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                  <text>Creative
burst of
boredom

Mostly
sunny
81/50

Bobcats
hold off
UMass

EDITORIAL s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 157, Volume 71

Breast Cancer
Awareness section
in today’s edition
Staff Report

OHIO VALLEY —
Today’s edition of The
Daily Sentinel, Gallipolis Daily Tribune
and Point Pleasant
Register feature our
annual Breast Cancer
Awareness special sec-

Tuesday, October 3, 2017 s 50¢

Davis crowned MHS Queen

tion.
Included in the section are stories of hope
and living each day
to the fullest as told
by survivors of the
disease, medical treatment options, grant
programs and upcoming clinics and events.

Art in the Village
to be held this
Saturday
By Jessica Marcum
Special to OVP

MIDDLEPORT —
Art in the Village, the
annual art show hosted
by the Riverbend Arts
Council, is set for Saturday, Oct. 7.
The show begins at
10 a.m. and continues
until 4 p.m., with lunch
available beginning at
11 a.m. for a donation.
Award presentation
will begin at 3 p.m.,
including Best of Show
and People’s Choice.
The theme of this year’s
show is “Transformation.” The winners of
this year’s art show will
have their artwork displayed at Farmer’s Bank
in Pomeroy or Mason,
for one month.
Guest Artist Melanie
Quillen will be on hand
to paint and answer
questions throughout
the day. Quillen won
Best of Show in the
2016 Art in the Village
art show. She works
primarily with oils. In
her Artist Statement,
Quillen states that her
art is “representational
of the weaving and
overlapping of various
generations and periods
of time, as well as the
effects upon individuals.”
The day’s festivities will also include
the Master Gardeners’ semi-annual plant
exchange, which begins
at 11. Bobbi Owen,
art teacher at Meigs
Elementary, will have
kids’ art activities in
a tent outside all day.
Students from Wahama

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The 2017 Meigs High School Homecoming Court is pictured following the crowning of the queen on Friday evening at Farmers Bank
Stadium. Pictured are (front, from left) Flower Girl Brielle Wyatt and Crown Bearer Jake Harrison; (second row) Queen Candidate Carmen
Doherty, Queen Candidate Mariah Haley, Queen Olivia Davis, Queen Candidate Morgan Michael and Queen Candidate Sydney Kennedy;
(back row) Levi Chapman, Beau Morris, Devon Hawley, Bryce Swatzel and Isaiah Ash.

Courtesy photo

Guest artist Melanie Quillen
won Best of Show in last
year’s show.

and Meigs Intermediate
will also have artwork
shown, along with various other organizations.
Meigs Industries, one
of the many organizations participating in
the art show, created a
mural with the theme
“Ocean of Color” to
be displayed. Meigs
Industries also took
charge of packing the
mystery boxes used in
this year’s “Think Outside the Box” projects.
These boxes are given
to teams to create sculptures out of everyday
items — transforming
them from their original
use into art meant to
inspire conversation.
The Riverbend Art
Council’s year does not
end with the art show,
however. Gallia-Meigs
Performing Arts calls
the Riverbend Arts
Council building home.
Most Fridays, the building is host to an open
studio, which is open
to the public and costs
$5. The next Snack and
See VILLAGE | 3

Baer crowned EHS Queen

Paul Boggs | Sentinel

The 2017 Eastern High School Homecoming Queen was crowned during halftime of Friday evening’s game at East Shade River Stadium.
Pictured are (from left) freshman attendant Ashton Guthrie, sophomore attendant Ali Carleton, junior attendant Hannah Hill, senior
Homecoming Queen candidate Madison Williams, senior Homecoming Queen candidate Sidney Cook, and 2017 Homecoming Queen
Morgan Baer.

Recognizing Alumni
By Sarah Hawley

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 7
Comics: 9

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

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

POMEROY — Meigs Alumni
recognized some of their own on
Friday evening prior to the Homecoming football game.
The 11th class of Distinguished
Alumni and Distinguished Service
award winners were presented
with their awards by members of
the Meigs Local Alumni Association and Meigs Local administration.
Michael Bartrum, Tom Reed and
John Tannehill received the Distinguished Alumni Awards, while
Jennifer Lohse Sheets received the
Distinguished Service Award.
Bartrum’s parents Weldon and
Joyce Bartrum, accompanied by
his oldest son Cody, accepted the
See ALUMNI | 3

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The 2017 Distinguished Alumni and Distinguished Service award recipients were Jennifer
Lohse Sheets, Tom Reed, John Tannehill and Michael Bartrum (represented by parents
Weldon and Joyce Bartrum).

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, October 3, 2017

ROBERTA MAE ALLENSWORTH KAIL
CHESHIRE
— Roberta Mae
Allensworth Kail,
90, of Cheshire,
passed away on
Friday, September
29, 2017 at the
Holzer Medical
Center.
She was born in
Cheshire, August 21,
1927 and she lived her
entire life in Cheshire
– the youngest of three
daughters of the late F.
Dale and Vida Rothgeb
Allensworth. She was preceded in death by daughter, Mary Lou North, two
sisters Dorothy (Harold) Broyles and Helen
(Claude) Burnett, all of
Gallipolis and son-in-law,
James “Jim” French Jr. of
Westerville. She was married February 9, 1946 in
Middleport, to John Oliver Kail, who survives.
Roberta was a graduate of the Class of 1945,
Cheshire High School,
was a member of the
Little Kyger Congregational Christian Church,
employed by the Gallia
County Local Schools
and was a secretary at
Kyger Creek High School
for several years. She
was a member of the
First Families of Gallia
County. Roberta was
a passionate Scrabble
player and a Jeopardy and
crossword puzzle fan and
was a Cheshire Canasta
Club member for over 50
years.
Roberta loved vacations
and traveling with her
family. She was known
for her potato salad, was
a hard working homemaker, a devoted wife,
loving mother, grandma,
great grandma, sister and
aunt, who truly loved her

family.
Surviving, in
addition to her
husband of 71
years John Oliver
Kail, of Cheshire,
are a daughter,
Sandra S. French
of Westerville; four grandchildren, J. Lance (Deborah) French, of Montgomery, Tara S. (Mike)
Tallarico, of Commercial
Point, John D. (Jill)
French, of Westerville and
Tom (Danielle) Morgan,
of Black Mountain, N.C.;
eight great-grandchildren,
whom she adored, Macy
Tallarico, Zachary, Stella
and Alex French, Allison
and Drew French, Cora
Mae Morgan and Janson
Reese; as well as nieces,
nephews and several
cousins.
Services will be 1 p.m.,
Wednesday, October 4,
2017 at the Willis Funeral
Home with Pastor Mel
Mock ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow in Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
prior to the service at the
funeral home.
Pallbearers will be
Lance French, John
French, Tom Morgan,
Tara Tallarico, Mike Tallarico, Macy Tallarico and
Zachary French. Honorary Pallbearers will be
Fred Burnett, Dave Burnett, Barry Burnett, Jon
Rothgeb, Robert Swisher,
and Rick Broyles.
In lieu of ﬂowers,
please consider a donation to the charity of
your choice in memory
of Roberta. Please visit
www.willisfuneralhome.
com to send e-mail condolences.

SHAW
NEW HAVEN — Virginia “Ginny” L. Shaw, 74, of
New Haven, W.Va., died Saturday, Sept. 30, 2017, at
Cabell Huntington Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 4,
2017, at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, A graveside service and burial will be 1 p.m.
Thursday, at the Blue Ridge Memorial Gardens in
Beckley, W.Va.
BARKER
PROCTORVILLE — Betty Ruth Barker, 65, of
Proctorville, passed away Saturday, September 30,
2017 at home.
Visitation will be held 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
October 3, 2017 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory,
Proctorville. A private family graveside service will be
held on Wednesday, October 4, 2017.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

SHIRLEY ANN CAUSEY
POMEROY — Shirley
Ann Causey, 73, of Pomeroy, Ohio, passed away
Saturday, Sept. 30, 2017,
at O’Bleness Memorial
Hospital in Athens, Ohio.
She was born Aug. 5,
1944, in Columbus, Ohio,
daughter of the late Dick
and Fern Lewis Smith.
Shirley is survived by
10 sons, Willie Causey,
Junior Causey, George
Welch, Richard Causey,
Michael Ewing, William
Causey, Jimmie Causey,
Jerry Causey, Tony Causey and Grady Vaness;
four daughters, Vickie
Causey, Penny Causey,
Barbie Causey and Kathy
Ewing; a sister, Anna
May Krumb; and several

FREMONT — Don A.
Spires, 82, of Fremont,
Ohio, passed away on
Friday, Sept. 29, 2017,
at Stein Hospice in Sandusky, Ohio. He was born
on Nov. 26, 1934, in Wilkesville, Ohio, to William
and Shirley (Wiseman)
Spires. He was a 1952
graduate of Wilkesville
High School.
Don worked for General Telephone Company
for 22 years when he
lived in Pomeroy. He
was working in Fremont,
Ohio, at Ohio Bell when
he met “his girl” Marilyn
Hottinger and they married on Oct. 10, 1953 in
Richmond, Indiana. She
preceded him in death on
Feb. 25, 2013.
Don and Marilyn both
loved to travel, spending
time with their families
and riding their motorcycle. He was an avid NAS-

MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

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

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DUNBAR — Robert Ray Wilson, 69, of Dunbar,
W.Va., died on Sept. 25, 2017, in Cancun, Mexico,
while vacationing with family. Service will be 5:30
p.m., Friday, Oct. 6, 2017, at Casto Funeral Home
Chapel, Evans, W.Va., with Elmer Miller ofﬁciating.
Visitation will be from 4:30 p.m. until time of service
at the funeral home. Private interment will be Mt.
Tabor Cemetery, Leon, W.Va.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Sunday, Oct. 8
POMEROY — Carleton Church Homecoming
will be held with the dinner at noon, followed by a
program at 1:30 p.m. There will be special singers.

Sunday, Oct. 22
RACINE — Morning Star United Methodist
Church Homecoming with lunch at 12:30 p.m. and
service of singing at 1:30 p.m.

STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) - 70.43
Akzo Nobel - 30.65
Big Lots, Inc. - 51.92
Bob Evans Farms - 77.37
BorgWarner (NYSE) 51.85
Century Alum (NASDAQ) - 16.86
City Holding (NASDAQ)
- 72.83
Collins (NYSE) - 131.46
DuPont (NYSE) - 83.93
US Bank (NYSE) - 53.44
Gen Electric (NYSE) 24.57
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
- 48.85
JP Morgan (NYSE) 96.84
Kroger (NYSE) - 19.96
Ltd Brands (NYSE) 42.13

Norfolk So (NYSE) 131.64
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 37.05
BBT (NYSE) - 47.16
Peoples (NASDAQ) 33.99
Pepsico (NYSE) - 109.12
Premier (NASDAQ) 21.75
Rockwell (NYSE) 180.70
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) - 13.45
Royal Dutch Shell - 60.55
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 7.08
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 78.45
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 15.29
WesBanco (NYSE) 41.59
Worthington (NYSE) 46.50

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

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Geneva “Peanut” Adkins
Paulus, 84, of Huntington, W.Va, died Saturday, September 30, 2017 at her home.
A celebration of life service will be held 1 p.m.
Wednesday, October 4, 2017 at Hall Funeral Home
and Crematory, Proctorville. Burial will follow in
White Chapel Memorial Gardens, Barboursville, W.Va.
Visitation will be held one hour prior to the service at
the funeral home.

