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                  <text>On this
day in
history

Chance
of rain,
81/59

Southern
falls to
Wahama

EDITORIAL s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 162, Volume 71

Learning fire safety

Meigs voters to
consider renewal
of library levy
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.
com

POMEROY — The
Meigs County District
Public Library is asking
voters to consider the
renewal of its current
one mill, ﬁve year tax
levy.
The levy was ﬁrst
approved by voters
in March 2012 by an
approximately 1,500
vote margin.
Generating approximately $300,000 per
year, the levy has
allowed the library to
maintain services and
hours despite cuts in
state funding.
“A renewal allows us
to keep those hours and
services,” explained
Library Director Kristi
Eblin.
Before the levy was

approved in 2012,
the library had put a
freeze on new materials, cut hours and a
few positions. All of
those things have been
restored due to the levy
funding.
Eblin explained that
the library currently
receives around the
same funding as it did
in 2001 despite the
fact that minimum
wage and costs have
increased for operating
the library and providing materials and services.
While the levy has
allowed the services
and hours to be maintained over the past
ﬁve years, Eblin and
Assistant Director
Chelsea Poole cautioned that without the

Wednesday, October 11, 2017 s 50¢

Courtesy of Southern Elementary

See LEVY | 3

The Racine Volunteer Fire Department presented information about Fire Safety Week on Monday to Headstart through Grade 4 students
at Southern Elementary. Junior Firemen assisting with the event were Ryan McCabe, Larry Dunn, Logan Dunn, and Gage Barrett.

Pair facing civil
rights charges

Drones are here to stay

By Beth Sergent
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT — Two adults have been
arrested and are each facing a civil rights charges
after a reported confrontation with a juvenile.
Delia D. Carr, 37 and Rocky L.
Nibert, 32, both of Point Pleasant,
have each been charged with prohibition violation of an individual’s
civil rights. Carr was also charged
with felony wanton endangerment.
Both were taken into custody and
appeared on Tuesday for arraignCarr
ment before Magistrate Cheryl Ross
who set Carr’s bond at $50,000 and
Nibert’s at $25,000. Both posted
property bonds and were later
released, according to court records.
The Point Pleasant Police Department reports on Friday, it received a
report from the mother of a 16-year
Nibert
old male claiming her son was
assaulted by three adults while playing basketball at the public courts located along
27th Street. According to the PPPD, the mother
told police racial slurs were used towards her son
and at one point, a handgun was pointed at him.
According to the criminal complaints ﬁled in
magistrate court, Carr is accused of calling the
teen the n-word multiple times and allegedly “did
point and wave a gun at him, putting him in fear
of being harmed and seriously injured.” Nibert
is accused of making threats towards the teen,
See CHARGES | 3

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

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
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thoughts.

Applications
in agriculture,
first response
Staff Report

POMEROY — While
many people see
drones, formally Small
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles or SAUVs, as nuisances, they have many
uses in agriculture, ﬁrst
response and engineering.
That was according
to John Bentz, Racine,
who gave a presentation,
“The View from Above,
the Use of Unmanned
Aircraft Systems in
Everyday Life,” at this
year’s annual Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District’s annual meeting
and election, which was
held Tuesday, Oct. 3 at
Meigs High School.
Bentz, a civil engineer
employed with Pickering
Associates and a Federal
Aviation Administrationcertiﬁed drone pilot,
stressed the importance
of drone operators to be
responsible and respectful of other people,
and drew a distinction
between recreational
users and commercial
users, who are regulated
by the FAA.
Recreational rules
include ﬂying no higher
than 400 feet and keeping the drone in sight
at all times. In addition
they are not allowed to
ﬂy near airports and
over people or sporting
events.
“Drones are becoming
very much a part of our
society whether we like it
or not,” Bentz explained,
citing a study from 2012
that erroneously estimated by the year 2020 there
would be approximately
30,000 drones in operation.

Courtesy photo

Southern High School FFA students Caelin Seth, Kristen McKay, and Ciera Whitesell were recognized
as first, second and third place participants in the Agricultural Land Judging Competition held
in September near New Marshfield. The top scoring team was from Southern and included Seth,
McKay, Whitesell, and Riley Holding. Shown are, from left: Meigs SWCD education coordinator Jenny
Ridenour, Whitesell, McKay, and Seth.

That 30,000 ﬁgure was
too low; since then that
number has been revised
to 7 million drones by
2020. The number of
hobby and commercial
drones is currently estimated around 2 million.
Bentz showed one of
his drones, a brick-sized
DJI Mavic Pro, which
can ﬂy up to 40 milesper-hour out to 4.3 miles
from the operator. It can
also attain an altitude of
3.1 miles (but is limited
by FAA rules to 400
feet), and has a battery
life of 27 minutes.
That particular
drone includes several
safety features including
obstacle avoidance and a
“return-to-home” feature.
He explained how
agricultural producers
can also use drones and
associated software for a
variety of purposes from
determining the fertility
and successful growing
rate of crop ﬁelds, to simply counting the cows in
the back 40 without ever
leaving the house.
First responders and
others are also using
drones, which can be

Heike Perko, left, eighth-grade science teacher at Meigs Middle
School, was honored as the inaugural Meigs SWCD Conservation
Teacher of the Year at last week’s Meigs SWCD annual banquet and
meeting. She is shown with Meigs SWCD education coordinator
Jenny Ridenour.

deployed quickly and up
to 400 percent cheaper
than helicopters. Other
relevant uses include
mapping and engineer-

ing including bridge and
tower inspections.
Again he stressed the
See DRONES | 3

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, October 11, 2017

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS BRIEFS

OBITUARIES
MARY ‘JO’ COATES
COOLVILLE — Mary
“Jo” Coates, 80, of
Coolville, Ohio, was
escorted into the loving
arms of Jesus on angel’s
wings Monday, Oct. 9,
2017.
She was born Feb.
28, 1937, in Grantsville,
W.Va., daughter of Lafe
and Edith Cogar, who
preceded her in death.
She is survived by
a son, Roger (Diana)
Coates of Pomeroy,
Ohio; daughters, Barbara (Lewis) Pulver of
Coolville, Ohio and Cathy
Coates of Coolville, Ohio;
ﬁve grandchildren, Joey
(Tish) Coates of Long
Bottom, Ohio, Samuel
(Leslie) Pulver of Beavercreek, Ohio, Amanda
(Ryan) Dill of Chester,
Ohio, John (Janel) Harrison of New Haven,
W.Va. and Amy (Joe)
Gray of Racine, Ohio;
14 great-grandchildren;
brothers, Bill (Shirley)

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.

Cogar, Gerald Cogar and
Richard Cogar; sisters,
Helen Frank, Nettie
(James) Fulenwider,
Judy (Charles) Lee,
Ginger (Willard) Reed
and Loretta (Junior) Van
Cooney.
Besides her parents she
was preceded in death by
her husband of 54 years,
Alva J. Coates in 2009; a
sister, Sharon Rizer; two
infant brothers; and a
brother, Jack Jordan.
It was truly an honor
to have this beautiful
woman as our Mother,
Grandmother, Aunt and
Sister.
Visitation will be held
Thursday, from 6-8 p.m.
at White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home in
Coolville, Ohio.
There will be no funeral service.
You are invited to sign
the online guestbook at
www.whiteschwarzelfh.
com.

Immunization
clinic Tuesday

State Route
124 slip repair

Meigs County
Road 128 closed

SOUTH POINT — Wanda Blevins Robertson, of
South Point, passed away Sunday October 8, 2017
at the age of 85. Private services will be held for the
family.

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

BRENNER
PROCTORVILLE — Elizabeth Betty Ann Paschall
Brenner, of Proctorville, Ohio, passed away September 29, 2017. A memorial service will be held at
Chesapeake United Methodist Church on Friday, Oct.
13th at 4 p.m.
HALFHILL
CHESHIRE — Dana H. Halfhill, 58, of Cheshire,
died Tuesday, October 10, 2017 at Riverside Methodist Hospital, Columbus, Ohio. Arrangements will be
announced later by the Willis Funeral Home.

Wednesday, Oct. 11

COTTAGEVILLE, W.Va. — Patricia “Patty” Anne
(Patrick) Rice age 65, of Cottageville, W.Va, died
Tuesday, October 3, 2017 after a long battle with
Liver Failure.
Visitation will be Friday, October 6, 2017 from
6-8 p.m. with funeral services Saturday Oct. 7, 2017
beginning at 2 p.m., all at the funeral home, burial will
follow at The Rice Family Cemetery in Cottageville.

Saturday, Oct. 14

Wednesday, Oct. 18

POMEROY — The 2017

POMEROY — An American

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

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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.

Saturday, Oct. 21
MIDDLEPORT — Middleport Fire Department will hold
a Chicken BBQ starting at 11
a.m. at the BBQ pit at Race and
4th Streets in Middleport.
RACINE — A craft show
will be held at Southern High
School from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Admission is free and refreshments will be available from
the Athletic Boosters. Proceeds
benefit the Southern Softball
program.

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Fight "Shamrock FC 290"
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Red Cross Blood Drive will be
held from 1:30-6 p.m. at the
Mulberry Community Center.

WEDNESDAY EVENING
3

Sunday, Oct. 22

Monday, Oct. 16

POMEROY — Alpha Iota Masters will meet at 11:30 a.m. at
New Beginnings United Methodist Church with hostesses Annie
Chapman and Eleanor McKelvey.

Thursday, Oct. 12

FORTNER

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.

LETART TWP. — The regular
meeting of the Letart Township
Trustees will be held at 5 p.m. at
the Letart Township Building.
CHESHIRE — Western Square
Dancing Lessons, 7-8 p.m. at
Gavin Employees Recreation
Building, State Route 554,
Cheshire, Ohio. This activity
suited for couples or singles, age
14 and up. For more information
call 304-675-3275, 740-517-6585,
740-446-4213 or 740-592-5668.

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

RICE

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.

