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                  <text>Scenes
from
Halloween

Partly
cloudy,
52/33

Southern
shuts out
Eagles

LOCAL s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 173, Volume 71

Tuesday, October 31, 2017 s 50¢

Ritchhart pleads guilty to abduction, assault
Syracuse woman sentenced to five years in prison
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — A
Syracuse woman was
sentenced to ﬁve years in
prison on Monday after
pleading guilty to felony
charges in two separate
cases in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
April M. Ritchhart,
39, pleaded guilty to
felonious assault, a
second-degree felony,
in connection with an
April incident, as well as

two counts of abduction,
third-degree felonies, and
one count of assault on
a peace ofﬁcer, a fourthdegree felony, from a
June incident. Twelve
misdemeanor charges
against Ritchhart from
the June incident were
dismissed as part of the
plea.
The felonious assault
charge stems from an
incident in which Ritchhart reportedly rammed
a vehicle in the village of
Racine, while the remain-

ing charges are from an
incident at an in-home
daycare in Middleport.
Judge I. Carson Crow
sentenced Rithchart to
two years in prison on
the felonious assault
charge, plus three years
on the two abduction
charges and 18 months
on the assault of a peace
ofﬁcer charge. The sentences on the abduction
and assault on a peace
ofﬁcer are to run concurrent to one another for
three years total, which

is to run consecutive to
the felonious assault sentence for a total of ﬁve
years in prison.
All but one of the eight
victims in the case were
in agreement with the
plea agreements and sentence Victim Advocate
Shelley Kemper told the
court. Assistant Prosecutor Jeff Adkins stated
that the victim who was
not in agreement in the
case wanted to see more
prison time on the case
and for it to go to a jury
trial. Adkins explained
that the maximum
sentence on the charge

involving the victim was
the 36 month sentence
on the abduction charge.
Even with a conviction
at a jury trial there could
not have been a longer
sentence on the charge.
Prosecutor James K.
Stanley said after the
hearing that the Victim
Assistance Ofﬁce had
worked hard to maintain
contact with the eight
victims and to work
toward a resolution in
the case.
Stanley noted the
importance of the resolution without going to
trial as it kept the young

victims in the case from
being brought into the
court to testify.
Ritchhart was arrested
on June 2 in Middleport
after an incident at an
in-home daycare in the
village. Ritchhart reportedly attempted to abduct
two children from the
daycare who were not
related to her.
Ritchhart was indicted
on two counts of abduction, one count of assault
of a peace ofﬁcer, one
count of criminal child
enticement, one count of
See RITCHHART | 5

Halloween Fun!

Emergency
HEAP begins
November 1
Staff Report

CHESHIRE — As the weather will be turning
colder, Gallia Meigs Community Action Agency
will be assisting customers with their main heating utility and/or furnace repair.
GMCAA’s Emergency HEAP Program will begin
Nov. 1 and will continue through March 31, 2018,
explained Debbie Cundiff, Community Services
Manager.
”We are excited to introduce to our customers
our new automated system for making appointments. Instead of having to wait to call every
Friday and our phone lines being tied up, plus
by the time some have been able to reach us the
appointments are already ﬁlled up. We now have
an IVR System, (Interactive Voice Response System), which will give the customers access 7days
a week/24 hours a day for making their appointment by phoning in. The new number is toll free,
1-866-409-1361. We are hoping that this will make
it easier for our customers and also you won’t have
the wait time of being told that all appointments
are ﬁlled and you would have to call back next
Friday. You will have to have your social security
number or client number and your gas and electric
account number in order to make your appointment. However, please note, an appointment may
not extend a scheduled utility shut-off,” stated a
news release.
Emergency HEAP provides assistance to households that have had utilities disconnected, face the
threat of disconnection, or have 25 percent or less
supply of bulk fuel, or less than 10 day supply of
wood or coal. The program allows a one-time payment per heating season to restore or retain home
heating. The potential dollar amount will be up to
$175 for regulated utilities, up to $550 for unregulated utilities, up to $450 for wood, coal or pellets
and up to $750 for propane/fuel oil, etc., and up to
eight cylinders of propane.
The income guidelines for Regular HEAP and
Emergency HEAP are the same. However, Regular
See HEAP | 2

INDEX
Obituary: 2
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.