LONG BOTTOM — Geraldine Varney of Long Bottom, Ohio, (Bashan area) died on Oct. 2, 2017, at the
Holzer Sr. Care. Funeral services will be held on Friday, Oct. 6, 2017, at 1 p.m. at the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Visitation will be held two
hours prior to the service.

12 (WVPB)

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

PAULUS

VARNEY

11 (WVAH)

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Julia Schultz, Ext. 2104
jschultz@aimmediamidwest.com

CAR fan. He was a 32nd
degree Mason, PomeroyRacine Lodge No. 164
and the Aladdin Shriners,
Grove City, Ohio.
He is survived by his
sister, Margaret Schilling, Lancaster, Ohio, and
many nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will
take place on Thursday,
Oct. 5, 2017, at 1 p.m. at
Oakwood Cemetery, 1225
Oakwood St, Fremont,
OH 43420.
Memorials can be made
to Aladdin Shriners, 1801
Gateway Circle, Grove
City, OH 43123
Online condolences
may be expressed to the
family at www.whhfh.
com.
Arrangements are
entrusted to Wonderly
Horvath Hanes Funeral
Home and Crematory,
Fremont, Ohio.

PROCTORVILLE — Margaret Ann Butcher, 77, of
Proctorville, passed away Wednesday, September 27,
2017 at St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
A memorial service will be held 4 p.m. Wednesday,
October 4, 2017 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory,
Proctorville. Visitation will be held one hour prior to
the service at the funeral home.

GALLIPOLIS — Betty Jean Williams, 68, of Gallipolis, died Saturday September 30, 2017 at Holzer
Medical Center.
There will be no services and burial will be in Pine
Street Cemetery. Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home
is assisting the family.

Telephone: 740-992-2155

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

grandchildren and greatgrandchildren.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
in death by her husband,
Willie Causey; a daughter, Jackie Causey; and a
brother, Harry Lewis.
Funeral services will be
held at 11 a.m., Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2017, at
White-Schwarzel Funeral
Home in Coolville, Ohio.
Burial will follow in the
Fairview Cemetery. Visitation will be held at the
funeral home Wednesday,
from 9 a.m. until time of
service.
You are invited to sign
the online guestbook at
www.whiteschwarzelfh.
com.

WILLIAMS

10 (WBNS)

CONTACT US

BUTCHER

DON A. SPIRES

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(4:55)

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

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

Fall book sale to be held
POMEROY — The Friends of the Pomeroy Public Library will host their Fall Book Sale for two
days during the ﬁrst week of October. Thursday,
Oct. 5, the sale will be open 9 a.m.-6 p.m., and
Friday, Oct. 6 the sale will be open from 9 a.m.-4
p.m. The items will not be pre-priced. Donations
will be accepted for items. Proceeds go to beneﬁt
library programs and outreach, including preschool and senior center visits.

Bake sale and yard sale
RACINE — The Sonshine Circle will host a
bake sale and yard sale on Oct. 5 and 6 at the
Bethany United Methodist Church, Tornado
Road in Dorcas (Racine). It will run from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. on the 5th and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the
6th.

Immunization clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health
Department will conduct an Immunization
Clinic on Tuesday from 9-11 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
$15.00 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. Zostavax (shingles); pneumonia vaccines are also
available. 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.

Drive through flu shot clinic
ROCKSPRINGS — The Meigs County Health
Department will host a drive through ﬂu shot
clinic on Saturday, Oct. 7 at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds. The clinic will be held from 9 a.m.
to noon. Those attending should bring Medicare, Medicaid or commercial insurance cards.
Self pay costs are $37 for ages 6 months to 64
years and $61 for age 65 and up. Cash, check,
and credit cards will be accepted. Those attending are asked to wear short sleeve shirts if possible for convenience.

Village

munity Association will
hold their Christmas
Market on Dec. 2 in the
RAC building.
From page 1
For more informaCanvas event, hosted by tion on the Riverbend
Arts Council and
Michelle Musser, will
be held on October 23. the events it holds
throughout the year,
November will see a
demonstration of tradi- check out their Facebook page, at https://
tional Christmas cookies by Rick Warner and www.facebook.com/
Riverbend-Arts-CounJessica Wolf, the 18th,
cil-161901707298911/.
and the annual Talent
Revue, directed by B.J.
Jessica Marcum is a freelance
Kreseen, on the 24th.
writer for Ohio Valley Publishing.
The Middleport Com-

Alumni

sented his award by
Meigs Local Supt. Scot
Gheen. Tannehill was
the top-rated player
From page 1
on the U.S. National
Table Tennis Team in
award from Anita
1971 and part of the
Hajivandi as Michael
team which was invited
Bartrum was preparto China as part of a
ing for Friday’s game
trip called “Ping Pong
as head coach of the
Diplomacy.” He was
Marauders.
inducted into the U.S.
“He (Bartrum) feels
Table Tennis Hall of
extremely blessed that
Fame in 2006 and conhis wonderful parents,
tinues to play and coach
Joyce and Weldon
Bartrum, who have sup- the game in Columbus.
Sheets was accompaported him throughout
it all, are able to accept nied by her husband,
Jim, as she received
this award for him
tonight, as he is focused her award from MLAA
on leading this current Co-President Dru Reed.
Sheets was recognized
team to another win.
in part for being the
He thanks the Meigs
co-author of the Meigs
Local Alumni Association for this honor and High School Alma
Mater along with her
challenges others to
late brother Jim Lohse.
please pay it forward,”
In addition to the
read announcer Gary
ceremony on Friday
Walker.
evening, a full schedule
Reed was accomof activities, including
panied by his wife,
a parade, live music
Kathy, as he received
and silent auction, were
his award from MHS
Principal Travis Abbott. held in Pomeroy on
Reed has spent the past Saturday as part of the
33 years working in the annual Reunion on the
Community Action net- River.
work, currently serving
as the Executive Direc- Editor’s Note: Complete
biographies of the recipients
tor of the Gallia-Meigs
appeared in the Wednesday
Community Action
edition of The Daily Sentinel
and can be found online at
Agency.
mydailysentinel.com.
Tannehill was pre-

Tuesday, October 3, 2017 3

Sonshine Circle donates school supplies
The Bethany United
Methodist Church Sonshine Circle had their
September meeting on
Sept. 14 with 11 ladies
attending. The signing
of cards was completed.
Donations of school
supplies were brought
in and delivered to stu-

dents in grades 1-4 at
Southern Elementary
School.
Plans for the bake sale
and yard sale on Oct. 5
and 6 were discussed.
The sale will be held
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on
Oct. 5 and 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. on Oct. 6.

The next meeting is
Oct. 12 when the group
will be bringing t-shirts
to send to the veterans
at the Chillicothe VA
and plans will be made
to serve dinner to the
veterans at the Racine
American Legion Post.
The monthly donation

was made to the Meigs
County Council on
Aging.
Birthdays for the
month were Bernice
Theiss, Jan McKee
and Blondena Rainer,
who turned 9 and was
surprised with a basket
from her friends.

Gardener , will be
held at the Riverbend
Arts Council building,
Middleport. A short
program or question and
answer session will be
held at 11:30 a.m. with
the exchange of plants at
noon. Bring any annuals
you need to transplant
or house plants that
need a new home or just
come and ﬁnd some different plants for your
garden.

bers beginning at 6 p.m.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Board of
Health Meeting will take
place at 5 p.m. in the
conference room of the
Meigs County Health
Department, which is
located at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy,
Ohio.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Editor’s Note: The
Daily Sentinel appreciates your input to the
community calendar.
To make sure items can
receive proper attention,
all information should be
received by the newspaper at least ﬁve business
days prior to an event.
All coming events print
on a space-available
basis and in chronological order. Events can be
emailed to: TDSnews@
civitasmedia.com.

Tuesday,
Oct. 3
OLIVE TWP. — The
Olive Township Trustees
regular meeting will be
held at 6:30 p.m. at the
township garage on Joppa
Road.

County PERI, Chapter 74
will be held at 1 p.m. at
the Mulberry Community
Center, located at 156
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
District 7 Representative
Greg Ervin will update
members on state and
local PERI issues, including information from the
recent Regional Meeting
held in Jackson. Guest
speakers for the meeting
will be Meigs County
Sheriff Keith Wood and
University of Rio Grande
Community College
Board Chairman Paul
Reed discussing proposed
November tax levies. All
retired Meigs County
Public Employees are
urged to attend.

Saturday,
Oct. 7

SALEM CENTER —
Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior Grange #878
will meet with potluck
supper at 6:30 p.m. folMASON, W.Va. — The lowed by presentation
by Meigs County Sheriff
Syracuse Community
Keith Wood on the ballot
Center will be holding a
issue for the new Meigs
Fundraiser to continue
County Jail at 7:30 p.m.
projects and activities
The regular meeting
at Bob Evans in Mason,
will follow. The public is
W.Va. Dine between the
hours of 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. invited to attend.
MIDDLEPORT — A
and present a Community
fall plant exchange,
Fundraiser ﬂyer during
hosted by the Master
checkout. Flyers will be
in business locations in
Syracuse. For more information, contact President
John Bentley at 740-9922365 or Carol Adams
740-992-2311.

Wednesday,
Oct. 4

Monday,
Oct. 9

Saturday,
Oct. 14

BEDFORD TWP. —
The regular monthly
meeting of the Bedford
Township Trustees will
be held at 7 p.m. at the
Bedford Township Hall.
POMEROY — Meigs
County Health Dept. will
be closed for Columbus
Day. Normal business
hours will resume at 8
a.m. on Oct. 10.

POMEROY — The
2017 Bedford School
Reunion will be held with
a potluck lunch beginning
at 1 p.m. at the Ohio Valley Christian Assembly,
Old Bedford School,
39560 Rocksprings Road,
Pomeroy. This includes
Bedford School, Darwin
School, Hemlock Grove
School and Carlton
School. For more information email reunion.old.
bedford.school@gmail.
com.

Tuesday,
Oct. 10

Wednesday,
Oct. 18

SUTTON TWP. —
The regular monthly
meeting of the Sutton
Township Trustees will
be held in the Racine Village Hall Council Cham-

POMEROY — An
American Red Cross
Blood Drive will be held
from 1:30-6 p.m. at the
Mulberry Community
Center.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Center for Women’s Health

Thursday,
Oct. 5
ORANGE TWP. —
The next regular meeting
of the Orange Township
Trustees will be held at
7 p.m. at the township
building.
SYRACUSE — A
bingo event to beneﬁt
the Meigs County Toys
for Tots giveaway will
be held at the Syracuse
Community Center.
Doors open at 5 p.m.
with games beginning at
6 p.m. Early bird tickets
may be purchased at
Farmers Bank in Tuppers
Plains and Pomeroy and
Home National Bank in
Syracuse. Food will be
available to purchase
from the Syracuse Community Center. Proceeds
from the event beneﬁt the
toy giveaway in December at the Tuppers Plains
Fire Department.
CHESTER — The
Chester Shade Historical Associations board
meeting will be held at
6:30 p.m. the Academy
Dining Room. It open to
the public and everyone
is welcome.
CHILLICOTHE — The
Southern Ohio Council of
Governments (SOCOG)
will hold its board meeting at 10 a.m. at 27 West
Second Street, Suite 202,
Chillicothe, Ohio, 45601.
Board meetings usually
are held the ﬁrst Thursday of the month. For
more information, call
740-775-5030, ext. 103.