Cancer survivor
dinner Nov. 3

RACINE — A concrete pavement restoration project began
on Sept. 5, on US 33 in Meigs
POMEROY — The Meigs
County. The project is taking
County Cancer Initiative is coorplace between Bashan Road
dinating the Meigs County Can(County Road 28) and Sandy
cer Survivor Dinner, which is a
Desert Road (Township Road
free event for Meigs County can371). A 14 foot width restriccer survivors and a guest. It will
POMEROY — The Meigs
be held on Nov. 3rd at Meigs High tion will be in place in this area
County Health Department will
from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m., Monday
School beginning at 6:30 p.m. A
conduct an Immunization Clinic
survivor is anyone who has heard through Friday. The estimated
on Tuesday from 9-11 a.m. and
completion date is Oct. 15.
the words “You have cancer.” To
1-3 p.m. at 112 E. Memorial
RSVP, call or email Courtney MidDrive in Pomeroy. Please bring
child(ren)’s shot records. Children kiff at 740-992-6626 Ext. 1028 or
must be accompanied by a parent/ courtney.midkiff@meigs-health.
legal guardian. A $15.00 donation com by or before Oct. 27.
is appreciated for immunization
administration; however, no one
will be denied services because
REEDSVILLE — State Route
of an inability to pay an admin124 in Meigs County will be
istration fee for state-funded
closed for a slip repair project
childhood vaccines. Please bring
beginning Sept. 11, 2017. The
medical cards and/or commercial
closure is taking place 0.5 miles
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs
insurance cards, if applicable.
north of Township Road 402
County Road 28, Locust Grove
Zostavax (shingles); pneumonia
(Barr Hollow). The estimated
Road, will be closed between
and inﬂuenza vaccines are also
completion date is Oct. 31,
State Route 7 and T-1059, Riggs
available. Call for eligibility deter- Crest Road, to allow county forces 2017. The posted detour is State
mination and availability or visit
Route 681 to State Route 7 N to
to repair a slip. This closing will
our website at www.meigs-health. be in effect from Monday, Sept.
State Route 144 S to State Route
com to see a list of accepted com- 25, to Friday, Oct. 13.
124.
mercial insurances and Medicaid

ROBERTSON

JACKSON — Tonnie Fortner, age 70, of Jackson,
originally of Oak Hill, passed away Tuesday, October
10, 2017. Friends may call Thursday, October 12,
2017 from 1-3 p.m. at the Lewis &amp; Gillum Funeral
Home of Oak Hill. A funeral service will immediately
follow the calling hours at 3 p.m. with Rev. Jamie
Fortner and Rev. Mick Browning ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow in the Fortner Family Cemetery.

US 33 concrete
restoration

for adults.

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lead singer of the band he idolizes. TVMA Bus
Dafoe, Christian Bale. TVMA
(5:15)
Can't Hardly
Mother's Day ('16, Com) Jennifer Aniston, Britt
The Edge of Seventeen School becomes
(:45)
Wait ('98, Com) Jennifer
Robertson. Four stories about mothers all come together to more unbearable for Nadine when her best Casualties of
Love Hewitt. TV14
celebrate anything and everything Mom. TV14
friend starts dating her brother. TVMA
War TVMA
(5:50)

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 11, 2017 3

Drones
From page 1

need for operators to
responsible and respectful
of other people.
“Drones can be a
nuisance, but they have
advantages… you will be
seeing their capabilities
and use expanding farther and farther,” Bentz
concluded.
Conservation Teacher of the
Year
Heike Perko, New
Marshﬁeld, was recognized as the inaugural
Conservation Teacher of
the Year.
The award was
announced by Meigs
SWCD education coordinator Jenny Ridenour,
who said to be considered for this award, a
teacher must have demonstrated commitment to
conservation education
by long-time cooperation,
practice, service or education.
Perko, the eighth-grade
science teacher at Meigs
Middle School, takes
her students outside and
hikes, conducts biological and chemical stream
studies, and started an
outdoor garden, Ridenour said. She also wrote
many grants to give
her students additional
opportunities to study
and learn out-of-doors,
and started an afternoon
garden club, which was a
huge success.
She started at Meigs
Local as the Talented and
Gifted teacher at Meigs
Intermediate School, and
was also a fourth-grade
science teacher.
“This teacher has a
long history of research
and environmental education,” Ridenour said.
“From studying seals and
sea lions in Seattle, Wash-

Courtesy photos

Southern High School FFA students Valerie Hamm and Dominique Wehrung were recognized as
first and second place, respectively, as high-scoring individuals in the Urban Land Judging Contest
held last month in Athens County. Taking third place was Jacob Jordan, Meigs High School FFA (not
pictured). The top scoring team was from SHS and included Valerie Hamm, Wehrung, Colton Hamm,
and Austin Rose. Shown are, from left: Meigs SWCD education coordinator Jenny Ridenour, Wehrung,
Valerie Hamm, and Rose.
Bryan White, Coolville, center, was recognized as the 2017 Meigs
SWCD Cooperator of the Year at the Meigs SWCD annual banquet
ington, to bats at Zaleski White has completed
that the Farm Bureau
and meeting on Oct. 2. He is shown with Carrie Crislip, USDA-NRCS
State Forest and Richland numerous projects includ- will begin holding its
district conservationist for Meigs County, and Joe Bolin, president
of the Meigs SWCD Board of Supervisors.
Furnace. She was a bird
ing improved grazing
annual meetings and

guide in St. Paul, Alaska,
an environmental educator at the Cincinnati Zoo,
an ornithology instructor
at Hocking College and a
naturalist at Clear Creek
Metro Park.”
Perko is also a member
of the Raccoon Creek
Partnership and assisted
with the Meigs SWCD
Rain Barrel Workshop
last year.
Cooperator of the Year
Bryan White of
Coolville and Cool Country Farms was named the
2017 Meigs SWCD Outstanding Cooperator.
Carrie Crislip, United
States Department of
Agriculture-Natural
Resources Conservation
Service district conservationist for Meigs County,
cited White’s long-time
cooperation with the
NRCS and the Meigs
SWCD dating back to
2007.
Using multiple agreements with the NRCS,

operations, access roads,
subsurface drainage,
watering facilities, heavy
use pads, fencing (including fencing cattle out of
ponds), and ﬁnally the
completion of a Comprehensive Nutrient Management Plan.
Crislip also gave a brief
update on Environmental Quality Incentives
Program projects for
Fiscal Year 2017. Twelve
contracts for $113,288.31
were obligated in the
following areas: Southern Ohio Appalachian
Outreach (1), High Tunnel Systems (2), Oak
Management in the Appalachian Mountains (5),
Pasture Improvement (1),
Limited Resource Farmer
(2), and Beginning Farmer (1). Obligations for
the past ﬁve years totaled
$435,506.83, Crislip said.
Farm Bureau Update
David Bright representing the Athens-Meigs
Farm Bureau announced

elections in conjunction with the respective
county SWCDs. The
Farm Bureau will hold its
annual meeting with the
Meigs SWCD on evennumbered years, and with
the Athens SWCD on
odd-numbered years.

Kristin McKay, and Ciera
Whitesell, all from Southern. The top-scoring team
was from Southern and
included Caelin Seth,
Kristin McKay, Ciera
Whitesell, and Riley
Holding.
High-scoring individuals in the Urban
Land Judging Awards
Judging Contest were,
Each year the Meigs
SWCD sponsors a county- in order: Valerie Hamm
wide soil judging contest (Southern), Dominique
for Vocational Agriculture Wehrung (Southern), and
Jacob Jordan (Meigs).
students. This is held
The top-scoring team
in conjunction with the
was from Southern and
Athens SWCD, and this
included Valerie Hamm,
year’s contest was held
Dominique Wehrung,
in Athens County at the
Colton Hamm, and AusBrooks Farm near New
Marshﬁeld. Nine students tin Rose.
from Southern Local participated as well as eight
Supervisor Election Results
students from Meigs
Cody Hacker, program
Local.
specialist for the Ohio
Top-scoring teams and Department of Agriculindividuals were recogture — Division of Soil
nized at the banquet.
and Water Conservation,
High-scoring individu- announced that Meigs
als in the Agricultural
SWCD Board of SuperJudging Contest were:
visors Keith Bentz and
in order, Caelin Seth,
Tonja Hunter, both of

Levy

Stronger Together

From page 1

Charges

Pleasant Valley Hospital’s partnership with Marshall
Orthopaedics helped me get back to living my life.
“After suffering a wrist fracture, I was concerned that I would
experience severe pain. With the treatment I received from
Marshall Orthopaedic Surgeon, Dr. John Crompton and the
occupational therapy team at Pleasant Valley Hospital, I’m pain
free.” - Becky Woodward
Meigs County District Public Library Facebook photo

If you are in need of orthopedic
treatment, please call for an
appointment today.
304-675-2781

The Pomeroy branch of the Meigs County District Public Library.

pumpkin painting and
gingerbread house making, LEGO night and
family movie events.
Monthly programs for
adults include, Fiction
Book Club, Inspirational
Book Club, Cookbook
Club, Acoustic Night,
Needlework Network,
adult coloring and technology assistance.
Pomeroy locations is
open 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.,
Monday-Friday; 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m., Saturday; and
1 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday.
Middleport, Racine

lence, committed against
their persons or property
because of their race,
From page 1
color, religion, ancestry,
national origin, political
calling the teen the
afﬁliation or sex.
n-word multiple times
When it comes to
and allegedly struck the
penalties, the law states
teen on the top of his
those convicted of the
nose with the bill of his
charge could be ﬁned
hat, according to the
not more than $5,000
criminal complaint.
According to the West or imprisoned not more
than 10 years, or both.
Virginia Code, prohibPolice Chief Joe Veith
iting violations of an
individual’s civil rights is said the department
is investigating allegadeﬁned as: All persons
within the boundaries of tions a third person was
the state of West Virginia involved.
At this point, the allehave the right to be free
from any violence, or inti- gations against Carr and
Nibert remain only allemation by threat of vio-

and Eastern locations
are open 10 a.m. to 6
p.m., Monday-Saturday.
In addition to the
branch hours, home
bound services are
available with scheduled delivery of library
materials to nursing
homes or home bound
residents.
For more information
on the levy or library
services contact the
Pomeroy branch at 740992-5813.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

gations. Next up for the
pair will be a preliminary
hearing in magistrate
court to determine if
there’s probable cause.
Preliminary hearings
do not determine guilt,
they determine if there is
probable cause to believe
that an offense has been
committed. If the hearing
is waived by the defendant or probable cause
found, the charges move
to Mason County Circuit Court for possible,
further criminal proceedings.
Patrolman Matt McCormick is leading the investigation.

