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                  <text>Long
live
newspapers
OPINION s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

36°

51°

50°

Mostly sunny and cool today. Mainly clear
tonight. High 59° / Low 39°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Huskies
slip past
Ohio

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 165, Volume 72

Brothers held
on $500,000
bond each
Staff Report

POMEROY — Two
brothers facing charges
of rape relating to
offenses alleged against
minor victims are being
held on $500,000 bond
after being arraigned
on Monday in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court.
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney James
K. Stanley stated in a
news release that, he
requested, and Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas Judge I.
Carson Crow ordered,
bond to be set in the
amount of $500,000
with no 10 percent
allowed for each James
Hess, 51, and John
Hess, Jr., 52, both of
Pomeroy.
The Hess brothers
were indicted on Oct.
10.
James Hess was
indicted for four
counts of rape, each
a felony of the ﬁrst
degree, and four
counts of gross sexual
imposition, three of

which are felonies of
the third degree and
one of which is a felony
of the fourth degree.
The allegations against
James Hess involve
four minor victims.
John Hess, Jr. was
indicted for three
counts of rape, each
a felony of the ﬁrst
degree. The allegations
against John Hess,
Jr. involve one minor
victim.
On Oct. 11, the
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney’s
Ofﬁce, along with the
Meigs County Department of Job and Family
Services and the Pomeroy Police Department, executed arrest
warrants on the Hess
brothers. They have
been incarcerated since
that time.
These cases will
proceed in the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas. James Hess
is scheduled for trial
on Dec. 20, 2018, and
John Hess, Jr. is scheduled for trial on Dec.
18, 2018.

Cancer Survivor
Dinner set to
be held Nov. 2
Theme to be ‘No
One Fights Alone’
Staff Report

ROCKSPRINGS —
The 2018 Meigs County Cancer Survivor
Dinner will be held
on Friday, Nov. 2 with
guest speaker Nicole
Phillips.
The dinner will take
place at 6:30 p.m. at
Meigs High School
with the them of “No
One Fights Alone.”
The dinner will feature
costumed superheroes
from Wolfe Mountain
Entertainment.
Phillips, of Athens,
is a champion for

Tuesday, October 16, 2018 s 50¢

Learning fire safety

Preschool students from Carleton School are pictured with MedFlight as part of Safety Day on Friday.

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Local departments visit students
as part of Fire Prevention Week
Staff Report

MEIGS COUNTY
— As part of Fire Prevention Week, students
around the county were
given a lesson in ﬁre
safety, along with a visit
from local emergency
personnel.
The National Fire
Protection Association
(NFPA) had the theme
of “Look. Listen. Learn.
Be aware – ﬁre can happen anywhere” for Fire
Prevention Week, which
took place from Oct.
7-13.
Visits from the local
ﬁre departments began
the Friday before Fire
Prevention Week with
the Rutland, Middleport
and Pomeroy ﬁre departments visiting Meigs

Elementary.
Events continued with
Chester, Tuppers Plains,
Olive Township and
Bashan volunteer ﬁre
departments holding an
event at Eastern Elementary.
Racine Volunteer Fire
Department visited with
students at Southern Elementary, while Carleton
School students took a
ﬁeld trip to the Syracuse
Volunteer Fire Department. Carleton students
were able to visit with
Meigs EMS and MedFlight as part of their
visit to the Syracuse Fire
Department.
According to a news
release from NFPA, the
latest statistics show that
See SAFETY | 5

Cliff Thomas of the Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department talks
with Carleton Preschool students about the equipment on the
department’s trucks.

Nicole Phillips

using kindness to
overcome all of life’s
difﬁculties, including
her own battle with
breast cancer.
She spreads the
message of the healing power of kindness
as host of the weekly
show “The Kindness
Podcast”, through her

A different kind of art
Getting creative
with fire hydrants
By Mindy Kearns
Special to the Register

See DINNER | 3

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
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.

MASON — Dalmatians have been associated with ﬁrehouses for
centuries, and the Mason
Volunteer Fire Department now has one of its
own.
The local mascot
won’t need much care,
however, maybe just a
clear coat now and then.
KeithAnn Lee, girlfriend
of Fire Chief C.R. Blake,
recently used her skills to
paint the hydrant on the
corner of the ﬁre station
to resemble a Dalmatian.
Lee said it was actually Blake who wanted
the hydrant painted, and
after searching the internet, found a photo of the
Dalmatian. Lee, who has
been painting for several
years, told her boyfriend
that she could do the job.

Mindy Kearns | Courtesy

KeithAnn Lee, right, and Rachelyn Faulk, pose next to the fire
hydrant that Lee painted on the corner next to the fire station in
Mason. Lee hopes to paint all 80 hydrants in the next few years,
starting with the ones along the main thoroughfare.

The goal, Lee said,
was to have the hydrant
completed by the recent
open house and ice
cream social hosted by
the department. Because
of rain and the extreme
heat, however, it didn’t
happen. The dog is now
ﬁnished, and Lee has
received dozens of compliments after the department posted a photo on

social media.
“It’s a God-given talent and I love to use it,”
Lee said. “If it makes
one child smile, it’s
worth it.”
And, now that she
has started painting the
hydrants, she doesn’t
want to stop.
Lee would like to
eventually paint all 80
hydrants in the Town

of Mason. She ﬁgures
the job will take her
a couple of years, and
would like to start with
the ones on the main
thoroughfare.
She wants to paint
a gumball machine
next, and would like to
do sports ﬁgures near
Wahama High School.
Lee said she will always
leave the top of the
hydrant red in order to
allow the ﬁreﬁghters to
easily ﬁnd them.
The painter said normally it will take two or
three hours to complete
a hydrant. She uses
spray paint for the base,
adds details with acrylic
paint, and then sprays it
with a clear coat.
While Lee lives in
Middleport, she said
she would love to help
beautify Mason, and
hopes it will bring more
people to town.
Mindy Kearns is a freelance writer
for Ohio Valley Publishing, email
her at mindykearns1@hotmail.
com.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, October 16, 2018

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

SUE L. SMITH

DENISE ANN WERRY MILLER

ANITA SUE NEUTZLING

PORTLAND — Denise
Ann Werry Miller, of
friends to gather
MEDINA
Portland, Ohio, went to
together with us
— Anita Sue
her Heavenly home on
at the Wadsworth
Neutzling (nee
Oct. 13, 2018, at Arbors
United Methodist at Pomeroy, after a couraRussell), age 75,
Church, 195 Broad geous battle with brain
passed peacefully
Street, Wadsworth, cancer.
from this earth
Ohio 44281 in a
on Sunday, Oct.
She was born on May
Celebration of her 13, 1957, in Gallipolis,
7, 2018. She was
Life, on Thursday Oct.
the daughter of the late
Ohio, daughter of the late
18, 2018. Calling hours
Truman and Elma (nee
Walter and Estelle Gress
Spencer) Russell of Meigs will start at 10 a.m. and
Werry of Mason, W.Va.
a service at 11 a.m. InterCounty, Ohio.
Denise was a faithful
ment to be in the Beech
She will be missed by
member of St. Joseph
her son, Jay A. Neutzling; Grove Cemetery, PomeCatholic Church in
roy, Ohio, at a later date. Mason, W.Va., and a curbrother and sister-inAnita loved her church rent member of St. Matlaw, Jay and Deborah
(nee Robey) Russell; her and church family, and
thews Catholic Church in
dearly loved all kinds of
nieces, Sara Williamson
Ravenswood, W.Va. She
animals so in lieu of ﬂow- was a graduate of Wahaand Amanda (Michael)
ers please pay it forward
Cramer; grand-nieces
ma High School, class of
with a donation to the
Summer, Samantha, and
1975 and a graduate of
Wadsworth United Meth- WVU-P. Dee retired as a
Merida; and many cousodist Church or your
ins and friends.
storeroom attendant from
favorite animal charity.
We invite family and
Century Aluminum. She
then worked as a certiﬁed
JOHN D. STUMBO
medical coder at Eldercare of Ripley. She was
POMEROY — John D. (Heather Roush); eight
a devoted mother and
grandchildren; and three MeMe, a loving sister and
Stumbo, 59, of Pomeroy,
brothers James, Roger
died Saturday, Oct. 13,
aunt. She was a genuine
and Billy Stumbo.
2018, at Holzer Medical
and kind soul.
Besides his parents, he
Center in Gallipolis.
She is survived by
was preceded in death by her companion of 17
Born July 13, 1959,
two brothers, Daryl and
in Welch, West Virginia,
years, Kenneth Cozart of
Ronnie Stumbo and a sis- Portland, Ohio; daughhe was the son of the
late John Henry and Uva ter, Brenda.
ters, Jayme Miller Hill
Private services will be and husband, Dean of
Stanley Stumbo.
John is survived by his held at a later date at the Portland, Ohio, Hannah
wife, Cheryl Stumbo; one convenience of the family. Miller Legar and husband
Arrangements have
son, John L (Carla Smith)
Kirk, of Pomeroy, Ohio;
been entrusted to the
Stumbo; two daughters,
stepdaughter, Monica
Ewing-Schwarzel Funeral Miller Cox Bryan and
Euva (George) Ramsey
Home in Pomeroy.
and Felisha Stumbo
husband, Tom of Parkersburg, W.Va.; her most
precious grandchildren
SHINN
(as MeMe would call
GALLOWAY— Terri Shinn, 64, of Galloway, forthem), Jace and Piper
merly of Point Pleasant, W.Va. died Friday, Oct. 12.
Hill, Allie and Kenzie
A memorial service honoring Terri’s life will be
Legar; loved step grandscheduled at a later date.

Trick-or-Treat times

MEIGS BRIEFS

Editor’s Note: Listed are the Trick-or-Treat
times as submitted to The Daily Sentinel. Halloween events and Trick-or-Treat information may
be submitted by email to tdsnews@aimmediamidwest.com.
RACINE — Trick-or-Treat will be held on Thursday, Oct. 25 from 6-7 p.m. with a party to follow at
the ﬁre station.
SYRACUSE — Trick-or-Treat will be held on
Thursday, Oct. 25 from 6-7:30 p.m. All village
streets, with the exception of State Route 124 will
be closed during this time.
RUTLAND — Trick-or-Treat will be held on
Thursday, Oct. 25 from 6-7 p.m.
POMEROY — Treat Street will take place in
downtown Pomeroy from 6:30-8 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 25.

Sentinel
Office Hours

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Wednesday, Oct. 17
POMEROY — Common Ground Mission will
host movie night beginning at 6 p.m. Refreshments will be served. The movie is The Investigator.

