<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="1265" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/1265?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-28T12:37:54+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="11167">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/7df290c303e0978f17caf34ab66643c6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>10f7cbcd5ae5b49ec697577f93861236</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="3047">
                  <text>Get to
know
me

Some
rain
82/66

Chippewas
hold
off OU

EDITORIAL s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 161, Volume 71

Early voting
begins on
Wednesday
Staff Report

POMEROY — Today
(Tuesday) is the last
day to register to vote
in the November 2017
General Election, with
early voting beginning
on Wednesday.
Registration must
be completed by 9
p.m. on Oct. 10, with
early/absentee voting
beginning at 8 a.m. on
Oct. 11 at the Meigs
County Board of Elections located at 113 E.
Memorial Dr., Suite A,
Pomeroy.
The Meigs County
Board of Elections will
be open for voting the
following dates and
times: Oct. 11-13 from
8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Oct.
16-20 from 8 a.m. to 5
p.m.; Oct. 23-27 from
8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Oct.
30-Nov. 3 from 8 a.m.
to 7 p.m.; Saturday,
Nov. 4 from 8 a.m. to
4 p.m.; Sunday, Nov. 5
from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.;
and Monday, Nov. 6
from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Voters in Meigs
County will be deciding
on three county-wide
levies, one multi-county
levy, several local and
township levies, as well
as village, township and
school board ofﬁcials.
Items and positions
to be voted on include
(according to a proclamation from the Board
of Elections):
Mayor of Pomeroy
(UTE 2019), Middleport Village Council,
Pomeroy Village Council, Rutland Village
Council, Racine Village
Council, Syracuse Village Council, Bedford
Township Trustee,
Chester Township
Trustee, Columbia
Township Trustee, Lebanon Township Trustee, Lebanon Township
Trustee (UTE 2019),
Letart Township
Trustee, Olive Township Trustee, Orange
Township Trustee,
Rutland Township
Trustee, Salem Township Trustee, Salem
Township Trustee
(UTE 2019), Salisbury
Township Trustee,

Scipio Township
Trustee, Sutton Township Trustee, Member
of Governing Board of
Educational Service
Center At Large, Member of Governing Board
of Educational Service
Center Southern Local,
Alexander Local School
District Member of
Education, Eastern
Local School Board
Member of Education,
Meigs Local School
Board Member of Education and Southern
Local School Board
Member of Education.
And determining
the following questions or issues: State
Issues — Issue 1 and
Issue 2, Local Tax Levies — Proposed Bond
Issue and Tax Levy,
Rio Grande Community College Taxing
District, Meigs County
District Public Library,
Meigs County Council
on Aging, Chester
Township, Columbia
Township, Alexander
Local School District
(Columbia Precinct)
(Athens, Meigs and
Vinton Counties), Olive
Township, Pomeroy
Village (two levies),
Proposed Local Liquor
Option (Pomeroy 1st),
Rutland Township, Sutton Township, Syracuse
Village (two levies) and
Syracuse Village Electric Aggregation.
As for voting on
election day, voting
precincts and their
locations are as follows:
Bedford — Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly
Campgrounds, 39560
Rocksprings Road,
Pomeroy; East/West
Chester — Chester
United Methodist
Church, 26580 State
Route 248, Chester;
Columbia — Columbia
Township Fire Department, 29466 State
Route 143, Albany;
Lebanon — Portland
Community Center,
56896 State Route
124, Portland; Letart
— East Letart United
Methodist Church
Building, 49018 East
See VOTING | 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.

Tuesday, October 10, 2017 s 50¢

SHS Homecoming set for Friday

Courtesy of Southern High School

The 2017 Southern High School Homecoming Queen will be crowned during halftime of Friday evening’s football game between the
Tornadoes and Waterford. Pictured are the queen candidates and their escorts (front, from left) Jane Roush, Lauren Lavender, Nikita
Wood, Sailor Warden and Jolisha Ervin; (back, from left) Conner Wolfe, Own Jones, Spencer Harrison, Jonah Hoback and Larry Dunn.

Photos by Jessica Marcum | Courtesy

Becky DeLong received Best of Show during Saturday’s Art in the Chuck Lukowski received the People’s Choice award for his
drawing at Saturday’s Art in the Village.
Village hosted by the Riverbend Arts Council.

Local artists participate in Art in the Village
By Jessica Marcum
Special to the Sentinel

MIDDLEPORT —
The 2017 Art in the
Village art show featured
artwork from area artists
as well as offerings from
local students.
Besides art, the show
featured a tent with art
activities for children,
a plant exchange by the
Master Gardeners, and
an art demonstration by
Guest Artist and Meigs
Middle School art teacher Melanie Quillen.
Kevin Lyles, Professor
of Art at the University
of Rio Grande, judged
the show. Lyles has been
at URG since 1990, and
currently teaches drawing, ceramics, art history, and sculpture. He
is a practicing sculptor,
with work in museums,
sculpture parks, and corporate collections across
the country.
“The work in this
year’s Art in the Village
was a joy to judge. The
work has a range of techniques and approaches.
I was particularly
impressed with some of

the collaborative works,
which are often difﬁcult to execute, and I
encourage the artists to
continue their practice,”
said Lyles of the show.
Besides artworks
submitted for judging,
several exhibit-only
paintings were on display, along with several
pieces from Riverbend
Art Council’s private
collection. Students
from Meigs Intermediate
School, Meigs Middle
School, and Wahama
High School were on display. Meigs Intermediate
students displayed art
based on Native American animal totems. Students used recycled and
recovered items for use
in their artworks. Meigs
Middle School students
showcased their shading
abilities in still life drawings of three-dimensional shapes like cubes and
cones, as well as drawings inspired by Dutch
artist M.C. Escher. Students from Wahama presented a group artwork.
Teacher Susan Parrish
assigned them the project as a way to have a

quiet group of students
get to know one another.
Meigs Industries, led
by Peggy Crane, displayed a three-canvas
mural with the theme
“Ocean of Color.” They
also put together the
mystery boxes for the
“Think Outside the Box”
project.
Winners of this year’s
art show all received
ribbons and a monetary
prize; their artwork will
also be on display at the
Farmers Bank locations
in Pomeroy and Mason.
Best of Show won $100,
and a blue rosette. First
place winners received
$50 and a blue ribbon,
second place $25 and
a red ribbon, and third
$15 and a white ribbon.
People’s Choice were
awarded $50 and a yellow rosette.
The Riverbend Arts
Council stated, “We are
grateful to participating
artists and volunteers
again making it possible
for us to share beautiful artwork with the
surrounding area.” The
Riverbend Arts Council
was ofﬁcially organized

in 1990. Currently the
council occupies the ﬁrst
ﬂoor of the Middleport
Masonic Temple, home
of the former Temple
Theater. RAC sponsors
the Big Bend Community Band, the annual
Riverbend Talent Revue,
classes in tap and ballet
for children, and many
art-related classes and
events. Art in the Village
is an annual event highlighting and encouraging local artists.
Other upcoming
events at the Riverbend
Arts Council include
the annual Talent Revue
on Nov. 24, a Snack
and Canvas event on
October 23, and the
building will host the
Middleport Community
Association’s Christmas
Market on Dec. 2. Rick
Werner and Jessica Wolf
will also hold a cooking
demonstration on Nov.
18, featuring traditional
Christmas Cookies.
More information on
these activities and
more can be found on
Riverbend Arts Council’s
See ART | 5

�DEATH NOTICES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, October 10, 2017

DEATH NOTICES

Daily Sentinel

Kids fly free at Vinton County Airport event

DOWNS
KENTON — Marrbell Timson Downs, 85, died on
October 5, 2017 at the Hardin Hills Health Center,
Kenton.
A private family celebration of life will take place at
a later date.

VINTON COUNTY
— Sunday, Oct. 15,
kids 17 years of age and
younger, will be able to
take one free airplane
ride during an annual
Vinton County Airport
event called Leaf Peep/
Young Eagles. All other
riders will pay $30 per
person.
The leaves are changing color which can

OILER
VINTON — Thurman Elsworth Oiler, 76, Vinton,
Ohio died Saturday, October 7, 2017 at his residence.
Funeral services will be held noon, Thursday, October 11, 2017 at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Vinton Chapel, with Pastor Steven Stewart ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow in the Ellis Family Cemetery, Vinton. Family and Friends may call at the funeral home
Wednesday 5-7 p.m.

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.

GALLIPOLIS — Lola Mae Thacker, age 85, of Gallipolis, died Sunday October 8, 2017.
Funeral Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 11,
2017 at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home with
Joe Bowers ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral
home on Wednesday from 11:30 a.m. until time of
service.
CHEUVRONT
PROCTORVILLE — Mary Lou Cheuvront, 89, of
Proctorville, passed away Thursday, October 5, 2017
at home.
A memorial service will be held 4 p.m. Tuesday,
October 10, 2017 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville. Visitation will be held 3 p.m. to 4
p.m. Tuesday, October 10, 2017 at the funeral home.

Tuesday, Oct. 10
POMEROY — Meigs County
Tea Party will be meeting at the
Meigs Senior Center at 7:30 p.m.
They will be hosting Glenn Newman from the Washington County
Tea Party. He is a frequent speaker at the meetings. The public is
invited to attend the meeting.
SUTTON TWP. — The regular
monthly meeting of the Sutton
Township Trustees will be held
in the Racine Village Hall Council
Chambers 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.

Indigenous Peoples
Day? Italians say
stick with Columbus
By Deepti Hajela
and Dake Kang

SCIPIO TWP. — Scipio Township Trustees regular monthly
meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. at

Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Julia Schultz, Ext. 2104
jschultz@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

Wednesday, Oct. 18
POMEROY — An American
Red Cross Blood Drive will be
held from 1:30-6 p.m. at the Mulberry Community Center.

Thursday, Oct. 19
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Commissioner weekly
meeting scheduled for today is
rescheduled for Friday, Oct. 20 at
11 a.m. due to the commissioners
attending another meeting on the
regularly scheduled day.

MIDDLEPORT — Middleport Fire Department will hold a
Chicken BBQ starting at 11 a.m.

BROADCAST

3
4
6

6

PM

WSAZ News
(WSAZ)
3 (N)
WTAP News
(WTAP)
at Six (N)
ABC 6 News
(WSYX)
at 6pm (N)
Arthur

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE

6:30

Saturday, Nov. 18
MIDDLEPORT — The Riverbend Arts Council will host The
Art of Baking Part IV cooking
demonstration with Rick Werner and Jessica Wolf featuring
Christmas cookies. The event
includes recipes, cookie samples
and refreshments.

Thursday, Nov. 30
POMEROY — The 10th
annual holiday program titled
“Oh Hol(l)y Night” will be held
at the Meigs County Extension
Ofﬁce, 113 E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy. Classes will be held
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 6-8
p.m. Pre-registration and prepayment ($25) are required. For
more information call 740-9926696.