Becky Woodward
Patient

CENTER FOR

Arthritis&amp;JointRehabilitation
at Pleasant Valley Hospital
OH-70002270

levy funds the library
would likely be forced to
reduce hours, programs,
services and jobs.
The library provides
much more than books
to residents, said Poole.
Services available
at the local libraries
include WiFi available
24 hours a day, seven
days a week; copy, lamination and fax services,
free notary services;
passport photos; disc
repair; home bound
services; best sellers
club; new movie club;
registration for the
Golden Buckeye Card;
voter registration; federal and state tax forms;
local history database;
and community meeting
rooms.
In addition to the services, there are monthly
programs for both children and adults hosted
by the library.
For children, there are
weekly story times, the
summer reading program, school visits, seasonal events including

Racine, were re-elected to
three-year terms on the
Meigs SWCD Board of
Supervisors commencing
January 2018.
The Meigs SWCD,
established in 1943 is a
legal subdivision of state
government that provides
natural resource management assistance to county
landowners and other
units of local government.
The district is funded by
the Meigs County Board
of Commissioners, and
county funds are supplemented by funding from
the Ohio Department of
Agriculture. The district
is governed by a ﬁvemember board of supervisors, all county residents.
Board members serve
staggered three-year
terms. Current supervisors also include: Bill
Baer, Racine; Joe Bolin,
Rutland; Tonja Hunter,
Racine; Keith Bentz,
Racine, and Tony Carnahan, Syracuse.

304-675-2781 | pvalley.org

�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, October 11, 2017

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Nothing funny
about Cam Newton’s
comments to reporter
It wasn’t funny.
Cam Newton thought it was. The charismatic
quarterback of the Carolina Panthers was responding to a perfectly acceptable sports
question from a reporter for the
Mitch
Charlotte Observer.
Albom
The question was about a receiver
Contributing
and
his pass routes.
columnist
The reporter was a woman.
It’s funny to hear a female talk
about routes,” Newton said, “like…” — he gave a
long, exaggerated smile and chuckled to himself
— “…it’s funny.”
As he would later admit, the joke was on him.
Newton was properly lambasted by the press and
social media, admonished by his own league, and
dropped as a spokesperson for Dannon yogurt.
Some of this was for his comment and some for
his lack of an immediate apology. The reporter,
25-year-old Jourdan Rodrigue, sought Newton out
after the press conference and asked privately why
he thought her question was funny. According to
Rodrigue, Newton did not say he was sorry. He
did question whether she (or other reporters) had
the ability to recognize pass routes. At the end
of their brief exchange, Rodrigue asked whether
Newton even knew her name. She had introduced
herself a year earlier and had been covering the
team every day since.
He admitted he didn’t.
That’s less funny than his ﬁrst comment.
Here’s why this matters. Forty years ago this
week, a female reporter for Sports Illustrated
named Melissa Ludtke was denied access to
the Yankees locker room during the 1977 World
Series, because she was a woman. She sued Major
League Baseball, claiming her 14th Amendment
rights to equal protection had been violated.
She won the case. And sports journalism
changed forever. Which does not mean it immediately improved. Women were continually harassed
and demeaned, even by ﬁgures we hold in high
esteem.
Red Smith of the New York Times wrote that
Ludtke had “struck a note of low comedy” by
contending in court that she could not cover the
World Series unless she could “watch Reggie Jackson undress.”
In other words, like Newton, Smith found something funny that was actually insulting. And he
was a sportswriter.
Things weren’t any better 13 years later, when
a Boston Herald reporter named Lisa Olson was
sexually harassed in the New England Patriots
locker room, with players fondling their private
parts and making lewd comments.
That same year, in the Tigers clubhouse, Jack
Morris told a female Free Press writer that he
didn’t to talk to women when he was naked
“unless they’re on top of me or I’m on top of
them.”
When the Free Press lodged a complaint, Bo
Schembechler, then the Tigers president, blamed
the newspaper for sending a woman, saying, “no
female member of my family would be inside a
men’s locker room regardless of their job description.”
By the way, these are all people I knew and
admired. Smith was a legend. I covered Jack for
years. Bo became a good friend.
That is even more reason why I need to stand
up for Rodrigue and other female sports journalists — women like Helene St. James, our ﬁne Red
Wings writer, Jennifer Hammond from Fox 2,
Christine Brennan from USA TODAY and many
others — who have the exact same demands put
on them as their male counterparts, but have to
deal with so much more baggage.
It’s not funny. And it’s not fair.
Ask those women how many times they get
their credentials scrutinized (as if every female’s
dream is to sneak into a sweaty locker room) or
get their questions ignored, or get pelted with
nasty sexist comments whenever they write something a male reader doesn’t agree with.
It’s a weekly if not daily occurrence. Sports has
long been a male kingdom, where the starting
point wasn’t even “Why are you women interested
in reporting?” It was more like “Why aren’t you in
a short skirt and pom-poms?”
That’s why it matters what Newton says. Ultimately he issued a video apology on his Twitter account. He said his choice of words was
“extremely degrading” and “disrespectful to
women.” He apologized and told young people,
“Don’t be like me. Be better than me.”
That’s a ﬁne mea culpa. And if we aspire to be
forgiving, we should accept Newton at his word.
The only thing missing was the name Jourdan
Rodrigue. Perhaps if Newton had learned it better, perhaps if all athletes learned the names of
journalists who cover them the way the journalists learn theirs, these incidents wouldn’t happen,
because ﬁrst you learn a name, then you get to
know someone, then you ﬁnd out they know more
than enough to analyze a pass route.
The 14th Amendment, invoked 40 years ago
by a female reporter, is at the core of things NFL
players are protesting right now. You must give
respect if you expect to get it. And know the difference between funny and just plain sad.

THEIR VIEW

JFK papers fodder for conspiracy theorists
The following editorial
recently appeared in the
Chicago Tribune:
His presidency was
brief — two years, 10
months, two days. Yet
the life and murder of
John Fitzgerald Kennedy
still fascinate Americans
53 years after shots rang
out on Dealey Plaza.
Later this month, a
trove of secret documents related to JFK’s
assassination is slated
to be released by the
National Archives. What
those documents reveal,
if anything meaningful, remains unknown.
President Donald Trump
can block the release,
if he chooses, on the
grounds of national security. It’s hard to imagine
any scenario in which
national security remains
a concern more than
ﬁve decades later, so we
hope the president lets
the documents emerge.
These would be among
the last of the government’s assassination ﬁles;
some tax documents
and grand jury materials
would remain under seal.
Nevertheless, if Americans think the records’

virtually all assassination
documents be released
within 25 years. That
deadline has arrived —
and unless Trump steps
in, the National Archives
must comply by Oct. 26.
JFK scholars say they
don’t expect any big
revelation. One potential
thread that interests
them: Oswald’s six-day
trip to Mexico City, and
his visits there to the
Cuban and Soviet embassies, weeks before Kennedy’s murder. The purpose for the trip remains
murky, scholars say, and
the documents might
shed some light.
But what America
shouldn’t expect is an
end to the conspiracy
theories that have surrounded JFK and Nov.
22, 1963, for half a century.
Kennedy himself, at a
commencement speech
at Yale University in
June 1962, talked of the
longevity of myths. “The
great enemy of truth is
very often not the lie
— deliberate, contrived
and dishonest — but the
myth: persistent, persuasive and unrealistic.”

release will once and for
all debunk the swirl of
conspiracy theories —
LBJ ordered it; the mob
did it; no, the communists were behind it —
they’re probably wrong.
Conspiracy theories
reﬂect a natural human
tendency to search out
information that ﬁts our
view of the world or
that makes sense of the
perplexing. “We tend
to reject information or
reject evidence that we
disagree with,” Viren
Swami, a psychology professor at Anglia Ruskin
University in Britain,
told National Public
Radio last year. “And we
do that for a very simple
reason. We don’t like
it when we feel wrong.
… We don’t like thinking that our view of the
world, our perspective of
the world, is incorrect.”
It’s why people suspicious of government
cling to the theory that
9/11 was not the handiwork of al-Qaida but
actually an inside job
perpetrated by the Bush
administration. It’s also
why some Americans
insist that former Presi-

dent Barack Obama is
not a U.S. citizen. It’s not
a fringe fraction of Americans that subscribes
to each of those beliefs
— it’s actually a third of
the country’s population,
according to University
of Miami political scientists Joseph Uscinski and
Joseph Parent.
As for JFK and Dallas,
conspiracy theories were
more than just a byproduct of a bewildered,
saddened nation groping
for answers. They created a cottage industry
that produced a raft of
books and documentaries
and, of course, “JFK,”
Oliver Stone’s feature
ﬁlm take on what happened. There’s proﬁt in
conspiracy, and it’s easy
to see why: An AP-GfK
poll in 2013 found that
more than half of Americans believe Kennedy’s
murder was a mission
concocted by multiple
conspirators, while only a
fourth thought Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone.
The information up
for release now includes
more than 3,000 secret
documents. In 1992,
Congress ordered that

a program from a CBS
television studio in New
York.
In 1958, the lunar
probe Pioneer 1 was
launched; it failed to go
as far out as planned,
fell back to Earth, and
burned up in the atmosphere.
In 1968, Apollo 7, the
ﬁrst manned Apollo mission, was launched with
astronauts Wally Schirra, Donn Fulton Eisele
and R. Walter Cunningham aboard. The government of Panama was
overthrown in a military
coup.
In 1979, Allan
McLeod Cormack and
Godfrey Newbold Hounsﬁeld were named corecipients of the Nobel
Prize for Medicine for
their work in developing
the CAT scan X-ray.
In 1984, Challenger
astronaut Kathryn D.
Sullivan became the ﬁrst
American woman to
walk in space as she and
fellow Mission Specialist
David C. Leestma spent
3 1/2 hours outside the
shuttle.
In 1987, the NAMES