Pleasant Valley Hospital’s Center for
Women’s Health is pleased to provide

$100

Mammograms

the entire month of October!

Special price includes
screening, reading,
and a free breast
cancer awareness
baseball tee!

To schedule your mammogram, please call

304.675.6257

Friday,
Oct. 6
POMEROY — The
regular meeting of Meigs

OH-80002484

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

The creative
burst of
boredom

Boredom births the most amazing creative
ideas. Kids know this. Adults know this. Yet,
we’ve all sought entertainment outside of ourselves to fulﬁll our inner need to
form something out of nothing — to
paint a cool picture or write an edgy
new novel — to form a collectible
from junk or a unique business from
scratch. These outside distractions
seldom satiate the inner desire to
create, but boredom can satisfy this
Michele Z. inner need and free our highest
Marcum
potential — when we know how to
Contributing reign it in.
columnist
Children who are accustomed
to constant stimulation from toys
and electronic devices will often become “bored”
with them. I can remember sauntering through
the kitchen as a nine-year-old and complaining to
mom that I was “bored.” Her response was something like, “You can always go play in the street.”
I guess she ﬁgured that way I could occupy myself
by dodging the few oncoming cars that would
trickle up our back street.
Adults too dishonor this innate funnel for creativity by either zoning out in front of a television
screen or immersing themselves in one activity
after another, numbing the feeling of listlessness
that boredom brings.
Boredom isn’t an external force that presses
us into a corner and
forces us to endure life
“Boredom exists
rather than ﬁnd the joy
only in the mind, so
in living. It isn’t a lack
of activities to attend or capturing it and the
a shortage of chores to
power it holds is as
do. Boredom is a state
simple as thinking
of mind. It’s a deﬁcit
differently when
of desire to participate
we feel the ennui
in life. It’s an apathy in
set in. Recognizing
engaging our imagination and joining forces
boredom as an
with the world around
opportunity
us that would bring
to expand our
to life that which we
sensational minds
ﬁnd stimulating to our
hearts.
is as simple as
Boredom exists only
pretending you
in the mind, so capturhave nothing to do.”
ing it and the power it
holds is as simple as
thinking differently when we feel the ennui set in.
Recognizing boredom as an opportunity to expand
our sensational minds is as simple as pretending
you have nothing to do. That’s right. Absolutely
no grocery lists, no emails to return, no appointments to rush to, just breathing — and that happens, thank God, as spontaneously as the wind
changes course.
In the recesses inside our soul we crave space
where our dreams can come alive — where we
have no name or title or presentation of appearance to maintain. We crave creativity like a bear
craves honey upon emerging from the cave at the
ﬁrst light of spring.
When we recognize boredom, and allow it to
function the way it was designed, we forget the
image of the person we have told ourselves we are
and we allow ourselves to just be — to feel the
aliveness behind the blood and the bones — and
through this expansiveness bursts creativity.
In order for boredom to enhance your life, let
yourself experience it for a few moments and ask
yourself what you wish to create that would bring
you or someone else a smile. Then notice the
desire to create stirring inside. Megan Murphy
did this and brought smiles to strangers one rock
at a time. She began writing messages on rocks
and placing them in public areas around her hometown for others to ﬁnd. Soon, the encouraging
movement, Kindness Rocks, spread world-wide.
See, creativity supersedes the logical and makes
room for the impossible.
So, don’t go play in trafﬁc, but do go play —
whatever that means to you. Go build or draw or
dance in your own playground. Then go skipping
through the yard, singing, “I’m bored,” with a
smile on your face that matches the one on your
heart. (Caution: Your neighbors may give you
strange looks after this. Good news is you won’t
care).
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native of Meigs County, author of “Rain No
Evil” and host of Life Speaks on AIR radio. Access more at soundcloud.
comlifespeaks.

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“I hate a song that makes you think that you are
not any good. I hate a song that makes you think
that you are just born to lose… Songs that run
you down or poke fun at you on account of your
bad luck or hard traveling. I am out to ﬁght those
songs to my very last breath of air and my last
drop of blood.”
— Woody Guthrie (1912-1967)

THEIR VIEW

A parent’s familiar dread

You scan the faces
of the other parents at
drop-off.
You
Heidi
check for
Stevens
knowledge.
Chicago
For fear.
Tribune
For grief.
Every
one of your
parental instincts tells
you not to kiss your
children goodbye and
send them into a school
building. It’s as if you’re
tearing off both of your
arms and pretending to
proceed as normal.
Nothing is normal. It’s
familiar. It’s not normal.
Your morning was
typical, and then you
checked your phone.
Your heart broke. Again.
People have been
shot. Dozens upon
dozens of people. Just
hours earlier, they were
outside listening to
music. Now more than
50 of them are dead.

Hundreds of lives are
forever changed. Their
wounds, at least the psychological wounds, will
never fully heal.
You want better. You
want change. You want
it to stop. You wanted
it to stop after Virginia
Tech. After Sandy Hook
Elementary. After Fort
Hood. After Emanuel
African Methodist Episcopal in Charleston, S.C.
After Pulse.
You want your children to live in a world
where it’s harder to
slaughter people. You
want them to live in a
country that tries harder
to stop the slaughter.
You want to believe
one of these mass shootings will be the one.
The one that makes us
decide assault riﬂes
don’t make us safer.
(How can a good guy
with a gun stop a bad
guy shooting from

32 stories above the
ground?)
You have a doctor’s
appointment for your
son in the afternoon. It’s
a routine checkup. She’ll
ask if you have any concerns.
She can’t solve your
concerns. You’re concerned he’ll be murdered. You’re concerned
a gunman will open ﬁre
on his playground, his
classroom, his college
campus, a concert he’s
attending with his girlfriend when he’s 23.
He’s 8. You’ve had
this concern every day
of his life. His sister is
11. His stepbrother is
16. Your concerns are in
triplicate. They’ll never
go away.
You know mothers live with this fear
daily. Mothers in your
own city — far, far too
many mothers — have
watched this fear show

up, fully realized, at
their doorsteps and rob
their children of life.
Mass shootings capture
our attention, but every
gun death is an outrage.
You can’t give in to
the fear. You have to
pretend, in fact, that
it’s not there. You have
to send your kids to
playgrounds and classrooms and colleges and
concerts.
So you scan the faces
of the other parents at
drop-off.
You check for guidance. For courage. For
faith that we’re doing
the right thing, saying
goodbye to our children
on this terrible morning.
You’re not sure. Until
something changes —
really changes — you’ll
never be sure.

In 1995, the jury in
the O.J. Simpson murder trial in Los Angeles
found the former football
star not guilty of the
1994 slayings of his former wife, Nicole Brown
Simpson, and Ronald
Goldman (however,
Simpson was later found
liable for damages in a
civil trial).
In 2008, O.J. Simpson
was found guilty of robbing two sports-memorabilia dealers at gunpoint
in a Las Vegas hotel
room. (Simpson was
later sentenced to nine
to 33 years in prison; he
was granted parole in
July 2017.)
Ten years ago: North
Korea agreed to provide
a complete list of its
nuclear programs and
disable its facilities at its
main reactor complex by
Dec. 31, 2007 (however,
North Korea later said it
would move to restore its
nuclear reactor, saying
the United States had
failed to follow through
with promised incentives). President George
W. Bush quietly vetoed
expansion of a children’s
health insurance program.
Five years ago: An
aggressive Mitt Romney

sparred with President
Barack Obama on the
economy and domestic
issues in their ﬁrst campaign debate. Secretary
of State Hillary Rodham
Clinton promised a full
and transparent probe
of the attack on the U.S.
consulate in Benghazi,
Libya, that killed the U.S.
ambassador to Libya and
three other Americans.
One year ago: The
United States suspended
diplomatic contacts with
Russia over failed efforts
to end the war in Syria
while President Vladimir Putin put on hold
a deal with the U.S. on
disposing weapons-grade
plutonium. Yoshinori
Ohsumi of Japan won the
Nobel Prize in medicine
for illuminating how cells
dispose of and recycle
their garbage — research
that might pay off in
treatments for diseases
like cancer, Parkinson’s
and Type 2 diabetes.
President Barack Obama
and actor Leonardo
DiCaprio teamed up on
the White House South
Lawn for the “South by
South Lawn” festival of
technology and music to
sound a call for urgent
action to combat climate
change.

Heidi Stevens is a Chicago
Tribune columnist. Readers may
send her email at hstevens@
chicagotribune.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Oct.
3, the 276th day of 2017.
There are 89 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Oct. 3, 1967, folk
singer-songwriter Woody
Guthrie, the Dust Bowl
Troubadour best known
for “This Land Is Your
Land,” died in New York
of complications from
Huntington’s disease; he
was 55.
On this date:
In 1789, President
George Washington
declared Nov. 26, 1789,
a day of Thanksgiving to
express gratitude for the
creation of the United
States of America.
In 1863, President
Abraham Lincoln
proclaimed the last
Thursday in November
Thanksgiving Day.
In 1922, Rebecca L.
Felton, D-Ga., became
the ﬁrst woman to be
appointed to the U.S.
Senate (however, she
served only a day).
In 1932, Iraq became
independent of British
administration.
In 1941, Adolf Hitler
declared in a speech
in Berlin that Russia

had been “broken” and
would “never rise again.”
”The Maltese Falcon”
— the version starring
Humphrey Bogart and
directed by John Huston
— premiered in New
York.
In 1951, the New
York Giants captured
the National League
pennant by a score of
5-4 as Bobby Thomson
hit a three-run homer
off Ralph Branca of the
Brooklyn Dodgers in the
“shot heard ‘round the
world.”
In 1962, astronaut
Wally Schirra became
the ﬁfth American to ﬂy
in space as he blasted
off from Cape Canaveral
aboard the Sigma 7 on a
9-hour ﬂight.
In 1974, Frank Robinson was named major
league baseball’s ﬁrst
black manager as he was
placed in charge of the
Cleveland Indians.
In 1981, Irish nationalists at the Maze Prison
near Belfast, Northern
Ireland, ended seven
months of hunger strikes
that had claimed 10 lives.
In 1992, Barack
Obama married Michelle
Robinson at the Trinity
United Church of Christ
in Chicago.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 3, 2017 5

First MHS Homecoming Queens honored

2017 Eastern Homecoming

Dave Harris | Photo

In the fall of 1967 Meigs High School crowned three homecoming queens, one each from Rutland, Midldeport and Pomeroy. On
Friday evening those queens were honored during the 2017 Meigs Homecoming festivities. Pictured are (from left) 1967 Queen from
Rutland Joyce Clonch Hlad escorted by Warren Entsminger, 2017 Meigs Homecoming Queen Olivia Davis, 1967 Queen from Pomeroy
Bonnie Banks Lightfoot escorted by Butch Lightfoot. Middleport Queen Jackie Hawley has passed away.