Hill, who is African-American, received criticism
from the network last month after referring to President Donald Trump as a “white supremacist.”
Hill targeted Jerry Jones after the Dallas Cowboys
owner stated that players who disrespect the ﬂag
would not play for his team.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10

7

PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune (N) (N)
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune (N) (N)
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
Newshour. A summary of
the day's national and
international news. (N)
News at 6
ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm(N)
News (N)
ent Tonight
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
(N)
Fortune (N)
Daily Mail
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
TV
News (N)
Theory
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing inBBC World Nightly
News:
Business
depth analysis of current
events. (N)
America
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition

6

PM

NBC Nightly
News (N)
NBC Nightly
News (N)
ABC World
News (N)
Newswatch
(N)

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

The Voice "The Blind
This Is Us "Deja Vu" (N)
Law &amp; Order (N)
Auditions" (N)
The Voice "The Blind
This Is Us "Deja Vu" (N)
Law &amp; Order (N)
Auditions" (N)
Kevin (Probably) Saves the
The Middle Fresh Off the Black-ish (N) The Mayor
(N)
Boat (N)
(N)
World "Listen Up" (N)
Finding Your Roots
The Vietnam War "The River Styx (January 1964"Unfamiliar Kin" (N)
December 1965)" Hardliners in Hanoi seize the initiative
and send combat troops to the south.
Kevin (Probably) Saves the
The Middle Fresh Off the Black-ish (N) The Mayor
(N)
Boat (N)
(N)
World "Listen Up" (N)
NCIS "Exit Strategy" (N)
Bull "A Business of Favors" NCIS: New Orleans "The
(N)
Asset" (N)
The Mick (N) Brooklyn 99 Eyewitness News at 10
Lethal Weapon "Born to
Run" (N)
"Kicks" (N) p.m. (N)
Finding Your Roots
The Vietnam War "The River Styx (January 1964"Unfamiliar Kin" (N)
December 1965)" Hardliners in Hanoi seize the initiative
and send combat troops to the south.
Bull "A Business of Favors" NCIS: New Orleans "The
NCIS "Exit Strategy" (N)
(N)
Asset" (N)

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)

68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Grey's Anatomy "All by
Dance Moms "Ashlee's Big Dance Chat (:50) Chloe
DanceMom "There's A New DanceMom/(:10) DanceMom
Myself"
Decision: Part 2"
(N)
Does It (N)
Team in Town: Part 2" (N)
/(:20) DanceMom (N)
(5:00)
Snow White
Mulan (1998, Animated) Eddie Murphy, BD Wong,
Aladdin (1992, Animated) Voices of Scott
and the Seven Dwarfs TVG Ming-Na Wen. TVG
Weinger, Linda Larkin, Robin Williams. TVG
Ink Master "Head in the
(5:30) Ink
Ink Master "Turning the
Ink Master "Revenge Live"
Ink Master: Angels "Bigger
Master
Game"
Tables"
'N Dallas" (N)
Loud House Escape From Mr. Lemoncello's Library
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
Chrisley
Chrisley
Chrisley
Chrisley
WWE Super Smackdown
Chrisley (N) Chrisley (N)
Family Guy Family Guy Postseason Pre-Game (L)
MLB Baseball National League Division Series (L)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
(5:00)
The Hunger Games Jennifer Lawrence. TV14
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire Jennifer Lawrence. TV14
Movie
Lake Placid (1999, Action) Bridget Fonda, Oliver
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides ('11, Act) Johnny Depp. Jack Sparrow
Platt, Bill Pullman. TVMA
learns both he and Blackbeard are looking for the fountain of youth. TV14
Street Justice: The Bronx
Street Justice: The Bronx
Street Justice Bronx (N)
Justice "The Reckoning"
48 Hours
L. Remini "The Ultimate
Remini: Scientology "The Remini Scientology (N)
Leah Remini: Scientology Undercover High "Would
Failure of Scientology"
'Perfect' Scientology Family"
and the Aftermath (N)
You Go Back?" (P) (N)
Lone Star Law
Woods Law "Buck Fever"
Woods Law "Homecoming" Animal Black Ops (N)
Animal Black Ops (N)
Chicago P.D. "Emotional
Chicago P.D. "Remember
Chicago P.D. "A Little Bit of Chicago P.D. "Last Minute Chicago P.D. "Army of
Proximity"
the Devil"
Light"
Resistance"
One"
Law &amp; Order "Juvenile"
Law &amp; Order "Tabula Rasa" Law &amp; Order "Empire"
Law &amp; Order "Ambitious" Law &amp; Order "Admissions"
(5:00)
Big Daddy TVPG E! News (N)
The Kardashians
Kardash "Milfs Gone Wild" Bellas "Wine About It"
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Mom
Mom
Alaska State Troopers
American High School "The American High School "All The '90s "Exposed" PreThe '90s: The Last Great
"Dazed and Confused"
World Is Not Black"
Hands On Deck" (N)
millennium tension is rising. Decade? "The Countdown"
NHL Top 10 NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Chicago Blackhawks at Montréal Canadiens (L)
NHL Hockey Ariz./V.G.K. (L)
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
UFC UFC 70: Nations Collide Site: Manchester Evening News Arena
UFC Main Event (N)
Forged in Fire "Khopesh" Forged in Fire "The War
Forged/Fire "International Forged in Fire "Tabar(:05)
(:35)
Hammer"
Championship" (N)
Shishpar" (N)
Counting (N) Counting (N)
Below Deck "Jesus Saves" Below Deck
Below Deck "Cool Beans" Below Deck (N)
Below Deck
(4:00) To Be Announced
To Be Announced
Being Mary Jane
Fixer Upper
Fixer "The Flipper Upper"
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child
Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991, Horror) Trick'r Treat ('08, Adult)
('89, Hor) Lisa Wilcox, Robert Englund. TVM
Lisa Zane, Yaphet Kotto, Robert Englund. TVM
Anna Paquin. TVMA

6

PM

(4:30)

400 (HBO) Adaptation

6:30

7

PM

7:30

Real Time With Bill Maher Vice News
Tonight (N)

TVM

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

LANGSVILLE — Joseph
Freeman American Legion Post
476 will hosts its 1st annual
Veteran’s Day Dinner from 5-7
p.m. The legion is located at
26100 Legion Road, Langsville,
Ohio 45741. FREE for Veterans
with Veteran Status ID. Public is
welcome.

M*A*S*H
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
18 (WGN) M*A*S*H
24 (ROOT) NCAA Football West Virginia at TCU Site: Amon G. Carter Stadium -- Fort Worth, Texas NCAA Soccer Oklahoma vs. West Virginia Women's
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
FballPlayoff "Top 25" (L)
NBA Basketball Pre-season Chicago Bulls at Cleveland Cavaliers (L)
NBA Basket.
26 (ESPN2) Horn (N)
Interruption Nación ESPN
Poker World Series
Poker World Series
Poker World Series

67 (HIST)

109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH

Saturday, Nov. 11

TUESDAY EVENING

62 (NGEO)

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

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.

BRISTOL, Conn. (AP) — ESPN anchor Jemele
Hill has been suspended by the network for two
weeks for making political statements on social
media.

42

Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

at the BBQ pit at Race and 4th
Streets in Middleport.

Saturday, Oct. 14

ESPN suspends Hill

30 (SPIKE)

(USPS 436-840)

Rt. 93 on Airport Road.
For more information
contact Nick Rupert at
740-357-0268 or Steve
Keller at 740-418-2612.
The event is sponsored
by the all-volunteer Vinton County Pilots and
Boosters Association.
All proceeds from airport events are used for
the maintenance and
operation of the airport.

IN BRIEF

29 (FREE)

Telephone: 740-992-2155

the Harrisonville Fire House.

Wednesday, Oct. 11 Saturday, Oct. 21

27 (LIFE)

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

to the Village of Zaleski
and Austin Powder,
then north to Lake
Hope State Park, and
back to the airport.
This will be the last
airport event of the
season at the general
aviation facility.
The Vinton County
Airport is located about
ﬁve miles north of
McArthur just off St.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

THACKER

Russo, president of the
Order Italian Sons and
Associated Press
Daughters of America.
“Columbus Day is a day
that we’ve chosen to celNEW YORK — Is it
ebrate who we are. And
time to say arrivederci
we’re entitled to do that
to Christopher Columjust as they are entitled
bus?
to celebrate who they
A movement to abolare.”
ish Columbus Day and
It’s not about taking
replace it with Indiganything away from
enous Peoples Day has
Italian-Americans, said
gained momentum in
Cliff Matias, cultural
some parts of the U.S.,
director of the Redhawk
with Los Angeles in
Native American Arts
August becoming the
biggest city yet to decide Council, which hosted a
to stop honoring the Ital- Re-Thinking Columbus
ian explorer and instead Day event Sunday and
Monday in New York.
recognize victims of
“The conversation is
colonialism.
Columbus,” he said. “If
Austin, Texas, folthey’re going to celelowed suit Thursday. It
brate Columbus, we need
joined cities including
to celebrate the fact that
San Francisco, Seattle
we survived Columbus.”
and Denver, which
The debate over
had previously booted
Columbus’ historical
Columbus in favor of
Indigenous Peoples Day. legacy is an old one, but
it became emotionally
But the gesture to
charged after a similar
recognize indigenous
debate in the South over
people rather than the
monuments to Confedman who opened the
erate generals ﬂared
Americas to European
into deadly violence in
domination also has
August at a rally in Charprompted howls of outlottesville, Virginia.
rage from some ItalianIn Akron, Ohio, a
Americans, who say
eliminating their festival September vote over
of ethnic pride is cultur- whether to dump Columbus opened a racial rift
ally insensitive, too.
on the city council that
“We had a very difﬁcult time in this country was so heated conﬂict
mediators were brought
for well over a hunin to sooth tensions.
dred years,” said Basil

best be seen from the
air.
The event will begin
at noon when fresh
grilled hamburgers and
hot-dogs will be ready.
Also included in the
menu will be nachos,
chips, and soft drinks.
The route of airplane
rides from the airport
will be over the Village
of McArthur, then east

(:10)

Hail, Caesar! ('16, Com/Dra) Josh Brolin. A

450 (MAX) 1950's Hollywood fixer must deal with more than fixing

problems when a star disappears. TV14
(5:00)
Young Guns
Dice "The
500 (SHOW) ('88, West) Emilio Estevez.
Trial"
TV14

Episodes

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

Spielberg Chronicling a nearly 50-year career of filmmaker Steven
Spielberg.

PM

10:30
(:25) Curb

Your
Enthusiasm
The Big Lebowski ('98, Com) John Goodman,
Tales Tour
Tales Tour
Jeff Bridges. A loser gets mixed up in a deadly kidnapping Bus "Johnny Bus "Jerry
Paycheck"
Lee Lewis"
after being mistaken for a millionaire. TVMA
Ray Donovan "Mister
Inside the NFL "2017 Week NavyFootball A Season
Lucky" Natalie's fame puts 5" (N)
"Episode 5" With Navy
Ray's career in jeopardy.
(N)
"Episode 5"

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Coat giveaway
going on now
Staff Report

CHESTER — Hearts and Hands Thrift Store, located in the Chester Community Center (former Chester
Elementary), is holding its annual coat giveaway.
The giveaway is currently underway for children
and adults in need of a coat.
The group is also gearing up for the annual Christmas toy giveaway. Signups for the giveaway will take
place from Oct. 9 to 13. Names of the ﬁrst 100 children will be taken for the giveaway. To sign up call
740-667-6798 between 10 a.m. and noon during the
week of Oct. 9. This will be the only week for signing
children up for the giveaway.
The Thrift Store is open on Thursdays from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon.
Clothing and household items are available. Good,
clean toys are also being collected at the thrift store
for the Christmas sale which is held the ﬁrst Saturday
in December. Those items can be dropped off during
regular hours of operation or from 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
on Tuesdays.

Tuesday, October 10, 2017 3

STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) - 71.74
Akzo Nobel - 30.64
Big Lots, Inc. - 52.72
Bob Evans Farms - 77.26
BorgWarner (NYSE) 52.00
Century Alum (NASDAQ) - 16.87
City Holding (NASDAQ)
- 72.96
Collins (NYSE) - 133.20

DuPont (NYSE) - 83.93
US Bank (NYSE) - 53.85
Gen Electric (NYSE) 23.43
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
- 45.78
JP Morgan (NYSE) 96.41
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.29
Ltd Brands (NYSE) 42.17

Norfolk So (NYSE) 130.79
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 37.20
BBT (NYSE) - 47.48
Peoples (NASDAQ) 34.08
Pepsico (NYSE) - 110.01
Premier (NASDAQ) 21.37
Rockwell (NYSE) 183.27

Rocky Brands (NASDAQ)
- 14.80
Royal Dutch Shell - 60.45
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 7.08
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 80.53
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 15.52
WesBanco (NYSE) 41.87
Worthington (NYSE) 43.19

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.

Immunization clinic to
be conducted on Tuesday
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 and inﬂuenza vaccines are also available.
Call for eligibility determination and availability or
visit our website at www.meigs-health.com to see a
list of accepted commercial insurances and Medicaid
for adults.

Cancer survivor dinner to
be held on Nov. 3 at MHS
POMEROY — The Meigs County Cancer Initiative
is coordinating the Meigs County Cancer Survivor
Dinner, which is a free event for Meigs County cancer
survivors and a guest. It will be held on Nov. 3rd at
Meigs High School beginning at 6:30 p.m. A survivor
is anyone who has heard the words “You have cancer.”
To RSVP, call or email Courtney Midkiff at 740-9926626 Ext. 1028 or courtney.midkiff@meigs-health.
com by or before Oct. 27.

Meigs County Road 28
to be closed for slip repair
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs County Road 28,
Locust Grove Road, will be closed between State
Route 7 and T-1059, Riggs Crest Road, to allow county forces to repair a slip. This closing will be in effect
from Monday, Sept. 25, to Friday, Oct. 13.

US 33 concrete pavement
restoration underway
RACINE — A concrete pavement restoration project began on Sept. 5, on US 33 in Meigs County. The
project is taking place between Bashan Road (County
Road 28) and Sandy Desert Road (Township Road
371). A 14 foot width restriction will be in place in
this area from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m., Monday through Friday. The estimated completion date is Oct. 15.