Saturday, Oct. 20
HEMLOCK GROVE — The Hemlock Grove
Christian Church is hosting a Harvest Costume
Party from 2:30-5:30 p.m. There will be Trunk or
Treat, food, games, face painting, pictures, fellowship and costume judging. The Church is located
at 38387 Hemlock Grove Road in Pomeroy. For
more information, contact Courtney Midkiff at
740-992-1158.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

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

CONTACT US
PUBLISHER
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@aimmediamidwest.com

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com

EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
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.

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.

POMEROY — The
Daily Sentinel front ofﬁce
will be closed Wednesday,
Oct. 17 through Friday,
Oct. 20. Normal business hours will resume
on Tuesday, Oct. 23 (the
ofﬁce is normally closed
on Mondays). For assistance during this time
call our Gallipolis ofﬁce
at 740-446-2342.

Road
Closure
RUTLAND — Meigs
County Road 174, Happy
Hollow Road, will be

children, Desiree, Alexis
and Brayden Cox; loving
sister and best friend,
Deborah Michael of
Roanoke, Va.; younger
brother, Glen Werry of
Pomeroy, Ohio; nephews
and niece, Christopher
Michael, Carmen Dillon
Mitchell (Rick), and Jonathon Dillon (Ella).
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
in death by her sister and
brother-in-law, Paula and
John Dillon, and brotherin-law, John Michael.
Special thanks to Nina
Hanson; Hospice of Marietta, Rebecca, Sabrina
and Jessie; and Arbors of
Pomeroy, especially Martha, nurses and STNA’s.
Our hearts are forever
grateful for their kindness
and care.
The funeral service
will be held on Thursday,
Oct. 18, 2018, at 11 a.m.
at St. Joseph Catholic
Church in Mason, W.Va.,
with Father Pen ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in
Beech Grove Cemetery in
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Friends may visit the
family at Roush Funeral
Home in Ravenswood,
W.Va., on Wednesday,
Oct. 17, 2018, from 6-8
p.m., with a Rosary service at 8 p.m.
Condolences may be
expressed to the family
at roush94@yahoo.com;
or on Facebook at www.
facebook.com/roushfuneralhome. The obituary
may be viewed on our
website at www.roushfuneralhome.net.

COLUMBUS — Sue L.
Smith, 76, of Columbus,
Ohio, formerly of Salem
Center, Ohio, passed
away unexpectedly on
Oct. 9, 2018, in her home.
Born Feb. 9, 1942, living
in Columbus, Ohio, she
moved her three children
to Salem Center, Ohio,
where she lived until
moving to Columbus in
1989. Sue is preceded by
her parents John M. and
Mabel P. (Cook) Thomas
of Columbus, Ohio and
her youngest son, Shane
E. Smith, Salem Center,
Ohio.
Sue was a loving mother and an excellent cook
who enjoyed cooking
for her family. Sue was a
collector of many things
particularly ceramic pigs
and Native American
dolls. She displayed these
collectables proudly and
could tell you where she
had gotten each one. She
often could see the beauty

closed Wednesday and
Thursday, Oct. 17 and
18, in order to repair the
bridge on the New Lima
end of Happy Hollow.

a.m. and 1-3 p.m., at 112
E. Memorial Drive in
Pomeroy. Please bring
child(ren)’s shot records.
Children must be accompanied by a parent/legal
guardian. A $30.00 donation is appreciated for
immunization administration; however, no one
will be denied services
because of an inability
to pay an administration
fee for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please
bring medical cards and/
or commercial insurance cards, if applicable.
Shingles, inﬂuenza and
pneumonia vaccines are
available as well as ﬂu
shots. Call for eligibility determination and
availability or visit our
website at www.meigshealth.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 vac-

Library
Storytime
MEIGS COUNTY
— Storytime at all four
locations, Sept. 10-Dec.
13. The following is the
schedule: Mondays at
1 p.m., Racine Library;
Tuesdays at 1:30 p.m.,
Eastern Library; Wednesdays at 1 p.m., Pomeroy
Library; Thursdays at 1
p.m., Middleport Library.

Immunization
Clinic Tuesday
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health
Department will conduct
an Immunization Clinic
on Tuesday, from 9-11

of many things, whether
she needed them or not.
Sue is survived by her
two remaining children,
daughter Kenney Sue
(Thomas) Sharon and her
husband Patrick W., and
son Kelly J. Thomas, both
of Columbus, Ohio. Also
survived by three brothers, John and Lana Thomas, Ace and Rose Thomas, George and Sandy
Thomas all of Columbus,
Ohio. Sue is also survived
by two grandchildren,
Missy and Joey Thomas
of Middleport, Ohio,
along with two great
granddaughters.
A casual graveside
service and burial will
be held on Oct. 19 at 11
a.m. at Salem Center
Cemetery in Salem Center, Ohio. Flowers can be
sent to Birchﬁeld Funeral
Home in Rutland, Ohio.
Online condolences
may be sent at birchﬁeldfuneralhome.com.

LAMM
RIO GRANDE — Brian Christopher Lamm, 32, of
Rio Grande, died on Saturday, July 28, 2018 in Chicago, Ill.
Memorial services will be 1 p.m., Wednesday, October 17, 2018, at Kingdom Ministries 839 Kerr Road,
Bidwell, with Pastor Randy Patterson ofﬁciating.
RATLIFF
GALLIPOLIS — David Charles Ratliff, 68, of Gallipolis, died on Sunday, October 14, 2018 at Valhalla
Post Acute facility in Louisville, Kentucky.
The funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. on Thursday, October 18, 2018 at Willis Funeral Home with
Pastor Ann Moody ofﬁciating. Visitation will be held
two hours prior to the service from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. at
the funeral home. Entombment will follow at the Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens.

cination of Healthcare
Workers. Additionally, the
Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices
(ACIP) does NOT recommend routine Hepatitis
A vaccination for Food
Workers. Currently, ODH
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 740-992-6626 for
vaccine availability.

Craft and
Vendor Fair
RACINE — The Southern Craft Show will be
held on Oct. 20, 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. at Southern
Elementary. Free admission, food available for
purchase.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Many health and service
providers will also be
available to answer questions.

Meigs County Republican
Executive Committee
will hold its annual bean
dinner at 6 p.m. at the
Mulberry Community
Center. Meet the Republican candidates. Free
admission, door prizes
and 50/50 drawing. Public is invited. Doors open
at 5 p.m.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Retired
Teachers will meet
at noon at the Meigs
County Senior Center.
The speaker will be Vicki
Hanson from the Meigs
County Historical Society. Members are asked
to call Charlene Rutherford at 740-444-5498
by Tuesday for lunch
reservations. Guests are
welcome.

es. This month’s theme is
open ﬁre pit cooking.
ROCKSPRINGS —
The Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club will have a
chili/soup supper at the
Rio Grande Center prior
to the Meigs Football
game, from 5-7 p.m. Help
the Rotary Club raise
funds for the various serPOMEROY — A blood
vice projects.
drive will be held at the
POMEROY — Meigs
Mulberry Community
County Health Dept. will
Center from 1-6 p.m.
be closed to the public
POMEROY — The
for its annual cleaning
Meigs Local Board of
day. Normal business
Elections will hold its
hours will resume at 8
public test at 11 a.m. at
a.m. on Mon., Oct. 22.
the Board of Elections
We apologize for the
ofﬁce.
inconvenience.LONG
BOTTOM — The Return
SYRACUSE — A
Jonathan Meigs Chapter
Health Fair will be held
of the NSDAR will meet
at the Syracuse Comat noon at the site of the
munity Center from 9
George Washington Hisa.m. to noon. Some tests
torical Plaque. The site
that will be provided are
POMEROY — Pomeis just south of Long Botnon-fasting cholesterol,
roy Library, Pumpkin
tom, Ohio on State Route
glucose screening, blood Painting, 6 p.m. The
124. This is the Chapter’s
pressure, vision screenlibrary will provide all the
Community Service projing and body mass
supplies needed to create
ect. Bring a chair, gloves,
index. If you want a ﬂu
your own festive work of
POMEROY — Pometools, water and snack. It
shot, there is a charge
art. Don’t forget to wear roy Library, Cookbook
for it; bring your insuryour painting clothes.
Club, 11 a.m. Bring a dish is a beautiful location for
enjoying the Ohio River.
ance card with you.
POMEROY — The
and sample others’ dish-

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.

Wednesday,
Oct. 17

Tuesday,
Oct. 16

Thursday,
Oct. 18

Friday,
Oct. 19

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 16, 2018 3

Families worry about loved ones
By Russ Bynum
and Kelli Kennedy
Associated Press

PANAMA CITY, Fla.
— Joanne Garone Behnke
has replayed every possible scenario in her mind
a hundred times.
Maybe her 79-year-old
aunt sought shelter at
the sturdy condo nearby
that survived Hurricane
Michael’s devastating
winds. Maybe she was
rescued and is lying in a
hospital bed somewhere.
The pile of rubble that
was once her Mexico
Beach home is shallow,
too shallow for a body
to go unnoticed, Garone
Behnke tells herself.
“It’s torture,” said
Garone Behnke, who last
talked to her Aunt Aggie
Vicari right before the
storm hit, begging her to
leave.
Five days after the hurricane slammed into the
Florida Panhandle, how
many residents might
be missing seemed to
be anyone’s guess, and
people struggled to ﬁnd
friends and loved ones
who hadn’t been heard
from since the storm.
“I’ve been on the phone
to reporters, to ﬁre chiefs,
to heads of task force
from Miami, to you name
it, I’ve called them. I’ve
called every hospital,”
Garone Behnke said
Monday, then stopped to
look at a text from the ﬁre
chief in Mexico Beach.
To her disappointment,
it read: “We’re still working on it ... we’ll keep you
posted.”
As President Donald Trump visited the
devastated zone, the
death toll from Michael’s
march from Florida to
Virginia stood at 17, and
the search for victims
continued.
As the hurricane closed
in and more than 375,000
people were warned to
evacuate, emergency
authorities expressed
frustration that many residents weren’t leaving.
Since the storm, many
people have been rescued
from the devastated

David Goldman | AP

Rachel Hyatt bathes her daughter, Eva, 2, using a lantern and bottled water Sunday in their damaged
home as they spend a fifth night without power and running water in the aftermath of Hurricane
Michael in Callaway, Fla. “It was hard at first, but we’re adjusting,” said Hyatt.