Paul Boggs | Sentinel

The 2017 Eastern High School Homecoming Queen candidates
(from left) Madison Williams, 2017 Homecoming Queen Morgan
Baer, and Sidney Cook.

Reunion on the River 2017

MHS Homecoming 2017

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

The 2017 Distinguished Alumni and Distinguished Service award recipients are pictured along with members of their families and
presenters. Award recipients were Jennifer Sheets, Tom Reed, Michael Bartrum and John Tannehill.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

2017 Meigs High School Homecoming Queen Olivia Davis (left) is
pictured with 2016 Meigs High School Homecoming Queen Jade
Dudding.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

50°

72°

67°

Mostly sunny and pleasantly warm today. A
moonlit sky tonight. High 81° / Low 50°

HEALTH TODAY
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.

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
0.00
0.17
36.13
33.20

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:26 a.m.
7:08 p.m.
6:16 p.m.
4:56 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Last

Oct 5

New

First

Oct 12 Oct 19 Oct 27

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

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

Major
10:18a
11:03a
11:50a
12:15a
1:10a
2:09a
3:11a

Minor
4:06a
4:51a
5:38a
6:29a
7:23a
8:23a
9:25a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
10:43p
11:28p
---12:41p
1:37p
2:36p
3:39p

Minor
4:31p
5:15p
6:03p
6:54p
7:50p
8:50p
9:53p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Oct. 3, 1979, Connecticut’s ﬁrst
recorded October tornado struck
north of Hartford. The twister killed
three, injured 500 and caused over
$200 million in damage around
Bradley International Airport.

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

THURSDAY

Low

Moderate

High

High

Lucasville
81/49
Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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

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

Level
12.58
16.25
21.65
13.04
13.31
24.97
12.96
25.65
34.56
13.24
14.60
33.80
13.40

Portsmouth
81/50

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.18
+0.31
+0.12
+0.14
+0.13
+0.01
-0.15
-0.08
none
-0.08
-0.20
-0.30
+0.10

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

Logan
80/48

SATURDAY

77°
60°
Mostly cloudy with a
few showers

86°
54°

Some sun with a
shower possible

Partly sunny and
remaining warm

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
79/49
Belpre
79/49

Athens
78/48

St. Marys
79/49

Parkersburg
80/50

Coolville
80/49

Elizabeth
80/49

Spencer
79/51

Buffalo
80/50
Milton
80/50
Huntington
81/51

St. Albans
81/52

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
67/46
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
73/56
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
75/59
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

82°
60°

Mostly cloudy and
warm

Murray City
78/49

Ironton
81/51

Ashland
81/51
Grayson
81/50

SUNDAY

81°
63°

Wilkesville
79/48
POMEROY
Jackson
80/49
80/49
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
80/50
81/49
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
81/57
GALLIPOLIS
81/50
81/50
80/50

South Shore Greenup
81/51
81/49

37

Partly sunny and
remaining warm

McArthur
79/49

Very High

Primary: ragweed, other
Mold: 641
Moderate

Chillicothe
80/51

FRIDAY

80°
61°

Adelphi
80/49

Waverly
80/48

Pollen: 3

Low

MOON PHASES

Warm with plenty of
sunshine

0

Primary: cladosporium
Wed.
7:27 a.m.
7:06 p.m.
6:51 p.m.
6:00 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

81°
56°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

73°
43°
73°
50°
92° in 1953
31° in 1946

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Meigs Band Director Toney Dingess looks on as the alumni
band and current band members play on Court Street following Elena Musser sings the Meigs High School Alma Mater before
the Reunion on the River Alumni Parade.
Friday evening’s Homecoming game.

Clendenin
81/52
Charleston
82/51

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

Winnipeg
55/41
Billings
44/27

Denver
59/40

Montreal
72/55
Toronto
76/60

Minneapolis
70/48
Chicago
84/68
Kansas City
78/63

Detroit
80/66

New York
72/58
Washington
76/56

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
80/58/s
54/46/r
79/60/s
71/56/s
75/51/s
44/27/sn
62/39/s
66/53/s
82/51/s
78/53/s
51/33/s
84/68/c
82/57/s
84/62/s
82/56/s
86/73/t
59/40/s
76/56/t
80/66/pc
87/77/pc
86/74/t
83/64/pc
78/63/t
82/61/s
81/66/pc
75/59/pc
84/61/s
87/79/t
70/48/r
84/58/s
85/75/c
72/58/s
80/68/c
85/72/pc
75/53/s
95/68/s
78/50/s
65/49/s
77/52/s
77/52/s
84/67/c
62/44/s
73/56/s
67/46/s
76/56/s

Hi/Lo/W
74/58/t
54/46/r
80/61/s
75/63/s
78/56/s
51/34/s
60/42/pc
75/62/pc
81/55/s
80/55/s
54/39/pc
73/56/r
82/60/pc
84/62/t
83/63/s
86/71/c
66/48/pc
69/55/pc
79/56/t
87/77/pc
88/70/pc
82/64/t
71/61/t
84/61/s
84/64/pc
76/57/pc
84/63/s
85/77/t
63/48/pc
84/58/s
86/72/s
77/62/s
77/65/t
85/73/pc
78/61/s
98/74/s
79/60/s
77/59/s
80/55/pc
79/57/s
81/65/c
66/44/sh
77/54/s
68/47/s
79/59/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
79/60

High
Low

El Paso
90/68

Chihuahua
84/62
Monterrey
85/70

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

92° in McAllen, TX
14° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global
Houston
86/74

Miami
87/79

High
110° in Akjoujt, Mauritania
Low -15° in Summit Station, Greenland
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

OH-70003248

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
promise to make you feel right at home.

w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
97 North 2nd Ave
Middleport, OH

�Sports
6 s Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Tomcats rally past Wahama, 32-20
By Bryan Walters

secutive touchdowns to close
to within 14-13 with 2:20 left
until halftime.
WHS, however, received a
MASON, W.Va. — The White
70-yard kickoff return from
Falcons played well enough to
Brady Bumgarner that put the
win, but the Tomcats did just
ball at the Tomcat eight, then
enough to prevent that from
the hosts needed only two
happening.
plays to extend their lead as
Visiting Trimble scored 19
Colton Arrington hauled in an
unanswered points in the second half and never led until late eight-yard pass from Bryton
Grate with 1:25 remaining —
in the fourth quarter Friday
giving the White Falcons a
night while escaping with a
32-20 victory over the Wahama 20-13 cushion headed into the
break.
football team in a Week 6 TriWahama was outgained by a
Valley Conference Hocking
172-127 margin in total yards
Division contest at Bachtel
in the ﬁrst half, and the guests
Stadium.
The host White Falcons (1-5, also held a 10-6 edge in ﬁrst
1-4 TVC Hocking) jumped out downs.
On the other hand, the White
to an early 14-0 ﬁrst quarter
Falcons scored touchdowns on
advantage, but the Tomcats
(4-2, 4-1) rallied back with con- half of their six ﬁrst half pos-

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Wahama junior Zach Marr wraps up Trimble running back Conner Wright for a
tackle during the second quarter of Friday night’s Week 6 TVC Hocking football
contest in Mason, W.Va.

sessions. THS, conversely, lost
possession on downs during
three of its ﬁve possessions in
the opening 24 minutes of play.
Another large reason for
Wahama’s early success —
outside of a tenacious defense
— was the ground attack spearheaded by Christian Thomas.
The senior amassed 81 yards
on 13 carries before the break,
which included touchdown
runs of seven and 35 yards in
the ﬁrst quarter while building
a 14-0 advantage.
In the second, however,
Trimble tightened its grip on
Thomas — limiting him to just
16 yards on six carries. The
White Falcons also mustered
only 33 yards of offense in the
See TOMCATS | 8

Local runners
compete at
Piketon Invite
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@aimmediamidwest.com

PIKETON, Ohio — On the ﬁnal day of September, the Eastern, Gallia Academy and River Valley
High School cross country clubs began their hunt
for October.
That’s because, on Saturday in the annual Piketon Invitational, the Lady Eagles placed sixth
while both Gallia Academy and River Valley were
closer to the middle of the pack of the 20-plus
teams.
In the girls high school race, Eastern — with its
top ﬁve scorers all crossing the ﬁnish from 11th
thru 51st-place —amounted a team score of 158
for sixth.
Just behind the Lady Eagles were the ninthplace Lady Raiders and 10th-place Blue Angels,
See PIKETON | 8

Bobcats hold off UMass, 58-50

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Oct. 3
Volleyball
Hannan at Tolsia, 6 p.m.
Athens at River Valley, 7
p.m.
Eastern at Wahama, 7
p.m.
Meigs at Wellston, 7 p.m.
South Gallia at Trimble,
7 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Point Pleasant at Belpre,
6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at South
Point, 7 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Williamstown at Point
Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Girls Golf
D-2 district at Ashville, 9
a.m.
Rio Sports
Men’s Golf at WVU Tech
INV, 8 a.m.
Volleyball at WVU Tech,
7 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 4
Cross Country

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Ohio senior Dorian Brown (28) delivers a stiff-arm to Kansas’ Hasan Defense (13) during the Bobcats’ 12-point victory on Sept. 16 in
Athens, Ohio.

GAHS, Meigs, SGHS at
Alexander, 4:30
Boys Golf
D-3 district at
Williamsport, 9 a.m.

By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Thursday, Oct. 5
Volleyball
Hannan at Van, 6 p.m.
Winfield at Point Pleasant,
6 p.m.
Eastern at South Gallia,
7 p.m.
Ironton at Gallia Academy,
7 p.m.
River Valley at Meigs, 7
p.m.
Southern at Miller, 7 p.m.
Waterford at Wahama, 7
p.m.
Boys Soccer
Gallia Academy at
Alexander, 7 p.m.
Rio Sports
Women’s Soccer at Ohio
Christian, 5 p.m.
Men’s Soccer at Ohio
Christian, 7 p.m.

AMHERST, Mass. —
The Minutemen must
be still be wondering
what else they could have
done.
The Massachusetts
football team found
the endzone six times,
made a pair of ﬁeld goals
and recorded a safety,
while outgaining nonconference guest Ohio by
a 550-to-473 clip in total
offense on Saturday at
Warren McGuirk Alumni
Stadium in Hampshire
County.
The Bobcats overcame
all of that, however,
defeating UMass 58-50
in for their third straight
win.
The Minutemen (0-6)

led 3-0 after a Logan
Laurent 24-yard ﬁeld goal
just 2:30 into play.
Ohio (4-1) — which
has the most wins of any
Mid-American Conference team currently —
answered on its ﬁrst drive
of the game, as a ﬁve-yard
touchdown run by Bobcats sophomore quarterback Nathan Rourke
capped off a seven-play,
76-yard drive. Louie
Zervos added his ﬁrst of
seven successful pointafter kicks, giving the
guests a 7-3 advantage.
The hosts answered
back with a 13-play,
75-yard drive, capped off
by a two-yard Ross Comis
touchdown run. Laurent
added his ﬁrst of four successful point-after kicks
and then made a 35-yard

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31 yards on 5 carries.

