bull "Witness for the
NCIS: New Orleans "High
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Prosecution"
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Beat Shazam "Episode
Love Connection "Greg and Eyewitness News at 10
Twelve" (N)
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Betty White A warm look at the life and
American Masters "Bob Hope" Explore the
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entertainer's life with unprecedented access
legend, Betty White.
to his personal archives.
NCIS "Sight Unseen"
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18 (WGN) BlueB. "Home Sweet Home"
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25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
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62 (NGEO)
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72 (BET)
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PREMIUM

M*A*S*H
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MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves at Pittsburgh Pirates Site: PNC Park -- Pittsburgh, Pa. (L)
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SportsC. (N) Baseball Little League World Series (L)
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WNBA Basketball Playoffs (L)
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Married at First Sight
Married at First Sight
Married at First Sight "Too Married:Love Married at
(:05) Seven Year Switch
Unlocked (N) First Si. (N) "Back to Reality" (N)
"Troube in Paradise"
Close for Comfort"
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The Parent Trap (1998, Family) Dennis Quaid, Natasha Richardson, Lindsay Lohan.
Despicable Me (2010, Animated) Voices of Jason
Identical twins mischievously conspire to reunite their unhappily divorced parents. TVPG Segel, Russell Brand, Steve Carell. TVPG
Mom
Mom
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
I, Robot (2004, Sci-Fi) Bridget Moynahan, Alan
Tudyk, Will Smith. TV14
Loud House Loud House Loud House SpongeBob "Runaway Roadtrip"
SpongeBob SpongeBob Friends 1/2 Friends 2/2
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Super Smackdown
Miz (N)
Chrisley (N)
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Wrecked
Drop the Mic
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(5:45)
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice ('16, Act) Ben Affleck. TVPG
Animal "The Hyenas" (N)
Animal King "The Hyenas"
(5:25)
The Taking of Pelham 1, 2, 3 (2009, Thriller)
xXx (2002, Action) Samuel L. Jackson, Marton Csokas, Vin Diesel. A charismatic
Denzel Washington, Luis Guzmán, John Travolta. TVMA
extreme sports competitor is recruited to infiltrate a Russian crime ring. TV14
Deadly Catch "Turf Wars" Catch "No Safe Harbor" (N) Deadliest Catch (N)
Deadliest Catch (N)
(:05) Hard to Kill (N)
The First 48 "Stray Shot"
The First 48 "Night Run"
The First 48 "Sudden Death/ The First 48 "Fallen Hero/ The First 48 "Rearview
Devil at the Door"
The Last Deal"
Killer/ Point Blank"
North Woods Law
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Yeti or Not
Weird, True and Freaky (N)
Chicago P.D. "Wrong Side Chicago P.D. "Chin Check" Chicago P.D. "Now Is
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Chicago P.D. "The Price We
of the Bars"
Always Temporary"
Balloons"
Pay"
Law &amp; Order "Return"
LawOrder "Burn Baby Burn" Law &amp; Order "Amends"
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Botched
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Loves Ray
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China’s Megatomb: Secrets Tut's Treasures King Tut's Secrets of Christ's Tomb: Uncovering Herod's Lost
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Forged in Fire "The Naval Forged in Fire "The Navaja" Forged in Fire "The
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(:35)
Cutlass"
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Counting (N) Counting (N)
Below Deck
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Million Dollar List (N)
(4:30) House Party 3 TVPG (:55)
Why Did I Get Married? ('07, Com/Dra) Sharon Leal, Tyler Perry. TV14
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Flippers (N) Desert Flip Hunters (N) House (N)
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Ghost Rider (2007, Action) Eva Mendes, Wes
Iron Man (2008, Action) Gwyneth Paltrow, Jeff Bridges, Robert Downey Jr.. Tony
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Stark creates a suit of high tech armor to fix his mistakes and defend the innocent. TVPG

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(4:45) Super

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American Made ('17, Act) Sarah Wright, Tom Cruise. A
Hard Knocks '18 (N)
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TVMA
starts smuggling drugs. TV14
(4:00)
(:25) Wilson A lonely and neurotic man
Post Grad Alexis Bledel. After college, Fast Times at Ridgemont High Follow six
450 (MAX) Kingdom of named Wilson reunites with his estranged a woman returns to her eccentric parents
teenagers through every one of their
Heaven
wife and daughter. TVMA
home and tries to start her life. TVPG
escapades for one year of high school.
(5:35)
Carlito's Way ('93, Cri) Sean Penn, Penelope
The Sum of All Fears ('02, Act) Morgan Freeman,
(:05) Who Is (:35) The
500 (SHOW) Ann Miller, Al Pacino. Upon his release, an ex-convict tries Ben Affleck. A CIA analyst must stop terrorists from
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Affair
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400 (HBO) Troopers

Real Time With Bill Maher Vice News
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8

Monday, Aug. 27
POMEROY — The August meeting of the Veterans Service Commission will be held at 9 a.m. at the
ofﬁce located at 97 N. 2nd Avenue in Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT — Michele Musser will be holding a Snack &amp; Canvas class at 6 p.m. at the Riverbend Art Council, 290 North 2nd Ave. Middleport,
Ohio. The project will be a 16x24 wood sign with
arrows &amp; words. Your choice of colors. All supplies
are furnished. To reserve a space call Michele at
740-416-0879 or Donna at 740-992-5123.
POMEROY — The regular meeting of the Meigs
County Library Board will be held at 3:30 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Library.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Saturday, Aug. 25
LONG BOTTOM — Mount Olive Community
Church, 51305 Mount Olive Road, Long Bottom will
host a hymn sing at 6 p.m. Everyone welcome, bring
your song to sing. Pastor Don Bush.

Sunday, Aug. 26
TUPPERS PLAINS — An Ice Cream Social will be
held at 5 p.m. at St. Paul United Methodist Church.
Music by Persuaded. The event is free and open to the
public.

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dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

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shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

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

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 21, 2018 3

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Aug. 21,
the 233rd day of 2018. There
are 132 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On August 21, 1831, Nat

Youth
From page 1

Champion), $1,350, Mark
Porter Chevrolet; Jennifer
Parker (Reserve Champion), $1,100, Parkersburg Home Surplus and
Liquidation; Alexa Ingels,
$1,600, Gavin Plant;
Makenzie Robertson,
$1,500, RC Construction
Company; Alivia Ord,
$900, Farmers Bank;
Becca Pullins, $1,700,
Ridenour Gas Service;
India Morris, $750,
Bob’s Market; Jeremiah
Mohler, $600, Dettwiller
Lumber; Cameron Hall,
$550, Drs. Jeremy and
Martha Buckley; Drake
Hall, $500, Mark Porter
Ford of Jackson; Arielle Beeler, $650, Mark
Porter AutoPlex; Rhiannon Morris, $600, Karr
Contracting; MaKenna
Rankin, $900, Ridenour
Gas Service; Dylan
Chevalier, $900, Baum’s
TP One Stop; Bradley
Dillon, $1,000, Norris
Northup Dodge; Avary
Mugrage, $850, Farmers
Bank; Bryant Mohler,
$500, Irvines Camper
Sales; Alex Pierce, $800,
Ohio Valley Bank; Kyra
Zuspan, $900, Pomeroy
Express Care of PVH;
Maylee Barringer, $750,
Save A Lot of Pomeroy;
Avery King, $800, Home
National Bank; Woody
Will, $650, Mark Porter
Chevrolet; Lydyah Barringer, $700, Bob’s Market;
Ayden Barringer, $650,
Birchﬁeld Funeral Home;
Sydneyahna Card, $900,
Pomeroy Express Care of
PVH; Ben Bailey, $700,
Holzer Health System
Meigs; Morgan Haines,
$700, Pomeroy Express
Care of PVH; Bella
Mugrage, $650, Ridenour
Gas Service.
Market Lambs
Auston Colburn (Grand
Champion), $2,500, Dr.
Meghan Haynes of Holzer Athens; Wyatt Watson
(Reserve Champion),
$2,000, Pool Masters of
Vienna; Maci Hood, $850,
McDonalds of Pomeroy
and Ravenswood; Braden
Watson, $800, Baum
Lumber Company; Lincoln Thomas, $1,900,
Nova Rubber; McKenzy
Burnem, $750, Shelly
Material; Matthew Werry,
$1,900, Ewing-Schwarzel
Funeral Home; Laikyn
Davis, $1,300, Ice Racing;
Jacynda Glover, $1,000,
J&amp;M Auto Sales; Matthew Parry, $950, Home
National Bank; Amy Grifﬁn, $850, Irvines Camper
Sales; Michael Kesterson,
$1,450, DJM Hardwoods;
Lauren Thorson, $900,
White-Schwarzel Funeral
Home; Caroline Roush,
$900, Farmers Bank;
Luke Enright, $1,100,
H&amp;L Hoof Trimming.
Market Dairy Steer
Kaylin Butcher (Grand
Champion), $2,500,
Mark Porter Chevrolet;
Grace Butcher (Reserve
Champion), $1,700, RVC
Architects.
Market Hogs
Jenna Jordan (Grand
Champion), $3,150, Stanley Logging and Prosecutor James K. Stanley;
Jaycie Jordan (Reserve
Champion), $2,100, J&amp;M
Auto Sales; Jacob Jordan,
$1,650, Shade River Ag;
Bruce Hawley, $1,300,
McDonalds; Erica Durst,
$1,300, Constellium
Rolled Products; Trinity
Wood, $1,200, Nova Rubber; Steven Fitzgerald,
$1,100, Nova Rubber;
Kori Robie, $1,150, Hupp