State Route 124 slip repair
project causes closure
REEDSVILLE — State Route 124 in Meigs County
will be closed for a slip repair project beginning Sept.
11, 2017. The closure is taking place 0.5 miles north
of Township Road 402 (Barr Hollow). The estimated
completion date is Oct. 31, 2017. The posted detour
is State Route 681 to State Route 7 N to State Route
144 S to State Route 124.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Friday, Oct. 14
RUTLAND — Rutland FWB is having a Soup Supper from 4-6 p.m. There will be beans and cornbread,
vegetable soup, hot dogs with sauce, pop and a dessert. Dine in or carry out. It is being prepared by
the Ladies Auxiliary. Come and enjoy good food and
fellowship. All proceeds go to purchase a new church
van.

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.

Jessica Marcum | Courtesy

Art in the Village winners who were present on Saturday afternoon are pictured with their awards.

Art

“Presque Isle”, Oil;
Vanessa Folmer, “Happily Ever After”, acrylic;
Jaylen Burris, “Coal
Miner Value Study”,
watercolor; Emma Bing,
“Colorful Chameleon”,
drawing; Sharon Dean,
“Time is Running Out”,
Mixed Media.
Third Place: Becky
DeLong, “Ready for
Apple Pie”, oil; Brooke
Cunningham, “Country
Bucket”, acrylic; Shirley
Hamm, “Early Blooming”, watercolor; Mary

Wise, “Summer Magic”,
drawing; Shirley Hamm,
“Cat and Mouse”, mixed
media.
Honorable Mention:
Rob Northup, “Singing
in the Rain”, drawing; Chuck Lukowski,
“Eli”, drawing; Barn
Buddies, “Fantasy Flowers”, acrylic; Wahama
Students, “Individual
Personalities”; Barn
Buddies, “Bird Study”,
acrylic.

Conde.
Pomeroy — Nicholas
Michael, Victor Young
Bedford — Shawn
From page 1
Hawley, Eldon Leon Sau- III, Brian Young, Thomas Profﬁtt and Philip
ters and Bob Jones.
Ohlinger.
Chester — Jeromee
Letart Road, Racine;
Racine — Ashli PeterNorth Olive and Orange Calaway, Paul Morrison,
man, Ian Wise and RobJames Hawthorne and
Precincts — Tuppers
ert Beegle.
Alan Holter.
Plains St. Paul United
Rutland — Stephanie
Columbia — Marco
Methodist Church,
Dillon, Kip Grueser and
Jeffers, Gary Carr,
42216 State Route 7,
Thomas A. Smith Sr. and Kimberly Wilford.
Tuppers Plains; South
Syracuse — Barry
Don Cheadle.
Olive — Long Bottom
Lebanon — Gary Coo- McCoy, David Poole,
Community Building,
Michelle White, Eber
per, Vincent Gray, Ger36709 Township Road
Pickens Jr. and Tom
275, Long Bottom; Rut- rad Perry, David Rose
Weaver; write-in: Casey
and Donald Dailey.
land Village, East RutPickens.
Lebanon (unexpired
land and West Rutland
term end 2019, one to
Precincts — Rutland
Church of the Nazarene be elected) — Matthew
Village Mayor
Evans.
Fellowship Hall, 460
Pomeroy (unexpired
Letart — Dave GraMain Street, Rutland;
term end 2019) — Don
Salem — Salem Center ham and Michael Roush. Anderson
Olive — Austin Bailey,
Fire Department, 28854
William Osborne, L.
SR 124, Langsville;
Board of Education
Brian Collins and Larry
Middleport 2nd, 3rd
Eastern (two to be
Life.
and 4th — Church of
elected) — Sammi
Orange — Michael
Christ Life Center, 437
Mugrage and Amanda
Guess, Chad Nelson and Reed.
Main Street, Middleport; Pomeroy 1st, 2nd Roger Ritchie.
Meigs (two to be electRutland — Jamie
and 3rd — Mulberry
ed) — Heather Hawley,
Fortner, David Davis and Jayson Tillis, Ryan Mahr
Community Center,
Steve Lambert.
260 Mulberry Avenue,
and Steven Vance.
Salem — Jack Ervin,
Pomeroy; Bradbury
Southern (three to
Eddie Howery and H.
— Bradford Church of
be elected) — Dennis
Dannie Lambert.
Christ Activity BuildTeaford and Brenda
Salem (unexpired
ing, 39105 Bradbury
Johnson; write-in: Kent
term end 2019, one to
Road, Pomeroy; Laurel
Wolfe, Thomas Woods,
be elected) — Rebecca
Cliff and Rocksprings
Tom Theiss and Don
— Meigs Local Admin- Johnston.
Smith.
Salisbury — Bill
istrative Ofﬁce, 41765
Athens-Meigs ESC
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy; Spaun and Robert Ball.
Board (Southern) —
Scipio — Tammy
Scipio — Scipio Townwrite-in: Mony Wood.
Andrus and Roger Cotship Fire Department,
In addition to the canterill.
35575 Firehouse Road,
didates, there are several
Sutton — Howard
Pomeroy; Racine Village
local issues and levies
and Racine Precinct — “Buddy” Ervin, Joseph
to appear on the ballot,
Nottingham, James
Racine Baptist Church
in addition to two state(Tony) Carnahan, Adam wide issues.
Christian Outreach
Johnson, Alan Crisp and
Center, 406 5th Street,
Larry Smith.
Racine; and Syracuse
Levies and Issues
Village and Minersville
Levies and Issues
Precincts — SyraVillage Council (four to be approved by the Secrecuse Village Commutary of State’s Ofﬁce for
elected)
nity Building, 2244 7th
ballot placement are as
Middleport (May ﬁlStreet, Syracuse.
ing deadline) — Sharon follows:
A complete list of
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Older; write-in candicandidates for the
Ofﬁce and Correctional
dates: Ruby Vaughan,
November election is as Emerson Heighton, Car- Facility — 2.95 mill,
follows:
new levy with the intent
olyn French and Brian

to sell bonds for the construction and operation
of the proposed 71-bed
correctional facility and
administrative ofﬁces.
Meigs County Senior
Center (Council on
Aging) — 1.6 mill additional levy. This levy
will replace two expiring
levies, valued at 1.1 mill
and .5 mill, which expire
at the end of this year,
according to Executive
Director Beth Shaver.
Meigs County District
Public Library — 1
mill renewal for current
expenses. This levy was
ﬁrst approved by voters
in 2012.
Rio Grande Community College — 1 mill
replacement. This levy
would replace a levy
approved by voters in
the mid-1970s, bringing the tax collected to
current property values,
rather than the values
from the 1970s.
Pomeroy Village —
Current Expenses, 1.9
mill renewal; Fire Protection, 1 mill renewal.
Syracuse Village —
Current Expenses, 1 mill
renewal; Police Protection, 2 mill renewal;
Electric Aggregation.
Chester Twp. —
Fire Protection, 2 mill
replacement.
Sutton Twp. — Current Expenses, 0.4 mill
additional.
Columbia Twp. —
Road Maintenance, 1.2
mill renewal.
Olive Twp. — Road
Maintenance, 2 mill
renewal.
Rutland Twp. — Cemetery Operations, 1 mill
renewal.
Eagles of Pomeroy —
A local option to allow
the Sunday sale of liquor
at the Eagles in Pomeroy.

Art in the Village art show
winners
Best of Show —
Becky DeLong, “Lakeside Afternoon”, oil.
People’s Choice —
Chuck Lukowski, “Jack

and Bethany”, drawing.
First Place — Becky
DeLong, “Lakeside
Afternoon”, oil; Eric
Cranston, “Happy Village”, acrylic; Blake
Hudson, “Flowing
Chaos”, watercolor;
Chuck Lukowski, “Untitled”, drawing; Jane
Oldaker, “Anything But
Simple”; Professional
Entry — Susan Parrish,
“Wild But Still Wonderful”, mixed media.
Second Place
— Becky DeLong,

Voting

Township Trustee (two to
be elected)

From page 1

Facebook page (https://
www.facebook.com/
Riverbend-Arts-Council-161901707298911/).

Jessica Marcum is a freelance
writer for The Daily Sentinel.

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

A crackdown
on predatory
payday loans
The following editorial recently appeared in the
Los Angeles Times:
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s
new rules for payday loans and car title loans have
drawn the predictable cries of outrage from lenders, particularly small storefront operators who
say the restrictions will put them out of business.
And it’s an understandable complaint — after
spending ﬁve years researching the market for
high-cost credit, the bureau has ﬁred a shot right
at the heart of these lenders’ business model.
But the outrage here isn’t what the regulators
are doing. It’s the way these lenders have proﬁted
from the ﬁnancial troubles of their customers. As
the bureau’s research shows, payday lenders rely
on consumers who can’t afford the loans they take
out. With no way to repay their original loans
other than to obtain further ones, most of these
customers wind up paying more in fees than they
originally borrowed.
That’s the deﬁnition of predatory lending, and
the bureau’s rules precisely target just this problem. They don’t prohibit lenders from offering the
sort of ﬁnancial lifeline they claim to provide —
one-time help for cash-strapped, credit-challenged
people facing unexpected expenses, such as a
large bill for medical care or car repairs. Instead,
they stop lenders from racking up fees by making
multiple loans in quick succession to people who
couldn’t really afford them in the ﬁrst place.
The question now is whether lawmakers will
try to reverse the bureau and maintain a ﬁnancial
pipeline that’s popular with millions of lowerincome Americans precisely because it’s the one
most readily available to them, either online or
from the storefront lenders clustered in urban
areas. It’s a huge pipeline too — the industry
made $6.7 billion in loans to 2.5 million U.S.
households in 2015, the bureau estimated.
Defenders of these costly loans say they’re the
only option available to people living paycheck to
paycheck. The problem is that the typical borrower can’t handle the terms of a payday loan, which
require the entire amount to be repaid in about
two weeks, plus fees.
What these borrowers really need is a conventional installment loan that they can pay back over
time. This option is emerging in states that either
ban payday loans or encourage small-dollar loans
to borrowers with uncertain credit, as California
does.
The bureau found that 90 percent of the fees
payday lenders collect in a year come from customers who borrowed seven times or more, and
75 percent come from those with 10 or more
loans. These people are not being helped out of a
bind; they’re being put in a debt trap.
The bureau’s rules are expected to slash the
number of payday and auto title loans issued,
which to critics is an attack on low-income Americans’ access to credit. A more accurate description is that the rules are an attack on unaffordable
credit.
Starting in 21 months, the rules will require
both payday and auto title lenders (who offer
short-term loans that use the borrower’s car or
truck as collateral) to do the sort of thing banks
and credit unions already do: Before extending a
loan, they’ll have to determine whether the borrower can repay it. These lenders haven’t bothered
with that sort of underwriting because it’s costly,
relying instead on high fees (typically, $15 per
$100 borrowed, or the equivalent of an interest
rate of at least 300 percent a year) to cover the
high rate of default. The bureau found that in
2011-‘12, nearly half of the money lent by storefront payday outlets went uncollected — hence
the need for blockbuster revenue from fees.
The new rules will allow payday lenders (but
not those issuing auto title loans) to skip the ability-to-repay determination if, and only if, they limit
the loan to $500 or the maximum allowed under
state law, whichever is lower. To discourage these
borrowers from taking out loans they can’t readily repay, the rule limits them to two more loans
of diminishing size over the subsequent 90 days.
If they haven’t paid off their debt within 90 days,
they’ll have to go at least a month before obtaining
a new loan.
Some consumer advocates argue that there
should be no exceptions, and that the rule isn’t
tight enough to stop payday lenders from digging
borrowers into deeper ﬁnancial trouble. But the
bureau is right to let these companies try to build
a lending business that isn’t predicated on collecting multiple fees for what amounts to a single
loan.
Payday and auto-title lending companies have
said they will ﬁght the rule in court, and their
allies in Congress are soon expected to try to pass
a resolution rejecting it. Lawmakers shouldn’t
be fooled by the industry’s argument that payday
and auto title loans are a crucial source of credit
for low-income Americans. As advocates for lowincome consumers have argued to regulators for
years, the issue here isn’t access to credit. It’s protection from predatory lending.