zones. Emergency ofﬁcials said that because of
widespread cellphone outages, others could be safe
and just haven’t been able
to tell friends or family.
Rescue worker Trevor
Lewis and the rest of his
six-member squad lent
their cellphones to storm
victims so that they could
contact loved ones for the
ﬁrst time in days. He said
he watched them “cry out
in joy.”
“Just the desperation
in the family members’
voices that hadn’t contacted their loved one
for a few days was bad,”
he said. “Then we get
on scene and ﬁnd their
family members and they
have no food, no water,
no power.”
There was just one
conﬁrmed death so far in
Mexico Beach, the town
of about 1,000 people that
was nearly wiped off the
map in a direct hit from
the hurricane and its 155
mph (250 kph) winds.
Mexico Beach City
Clerk Adrian Welle told
local media Sunday that
46 people were unaccounted for. That number
had previously been 285,
but ofﬁcials think many
left right before the storm
hit. Other city ofﬁcials
told reporters that the
number of unaccounted
for was three.
A Houston-based orga-

nization called CrowdSource Rescue that takes
calls from worried family
members and sends the
details to rescue crews
on the ground said it has
helped ﬁnd nearly 1,500
people across the region
since Michael struck.
But co-founder Matthew
Marchetti said it was still
looking for more than
1,350.
Melissa and Rodney
Reinhardt spent days
wondering whether Rodney’s 79-year-old father
survived the storm at his
home in the devastated
Port St. Joe area.
“Our hope was that he
evacuated but nobody
had heard from him,”
she said. “It’s horrifying
not knowing. It’s scary.
Seeing the pictures on
the news makes it even
scarier.”
Emergency ofﬁcials
checked on him Thursday night and said he
was there, but that was
all the information they
received. Rodney went in
with a church group on
Sunday and picked him
up.
“It was a happy ending,” Melissa Reinhardt
said.
During his visit to the
devastated zone, Trump
commended Republican
Gov. Rick Scott for an
“incredible” response to
the disaster and said:

“You’re a great governor.”
Scott, who is running for
the U.S. Senate, returned
the praise, saying, “Every
time I’ve called, he’s come
through.”
Some in the affected
area were lukewarm
about the president’s
visit.
About 5 miles from
a neighborhood Trump
visited, 57-year-old Sheila
Vann sat on a cooler in
her garage, taking a break
from cleaning up. The
hurricane tore off much of
her roof in Panama City,
and most of her ceiling
collapsed after soaking
up the storm’s rain. Plus
there were four freezers
ﬁlled with ﬁsh and meat
that were starting to spoil
and smell.
“You want to see the
president?” Vann asked
her husband, Joseph, with
a dismissive tone. “I ain’t
got time, unless he wants
to help clean up.”
Nanya Thompson, 68,
of Lynn Haven, said of
the president: “He’s doing
this, I believe, to project a
different image of himself
because of all the bad
publicity he’s had. He’s
not going into get into
the sewage water with
other people and start
digging.”
“If this is just going to
be another reality show,
I don’t think he should
come,” she added.

IN BRIEF

Mega Millions
up to $654M
DES MOINES, Iowa
(AP) — After nearly
three months without a
winner, the Mega Millions lottery game has
climbed to an estimated
$654 million jackpot.
Unfortunately, even
as the big prize for
Tuesday night’s drawing
increases to the fourthlargest in U.S. history
, the odds of matching
all six numbers and
winning the game don’t
improve. They’re stuck
at a miserable one in

302.5 million.
The last time anyone
won the jackpot was July
24, when a group from
California claimed a
$543 million prize.

bune reports that the
Chicago-born Grammywinning hip-hop artist
who has given millions
of dollars to Chicago
Public Schools recently
went undercover as a
driver for the rideshare
service to make a video
that encourages riders
to donate to the city’s
public schools arts programs.
CHICAGO (AP) —
The video shows
Chance the Rapper is
so serious about raising Chance wearing shades
money for arts education and a maroon hat telling
riders his name is John.
programs in Chicago
Then he reveals his true
that he took a second
identity and encourjob as a Lyft driver to
ages riders to use the
spread the word.
Lyft app’s feature called
The Chicago Tri-

Round Up and Donate
that allows users to support his charity, The
New Chance Fund, or
others of their choice.

Meeting to be
held on health
care in county
POMEROY — Meigs County Health Department is working on its State-mandated national
accreditation via the Public Health Accreditation.
Domain 7 deals with access to care and requires
the health department to work with the health
care system to (1) understand the availability of
health care services to the population, (2) identify
populations who experience barriers to health care
services, and (3) identify gaps in access to health
care and barriers to the receipt of care. The health
department is requesting community assistance
and participation in a meeting on Oct. 18 from
10 a.m.-noon in the 3rd Floor conference room of
the Meigs County Department of Jobs and Family Services (on Race Street in Middleport). Ohio
University will be facilitating the meeting.
The purpose of the meeting is review public perception of access to health care in Ohio and Meigs
County, identify some potential gaps in care, and
evaluate strategies to improve health care access
locally. The agenda will include two main items:
review access to care deﬁnition and survey results
and work through a process to evaluated strategies
to improve access to care in Meigs County.
RSVP by emailing courtney.midkiff@meigshealth.com.or calling 740-992-6626.

Judge to hear
arguments in sex toy
harassment case
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — A judge is scheduled
to hear arguments in a case involving a police
department, a sex toy and harassment claims.
Several members of the Mountainside police
department claim superiors used the toy to
harass them and subjected them to homophobic
and racial slurs, according to a lawsuit ﬁled in
May.
The lawsuit stated Police Detective Sgt.
Andrew Huber would “wave around” a sex toy
and throw it at people walking past the detective
bureau.
Huber, who was once named “Cop of the Year”
by the Policemen’s Benevolent Association, would
also hide in the men’s locker room naked to surprise other ofﬁcers, according to the lawsuit.
The lawsuit also named Police Chief Allan Attanasio and Lt. Thomas Murphy.
Attanasio pointed his gun at ofﬁcers so often it
became a running joke, and Murphy and Huber
harassed a female dispatcher to the point that she
adjusted her work schedule to avoid them, among
other claims in the lawsuit.
The plaintiffs include ﬁve men and one woman
out of a police department that has less than two
dozen ofﬁcers.
The borough about 10 miles southwest of Newark said the allegations are frivolous and is seeking to have the suit thrown out. Attorneys said
the plaintiffs haven’t backed up claims of a hostile
work environment or that they were retaliated
against.
They also argued that the claims aren’t valid
because they involve alleged behavior directed at
both men and women.
The attorneys for the plaintiffs said the town is
presenting a “frivolous argument that breaks new
ground for absurd employment law defenses.”

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weekly column, Kindness
is Contagious, which runs
in newspapers in North
Dakota and Minnesota,
and as a featured weekly
guest on Faith Radio
which runs on 15 stations
throughout the Midwest.
She is also the author
of two books, Kindness is
Contagious and the brand
new book, Kindness is
Courageous.
A former TV anchor
and Miss Wisconsin
1997, Nicole now lives in
Athens, Ohio has three
children and is married
to Ohio University Men’s
Basketball Coach, Saul
Phillips.

attend are asked to RSVP
by Oct. 26 to Courtney
Midkiff at 740-992-6626
Ext. 1028 or Courtney.
midkiff@meigs-health.
com.

City: __________________________________ State:_________ Zip: ___________
County:______________________________________________________________
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And now he walks
in quiet solitude
Among the forests
&amp; the streams
Loved &amp; Missed,
Barbara Ann

OH-70077353

From page 1

OH-70083733

Dinner

Address: _____________________________________________________________

Various businesses and
organizations have assisted the Meigs County
Cancer Initiative, which
is hosting the event.
Those wishing to

Rural Life Today provides farming and agriculture news and information
in print and online for everyone in our rural communities.

�Opinion
4 Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Long live
America’s
newspapers!
Bring out cookies, punch, and party hats! It’s
time to celebrate National Newspaper Week.
“Radio was supposed kill newspapers. It didn’t.
Television was supposed to kill newspapers. It didn’t. Neither will the
Internet. “Newspapers won’t die,”
writes Jaime Richards. www.eastbaytimes.com/.
The 78th annual National Newspaper Week is the recognition of
the service of newspapers and their
Melissa
employees across North America
Martin
and is sponsored by Newspaper
Contributing
Association Managers. The annual
columnist
celebration in October of every year
marks the impact of newspapers in
their communities.
The 2018 theme — “Journalism matters. NOW
more than ever.” — aims to highlight the important work journalists, reporters, columnists, editors, and publishers do on behalf of their communities every day.
The history of National Newspaper Week.
In 1904, the California Publisher announced a
Nationwide Newspaper Week, where “the entire
press can organize in a united front to impress
American readers with the reliability, integrity and
enterprise of their newspapers, is being sponsored
by the Newspaper Association Managers, with
plans already underway.” www.nationalnewspaperweek.com/.
“More so, newspapers remain an interactive
part of the ‘new’ media and must continue to
evolve in this direction. We hope the print version,
however, is never lost. It informs in a manner no
amount of pixels ever can.” www.stantoncomm.
com/four-on-friday-why-newspapers-still-matter.
Celebrate Ohio newspapers
The Ohio News Media Association was established in 1933 as the Ohio Newspaper Association
and is located in Columbus, Ohio. www.ohionews.
org.
In 2015, two daily newspapers in Ohio ran an
unusual ad to show the news coverage communities receive without local papers — a blank page.
That’s how the publishers/editors celebrated
National Newspaper Week. www.ohionews.org/.
Celebrate the local community newspaper
Why is the local newspaper so vital and valuable
to the city and the county? Coverage and communication: governance of city council meetings and
decisions; county and city commission meetings,
school events and highlights of sports; business
openings and closings, birth announcements and
obituaries; crime and court news; civic clubs and
charity news; festivals and fairs; church news; and
a plethora of local stories about local residents.
And feature columns. And crosswords and comic
strips.
Most newspapers have main departments
devoted to making the newspaper: production/
printing, circulation, and advertising. I’m sending
a thank-you to the employees behind the scene:
typesetters, press operators, web designers, proofreaders, fact-checkers, advertising managers, sales,
newspaper carriers, and others on the payroll.
Supporting your local newspaper matters more
than you may think. Send a thank-you to the publisher, editor, reporters, and columnists. Write a
Letter to the Editor on a local issue that matters
to you. Purchase a subscription and show your
community pride!
But why not show appreciation to your local
newspaper people more often than once a year.
Send an email or text whenever a local story resonates with you.
“The newspaper is a greater treasure to the
people than uncounted millions of gold,” declared
Henry Ward Beecher.
Melissa Martin, Ph.D, is an author, columnist, educator, and therapist.
She lives in southern Ohio. www.melissamartinchildrensauthor.com.
Contact her at melissamcolumnist@gmail.com.