In 1609, Galileo Galilei demTurner launched a violent slave
rebellion in Virginia resulting in onstrated his new telescope
the deaths of at least 55 whites. to a group of ofﬁcials atop the
Campanile in Venice.
(Turner was later executed.)
In 1858, the ﬁrst of seven
debates between Illinois senatoOn this date

Landscaping, TJohnson
Contracting, Reed and
Baur Insurance, and Ohio
Valley Plumbing (donated
to Make A Wish); Courtney Fitzgerald, $1,000,
Skyline Bowling Center;
Roseanna Butcher, $900,
McDonalds; Brady Colburn, $1,000, Pomeroy
Express Care of PVH;
Brandon Oldaker, $1,500,
Buckley Group Engineering and Surveying;
Whitney Durst, $1,250,
D.V. Weber Construction;
Layne Caldwell, $1,350,
Holzer Health System
Meigs; Kathryn Ryan,
$2,000, J&amp;L Construction; Ashton Monroe,
$1,300, Rose’s Excavating; Autumn Jones,
$1,200, Wild Horse Cafe;
Chloe Rizer, $1,300,
AEP Mountaineer Plant;
Shelbe Cochran, $1,400,
Mark Porter Chrysler,
Dodge, Jeep, Ram;
Elizabeth Collins, $1,600,
Parkersburg Home Surplus and Liquidation;
Bradley Hamm, $1,300,
AEP Mountaineer Plant;
Garrett Wolfe, $1,700,
Home National Bank
(donated to St. Jude Trail
Ride); Logan Caldwell,
$1,400, White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home; Simon
Spires, $1,400, Farmers
Bank (donated to St.
Jude Trail Ride); Brandon
Colburn, $1,200, Save A
Lot of Pomeroy; Colton
Hamm, $1,600, Pool
Masters of Vienna; Coltin
Parker, $1,350, Dr. Melanie Weese Optometry;
William Oldaker, $1,800,
AEP Mountaineer Plant;
Kaden Robinson, $1,750,
Rose’s Excavating; Robert
Butcher, $1,250, Ridenour Gas Service; Malachi Smith, $1,200, Porter’s Pumpkin Patch and
Webb Company Trucking;
Ashton Jude, $1,750,
Moore’s Petrolium; Brad
Hawk, $1,600, Gavin
Plant; Micaiah Smith,
$1,400, Middleport Jail
and Meigs County Sheriff; Kaitlyn Hawk, $1,800,
McGinnis Inc.; Brayden
Robinson, $1,800, Norris
Northup Dodge.

rial contenders Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas took
place.
In 1911, Leonardo da Vinci’s
“Mona Lisa” was stolen from
the Louvre Museum in Paris.

(The painting was recovered
two years later in Italy.)
In 1912, the Boy Scouts of
America named its ﬁrst Eagle
Scout, Arthur Rose Eldred of
Troop 1 in Rockville Centre, N.Y.

Champion), $1,400,
Dettwiller Lumber and
Peoples Bank; Cooper
Schagel (Reserve Champion), $1,000, Kinsale
Corporation; Trace
Erwin, $400, Bob’s Market; Levi Williams, $350,
Leedy Angus Farms;
Corey Seth, $600, Baum
Lumber Company; Sarah
Williams, $500, Michael’s
Egg Farm and Ohio Valley Bank; Joseph Butcher,
$425, Farmers Bank;
Hannah Erwin, $500,
McGinnis Inc.; Landen
Woods, $450, Dr. Douglas
Hunter; Lane Edwards,
$500, Gavin Plant; Israel
Williams, $450, Farmers
Bank; Raeann Schagel,
$600, Buckley Group
Engineering and SurveyPhotos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel
Grand Champion Dairy Feeder shown by Allison Barber; Purchased by Hendrix Heating and Cooling
ing; Emma Doczi, $500,
and Hendrix Contracting.
Farmers Bank; Dominique Butcher, $400,
Home National Bank;
Lilyanna Butcher, $400,
A-1 Sanitation; Faith
Butcher, $400, Pat Mullen
Construction and RVC
Architects; Hunter Smith,
$450, Mama and Papa;
Lydia Edwards, $800,
Gavin Plant; Michael Letson, $400, Farmers Bank;
Mattison Finlaw, $550,
Mark Porter AutoPlex.
Market Rabbits
Brycen Rowe (Grand
Champion), $1,800,
Ridenour Gas Service;
Hanna Bottomley
(Reserve Champion),
$1,050, Ridenour Gas
Service; Emilie Smith,
$800, Holzer Health System Meigs; Rachel Jackson, $600, Bob’s Market;
Brayden O’Brien, $450,
Peoples Bank; Ciera
Whitesell, $450, Farmers Bank; Avery Patterson, $700, Baum’s TP
One Stop; Gabby Beeler,
$550, Farmers Bank;
Hannah Jackson, $550,
Dr. Douglas Hunter;
Taylor Bartrum, $500,
Gavin Plant; Kendall
Schagel, $700, Pool Masters of Vienna; Kadynce
Wolfe, $475, K&amp;C Show
Poultry; Alexis Grubb,
$600, Mark Porter Ford;
Gavan Smith, $700,
Gavin Plant; Sidney Dillon, $600, Baum Lumber
Company; Hannah Evans,
$500, Home National
Bank; Matthew Jackson,
$500, Matthew Jackson;
Valerie Hamm, $400,
AEP Mountaineer Plant;
Hunter Clary, $400,
Butcher Logging; Brogan Jenkins, $450, H&amp;L
Hoof Trimming; Blake
Cremeans, $400, Mark
Porter Chevrolet and
Ohio Valley Bank; Raeven
Reedy, $450, Mark Porter
Ford; Samual Cremeans,
$500, Gavin Plant;
Keaghan Wolfe, $450,
Farmers Bank; Jacob
Spencer, $500, Buckley
Group Engineering and
Surveying; Adryauna
Parker, $400, Home
National Bank; Andrea
Mahr, $450, Baum Lumber Company; Jackie
Dailey, $450, Farmers Bank; Dana Card,
$450, Ridenour Gas
Service; Nathan Minshall, $500, Birchﬁeld
Funeral Home; Brayden
Stanley, $500, Stanley
Logging and Prosecutor
James K. Stanley; Alexia
Cremeans, $500, Ohio
Valley Bank and Mark
Porter Chrysler, Dodge,
Jeep, Ram; Leah Spencer, $1,000, Drs. Jeremy
and Martha Buckley.
Price Bumps reported
during the sale were as
follows:

Market Beef Steer
Jess Parker (Grand
Champion), $3,100,
Parker Corporation; Trenton Morrissey (Reserve
Champion), $3,400, Drs.
Jeremy and Martha Buckley, Buckley Group Engineering and Surveying,
and Precision Fabrication;
Faith Bauerbach, $2,500,
Parker Corporation; Rylee
Lisle, $2,400, I-77 Auto
Group; Abigail Bauerbach, $2,300, Parker Corporation; Mitchel Evans,
$2,800, Rose’s Excavating; Trevor Morrissey,
$2,300, Ohio Valley
Bank; Katelynn Chevalier,
$2,500, JayMar; Zachary
Williams, $2,800, Home
National Bank; Heidi Willis, $2,200, Nova Rubber;
Kristin McKay, $3,700,
Dillon Cattle Company;
Rachel Kesterson, $3,000,
J&amp;L Construction and
Rutland Service Center;
Sean Stobaugh, $2,700,
Rose’s Excavating; Tiffany
Tripp, $2,850, Mark Porter Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep
and Ram and Reed and
Baur Insurance; Elisha
Jane Williams, $2,800,
Leedy Angus Farms; Justin Pierce, $2,900, Campaign to Elect Michael L.
Barr; Courtnee Williams,
$3,000, Valley Stone Yard;
Nathan Pierce, $2,600,
Farmers Bank; Olivia
Wood, $3,400, State Representative Jay Edwards,
Peoples Bank, and Mark
Commercial Beef Feeder
Porter Chrysler, Dodge,
Olivia Harris —
Jeep, Ram.
Gheen Painting, $500;
Allison Hatﬁeld —
Bridgeport Equipment
Market Poultry
Tools, $1,000; Preston
Austin Rice (Grand

Reserve Champion Rabbit shown by Hanna Bottomley; Purchased by Ridenour Gas Service.

Reserve Champion Goat shown by Jennifer Parker; Purchased by Parkersburg Home Surplus and
Liquidation.

Ervin — Hubbard Farm
and Greenhouse, $200;
Owen Johnson — PDK,
$250; Brayden Ervin
— Aunt Shelia Carsey,
$200; Samuel Bauerbach — Parker Corporation, $100; Dalton
Ervin — Hubbard Farm
and Greenhouse, $150;
Ryan Parker — PDK,
$250; Austin Rose: Tara
Roberts Thirty-One
Consultant, $100; Sarah
Hawley, $100; Conner
Ervin — Aunt Shelia
Carsey, $200; Madison
Johnson — PDK, $250;
Cassidy Bailey: Sarah
Roush, $500; Mark Porter Chevrolet, all beef
feeders to $1500.

Roush — Mamaw and
Papaw Walker, $100;
Mark Porter Chevrolet, all market lambs to
$1,000.

$250; JayMar, all beef
steers to $2,500.

Market Poultry
Mattison Finlaw —
Curtis Wildlife Foods,
$100; Donna Yeril, $100;
Market Dairy Steer
Kaylin Butcher — Reed J&amp;M Auto Sales, all market poultry to $500.
and Baur and Birchﬁeld
Funeral Home, $100.
Market Rabbits
Market Hogs
Brycen Rowe — PDK,
Jacob Jordan — Holzer $100; Rachel Jackson —
Constellium, $100, Fitch
Health System Meigs,
Farms, $50; Brayden
$100; Courtney FitzgerO’Brien — Constellium,
ald — Skyline Bowling
Center, $500; Brady Col- $100; Gabby Beeler —
burn — PDK, $250; Bran- Grandma and Grandpa
Beeler, $100; Taylor
don Oldaker — PDK,
Bartrum — PDK, $100,
$250; Whitney Durst —
Constellium, $100; Chloe Jordan Parker, $100; Sidney Dillon — JTM ConRizer — Holzer Health
tracting, $200; Hannah
System Meigs, $100;
Logan Caldwell — Holzer Jackson — Constellium,
Market Goats
$100; Matthew Jackson
Jessica Parker — Park- Health System Meigs,
— Constellium, $100;
$100.
er Corporation, $150,
Brogan Jenkins — Arrow
Grandma and Grandpa
Smith Archery, $25;
Cecil, $500; Jennifer
Market Beef Steer
Keaghan Wolfe — Arrow
Parker — Parker CorpoJess Parker — Parker
Smith Archery, $25, PDK,
ration, $500, Grandma
Farms, $300, Grandma
$100; Andrea Mahr —
and Grandpa Cecil,
and Grandpa Cecil,
PDK, $200; Dana Card
$400; Heritage Co-Op,
$1,000; Faith Bauerbach
— Pomeroy Express Care
$200; Makenzie Robert- — Parker Corporation,
of PVH, $500, Reed and
son — Parker Corpora$500, Parker Farms,
Baur and Ohio Valley
tion, $200, Grandma and $300; Rylee Lisle —
Grandpa Cecil, $300;
PDK, $250, Constellium, Plumbing, $100; Brayden
Stanley — PDK, $100.
Bryant Mohler — Hat$100; Kristin McKay —
ﬁeld Farms, $100; Ben
JTM Contracting, $300;
Sarah Hawley is the managing
Bailey — Shade River
Olivia Wood — PDK,
editor of The Daily Sentinel.
Farms, $100; Sammi
Mugrage Clerk of
Courts, all market goats
Jeff Warner Agency
to $600.
Nationwide Insurance
Market Lambs
Wyatt Watson — Pool
113 West 2nd Street
Masters of Vienna, $100;
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Braden Watson — Parker
Corporation, $100; LinTel 740-992-5479
coln Thomas — ConstelFax 740-992-6911
lium, $100; Matthew
Werry — Parker Corpowarnerj1@nationwide.com
ration, $100; Caroline
OH-70068551

�FAIR

4 Tuesday, August 21, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Scenes from Meigs County Fair Livestock Sale

Reserve Champion Beef Feeder shown by Mackenzie Newell;
Purchased by Reed and Baur Insurance and Ohio Valley Plumbing.

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Grand Champion Beef Feeder shown by Olivia Harris; Purchased by Burke Farms.

Reserve Champion Beef Steer shown by Trenton Morrissey;
Purchased by Drs. Jeremy and Martha Buckley, Buckley Group
Engineering and Surveying and Precision Fabrication.

Reserve Champion Dairy Feeder shown by Raegan Jones; Purchased
by State Representative Jay Edwards.

Grand Champion Goat shown
by Jessica Parker; Purchased by
Mark Porter Chevrolet.
Reserve Champion Dairy Steer
shown by Grace Butcher;
Purchased by RVC Architects.

Grand Champion Poultry shown by Austin Rice; Purchased by Dettwiller Lumber and Peoples Bank.

Grand Champion Rabbit shown by Brycen Rowe; Purchased by Ridenour Gas Service.

Grand Champion Lamb shown by Auston Colburn; Purchased by Dr. Meghan Haynes of Holzer Athens. Grand Champion Dairy Steer shown by Kaylin Barber; Purchased by Mark Porter Chevrolet.

Reserve Champion Poultry shown by Cooper Schagel; Purchased Reserve Champion Hog shown by Jaycie Jordan; Purchased by J&amp;M
by Kinsale Corporation.
Auto Sales.

Reserve Champion Lamb shown by Wyatt Watson; Purchased by
Pool Masters of Vienna.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Watch for signs of back-to-school stress

Assault
From page 1

Nationwide Children’s Hospital

Former NFL player and general manager Pete Retzlaff is 87. Actor-director Melvin Van Peebles is 86. Playwright Mart
Crowley is 83. Singer Kenny Rogers is 80.