Erin Perkins photos

Downtown Pomeroy was in the Halloween spirit on Thursday evening for the annual Treat Street, along with a haunted house and
games at Wolfe Mountain Entertainment. Kids and adults took to Main Street in the downtown area dressed in the Halloween spookiest,
prettiest and most creative costumes to collect candy and other treats. Additionally there were photo opportunities and a costume
contest. The annual haunted house with River City Players and Wolfe Mountain Entertainment wraps up its 2017 run on Halloween night.
(Clockwise from top left) The entrance to the haunted house and kid tent area is ready for visitors; Brittyn Barkey, Selena Honaker,
Autumn Honaker, Shayla Honaker, Wesley Honaker are pictured at Treat Street; Merchants along Main Street dressed up in costume to
hand out treats to the kids; Hundreds of kids in costume made their way down Main Street collecting treats.

FOR THE RECORD
Staff Report

Meigs County
Sheriff’s Office
Night Shift
Oct. 16
Well-being check —
Sgt Jones went to a residence on Callaway Road,
Coolville, for a well-being
check. The person was
found and informed
to contact the original
caller.
Oct. 17
Verbal dispute — Sgt.
Jones responded to a
residence on Township
Road 1014, Pageville, for
a verbal dispute between
family members. All parties advised it was all
verbal and separated for
the night.
Domestic dispute
— Deputy Stacy and
Sgt Jones responded
to a residence on Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy,
for a domestic dispute.
Elwood J. Myers, age 52,
Pomeroy, was arrested
for domestic violence
and incarcerated in the
Meigs County Jail.

Oct. 18
Verbal dispute —
Deputy King and Sgt.
Jones responded to a
residence on State Route
124, Racine, for a verbal
dispute between family members. On their
arrival, deputies spoke
with a man who stated
that he and his brother
had been arguing over
a motorcycle and his
brother had left with the
motorcycle prior to the
deputies’ arrival. He was
referred to his attorney
for the civil issues.
Alarm call — Deputy
Fennell and Sgt. Jones
responded to two separate alarm calls at the
Hot Spot in Portland and
the 124 Mart in Pomeroy.
Both key holders were
notiﬁed, and the properties were found secured.
Oct. 20
Car in a ditch — Dispatch received a call
about a car in the ditch
on McCumber Road and
the caller advised that
they believed the driver
was intoxicated. Deputy

Fennell arrived on scene
and made contact with
the driver. He was not
intoxicated and already
had someone there to
pull him out. There was
no damage to the vehicle
or property. He was
given a warning for failure to control. No further
action was taken on this
call.
Crash — Dispatch
received a call from OSP
advising that they have
a trooper on the way to
a crash on State Route
124 at Buck Town Road.
They requested that we
send a deputy to secure
the scene until they
arrived. Deputy King
arrived and stood by
with the driver until the
OSP unit arrived. The
scene was released to the
trooper, no further action
was taken by the deputy
on this call.
Oct. 21
Alarm drop — Dispatch received a call from
ADT Alarm company
advising of a residential
alarm on Dexter Road. A

deputy was sent to check
the home. The deputy
arrived and was unable
to make contact with
the home owner. The
outside of the house was
checked, and everything
was secure. No further
action was taken on this
call.
Domestic — Dispatch
received a transfer call
from 911 of a domestic
on State Route 833.
The female on the line
advised that she needed
help because her boyfriend would not leave
her along. The call was
difﬁcult to understand
because her cell service
was poor. The dispatcher
was able to get the
address and ofﬁcers
were sent to the location.
Deputy Campbell arrived
along with a Pomeroy
Police Department unit
that was sent to assist
him and spoke with the
residents of the home.
After an investigation
into the incident it was
determined from both
See RECORD | 5

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, October 31, 2017

DEATH NOTICES

MEIGS BRIEFS

STOVER
RACINE — Mary Stover, 61, Racine, died Monday, Oct. 30, 2017, in the Overbrook Nursing Center,
Middleport. Funeral arrangements will be announced
by the Cremeens-King Funeral Home, Racine.