ELECTION LETTERS POLICY
The deadline for The Daily Sentinel to receive electionrelated Letters to the Editor pertaining to issues or
candidates in the Nov. 6 general election is 4 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 30.
Election-related Letters to the Editor must be 250 words
or less and are subject to editing by the Sentinel. Letters
must maintain a degree of civility and good taste, and any
that are potentially libelous will not be published.
Election-related letters are limited to one per
household. Letters from candidates or their families will
not be published. Due to space restrictions, we will try,
but cannot guarantee, that all letters will be published
in the print version of the Sentinel.
Letters should be emailed to The Daily Sentinel at
tdsnews@aimmediamidwest.com and include the
writer’s name, community of residence, and a daytime
phone number to verify authorship (and to answer any
questions we may have). Signed letters may also be
dropped off at The Daily Sentinel at 109 West Second
Street, Pomeroy, during normal business hours.

THEIR VIEW

Opposition to Issue 1
cent. Prisoners preState Issue 1
James K. viously convicted
will appear on
Stanley
of drug possession
the ballot at the
general election on Contributing charges would be
eligible to be immeNovember 6, 2018. columnist
diately released.
State Issue 1 seeks
Courts will be proto amend the Ohio
hibited from sending to
Constitution to reclasprison those who violate
sify certain felony drug
offenses to misdemeanor the terms of their community control or probaoffenses, release serition. Possession of deadly
ous felons from prison
drugs will be reclassiﬁed
early, and to immediately release certain drug from a felony to a misdemeanor. A person conoffenders from prison.
victed of a misdemeanor
Alleged costs saved by
lower incarceration rates drug possession offense
would be used to support could only be sentenced
drug treatment programs. to probation with no possibility of jail time for the
While providing greater
access to drug treatment ﬁrst two offenses within
a 24-month period. Thus,
and rehabilitation is an
a person convicted of
admirable goal, State
Issue 1 is the wrong way possessing 19 grams of
fentanyl, enough to kill
to accomplish this goal,
nearly 10,000 people,
and its wide-ranging
could only be sentenced
impact will prove disasto probation.
trous to Meigs County
What are the effects if
and the State of Ohio.
If State Issue 1 passes, State Issue 1 passes? Law
enforcement will have an
serious and violent
criminals will be eligible even harder time getting
trafﬁckers and users off
to have their sentences
reduced by up to 25 per- the street. Without the

threat of incarceration,
there will be no incentive for many addicts to
enter into rehabilitation.
Dangerous drugs, such
as heroin, fentanyl, and
carfentanil, will become
more prevalent in Ohio
as out-of-state trafﬁckers
ﬂood our communities
to peddle their poison.
Employers will have
an even tougher time
ﬁnding employees who
can pass a drug test.
Property crimes, such
as theft, breaking and
entering, and burglary
will increase dramatically. The actual savings
from reduced incarceration rates will be negligible, and any savings
used for drug treatment
and rehabilitation programs will be population
based, so Meigs County
will realize little to no
additional funding for
such programs. Children
will receive the wrong
message about the dangerousness of drugs,
particularly when under-

age possession of alcohol
will carry a stiffer penalty
than possessing heroin,
methamphetamine, or
fentanyl.
State Issue 1 is bad for
Ohio. If passed, since it
would be a Constitutional
amendment, it would
be very difﬁcult if not
impossible to undue the
damage it does. Additionally, it makes no sense for
proponents of State Issue
1 to push for its passage
in order to effectively
decriminalize drug possession offenses when
overdoses and overdose
deaths in Ohio are occurring at rates never before
seen.
It is imperative that
opponents of State Issue
1 reach as many voters
as possible and explain
what State Issue 1 will
really do to Meigs County
and to Ohio. Join me in
actively opposing State
Issue 1.
James K. Stanley is the prosecuting
attorney for Meigs County.

TODAY IN HISTORY
the Nationalists, began
their “long march” lasting a year from southeastern to northwestern
China.
In 1962, the Cuban
Today’s Highlight in History
On Oct. 16, 1793, dur- missile crisis began as
President John F. Kening the French Revolunedy was informed that
tion, Marie Antoinette,
the queen of France, was reconnaissance photographs had revealed the
beheaded.
presence of missile bases
in Cuba.
On this date
In 1968, American athIn 1758, American
letes Tommie Smith and
lexicographer Noah
John Carlos sparked conWebster was born in
troversy at the Mexico
Hartford, Connecticut.
In 1859, radical aboli- City Olympics by giving
“black power” salutes
tionist John Brown led
during a victory cera group of 21 men in a
raid on Harpers Ferry in emony after they’d won
gold and bronze medals
western Virginia. (Ten
in the 200-meter race.
of Brown’s men were
In 1978, the College of
killed and ﬁve escaped.
Brown and six followers Cardinals of the Roman
Catholic Church chose
were captured; all were
Cardinal Karol Wojtyla
executed.)
(voy-TEE’-wah) to be
In 1916, Planned
the new pope; he took
Parenthood had its
beginnings as Margaret the name John Paul II.
In 1987, a 58-1/2Sanger and her sister,
Ethel Byrne, opened the hour drama in Midland,
ﬁrst birth control clinic Texas, ended happily as
rescuers freed Jessica
in Brooklyn, New York.
McClure, an 18-month(The clinic ended up
old girl trapped in a narbeing raided by police
row, abandoned well.
and Sanger was arrestIn 1991, a deadly
ed.)
In 1934, Chinese Com- shooting rampage took
munists, under siege by place in Killeen, Texas,
Today is Tuesday, Oct.
16, the 289th day of
2018. There are 76 days
left in the year.

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Life is a solitary cell whose walls are
mirrors.”
— Eugene O’Neill
American playwright (born this date in 1888, died 1953)

as a gunman opened ﬁre
at a Luby’s Cafeteria,
killing 23 people before
taking his own life.
In 1995, a vast throng
of black men gathered in
Washington, D.C. for the
“Million Man March”
led by Nation of Islam
leader Louis Farrakhan.
In 1997, in the ﬁrst
known case in the
United States, a Georgia
woman gave birth after
being implanted with
previously frozen eggs.
In 2001, twelve Senate ofﬁces were closed
as hundreds of staffers
underwent anthrax tests.
Ten years ago: A volatile Wall Street pulled off
another stunning U-turn,
transforming a 380-point
loss for the Dow Jones
industrial average into a
401-point gain.
Five years ago: Congress passed and sent
to President Barack
Obama for his signature

legislation to avoid a
threatened U.S. default
and end the partial,
16-day government shutdown. A Lao Airlines
turboprop crashed as it
approached Pakse Airport in southern Laos;
all 49 people on board
were killed. The Los
Angeles Dodgers beat
St. Louis 6-4, trimming
the Cardinals’ lead to
3-2 in the NL championship series. The Detroit
Tigers beat the Boston
Red Sox 7-3 to even the
AL championship series
at 2-all.
One year ago: Army
Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl,
who had been captured
and held by the Taliban
for ﬁve years after walking away from his post
in Afghanistan, pleaded
guilty to desertion and
endangering his comrades. (A military judge
later decided not to send
him to prison.)

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 16, 2018 5

Safety
From page 1

if you have a reported
ﬁre in your home, you
are more likely to die
today than you were a
few decades ago. This
startling statistic is
behind this year’s Fire
Prevention Week theme:
“Look. Listen. Learn. Be
aware - ﬁre can happen
anywhere.™”
Through three simple
calls-to-action, this year’s
theme identiﬁes basic
but essential ways people
can reduce their risk to
ﬁre and be prepared in
the event of one:
Beea�\eh�fbWY[i�Òh[�
can start
B_ij[d�\eh�j^[�iekdZ�
of the smoke alarm
B[Whd�jme�mWoi�ekj�
of each room
“People take safety
for granted and are not
aware of the risk of ﬁre,”
said Lorraine Carli,
NFPA vice president of
Outreach and Advocacy.
“Paying attention to your
surroundings, looking
for available exits in the
event of a ﬁre or other
emergency, and taking
the smoke alarm seriously if it sounds can make a
potentially life-saving difference in a ﬁre or other
emergency situation.”
This year’s Fire Prevention Week messages
apply to virtually all
locations. However,
NFPA continues to focus
on home ﬁre safety, as
the majority of U.S. ﬁre
deaths (four out of ﬁve)
occur at home each year.
In fact, the ﬁre death
rate (per 1000 home
ﬁres reported to the ﬁre
department) was 10 percent higher in 2016 than
in 1980.
“While we’ve made signiﬁcant progress in preventing home ﬁres from
happening, these statistics show that there’s
still much more work

Some of the students were able to try on the firefighter helmets.

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Meigs EMS also took part in Safety Day with Carleton School, with the students able to walk through
the ambulance.

Meigs EMS also took part in Safety Day with Carleton School, with
the students able to walk through the ambulance.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

36°

51°

50°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

(in inches)

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

0.27
1.54
1.31
50.01
34.34

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:39 a.m.
6:49 p.m.
2:40 p.m.
none

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

First

Full

Last

Oct 16 Oct 24 Oct 31

New

Nov 7

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

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

Major
6:12a
7:00a
7:45a
8:27a
9:07a
9:47a
10:26a

Minor
12:24p
12:48a
1:33a
2:16a
2:56a
3:35a
4:15a

Major
6:36p
7:24p
8:08p
8:50p
9:30p
10:09p
10:48p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
58/39

High

Very High

Minor
---1:12p
1:56p
2:38p
3:18p
3:58p
4:37p

WEATHER HISTORY
An early blizzard raged across South
Dakota and southern Minnesota
on Oct. 16, 1880. Drifts blocked
railroads. The storm also caused
boat-sinking gales on the Great
Lakes.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.73 +0.13
Marietta
34 17.40 -0.69
Parkersburg
36 22.12 -0.58
Belleville
35 12.69 -0.45
Racine
41 12.85 -0.14
Point Pleasant
40 25.82 -0.59
Gallipolis
50 12.03 -0.59
Huntington
50 29.99 +0.09
Ashland
52 36.48 +0.24
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.66 +0.32
Portsmouth
50 27.30 -0.80
Maysville
50 35.70 +0.30
Meldahl Dam
51 26.40 -0.30
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

Remaining cool with
plenty of sunshine

Increasing cloudiness

Logan
55/37

52°
34°

Mostly cloudy,
Some sun with a
showers around; cool shower in spots; cool

Marietta
56/39

Murray City
55/38
Belpre
57/39

Athens
56/38

St. Marys
57/40

Parkersburg
56/40

Coolville
56/39

Elizabeth
58/39

Spencer
58/38

Buffalo
59/39
Milton
59/40
Huntington
57/40

Clendenin
60/36

St. Albans
60/40

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
69/47
80s
70s
Billings
60s
60/35
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
72/52
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
83/60
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

67°
38°
Plenty of sunshine

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
58/41

Ashland
58/41
Grayson
58/40

SUNDAY

59°
36°

Wilkesville
56/38
POMEROY
Jackson
58/39
57/37
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
58/39
58/39
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
54/39
GALLIPOLIS
59/39
59/39
58/39

South Shore Greenup
58/41
57/39

48
0 50 100 150 200

Portsmouth
58/40

SATURDAY

61°
50°

McArthur
56/37

Very High

Primary: no allergens seen
Mold: 301
Moderate

Chillicothe
56/38

FRIDAY

55°
31°

Adelphi
55/37

Waverly
56/37

Pollen: 0

Low

MOON PHASES

THURSDAY

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

0

Primary: aspergillus

Wed.
7:40 a.m.
6:47 p.m.
3:21 p.m.
12:39 a.m.