From page 1

Elizabeth Bird, Racine; Class
24-Animal Study — 1st Elizabeth Bird, Racine; 2nd Shirley
Hamm, Racine; Class 25-Floral
Study — 1st Shirley Hamm,
Racine; 2nd Peggy Crane, Rutland; Class 26-Miscellaneous
— 1st Robert Bailey, Long
Bottom; 2nd Shirley Hamm,
Racine; 3rd Peggy Crane,
Rutland; Class 27-Pencil, Pen,
or Crayon — 1st Vicki Taylor,
Rutland; 2nd Elizabeth Bird,
Racine; 3rd Stephanie A. Rife,
Middleport.
Division 3-Adult PaintingExperienced: Class 29-Landscape — 1st Peggy Crane,
Rutland; Class 31–Floral
Study — 1st Peggy Crane,
Rutland; Class 34-Animal
Study — 2nd Peggy Crane,
Rutland; Class 35-Floral Study
— 1st Peggy Crane, Rutland;
Class 39-Floral Study — 1st
Julia Bancroft, Rutland; Class
40-Miscellaneous — 1st Julia
Bancroft, Rutland; Class

2 PM

8 PM

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

Full

Aug 26

Sep 2

New

Sep 9

First

Sep 16

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

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

Major
8:38a
9:21a
10:05a
10:48a
11:32a
12:17p
12:40a

Minor
2:26a
3:09a
3:53a
4:36a
5:20a
6:05a
6:51a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Major
9:03p
9:46p
10:28p
11:11p
11:55p
---1:02p

Minor
2:50p
3:34p
4:17p
5:00p
5:43p
6:28p
7:13p

WEATHER HISTORY
By Aug. 21, 1888, a massive
lightning-induced ﬁre that consumed
six billion board feet of lumber in the
northern Rockies was ﬁnally contained. By then, the ﬁre had claimed
851 lives.

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

Very High

AIR QUALITY
300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

Level
12.97
16.27
21.49
12.30
12.61
25.37
13.42
25.88
34.42
13.00
16.80
34.20
16.20

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.32
+0.47
+0.02
-0.63
+0.03
+0.08
-0.10
-0.24
-0.11
-0.01
-1.70
-0.10
-1.10

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

86°
67°
Partly sunny with a
t-storm possible

Marietta
80/65
Belpre
82/66

Athens
81/65

87°
71°
An afternoon
thunderstorm possible

Today

St. Marys
82/66

Parkersburg
80/65

Coolville
81/66

Elizabeth
82/67

Spencer
83/68

Buffalo
83/68
Milton
83/68

Clendenin
83/67

St. Albans
83/68

Huntington
81/66

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
89/61
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
71/58
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
84/66
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
82/67

Ashland
81/67
Grayson
80/66

Lorna Hart is a freelance writer for The
Daily Sentinel.

SUNDAY

Chance for
an afternoon
thunderstorm

Wilkesville
81/65
POMEROY
Jackson
82/67
81/65
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
83/68
82/66
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
79/63
GALLIPOLIS
83/67
84/68
82/67

South Shore Greenup
81/67
80/65

64

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

Portsmouth
81/66

Class 13-Pencil, Pen, or Crayon — 1st Vivian R. Huggins,
Rutland; 2nd Opal H. Huggins, Rutland; 3rd Madison M.
Chapman, Racine.

86°
63°

Murray City
80/64

McArthur
80/64

Lucasville
80/66

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
81/64

Very High

Primary: ragweed, grass/other
Mold: 2660

Logan
80/64

Adelphi
81/64

Waverly
80/65

Pollen: 42

Low

MOON PHASES

THURSDAY

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

4

Primary: cladosporium
Wed.
6:48 a.m.
8:14 p.m.
6:03 p.m.
3:12 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

Comfortable with
more sun than clouds

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.

Today
6:47 a.m.
8:15 p.m.
5:16 p.m.
2:25 a.m.

EXTENDED FORECAST

Pleasant with plenty
of sunshine

Temperature

SUN &amp; MOON

Middleport; 2nd Harvest
Lechler, Rutland; 3rd Hannah Crane, Pomeroy; Class
10-Animal Study — 1st Halo
M. Rife, Middleport; Class
12-Watercolor-Misc. — 1st
Halo M. Rife, Middleport;
2nd Laurel Huggins, Rutland;

Clouds breaking;
71°
80°
74°
Humid today with showers and thunderstorms. breezy with a shower
Mostly cloudy tonight. High 83° / Low 67°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

0.00
4.07
2.50
35.86
29.01

Photos by Lorna Hart | Courtesy

Josephine Hill, of Long Bottom, Ohio, displayed her landscape entry winner.

84°
61°

HEALTH TODAY

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

41-Pencil, Pen, or Crayon —
1st Danny Carter, Vinton;
2nd Vicki Taylor, Rutland; 3rd
Julia Bancroft, Rutland.
Amateur Painting-Junior
Department-X Amateur
Painting:
Division 1-Junior Painting:
Class 6-Animal Study — 1st
Halo M. Rife, Middleport; 2nd
Opal H. Huggins, Rutland;
3rd Hannah Crane, Pomeroy;
Class 8-Acrylic PaintingMisc. — 1st Halo M. Rife,

79°
54°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

(in inches)

Halo Rife was named Best of Show in
the Junior Division

78°
55°

ALMANAC

Precipitation

lege and Pro Football Hall of Famer Willie
Lanier is 73. Actress Patty McCormack
is 73. Pop singer-musician Carl Giammarese is 71. Actress Loretta Devine is 69.

Actor Clarence Williams III is 79. Rockand-roll musician James Burton is 79.
Singer Harold Reid (The Statler Brothers)
is 79. Singer Jackie DeShannon is 77. Col-

Winners

8 AM

85°
66°
86°
64°
100° in 1983
48° in 1953

and behavior: This could be a
sign that something is wrong.
For example, if the child
seems really down, they stop
doing things they normally
enjoy, or you notice signiﬁcant changes in eating or
sleeping.
If you or someone you know
is thinking about suicide,
contact the National Suicide
Prevention Lifeline at 1-800273-TALK (1-800-273-8255),
or contact the Crisis Text
Line by texting “START” to
741-741.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS

TODAY

WEATHER

prevention coordinator for the
Center for Suicide Prevention
and Research at Nationwide
Children’s Hospital, offers recommendations:
Don’t wait for a crisis: A
good opportunity to talk
about suicide or mental health
issues is when things are
going well.
Check in regularly: Ask the
child directly how they are
doing and if they have ever
had thoughts about ending
their life.
Look for changes in mood

Asking a child directly
about suicidal thoughts is
usually the best thing a parThe start of a new school
year can be overwhelming for ent can do to help their child
open up about their emotions.
children and teens. Feelings
Even if their child is not
of stress, confusion, fear and
struggling with suicide or
doubt can often inﬂuence
problem-solving and decision- depression, parents can model
for their child that it is good
making skills and for some,
suicide may seem like an idea. to talk about serious emoAccording to national statis- tional concerns with trusted
tics, we lose more than 2,000 adults and important to reach
children and teens per year to out to friends to have these
suicide. It is the second lead- conversations, too.
Dr. John Ackerman, a cliniing cause of death among 10
cal psychologist and suicide
to 19 year olds.

According to a news
release, on Saturday morning, dispatch received a call
from two women advising
that they had been sitting
in a car talking on Pomeroy Pike Road when a man
allegedly came out of the
dark and attacked them
with a bat and a machete
damaging their vehicle.
The women ﬂed the area
and were now at Five Points
waiting on police.
Sgt. Mohler and Deputy
Stacy responded, spoke
with the victims and took
photos of the damage to the
vehicle.
According to the release,
both female victims stated
that they had feared for
their lives and believed if
they had not been able to
get away from the suspect
they would have been killed.
The damage to the car
reportedly consisted of
dents and machete cut
marks in the windshield
directly in front of the
driver, another cut mark on
the driver’s side door at the
edge of the open window
frame and additional marks
on the passenger side near
the passenger.
The women gave a
description of the suspect
and then took the deputies
to the scene of the attack.
Through the investigation
a suspect was identiﬁed.
A search warrant was
obtained and served on
his home. Evidence of the
alleged crime was located
and the suspect arrested.
Although the victims
were not injured, because
of the placement of the
damage on the vehicle and
the victim’s statement of
the suspect’s actions it is
believed that he was not
only targeting the vehicle
but the occupants inside,
according to the release.
Kauff is being held in the
Meigs County Jail awaiting
a court appearance.