THOUGHT FOR TODAY

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday,
Oct. 11, the 284th day of
2017. There are 81 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On Oct. 11, 1942, the
World War II Battle of
Cape Esperance began
in the Solomon Islands,
resulting in an American
victory over the Japanese.
On this date
In 1779, Polish nobleman Casimir Pulaski,
ﬁghting for American
independence, died two
days after being wounded during the Revolutionary War Battle of
Savannah, Georgia.
In 1890, the Daughters of the American
Revolution was founded
in Washington, D.C.
In 1910, Theodore
Roosevelt became the
ﬁrst former U.S. president to ﬂy in an airplane
during a visit to St.
Louis.
In 1932, the ﬁrst
American political telecast took place as the
Democratic National
Committee sponsored

“Life was meant to be lived, and curiosity
must be kept alive. One must never, for
whatever reason, turn his back on life.”
— Eleanor Roosevelt,
American first lady (born this date in 1884, died 1962)

Project AIDS Memorial Quilt was unfurled
for the ﬁrst time on the
National Mall in Washington, D.C.; the 7,000pound quilt bore the
names, personal effects
and, in some cases,
the ashes of victims of
AIDS.
In 1991, testifying
before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Anita
Hill accused Supreme
Court nominee Clarence Thomas of sexually
harassing her; Thomas
re-appeared before the
panel to denounce the
proceedings as a “hightech lynching.”
In 1992, in the ﬁrst
of three presidential
debates, three candidates faced off against
each other in St. Louis:
President George H.W.
Bush, Arkansas Gov. Bill

Clinton and businessman Ross Perot.
In 2002, former President Jimmy Carter was
named the recipient of
the Nobel Peace Prize.
Ten years ago: The
Bush administration
reported that the federal
budget deﬁcit had fallen
to $162.8 billion in the
just-completed budget
year, the lowest amount
of red ink in ﬁve years.
Cold medicines for
babies and toddlers were
pulled off shelves amid
concerns about unintentional overdoses. Briton
Doris Lessing won the
2007 Nobel Prize in
literature. Werner von
Trapp, a member of the
musical family made
famous by the musical
“The Sound of Music,”
died in Waitsﬁeld, Vermont, at age 91.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

O.U.’s Marching Band celebrates 50 years

physical therapist
practice, education,
and research. In most
states, patients can
make an appointment
directly with a physical
therapist, without a
physician referral.
“National Physical Therapy Month
(NPTM) is an annual
opportunity to recognize the profession’s
efforts to transform
society by optimizing
movement to improve
the human experience,”
stated APTA President
Sharon Dunn, PT, PhD.
“I, on behalf of APTA
staff, components, and
the Board of Directors,
would like to thank
you for all that you do
every day to improve
the health, mobility,
and quality of life of
the patients you serve.”
This year’s recognition
week theme revolves
around APTA’s #ChoosePTCampaign, which
raises awareness about
the dangers of prescription opioids, and
encourages consumers
and prescribers to follow guidelines by the
Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention
(CDC) to choose safer
alternative treatments
like physical therapy.
Holzer Health System offers therapy
services at several
of locations. For
more information on
physical therapy, or
other services, call
1-855-4-HOLZER or
visit www.holzer.org.

STOCKS

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Collins (NYSE)

Submitted by Holzer Health
System.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

On Oct. 6 and 7, Ohio
University celebrated the
50th anniversary of the
beginning of what is now
called “The Marching
110.”
In 1967, Gene
Thrailkill became the new
marching band director
and changed the band
from the old military
style unit wearing blazers as uniform to what
is exciting style and
uniforms still used today.
The band not only played
and marched but it also
danced, which still goes
on today.
However, the biggest
change in 1967 was that
the band became an allmale group then known
as the “110 Marching
Men of Ohio.” The school
newspaper opposed the
change, and there was
some booing at the beginning to the ﬁrst performance, which ended with
a standing ovation. It also
adopted the nickname of
“the most exciting band
in the land.” However, by
the 1975 football season,
federal law required the
end to the all-male institution, and women again
became band members,
which is still true today.
The number in the
1967 band was literally
a 110 men; however, the
110 signiﬁes what the
members called giving
110 per cent in their
efforts to make the band
it became. Many have

2 PM

67°

78°

71°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

(in inches)

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

0.00
2.55
0.88
38.68
33.91

SUN &amp; MOON
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

Oct 12

New

Oct 19

First

Oct 27

Full

Nov 4

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

Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.

Major
5:17a
6:18a
7:14a
8:06a
8:54a
9:39a
10:21a

Minor
11:32a
12:01a
1:00a
1:53a
2:41a
3:26a
4:10a

Major
5:46p
6:47p
7:42p
8:33p
9:20p
10:03p
10:45p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Minor
---12:32p
1:28p
2:20p
3:07p
3:51p
4:33p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Oct. 11, 1984, 25-foot waves
off Vancouver Island, B.C., capsized
eight ﬁshing boats, killing ﬁve people.
Monitoring programs using satellites
and automated buoys can often
detect these waves.

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

OVBC (NASDAQ)
BBT (NYSE)
Peoples (NASDAQ)
Pepsico (NYSE)
Premier (NASDAQ)
Rockwell (NYSE)
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ)
Royal Dutch Shell

Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
Wal-Mart (NYSE)
Wendy’s (NYSE)
WesBanco (NYSE)
Worthington (NYSE)

Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
78/58

High

Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 13.11 +0.64
Marietta
34 16.70 +0.51
Parkersburg
36 22.06 +0.56
Belleville
35 13.40 +0.48
Racine
41 13.58 +0.66
Point Pleasant
40 25.43 +0.33
Gallipolis
50 13.30 +0.04
Huntington
50 25.82 +0.08
Ashland
52 34.61 +0.06
Lloyd Greenup
54 13.05 -0.07
Portsmouth
50 16.10 +0.20
Maysville
50 34.60 none
Meldahl Dam
51 14.40 -0.20
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

Logan
77/55

84°
65°
Mostly sunny and
very warm

83°
60°

TUESDAY

69°
44°

Remaining warm with
periods of sun

6.70
84.13
15.71
42.47
43.16

Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions Oct. 10, 2017.

MONDAY

Cooler with sunny
intervals

Marietta
78/58

Murray City
78/55
Belpre
79/59

Athens
78/56

St. Marys
79/60

Parkersburg
78/56

Coolville
78/58

Elizabeth
81/59

Spencer
80/60

Buffalo
81/58
Milton
81/58

Clendenin
82/57

St. Albans
82/59

Huntington
80/54

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
55/44
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
70/52
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
77/58
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Article submitted by Keith Ashley.

63°
43°
Plenty of sun

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
80/58

Ashland
80/58
Grayson
80/57

38.20
47.71
34.00
110.78
21.10
182.74
14.65
61.04

SUNDAY

Wilkesville
79/55
POMEROY
Jackson
80/58
79/56
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
81/60
81/57
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
73/56
GALLIPOLIS
81/59
81/60
81/59

South Shore Greenup
80/58
78/56

56
0 50 100 150 200

Portsmouth
79/57

SATURDAY

Partly sunny and
warm

McArthur
78/55

Very High

Primary: no pollen seen
Mold: 425
Moderate

Chillicothe
77/57

83.93
54.23
23.86
46.32
97.13
20.53
42.95
130.00

81°
61°

Adelphi
77/55

Waverly
77/57

Pollen: 0

Low

MOON PHASES

DuPont (NYSE)
US Bank (NYSE)
Gen Electric (NYSE)
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
JP Morgan (NYSE)
Kroger (NYSE)
Ltd Brands (NYSE)
Norfolk So (NYSE)

FRIDAY

Pleasant with clouds
and sun

2

Primary: cladosporium

Today
Thu.
7:34 a.m. 7:35 a.m.
6:56 p.m. 6:54 p.m.
12:00 a.m.
none
1:48 p.m. 2:43 p.m.

THURSDAY

Humid today with a couple of showers. Mostly
cloudy tonight. High 81° / Low 59°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

Ohio University’ s Memorial Auditorium
At the end of each football season, the Marching 110 plays a Saturday
concert in November at
Memorial Auditorium
on camps followed by a
concert at the Palace Theater in Columbus. These
concerts are usually given
to sell-out crowds.
The Marching Band
holds the distinction of
playing Carnegie Hall in
New York City in 1975.
Nathan Robinette of
Pomeroy was a member
of the band during that
concert. The band also
holds the distinction
of being the only college band invited three
times to perform in the
Macey’s Thanksgiving
Day Parade. It will be performing this year, while
its competition, the Ohio
State Marching Band, has
never performed in that
event. In the past few
years, the band traveled
to England, Paris, and
the Vatican, where it performed to rave reviews.
Nearly everyone who
has been in this unique
band will say it was the
best thing of their college
career. Although the size
of the band has more than
doubled since the time
of the Marching Men of
Ohio, it still dazzles audiences and receives many
stand ovations.

77°
61°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

80°
66°
70°
47°
90° in 1949
29° in 1906

to present her with a
band jacket, and the band
refused since she never
was in the band to earn
it.
Band members from
1967 until today attended
the special celebration.
About 20 members of the
original band were there
along with the original
director, Gene Thrailkill.
At the alumni banquet,
Thrailkill stated that it
was a testament to his
work that the marching style he adopted is
still used along with the
arrangements written
for the ﬁght song and
the alma mater and the
uniform style copied from
the University of Michigan.
Among alumni band
members of the 110
Marching Men attending who originate from
Meigs County and their
years in the band were
Martin Osborn (197073) of San Francisco,
Thomas Gumpf(1970-74)
of Buchtel, Keith Ashley
(1971-74) of Rocksprings,
and Bill Beegle (1971-72)
of Cincinnati. Osborn and
Gumpf graduated from
Eastern High and Ashley
and Beegle from Racine
High. Martin Osborn
was also responsible for
arranging several of the
musical charts used from
the Marching Men days
to this very day and his
work is original arrangements are displayed at

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

72.39
30.86
52.82
77.40
51.99
16.29
73.98
133.96

considered the Marching
110 the top marching
band in the country. It literally brings in millions of
dollars in advertising for
the university to attract
prospective students, and
many in the band came to
Ohio University speciﬁcally to be in the band.
Some band members
who later became became
band directors took the
Ohio University style to
their own high school
bands. However, current high school marching band competitions
exclude these bands
because of the totally different style to most other
bands. The Marching
110 is made up of only
a minority of students
majoring in music.
The Marching Band
has been so popular with
the student body that
many came to football
games over the years only
to see the band perform
and then left after the
half-time performance.
Many felt that the band
members received greater
respect from their fellow
students than any of the
athletic teams.
Obtaining the athletic jacket worn by band
members required that no
non-members wear them
including girlfriends, who
understood this. When
Laurie Lee Schaeffer of
Ohio University was Miss
America in the 1970’s, the
administration wanted