Sunshine, but cool

Mostly sunny and cool today. Mainly clear
tonight. High 59° / Low 39°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

WEDNESDAY

59°
31°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

65°
60°
68°
45°
85° in 1956
28° in 1937

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

munities and reaches out
to the public directly to
encourage everyone to
take action to be safe.
Founded in 1896,
NFPA is a global, nonproﬁt organization
devoted to eliminating
death, injury, property
and economic loss due to
ﬁre, electrical and related hazards. The association delivers information
and knowledge through
more than 300 consensus
codes and standards,
research, training, education, outreach and advocacy; and by partnering
with others who share an
interest in furthering the Preschool students climbed inside the MedFlight helicopter with the assistance of the flight crew.
NFPA mission. For more
viewed online for free at vided by Derek Miller of tion Week information
information, visit www.
from the National Fire
nfpa.org. All NFPA codes www.nfpa.org/freeaccess. the Meigs County Fire
and standards can be
List of events as proAssociation. Fire Preven- Prevention Association.

to do when it comes to
teaching people how to
protect themselves in
the event of one, and
why advance planning is
so critically important,”
said Carli.
“Look. Listen. Learn.
Be aware – ﬁre can happen anywhere.” works to
remind the public that
ﬁres can and do still happen – at home, as well as
other locations - and that
there are basic but vitally
important steps people
can take to remain safe.
As the ofﬁcial sponsor of Fire Prevention
Week for more than
90 years, NFPA works
with local ﬁre departments throughout North
America to promote the
campaign in their com-

Charleston
59/40

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
37/23

Toronto
51/39

Minneapolis
50/32

Denver
54/30
Kansas City
60/38

Chicago
55/38

New York
58/46
Washington
62/50

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
52/39/r
51/43/r
79/61/sh
60/51/pc
61/47/pc
60/35/pc
61/37/s
58/45/s
59/40/pc
77/64/c
50/27/s
55/38/s
55/40/pc
55/42/pc
56/40/s
47/43/r
54/30/s
58/36/s
54/40/pc
85/71/pc
60/53/sh
54/40/s
60/38/s
73/59/s
49/43/r
83/60/s
58/42/pc
89/78/pc
50/32/pc
58/43/c
86/68/t
58/46/s
57/41/pc
93/72/pc
59/46/pc
69/55/pc
52/39/s
56/39/pc
70/56/c
60/53/c
58/43/s
58/37/s
72/52/s
69/47/s
62/50/pc

Hi/Lo/W
52/42/pc
49/40/c
70/53/pc
64/43/s
63/41/s
63/40/s
65/40/s
60/37/s
58/32/s
74/46/pc
51/29/s
48/31/s
56/32/s
50/37/sh
55/31/pc
57/51/r
56/34/s
50/34/s
48/30/pc
85/74/pc
63/58/sh
53/33/s
59/36/s
73/56/s
66/47/pc
83/58/s
61/36/s
89/78/s
47/34/pc
66/41/s
78/65/pc
60/40/pc
65/51/s
92/72/pc
61/40/s
76/59/s
50/32/c
58/31/pc
70/43/pc
70/42/sh
60/36/s
63/41/s
70/52/pc
70/47/s
65/43/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
79/61

El Paso
50/42
Chihuahua
54/40

Detroit
54/40

Montreal
49/41

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

Global

Houston
60/53

Monterrey
63/53

93° in Plant City, FL
-4° in Gould, CO

High
110° in Wyndham, Australia
Low -30° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
89/78

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
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�Sports
6 Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Blue Angels place 12th at state
By Alex Hawley

count four format.
Gallia Academy’s topﬁnisher was senior Molly
Fitzwater, who shot 100 on
COLUMBUS, Ohio —
Friday and 93 on Saturday
There’s no better place to
for a 193, the 45th best
ﬁnish your season than the
round of the tournament.
state championships.
One shot behind Fitzwater,
The Gallia Academy girls
fellow GAHS senior Hunter
golf team wrapped up its
Copley ﬁred a team-best 90
2018 campaign on Friday
and Saturday in the OHSAA on Friday, and then posted a
Girls Division II State Cham- 104 on Saturday, placing her
in a tie for 46th at 194.
pionship at the Ohio State
Blue Angels junior Bailey
University Golf Club’s Gray
Meadows had a two-day
Course.
The Blue Angels — ﬁnish- total of 195, ﬁring a 103 on
Friday and a team-best 92 on
ing 12th in their ﬁrst-ever
Saturday, tying her for 48th
state appearence — recordAlex Hawley | OVP Sports ed a 398 on the opening
overall.
GAHS senior Molly Fitzwater tees off on the par-4
GAHS sophomore Lilly
day
of
the
tournament
and
14th hole at OSU Golf Club’s Gray Course during the
Rees
was 67th overall with
followed
it
up
with
a
399
opening round of the OHSAA Girls Division II State
on Saturday in the play ﬁve, a two-day total of 215, comChampionship on Friday in Columbus, Ohio.
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

bining a 105 from Friday
with a 110 on Saturday.
Fellow Gallia Academy
sophomore Avery Minton
tied for 70th overall, combining Friday’s 120 with Saturday’s 116 for a 236 total.
Lima Central Catholic won
the team title with a twoday total of 652, 22 strokes
ahead of runner-up Shelby.
Sugarcreek Garaway was
third at 681, followed by
Cincinnati Wyoming with
711, Shaker Heights Laurel
with 733 and Youngstown
Cardinal Mooney with 737.
Bellefontaine Benjamin
Logan was seventh with a
745, three strokes ahead
of eighth-place Bellevue.
New Paris National Trail

was ninth at 752, BloomCarroll was 10th with a 764,
St. Henry was 11th at 766,
while Gallia Academy was
12th with a 797.
There was a tie for the
low-score of the tournament, as Kyleigh Dull of
Kansas Lakota, and Jami
Morris of Shaker Heights
Laurel both shot 73 on Friday and 74 on Saturday for
matching 7-over par 147s.
Shelby’s Amanda Ruminski
was one shot back in third.
A total of 71 golfers competed on the 5,560-yard par-70
course for two days.
Visit ohsaa.org for complete results of the 2018
OHSAA Girls Division II
State Championship.

Buckeyes
roll past
Minnesota
By Jim Naveau
jnaveau@limanews.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Ohio State’s 1968
national championship team, which was honored during OSU’s 30-14 win over Minnesota
on Saturday, witnessed a game that might have
seemed very different from the games they
played.
No. 3 Ohio State (7-0, 4-0 Big Ten) won by
throwing for 412 yards and running the football
for only 92 yards, which was a drastic departure
from the favored manner of playing offense of
the 1968 team’s legendary coach, Woody Hayes.
The big questions after OSU’s win were can
it continue to win games with an offense tilted
so far toward the passing game and can it get to
where the 1968 team got without more production in its rushing game.
OSU’s win over Minnesota (3-3, 0-3 Big Ten)
was closer than expected. The Gophers led for
much of the ﬁrst half and it wasn’t until late in
the second quarter that OSU took the lead for
good. And it wasn’t until the ﬁnal 10 minutes of
the game that the Buckeyes could build a lead of
more than one score.
Quarterback Dwayne Haskins (33 of 44 for
412 yards, 3 touchdowns) and wide receiver
K.J. Hill (9 catches, 187 yards, 2 touchdowns)
led the offense.
But Ohio State’s running game struggled for
the third week in a row. In its last three games,
OSU has averaged 122 yards a game on the
ground and 3.1 yards per carry.
When OSU coach Urban Meyer was asked if
the Buckeyes could get where they want to go
with that kind of imbalance in their offense, he
said, “As of today and last week, no. But there
are certainly signs. We’ve got two good backs
and we’ve just got to get it worked out.”
Co-offensive coordinator Kevin Wilson said,
“It’s a talented group of linemen. We’ve got
some backs. We’ve got to tighten it up.
“I think we have really good guys. The skill
set is good. We’ve just got to get those guys
playing better,” he said.
Nothing illustrated the dominance of the pass
in OSU’s offense more than the 71-yard drive
that set up the ﬁeld goal that gave the Buckeyes
some breathing room with a 23-14 lead with 10
minutes to play.
See BUCKEYES | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Oct. 16
Volleyball
Wahama, Cross Lanes
Christian at Point
Pleasant, 5 p.m.
(11) Meigs at (6)
Nelsonville-York, 6 p.m.
Girls Soccer
(6) Athens at (3) Gallia
Academy, 5 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Point Pleasant vs
Ravenswood/Sissonville
winner at Shawnee Sports
Complex, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 17
Volleyball
(7) Jackson at (2) Gallia

Academy, 6 p.m.
(8) River Valley at (1)
Unioto, 6 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 18
Volleyball
ISJ-Belpre winner at (2)
Eastern, 6 p.m.
(6) South Gallia at (3)
Trimble, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca,
6 p.m.
Boys Soccer
(6) Gallia Academy at (3)
Marietta, 5 p.m.
Cross Country
Region IV Championships
at Mineral Wells, TBA

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Ohio tight end Conner Brown (83) breaks away from a UMass defender, during the Bobcats’ win on Sept. 29 in Athens, Ohio.