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Tuesday, August 21, 2018 5

Charleston
82/68

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
75/50

Billings
64/49

Montreal
80/67
Toronto
75/62

Minneapolis
76/56

New York
77/70
Chicag
78/60

Denver
76/54

80

Washington
83/73

t

Kansas City
80/60

Wed.

City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
88/64/s
87/63/t
Anchorage
60/53/r 61/53/c
Atlanta
85/70/t 86/67/s
Atlantic City
82/75/sh
85/67/t
Baltimore
82/72/t 85/63/sh
Billings
64/49/pc 78/57/s
Boise
87/61/pc 88/62/pc
Boston
74/67/pc
81/65/t
Charleston, WV
82/68/t 76/56/pc
Charlotte
88/71/s 88/66/s
Cheyenne
65/51/t
69/53/t
Chicago
78/60/sh 78/60/s
Cincinnati
79/64/t 77/56/pc
Cleveland
81/64/t 73/58/sh
Columbus
80/64/t 73/56/pc
Dallas
96/72/s 95/73/s
Denver
76/54/t 76/57/s
Des Moines
76/56/pc 78/56/s
Detroit
80/62/r 75/57/pc
Honolulu
88/76/pc 89/78/pc
Houston
98/78/t 100/77/s
Indianapolis
78/63/t 75/56/pc
Kansas City
80/60/pc 77/60/pc
Las Vegas
103/83/s 102/82/s
Little Rock
85/67/s 84/68/pc
Los Angeles
84/66/pc 84/65/pc
Louisville
81/67/t 79/59/pc
Miami
90/75/pc
89/77/t
Minneapolis
76/56/pc 80/58/s
Nashville
84/68/pc 84/62/pc
New Orleans
91/75/t 92/76/s
New York City
77/70/c
84/65/t
Oklahoma City
85/67/s
85/67/t
Orlando
90/74/t
90/73/t
Philadelphia
82/72/sh 86/64/sh
Phoenix
100/82/pc 101/84/pc
Pittsburgh
78/65/t
72/53/t
Portland, ME
72/61/pc
75/59/t
Raleigh
86/70/t 88/65/s
Richmond
82/71/t 87/64/sh
St. Louis
82/63/pc 80/59/pc
Salt Lake City
85/66/t
85/63/t
San Francisco
71/58/pc 71/57/pc
Seattle
89/61/pc 90/57/s
Washington, DC
83/73/t 87/65/sh

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

El Paso
97/73

Chihuahua
89/65

High
Low

Atlanta
85/70

109° in Needles, CA
30° in Walden, CO

Global
High
120° in Badrah, Iraq
Low -8° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
98/78
Monterrey
98/71

Miami
90/75

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

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Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close
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�Sports
6 Tuesday, August 21, 2018

Daily Sentinel

On 50th anniversary of last MAC title, Ohio a threat

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Ohio University head coach Frank Solich walks onto the field during a break in
the action of the Bobcats’ three-point loss to Central Michigan on Oct. 7, 2017,
in Athens Ohio.

DETROIT (AP) — Frank
Solich is closing in on his 100th
victory at Ohio. In a league
where coaches come and go, he
has built a consistently successful program and stuck with it
for a while.
All that’s really left for the
Bobcats do to is win the title.
“I like our players. I like their
ability, I like their conﬁdence. I
like the leadership that’s on our
football team,” Solich said. “All
that needs to obviously come
together.”
Ohio hasn’t won a Mid-American Conference championship
since 1968, but the Bobcats
have played in the title game
four times under Solich, most
recently in 2016. In a college
coaching career that has included six seasons at Nebraska and
13 at Ohio, Solich has only had

two losing seasons.
“Been a coach for 50 years,
and only been to four different
schools — two of them high
schools,” he said. “Any time
I go to a school, I’m not looking for the next job. I’m just
looking at doing my job and
trying to do it as well as I possibly can. I enjoy being around
young guys, and so I get
attached to players. One day
seems to lead to the next, and
here we are.”
Successful MAC coaches
can become targets for bigger
programs, but Solich — who
came within a victory of a BCS
title while at Nebraska — has
remained somewhat under the
radar since coming to Ohio.
This could be the year the
Bobcats have been waiting for.
Quarterback Nathan Rourke is

back after throwing for 2,203
yards and rushing for 912 last
season.
The Bobcats tied a MAC
single-season record with 44
touchdowns on the ground.
Rourke had 21 of them.
Ohio ﬁnished a game behind
Akron in the MAC East last
year, while Toledo won the
West and the league title game
. The Rockets are again among
the favorites in the West, but
Northern Illinois, which went
to six straight MAC title games
from 2010-15, is eager to
return to the top.
Ohio and Northern Illinois
were the picks to win the divisions in the MAC’s preseason
media poll , but seven of the
league’s 12 teams received at
See MAC | 8

Point soccer
opens year with
2 road wins
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

BECKLEY, W.Va. — Different battles. Same
result.
The Point Pleasant boys soccer team started
the 2018 season on a solid note following a pair of
road wins at Independence and PikeView this past
weekend in a pair of non-conference matches at
the YMCA Field.
The Black Knights (2-0-0) opened the campaign
with a decisive 6-0 triumph over the Patriots on
Friday night, then rallied back from a one-goal
deﬁcit on Saturday for a thrilling 2-1 decision over
the Panthers.
PPHS outshot Independence by a sizable 37-2
overall margin, including a 17-2 edge in shots on
goal, as the Red and Black built a 2-0 intermission
advantage.
Adam Veroski opened the scoring after receiving a crossing pass from Jaden Reed in the third
minute for a 1-0 edge. Veroski added a second goal
in the 11th minute following a crossing pass from
Cohen Yates.
Point caught a lucky bounce early in the second
half as a corner kick bounced off of an IHS player,
resulting in an own goal during the 43rd minute.
Isaiah Snyder buried a line drive from 18 yards
out into the opposite corner for a 4-0 lead in the
47th minute, then Garrett Hatten planted a loose
ball from 12 yards out in the 66th minute for a
ﬁve-goal cushion.
Snyder completed the six-goal victory in the
69th minute with another successful 18-yard boot
to the opposite corner.
Point Pleasant claimed a 3-2 edge in direct kicks
and 3-0 advantage in corner kicks. PPHS keeper
Nick Smith made two saves for a shutout, while
Colton Blackcorn stopped 12 shots in the setback.
The Black Knights were held scoreless in the
ﬁrst half against PikeView, plus Point was unlucky
with a bounce over that same stretch.
Gage Damewood found himself in an opportunistic position as the sophomore played a bounce
off of a defender in front of the net. The ball took
a weird bounce and spun itself inside the post, giving PVHS a 1-0 lead in the eighth minute.
Veroski ended Point’s scoreless drought in the
48th minute after booting a 22-yard bullet past the
diving attempt of Panther keeper Colton Caskey,
tying the game at one.
The eventual clincher came in the 69th minute
as Veroski buried a penalty kick into the lower
right side of the goal.
The penalty happened when Braxton WatkinsLovejoy was tripped by multiple defenders while
setting up a pass.
The Black Knights outshot PikeView by a slim
See SOCCER | 8

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Aug. 21
Golf
Gallia Academy at
Fairland, 4 pm
River Valley at Cliffside,
4:30
Eastern at Miller, 4:30
Volleyball
OVCS at South Gallia, 6
pm
Meigs at Southern, 7 pm
Girls Soccer
Gallia Academy at
Chesapeake, 6 pm
Boys Soccer

Gallia Academy at
Chesapeake, 7:30
Wednesday, Aug. 22
Golf
TVC Ohio at NelsonvilleYork, 4:30
Southern, Eastern, SGHS
at Belpre, 4:30
Volleyball
Oak Hill at River Valley,
7 pm
Boys Soccer
Gallia Academy at
Portsmouth, 6 pm

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Marshall head football coach Doc Holliday, right, talks with his coverage unit during an Oct. 14, 2017, football contest against Old
Dominion at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington, W.Va.