Charleston
81/56

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
58/45
Montreal
57/40

Billings
67/39

Minneapolis
Detroit
61/52
61/53

Toronto
New York
55/47
72/56

Chicago
64/55

Denver
67/43

Kansas City
60/46

Washington
74/64

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
73/52/s
52/40/pc
87/69/sh
74/63/r
73/58/r
67/39/pc
57/34/pc
67/51/pc
81/56/c
88/69/pc
63/36/s
64/55/r
73/56/c
69/58/r
74/56/r
75/56/s
67/43/s
62/51/pc
61/53/r
88/76/sh
82/63/pc
67/55/sh
60/46/pc
87/60/s
75/51/s
77/58/pc
71/57/c
88/78/sh
61/52/pc
78/53/pc
87/73/pc
72/56/r
67/48/s
88/69/sh
75/60/r
96/67/s
72/58/r
65/41/pc
86/67/pc
81/64/t
67/56/c
75/44/pc
70/52/pc
55/44/sh
74/64/r

Hi/Lo/W
79/50/s
47/42/r
85/67/pc
67/58/c
69/55/sh
54/31/pc
54/38/s
60/48/s
77/60/pc
83/65/c
65/35/s
67/57/c
69/53/pc
72/60/c
71/57/c
86/65/s
74/37/s
69/54/pc
67/57/c
87/76/r
88/69/pc
69/56/c
72/58/s
83/55/s
80/56/s
75/55/pc
71/55/pc
86/78/t
67/52/pc
76/55/pc
87/72/pc
67/55/pc
79/61/s
86/71/pc
68/56/c
94/65/s
70/56/c
61/41/s
78/62/sh
74/61/sh
73/56/pc
58/37/s
69/52/s
56/44/sh
71/60/sh

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
87/69

High
Low

El Paso
82/59
Chihuahua
81/57

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

94° in Cordele, GA
-2° in Laramie, WY

Global
High
110° in Chhor, Pakistan
Low -22° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
82/63
Monterrey
73/63

Miami
88/78

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

Physical Therapy
Month observed
Holzer Health
System is observing
National Physical Therapy Month throughout
October.
National Physical
Therapy Month, celebrated each October, is
a nationwide event that
seeks to give the public
ﬁrsthand knowledge
about the beneﬁts of
physical therapy.
Physical therapists,
physical therapy assistants, and physical
therapy students across
the country host special
events such as ﬁtness
clinics, fun runs, athletic competitions, open
houses and seminars on
health and ﬁtness topics. Activities focus on
general physical ﬁtness
training and education; injury prevention;
rehabilitation following
injury, disease or surgery; and other areas of
physical therapy practice that help patients
achieve and maintain
good health.
Physical therapists
are highly-educated,
licensed health care professionals who can help
patients reduce pain
and improve or restore
mobility – in many
cases without expensive surgery or the side
effects of prescription
medications. APTA
represents more than
88,000 physical therapists, physical therapist
assistants, and students
of physical therapy
nationwide. Its purpose
is to improve the health
and quality of life of
individuals through
the advancement of

Wednesday, October 11, 2017 5

�Sports
6 s Wednesday, October 11, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Lady Falcons sweep South Gallia
By Paul Boggs

season sweep.
The only ties were 1-1 and
2-2 in the second set and 1-1
and 3-3 in the last, as South
MERCERVILLE, Ohio —
Gallia got as close as 23-21
The undersized, and on paper
in the second game, but the
perhaps over-matched, South
Gallia Lady Rebels made Miller Falcons ﬁnished things off en
work just a little bit on Monday route to another 3-0 win.
With the win, Miller raised
night.
its record to 13-7 — and to
But, the taller and visiting
10-4 in the TVC Hocking.
Falcons found a way to shake
The Falcons also swept the
off the doldrums of a long bus
Lady Rebels in three games
ride —and swept South Galthree weeks ago on Sept. 18.
lia 25-19, 25-21 and 25-16 in a
For South Gallia, which celTri-Valley Conference Hocking
ebrated Senior Night for ﬁve
Division volleyball tilt.
seniors on Monday night, it fell
The Falcons never trailed in
to 3-17 — and to 3-12 in the
the ﬁrst two games, and only
fell behind by as much as 3-1 in division.
The Lady Rebels, which travgame three, before scoring six
eled to Wahama for Tuesday
consecutive points and never
looking back in completing the night’s TVC Hocking ﬁnale,

pboggs@aimmediamidwest.com

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

South Gallia senior Olivia Hornsby (5) goes up for a kill attempt over Miller’s
Brooklyn Wilson (10) and Olivia Houk (11) during Monday night’s Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division volleyball match in Mercerville, Ohio.

remain with Wahama and a season sweep of Belpre for their
only three campaign victories.
Dating back to that four-set
win over Wahama on Sept. 19,
and a four-set triumph over
Belpre a week ago, the Lady
Rebels have dropped all of their
other league matches in the
season’s second half — and all
unfortunately by 3-0 counts.
The program has also been
impacted by the absence of
second-year head coach Sarah
Shirley, who returned to the
team after missing two weeks
with a family emergency.
Shirley spoke highly of her
ﬁve seniors, whom she has
coached for all four years.
See KNIGHTS | 8

Volleyball
postseason
matches set
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

See MATCHES | 8

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
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.
Point Pleasant at OVCS,
6 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.
Friday, Oct. 13
Football
Gallia Academy at Rock
Hill, 7 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 7:30
Meigs at Point Pleasant,
7:30
Paden City at Hannan,
7:30
River Valley at Vinton
County, 7:30
Wahama at South Gallia,
7:30
Waterford at Southern,
7:30
Volleyball
Covenant Christian at
OVCS, 6 p.m.

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Wahama junior Makinley Bumgarner (1) spikes the ball in front of freshman Victoria VanMatre (3), during the Lady Falcons’ straight
games win over Southern on Monday in Racine, Ohio.

Lady Falcons soar past Southern
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE, Ohio —
What a difference three
weeks can make.
Just 21 days after the
Southern volleyball team
claimed a 3-1 victory
at Wahama, the Lady
Falcons earned revenge
with a straight games
win in Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
play on Monday evening
in Meigs County.
Wahama (4-15, 3-11
TVC Hocking) never
trailed in the opening
game, ﬁghting through
just one tie, at 1-all, on
its way to the 25-14 victory. The 11-point margin was the largest lead
that either team held in
the match.
After a trio of early
lead changes in the

second game, Southern (6-14, 5-9) opened
up a four-point, 12-8
advantage. The Lady
Tornadoes stretched
their lead to as many as
ﬁve points, at 19-14, but
the Lady Falcons battled
back to reclaim the edge
at 22-21. Wahama led for
the remainder of Game
2, winning by a 25-23
count.
The Lady Tornadoes
scored the ﬁrst three
points of the third game
and eventually extended
their advantage to ﬁve
points, at 15-10. After
tying the game at 17 and
again at 18, the Lady Falcons opened up a 22-18
lead.
The hosts tied the
game at 22, 24 and 25,
Southern sophomore Kassie Barton (center) attempts a spike
before moving into
over Wahama freshman Victoria VanMatre (3), in front of Lady
Tornadoes Marissa Brooker (left) and Phoenix Cleland (6), on

See FALCONS | 8 Monday in Racine, Ohio.

Anderson www.andersonmcdaniel.com Meigs
Memory
McDaniel ɺɺɳ�ɶɵɵɵ��ɺɺɳ�ɶɲɵɲ

Funeral Homes
M

GO

TEA

949-2300

PLAYER

OH-70005374

Southern Logan Drummer
#11 Junior

Quarterback - 3 yards on 3
carries, 8 of 19 passes with
127 yards and 2 Touchdowns
and 0 interceptions

Gardens

OF THE

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7440
spaces available

WEEK

OH-70005374

The high school postseason is just around the
corner, but the tournament roads were paved Sunday afternoon during the 2017 OHSAA Southeast
District volleyball tournament selection meeting.
Six area schools — Gallia Academy, Meigs,
River Valley, Southern, South Gallia and Eastern
— now know where their opening games will be
and who they will be facing in their respective sectional matchups.
Four of the six local teams will host at least
one postseason match, while only one of the six
programs needs just one win to advance to the district tournament.
Starting in Division II, Gallia Academy came
away with the second overall seed in the South
bracket and will host a sectional semiﬁnal contest
at 6 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 18, against seventh
seeded Vinton County.
If the Blue Angels win, they will advance to the

GO T
EA

M

Meigs Zach Helton
#10

Eastern Noah Browning
#15

Quarterback - 19 of 35 passing
for 290 yards and
2 touchdowns.

WR/DB - 3 receptions for
43 yards - 4 tackles and no
receptions against him.

life happens. fast.

MEMBER

OH-70005380

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

SHERIFF’S SALE, CASE NO. 17 CV 013, HOME NATIONAL
BANK, PLAINTIFF, VS. DONALD G. JONES, JR. AKA
DONALD GEAN JONES, JR. AKA DONALD DEAN JONES,
JR., ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.