ﬁeld goal with 11:35
left in the ﬁrst half to
increase the UMass lead
to 13-7.
Ohio regained the
advantage at the 10:22
mark, as Rourke connected with Brendan Cope for
a 16-yard scoring pass.
After OU junior
Andrew Payne recovered
an UMass fumble, the
Bobcats increased their
lead to 21-13, when
Rourke scrambled for a
17-yard touchdown with
8:57 to go in the period.
The Bobcat defense
came up with another
takeaway on the Minutemen’s next drive, as Chad
Moore intercepted a pass
and returned it to within
seven yards of paydirt.
OU was forced to settle
for the ﬁeld goal, how-

Gardens

OF THE

ever, and Zervos gave the
Bobcats a 24-13 lead with
7:24 left in the ﬁrst half.
After an 81-yard kickoff
return by Marquis Young,
the hosts cut the deﬁcit
to just four points, as
Andrew Ford tossed a sixyard touchdown pass to
Adam Breneman.
Following a Bobcat
three-and-out, the Minutemen took a 27-24 lead,
as Ford found Brennon
Dingle for a 30-yard scoring pass. The guests tied
the game before the half,
however, as Zervos connected on a 23-yard ﬁeld
goal with 38 seconds left.
Ohio regained the
advantage on the ﬁrst
drive of the second half,
as A.J. Ouellette capped
See BOBCATS | 8

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7440
spaces available

WEEK

60734955

GO T
EA

M

Meigs Weston Baer
- #6 Sophomore

Southern Weston Thorla
#4 Junior

104 receiving yards
DQG�ɲ�WRXFKGRZQ�

Wide Receiver and
Defensive Back

60734952
60734952

�Daily Sentinel

SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Tuesday, October 3, 2017 7

Wildcats wallop Jenkins, 41-8
By Alex Hawley

After the Cavaliers
converted a fake punt
play for their ﬁrst ﬁrst
down of the night, HanASHTON, W.Va. —
nan stopped Jenkins on
The Wildcats must have
its second fourth down
found a way to carry
of the drive. On the ﬁrst
momentum through the
play of the ensuing HHS
bye week.
drive, Nibert busted
After a week off, the
through the JHS defense
Hannan football picked
for a 66-yard scoring run,
up its second straight
giving the hosts a 14-0
win on Friday night
Craigo Athletic Complex lead with 5:20 left in the
ﬁrst.
in Mason County, as the
Just 59 seconds after
host Wildcats scored 29
Nibert’s second scoring
points in the opening
quarter and never looked run, the Wildcat defense
got in on the scoring fun,
back on their way to a
41-8 victory over visiting as Chris Exline and Riley
Grifﬁth combined to tackJenkins.
le a JHS ball carrier in
After backing the
Cavaliers (0-7) up on the the endzone for a safety.
HHS junior Andrew
game’s opening drive, the
Wildcats (2-3) — winners Gillispie returned the free
of back-to-back games for kick to the JHS 28, and
Holland took over from
the ﬁrst time since 1997
— needed just two plays there, carrying the ball
into the endzone on the
to ﬁnd their way to the
very next play.
endzone.
The Wildcat defense
Set up by a 24-yard
forced its third three-andChristian Holland run,
HHS senior Logan Nibert out of the ﬁrst quarter
and took over on the JHS
broke a 15-yard run for
the touchdown. Chandler 41, following a Cavalier
punt. After earning a pair
Starkey made his ﬁrst of
of ﬁrst downs, Hannan
three consecutive pointquarterback Matthew
after touchdown kicks,
Qualls scored on a twogiving the hosts a 7-0
yard run with 1:42 left in
lead with 9:05 left in the
the opening quarter, makﬁrst quarter.

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ing the Wildcat lead 29-0.
The Hannan offense
cooled off a bit in the
second quarter, as the
Wildcats’ ﬁrst drive of the
period ended in a missed
ﬁeld goal, their second
resulted in a loss of
downs and the third was
ended by halftime.
The hosts’ defense
made up for their lack
of offense in the period,
as the Wildcats forced
a fumble and Nibert
returned it 10 yards for
the touchdown with 4:07
left in the ﬁrst half, giving HHS a 35-0 lead.
In the ﬁrst half, Hannan outgained its opponent 165-to-38 in total
offense, while earning a
8-to-3 advantage in ﬁrst
downs.
The Wildcats were
intercepted on their ﬁrst
drive of the second half,
but the HHS defense
came up with its second
interception of the day on
the ensuing JHS drive.
Facing a fourth-and-20,
Holland broke a 26-yard
touchdown run with 1:11
left in the third quarter,
giving the hosts a 41-0
advantage.
The Wildcats ran just
two offensive plays in the

fourth quarter, fumbling
the ball away on the second one.
Jenkins put together
its best drive of the night
to ﬁnish the game, going
76 yards in 15 plays,
with quarterback Lance
Bentley scoring on a fouryard run with just three
seconds left in regulation.
Bentley also ran in the
two-point conversion for
JHS, putting the ﬁnal
touches on Hannan’s 41-8
victory.
“It feels great, I think it
gives us a lot of momentum going into the rest
of season,” Hannan head
coach Brian Scott afterwards. “Our guys just
keep improving week
after week, and at this
point we’re a whole different team than what we
began as. This next week,
we’re going to work on
additional outside containment and really just
perfecting our game at
this point.”
For the game, Hannan
outgained the Cavaliers 280-to-137 in total
offense, including 218-to64 on the ground. HHS
ﬁnished with a 11-to-8
advantage in ﬁrst downs,
with both teams commit-

ting two turnovers. The
Wildcats were penalized
12 times for 100 total
yards, while Jenkins was
ﬂagged nine times and
sent back 60 yards.
“The offensive line has
improved a bunch since
the beginning of the season,” said Scott. “That’s
really where we’ve seen
our success pick up. Our
line blocked hard in the
ﬁrst half, and our backs
found the holes, ran hard,
and played well.”
Nibert carried the ball
ﬁve times and caught one
pass for HHS, gaining
120 total yards with a
pair of touchdowns. Holland ran three times for
78 yards and two scores,
while Stephen Berry carried the ball twice for a
total of 39 yards. Jordan
Fitzwater added 18 yards
on two carries, while
Dylan Starkey added one
ﬁve-yard run.
Dominic Burris hauled
in one 26-yard pass for
HHS, Alex Lemieux
caught a 17-yard pass,
while Chris Exline and
Chris Wiley had receptions of nine and three
yards respectively.
Qualls — who had two
carries for three yards

and one score — was
5-of-13 passing for 62
yards.
Lance Bentley was
7-of-25 passing for 38
yards, while leading
Jenkins on the ground
with 47 yards and one
score on 16 totes. Jordan
Bates completed 1-of-2
passes for 35 yards, while
combining eight carries
with ﬁve receptions for a
total of 59 yards. Shawn
Laughary caught two
passes for 30 yards, while
Andrew Watts carried the
ball eigth times for 11
yards.
For the Hannan
defense, Berry, Grifﬁth
and James Edmonds
came up with a sack
apiece.
Hannan’s last two-game
winning streak came with
27-8 victory over Clarksburg Notre Dame on Oct.
17, 1997, followed by
26-0 win over South Gallia on Oct. 24, 1997.
The Wildcats will look
for their third straight
win on Friday at Beallsville. Hannan claimed a
55-0 victory over the Blue
Devils in Ashton last fall.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Don’t be left hanging; focus on tree stand safety
check the muzzle for
obstructions once you
get it up into the tree.
Carry your cell phone or
a two-way radio on your
person, not in a separate
pack. As always, plan
your hunt, and hunt your
plan; make sure that
someone knows exactly
where you are and when
you plan on returning.
Finally, consider using a
ground blind.

If you do go aloft,
and you ﬁnd yourself
falling from your tree
stand, remember the
3Rs – Recover, Relief
and Rescue. Attempt to
recover by returning to
your stand. If you cannot
recover, provide relief
to your legs by exercising them or using a
suspension relief device
until help arrives (even
with a full-body harness

you can only hang so
long before permanent
damage occurs to your
body). Then call for help
immediately – rescue.
Notice that none of this
applies if you aren’t
wearing a full-body harness; so wear that harness.
Time is precious and
we are often rushed and
in a hurry to get out
into the woods; don’t let

haste make you a statistic – take your time and
don’t take shortcuts.
Tell yourself this every
single time you go hunting: “There is no deer
worth dying for.”
Jim Freeman is the wildlife
specialist for the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District and a
long-time Ohio Hunter Education
Instructor. He can be contacted
weekdays at the Meigs SWCD at
740-992-4282 or at jim.freeman@
oh.nacdnet.net

CLASSIFIEDS
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LEGALS

SERVICES

Name Change

Other Services

PROBATE COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
L. SCOTT POWELL, JUDGE
IN RE: CHANGE OF NAME
OF MARY JOY BABLE
TO JOY MARIE ST. CLAIR
CASE NO: 20176014
APPLICANT HEREBY GIVES
NOTICE THAT SHE HAS
FILED AN APPLICATION FOR
CHANGE OF NAME IN THE
PROBATE COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO, REQUESTING THE CHANGE OF NAME
FROM MARY JOY BABLE TO
JOY MARIE ST. CLAIR. A
HEARING ON THIS APPLICATION WILL BE HELD ON NOVEMBER 1, 2017 AT 9:00
A.M.
IN
THE
MEIGS
COUNTY PROBATE COURT,
LOCATED AT 100 EAST SECOND STREET POMEROY,
OHIO 45769.
10-3-17

· ORDINANCE NO. O2017-34:
AN EMERGENCY ORDINANCE AMENDING ORDINANCE
NO. O2017-06, AS AMENDED BY ORDINANCE NO.
O2017-13, AS AMENDED BY ORDINANCE NO. O2017-22, AS
AMENDED BY ORDINANCE NO. O2017-30, SETTING
APPROPRIATIONS FOR CURRENT EXPENSES OF THE
CITY OF GALLIPOLIS, OHIO, DURING THE FISCAL YEAR
ENDING DECEMBER 31, 2017. Decreases appropriations in
General Fund by net $1,000 ($500 for Sponsorship of Fire Dept
fundraiser, $2,000 share in joint tax lawsuit, and $3,500 less in
transfers). Decreases overall appropriations by $298.53
(General Fund (-$1,000, City Park Tree Fund (+$535), CCA
Grant (-$7,133.53), Alcohol Treatment (+$3,000) Pool (+$300),
and Unclaimed Funds (+4,000). (Adopted as an emergency.)