Huskies slip past Ohio, 24-21
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

DeKALB, Ill. — A
battle ﬁtting of their mascots.
The Ohio and Northern
Illinois football teams
exchanged the lead four
times in Saturday’s MidAmerican Conference
contest in the Prairie
State, with the Huskies
pulling out a 24-21 victory over the visiting
Bobcats.
Each defense started
the game by forcing a
three-and-out, and the
Huskies (4-3, 4-0 MAC)
put the game’s ﬁrst points
on the board in their second drive, with Andrew
Grantz capping off a
16-play, 77-yard drive
with a 36-yard ﬁeld goal.
After another punt by
each side, Ohio (3-3, 1-1)
took a 7-3 lead with 8:39
left in the ﬁrst half, as
A.J. Ouellette rushed in
from two yards out and
Louie Zervos made his
ﬁrst of three extra points,
capping off a nine-play, 92
yard drive.
Northern Illinois
answered 1:58 later,
as D.J. Brown broke a
28-yard touchdown run.
The Huskies failed a twopoint conversion run,
however, keeping their
lead at 9-7.
Defense controlled the
remainder of the half, as
the two teams combined
for four punts and 10
yards, leaving the Bobcats
with a two-point deﬁcit at
the midway point.
The Bobcats turned
the ball over on its ﬁrst
two drives of the second
half, but the Ohio defense
came up with a pair of
three-and-outs to start
the third quarter.
The guests began their
third possession of the

half on their own 15, but
on the fourth play of the
drive, Nathan Rourke
tossed a 56-yard touchdown to Isiah Cox, giving
the Bobcats a 14-9 lead
with 6:39 left in the third.
NIU punted for the ﬁfth
consecutive drive, giving the Green and White
the ball on their own 10.
Ohio needed 11 plays to
cover the 90 yards, with
Connor Brown grabbing
an 11-yard touchdown
pass from Rourke on the
ﬁnal play of the third
quarter, giving Ohio a
21-9 advantage with 15
minutes to play.
The Huskies ended
their scoring drought on
the ensuing drive, covering 77 yards in 12 plays,
with Marcus Childers
ﬁnding paydirt from 10
yards out. Gantz made
the point-after kick, cutting Ohio’s lead to 21-16
with 10:38 to play.
The turnover bug
took its third bite out of
the Bobcats at the NIU
47, with Sutton Smith
recovering a fumble for
the hosts. Six plays later,
Marcus Jones gave the
Huskies a 22-21 lead with
a two-yard touchdown
run. Max Scharping followed with a successful
two-point conversion run,
giving the hosts a 24-21
edge with 4:51 to play.
The Bobcats went
three-and-out, and never
got the ball back, as NIU
sealed the three-point
win.
The Huskies earned
a 25-to-19 advantage in
ﬁrst downs, and a 400-to321 edge in total offense,
including 255-to-46 on
the ground.
Ohio punted ﬁve times,
twice fewer than NIU, but
the hosts won the turnover battle by a 3-0 tally.
OU was penalized six

Ohio senior Kent Berger sacks UMass senior Andrew Ford (7),
during the Bobcats’ victory on Sept. 29 in Athens, Ohio.

times for 59 yards, while
the victors were sent back
109 yards on 12 ﬂags.
Rourke — who was
sacked four times — was
15-of-23 passing for 275
yards and two touchdowns, while rushing for
a net of zero yards on 10
carries, after gaining and
losing 40 yards.
Maleek Irons led Ohio’s
ground attack with 30
yards on 11 carries, while
Ouellette picked up 16
yards and a touchdown
on his 11 rushing tries of
his own.
Papi White caught a
team-high six passes
for 59 yards, while Cox
grabbed three passes —
including a touchdown
— for a game-high and
career-best 147 yards.
Cameron Odom caught
three passes for 54
yards, Brown added two
receptions for 11 yards
and a score, while Irons
caught one four-yard
pass.
Javon Hagan led the
Ohio defense with 10
tackles, including four
solo. Evan Croutch and
Kent Berger earned
a sack apiece for the
Bobcats, with Dylan
Conner and Will Evans

both recording a tackle
for a loss as well. Jamal
Hudson had a team-best
three pass break-ups in
the setback.
For NIU, Childers was
17-of-33 passing for 145
yards, while leading the
team with 169 yards
and on touchdown on
a game-high 23 carries.
Jauan Wesley led the
Northern Illinois receiving unit with six grabs
for 61 yards.
Kyle Pugh had a teambest nine tackles, including eight solo for the
victors. Sutton Smith
recovered two fumbles,
earned two sacks, and
2.5 tackles for a loss,
while Josh Corcoran and
Jordan Nettles added a
sack apiece. Trayshon
Foster had the game’s
lone interception for the
Huskies.
Ohio falls to 10-12
in all-time meetings
with Northern Illinois,
including 3-3 under head
coach Frank Solich.
The Bobcats return
to Peden Stadium at 2
p.m. on Saturday against
Bowling Green.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 16,2018 7

Herd rumbles past ODU, 42-20
as LaRussa found Kesean Strong on a 16-yard
pass at the 5:01 mark,
again cutting the deficit
down to eight points.
Marshall won the time
of possession battle by
a mere 1:12 over the
course of 60 minutes,
and the Monarchs also
claimed a small 25-24
edge in first downs.
ODU also had six of the
11 punts in the game
and committed two
of the three turnovers
overall.
Thomson finished the
day 18-of-29 passing for
182 yards, throwing one
TD and one interception
early in the first quarter.
Brady led the wideouts
with 103 yards on nine
catches, accounting for
half of Marshall’s com­
pletions.
Chase Hancock led
the MU defense with 13
tackle and Chris Jackson
was next with 10 stops.
Frankie Hernandez also
forced and recovered a
fumble on Old Domin­
ion’s opening drive of
the game. Marshall also
recorded three sacks and
six tackles for loss.
Will Knight paced the
ODU ground attack with
70 yards on 11 carries,
while Strong added 52
yards on 15 attempts.
LaRussa finished the
day 31-of-54 passing for
296 yards and two scores
to go along with a pick.
Isaiah Harper hauled in
eight passes for 37 yards
in the setback.
Sean Carter and Justinn Richardson both
paced the Monarchs
with eight tackles
apiece. Oshane Ximines
added seven stops and
also came away with
both a sack and an inter­
ception.
Marshall will try to
end a two-game los­
ing skid at home on
Saturday when it hosts
Florida Atlantic on
Homecoming. Kickoff is
scheduled for 2:30 p.m.

By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

NORFOLK, Va.— An
effort worthy of defeat­
ing a king.
The Marshall football
team churned out a
season-best 319 rushing
yards and led wire-towire on Saturday en
route to a 42-20 victory
over host Old Dominion
in a Conference USA
contest held at S.B. Bal­
lard Stadium in the Old
Dominion State.
The Thundering Herd
(4-2, 2-1 CUSA East)
built leads of 14-3 at the
half and 21-10 headed
into the finale, but the
guests saved their best
for last after preserving
their advantage with
a ground-and-pound
approach that worked to
perfection.
Through three quar­
ters, the Green and
White had yielded 147
rushing yards — but
the Herd kicked into
another gear down the
stretch after producing
three touchdowns and
172 rushing yards that
turned a one-possession
contest into a command­
ing 42-20 cushion with
less than two minutes
left in regulation.
The Monarchs (1-6,
0-4) did manage to
close the gap down to
eight points twice in the
fourth quarter, the last
of which came at 28-20
with 5:01 remaining.
Tyler King, however,
broke off touchdown
runs of 65 and 46 yards
over the next three-plus
minutes, allowing Mar­
shall to seal the deal on
staying unbeaten in road
games this fall.
King finished the
game with 195 rushing
yards and two scores
on 22 attempts, while
Anthony Anderson
added three TD runs and
91 yards on 14 totes —
all of which enabled the
Herd to get out of the
historic Hampton Roads
metropolitan area with
the triumph.

_________________
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Marshall safety Malik Gant (29) makes a tackle on an Eastern
Kentucky running back during the first half of a Sept. 8 contest
at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington, W.Va.

answered with a 14-play,
55-yard drive that ended
in a successful 30-yard
field goal by Nick Rice
with 18 seconds left,
making it a 14-3 contest
entering the break.
Anderson extended
Marshall’s lead out to
21-3 at the 5:31 mark
of the third following a
4-yard scamper, capping
an 8-play, 73-yard drive.
The Slate Blue and Sil­
ver, however, answered
with their first TD
drive as Travis Fulgham
hauled in a 1-yard pass
from Blake LaRussa at
the 3:29 mark, capping a
7-play, 75-yard drive that
closed the gap down to

The Thundering Herd
claimed a 501-402 advan­
tage in total yards of
offense and finished the
afternoon plus-1 in turn­
over differential. The
guests also limited ODU
to just 106 rushing yards
on 31 carries, an average
of 3.4 yards per attempt
— compared to their
own 7.1 yards per carry
average on 45 rushes.
Both teams went
scoreless in the opening
period, but the last of
three turnovers in the
game ultimately led to
the first points of the
contest.
Malik Gant’s intercep­
tion gave MU possession
at its own 12 with 2:51
left in the first, then the
guests marched 88 yards
in 10 plays to secure
what proved to be a per­
manent cushion.
Anderson gave Mar­
shall a 7-0 lead a minute
into the second period
following a 22-yard run.
The Herd increased
their lead to 14-0 as Tyre
Brady hauled in a 3-yard
pass from Alex Thom­
son, capping a 10-play,
60-yard drive with 8:33
remaining in the first
half.
Old Dominion

21-10.
ODU strung together
a 10-play, 70-yard drive
that ended with a
41-yard field goal by Rice
— allowing the hosts to
pull within 21-13 with
12:40 left in regulation.
The Herd countered
with a 4-play, 43-yard
drive that ended with
a 4-yard Anderson TD
run, allowing the guests
to increase the lead back
out to 28-13 with 7:08
left in the fourth.
The Monarchs
answered with one final
score on their next drive

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

Tuesday Evening
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Loves Ray |Loves Ray

The Boonies "Beyond the

Life Below Zero "Arctic

Life Below Zero "Strength

Life Below Zero "Home

Running Wild "Don

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in Numbers" (N)

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Tractor Pulling

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American Pickers "No

American

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for Badness"

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Reynolds' Rides" (N)

Below Deck

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Below Deck (N)

Flipping Out(N)

1(5:00)

The Other Guys ('10, Com) Mark Wahlberg, Will Ferrell. TV14

"Bound

Pickers

I Fixer Upper

NFL Films (N)| Pre-game
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6 PM

7 PM

Real Time With Bill Maher

Darkest Hour

7:30
Vice

News

American

Pickers

"Harleys

I BET Hip Hop Awards "2018" (N)

Two 1/2 Men

8 PM

(:05) Counting Cars "Burt

Hustle In Brooklyn

I Flippers (N) | Desert Flip

I Fixer Upper

H.Hunt(N) ¡House (N)

★ Texas Chainsaw 3D (2013, Horror) Dan Yeager, Trey

Emmanuelle Chriqui, Desmond Harrington. TVMA

6:30

Movie

|Two 1/2 Men

I MLB Baseball National League Championship Series (L) |

"Going

(5:00) ★ Wrong Turn 3: Left (:05) ★★ Wrong Turn (2003, Horror) Eliza Dushku,
for Dead TVMA

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I NHL Hockey Arizona Coyotes at Minnesota Wild (L) |(:45) Overtime |

★★★★ Creed ('15, Spt) Michael B. Jordan. TV14

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C.Minds "Secrets and Lies"

P.D.