THEIR VIEW

The being behind the bones
Maybe all I want
before I die is for someone—anyone—to really
know me.
The room was full of
familiar faces, most of
whom I couldn’t tag with
a name. Thirty years ago
we’d shared lockers and
gym clothes. We’d drank
from the same beer bottle and swapped eyeliner,
yet as I strolled over to
the few folks I recognized, I realized that in
high school, I’d only let
my schoolmates see the
me I wanted them to
see. I’d masked my insecurities then as much as
they likely had too, with
sarcasm and a chuckle,
or a tear shed in a lonely
bathroom stall, but as I
hugged my friends who’d
once strolled the same
high school halls with
me, I felt an acceptance
that transcended time
and space. I was comfortable in my own skin
and it felt sweet.
The acceptance wasn’t
the kind that’s extended
through handshakes
or even smiles. The
acceptance was internal, radiating from the
being beneath my belly.
I knew myself—and
liked myself—quirks and
all. This feeling wasn’t
earned overnight or
learned by taking excellent notes from a lecture.

even more when
This feeling of
Madonna sang,
inner peace was
“Crazy for You.”
gained through
In this way, high
challenges from
school did prepare
situations and peous for life, much
ple who’d attemptmore so than the
ed to deﬁne me—
to create the me
Michele Z. algebra class I
nearly failed. We
they wanted me to Marcum
be—and they were Contributing learned we could
laugh and cry in
partially successful columnist
the same day and
for years.
not be committed
Once I got
to the psych ward. We
“in touch” with myself
learned that we could
through self-inquiry and
honesty, I dismantled the mess up, like really mess
up, and our parents
persona others had crewould still love us. We
ated of me. I permitted
my preconceived notions realized that we need not
be perfect to survive.
of others to dissolve
We knew we were a
right along with theirs of
me. This upheaval of old work in progress. We
still are. For me, the difparadigms created space
ference between then
in my body as well as in
and now is that I accept
my life. Space where I
constructed a remodeled the inner workings of
progress for what they
version of myself—one
with a ﬁrm foundation of are—an unravelling of
potential—an investigaauthenticity and a frame
tion into the mysterious
of ingenuity that will
“I am.” This doesn’t
withstand life’s storms.
mean I’m not perfect
High school reunions
enough already. It simply
conjure all sort of emomeans I enjoy uncovertions. Memories of
ing traits in myself that I
those years are painful
didn’t know I possessed
for some and joyful to
and exploring new facets
others, but usually it’s
of myself that I never
a random mixture of
knew existed.
both— of rememberI’ve been getting to
ing the honor of being
know the being inside
nominated for class
ofﬁce or scoring the win- these bones for forty
some years. I keep disning touchdown and of
covering new interests,
remembering the ﬁrst
talents and fears with
heart-break that hurt

each day, and it’s obvious
to me that, even as the
universe is ever-changing, so am I—that is,
if my taste buds are an
indication. Sushi that I
once described as tasting
like I’d licked an ocean
rock, is now yummy on
my palette.
Life had led each of
my classmates to sit on
various bleachers and to
eat at different tables,
but for one night, we all
dipped into the same
bowl of tortilla chips and
salsa as we shared the
common bond among
us that extended well
beyond the structure of
any school building. We
were all still students,
learning about each
other and discovering
who we want to be.
The discoveries are
surprising and they
excite me, like ﬁnding a ring in the box of
Cracker Jacks. I relish
experimenting with the
recipe that allows me to
taste interesting textures
of myself. I’ve created my
own version of me—one
I can live with. One I will
live with until I die—
even if no one else ever
knows the me I do.
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.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Oct.
10, the 283rd day of
2017. There are 82 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Oct. 10, 1967, the
Outer Space Treaty, prohibiting the placing of
weapons of mass destruction on the moon or elsewhere in space, entered
into force.
On this date:
In A.D. 19, Roman
general Germanicus
Julius Caesar, 33, died
in Antioch under mysterious circumstances,
possibly from poisoning.
In 1845, the U.S.
Naval Academy was
established in Annapolis, Maryland.
In 1913, the Panama
Canal was effectively
completed as President
Woodrow Wilson sent
a signal from the White
House by telegraph, set-

ting off explosives that
destroyed a section of
the Gamboa dike.
In 1917, legendary
jazz composer and pianist Thelonious Monk
was born in Rocky
Mount, North Carolina.
In 1935, the George
Gershwin opera “Porgy
and Bess,” featuring an
all-black cast, opened
on Broadway, beginning
a run of 124 performances.
In 1938, Nazi Germany completed its
annexation of Czechoslovakia’s Sudetenland
(soo-DAYT’-uhn-land).
In 1943, Chiang Kaishek took the oath of
ofﬁce as president of
China.
In 1957, President
Dwight D. Eisenhower
apologized to the
ﬁnance minister of
Ghana, Komla Agbeli
Gbdemah, after the ofﬁcial was refused seating
in a Howard Johnson’s
restaurant near Dover,

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“The imperceptible process of age has
a point which, once passed, cannot be
retraced. I knew I had passed that point and
was getting old the day I noticed that all the
cops looked so young.”
— Harry Lewis Golden,
American author, editor and publisher (1903-1981)

Delaware. The Milwaukee Braves won the
World Series, defeating
the New York Yankees
in Game 7, 5-0. The TV
series “Zorro,” starring
Guy Williams as the
masked hero, debuted
on ABC.
In 1966, the Beach
Boys’ single “Good
Vibrations” by Brian
Wilson and Mike Love
was released by Capitol
Records.
In 1973, Vice President Spiro T. Agnew,
accused of accepting
bribes, pleaded no contest to one count of federal income tax evasion,

and resigned his ofﬁce.
In 1985, U.S. ﬁghter
jets forced an Egyptian
plane carrying the
hijackers of the Italian cruise ship Achille
Lauro (ah-KEE’-leh
LOW’-roh) to land in
Italy, where the gunmen were taken into
custody. Actor-director
Orson Welles died in
Los Angeles at age 70;
actor Yul Brynner died
in New York at age 65.
In 1997, the International Campaign to Ban
Landmines and its coordinator, Jody Williams,
were named winners of
the Nobel Peace Prize.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 10, 2017 5

Wildfires sweep into California wine country

By Ellen Knickmeyer

“Trees were on ﬁre
like torches,” she said.
With downed trees or
ﬂames blocking some
SONOMA, Calif. —
More than a dozen wild- routes, Sonoma County
ﬁres whipped by power- residents struggled to
ful winds swept through ﬁgure out what roads to
California wine country take.
Fires also burned just
Monday, destroying at
to the east in the Napa
least 1,500 homes and
County as well as in
businesses and sending
an estimated 20,000 peo- Yuba, Butte and Nevada
counties — all north of
ple on a headlong ﬂight
to safety through smoke the state capital. The
ﬁreﬁghting agency Cal
and ﬂames.
Fire tweeted that as
The state’s ﬁre chief
many as 8,000 homes
called the damage estiwere threatened in
mates conservative and
said the ﬁres were burn- Nevada County, which
ing throughout an eight- lies on the western slope
of the Sierra Nevada.
county swath of NorthNapa County Fire
ern California, including
Napa, Sonoma and Yuba Chief Barry Biermann
said there were no
counties.
Numerous people had reports of injuries or
been hurt and some were deaths, although the
ﬁres had burned more
missing, although no
than 68 square miles
estimates were imme(176 sq. kilometers).
diately available, said
Crews had not yet been
California Department
able to contain a ﬁre
of Forestry and Fire
Protection Director Ken heading toward downtown Napa.
Pimlott.
“Right now, with these
Mandatory evacuations were ordered after conditions, we can’t get
ahead of this ﬁre and
the blazes broke out
do anything about the
late Sunday. Long lines
forward progress,” Bierformed at gas stations
mann said. He said there
when many families
were seven large ﬁres
heeded a middle-of-theburning in Lake, Sonoma
night call to get out.
and Napa counties.
“It was an inferno
Gov. Jerry Brown
like you’ve never seen
before,” said Marian Wil- declared a state of emergency in Napa, Sonoma
liams, who caravanned
and Yuba counties.
with neighbors before
Smoke was thick in
dawn as one of the wildSan Francisco, 60 miles
ﬁres reached the vine(96 kilometers) south of
yards and ridges at her
the Sonoma County ﬁre.
small Sonoma County
John Dean was driving
town of Kenwood.
Williams could feel the to his Sonoma County
home early Monday
heat of her ﬁre through
when he saw a house on
the car as she ﬂed.

Associated Press

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

65°

77°

74°

Warm today with periods of sun. Periods of rain
late tonight. High 82° / Low 66°

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

1.45
2.55
0.79
38.68
33.82

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:33 a.m.
6:57 p.m.
11:02 p.m.
12:46 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

New

First

Oct 12 Oct 19 Oct 27

Full

Nov 4

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

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

Major
4:14a
5:17a
6:18a
7:14a
8:06a
8:54a
9:39a

Minor
10:29a
11:32a
12:01a
1:00a
1:53a
2:41a
3:26a

Major
4:43p
5:46p
6:47p
7:42p
8:33p
9:20p
10:03p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Minor
10:58p
---12:32p
1:28p
2:20p
3:07p
3:51p

WEATHER HISTORY
A World Series game was snowed out
in Baltimore, Md., on Oct. 10, 1979.
The early snowstorm dumped 12
inches on Webster County, W.Va. Over
2 inches accumulated at Philadelphia.

THURSDAY

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Lucasville
80/67
Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. 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
12.47
16.19
21.50
12.92
12.92
25.10
13.26
25.74
34.55
13.12
15.90
34.60
14.60

Portsmouth
81/67

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.12
-0.15
-0.32
-0.33
+0.16
+0.06
+0.10
+0.29
+0.34
+0.26
+0.50
+0.10
+0.90

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

79°
57°

68°
45°

Partly sunny and
remaining warm

Cooler with sunny
intervals

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
81/63
Belpre
81/65

Athens
80/63

St. Marys
81/64

Parkersburg
82/62

Coolville
81/64

Elizabeth
82/66

Spencer
82/65

Buffalo
82/66
Milton
82/66
Huntington
83/64

St. Albans
83/66

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
57/44
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
74/53
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
84/60
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

82°
52°

Sunny and warm

Murray City
79/63

Ironton
81/67

Ashland
81/67
Grayson
81/67

unattended ﬂames, or
are having another emergency.”
Business owner Andy
Lahiji stood before a
burned-out warehouse
where he said he had
lost his inventory of
furniture and other
property. He said it took
ﬁretrucks ages to arrive
Monday morning.
“They said, ‘We have
so many other places to
go, you have to wait.’
And then when they
came, they had only a
couple of guys,” he told
the station. “I feel very
sad. I’m glad nobody got
hurt. Hopefully insurance takes care of it.”

SUNDAY

81°
59°

Wilkesville
80/63
POMEROY
Jackson
81/65
80/64
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
82/67
82/66
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
77/64
GALLIPOLIS
82/66
83/67
81/66

South Shore Greenup
81/67
80/65

31

Logan
79/63

McArthur
80/63

Very High

Primary: moo pollen seen
Mold: 1337

SATURDAY

Sunshine and not as Sunny, nice and warm
warm but pleasant

Adelphi
80/64
Chillicothe
80/65

the ﬁre unpredictable,
she said. “It’s something
that we’re having to be
very cautious about.”
Ann Dubay, a spokeswoman for the Sonoma
County Emergency
Operations Center,
said the area where the
largest ﬁre started was
relatively rural but the
ﬂames “went through
many, many neighborhoods,” and authorities
did not know how many
structures were gone.
Emergency lines were
inundated with callers reporting smoke,
prompting ofﬁcials to
ask that the public “only
use 911 if they see actual

FRIDAY

73°
55°

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

Waverly
79/65

Pollen: 0

Low

MOON PHASES

Clouds and sun, a
couple of showers

1

Primary: cladosporium

Wed.
7:34 a.m.
6:56 p.m.
12:00 a.m.
1:48 p.m.