Freon R12 WANTED:
Certified buyer will pick up,
pay CASH for cylinders
and cases of cans.
312-291-9169

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

Apartments/Townhouses
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· ORDINANCE NO. O2017-35:
AN EMERGENCY ORDINANCE AMENDING ORDINANCE
NO. O2017-07, AS AMENDED BY ORDINANCE NO.
O2017-14, AS AMENDED BY ORDINANCE NO. O2017-23, AS
AMENDED BY ORDINANCE NO. O2017-29, AUTHORIZING
THE CITY AUDITOR TO TRANSFER OR ADVANCE FUNDS.
Authorizes transfers from O2017-34. (Adopted as an
emergency.)
10/3/17

SERVICES
REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT
Other Services
Sales
Mason Co. Fair Storage
Rental, $8.00 per foot.
Accepting every Wed. &amp; Sat.
in Oct. 9-4.
Appt. only after Oct.
304-675-5463

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REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT

AUCTION

Rentals
Small Mobile Home on Rt 62
South Point Pleasant. All
appliances, water, trash paid.
Ref. deposit 304-675-7961
GARAGE/YARD SALES

Garage/Yard Sale
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Thursday, Oct. 5th @ 5:30pm

LOCATED AT THE AUCTION CENTER
786 ADAMSVILLE ROAD, MASON, WV
GLASSWARE Large Avon Stein Collection, Mrs. Albee Dolls, Mrs. Albee Award Dolls, Punch Bowl Set, Nice Lamp
Sets - Like New, Albee Commerative Plates, Antique Child’s Chalkboard, Marx Toys Train Engine With Track And Trans,
Record Collection, Porcelain Washtub And Much More!
ANTIQUES Huffy and Road Monster Bicycles
FURNITURE Beautiful, Local-Made Quilts, Oak 2-piece Bedroom Suite, Maple 4-piece Bedroom Suite, Drop Leaf Table
And 2 Chairs, Oak Carved Glass China Cabinet, Mahogany China Cabinet, Oak Lamp Table, Oak Rocking Chair, Oak Tea
Cart, 2-Piece Maple Secretary Desk With Windsor-Style Chair, Blonde Bedroom Suite, Drop Leaf Sewing Stand, 3-piece
Mahogany Bedroom Suite And Much More!
APPLIANCES Kenmore Heavy-duty Washer, Frigidaire Dryer, Working Wringer Washer, Metal Washtub With Stand
For further listing and pictures go to Auction Zip .com
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:
OH-70003064

like – a ladder that
If you hang out
leans up against
with many deer
the tree with a
hunters for any
seating platform
length of time,
at the top. The
you will eventuhang-on stand is
ally hear the tree
attached to the
stand horror
In the
tree and accessed
stories, most of
via a ladder or
Open
which, sadly, are
Jim
steps attached to
entirely true. You
Freeman
the tree, while the
will also probably
climber normally
know at least one
consists of two
hunter who has
sections (the seat and
had a tree stand-related
foot platform) and is
accident.
A tree stand is simply “ratcheted” up into the
tree by the hunter.
deﬁned as an elevated
About 10 years ago
platform used for huntI gave up on climbers
ing deer, and prior to
and hang-on stands,
the early 1980s most of
mainly because I no
those were just crude
longer cared to get that
platforms and boards
high off of the ground,
nailed into a suitable
and big deer just ceased
tree – these so-called
being that important
“permanent” stands
to me. The closest call
were dangerous, and
that I ever had with
killed and injured trees
a tree stand was with
just as effectively as
an old style climbing
they killed and injured
hunters. Over the years, stand when the bottom
portion dropped away
tree stands have gotten
from the top portion
lighter and safer, while
leaving me with a little
fall-restraint systems,
aka full-body harnesses, dilemma. However, I
have become more com- was able to recover the
bottom portion of the
mon and effective at
stand, secure it with a
protecting hunters.
stronger knot, and conIn Ohio, there is no
tinue the hunt.
requirement to report
Anymore when I do
tree stand-related accigo into a tree, which is
dents, so it is hard to
rarely, it is with a laddetermine exactly how
der stand – and not a
common they are, but
tall one – and I always
it is likely much higher
than people realize – and use a full body harness.
You owe it to the
it seems that the number
people who care for
of tree stand accidents
you to be safe; know
has increased even
your equipment, your
while the numbers of
hunters have decreased. tree stand and your
However, it is generally full-body harness, and
follow all of the instrucaccepted that one-inthree hunters will fall at tions and warnings.
some point during their Check everything out
closely before using
hunting years.
– looking for signs
According to some
of wear, and loose or
studies, half of falls
missing parts. Practice
occurred while on the
using your stand at
stand, or entering and
exiting the stand, while ground level, and then
ﬁnally select your tree
the other half occurred
carefully; use a live tree
while climbing or
without dead branches,
descending the tree,
and beware our dead
and while one-in-three
and dying ash trees!
hunters will fall, about
Always use a haul line
one-in-100 frequent tree
stand users will be killed to raise and lower your
hunting equipment.
or permanently injured
Make sure ﬁrearms
– that’s too high, especially for something that are unloaded before
attaching them to the
is easily prevented.
haul line; attach the
There are three
line to the sling so that
common types of tree
stands: climbing stands, the muzzle of the gun
hang-on stands, and lad- points towards the
ground and not at you
der stands. The ladder
or someone else, then
is about what it sounds

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66
RICKY PEARSON, JR #1955
304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118

Terms of sale cash or check w/ valid ID

Food will be available

�SPORTS

8 Tuesday, October 3, 2017

MLB
x-Boston
y-New York
Tampa Bay
Toronto
Baltimore

W
93
91
80
76
75

L
69
71
82
86
87

x-Cleveland
y-Minnesota
Kansas City
Chicago
Detroit

W
102
85
80
67
64

L
60
77
82
95
98

x-Houston
Los Angeles
Seattle
Texas
Oakland

W
101
80
78
78
75

L
61
82
84
84
87

x-Washington
Miami
Atlanta
New York
Philadelphia

W
97
77
72
70
66

L
65
85
90
92
96

x-Chicago
Milwaukee
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati

W
92
86
83
75
68

L
70
76
79
87
94

x-Los Angeles
y-Arizona
y-Colorado
San Diego
San Francisco

W
104
93
87
71
64

L
58
69
75
91
98

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Pct GB WCGB
.574 —
—
.562 2
—
.494 13
5
.469 17
9
.463 18
10
Central Division
Pct GB WCGB
.630 —
—
.525 17
—
.494 22
5
.414 35
18
.395 38
21
West Division
Pct GB WCGB
.623 —
—
.494 21
5
.481 23
7
.481 23
7
.463 26
10
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Pct GB WCGB
.599 —
—
.475 20
10
.444 25
15
.432 27
17
.407 31
21
Central Division
Pct GB WCGB
.568 —
—
.531
6
1
.512
9
4
.463 17
12
.420 24
19
West Division
Pct GB WCGB
.642 —
—
.574 11
—
.537 17
—
.438 33
16
.395 40
23

L10
5-5
6-4
6-4
5-5
2-8

Str
L-1
L-1
W-4
W-1
L-5

Home
48-33
51-30
42-39
42-39
46-35

Away
45-36
40-41
38-43
34-47
29-52

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

Str
W-1
W-1
L-1
L-1
L-1

Home
49-32
41-40
43-38
39-42
34-47

Away
53-28
44-37
37-44
28-53
30-51

L10
8-2
4-6
4-6
2-8
6-4

Str
W-1
W-1
L-1
L-1
W-1

Home
48-33
43-38
40-41
41-40
46-35

Away
53-28
37-44
38-43
37-44
29-52

L10
5-5
5-5
3-7
5-5
5-5

Str Home
L-2 47-34
L-1 43-38
W-1 37-44
L-1 37-44
W-1 39-42

Away
50-31
34-47
35-46
33-48
27-54

L10
7-3
5-5
3-7
7-3
2-8

Str Home
L-1 48-33
W-1 44-37
L-1 44-37
W-2 44-37
W-1 39-42

Away
44-37
42-39
39-42
31-50
29-52

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

Str
W-2
W-1
L-2
L-1
W-1

Away
47-34
41-40
41-40
28-53
26-55

Home
57-24
52-29
46-35
43-38
38-43

NFL
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
Buffalo
3 1 0 .750 73 54
N.Y. Jets
2 2 0 .500 75 92
New England 2 2 0 .500 129 128
Miami
1 2 0 .333 25 57
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Jacksonville 2 2 0 .500 109 74
Houston
2 2 0 .500 110 88
Tennessee
2 2 0 .500 100 126
Indianapolis 1 3 0 .250 71 136
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Pittsburgh
3 1 0 .750 90 59
Baltimore
2 2 0 .500 60 80
Cincinnati
1 3 0 .250 64 67
Cleveland
0 4 0 .000 63 107
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Kansas City 3 0 0 1.000 93 57
Denver
3 1 0 .750 98 74
Oakland
2 2 0 .500 91 79
L.A. Chargers 0 4 0 .000 72 93

Bobcats
From page 6

off a six-play, 75-yard
drive with a ﬁve-yard
rushing score. Just over
six-minutes later, Ouellette ﬁnished a 10-play,
79-yard drive with a
12-yard scoring pass from
Rourke, giving the Bobcats a 41-27 lead.
The Minutemen beneﬁted from a Bobcat
mishap, as a fumble led to
the UMass defense earning a safety at the 3:20
mark of the third quarter.
The Ohio offense
regrouped and scored
again on its ﬁrst possession in the fourth
stanza. After a 60-yard
run by Ouellette to start
the drive, Dorian Brown
found paydirt from 15
yards out, giving the
Green and White a 48-29
lead.
The UMass offense
scored its ﬁrst offensive
points of the second half
with 10:41 left in the
fourth, as Young hauled
in a 19-yard scoring pass
from Ford. The two-point
conversion pass failed,
however, leaving the
hosts behind 48-35.
Ohio managed to take
4:31 off the clock with an
eight-play, 45-yard drive
that resulted in a 34-yard
ﬁeld goal by Zervos,
stretching the Bobcat
lead to 51-35 with 6:10
to play.
With 3:23 left in regulation, UMass was in the
endzone again, with Ford
ﬁnding Breneman for a
seven-yard touchdown
pass. This time, the twopoint conversion pass was
good, as Ford tossed a
pass to Andy Isabella.
It remained a one-score
game for just 1:41, however, as Brown broke a
42-yard touchdown run
on the third play of Ohio’s
ensuing drive, giving the
guests a 58-43 advantage
with 1:42 to play.
With 11 seconds left
Dingle caught a 16-yard
scoring pass from Ford,
but it was too little, too
late, as Ohio claimed the
58-50 win.
Despite the guests’
72-yard advantage overall,
the Bobcats held a 292to-147 edge in rushing
yards. UMass earned 30
ﬁrst downs in the game,
converting on just 5-of18 third down tries, but