Bread Crumb"

Criminal Mind “Machismo"

Songz, Alexandra Daddario. TVMA

8:30

Pod Save America

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

HBO First Look "Hunter Killer" (N) /(:15) ★★ Maze
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4
3
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3
4

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AFC
4-1-0
3-2-0
2-3-0
1-3-0

NFC
0-1-0
1-0-0
1-0-0
1-1-0

Div
1-0-0
1-1-0
0-1-0
0-0-0

Tennessee
Houston
Jacksonville
Indianapolis

W
3
3
3
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L
3
3
3
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T
0
0
0
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Pet PF PA Home
.500
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.500 135 137 2-1-0
.500 109 126 2-1-0
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1-2-0
1-3-0

AFC
2-3-0
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1-1-0
1-1-0

Div
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0-1-0
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Baltimore
Pittsburgh
Cleveland

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L.A. Chargers
Denver
Oakland

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4
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4
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120
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Dallas
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Thursday's Games

Philadelphia 34, N.Y. Giants 13
Sunday's Games

Seattle 27, Oakland 3
Houston 20, Buffalo 13
Washington 23, Carolina 17
Minnesota 27, Arizona 17
L.A. Chargers 38, Cleveland 14
Pittsburgh 28, Cincinnati 21
Atlanta 34, Tampa Bay 29

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117 1-1-0
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N.Y. Jets 42, Indianapolis 34
Miami 31, Chicago 28,0T
Dallas 40, Jacksonville 7
Baltimore 21, Tennessee 0
L.A. Rams 23, Denver 20
New England 43, Kansas City 40
Open: Detroit, New Orleans
Monday's Games

San Francisco at Green Bay, 8:15 p.m.

TRANSACTIONS
Monday's Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
American League

OAKLAND ATHLETICS - Assigned
RHP Chris Hatcher outright to Las Vegas
(PCL).
National League

ATLANTA BRAVES-Agreed to
terms with manager Brian Snitker on a

two-year contract.
CHICAGO CUBS - Named Anthony
lapoce hitting coach.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association

ATLANTA HAWKS - Exercised
fourth-year options on Fs DeAndre'
Bembry and Taurean Prince and the
third-year option on F/C John Collins.

Marijuana legalization
in Canada won’t
change NHL yet
By Stephen Whyno
Associated Press

As Riley Cote took and delivered countless punches
over more than a decade of junior and pro hockey, he
was eager to avoid painkillers.
Early on, marijuana was touted to the enforcer as a
healing option.
“I started noticing some therapeutic benefits,” Cote
said. “It helped me sleep, helped with my anxiety and
general well-being.”
Now a handful of years into retirement, Cote is a
proponent of cannabis and its oils as an alternative
to more addictive drugs commonly used by athletes
to play through pain. Marijuana can be detected in
a person’s system for more than 30 days, is banned
by the World Anti-Doping Agency without a specific
therapeutic use exemption and is illegal in much of
the United States.
Canada on Wednesday will become the largest
country in the world to legalize recreational mari­
juana. That means it will be available under the law
in seven more NHL cities (it’s been legal to adults
in Denver since 2012). The move is a step forward
for those who, like Cote, believe marijuana has been
stigmatized and should be accepted as a form of treat­
ment.

NCIS: New Orleans

I FIFA Soccer International Friendly Peru vs United States (L) | ESPN FC (N) | NFL Live |

Married at First Sight "A
(4:30)

New England
Miami
N.Y.Jets
Buffalo

"Legacy" (N)

8:30

8 PM

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News:

I Basketball: A Love Story (N) | Basketball: A Love Story (N) |

52 tmaa

FBI "Crossfire" (N)

America

I NHL Hockey Vancouver Canucks at Pittsburgh Penguins (L)

42 Cil

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Tuesday, October 16
9:30
10 PM
10:30

9 PM

WSAZ News

cromi
8 «roía

7:30

All Times EDT
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East

(5:50) ★★ He's Just Not That Into You ( 09, Com)

Wilson Woody Harrelson. A lonely and

(:35) ★★ Striptease Demi Moore. A Miami

Ginnifer Goodwin. Men and woman mix their signals and
misinterpret the true intentions of the opposite sex. TV14

neurotic man named Wilson reunites with
his estranged wife and daughter. TVMA

strip dub dancer struggles to regain custody
of her daughter from her ex-husband. TVMA

(5:30) ★★★ Backdraft ('91, Act) William Baldwin, Kurt

Shameless "Face It, You're

Inside the NFL "2018 Week

Kidding

Russell. Two feuding firefighters assist a detective in the
investigation of a mysterious arsonist. TVMA

Gorgeous"

6" (N)

Cookie"

"The TheCircus
"California
Dreaming"

Buckeyes

good learning tool for
next week,” Haskins said.
Ohio State’s defense,
From page 6
playing without four
injured starters, had some
In that drive, only three moments of adversity,
of the plays were running too, mainly against the
slant passes of Minne­
plays and they netted -1
yard. The rest of the drive sota quarterback Zack
Annexstad (13 of 22 for
came on passes.
218 yards) and running
Ohio State scored first
back Mohamed Ibrahim
on a 21-yard field goal,
(23 carries, 157 yards, 2
one of three he kicked as
touchdowns).
a replacement for Sean
But the defense also
Nuernberger, who was
came up with three turn­
unable to play because
overs and all were deep
an injury described as “a
in Ohio State territory
strain” by an Ohio State
- Kendall Sheffield’s inter­
spokesman.
ception was at the 13-yard
The two teams traded
line, Jeffrey Okudah’s
leads three times before
fumble recovery was at
K.J. Hill’s one-handed
the 24-yard line and Isa­
catch on a 36-yard touch­
iah Pryor’s interception
down play put OSU in
front to stay at 17-14 with was at the 2-yard line.
“Minnesota came in
3:59 left in the first half.
and swung hard,” Meyer
Haubeil made a 47-yard
field goal and a 27-yarder said. “The saying right
now that I’m using is
to make it 23-14 early in
enhance our strengths
the fourth quarter. Then
and let’s fix our weak­
Haskins connected with
nesses. We’re going to
Hill on a 27-yard touch­
have to get some things
down pass with 2:15 to
play to give OSU a 30-14 fixed. What we’re going
to do is enjoy our win.
lead.
Not many teams are 7-0.
“We just had to fight
We’ll get some things
through adversity and
fixed and get ready for
made plays when they
mattered. And that’s a
the trip to Purdue.”

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Brown’s late TD sends Steelers over Bengals 28-21
Hunter’s block for a
31-yard touchdown with
10 seconds left Sunday
and yet another improbable — and entirely predictable — victory over
the Cincinnati Bengals.
The Steelers’ 28-21 win
made it eight straight and
counting over their AFC
North rival.
“We’ve been in that
situation a lot, and I knew

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

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HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

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

ANNOUNCEMENTS

EMPLOYMENT

Personals

Help Wanted General

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Joe Mixon’s 4-yard
touchdown run with 1:18
got the Bengals (4-2)
thinking they might
ﬁnally have their breakthrough. Roethlisberger
and the Steelers stunned
them again.
Big Ben came to the
line on the decisive play
and saw that the Bengals
were set for an all-out
blitz with no safeties to

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we were going to do it,”
Brown said.
They always do.
James Conner ran for
111 yards and a pair of
touchdowns on the eve
of Le’Veon Bell’s possible
return to help the Steelers (3-2-1) get ahead, but
they had to pull off their
third last-minute rally at
Paul Brown Stadium to
extend the streak.

FILE CLERK
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guard against a big play.
He immediately thought
touchdown.
“When you see that
look, it’s how fast can I
get him the ball,” said
Roethlisberger, who is
14-2 in his career at Paul
Brown Stadium.
Brown caught the ball
in stride, cut Hunter’s
block and outran the secondary for the winning

score, leaving thousands
of Steelers fans twirling their towels in the
stands while stunned
Bengals fans stood and
watched a familiar ending.
The Bengals are 2-16
against the Steelers at
Paul Brown Stadium during coach Marvin Lewis’
16 seasons, including a
pair of playoff losses.

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

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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Help Wanted General

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

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Drug test, physical and
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Public Notice
The Meigs County Sub-Committee for Round 33 SCIP/LTIP
Projects will meet Thursday October 25, 2018 at 10:00 A.M. at
the Meigs County Commissioners Office, Meigs County Courthouse, 100 East Second Street, Suite 301, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. The Sub-Committee is composed of one representative
appointed by the village mayors of the county, one representative appointed by the township trustees, one representative appointed by the county commissioners, one representative appointed by the county engineer and a fifth member selected by
the four appointed representatives.
The purpose of this meeting is for the village mayors to appoint
their representative and for the commissioners to appoint their
representative. Then, together with the township trustees and
county engineer representatives, appoint the fifth member. Immediately following, the Sub-Committee will assign local priority
to Meigs County applications submitted for Round 33
SCIP/LTIP.
10/16/18 TDS
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF RECEIPT OF 401 APPLICATION
Meigs County
Public notice is hereby given that the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency (Ohio EPA) Division of Surface Water (DSW)
has received an application for and has begun to consider
whether to issue or deny, a Clean Water Act Section 401 water
quality certification for a project to immediately stabilize approximately 800 LF of the right descending bank of the Ohio River
which is eroding and failing, endangering adjacent utilities and
village infrastructure. The application was submitted by the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, Huntington District. The project is located in the village of Pomeroy. The Ohio EPA 10 Numberfor
this project is 185984. Discharges from the activity, if approved,
would result in degradation to, or lowering of, the water quality
of the Ohio River. Ohio EPA will review the application, and decide whether to grant or deny the certification, in accordance
with OAC Chapters 3745-1 and 3745-32. In accordance with
OAC rule 3745-1-05, an antidegradation review of the application will be conducted before deciding whether to allow a lowering of water quality. No exclusions or waivers, as outlined by
OAC rule 3745-1-05, apply or may be granted.
Starting October 16, 2018, copies of the application and technical support information may be inspected at Ohio EPA-DSW,
Lazarus Government Center, 50 West Town Street, Suite 700,
Columbus, Ohio, by first calling (614) 644-2001. Copies of the
application and technical support information can be made
available upon request at Ohio EPA District Offices by calling
the same number. Persons wishing to 1) be on Ohio EPA's interested parties mailing list for this project, 2) request a public
hearing, or 3) submit written comments for Ohio EPA's consideration in reviewing the application should do so by email to
epa.dswcomments@epa.ohio.gov or in writing to Ohio
EPA-DSW, Attention: Permits Processing Unit, P.O. Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohio 43216-1049 within thirty days of the date of
this public notice.
10/16/18

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OH-70081521

CINCINNATI (AP) —
Ben Roethlisberger saw
the defensive alignment
and knew immediately
that the Pittsburgh Steelers had a chance for a
winning touchdown. All
he had to do was get the
ball to Antonio Brown
right away.
Brown took a few
strides, caught the pass
and ran behind Justin