WEDNESDAY

81°
58°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

79°
70°
70°
47°
92° in 1939
31° in 1978

pointed to her feet, still
in slippers. She had ﬂed
so fast that she hadn’t
put on her shoes.
Ofﬁcials did not yet
have a count on how
many properties were
affected, either by the
ﬁre directly or by evacuations, said Belia Ramos,
chairwoman of the Napa
County Board of Supervisors.
“We’re focusing on
making evacuations and
trying to keep people
safe. We are not prepared to start counting,”
she said shortly after
sunrise.
The “tremendous”
wind gusts were making

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

ﬁre along the road. Soon
he saw more houses
engulfed in ﬂames.
“I mean blazing, falling
down on ﬁre,” he said.
Dean sped to his home
in Kenwood, alerted
neighbors and ﬂed to
the town of Sonoma. He
was one of hundreds of
evacuees who streamed
into a 24-hour Safeway
market overnight, while
authorities set up an ofﬁcial evacuation center.
Maureen McGowan
was house-sitting for a
brother near Kenwood,
and said both of the
homes on his property
were on ﬁre when she
left. At the Safeway, she

Clendenin
83/65
Charleston
84/65

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
61/39

Billings
64/40

Denver
53/32

Montreal
70/45
Minneapolis
57/41
Chicago
66/56
Kansas City
50/40

Toronto
73/51
New York
Detroit
80/63
72/54
Washington
85/68

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

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
62/44/s
52/42/c
86/72/pc
81/66/pc
84/61/pc
64/40/pc
69/46/pc
78/58/pc
84/65/c
85/71/c
49/30/s
66/56/r
78/67/c
76/61/pc
79/62/pc
73/51/pc
53/32/s
50/45/r
72/54/pc
87/73/pc
81/62/pc
77/59/sh
50/40/r
77/57/s
84/51/pc
84/60/s
81/66/r
89/80/pc
57/41/pc
83/67/r
88/74/pc
80/63/pc
59/40/pc
89/72/pc
84/64/pc
92/69/s
77/62/pc
76/52/pc
85/71/t
84/68/c
76/52/t
67/48/s
74/53/s
57/44/c
85/68/pc

Hi/Lo/W
73/53/s
50/42/pc
86/69/pc
72/64/pc
74/59/c
67/38/c
58/33/pc
65/53/pc
82/56/sh
86/68/t
60/38/s
64/57/r
73/55/pc
71/58/r
76/57/sh
76/57/pc
66/42/s
60/49/pc
63/54/r
87/76/t
81/65/pc
69/55/pc
61/44/s
86/60/s
75/52/pc
77/58/s
74/58/pc
88/78/t
61/51/pc
79/54/pc
88/74/pc
72/58/pc
68/49/pc
88/72/pc
75/62/c
96/65/s
72/55/r
64/46/pc
85/67/t
77/67/sh
67/55/pc
74/45/pc
70/51/pc
56/44/sh
75/66/sh

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
86/72

High
Low

El Paso
73/52
Chihuahua
78/53

95° in Kingsville, TX
1° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global
Houston
81/62
Monterrey
80/63

High
109° in Nawabshah, Pakistan
Low -22° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
89/80

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

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
OH-70004384

Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
www.homenatlbank.com
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
RACINE MIDDLEPORT SYRACUSE
RACINE
SYRACUSE
promise to make you feel right at home.
740-949-2210
740-992-6333
740-691-3151 740-992-6333
740-949-2210

60701680

TODAY

Jeff Chiu | AP

Rudy Habibe, from Puerto Rico, stands by the burning Hilton Sonoma Wine Country hotel, where he was a guest on Monday, in Santa
Rosa, Calif. Wildfires whipped by powerful winds swept through Northern California, sending residents on a headlong flight to safety
through smoke and flames as homes burned.

�Sports
6 s Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Herd shuts down Charlotte, 14-3
By Bryan Walters

victory of the 2017 campaign.
Marshall’s ground-and-pound
approach helped the guests
maintain possession for 36:37
CHARLOTTE, N.C. —
Sometimes the best offense is a of the 60-minute affair, but the
Green and White needed a
really good defense.
pair of aerial strikes to ﬁnd the
Visiting Marshall held Charscoreboard.
lotte to just 80 rushing yards
Both teams traded punts on
and 212 yards of total offense
each of their ﬁrst two posses— both season-bests — while
sions, but the Herd found some
opening Conference USA play
on a solid note Saturday during magic on their third drive of
a 14-3 victory at Jerry Richard- the opening canto.
MU covered 64 yards on four
son Stadium in the Tar Heel
plays, with Chase Litton ﬁndState.
ing Tyre Brady on a 37-yard
The Thundering Herd (4-1,
touchdown pass at the 6:25
1-0 CUSA East) pitched a
mark for an early 7-0 advantage
defensive shutout in the ﬁrst
— which ultimately held up
half for a third consecutive
until halftime.
week while also producing a
After forcing a 49ers punt to
season-high 212 rushing yards
en route to their third straight start the second half, Marshall

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Marshall defenders Ryan Bee, left, and Artis Johnson (21) apply pressure to
Miami (OH) quarterback Gus Ragland during the second half of a Sept. 3 contest
at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington, W.Va.

struck gold again as Brady
capped a seven-play, 72-yard
drive with an 11-yard grab on
a Litton pass at the 9:14 mark
— giving MU its largest lead of
the night at 14-0.
Charlotte (0-6, 0-2) followed
with nine-play, 62-yard drive on
the ensuing possession, which
led to points after a successful
Nigel Macauley 30-yard ﬁeld
goal with 5:20 left in the third
— making it a 14-3 contest.
Neither team scored the rest
of the way, allowing the Herd
to pick up their ﬁrst CUSA
road win in its last seven outings.
Eight of the 49ers’ 11 offensive possessions resulted in
See HERD | 10

Locals compete
at Unioto Invite;
RVHS in top four
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@aimmediamidwest.com

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio — The races may have
been Purple and Gold, but it was all about the Silver and Black on Saturday.
That’s because the River Valley High School
cross country clubs both ﬁnished among the top
four teams in their respective races, as part of the
annual — and enormous — Unioto Invitational at
Unioto High School.
Because of the number of schools and individuals competing, both the boys and girls high school
races were divided into two different runs — one
“Purple” and one “Gold”.
For the boys, River Valley placed third among
the 18 teams in the “Purple” race, as the Raiders
recorded a team score of 106.
The Lady Raiders were fourth in the 13-team
girls “Purple” run with a 116, while Eastern’s girls
— in the dozen-team “Gold” race — took fourth
with a team tally of 132.
The Meigs boys and girls, which also competed
in the “Purple” events, ﬁelded ﬁve runners apiece
— with the Lady Marauders garnering an eighthplace team score of 163.
The Marauder men managed a 17th-place score
of 370, as only Eastern Brown — with a team
score of 450 — ﬁnished behind them.
The South Gallia boys in the “Purple” race, and
the Eastern boys in the “Gold” race, sported just
two runners apiece.
On the team front, the top six Raiders — spearheaded by senior standout Nathaniel Abbott’s
runner-up effort of 17 minutes and 34 seconds —
all placed in the top 42.
In fact, Abbott was the runner-up by a mere second to Alexander senior Carter Carr (17:33), as
Abbott and Carr were the only two in the “Purple”
race to complete the 5K distance in under 18 minutes.
The next ﬁve River Valley times were all within
18 places and 48 seconds of one another, and
included Kyle Coen (24th in 19:26), George Rickett (25th in 19:29), Rory Twyman (30th in 19:44),
Austin Livingston (41st in 20:12) and Cole Franklin (42nd in 20:14).
The ﬁnal Raider scorer was Caleb McKnight in
See INVITE | 10

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Oct. 10
Volleyball
Point Pleasant at Warren,
5:30
OVCS at Calvary
Christian, 6 p.m.
Tolsia at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at South
Point, 6:30
Miller at Eastern, 7 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at Meigs,
7 p.m.
River Valley at Vinton
County, 7 p.m.
South Gallia at Wahama,
7 p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 7
p.m.
Boys Soccer
Belpre at Gallia Academy,
6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Shady
Spring, 6:30
Cross Country
OVC meet at Gallia
Academy, 4:30
Rio Sports
Men’s Golf at RSC Fall

Preview, 8 a.m.
Volleyball vs Carlow, 7
p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 11
Volleyball
South Gallia at River
Valley, 7 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Cabell Midland at Point
Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Rio Sports
Women’s Soccer vs.
Union, 5 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 12
Volleyball
Hannan at Huntington St.
Joseph, 5 p.m.
Chesapeake at Gallia
Academy, 6:30
Alexander at River Valley,
7 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 7 p.m.
Meigs at Athens, 7 p.m.
Southern at Federal
Hocking, 7 p.m.
Wahama at Miller, 7 p.m.

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Ohio senior Mason Morgan (86) hauls in a pass in between a trio of Chippewas, during Central Michigan’s 26-23 victory on Saturday in
Athens, Ohio.

Chippewas hold off Ohio, 26-23
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ATHENS, Ohio —
There just wasn’t much
that went Ohio’s way.
The Bobcats were
minus-3 in the turnover
category and had some
very untimely penalties
on Saturday in their annual homecoming game at
Peden Stadium, as the
Green and White dropped
a 26-23 decision to MidAmerican Conference
guest Central Michigan.
Ohio (4-2, 1-1 MAC)
— which had won its last
three decisions — started
the day smoothly, going
75 yards in 10 plays on
the game’s opening possession. OU sophomore
quarterback Nathan
Rourke completed three
passes on the drive
and capped it off with
a one-yard sneak for a
touchdown. Louie Zervos
added the extra-point, his
ﬁrst of three, and gave
the hosts a 7-0 edge 5:01
into play.
Central Michigan (3-3,
1-1) answered on its
ﬁrst drive, covering 72
yards in 10 plays, with
Tyler Conklin catching a
16-yard pass from Shane
Morris for the score.
Michael Armstrong
added the point-after
and tied the game at 7-all
with 5:46 left in the ﬁrst
period.
After a Bobcat punt,
OU senior Chad Moore
intercepted a CMU pass
and gave the Ohio offense
just 48 yards in front of it.
The hosts converted on
a pair of third-and-longs,

but fumbled the ball away,
giving Central Michigan
possession at its own 14.
The Bobcats came up
with a three-and-out,
however, and the Ohio
offense took over at its
own 32. The Bobcats
used nine consecutive
running plays, ﬁve by
Rourke and four by
Dorian Brown, to cover
the 68 yards, with Rourke
scoring from 14 yards at
the 5:59 mark of the second quarter.
Leading 14-7, Ohio
forced CMU to punt
again, but the Bobcat
offense had just 2:24 left
on the clock and 84 yards
to go. The Bobcats made
it to the Central Michigan 28 with 17 seconds
left on the clock, when
Rourke connected with
Andrew Meyer in the
back of the endzone, but
an illegal formation penalty wiped the touchdown
off of the board.
After an incomplete
pass, Ohio settled for
a 50-yard ﬁeld goal
attempt, which the Chippewas blocked. CMU
sophomore Sean Bunting
scooped the blocked ball
and returned it 60 yards
for the touchdown as
time expired. The Central Michigan point-after
attempt failed, however,
leaving the Chippewas
behind 14-13 at halftime.
“The end of the ﬁrst
half was outrageous in
terms of what transpired,” said Ohio head
coach Frank Solich. “We
lined up incorrectly on
formation, we had a
touchdown called back,

Ohio senior Quentin Poling (32) pressures CMU quarterback Shane
Morris (11), during the Chippewas’ 26-23 victory on Saturday in
Athens, Ohio.

a ﬁeld goal blocked, they
scored. Instead of being
up 21-7 the score was
14-13 and that is huge.
“It’s a big momentum
shift,” Solich added.
“Instead of being down
two touchdowns, they are
right there, jumping up
and down in the locker
room. We got them back
in the game.”
The Maroon and Gold
carried the momentum
into the opening drive
of second half, going 65
yards in 10 plays with
Jonathan Ward scoring
on a one-yard rush to give
CMU a 19-14 lead. The
Chippewas attempted to
stretch their lead to seven
points, but the two-point
pass was intercepted.
Ohio’s ﬁrst play from
scrimmage in the second

half was intercepted by
Central Michigan’s Josh
Cox, and the visiting
offense took over at the
OU 24. The Chippewas
ran eight plays before
coming up short on
fourth-and-goal from the
OU 3, giving the ball to
the Green and White with
97 yards to go.
Ohio made it over half
of the way down the ﬁeld
in 12 plays, but fumbled
the ball away again. A
three-and-out by each
team took the game into
the ﬁnal period with Ohio
still behind 19-14.
CMU punted on its ﬁrst
drive of the fourth quarter, but forced and recovered an OU fumble at the
Bobcat 35. From there, a
See OHIO | 10

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Beavers chew up
Point Pleasant
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmmediamidwest.com