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF
Philadelphia 3 1 0 .750 103
Washington 2 1 0 .667 71
Dallas
2 2 0 .500 94
N.Y. Giants
0 4 0 .000 60
South
W L T Pct PF
Atlanta
3 1 0 .750 104
Carolina
3 1 0 .750 78
Tampa Bay
2 1 0 .667 71
New Orleans 2 2 0 .500 93
North
W L T Pct PF
Detroit
3 1 0 .750 99
Green Bay
3 1 0 .750 102
Minnesota
2 2 0 .500 79
Chicago
1 3 0 .250 61
West
W L T Pct PF
L.A. Rams
3 1 0 .750 142
Seattle
2 2 0 .500 94
Arizona
2 2 0 .500 74
San Francisco 0 4 0 .000 66

PA
92
60
97
95
PA
89
70
64
78
PA
70
81
76
104
PA
105
77
91
94

6-of-8 attempts on fourth
down. Ohio had 25 ﬁrst
downs in the game and
converted on half of its 10
third downs.
The Bobcats were
penalized seven times for
a total of 69 yards, while
UMass was sent back
ﬁve times for a total of
35 yards. Ohio was plus-2
in the turnover category,
while the Minutemen
held an advantage of over
six minutes in time of
possession.
With 12 carries and
three receptions, Ouellette had 151 total yards
and two touchdowns
to lead the Green and
White. Rourke was 13-of24 passing for 181 yards
and two touchdowns,
while rushing for 113
yards and two more
scores.
Brown earned 72 yards
and two touchdowns
on seven carries, while
Cope hauled in a teambest seven passes for 126
yards and one score.
Julian Ross ran the
ball three times and
gained four yards for the
Bobcats, while Cameron
Odom, DL Knock and
Andrew Meyer each
caught one pass of 17,
seven and ﬁve yards
respectively.
Quentin Poling led the
Bobcat defense with 19
tackles, including nine
solo. Moore posted 12
tackles and an interception, while Payne had a
team-best 1.5 tackles for
a loss, with half of a sack
and a fumble recovery.
Austin Conrad, Kent
Berger and Tony Porter
each had half of a sack as
well for the OU defense.
Ford ﬁnished with 390
of the Minutemen’s 403
aerial yards on 32-of-54
passing with ﬁve touchdowns and one interception. Bilal Ally had 57
yards on 13 carries to
lead the UM ground
game, while Breneman
recorded a game-best 12
receptions for 131 yards
and two scores. Young
combined 14 carries and
three receptions for 90
total yards and one touchdown.
It’s MAC play the rest
of the way for Ohio,
beginning with the Bobcats annual homecoming
game. The Green and
White will welcome Central Michigan to Peden
Stadium on Saturday at
2 p.m.

Daily Sentinel

Buckeyes bury Rutgers, 56-0
By Jim Naveau

jnaveau@limanews.com

PISCATAWAY, N.J. – It was
J.T. Barrett’s night. And it deﬁnitely wasn’t Rutgers’ night.
Barrett completed 14 of 22
passes for 275 yards and three
touchdowns to lead Ohio State to
a 56-0 win over Rutgers on Saturday night.
He also rushed for 89 yards
on 10 carries before Dwayne
Haskins came in to play quarterback with 3:50 left in the third
quarter.
Rutgers (1-4, 0-2 Big Ten) was
supposed to be improved this
season, or at least that is what
Ohio State’s coaches claimed in
the days leading up to the game.
But the Scarlet Knights looked
a lot like the Rutgers teams
which lost to Ohio State 56-17,
49-7 and 58-0 the previous three
seasons.
If Ohio State (4-1, 2-0 Big Ten)
hadn’t gotten off to a slow start it

Tomcats
From page 6

second half.
The Tomcats came out
of the break and strung
together an 11-play,
70-yard drive that ended
with a Tyler Roback oneyard run. Max Hooper
added a successful pointafter boot to knot the
game up at 20 with 6:31
left in the third canto.
The score remained
that way headed into
the fourth as THS took
over possession at the
Wahama 46 with 11:05
remaining.
Eleven plays, 46 yards
and over six minutes
later, the Tomcats ﬁnally
claimed their ﬁrst lead
following a four-yard
TD run by Roback. The
PAT kick failed though,
allowing Trimble to
secure a 26-20 lead with
4:44 remaining.
Both teams traded
punts following a pair
of quick three-and-outs,
giving WHS possession
at its own seven with
1:55 left.
On the ﬁrst play
from scrimmage, Grate
dropped back for a pass
and was hit by a Trimble
defender — who jarred
the ball loose on the
play. Trimble’s Anthony
McLaughlin recovered
the fumble in the end
zone, all but eliminating
any hopes of a White
Falcon rally.
Again, Trimble missed
on the PAT as a twopoint pass play fell
incomplete — but the

Piketon
From page 6

which turned in team
scores of 303 and 304
respectively.
In between them were
seventh-place Waverly
(254) and eighth-place
Logan Elm (293), as
Teays Valley captured
the team championship
with a score of 78.
There were 23 girls
schools which posted
team scores and 25 for
the boys, as River Valley
secured seventh with a
220, while the Blue Devils tallied a 298.
Sandwiched in
between them were
Alexander (242), host
Piketon (264) and Minford (294), as Unioto
earned the team title
with a tally of 54.
On the girls side, Gallia Academy freshman
Sarah Watts was the top
Ohio Valley Publishing
area placer, completing
the 5K distance in 19
minutes and 48 seconds
for sixth-place overall.
For the Lady Eagles,

could have been even worse.
OSU had nearly as many penalties (ﬁve) as it had points in the
ﬁrst quarter (seven). But that 7-0
lead turned into a 35-0 lead by
halftime and it was the Buckeyes’
much-criticized passing game
that led the way in breaking
down Rutgers.
After gaining only 33 yards in
the air in the ﬁrst quarter, Barrett was 7 of 11 for 183 yards and
two touchdown in the second
quarter. He connected with Johnnie Dixon on touchdown throws
of 70 yards and 39 yards and had
a 46-yard non-scoring pass to
Binjimen Victor.
The senior quarterback also
became Ohio State’s career passing yardage leader in the ﬁrst
half to break Art Schlichter’s
36-year-old record. Barrett ﬁnished the game with 7,622 passing yards. Schlichter threw for
7,547 yards in his career.
Mike Weber returned to a fulltime job share at running back

with J.K. Dobbins and scored
three touchdowns in the ﬁrst
half. Dobbins had 53 yards on
6 carries and Weber gained 44
yards on 10 carries.
Five OSU receivers had catches
of 20 yards or more.
Ohio State’s ﬁrst-half touchdowns came on drives of 60
yards, 87 yards, 63 yards, 50
yards and 75 yards.
Weber scored the ﬁrst two on
runs of one yard and three yards.
They were followed by Dixon’s
two scores and Weber scored on
a two-yard run.
Barrett threw a 22-yard touchdown pass to Victor with 8:02
left in the third quarter to raise
the lead to 42-0.
Haskins found Demario McCall
with a 35-yard touchdown pass
with 13:56 left in the game for
a 49-0 lead. Demario McCall’s
48-yard run with eight minutes
to play made it 56-0, the 21st
time OSU has scored 50 points
or more in the Urban Meyer era.

guests led 32-20 with
1:50 remaining.
The Tomcats have
now won ﬁve straight
decisions against
Wahama, including three
straight victories at
Bachtel Stadium.
The fact that Wahama
was in winning position
late was a positive, but
it was also what made
the ﬁnal outcome so
hard for WHS coach
Dave Barr to stomach
following the game —
especially given the circumstances leading up
to this annual clash.
“We were hobbled
around quite a bit this
week and we have some
kids that have been sick,
so to put the kind of
effort together that they
did is really a credit to
those kids. It would have
been real easy for them
to lay down and let have
Trimble get the best
of them,” Barr said. “I
really feel like that is the
best effort that I’ve seen
anybody give against
Trimble in quite a while.
I’m disappointed with
the ﬁnal outcome, but I
couldn’t be prouder of
my guys and how they
played tonight in the
face of some adversity.”
Wahama took the
opening kickoff and
marched 60 yards in
12 plays, with Thomas
scoring from seven yards
out at the 7:10 mark for
a 7-0 cushion.
Trimble had four plays
and lost possession on
downs, then the hosts
answered with a twoplay, 62-yard drive that
ended with a Thomas

35-yard TD run at the
4:20 mark for a 14-point
advantage.
The Tomcats closed
to within 14-7 following
a four-yard by Conner
Wright at the 7:43 mark
of the second canto, capping a drive that covered
65 yards in just four
plays.
Trimble forced a
three-and-out on the
ensuing WHS drive,
then put together a
ﬁve-play, 37-yard drive
that ended with a lucky
break.
After converting a successful draw play down
to the Wahama 19 on
fourth down, THS quarterback Cameron Kittle
completed an 18-yard
pass to Bryce Richards
near the goal line. Richards was immediately
stopped and had the ball
stripped out, forcing a
fumble.
The ball, however,
was landed on by Noah
Rossiter in the end zone
— allowing the guests
to close to within 14-13
with 2:20 left in the ﬁrst
half.
The White Falcons
responded with the
Bumgarner kickoff
return, then increased
their lead back out to
seven points following the TD catch by
Arrington.
Trimble outgained
the hosts by a 304-160
margin in total yards,
including a 260-122
edge on the ground. The
Tomcats also claimed an
18-8 advantage in ﬁrst
downs and ﬁnished the
night plus-1 in turnover

differential.
Thomas led WHS in
rushing with 97 yards on
19 carries, followed by
Arrington with 35 yards
on seven tries. Thomas
also recovered a fumble
in the second half.
Grate completed 5-of12 passes for 38 yards,
throwing one pick and
one TD. Arrington led
the wideouts with three
catches for 25 yards.
Hooper led THS with
101 rushing yards on 16
carries. Kittle was 4-of11 passing for 44 yards,
with Hooper hauling in
half of those passes for
13 yards.
Barr noted afterwards
that a few more performances like tonight
could go a long way for
his squad the rest of the
year. He also wanted to
give credit where credit
was due.
“We executed a
lot of our game plan
really well, but you also
have to give Trimble
credit too. Their kids
also answered the bell
tonight,” Barr said.
“Honestly, it was just a
great ﬁght between two
good football teams.
“If we can get this
kind of effort in our last
four games, I feel we
can ﬁnish this season
on a pretty good note.
However, it’s one game
at a time … starting next
week with at Eastern.”
The White Falcons
return to action Friday
when they face the
Eagles in a Week 7 TVC
Hocking contest at East
Shade River Stadium at
7:30 p.m.

Jessica Cook led the way
with a 20-minute and
14-second clocking for
11th-place, while Ally
Durst (18th in 20:36),
Rhiannon Morris (33rd
in 21:24), Whitney
Durst (47th in 22:12)
and Kaitlyn Hawk (51st
in 22:27) had Eastern’s
other four counting
times.
The Lady Eagles’
other two counting
scores were those of
Lexa Hayes (85th in
23:56) and Haylie Blankenship (131st in 26:29).
Kenzie Baker paced
River Valley by crossing 19th in 20:38, while
Hannah Culpepper
placed 41st in 21:58.
The Lady Raiders’
other counting times
were those of Josie Jones
(71st in 23:26), Lexi
Stout (79th in 23:42),
Julia Nutter (133rd in
26:34), Natosha Rankin
(149th in 27:23) and
Connie Stewart (155th
in 27:50).
In addition to Watts,
the Blue Angels’ Brooke
Johnson also placed
among the top 30, ﬁnishing in 28th in 21:19.