Wednesday, October 11, 2017 7

LEGALS

REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT

Adoption

Sales

PROBATE COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY L. SCOTT POWELL,
JUDGE CASE NO 20175007
&amp; 20175008 NOTICE OF
HEARING
TO
JANNECA
REED, AKA, BEELER, LAST
KNOWN ADDRESS, 214
LOCUST ST. BELPRE,
OH 45714
ON THE 25TH DAY OF MAY,
STEVEN AND SUSAN REED
FILED A PETITION TO
ADOPT TRINITY GRACE
REED AND ANTHONY
STEVEN REED,
DOB 09/27/04 AND 11/19/03.
THIS MATTER IS SET FOR
HEARING DECEMBER 15TH,
2017 AT 10:00 AM AT THE
PROBATE COURT LOCATED
AT 100 EAST SECOND ST,
RM 203 POMEROY, OH.
IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO
CONSENT TO THE ADOPTION PLEASE CONTACT
DENISE
L.
BUNCE,
ATTONEY FOR PETITIONERS AT 740-992-5730
10/4/17,10/11/17,10/18/17,
10/25/17,11/1/17,11/8/17

)RU 6DOH %\ 2ZQHU
���� %URRNZRRG OO
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������������

In pursuance of an Order of Sale issued out of said Court in the
above action, I will offer for sale at public auction to be held on
the front steps of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, on Friday, November 3, 2017, at 10:00
a.m., the following described real estate, to wit:

JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association
Plaintiff

AUTOS

THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY, SITUATED IN THE
TOWNSHIP OF OLIVE, COUNTY OF MEIGS AND THE
STATE OF OHIO. A MORE COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF
THE ABOVE NAMED REAL ESTATE MAY BE FOUND IN THE
MEIGS COUNTY RECORDER’S OFFICE, VOLUME 330,
PAGE 804 AND VOLUME 133, PAGE 289, OFFICIAL
RECORDS.

Jamie Johnston aka Jamie Lynn Johnston, et al.
Defendant

Autos For Sale

Ohio Valley Bank
will take bids
on the following:

AUDITOR’S PARCEL NOS.: 09-00378.003 AND 09-02030.001

2013 Ford Fiesta
Mileage: 86,290 VIN #136704
- WRECKED This item is available at the Ohio Valley Bank Annex, 143 3rd
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH. Sold to the highest bidder “as-is,
where-is” without expressed or implied warranty &amp; may be
seen by calling the Collection Department at 1-888-441-1038.
OVB reserves the right to accept / reject any and all bids, and
withdraw items from sale prior to sale. Terms of sale: CASH
OR CASHIER’S CHECK.

GARAGE/YARD SALES

The above described real estate is sold “as is” without
warranties or covenants.

OHIO VALLEY BANK
Member FDIC

®

OH-70003034

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REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

Apartments/Townhouses
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

ADVER TISE!

Houses For Rent
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No employees of the Sheriff’s Office or any of its affiliates have
access to the inside of said property, and no interior inspection
may have been made by the appraisers. All properties are as is
and not to be entered until the deed is in the purchaser’s
possession.
If the property is not sold at the above sale date, it will be offered for sale again on November 17, 2017, at the same time
and location above. The second sale will start with no minimum
bid. In addition, the purchaser shall be responsible for those
costs, allowances, and taxes determined by the Court that the
proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.

TERMS OF SALE: 10% down at time of sale, balance due in 30
days
The purchaser shall be responsible for costs, allowances, and
taxes that the proceeds of sale are insufficient to cover.
Keith Wood
Sheriff
Meigs County, OH
Carson A. Rothfuss
Attorney
10/11/17, 10/18/17, 10/25/17

SHERIFF’S SALE, CASE NO. 16 CV 082, HOME NATIONAL
BANK, PLAINTIFF, VS. MICHAEL SATTERFIELD, ET AL.,
DEFENDANTS, COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
In pursuance of an Order of Sale issued out of said Court in the
above action, I will offer for sale at public auction to be held on
the front steps of the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio, on Friday, November 3, 2017, at 10:00
a.m., the following described real estate, to wit:
THE FOLLOWING REAL PROPERTY, SITUATED IN THE
TOWNSHIP OF SCIPIO, COUNTY OF MEIGS AND THE
STATE OF OHIO. A MORE COMPLETE DESCRIPTION OF
THE ABOVE NAMED REAL ESTATE MAY BE FOUND IN THE
MEIGS COUNTY RECORDER’S OFFICE, VOLUME 359,
PAGE 880, OFFICIAL RECORDS.

Sold subject to accrued 2017 real estate taxes and to any
ongoing or uncertified special assessments or delinquent
charges, as well as any reservations, restrictions or covenants of record.

ALL SHERIFF’S SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
10/11/17, 10/18/17, 10/25/17

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

�� ���"%���"���'�"� �����

Said Premises Appraised at $85,000 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount at initial sale. There will be
no minimum bid at the provisional second sale.

Attorney: Douglas W. Little, LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP,
211-213 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone:
(740) 992-6689

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY: RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO #66
304-773-5447 OR 304-593-5118
www.auctionzip.com for pics

OH-70004532

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*Said Premises Located at 31970 Hysell Run Road, Pomeroy,
OH 45769

Subject to any statutory rights of redemption.

ITEMS TO BE SOLD
12 Overhead Projectors; 12 Oven Safe Serving Trays; 4 rolling TV Carts; 3 TV’s; 1 Window; 4 VHS Players; 1
Green Grid Chalk Board; 3 Shelves Double Sided Book Shelves; 1 Wood Filing Cabinet; 2 Jeopardy Games; 1
Portable Score Board; 1 Grid Layout; 49 Power Strip Desk (Computer); 3 Stainless Steel Cooking Paddles; 1
Industrial Hobart Meat Slicer w/Attachments; 1 Hobart Stand Mixer W/Attachments; 4 Industrial Stainless Steel
Mixing Bowls; 4 Comm Stainless Steel Mixing Pots; 2 Stainless Steel Napkin Holders; 1 Plexi Glass Conductors
Podium; 5 Comm Stainless Steel Serving Bowls; 1.25 Boxs of Foam Hinge Lid Containers; 1 Stainless Steel Bed
Pan; 2 Black Framed Pictures (motivational poster); Multi Boxes of Misc Cooking &amp; Serving Utensils; 1 Box 200
Wt Light Bulbs; 1 Box Misc. Plumbing Parts; 1 Box of Adding Machine Paper; 1 Lg Cutting Board; 20 Serving
Trays; 8 Decorative Lamps; 12 Metal Filing Cabinets Reel Riding Lawn Mower; 2 Pallets of Misc 12” &amp; 13” Buffer
Pads; 20 Toilet Paper Dispensers; welders; Plus More.
VEHICLES
Chevrolet 1 Ton Dump Truck, 3 school buses sold as is.
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK W/VALID ID AND BANK LETTER OF CREDIT.
FOOD

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In pursuance of an Order of Sale in the above entitled action, I
will offer for sale at public auction, ����� +\VHOO 5XQ 5RDG�
3RPHUR\� 2+ ����� on the courthouse steps, in the above
named County, on )ULGD\� 1RYHPEHU �UG� ����� DW �����
D�P�� with a provisional second sale date on )ULGD\� 1RYHPEHU
��� ���� DW ����� D�P�� the following described real estate:

KEITH O. WOOD
Meigs County Sheriff

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2017 @ 10:00 A.M.

Qualiﬁcations:

vs. No. 17-CV-028

AUDITOR’S PARCEL NOS.: 17-00272.000 and 17-00273.000

ALL ITEMS WILL BE SOLD AT THE MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT
BUS GARAGE LOCATED BEHIND
MEIGS ELEMENTARY AT 36781 STATE ROUTE 124, MIDDLEPORT, OH 45760.

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.

The State of Ohio, Meigs County.

All remote bids are to be submitted by email or fax by 4:30 p.m.
the day prior to the sale. Email:
cheyenne.trussell@meigssheriff.org; Fax: 740-992-2654

MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL AUCTION

OH-70004953

$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

Said premises appraised at $42,000.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount. In addition, the purchaser
shall be responsible for those costs, allowances, and taxes
determined by the Court that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.

TERMS OF SALE: Payment shall be made in the form of
certified/cashier’s check (cash and personal checks are not accepted). If the appraisal is less than or equal to $10,000.00 =
deposit $2,000.00; greater than $10,000.00 but less than or
equal to $200,000.00 = deposit $5,000.00; greater than
$200,000.00 = deposit is $10,000.00. Deposits due at the time
of sale and made payable to the Sheriff. Balance due within 30
days of confirmation of sale.

for your buck...

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Also a 2002 Clayton Heartlander manufactured home,
ID#CAP012107TNAB, Ohio Certificate of Title #5300270785.

1-888-441-1038

Garage/Yard Sale

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

Subject to any statutory rights of redemption.

Sold subject to accrued 2017 real estate and manufactured
home taxes and to any ongoing or uncertified special
assessments or delinquent charges, as well as any reservations, restrictions or covenants of record.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Miscellaneous

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 53251 State Route 681, Reedsville,
OH 45772

6KHULII¶V 6DOH RI 5HDO (VWDWH
5HYLVHG &amp;RGH� 6HF� �������

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

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 38384 SR 684, Pomeroy, OH 45769

The above described real estate is sold “as is” without
warranties or covenants.
Said premises appraised at $20,000.00 and cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds of that amount. In addition, the purchaser
shall be responsible for those costs, allowances, and taxes
determined by the Court that the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.
No employees of the Sheriff’s Office or any of its affiliates have
access to the inside of said property, and no interior inspection
may have been made by the appraisers. All properties are as is
and not to be entered until the deed is in the purchaser’s
possession.
If the property is not sold at the above sale date, it will be
offered for sale again on November 17, 2017, at the same time
and location above. The second sale will start with no minimum
bid. In addition, the purchaser shall be responsible for those
costs, allowances, and taxes determined by the Court that the
proceeds of the sale are insufficient to cover.
TERMS OF SALE: Payment shall be made in the form of
certified/cashier’s check (cash and personal checks are not
accepted). If the appraisal is less than or equal to $10,000.00 =
deposit $2,000.00; greater than $10,000.00 but less than or
equal to $200,000.00 = deposit $5,000.00; greater than
$200,000.00 = deposit is $10,000.00. Deposits due at the time
of sale and made payable to the Sheriff. Balance due within 30
days of confirmation of sale.
All remote bids are to be submitted by email or fax by 4:30 p.m.
the day prior to the sale. Email:
cheyenne.trussell@meigssheriff.org; Fax: 740-992-2654
KEITH O. WOOD
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney: Douglas W. Little, LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; BARR, LLP,
211-213 E. Second Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone:
(740) 992-6689
ALL SHERIFF’S SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
10/11/17, 10/18/17, 10/25/17

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, October 11, 2017

NFL
All Times EDT
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
Buffalo
3 2 0 .600 89 74
N.Y. Jets
3 2 0 .600 92 106
New England 3 2 0 .600 148 142
Miami
2 2 0 .500 41 67
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Jacksonville 3 2 0 .600 139 83
Houston
2 3 0 .400 144 130
Tennessee
2 3 0 .400 110 142
Indianapolis 2 3 0 .400 97 159
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Pittsburgh
3 2 0 .600 99 89
Baltimore
3 2 0 .600 90 97
Cincinnati
2 3 0 .400 84 83
Cleveland
0 5 0 .000 77 124
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Kansas City 5 0 0 1.000 164 111
Denver
3 1 0 .750 98 74
Oakland
2 3 0 .400 108 109
L.A. Chargers 1 4 0 .200 99 115
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
Philadelphia 4 1 0 .800 137 99
Washington 2 2 0 .500 91 89
Dallas
2 3 0 .400 125 132
N.Y. Giants
0 5 0 .000 82 122
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Carolina
4 1 0 .800 105 94
Atlanta
3 1 0 .750 104 89
New Orleans 2 2 0 .500 93 78
Tampa Bay
2 2 0 .500 85 83

Falcons

North
L T Pct PF PA
1 0 .800 137 112
2 0 .600 123 97
2 0 .600 99 93
4 0 .200 78 124
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Seattle
3 2 0 .600 110 87
L.A. Rams
3 2 0 .600 152 121
Arizona
2 3 0 .400 81 125
San Francisco 0 5 0 .000 89 120
Thursday, Oct. 5
New England 19, Tampa Bay 14
Sunday, Oct. 8
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: Buffalo, Dallas, Seattle, Cincinnati
Monday, Oct. 9
Minnesota 20, Chicago 17
Thursday’s Games
Philadelphia at Carolina, 8:25 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
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.