BLUEFIELD, W.Va. — Deﬁnitely a road less traveled.
The Point Pleasant football team had its 24-game
regular season road winning streak coming to a
convincing halt on Friday night following a 42-13
setback to host Blueﬁeld in a Week 7 non-conference
football contest at Mitchell Stadium in Mercer
County.
The visiting Big Blacks (5-2) were simply overmatched in a way that hasn’t happened in a long time
as the top-ranked Beavers (7-0) stormed out a 28-7
halftime lead and never looked back.
Point Pleasant — which entered Friday ranked
eighth in the Class AA playoff ratings — surrendered 515 yards of total offense, which included 384
rushing yards on 42 attempts for an average of 9.1
yards per carry.
Conversely, the Big Blacks managed 273 total
yards of offense — including 216 rushing yards on
32 attempts for 6.8 yards per try.
Mookie Collier gave BHS a permanent lead with
a 76-yard catch and run on a Chandler Cooper pass,
then Truck Edwards added a 14-yard run that gave
the hosts a 14-0 cushion through one quarter of play.
Collier added an 80-yard jaunt early in the second
frame for a 21-point edge, but PPHS responded with
its ﬁrst points of the night following a 24-yard run
by Justin Brumﬁeld. Edwards tacked on a 1-yard run
just before the half to give the Beavers a 28-7 cushion at the break.
Collier tacked on a 55-yard run at the start of
the third, but Brumﬁeld responded with a 27-yard
run that closed the deﬁcit down to 35-13. Edwards
added the ﬁnal score of the game on a 1-yard run just
before the end of the third canto.
Blueﬁeld claimed an 18-10 advantage in ﬁrst
downs and neither squad committed a turnover in
the contest. Point was penalized seven times for
45 yards, while the hosts were ﬂagged twice for 25
yards.
The Big Blacks last lost a regular season road
game back in Week 7 of the 2012 campaign, a 34-14
setback at Oak Hill. That was also the last time that
an opponent defeated PPHS by double digits in the
regular season.
No individual statistics were available at press
time.
Point Pleasant begins a three-game home stand to
ﬁnish out the regular season on Friday night when it
hosts Meigs at 7:30 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Bengals rally to
beat Bills, 20-16
CINCINNATI (AP)
— One pass slipped off
A.J. Green’s wet hands,
and another deﬂected
off his chest. Then he
got stripped of the ball
after a catch. The usually
sure-handed receiver was
having such a tough time
that his head coach wondered if he was hurt.
“I asked him if he was
OK,” coach Marvin Lewis
said. “He said yes. I said,
well, go win the game.”
Green overcame his
bad moments with
several game-changing
ones Sunday, scoring
on a 77-yard catch and
setting up the go-ahead
touchdown with another
big play as the Cincinnati
Bengals beat the Buffalo
Bills 20-16 in a steady
rain.
Green’s big game gave
Cincinnati (2-3) a second
chance. After losing their
ﬁrst three games, the
Bengals were in danger
of having their season
scuttled early. Instead,
back-to-back wins moved
them only a game out
of ﬁrst place in the AFC
North.
“Obviously, 2-3 is way
better than 1-4,” Andy
Dalton said. “If you look
at the way this division
is, it’s still wide open.”
For the Bills (3-2),
it was another graphic
example of how much
their depleted offense
must improve. They
had only four healthy
receivers and lost tight
end Charles Clay to an
injured left knee. Even
though the defense provided three turnovers —
Green had a hand in each
— Buffalo couldn’t take
advantage.
“When we create three
turnovers, we have to
ﬁnd a way to get the ball
into the end zone,” said

safety Jordan Poyer, who
had one of the interceptions. “Somehow, some
way, we need to ﬁgure
out how to get the ball
into the end zone. It’s a
tough loss.”
Green had one pass slip
off his hands for an interception. Another deﬂected off his chest and
was picked off. He also
fumbled after a reception.
When it mattered, he
made the difference. His
47-yard catch set up Joe
Mixon’s 5-yard run for
the go-ahead touchdown
in the fourth quarter.
“I understand the
ups and downs,” said
Green, who had seven
catches for 189 yards,
the third-highest total
of his career. “You know
me, I’m pretty level all
the time. The drops hurt,
but you just have to erase
everything.”
Some takeaways from
Paul Brown Stadium:
Dalton excelling
Dalton hurt his left
ankle in the second
quarter, got it taped
and stayed in the game
despite a limp. He was
22 of 36 for a season-high
328 yards. In his last two
games, Dalton has completed 47 of 66 passes for
614 yards with ﬁve touchdowns. Since the Bengals
changed coordinators, his
passer rating is 116.2.
Season salvaged
The Bengals go into
their bye week with a
realistic chance of reaching the playoffs. Detroit
and Miami made the
playoffs last season after
starting 2-3. They still
have two games left with
Pittsburgh and one with
Baltimore, which won
the season opener 20-0 at
Paul Brown Stadium.

Tuesday, October 10, 2017 7

Wilson wins Wirt County title
By Bryan Walters

ning mark of 17:36.66,
the only competitor out
of the 38-man ﬁeld to
ELIZABETH, W.Va. — post a sub-18-minute
time. Clayton Bee of
A triumphant return.
Ritchie County was the
After missing the
overall runner-up with a
Ritchie County Invitime of 18:03.28.
tational last weekend,
The Black Knights did
Point Pleasant junior
Luke Wilson came away not have enough competitors for a a team score
with top individual
and only three schools
honors on Saturday at
competed as teams in
the 2017 Wirt County
Wetlands Cross Country the boys event.
Ritchie County won
Invitational.
the team crown with a
Wilson captured his
third race title of the sea- ﬁnal tally of 18 points.
Williamstown was
son after posting a win-

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

second with 51 points,
while Wirt County completed the ﬁeld with 67
points.
Ethan Scott followed
Wilson for PPHS with
a 24th place effort of
21:50.97, followed by
Isaac Daniels was 25th
with a mark of 21:55.03.
Alex Foster was also
38th overall with a time
of 37:24.56.
Williamstown was
the only girls team to
compete at the event,
which allowed them to
post a perfect score of

15. The WHS tandem of
Ella Hesson (20:19.06)
and Kasey McNamara
(20:35.15) earned the
top two ﬁnishes in the
19-competitor ﬁeld.
Allison Henderson
was the lone Point Pleasant entrant in the girls
race and ﬁnished eighth
overall with a time of
24:14.31.
Visit runwv.com for
complete details of the
2017 Wirt County Wetlands Invitational.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Buckeyes blast Maryland, 62-14
By Jim Naveau

sidelined the two players ahead of him, was 3
of 12 for 16 yards.
“The defense was outCOLUMBUS, Ohio
standing,” OSU coach
– It’s not easy for a
Urban Meyer said.
defense to take the
“When you hold them
spotlight away from
to 16 yards passing or
the offense on a day a
something like that,
team scores 62 points
but Ohio State’s defense that’s good secondary
play. But I know why
might have accomplished that on Saturday. they didn’t throw very
When the No. 9 Buck- much. The defensive
line was all over them.”
eyes (5-1, 3-0 Big Ten)
Ohio State’s defense,
rolled to a 62-14 win
over Maryland (3-2, 1-1 which scored seven
touchdowns last season,
Big Ten) the numbers
that jumped off the stat got to the end zone for
the ﬁrst time this season
sheet belonged to the
when linebacker Jerome
defense.
OSU, which rolled up Baker picked up a fumble by Bortenschlager
584 yards on offense,
held the Terrapins to 66 and returned it 20 yards
for a touchdown in the
yards of total offense.
ﬁrst quarter.
One of Maryland’s
As a group, Ohio
touchdowns came on a
State’s linebackers prob100-yard kickoff return
in the ﬁrst quarter. The ably did not live up to
expectations early this
other was set up by an
season. But that has
OSU fumble at its own
turned around, Baker
27-yard line late in the
said.
fourth quarter.
“We just locked in. We
“We came out and did
what we’re supposed to were so worried about
do. We stopped the run making mistakes and
doing the wrong thing.
and didn’t give them
We told each other to
many opportunities,”
just go out there and
Ohio State defensive
end Tyquan Lewis said. play no matter who was
Maryland got 50 of its out there.
“I talked to Coach
66 yards on the ground.
(Greg) Schiano after
Quarterback Max
the Oklahoma game and
Bortenschlager, who
began the season as the he asked me ‘What’s
going on and how can
Terrapins’ No. 3 quarwe improve?’ I told him
terback before injuries
jnaveau@limanews.com

sometimes you just have
to settle down, it’s as
simple as that,” he said.
The No. 9 Buckeyes’
big win came one year
after a 62-3 victory at
Maryland. And it came
one week after a 56-0
win over Rutgers, the
other newest member of
the Big Ten, and a team
OSU has outscored
114-0 over the last two
seasons.
Barrett was 20 of
31 for 261 yards and
three touchdowns and
rushed for 59 yards
and a touchdown. J.K.
Dobbins rushed for 96
yards on 13 carries and
had a touchdown. Parris
Campbell’s six catches
led the receivers.
Ohio State led 41-7 at
halftime and outgained
Maryland 361 yards to
26 in the ﬁrst two quarters.
Even with that dominance it was far from
a perfect half for the
Buckeyes, who lost a
fumble, lost cornerback
Denzel Ward for the
afternoon because of a
targeting call and had
six early mistakes on
special teams, including allowing a 100-yard
kickoff return for a
touchdown.
While Bortenschlager
was the starter when
Maryland beat Minnesota last week, being

down 14-0 just over six
minutes into the game
was not where the Terrapins wanted to be
on Saturday. But that
is exactly where Ohio
State put them after
Barrett’s 1-yard touchdown run ended OSU’s
ﬁrst drive of the game
and Baker’s touchdown
Ty Johnson’s 100yard kickoff return after
Baker’s TD cut the lead
to 14-7 before Barrett
connected with Binjimen Victor for an 8-yard
touchdown and a 20-7
OSU lead with 7:14 left
in the ﬁrst quarter.
Two of Ohio State’s
three touchdowns in the
second quarter came on
touchdown passes by
Barrett. The ﬁrst went
to tight end Marcus
Baugh for 10 yards and
the other was 5-yard
throw into tight coverage to Austin Mack.
In between those two
TDs, Parris Campbell
scored on a 24-yard run
on a play on where Barrettt handed the ball to
running back J.K. Dobbins, who pitched it to
Campbell.
In the second half,
Mike Weber and J.K.
Dobbins added short
touchdown runs to put
OSU up 55-7. Then
Antonio Williams scored
on an 8-yard run for the
ﬁnal OSU score.

Jaguars pick off Steelers, 30-9
PITTSBURGH (AP)
— The Jacksonville
Jaguars spent the ﬁrst
month of the season
looking equal parts awesome and awful, taking
one step toward respectability immediately followed by a bafﬂing step
back.
On the road facing a
team expected to play
deep into January and
perhaps beyond, the
Jaguars instead served
notice their best start in
nearly a decade is hardly
a ﬂuke.
Turns out, running
back Leonard Fournette
can ﬂy in more ways
than one. And a secondary getting better by
the week appears ready
to make the Jaguars a
legitimate threat in the
underwhelming AFC
South.
Fournette soared for
a 2-yard touchdown and
sprinted 90 yards for
another, and Jacksonville
used Pick 6s on back-toback Pittsburgh drives to
stun the Steelers 30-9 on
Sunday.
“I think this is a completely different ballclub
compared to last year,”
said Jaguars safety
Tashaun Gipson, who
had two of Jacksonville’s
ﬁve interceptions. “We
got guys who will make
plays on the football,
guys in situations to
make plays, and that’s
all you can ask for. This

year has been fun so far.”
And decidedly different. The Jaguars (3-2)
have already matched
their 2016 win total and
are above .500 after ﬁve
games for the ﬁrst time
since 2010 thanks in
large part to Fournette’s
precocious play.
The rookie ﬁnished
with a season-high 181
yards, the knockout
punch delivered with his
dash to the open end of
Heinz Field with 1:47
to go that sent whatever
portion remained heading for the exits following Pittsburgh’s worst
home loss in coach Mike
Tomlin’s 11 seasons.
“They drafted me for a
reason,” Fournette said,
adding later his only
goal on the third-longest
touchdown run ever
against the Steelers was
simply to not get caught.
No chance.
Fournette and Jacksonville’s defense were
so dominant that quarterback Blake Bortles
only attempted one pass
in the second half. The
way the Jaguars were
overwhelming Steelers
quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, Bortles didn’t
have to do much other
than watch Fournette go
to work.
Pittsburgh (3-2) again
struggled to get big-play
production out of an
offense that was supposed to be among the

league’s best. Five games
in, the Steelers look
average. Roethlisberger
completed 33 of 55 for
312 yards and his careerhigh ﬁve interceptions,
the most by a Steelers quarterback since
Mark Malone threw ﬁve
against Cleveland in
1987.
“You know it’s one
of those things where
I’ve been doing this a
long time,” Roethlisberger said. “I’ve had
bad games before, bad
stretches. I’ve had good
ones too. You just ﬁnd a
way to move on and play
better.”
A week after a sideline
outburst generated headlines and drew Roethlisberger’s ire, Steelers
wide receiver Antonio
Brown caught 10 passes
for 157 yards. Brown
didn’t score, but twice
men attempting to cover
him did.
The Steelers led 9-7 in
the third quarter when
Roethlisberger looked
left for Brown. Jacksonville defensive lineman
Abry Jones tipped it
into the hands of Telvin
Smith, who chugged 28
yards to put Jacksonville
in front with 6:38 left in
the period.
The Jaguars defense
struck again on Pittsburgh’s next series.
Roethlisberger tried
to hit Brown down the
sideline. Jalen Ramsey

deﬂected it, Barry
Church came down with
it and 51 yards later
Jacksonville had turned
a two-point deﬁcit into
an 11-point lead without
taking an offensive snap.
“I was just right there
in the nick of time to
grab it,” Church said. “I
wasn’t letting anybody
tackle me before I got to
the end zone. I had to
get there.”
When Gipson made
a leaping pick near the
Jacksonville goal line
in the ﬁnal minutes to
thwart any chance of a
Pittsburgh rally, it gave
the Jaguars 15 takeaways on the season.
They managed an NFLlow 13 while going 3-13
in 2016.
Ground to halt
Jacksonville came in
with the top-ranked pass
defense in the league,
though that number
was a bit of a misnomer.
The Jaguars also came
in last in rushing yards
allowed, giving up an
average of 165 per game.
Pittsburgh managed just
70 on 20 carries, with
Le’Veon Bell mustering
just 47.
“They stopped the
run,” Steelers tackle
Alejandro Villanueva
said. “They pretty much
forced us to throw the
entire game and they
played better than us at
the end.”