FAU favored to repeat at C-USA champ
By Stephen Hawkins

postseason games (only
the SEC and ACC has
more).
“Especially (when)
Lane Kifﬁn knew very
you’ve got some games
little about Conference
where they’re basiUSA before he became
cally assuming that you’re
Florida Atlantic’s head
going to lose early in the
coach. Same for Butch
year, to be able to still
Davis at Florida Internahave that many teams
tional.
bowl-eligible again speaks
The high-proﬁle
to the players, but to the
coaches made immedicoaches, too,” Kifﬁn said.
ate impacts in their new
Rick Stockstill is the
league, and at their new
longest-tenured C-USA
schools not all that far
coach, going into his
apart.
13th season at Middle
FAU is the preseason
Tennessee. This is Doc
favorite to repeat as
Holliday’s ninth season at
league champs after a
school-record 11 wins and Marshall.
Louisiana Tech has
its ﬁrst C-USA title. The
won bowl games each
Owls, coming off three
of the past four seasons
consecutive 3-9 seasons,
under coach Skip Holtz,
overcame a 1-3 start last
season and now and carry while North Texas has
a 10-game winning streak played in bowls both seainto their 2018 opener at sons since former North
Carolina assistant Seth
Oklahoma.
Littrell became its coach.
FIU went 8-5, douMike Sanford Jr. was
bling its win total from
Notre Dame’s offensive
the previous season for
coordinator before going
the team’s ﬁrst winning
to Western Kentucky last
record since joining the
year.
conference in 2013.
The whole league will
“Way better than
be watching when FAU
people think that it is,”
Davis said about C-USA. opens at Oklahoma, the
“The level of the coaches preseason favorite to win
in this conference, there’s its fourth consecutive Big
some damn good football 12 title after being in the
College Football Playoff
coaches in just about
last season. So what if
every place. … There’s a
the Owls could pull off an
lot more talent, there’s a
lot of really good athletes upset Sept. 1?
“That would do a ton
in this conference.”
for the program, and
Kifﬁn, who spent the
for the conference, and
previous three seasons
Group of Five,” Kifﬁn
with Nick Saban at
said. “We’ve got a very
Alabama, had a similar
impression about a league tough schedule, we’re not
that had 10 bowl-eligible putting everything into
that game. Then all of a
teams and sent nine to

Associated Press

sudden you don’t win that
game and … you start
losing games that you
should win.”
Father-son finale
Middle Tennessee quarterback Brent Stockstill
remembers being a little
standofﬁsh with the head
coach when he ﬁrst got to
school there “just to try
to prove that I was there
was a football player and
not because of (being) his
son.” Stockstill goes into
his senior season already
as the Blue Raiders career
leader in touchdown
passes (77) and 300-yard
passing games (14).
“It’s everything that
I wanted it to be, and
more,” said the younger
Stockstill, who plans to
be a coach like his dad.
“We’ve grown closer and
closer and really tried to
just do it the right way
and show people that it’s
a special opportunity.”
Rick Stockstill said it’s
hard to put into words
how much he’s enjoyed
the time coaching his son.

former Oklahoma player
Chris Robison or DeAndre Johnson, by way of
Florida State and East
Mississippi Community
College.
West Division: Two
of the losses by North
Texas last season were
to FAU, and both were
lopsided — ﬁrst in the
regular season and then
in the C-USA championship game. But the Mean
Green were 7-0 against
other C-USA opponents.
Quarterback Mason Fine
(school records of 4,052
yards passing and 31
TDs), last year’s C-USA
offensive player of the
year, is among 17 returning starters. Top tackler
E.J. Ejiya is also back.
FAU visits Denton on
Nov. 15, about two weeks
before the league championship game.

New coaches
Mike Bloomgren takes
over at Rice as a ﬁrsttime head coach after the
past seven seasons as a
Stanford assistant. The
41-year-old Bloomgren
replaced two-time C-USA
The favorites
coach of the year David
East Division: Florida
Atlantic returns 15 start- Baliff, ﬁred after Rice
ﬁnished 1-11 in his 11th
ers, including running
season.
back Devin Singletary
New UTEP coach Dana
and linebacker Azeez
Dimel was previously
Al-Shaair, the preseason
head coach at Wyoming
C-USA offense and
(1997-99) and Houston
defensive players of the
(2000-02), and was an
year. Singletary led the
assistant at Kansas State,
nation with 32 rushing
his alma mater, the past
touchdowns while running for 1,920 yards, and nine years. The Miners
Al-Shaair had 147 tackles. were the only Division
The Owls will have a new I team that didn’t win a
game last season.
starting quarterback —

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 21, 2018 7

XXX�NZEBJMZUSJCVOF�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, August 21, 2018

RedStorm open season with 2 wins

MLB
American League
All Times EDT
East Division
W
L Pct
Boston
88 37 .704
New York
78 46 .629
Tampa Bay
63 61 .508
Toronto
55 69 .444
Baltimore
37 87 .298
Central Division
W
L Pct
Cleveland
71 52 .577
Minnesota
59 64 .480
Detroit
51 74 .408
Chicago
46 77 .374
Kansas City
38 86 .306
West Division
W
L Pct
Houston
75 49 .605
Oakland
74 50 .597
Seattle
71 54 .568
Los Angeles
63 63 .500
Texas
56 70 .444

GB
—
9½
24½
32½
50½
GB
—
12
21
25
33½
GB
—
1
4½
13
20

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Sunday’s Games
Tampa Bay 2, Boston 0
N.Y. Yankees 10, Toronto 2
Cleveland 8, Baltimore 0
Chicago White Sox 7, Kansas City 6
Minnesota 5, Detroit 4
Texas 4, L.A. Angels 2
Houston 9, Oakland 4
L.A. Dodgers 12, Seattle 1
Monday’s Games
Baltimore at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 7:10
p.m.
Cleveland at Boston, 7:10 p.m.
Kansas City at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m.
Texas at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
Houston at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.

MAC
From page 6

least one ﬁrst-place vote.
“We have a chance,
but so do a lot of other
schools,” Solich said.
Defending champs
Toledo ﬁnally broke
through for its ﬁrst title
since 2004, and the Rockets will be tested in September when they host a
nonconference showdown
against Miami.
“We have to take that
game just like any other
one,” coach Jason Candle
said. “That’s a hard thing
to do, because that’s a
game that our guys are
looking forward to.”
Toledo led at Miami
at halftime last year and
trailed 38-30 midway
through the fourth quarter — before a couple late
touchdowns by the Hurricanes put the game away.
The Rockets must replace
quarterback Logan Woodside, who was drafted by
the Cincinnati Bengals,
and Toledo’s big game
against Northern Illinois
is on the road.
Top players
Offense: Buffalo’s
Anthony Johnson ﬁnished
sixth in the nation last
season with 1,356 yards
receiving. He also set a
school record by catching
14 touchdown passes.
Last season was his ﬁrst
after transferring from
Iowa Western Community College.
Defense: Northern Illinois defensive end Sutton
Smith was a second-team

Daily Sentinel

National League
All Times EDT
East Division
W
L Pct GB
Atlanta
68 55 .553
—
Philadelphia
68 56 .548
½
Washington
62 63 .496
7
New York
54 69 .439 14
Miami
50 76 .397 19½
Central Division
W
L Pct GB
Chicago
71 52 .577
—
Milwaukee
69 57 .548 3½
St. Louis
68 57 .544
4
Pittsburgh
63 62 .504
9
Cincinnati
55 69 .444 16½
West Division
W
L Pct GB
Arizona
69 56 .552
—
Colorado
68 56 .548
½
Los Angeles
67 58 .536
2
San Francisco 61 64 .488
8
San Diego
49 78 .386 21