Green Bay
Detroit
Minnesota
Chicago

W
4
3
3
1

thought they played well
tonight.”
The Lady Falcon service was led by freshman
From page 6
Harley Roush with 12
points, including four
their ﬁrst game-point at
26-25. However, Wahama aces. Madison VanMeter
and Gracie VanMeter
claimed the next three
both marked nine points,
points and earned the
sweep-sealing 28-26 vic- with two aces and one
ace respectively. Victotory.
ria VanMatre had eight
“It’s a good feeling,
points and two aces for
but we tried really hard
the victors, Makinley
to give it up,” Wahama
Bumgarner added six
head coach Matt Vanpoints and one ace, while
Meter said. “When our
Hannah Billups chipped
girls don’t give away
in with two service
points, we can do stuff.
points.
Hopefully they saw that
SHS sophomore Baytonight and we can keep
building through the rest lee Wolfe led the hosts
with 11 service points,
of this season and the
including one ace. Jane
postseason.”
Roush and Kassie Barton
The win gives the
both ﬁnished with seven
Lady Falcons their secpoints and two aces
ond win the their last
in the setback, while
four matches. Of WahaMarissa Brooker, Baylee
ma’s four victories this
Grueser and Phoenix
season, three have now
Cleland had three points
been in straight games.
apiece, with Brooker and
WHS has also claimed
Grueser both earning
three of its four wins
one ace.
away from home.
At the net, Wahama
“We talked, we covered
freshman Emma Gibbs
each other, we worked
led the victors with
as a team, we actuseven kills and four
ally played volleyball
tonight,” VanMeter said. blocks. Billups was next
“I keep telling them ‘I’ve with six kills, followed
by Madison VanMeter
coached about as much
as I can coach, the rest of with ﬁve. Roush and
it’s up to you. When you Gracie VanMeter had
one kill apiece, with Graall decide you want to
play, we’ll start winning cie VanMeter earning a
ball games.’ I think they team-best 10 assists.
Wolfe posted a matchwanted to play tonight
best nine kills for the
and it showed.”
Lady Tornadoes, PhoeFor Southern, Monnix Cleland added six
day marked the fourth
kills, while Sydney Clestraight setback, all
land came in with ﬁve.
in league play. The
Paige VanMeter had
Lady Tornadoes hadn’t
two kills for the hosts,
dropped four straight
Roush added one kill,
in the league previously
while Jolisha Ervin and
this season.
“We just did not make Abby Cummins contributed one block each and
the hustle plays to get
Brooker ﬁnished with a
the momentum on our
match-best 18 assists.
side,” SHS head coach
Both teams have
Kim Hupp said. “We had
some missed serves and quick turnarounds, hosting league matches on
some miscommunication. It just wasn’t going Tuesday, with Southern
welcoming Trimble, and
our way.”
Wahama entertaining
The Lady Tornadoes
South Gallia. Both teams
defeated Wahama on
Sept. 18 in Mason, W.Va. will wrap-up TVC Hocking play on Thursday, as
by counts of 25-11,
Southern visits Federal
19-25, 25-15 and 25-9.
Hocking and Wahama
“The girls just didn’t
seem as focused tonight travels to Miller.
when we played,” Hupp
Alex Hawley can be reached at
said. “Wahama has deﬁ740-446-2342, ext. 2100.
antly improved and I

Daily Sentinel

Red Wolves earn tie with Rio men
By Randy Payton

goal.
Indiana East actually
drew ﬁrst blood just
over ﬁve minutes into
the contest when Rio
senior defender Danny
Carroll (Liverpool,
England) collided with
Rodriguez at the top
of the 18 in his retreat
toward the goal, causing both to fall to the
ground and allowing
Trevor Lenke a clear
look at an unguarded
net for a 1-0 lead.
The RedStorm tied
the game a little more
than 10 minutes later
when junior Eduardo
Zurita (Sant Boi de Llobregat, Spain) scored
from the top of the
18-yard box courtesy of
a pass from junior Spencer Reinford (McAlisterville, PA) and took
a 2-1 advantage on an
unassisted marker by
sophomore Deri Corfe
(Chester, England) - a
shot from 15 yards out
on the left wing - with
22:52 remaining in regulation.

Hoot’s late goal tied
the game and set up the
nail-biting ﬁnish to the
physical match, which
included 33 common
fouls (18 against IUE
and 15 on Rio), seven
yellow card cautions
and a red card ejection of Zurita with 20
seconds left in the ﬁrst
extra session.
Rodriguez had four
saves for Rio Grande
in a route-going performance.
IUE net-minder Aaron
Gipson was credited
with ﬁve of the Red
Wolves’ six saves.
Rio Grande returns
to action on Saturday
night when West Virginia University-Tech
visits for a rematch of
last year’s RSC Tournament title game.
Kickoff is set for 7
p.m., with the “Rockets
Over Rio” ﬁreworks
celebration to follow the
game’s conclusion.

nament will be held
Wednesday, Oct. 25,
and Saturday, Oct. 28,
at Southeastern High
School in Londonderry.
Eastern came away
with the three seed in
the Division IV East
bracket and will host the
winner of the Symmes
Valley-Belpre match in a
sectional ﬁnal at 6 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 19.
Southern earned the
eight seed in the East
bracket of Division
IV and will host ninth
seeded South Webster
in a sectional semiﬁnal
at 6 p.m. Monday, Oct.
16. The winner trav-

els to face top-seeded
Waterford in a sectional
ﬁnal at 6 p.m. Thursday,
Oct. 19.
South Gallia earned
the 10 seed and will
travel to seventh seeded
Trimble for a sectional
semiﬁnal contest at 6
p.m. Monday, Oct. 16.
The D-4 district tournament will be held
Wednesday, Oct. 25,
and Saturday, Oct. 28,
at Jackson High School
in the Apple City.
Meigs came away
with the eight seed in
the Division III North
bracket and will host
ninth-seeded New Lex-

ington in a sectional
semiﬁnal at 6 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 17. The
winner travels to topseeded Southeastern
for a sectional ﬁnal at 4
p.m. Saturday, Oct. 21.
The D-3 district semiﬁnals will be held October 24-26, and the district ﬁnals will happen
on Saturday, Oct. 28, at
Waverly High School in
Waverly.
Visit seodab.org for
complete pairings of the
2017 OHSAA Southeast
District volleyball tournament.

served for the opening
six points in the opening game, as Miller
From page 6
mustered leads as large
as 18-9 and 22-13.
The Rebels remained
Shirley served as the
two-year junior varsity within striking distance, though, trailing
mentor before being
by four points five
promoted to head
times at 8-4, 12-8, 13-9,
coach, and is also the
22-18 and finally 23-19.
softball boss at SGHS.
But a South GalThe senior fivesome
lia service error and
consists of Olivia
a four-hit call on the
Hornsby, Erin Evans,
Hannah Shafer, Aaliyah Lady Rebels ended
game one — and the
Howell and libero Keiearly comeback bid.
rsten Howell.
In game two, the Fal“I am extremely
cons gained a sideout
proud of each and
on an attack error to
every senior on this
take a 3-2 advantage,
team. They are trethen libero Lacey
mendous athletes and
Alexander —with five
they will definitely be
straight service points
missed. We love them
including three of her
all, every last one of
match-high five aces
them,” said Shirley.
“I’ve had them in class — increased Miller’s
cushion to 8-2.
and in one sport or
Miller maintained a
another for four years.
They are my first group lead from there, rangof freshmen all the way ing from three (11-8,
through. They are very 15-12 and 20-17) to
special to me, so this is seven (10-3, 11-4 and
20-13) points three
hard.”
times, before the RebAs for the match
els rallied to within
itself, Haille Joseph

23-21 on three consecutive Falcon hitting
errors and a kill by
Aaliyah Howell.
But a key kill by Josie
Crabtree and a Rebel
hitting error clinched
the second game for
the Falcons — and a
2-0 lead.
Miller then led 1-0 in
game three before the
Rebels reeled off three
straight points, but
bookend kills by Olivia
Houk highlighted the
six-straight spree, and
South Gallia got only
as close as 8-6 the rest
of the way.
After a Brooklyn Wilson kill made it 9-6 for
the Falcons, Houk had
five straight service
points — and Miller’s
lead soon swelled to
10 three times (19-9,
21-11 and 22-12).
The Lady Rebels got
only as close as 22-15
and 23-16, but another
Wilson kill forced
match point — and
Shirley substituting out
for the five seniors to a
nice round of applause.