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Truex Jr. wins yet another
playoff race for Toyota
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) — Standing next to his car in victory lane,
in this season he never thought
possible, Martin Truex Jr. struggled
with his emotions.
He raced to his career-best sixth
victory Sunday at Charlotte Motor
Speedway, and this win is worth an
automatic slot in the next round of
NASCAR’s playoffs. He’s clearly the
driver to beat in this championship
race, and the reality of how close it
really is seemed somewhat surreal.
Then he thought about his partner, Sherry Pollex, who has ovarian
cancer and chemotherapy scheduled
for Monday. She couldn’t come to
the race, partly because her weakened immune system makes crowds
too risky for her.
He choked on his words, his voice
heavy as he tried not to cry.
“I couldn’t hold it in anymore,”
he said. “Sherry, I was thinking
about her because she’s not here,
and I know she really wanted to be.
I thought about winning this ﬁrst
race of the round, the pressure coming off. Just a lot of things, I guess.
I was wore out. I just lost it for a
minute.
“There’s a lot going on. It just

LEGALS

shows how much this stuff means
to us. We put everything into this,
everything we have.”
Truex gave Toyota yet another
victory in NASCAR’s playoffs — the
manufacturer is 4 for 4 so far — on
a humid day at Charlotte. Truex has
two wins in the playoffs and this one
was the ﬁrst time in this format that
Toyota has won a race in this round
of postseason.
“Just a total team effort,” Truex
said. “Every single guy, every guy on
this team just did a perfect job today
and I can’t be more proud of them
and at this time of the year is just
when you want it to happen. You
dream about days like today. I don’t
know if we had the best car, but we
damn sure got it in victory lane.”
Kyle Busch, winner of the last two
playoff races, wrecked early in the
race yet completed it in a damaged
race car. Complaining most of the
500 miles of being overheated, he
needed immediate medical attention
when he climbed from his car.
Busch laid in the grass, packs of
ice were placed on his chest, and a
stretcher was brought to him. Once
he felt strong enough, he stood and
walked to an ambulance.

EMPLOYMENT

Jackson’s choices questioned
CLEVELAND (AP)
— Moments after losing for the 20th time in
21 games as Cleveland’s
coach, Hue Jackson
began the long, cruel
walk toward the locker
room.
As he headed for the
tunnel, Jackson was
already pondering his
postgame speech and
an explanation on his
decision to bench rookie
quarterback DeShone
Kizer at halftime.
But before leaving
the ﬁeld, Jackson was
chased down. Josh
McCown threw an
arm around his former
coach.
“I just let him know
that I’m thinking about
him, that I loved him
and to hang in there,”
McCown said after leading the New York Jets
to a 17-14 win. “I know
he’s ﬁghting a ﬁght. I
believe in him.”
Jackson may need
more than McCown’s
support.

and the ﬁeld-goal unit
onto the ﬁeld, but called
a timeout and changed
his mind, partially inﬂuenced by two missed
kicks in in the ﬁrst half.
Jackson dialed up a
running play, but the
Jets stuffed Isaiah Crowell after a 1-yard gain,
giving the ball back to
McCown, who then engineered a 97-yard touchdown drive that put New
York ahead by 10.

Employment Opportunity

$600 FREE RENT
Ellm View Apts.
Rent: $425 &amp; Up
Includes: AC, W/D hook up
&amp; much more.
Landlords pays Water,
Trash, Sewage
304-88-3017
Equal Housing Opportunity

+RXVH IRU 5HQW�DYDLODEOH 2FW �
���� � EHGURRPV�
IXUQDQFH�QHZ IORRUV�QHZ SDLQW
�����������������

Chief Executive Officer for Meigs Industries, Inc. to run all
aspects of an Adult Day Program for individuals with developmental disabilities.

�2KLR 7RZQVKLS 7UXVWHHV ZLOO
KROG WKHLU UHJXODU PHHWLQJ DQG
FRQVLGHU DQG DGRSW WKH ����
7RZQVKLS EXGJHW RQ 2FWREHU
��� ���� DW ���� 3�0� 7KH
PHHWLQJ ZLOO EH KHOG DW WKH ILUH
VWDWLRQ RQ :DXJK 5RDG��
,I \RX KDYH DQ\ TXHVWLRQ IHHO
IUHH WR FDOO �������������
7KDQNV� 6FRWW *LEVRQ )LVFDO
2IILFHU 2KLR 7RZQVKLS�
�������������������������

*RRG 1HZV %DSWLVW &amp;KXUFK LV
ORRNLQJ WR KLUH D SDUW WLPH
FXVWRGLDQ� ��� KRXUV D ZHHN�
&amp;DOO ������������ DQG OHDYH
D PHVVDJH WR OHDUQ PRUH DQG
DSSO\�

ANNOUNCEMENTS

2BR second floor Apartment
overlooking Gallipolis City Park
$650 per month plus security
deposit No pets trash included
Call 740-645-1022
or 740-441-7875

Pleasant Valley Hospital is seeking a full-time Licensed
Practical Nurse for a physician office. Must have a
good understanding of physician office procedures and
enjoy working with the public.

0XVW VHH�� EG��EDWK DSW�QHZ
IORRUV�IUHVK SDLQW�JUHDW ORFD�
WLRQ� ���� WUDVK LQFOXGHG SOXV
GHSRVLW ������������

)��# ��"����� ������!����
)� �(�����"������������"������#�!��������� ����#!���!!�� ��"���!�
)� ���!��"������'����� !������"�"�$��!��� '������&amp;������"�����(�"!���
)� #�"���� ����# !����"�

+RXVH )RU 5HQW
� %HGURRP LQ 1HZ +DYHQ ���
D PRQWK ��� GHSRVLW
������������

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

*Specialized work in administration and supervision of a comprehensive program of training and vocational services
*Provides leadership to plan, develop, implement and evaluate
mandated and other services to meet unique needs
*Develops budget; writes grants and proposals; ensures completion of Medicaid billing
*Hires, trains, evaluates and disciplines staff members
*Coordinates the purchasing and maintenance of equipment
and supplies
*Develops and promotes good public relations
Bachelor's degree in Business, Education or related field and
supervisory experience of programs or services for persons
with developmental disabilities required.

Apartments/Townhouses

Send resume by October 18th to: Meigs Industries, Inc.
1310 Carleton Street, P.O. Box 307, Syracuse, OH 45779
EEO

Requirements:

OH-70004546

Get the most

�� ��� #��� ���%� �������

B
A
N
G

AUCTION
Thursday, October 12 at 5:30 PM
�5+)9-,�)9�9/-��:+9054��-49-7�&gt;��� ��,)38;022-�",�&gt;��)854��'&amp;
�%"��$%"�
Match Pair Leaded Glass Stack Bookcases, Curved Glass China, Oak Washstand, Oak
Bookcase, Oak Desk, Bedroom Suits, Plus Much More.
���##'�"�
Weller Pottery, Blenko Glass, Fenton Glass, Stone Jars, Fiesta Dishes, Antique Lamps, Old
Toys, Carnival Glass, Indian Pottery, Milk Jugs, Pfaltzcraft Set, Robinson Ransbottom Oil Jar,
Bird Cage, Blue Canning Jars, Silverware Sets, Bed Spreads, and Much More.
�/-+1��:+9054=06�+53�.57�60+9:7-8�

OH-70005243

for your buck...
ADVER TISE!

The Browns (0-5)
are again headed down
a painful path led by
Jackson, who didn’t do
himself any favors with a
very questionable choice
not to kick a potential
game-tying ﬁeld goal in
the fourth quarter.
Cleveland was down
10-7 and facing a fourthand-2 at New York’s four
with 13:03 left. Jackson
initially sent rookie
kicker Zane Gonzalez

Houses For Rent

Other

Just in Time for
Christmas,small black bear
fully mounted in walking
position $700.: Remington
Model 11-48, 410-GA, $750.
Full set walking Liberty Half
Dollars.1916-1947 $1650.
Ironton,Oh 740-533-3870

David Richard | AP

Cleveland Browns defensive end Myles Garrett (95) pushes past
New York Jets offensive tackle Kelvin Beachum (68) during the
first half of an NFL football game Sunday in Cleveland. The Jets
won 17-14.

Apartments/Townhouses

Legals

Miscellaneous

Daily Sentinel

$�"�#����#�� "�������'�&amp;��������
�����������$$�"� ���"���$�
�
�
�%�$� ��� ��%�$����(��"����!��"# ���%�$� ��� ��
"0+1&lt;�!��"# ���"�����
� ��� �
�� "� � � � � ���

Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
is seeking full-time Certified Nursing Assistants. The
Certified Nursing Assistants provide support and total
assistance in the performance of the activities of daily
living as required by the residents.
Qualiﬁcations:
+�� %#$���������� ����
+� ������������� ������"��!%�&amp;����$�
+� ���#��$������)�����"#���� �$�$�&amp;��#���")������(������$�����*�$#���
OH-70004532

�� ���"%���"���'�"� �����

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, October 10, 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

�

�

�

�
� �

�
�

�

� �
�
�

�
�$IFFICULTY ,EVEL

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

�����

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

���� #ONCEPTIS 0UZZLES $IST� BY +ING &amp;EATURES 3YNDICATE )NC�

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

�����

�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�
�

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

� �
�
�

�
�

Hank Ketcham’s

�

�

�

By Hilary Price

�

� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
� � �
�$IFFICULTY ,EVEL

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

�
� �

���� #ONCEPTIS 0UZZLES $IST� BY +ING &amp;EATURES 3YNDICATE )NC�

"Y $AVE 'REEN

Having A Yard Sale?
Call your classified department
to schedule your ad today!

�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Man sues Cubs over foul ball

CHICAGO (AP) — A man who
was left blind in one eye — at least
temporarily — and may ultimately
lose the eye after a foul ball struck
him in the face at Wrigley Field
this summer has ﬁled a lawsuit
against the Chicago Cubs and
Major League Baseball, alleging
that they have failed to install
enough safety netting to protect
him and other fans.
At a Monday news conference
60-year-old John “Jay” Loos said

Herd
From page 6

punts. Chris Jackson
picked off a Charlotte
pass in the ﬁrst half that
was almost immediately
fumbled back to the
hosts. The 49ers also
missed a 33-yard ﬁeld
goal attempt on their
ﬁnal drive of the night.
The Thundering Herd
claimed a 23-9 edge in
ﬁrst downs and ﬁnished
the night minus-1 in
turnover differential.
Marshall outgained the
hosts by a nearly 2-to-1
edge in total yards of
offense with a 404-212
overall advantage.
Keion Davis led the
Marshall ground game
with 122 yards on 23
carries, followed by
Tyler King with 74
yards on 13 attempts.