Gallia Academy’s
other ﬁve counting
scores included Abby
Johnson (82nd in
23:49), Abby Cremeans
(111th in 25:20), Cassidy Starnes (128th in
26:23), Maddie Stewart
(136th in 26:44) and
Grace Montgomery
(137th in 26:45).
There were 227 runners in the girls high
school race, as senior
Anna Foster of Sheridan
was the individual race
winner in a fast 18 minutes and 58 seconds.
For the boys, River
Valley senior Nathaniel
Abbott earned a ninthplace performance in
16:41, as George Rickett
(38th in 17:41), Kyle
Coen (51st in 18:00),
Rory Twyman (67th in
18:25) and Austin Livingston (78th in 18:45)
landed the other top four
Raider times.
River Valley’s other
counting scores were
those of 83rd-place Cole
Franklin (18:52) and
115th-place Caleb McKnight (19:19).
Caleb Greenlee
(13th in 16:59) and

Kyle Greenlee (15th in
17:05), Gallia Academy’s
senior twin brother
tandem, paced the Blue
Devils — while their
other ﬁve counting
scores ranged from 101st
to 130th.
That ﬁvesome included Ezra Blain (101st in
19:08), Kobe Cochran
(109th in 19:16), Ethan
Rider (110th in 19:17),
Tristan Crisenbery
(126th in 19:37) and
Logan Blouir (130th in
19:42).
Eastern’s only runners
were Owen Arix in 24th
in 17:22 and Colton
Reynolds in 32nd in
17:36.
There were 307 runners in the boys high
school race, as Logan
Elm senior Keifer Mosmeier —the only individual all day under 16
minutes — won the race
in 15 minutes and 53
seconds.
Visit www.baumspage.
com for a complete list
of results of the 2017
Piketon Invitational.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, October 3, 2017 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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10 Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Herd hammers Cincinnati, 38-21
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

CINCINNATI, Ohio
— They say good things
come in threes.
The Thundering Herd
can attest to that adage.
Marshall forced three
turnovers, which ultimately turned into three
touchdown catches by
Ryan Yurachek, and
the Herd matched last
year’s win total on Saturday night following an
impressive 38-21 victory
over host Cincinnati in a
non-conference football
contest at historic Nippert Stadium.
The Thundering Herd
(3-1) led wire-to-wire in
their ﬁnal tuneup before
Conference USA play
begins as the guests
stormed out to a 24-0
halftime lead and never
looked back while snapping an eight-game losing
skid on the road.
The Green and White
were simply dominant
in that decisive ﬁrst half
as the Bearcats (2-3)
mustered only three ﬁrst
downs and possessed the
ball for 5:39 of the opening 30 minutes of action.
UC, however, had the
ﬁrst — and its only —
bright spot of the ﬁrst
half after forcing a Marshall fumble on the second play of the game.
The Bearcats followed
with a two-play drive that
also resulted in a fumble,
which was scooped up by
Frankie Hernandez at the
MU 34.
The Thundering Herd
followed with a 10-play,
66-yard drive that ended
with a 14-yard touchdown pass from Chase
Litton to Yurachek at the

8:39 mark, allowing the
guests to take an early 7-0
advantage.
After three consecutive
punts on the ensuing possessions, Marshall was
able to add to its lead
with 12:55 remaining
until halftime as Kaare
Vedvik booted a successful 26-yard ﬁeld goal —
capping a 15-play, 73-yard
drive that gave MU a 10-0
cushion.
The Herd forced a pair
of consecutive three-andouts around a missed
Vedvik ﬁeld goal attempt
early in the second
canto, but the guests
strung together a 10-play,
68-yard scoring drive
that resulted in a Litton
27-yard TD pass to Willie
Johnson at the 1:38 mark
for a 17-0 advantage.
On the ensuing kickoff,
Thomas Geddis received
the kick six yards deep
in the end zone and hesitated brieﬂy before deciding to try a return. Artis
Johnson knocked the ball
free and Nazeeh Johnson
recovered the loose ball,
giving the Herd possession at the UC 15 with
1:34 left until halftime.
Litton found Yurachek
on a 15-yard scoring pass
on the very next play,
allowing the Green and
White to take a commanding 24-point advantage into the halftime
locker room.
The Thundering Herd
held a 17-3 edge in ﬁrst
downs and had a sizable
202-75 advantage in total
offense at the break, as
well as a plus-1 margin in
turnover differential.
The second half proved
to be nothing more than
a formality as both programs traded scores the

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Marshall tight end Ryan Yurachek (85) celebrates after scoring his second of three touchdowns Saturday night during a 38-21 victory
over Cincinnati in a non-conference contest at Nippert Stadium in Cincinnati, Ohio.

rest of the way, with Marshall’s lead never dipping
below 17 points.
Gerrid Doaks capped
a 15-play, 75-yard drive
with a two-yard run on
Cincinnati’s opening
second half possession,
allowing the hosts to
close to within 24-7 with
9:05 left in the third.
The Bearcats forced a
punt later in the period,
but the ball bounced off of
a UC player before rolling
around in the open ﬁeld.
D’Andre Wilson recovered
the fumble for Marshall
at the hosts’ 31-yard line
with 1:12 left.
Litton needed only one
play and six seconds to
turn that ﬁnal turnover

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into points after ﬁnding
Yurachek on a 31-yard
TD pass, allowing MU to
increase its lead back out
to 31-7 with 1:06 remaining in the third.
Michael Warren capped
a seven-play, 78-yard
drive with a 27-yard TD
run at the 14:45 mark
of the fourth for a 31-14
contest, but the Herd
responded right back
with a nine-play, 75-yard
drive that ended with a
Keion Davis one-yard run
for a 31-14 lead with 9:14
remaining.
Javan Hawes hauled
in an 18-yard touchdown
pass from Hayden Moore
with 3:03 left to wrap up
the 17-point outcome.
Marshall — which had
lost three straight to the
Bearcats before Saturday
— picked up only the program’s second-ever win in
the Queen City, with the
ﬁrst coming during a 27-9
decision back in 1938.
Cincinnati still leads the
all-time series with an
8-4-1 overall mark.
The Thundering Herd
ﬁnished the night with a
slim 22-21 edge in ﬁrst
downs and gained only

17 more yards in total
offense (366-349), but the
guests more than sealed
the deal on this triumph
before halftime.
Marshall ﬁnished the
evening with 133 rushing
yards on 44 carries, with
Davis leading the charge
with 93 yards on 20 totes.
Litton completed
21-of-34 passes for 233
yards, which included
four touchdowns and zero
interceptions. Litton has
thrown a TD pass in 25
consecutive games, which
is currently second in the
nation in FBS behind only
Oklahoma quarterback
Baker Mayﬁeld (30).
Yurachek — who has
now caught at least one
pass in 33 straight games
— hauled in seven passes
for a career-best 77 yards
to lead the wideouts. It
was also the ﬁrst multitouchdown game for
Yurachek in his three-plus
years as a starter.
Chris Jackson and
Chase Hancock paced the
MU defense with seven
tackles apiece. Neither
team recorded a sack in
the game.
Vedvik — who missed

a 42-yard ﬁeld goal
attempt in the second
quarter — was a perfect
5-for-5 on PAT kicks to go
along with his successful
26-yard ﬁeld goal. Vedvik
also averaged 43.4 yards
on ﬁve punts.
Doaks led the Bearcat
ground attack with 55
yards on 10 carries, followed by Warren with 49
yards on ﬁve attempts.
Moore ﬁnished the
night 22-of-45 passing for
211 yards, which included
one TD and zero picks.
Josiah Deguara led the
UC wideouts with four
catches for 30 yards.
Perry Young led the
Bearcat defense with
13 tackles, followed by
Carter Jacobs with nine
and Jaylyin Minor with
eight stops.
The Thundering Herd’s
last road win prior to
Saturday came on Oct.
31, 2015, during a 34-10
decision at Charlotte.
Marshall will begin
Conference USA play on
Saturday when it travels
to Charlotte for a 6 p.m.
kickoff.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Busch spoils Elliott’s run at
Dover for 2nd straight win
DOVER, Del. (AP) —
Chase Elliott rubbed his
head and leaned against
his car, crestfallen as he
replayed the ﬁnal laps
in his mind. Jimmie
Johnson, his champion
teammate, walked over
to offer some encouragement and let Elliott vent.
“I anticipated them
being cuss words,”
Johnson said, “and they
were.”
Elliott had it, the ﬁrst
win in 70 career Cup
starts in his sight, the
white ﬂag about to drop.
But the son of a NASCAR Hall of Fame driver
simply could not ﬁnd his
way out of a thicket of
trafﬁc and Kyle Busch
was ready to pounce.
Busch spoiled Elliott’s
bid at his ﬁrst career
NASCAR Cup Series
victory, taking the lead
with two laps left to win
Sunday at Dover International Speedway.
Elliott, largely expected to lead NASCAR’s
next generation of stars,
was in stunned disbelief
that he let the lead slip
away.
“I’m just so disappointed in myself,” Elliott
said. “Golly. I couldn’t
have had it any easier. I
gave it away.”

Busch, the 2015 Cup
champion, went high on
the concrete track and
zipped past Elliott to win
for the second straight
week. He won for the
fourth time in the No. 18
Toyota and is streaking
at the right time as NASCAR’s playoffs head into
the second round.
While Elliott was consoled, Busch took his
customary bow.
He injected a ho-hum
race with a thrilling
ﬁnish and perhaps the
best two closing laps of
the season. Busch is 24
points behind fellow Toyota driver Martin Truex
Jr. for the points lead
and was already safely in
the ﬁeld of 12.
“As far as Chase get
out there, I wasn’t sure
I’d run him back down,”
Busch said. “The only
thing Chase could have
done differently was just
move around and try and
to get out of the wave
of the cars that were in
front of him. I was actually surprised he didn’t.”
Ryan Newman, Austin
Dillon, Daytona 500
champion Kurt Busch
and Brickyard 400 winner Kasey Kahne were
eliminated as the playoff
ﬁeld was cut from 16

drivers.
Elliott was second, followed by Johnson, Truex
and Kyle Larson.
Elliott followed in
some superstar footsteps
when he made his Cup
debut in 2015. Bill Elliott
was a two-time Daytona
500 champion and was
named NASCAR’s most
popular driver a record
16 times. Chase Elliott
also took over the No. 24
Chevrolet when four-time
Cup champion Jeff Gordon retired.
Gordon attended the
race and exchanged
words with Newman on
pit road. Newman, who
ﬁnished a lap down in
13th, was one of the drivers that held up Elliott
down the stretch and
contributed to his collapse.
Newman was clearly
frustrated after missing
the playoff cutoff by just
two points.
“You don’t think I was
racing for my own position,” Newman asked
Gordon.
“I didn’t say you
weren’t,” Gordon said.
“Just watch what you
say, man,” Newman said.
Elliott was crushed,
Newman was irked, Gordon stirred the pot.

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