By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

CHICAGO, Ill. - The
University of Rio Grande
opened its 2018 men’s
soccer season in successful fashion Friday night,
posting a 3-0 win over
Saint Xavier University
at Deaton Field.
The RedStorm, who
entered the contest
ranked No. 16 in the preseason NAIA coaches’
poll, outshot the host
Cougars, 13-5, and
allowed only two shots
on frame in the contest.
Rio Grande scored
what proved to be the
only goal it would need
with a little more than
21 minutes gone in the
opening half when sophomore Samuel Pederson
(Aldershot, England)
found the back of the net
off a crossing pass from
junior James Williamson
(San Jose, Costa Rica).
The lead reached 2-0
with 6:41 remaining
before the intermission
when freshman Nicolas
Cam Orellana (Santiago,
Chile) broke free on a
dribble inside the right
side of the box and
pushed a shot past SXU
net-minder Shane Badertscher.
The RedStorm’s ﬁnal
marker of the night
came just over 12 minutes into the second half
when senior Harry Reil-

Tuesday’s Games
Baltimore (Bundy 7-11) at Toronto (Gaviglio 2-6), 7:07 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 9-9) at Detroit
(Zimmermann 5-5), 7:10 p.m.
Cleveland (Bieber 6-2) at Boston (Eovaldi
5-4), 7:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Sparkman 0-1) at Tampa
Bay (Snell 14-5), 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 9-4) at Miami (Lopez 2-3), 7:10 p.m.
Minnesota (Berrios 11-8) at Chicago
White Sox (Kopech 0-0), 8:10 p.m.
L.A. Angels (Pena 1-3) at Arizona (Corbin
10-4), 9:40 p.m.
Texas (Jurado 2-2) at Oakland (Anderson
2-3), 10:05 p.m.
Houston (TBD) at Seattle (Leake 8-7),
10:10 p.m.

All-American last year,
ﬁnishing with 14 sacks
and two touchdowns on
fumble returns. Of his 63
tackles on the season, 29
½ were for loss.
In decline?
Bowling Green played
in three straight MAC
title games from 201315, winning two. Since
then, the Falcons are just
6-18. Bowling Green gave
up 66 points in a loss to
Toledo late last season.
On the rise?
Chris Creighton has
gone 15-34 in four seasons as Eastern Michigan’s coach, but that
doesn’t tell the whole
story. EMU is 12-13
over the past two years,
including a bowl appearance two seasons ago. It
was the most victories
over a two-year stretch
for the program since
1988-89.
EMU opens its conference schedule this year
against Northern Illinois,
Western Michigan and
Toledo. After that, the
schedule may ease a bit.
It would be a stretch to
call EMU a title contender, but another season of
respectability is certainly
attainable.

Courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Eduardo Zurita is congratulated by teammates
after his second half goal in Friday night’s 3-0 win at Saint Xavier
University.

ly (Coventry, England)
lofted a crossing pass
from 25 yards out on the
right wing and fellow
senior Eduardo Zurita
(Sant Boi de Llobregat,
Spain) scored on a nifty
one-timer.
Rio junior goalkeeper
Richard Dearle (Castle
Donington, England)
recorded a pair of stops
in his debut en route to
a clean sheet effort.
Badertscher stopped

four shots in a losing
cause for the Cougars.
Benjamin Andoh
snapped a scoreless tie
with a goal just over 13
minutes into the second
half and lifted the University of Rio Grande to
a 1-0 win over Roosevelt
University, Sunday afternoon, in non-conference
men’s soccer action at
Toyota Park.
The RedStorm
improved to 2-0 with

the victory.
The loss came in the
2018 season opener for
the Lakers.
The match was a
defensive struggle from
the outset and featured
just nine shots on goal
combined - six by Rio
Grande and three by
Roosevelt.
Andoh, a sophomore
from Glasgow, Scotland,
netted the game’s lone
marker at the 58:16
mark of the contest off
a feed from senior Eduardo Zurita (Sant Boi de
Llobregat, Spain).
The Lakers, who
were outshot 10-7 overall, managed just one
shot on frame after the
RedStorm’s go-ahead
goal and that came 52
seconds after Andoh’s
score.
Freshman Simon
Grande (Ontario, Canada) had three saves in
the shutout effort - his
ﬁrst career appearance
in goal for Rio Grande.
Jesus Velasco had ﬁve
saves in a losing cause
for Roosevelt.
Rio Grande returns
to action on Saturday,
entertaining Indiana
Tech in its home opener
at Evan E. Davis Field.
Kickoff is set for 7
p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Rio men ranked No. 16 in
NAIA preseason poll
KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The University of Rio
Grande is ranked 16th in the preseason NAIA Men’s
Soccer Coaches’ Top 25 Poll released Tuesday night
by the national ofﬁce.
The RedStorm collected 227 points in the balloting of a panel of head coaches representing each of
the conferences, Association of Independent Institutions and Unafﬁliated Groups.
The No. 16 ranking is Rio’s lowest preseason
mark since the then-Redmen failed to make the poll
in 2001. Rio has now appeared in 108 consecutive

Soccer

Predicted order of finish
East
1, Ohio. 2, Miami,
Ohio. 3, Buffalo. 4,
Akron. 5, Bowling Green.
6, Kent State.
West
1, Northern Illinois. 2,
Toledo. 3, Eastern Michigan. 4, Western Michigan. 5, Central Michigan.
6, Ball State.

From page 6

15-13 overall margin, which
included an 8-5 deﬁcit in shots
on goal. Point also claimed a 4-3
edge in corner and was whistled
for only six of the 21 fouls in the
contest.
Smith stopped seven shots in
the triumph, while Caskey made

polls.
Head coach Scott Morrissey’s squad ﬁnished
the 2017 season with a 14-2-2 mark after suffering
an upset loss to Cardinal Stritch University in the
opening round of the national tournament.
Following its ﬁrst championship in program history, Wayland Baptist (Texas) claimed the No. 1
spot by capturing 15 of 16 ﬁrst place votes and a
total of 436 points.
Missouri Valley grabbed the No. 2 spot with 422
points, while Oklahoma Wesleyan was third with
409 points and the remaining ﬁrst place vote.
Rounding out the top ﬁve were Marymount California with 394 points and William Carey (Miss.)
with 380 points.

only three saves in goal for the
Panthers.
“This was a very good win for
us. We haven’t had a come-frombehind win for years, and last
year we were always on the other
side of one-goal games,” PPHS
coach Chip Wood said following
the PikeView victory. “I thought
we did a great job of making
adjustments in game and it really
made a difference in getting some

good chances in the second half.
“This was a really good experience for this group in traveling to
Beckley. We took care of business
in both games, which is a great
way to start the season.”
Point Pleasant returns to action
Saturday when it hosts Independence.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

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IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., as Trustee for the Pooling and
Servicing Agreement dated as of May 1,2005 Park Place
Securities, Inc. Asset-Backed Pass-Through Certificates
Series 2005-WHQ3 Case Number:
17-CV-007
Plaintiff,
Judge: Carson Crow
vs.
DONALD E. SAVAGE
LORELEI SAVAGE, et al.

LEGAL NOTICE

Defendants,
The Defendant, Unknown Heirs, Legatees, Devisees, Executors, Administrators and Assigns and their Spouses, if any, of
Lorelei Savage, but whose current address is unknown, will
take notice that on January 24, 2017, the Plaintiff, Wells Fargo
Bank, N.A., as Trustee for the Pooling and Servicing Agreement dated as of May 1,2005 Park Place Securities, Inc.
Asset-Backed Pass-Through Certificates Series 2005-WHQ3,
filed its Complaint in Case No. 17-CV-007 , in the Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs County, Ohio, seeking a foreclosure of
its mortgage interest in the real property located at 31175
Painter Ridge Road, Vinton, OH 45686, Permanent Parcel No.
1300161003,("Real Estate"), and alleged that the Defendant,
have or may have an interest in this Real Estate.
The Defendant, Unknown Heirs, Legatees, Devisees, Executors, Administrators and Assigns and their Spouses, if any, of
Lorelei Savage is required to answer the Plaintiff's Complaint
within twenty-eight (28) days after the last date of publication of
this notice. In the event that the Defendant, Unknown Heirs,
Legatees, Devisees, Executors, Administrators and Assigns
and their Spouses, if any, of Lorelei Savage fails to respond in
the allotted time, judgment by default can be entered against
them for the relief requested in the Plaintiff’s Complaint.
Carrie L. Davis (0083281)
Thomas M. Drinan (0080307)
Michael R. Brinkman (0040079)
Yanfang Marilyn Ramirez (0074242)
Rachel K. Pearson (0079176)
Attorney for Plaintiff
Reisenfeld &amp; Associates LLC
3962 Red Bank Road
Cincinnati, OH 45227
voice: (513) 322-7000
facsimile: (513) 322-7099
8/21/18, 8/28/18, 9/4/18