Invite
From page 6

75th-place in 21:36.
Only team champion
Teays Valley with a 44
and runner-up Alexander
with a 66 ﬁnished ahead
of River Valley.

he has undergone three surgeries
to repair his severely damaged
left eye and the ﬁve bones in his
face shattered by the foul ball that
struck him as he sat down the ﬁrstbase line during a game between
the Cubs and the Pittsburgh
Pirates on Aug. 29.
“I had no idea that you were
subjected to such missiles…. said
Roos, whose eye was heavily bandaged. “You could be there with a
mitt and you wouldn’t have been

Litton had four
scrambles for 21 yards
and also completed
19-of-28 passes for 192
yards to go along with
the two scores.
Ryan Yurachek led
the MU receiving corps
with seven catches for
52 yards, while Brady
hauled in six passes
for 88 yards and a pair
of scores. Davis also
hauled in three passes
for 24 yards.
The Green and White
held UNCC to just 3-of14 on third down plays
and also recorded the
only two sacks in the
game. Ryan Bee had a
solo sack that resulted
in a 9-yard loss, while
Juwon Young and Artis
Johnson teamed up on a
2-yard loss.
Malik Gant led the
Herd defenders with 11
total tackles, followed
by Brandon Drayton

The Marauders’ ﬁve
runners were Landon
Davis (57th in 20:47),
Colton Heater (71st in
21:16), Christian Jones
(106th in 23:23), Brandon Justis (136th in
24:45) and Cole Hoffman
(151st in 25:18).
South Gallia freshman

able to react in time.”
With the lawsuit, Loos joins a
growing chorus of critics who after
recent incidents to call on Major
League teams to extend the safety
netting farther down the lines to
protect fans sitting there like the
netting that protects the fans sitting behind home plate. There also
was an incident last month at New
York’s Yankee Stadium in which a
2-year-old was struck in the face
by a line drive foul ball.

with nine tackles and
Chase Hancock with
seven stops. The guests
also recorded ﬁve tackles for losses for 18
total yards.
MU placekicker
Kaare Vedvik — who
made both of his extrapoint boots — missed
a 39-yard ﬁeld goal
attempt on the guests’
ﬁrst drive of the second
quarter.
Benny LeMay led the
hosts with 38 rushing
yards on nine carries.
Hassan Klugh was
10-of-21 passing for 132
yards to go with a pick.
Klugh also had eight
carries for just four
yards on the ground.
Workpeh Kofa paced
UNCC with four catches
for 38 yards, while
Trent Bostick hauled in
two passes for 51 yards.
Ben Deluca led Charlotte with 17 total tack-

Garrett Frazee ﬁnished
13th overall in exactly
19 minutes, while fellow
freshman Grifﬁn Davis
was 154th in 25:32.
There were 194 runners
in the boys “Purple” high
school race, with another
107 individuals and 13
teams in the “Gold” race.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Center for Women’s Health

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

OH-80002484

les. Tommy Doctor and
Nate Mullen also recovered a fumble apiece.
The Herd returns
to action at 2:30 p.m.
Saturday when it hosts
Old Dominion on
Homecoming at Joan C.
Edwards Stadium.
NOTE: Former Point
Pleasant standout Cody
Mitchell earned his ﬁrst
collegiate start at tight
end for the Thundering
Herd. Mitchell was not
targeted for a pass, but
does have ﬁve kickoff
returns this year for
48 yards — a 9.6 average. … The Marshall
offensive line has not
allowed a sack in the
last three games while
also leading the way for
a pair of 100-yard rushing efforts. King gained
101 yards against Kent
State at the beginning
of the current win
streak.

Eastern’s only runners
in the “Gold”5K were
senior Owen Arix in 20th
in 17:57 and sophomore
Colton Reynolds in 23rd
in 18:02.
For the Lady Eagles,
they had six runners at
Unioto, as senior Jessica
Cook (11th in 20:48) and
junior Ally Durst (14th in
21:10) led the way.
The other four Eagle
times belonged to Rhiannon Morris (30th in
22:24), Kaitlyn Hawk
(45th in 23:27), Whitney
Durst (53rd in 23:54)
and Lexa Hayes (59th in
24:36).
Only Fairﬁeld Union
(47), Vinton County (90)
and Chillicothe (102)
placed ahead of Eastern
in the team standings,
as junior Jenny Seas of
Peebles easily won the
individual title — out of

Ohio

Daily Sentinel

NFL

Buffalo
N.Y. Jets
New England
Miami

W
3
3
3
2

L
2
2
2
2

T
0
0
0
0

Jacksonville
Houston
Tennessee
Indianapolis

W
3
2
2
2

L
2
3
3
3

T
0
0
0
0

Pittsburgh
Baltimore
Cincinnati
Cleveland

W
3
3
2
0

L
2
2
3
5

T
0
0
0
0

Kansas City
Denver
Oakland
L.A. Chargers

W
5
3
2
1

L
0
1
3
4

T
0
0
0
0

Philadelphia
Washington
Dallas
N.Y. Giants

W
4
2
2
0

L
1
2
3
5

T
0
0
0
0

Carolina
Atlanta
New Orleans
Tampa Bay

W
4
3
2
2

L
1
1
2
2

T
0
0
0
0

Green Bay
Detroit
Minnesota
Chicago

W
4
3
2
1

L
1
2
2
3

T
0
0
0
0

Seattle
L.A. Rams
Arizona
San Francisco

W
3
3
2
0

L
2
2
3
5

T
0
0
0
0

All Times EDT
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
Pct PF PA Home Away
.600 89 74 2-0-0 1-2-0
.600 92 106 2-0-0 1-2-0
.600 148 142 1-2-0 2-0-0
.500 41 67
1-1-0
1-1-0
South
Pct PF PA Home Away
.600 139 83
1-1-0 2-1-0
.400 144 130 1-2-0
1-1-0
.400 110 142
1-1-0 1-2-0
.400 97 159 2-1-0 0-2-0
North
Pct PF PA Home Away
.600 99 89
1-1-0 2-1-0
.600 90 97
1-1-0 2-1-0
.400 84 83 1-2-0
1-1-0
.000 77 124 0-3-0 0-2-0
West
Pct PF PA Home Away
1.000 164 111 2-0-0 3-0-0
.750 98 74 3-0-0 0-1-0
.400 108 109
1-1-0 1-2-0
.200 99 115 0-3-0
1-1-0
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
Pct PF PA Home Away
.800 137 99 2-0-0 2-1-0
.500 91 89
1-1-0
1-1-0
.400 125 132 1-2-0
1-1-0
.000 82 122 0-2-0 0-3-0
South
Pct PF PA Home Away
.800 105 94
1-1-0 3-0-0
.750 104 89
1-1-0 2-0-0
.500 93 78 0-1-0 2-1-0
.500 85 83 2-1-0 0-1-0
North
Pct PF PA Home Away
.800 137 112 3-0-0
1-1-0
.600 123 97 1-2-0 2-0-0
.500 79 76 2-1-0 0-1-0
.250 61 104
1-1-0 0-2-0
West
Pct PF PA Home Away
.600 110 87 2-0-0 1-2-0
.600 152 121 1-2-0 2-0-0
.400 81 125
1-1-0 1-2-0
.000 89 120 0-2-0 0-3-0

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

NFC
1-1-0
0-0-0
2-1-0
0-1-0

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

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

NFC
0-0-0
0-0-0
1-0-0
1-3-0

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

AFC
2-1-0
3-2-0
2-2-0
0-5-0

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

Div
2-0-0
2-1-0
1-1-0
0-3-0

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

NFC
2-0-0
1-0-0
0-1-0
1-1-0

Div
1-0-0
2-0-0
0-1-0
0-2-0

NFC
3-0-0
1-1-0
2-2-0
0-4-0

AFC
1-1-0
1-1-0
0-1-0
0-1-0

Div
2-0-0
0-1-0
1-0-0
0-2-0

NFC
2-1-0
3-0-0
1-1-0
2-1-0

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

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

NFC
3-1-0
3-2-0
2-1-0
0-3-0

AFC
1-0-0
0-0-0
0-1-0
1-0-0

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

NFC
2-1-0
2-2-0
1-3-0
0-4-0

AFC
1-1-0
1-0-0
1-0-0
0-1-0

Div
2-0-0
1-1-0
1-0-0
0-3-0

Thursday’s Games
New England 19, Tampa Bay 14
Sunday’s Games
N.Y. Jets 17, Cleveland 14
Philadelphia 34, Arizona 7
Cincinnati 20, Buffalo 16
Jacksonville 30, Pittsburgh 9
Carolina 27, Detroit 24
Miami 16, Tennessee 10
L.A. Chargers 27, N.Y. Giants 22
Indianapolis 26, San Francisco 23, OT
Baltimore 30, Oakland 17
Seattle 16, L.A. Rams 10
Green Bay 35, Dallas 31
Kansas City 42, Houston 34
Open: Washington, New Orleans, Atlanta,
Denver
Monday’s Games
Minnesota at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.

Thursday, Oct. 12
Philadelphia at Carolina, 8:25 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 15
Green Bay at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Cleveland at Houston, 1 p.m.
Detroit at New Orleans, 1 p.m.
Miami at Atlanta, 1 p.m.
New England at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.
Chicago at Baltimore, 1 p.m.
San Francisco at Washington, 1 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Arizona, 4:05 p.m.
L.A. Rams at Jacksonville, 4:05 p.m.
L.A. Chargers at Oakland, 4:25 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Kansas City, 4:25 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Denver, 8:30 p.m.
Open: Buffalo, Dallas, Seattle, Cincinnati
Monday, Oct. 16
Indianapolis at Tennessee, 8:30 p.m.

91 runners — in a superfast 18 minutes and 15
seconds.
Two Lady Raiders —
senior Kenzie Baker in
second in 21:32 and freshman Hannah Culpepper
in fourth in 23:07 —registered top-four ﬁnishes,
while the remaining River
Valley scorers all ranged
within 50 places (33rd
thru 83rd) of one another.
They included Akari
Michimukai (33rd in
25:18), Josie Jones (35th
in 25:22), Connie Stewart
(62nd in 28:26), Natosha
Rankin (65th in 28:37)
and Julia Nutter (83rd in
29:51).
Only Teays Valley (81),
Fairﬁeld Union (97) and
Alexander (106) placed
ahead of the Lady Raiders
for the team championship.
The Lady Marauders’

ﬁve runners were Caitlyn
Rest (16th in 24:11),
Taylor Swartz (22nd in
24:37), Madison Cremeans (34th in 25:21),
Ariann Sizemore (41st
in 25:48) and Carmen
Doherty (76th in 29:26).
Also running in the
girls “Purple” race —
which had 119 runners
— was Eastern freshman
Alysa Howard, who was
57th in 27:31.
Visit www.baumspage.
com for a complete list of
results of the 2017 Unioto
Invitational.
All four Ohio Valley
Publishing area programs which competed
at Unioto — along with
Southern — will return
to action on Saturday at
the annual Tri-Valley Conference meet at Wellston.

huge part in it. Four turnovers to one, that is not
winning football. We realFrom page 6
ly didn’t play well enough
25-yard pass from Morris on offense, defense, or
special teams. We did
to Conklin followed by a
10-yard scoring pass play not have one area that
by the same duo gave the played winning football.
When that happens you
guests a 26-14 lead with
usually don’t win football
10:16 remaining.
games. We hung in there
The Bobcat offense
couldn’t answer the score and kept the score close
but Ohio punter Michael to where if we’d stopped
Farkas pinned the guests them on their last drive,
back inside their own 20. who knows what would
have happened. EveryThe guests were backed
thing leading up to that is
up as far as the six, but
not good football.”
made it back to the 13
For the game, Ohio
before having to punt.
Ohio junior Tyler Gullett held a 350-to-317 advanblocked the punt attempt tage in total offense,
including 190-to-68 on
and the ball went out of
the ground. OU held a
the endzone for a safety,
21-18 edge in ﬁrst downs,
trimming the Chippewa
while converting on 10
lead to 26-16 with 7:48
third downs, twice as
to play.
many as CMU. Ohio was
On the ensuing Ohio
penalized ﬁve times for
drive, the Bobcats cova total of 28 yards, while
ered 65 yards in seven
plays with Rourke scoring Central Michigan was
sent back eight times for
from four yards out on a
78 yards.
third-and-goal. Zervos’
Rourke — who was
point-after made the
17-of-31 passing for 160
Bobcat deﬁcit just three
points, at 26-23 with 5:01 yards — led the Bobcats
on the ground with 105
to play.
The Ohio offense never yards and three scores on
regained possession, how- 13 carries.
A.J. Ouellette had 76
ever, as the Chippewas
total yards on 15 carries
converted on a trio of
and two receptions, while
third downs and sealed
Brown added 18 yards
the 26-23 victory.
on nine carries. Brendan
“This was a difﬁcult,
Cope led all Ohio receivstrange game,” said Solers with six receptions
ich. “Turnovers played a

Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

and 58 yards, Meyer
added 39 yards on two
receptions, while Troy
Mangen hauled in three
passes for 26 yards.
Cameron Odom caught
two passes for 10 yards in
the setback, while Mason
Morgan and David Burroughs each had a one
catch, gaining 12 and four
yards respectively.
Moore led the Bobcat
defense with nine tackles, two for a loss, and
an interception. Evan
Croutch also came up
with nine tackles, while
Bradd Ellis had eight
tackles, including a teambest ﬁve solo tackles.
Wyatt Shallman had a
sack for the OU defense,
while Tony Porter and
Cleon Aloese combined
for another sack.
Morris was 25-of-35
passing for 249 yards
and two touchdowns for
CMU. Conklin led all
receivers with 136 yards
and two scores on 10
grabs. Tony Joljan led the
Chippewas on the ground
with 24 yards on ﬁve
tries.
Central Michigan is
now 25-5 all-time against
Ohio.
Ohio returns to action
at Bowling Green on Saturday at 3:30 p.m.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="68">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1605">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="4057">
            <text>newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="3048">
              <text>October 10, 2017</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1950">
      <name>cheuvront</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1949">
      <name>downs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1398">
      <name>oiler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="255">
      <name>thacker</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