University on Sept. 13,
2014.
Hoot, who had
entered the IUE lineup
RIO GRANDE,
Ohio — Konner Hoot’s just 2-1/2 minutes
earlier, gathered in a
goal with just over ﬁve
loose ball on the left
minutes remaining in
regulation lifted upstart wing, made a move to
Indiana University East create a 1-on-1 situation with Rio freshman
to a 2-2 deadlock with
goalie Luis Rodriguez
the University of Rio
Grande, Saturday night, (San Jose, Costa Rica)
and then ﬁred a shot
in River States Conwhich ricocheted off of
ference men’s soccer
action at Evan E. Davis Rodriguez and into the
net for the game-tying
Field.
marker with 5:10 left to
The Red Wolves,
who are ﬁelding a team play.
That’s how things
for the ﬁrst time this
stayed the rest of the
season, moved to 5-5-2
way, despite the fact
overall and 0-2-1 in
that Rio Grande manconference play with
aged two more shots
the tie.
in regulation and held
Rio Grande, the No.
3-ranked team in the lat- a 4-0 advantage in the
est NAIA coaches’ poll, same department over
closed the night at 9-1-1 the two 10-minute overtime sessions.
overall and 3-0-1 in the
The RedStorm
RSC.
enjoyed a whopping
The tie also snapped
30-9 advantage in overa 33-match win streak
all shots and an 11-6
at home for the RedStorm which dated back cushion in corner kick
chances, but had just
to a 2-0 triumph over
Mount Vernon Nazarene an 8-6 edge in shots on
For Ohio Valley Publishing

Matches
From page 6

sectional ﬁnals and
host the winner of the
Athens-Waverly contest
at 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct.
21.
River Valley earned
an eight seed and will
travel to top-seeded
Unioto for a sectional
semiﬁnal contest at 6
p.m. Wednesday, Oct.
18. The winner hosts
the winner of the Warren-Jackson contest in a
sectional ﬁnal at 4 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 21.
The D-2 district tour-

Knights

The following matters are the subject of this public notice by the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. The complete public
notice, including any additional instructions for submitting
comments, requesting information, a public hearing, or filing an
appeal may be obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk, Ohio
EPA, 50 W. Town St. P.O. Box 1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-3037 email: HClerk@epa.ohio.gov
Final Issuance of Permit to Install
Village of Middleport
Facility Description: Wastewater
ID #: 1156939
Date of Action: 09/29/2017
This final action not preceded by proposed action and is
appealable to ERAC.
Project: Village of Middleport Main Street Area Sewer Separation Project
Project Location: middle of the village, Middleport
10/11/17

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

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

Wilson, with an ace,
ended the match.
Houk had a dozen
kills and Crabtree
chipped in 10, as Josie
Perani set for all but
one of the Falcons’ 32
assists.
Alexander added a
match-high 20 digs to
her five aces, as Crabtree contributed 12 and
Houk nine.
Wilson and Ryleigh
Newman notched six
kills apiece.
Evans and Rachal
Colburn collected
four kills and an ace
apiece to lead the Lady
Rebels, as sophomore
middle hitter Christine
Griffith racked up four
kills, three blocks and a
pair of aces.
Hornsby had three
kills, while Shafer and
Aaliyah Howell had two
apiece.
The Rebels’ regular
season concludes on
Wednesday night at
rival River Valley.
Paul Boggs can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2106

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.
Requirements:
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, October 11, 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

By Hilary Price

�$IFFICULTY ,EVEL
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10 Wednesday, October 11, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Blue Angels slip past Portsmouth
By Alex Hawley

claimed the opening
game by a 25-18 count
after recording 14 service points, six aces and
PORTSMOUTH,
11 kills.
Ohio — They had to
The Blue Angels
work for it, but the Blue
Angels have clinched at overcame their lowest
least a share of the Ohio side-out percentage of
Valley Conference cham- the night, 36.4, to win
Game 2 by a 25-22 final,
pionship for the third
combining 17 service
straight year.
points, three aces and
The Gallia Academy
14 kills.
volleyball team faced
Gallia Academy
the most adversity in its
dropped the third game
27-match league winby a 25-20 count, howning streak on Monday
ever, earning just 10 serin Scioto County, but
vice points with one ace
the Blue Angels preand 11 kills. The Blue
vailed in five games
Angels had a negative
over host Portsmouth,
giving the Lady Trojans hitting percentage in the
fourth game, as Portstwo league losses with
mouth evened the match
GAHS only having two
with a 25-21 win.
matches remaining.
The Blue and White
Gallia Academy (19saved their best for last,
1, 12-0 OVC) — which
has now won six league allowing just two service
points en route to a 15-9
championships in the
victory in the deciding
last five seasons —
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

fifth game. In the final
game, GAHS posted
10 kills and boasted a
match-best 77.8 side-out
percentage.
For the match, Gallia
Academy had a side-out
percentage of just 47.4,
with a serving percentage of 90.7. GAHS had
10 serving errors and 26
hitting errors in the victory, while recording 54
kills and 60 digs.
The Blue Angel service attack was led by
Taylor Burnette with
three aces. Ashton
Webb, Ryelee Sipple,
Hunter Copley and
Katie Carpenter each
had two aces in the
win, while Alex Barnes
added one ace.
Webb led the guests at
the net with 25 kills and
eight blocks. Barnes was
next with 18 kills and
four blocks, followed by

Peri Martin with four
kills, three blocks and a
team-best 38 assists.
Aubrey Unroe posted
three kills, Copley finished with two kills,
Carpenter added one
kill and one block, while
Maddy Petro chipped in
with one kill. Carpenter led the Blue Angel
defense with 12 digs in
the triumph.
Gallia Academy —
ranked tied for 15th
in the latest OHSVCA
Division II Coaches Poll
— also defeated the
Lady Trojans on Sept.
5 in straight games at
GAHS.
After a trip to South
Point on Tuesday,
GAHS will be wrap-up
its 2017 regular season
at home on Thursday
against Chesapeake.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

TCU only Big 12 team without a loss
FORT WORTH, Texas
(AP) — Sixth-ranked
TCU is the only undefeated team remaining the
Big 12 Conference, even
after giving up more than
500 yards and needing
some trickery after blowing a two-touchdown lead
in the second half.
“I would bet every
game is going to be like
this,” coach Gary Patterson said. “If you’re going
to win a championship,
as a general rule … you
win about three or four
of them that are ugly. You
got to win the ugly ones
sometimes.”

Count their 31-24 win
over West Virginia as one
of those for the Horned
Frogs (5-0, 2-0 Big 12),
who were up two spots in
the AP Top 25 poll Sunday. The Mountaineers
(3-2, 1-1) dropped out of
the new poll from 23rd.
One weekend into
October, with every Big
12 team having played
two league games and
no open dates left, only
the Frogs and Texas (3-2,
2-0) are without a conference loss. Iowa State
upset two-time defending
Big 12 champion Oklahoma (4-1, 1-1), ending

the Sooners’ nation’s-best
14-game winning streak
and leaving TCU as the
only team without any
losses this season.
“It’s nice just for the
fact that now we’re at the
top of the conference,
but it just means that
everybody’s going to be
gunning for us,” TCU
quarterback Kenny Hill
said.
Hill became the ﬁrst
player from a current Big
12 school with running,
passing and receiving
touchdowns in the same
game when he scored the
game-winner on 3-yard

run with 2:53 left Saturday.
After Hill’s 45-yard
TD pass to Jalen Reagor
midway through third
quarter put TCU up 17-3,
West Virginia tied the
game on two long catchand-run scores in a span
of about 2 1/2 minutes.
The Frogs regained the
lead when KaVontae Turpin took a handoff, swept
right, then stopped and
threw back to Hill for a
48-ayrd sprint down the
left sideline for a touchdown.
The last Big 12 player
with passing, rushing
and receiving TDs in
the same game had been
Nebraska’s Joe Ganz in
2008, former Cornhuskers quarterback Eric
Crouch did it in 1999.

Rio volleyball
gets swept in
Pittsburgh
By Randy Payton

(Gallipolis, OH) and
Macy Roell (Farmersville, OH) had 19 and
13 assists, respectively.
PITTSBURGH, Pa.
Kristina Hudock led
— A weekend trip to
Carlow with 19 kills and
the Steel City proved
less-than-successful for 11 digs, while Michaela
Korna had 39 assists
the University of Rio
Grande volleyball team and 10 digs and Kassidy
Dickson added 10 kills
following losses to
Carlow University and of her own in the winning effort.
Point Park University
Mia Marmion also
in River States Conferhad 10 digs for the Celtence play.
ics.
The RedStorm
On Saturday at Point
dropped a tough 3-2
Park, Pelphrey led Rio
(25-21, 22-25, 22-25,
with six kills, while
25-18, 16-14) decision
Shriver ﬁnished with
to Carlow on Friday
night before falling 3-0 nine assists and freshman Ashton Ward
(25-9, 25-12, 25-19) at
Point Park on Saturday (Chillicothe, OH) had
seven digs.
afternoon.
Dennis had four
Head coach Billina
blocks - two solos and
Donaldson’s squad,
two assists - for the
which has now lost
RedStorm, who ﬁnished
its last nine outings,
with just two more kills
slipped to 3-19 overall
(16) than it did attack
and 0-7 in conference
errors (14).
play with the two
Erica Gumz had 12
losses.
The nine-game losing kills in the winning
slide is the longest such effort for Point Park,
while Julia Menosky
stretch for the Redrecorded 27 assists and
Storm since the 2008
four service aces.
campaign ended with
Morgan Dangelo and
15 consecutive losses.
Meg Reineke had 15
Senior Aleah Peland 13 digs, respecphrey (Piketon, OH)
had 17 kills and 16 digs tively, for the Pioneers
- who ﬁnished with a
to lead Rio in Friday’s
.307 attack percentsetback at the hands
age - and Jazlyn Rozier
of the Celtics, while
tallied four blocks (one
freshman Taylor Carsolo, three blocks) in
roll (Atlanta, GA) and
the victory.
sophomore Patricia
Rio Grande returns to
Dennis (Celina, OH)
action on Tuesday night
added 12 and 11 kills,
when Carlow visits the
respectively.
Newt Oliver Arena for a
Sophomore Katie
Hemsley (Jackson, OH) 7 p.m. ﬁrst serve.
ﬁnished with a teamRandy Payton is the Sports
best 18 digs, while
Information Director at the
freshmen Carly Shriver University of Rio Grande.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

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As Pleasant Valley Hospital celebrates
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