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, August 21, 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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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, August 21, 2018

Daily Sentinel

WNBA playoff field
set, LA-Minnesota
meet in first round
NEW YORK (AP) — The WNBA playoffs are
set after a wild, unpredictable regular season
came to an end Sunday.
As expected, Los Angeles and Minnesota will
meet in the postseason for a third straight year.
Unexpectedly, it’s in the ﬁrst round.
The two-time WNBA ﬁnalists ﬁnished a surprising sixth and seventh in the regular season
and will face off in Los Angeles on Tuesday
night.
“Minnesota is a good team. You can throw
records out the window right now,” Sparks
coach Brian Agler said. “They have two of the
elite offensive players in the league, one inside
and one outside, they have veteran savviness,
tough minded championship pedigree and we
have played them enough, over 20 times in
three years, so we know each other pretty well.”

That scrutinized bit of
Meyer’s OSU contract
may be new norm
Courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Payten Davis races Mount Vernon Nazarene University’s Adison Preston to the ball during the first half of Saturday night’s
non-conference women’s soccer game at Evan E. Davis Field. The Cougars spotted the RedStorm an early lead before rallying for a 3-1
victory.

MVNU continues mastery of Rio women
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE,
Ohio - Melanie Critzer
sandwiched a go-ahead
goal between a pair of
scores by teammate
Amberly Knox, leading
Mount Vernon Nazarene
University to a 3-1 win
over the University of
Rio Grande, Saturday
night, in non-conference
women’s soccer action at
Evan E. Davis Field.
The contest was the
season opener for both
squads.
The Cougars ran their
all-time record against

Rio to 10-1, with the
only loss coming by forfeit after the 2013 campaign when it was discovered that an ineligible
player had been used in
an on-ﬁeld triumph over
the RedStorm.
Saturday night’s
renewal of the series
actually saw Rio Grande
take a 1-0 lead just 3:39
into the match when
senior Kelsey Lee (West
Chester, OH) tapped a
left wing free kick off the
foot of junior teammate
Brooklyn Pritt (Scott
Depot, WV) past MVNU
goalkeeper Anna Chrysler and into the back of

the net.
The lead lasted for a
little more than 31 minutes before Knox ﬁred
a shot from the right
wing which just cleared
the outstretched arm of
Rio senior net-minder
Andrea Vera (Quito,
Ecuador) for the tying
marker.
Critzer put the Cougars ahead to stay just
3:24 into the second half
with a goal from just
outside the upper left
corner of the 18-yard
box and Knox closed the
scoring just over seven
minutes later with a goal
off an assist by Abby

Creech.
MVNU controlled the
match after Rio Grande’s
early score and outshot
the RedStorm, 26-6,
including a 14-4 edge in
shots on goal.
Chrysler ﬁnished with
three saves in the win for
the Cougars.
Vera stopped 11 shots
in a losing cause for Rio
Grande.
The RedStorm returns
to action next Saturday,
traveling to Milligan
(Tenn.) College for a 2
p.m. kickoff.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Kurt Busch
steals
spotlight

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BRISTOL, Tenn.
(AP) — Kurt Busch
stole the spotlight from
his younger brother
Saturday night at Bristol
Motor Speedway to snap
a 58-race winless streak
and grab an overdue
short track victory.
Busch won for the ﬁrst
time this season — ﬁrst
since the 2017 seasonopening Daytona 500 —
but it was his sixth victory on the 0.533-mile
bullring he once dominated. Busch once won
three consecutive times
on the Tennessee track
and was considered the
best in the business on
the concrete oval.
Then his younger
brother learned his way
around the place, and
Kyle Busch became the
master of the track.
Kyle Busch has seven
Cup wins at Bristol, 21
combined across NASCAR’s national series.
He’s so good that he
chose the song “All I Do
Is Win” by D.J. Khaled
to play as he was introduced before the race.
The crowd responded
with a thunderous jeering, and Kyle Busch’s
eventful evening was off
to a roaring start.
He triggered a 15-car
accident just two laps
into the race, fell two
laps off the pace, came
back to race Martin
Truex Jr. for second, and
moved Truex out the
way late in the race. His
late spin set up the ﬁnal
restart that helped Kurt
Busch seal the victory.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The investigation of how football coach Urban Meyer handled
domestic violence accusations against an assistant has drawn attention to his obligation to
report violations of Ohio State’s sexual misconduct policy — a type of speciﬁcity becoming
increasingly common in college athletic contracts.
Sports law experts say such provisions clarify
expectations for those employees and can make it
easier for schools to ﬁre them without compensation if they fall short.
They say that language started popping up
more in recent years after the child sex abuse
scandal at Penn State, with terms that go beyond
the widespread and often vague morals clauses in
contracts. Sometimes the terms simply reiterate
obligations already laid out in school policy, federal Title IX law, or NCAA rules that deem coaches
responsible for actions of their staff.
Ohio State is expected to get a report this week
in its investigation of Meyer and trustees will
then decide if he should be ﬁred, suspended or
otherwise disciplined.
When speciﬁcs about Title IX reporting requirements were added to Arizona basketball coach
Sean Miller’s contract this year, the school said
to expect similar language in its other coaching
contracts. UCLA is taking the same approach,
including for football coach Chip Kelly.
And it’s not just in head coaching contracts.
Tennessee athletic director Phillip Fulmer can be
ﬁred for cause if he fails to report misconduct as
mandated by university rules. So can new Texas
A&amp;M football assistants if they mishandle certain
Title IX issues.
“Every college coach that I work with now
should expect some version of this language,”
said Aaron Swerdlow, a sports lawyer in California.
Contract negotiators devote a lot of attention to
deﬁning how a coach with a guaranteed contract
can be ﬁred for cause, because big payouts could
be at stake, Swerdlow said. While coaches want
narrow terms, a school seeking to protect its
image and ﬁnances will push for broader coverage.
And there’s a growing trend among universities
to protect themselves from misconduct by coaches beyond breaking the law or NCAA rules, said
Gabe Feldman, director of Tulane University’s
sports law program.
“In most of these contracts you can be terminated for cause for something that falls far short
of a legal violation,” Feldman said.
Meyer’s contract extension signed this spring,
which raised his salary to $7.6 million this year
and runs through 2022, requires that he notify
the university’s Title IX coordinator for athletics
about “any known violations” of its sexual misconduct policy — including sexual assault and
harassment and “intimate violence” — involving
students or staff.
Whether those terms required Meyer to report
previous issues might be a legal gray area, said
Barbara Osborne, who teaches sports law at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
The question got attention after Ohio State
ﬁred receivers coach Zach Smith last month following a dispute with his ex-wife, and she publicly alleged that Meyer’s wife, Shelley, knew about
allegations of domestic violence against Smith
back in 2015.
When reporters asked this summer about the
2015 incident, Meyer initially said he didn’t know
anything about it. After Smith’s ex-wife made
her comments and Ohio State put Meyer on paid
leave to investigate, Meyer acknowledged he’d
known about the incident and insisted he followed protocol for reporting it.
Smith, who denied being aggressive with his
ex-wife, wasn’t criminally charged in the 2015
matter, and that put the school in a tough position, said Matt Mitten, director of the National
Sports Law Institute at Marquette University.
“It’s really difﬁcult to expect particularly public
employers to take action when the criminal justice system isn’t,” said Mitten, who — full disclosure — is a Buckeyes season ticketholder.
Now, as the university awaits an investigative
panel’s soon-anticipated ﬁndings about whether
Meyer did what he was supposed to, it faces signiﬁcant public pressure to do something, Mitten
said.
Firing Meyer without cause would cost Ohio
State a roughly $38 million buyout.

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