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NOTICE FOR EARLY PUBLIC REVIEW OF
A PROPOSAL TO SUPPORT ACTIVITY IN A
100-YEAR FLOODPLAIN
October 15, 2018
To: All Interested Agencies, Groups, and Individuals:
The Board of Meigs County Commissioners is in the process of
conducting an environmental review for the Demolition Project
to demolish commercial structure located at 192 South 2nd
Ave, CDBG Community Development Grant Funding, located in
the Village of Middleport.
This notice is required by Section 2(a)(4) of Executive Order
11988 for Floodplain Management, and is implemented by HUD
Regulations found at 24 CFR 55.20(b) for any action that is
within and/or affects a floodplain. As currently proposed, the
project site will include areas designated as floodplain.
The Board of Meigs County Commissioners alternatives
regarding sponsorship of the action would be:
1. Approval as proposed;
2. Disapproval;
3. Approval only if all improvements are located outside of the
floodplain;
4. Approval of an equivalent project site located outside of the
floodplain; and
5. Approval only if no fill is added in floodplain areas.
Additional information regarding the proposed action may be
obtained by contacting Betsy Entsminger, Meigs County
Grant Administrator, at 740-992-4630 or at the following
address:
Meigs County Courthouse, 100 E. 2nd St Suite 301 Pomeroy,
OH 45769
Any interested person, agency, or group wishing to comment
on the project may submit written comments for consideration
to the Board of Meigs County Commissioners at the above
listed address by 4:00 p. m. on 10/30/2018, which is at least
15 days after the publication of this notice.
Meigs County Commissioners
10/16/18-tds

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, October 16, 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

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Ol’ man Rivers leads
Chargers to 38-14
blowout of Browns
CLEVELAND (AP) — Ol’ man Rivers keeps
rolling along.
Philip Rivers threw two touchdown passes to
Tyrell Williams — and the 36-year-old quarterback even threw a block — and Melvin Gordon
had three TD runs as the Los Angeles Chargers
banged around Cleveland rookie Baker Mayﬁeld
and the Browns, 38-14 on Sunday.
Rivers continued one of the best starts of his
15-year career, leading the Chargers (4-2) to their
third straight win. Rivers ﬁnished 11 of 20 for 207
yards and had only one mistake, an interception
midway through the fourth quarter.
The Chargers did most of their damage on the
ground with Gordon running for 132 yards and
scoring on runs of 4, 10 and 11 yards. They had
246 yards rushing.
“There haven’t been too many days where we’ve
run for more than we’ve thrown,” Rivers said with
a laugh. “But I’ll take them any time we can get
them.”
Rivers and Williams connected on scoring plays
of 45 and 29 yards in the ﬁrst half, and Gordon’s
11-yard run put the Chargers up 35-6.
Mayﬁeld’s third start as a pro was a rough one.
The No. 1 overall pick was sacked ﬁve times,
tweaked his ankle when he slid on a sideline marker and threw two interceptions.
“We didn’t execute,” said Mayﬁeld, who threw
a TD pass to tight end David Njoku . “We didn’t
do our job. We weren’t detailed. We didn’t do the
things that we talked about all week. That’s the
most disappointing thing. Any time you don’t do
your job — I’m at fault for the majority of that. I’m
going to be very hard on myself but we have to be
able to look at this and learn from it.”
The Browns (2-3-1) were blown out after playing ﬁve tight games — three going to overtime —
and showed there’s still a long road ahead.
While young QBs like Mayﬁeld, Carson Wentz
and Patrick Mahomes may be the NFL’s next
wave, Rivers is showing that the old guys can still
get the job done. He has thrown 15 TD passes
with just three interceptions, and he did all he
could to block Browns linebacker Jamie Collins to
help Keenan Allen pick up a ﬁrst down despite the
Chargers leading 28-6.
“I’m not real comfortable out there,” Rivers said.
“But I stayed in front and did not get a holding, so
that’s a positive.”
The Chargers weren’t surprised by Rivers’
effort.
“That’s Phil,” said Williams, who had three
catches for 118 yards. “He’s competitive and he’s
going to stick his nose in there if he gets an opportunity. I’m not surprised at all.”

Daily Sentinel

Iowa State throttles No. 6 WVU
AMES, Iowa (AP) — It
was arguably West Virginia’s biggest test, on
the road at night against
a plucky Iowa State team
with a stiﬂing defense
and a dangerous young
quarterback.
The sixth-ranked
Mountaineers failed miserably.
Freshman Brock Purdy
threw for 254 yards and
three TDs and Iowa State
throttled West Virginia
30-14 on Saturday, handing the Mountaineers
their ﬁrst loss in emphatic fashion.
David Montgomery had
a career-high 189 yards
rushing for the Cyclones
(3-3, 2-2 Big 12), who
capped a wild day by
beating a Top 25 team
for the ﬁfth time in seven
tries after dropping 20 in
a row to ranked teams.
Iowa State held the
Mountaineers to 152
yards overall and zero
points in the second half.
“They didn’t come up
with a magical defense
to stop what we were
doing,” West Virginia
coach Dana Holgorsen
said. “We didn’t do anything right. We didn’t
make plays, we didn’t
keep our eyes where they
needed to be. We didn’t
run fast, we didn’t get
off coverage, we didn’t
make good decisions. We
didn’t call good plays, we
didn’t tackle them, we
didn’t block.”
The only solace for
West Virginia (5-1, 3-1)
was that it was the fourth
Top 10 team to fall Saturday. LSU pounded No.
2 Georgia 36-16, No. 7
Washington fell 30-27
in overtime at No. 17
Oregon, and No. 8 Penn
State lost to Michigan
State 21-17.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

West Virginia junior Matt Jones blocks a Youngstown State defender, during the Mountaineers’ win on
Sept. 8 in Morgantown, W.Va.

downs.
“I thought at times
that we played a lot of
complete football,” Iowa
State coach Matt Campbell said. “We continue
to grow.”
Fittingly, the Cyclones
sealed the win by forcing
a hold in the end zone
for a team safety and a
30-14 edge with 5:14 left.
Will Grier had arguably his worst game as a
Mountaineer, throwing
for just 100 yards on 11
off 15 passing. West Virginia was outgained by
346 yards, a stunning ﬁgure for a team that hadn’t
even trailed in rolling up
ﬁve straight wins.

Iowa State scored 20
straight points after
spotting West Virginia
an early touchdown off
a turnover. Purdy, in
his ﬁrst career start,
then found Deshaunte
Jones through a pair of
defenders on a sprawling
32-yard TD grab that put
Iowa State ahead 28-14
with 12:17 to go.
The story of the game
was Iowa State’s defense,
which dominated the
high-ﬂying Mountaineers. West Virginia was
held 375 yards below its
season average, Grier
was sacked seven times
and the Mountaineers
were 1 for 10 on third

The takeaway
West Virginia: The
Mountaineers still
control their destiny in
the Big 12, with games
against Texas and
Oklahoma left on the
schedule. But their playoff hopes are currently
out of their hands. Still,
it’s early, and if West
Virginia can regain the
offensive form they
showed through the early
part of the season it’ll be
tough to beat. But this
was a bad, bad loss. “It’s
just lack of execution.
I don’t know if it was a
lack of effort, just lack of
execution,” running back
Kennedy McKoy said.

The 15th Annual

Brian &amp; Family Connections Homecoming

Fall Harvest Gospel Sing

304-675-2781 | pvalley.org

In Loving Memory of Brian Frederick
Please come and help us Honor Brian and continue what he started

Fri Oct. 19th
5:00 pm-11:00 pm (??)

Orthopaedic Surgical Services
at Pleasant Valley Hospital
There is a place where
patients from miles away
can turn - a hospital that
combines the latest technology
with experienced surgeons
who perform specialized,
orthopaedic surgeries with skill
and compassion. Pleasant Valley
Hospital has grown and become
more advanced every day. It’s a
commitment that we’ve made to
better serve the community that
we all call home.

Surgical Capabilities:
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Pleasant Valley
Hospital

Sat. Oct. 20th
1:00 pm – 11:00 pm (??)
Special Recognition of all Veterans 5:00 pm

Larry Wilson &amp; God’s
Country Band

Sun. Oct. 21st
Pot Luck Dinner at 1:00 pm
SPECIAL CONCERT at 2:00 pm
Additional Artists include: David &amp;
Sheila Bowen, Ron Shamblin, Rick Towe,
Randy Parsons, River of Life Quartet, New
Salvation, Edification, Danny LaMasters,
Everett Caldwell, Diana &amp; Jerry Frederick,
Marilyn Phillips, Vicki Moore, The Dollys,
Sharon Kelp, Debbie Dodrill, Mike Cadle,
Brian’s Family Connection, Angela Gibson,
Joe McCloud, Debbie Falcon…and more
Brian’s vision for the Fall Harvest Gospel Sing was
to reach his community with the Good News he
found during his life. For 12 years he invited people
&amp; advertised the sing so people would come and
hear. This is the 3rd year that the sing is being held
in his memory and there are still many people in the
community that have not attended the sing, so on
this - the 15th Annual event, Angela wants to share
the Good News Brian wanted to share with you:
1. God loves you and has a plan for you!
The Bible says, “God so loved the world that He gave
His one and only Son, [Jesus Christ], that whoever
believes in Him shall not perish, but have eternal life”
(John 3:16).
2. Man is sinful and separated from God.
We have all done, thought or said bad things, which
the Bible calls “sin.” The Bible says, “All have sinned
and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23).
The result of sin is death, spiritual separation from
God (Romans 6:23).
The good news?
3. God sent His Son to die for your sins!
Jesus died in our place so we could live with Him for
eternity in Heaven.
“God demonstrates His own love toward us, in
that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us”
(Romans 5:8).

For additional information:
Text 513-508-7766
or Email giraffeangela@hotmail.com
But it didn’t end with His death on the cross.
“Christ died for our sins. … He was buried. …
He was raised on the third day, according to the
Scriptures.” (1 Corinthians 15:3-4).
Jesus said, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life;
no one comes to the Father, but through Me”
(John 14:6).
4. Would you like to receive God’s forgiveness?
We can’t earn salvation; we are saved by God’s grace
when we have faith in His Son, Jesus Christ. All you
have to do is believe you are a sinner; that Christ
died for your sins, and ask His forgiveness. Then turn
from your sins—that’s called repentance. No one can
change themselves, God changes us. Jesus Christ
knows you and loves you. Years ago Brian prayed a
prayer like this and you can do the same. This is the
Good News he wanted to share with you at the Fall
Harvest Gospel Sing
“Dear Lord Jesus,
I know I am a sinner, and I ask for your
forgiveness. I believe that you died for my sins on
the cross and rose from the dead. Please save
me and be my Lord and Savior. Guide my life and
help me to do your will.
In your name, amen.”
OH-70079465

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