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.

QUEEN
=7BB?FEB?I�Å�&lt;hWda�B[ed�Gk[[d"�,."�e\�=Wbb_felis, died on Sunday, October 29, 2017 at Cornerstone
e\�&gt;kdj_d]jed�&gt;eif_jWb"�&gt;kdj_d]jed"�M$LW$$�I[hl_Y[i�
will be 2 p.m., Thursday, November 2, 2017 at the
First Church of God with Pastor Paul Voss ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow in Mina Chapel Cemetery. Friends
may call from noon until 2 p.m. prior to the funeral at
j^[�Y^khY^$�M_bb_i�&lt;kd[hWb�&gt;ec[�_i�Wii_ij_d]�j^[�\Wcily.

Naylors Run Road
to be closed Nov. 2
I7B?I8KHO�JMF$�Å�DWolors Run Road will be closed
Thursday, Nov. 2, 2017, for
approximately 8 hours for repair
a culvert.

Daily Sentinel

Immunization
clinic on Tuesday

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
POMEROY — The Meigs
insurance cards, if applicable.
County Health Department will
Zostavax (shingles); pneumonia
conduct an Immunization Clinic
and inﬂuenza vaccines are also
on Tuesday from 9-11 a.m. and
available. Call for eligibility deter1-3 p.m. at 112 E. Memorial
mination and availability or visit
Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring
child(ren)’s shot records. Children our website at www.meigs-health.
must be accompanied by a parent/ com to see a list of accepted comlegal guardian. A $15.00 donation mercial insurances and Medicaid
for adults.
is appreciated for immunization
administration; however, no one

ADKINS
=7BB?FEB?I�Å�CWho�7Za_di"�.)"�=Wbb_feb_i"�Z_[Z�
Sunday, October 29, 2017, in the Arbors at Gallipolis.
Funeral arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens King Funeral Home, Gallipolis.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Card Shower

Wednesday, Nov. 1

OGIER
FE?DJ�FB;7I7DJ"�M$LW$�Å�@[h[co�HWo�E]_[h"�
)-"�e\�Fe_dj�Fb[WiWdj"�M$LW$"�Z_[Z�IWjkhZWo"�EYjeX[h�
(."�(&amp;'-"�Wj�j^[�;ce][d[�:eb_d�@ed[i�&gt;eif_Y[�&gt;eki["�
&gt;kdj_d]jed"�M$LW$
7�\kd[hWb�i[hl_Y[�m_bb�X[�'�f$c$�M[Zd[iZWo"�Del[cX[h�'"�(&amp;'-"�Wj�M_bYen[d�&lt;kd[hWb�&gt;ec[�_d�Fe_dj�Fb[Wiant. Burial will follow at Zion Cemetery in Gallipolis
&lt;[hho"�M$LW$�J^[�\Wc_bo�m_bb�h[Y[_l[�\h_[dZi�ed[�^ekh�
fh_eh�je�j^[�\kd[hWb�i[hl_Y[�M[Zd[iZWo�Wj�j^[�\kd[hWb�
home.

Tuesday, Oct. 31

Thursday, Nov. 2

HARDIN
M;IJ�9EBKC8?7"�M$LW$�Å�J_cej^o�=b[d�&gt;WhZ_d"�,+"�e\�M[ij�9ebkcX_W"�M$LW$"�\ehc[hbo�e\�IW_dj�
7bXWdi"�M$LW$"�Z_[Z�IWjkhZWo"�EYjeX[h�(."�(&amp;'-"�Wj�
BWa_d�&gt;eif_jWb$
There will be no services. Burial will be at the convenience of the family. Arrangements are under the
Z_h[Yj_ed�e\�M_bYen[d�&lt;kd[hWb�&gt;ec[�_d�Fe_dj�Fb[Wiant.
HILL
=7BB?FEB?I�Å�&lt;beoZ�Æ&gt;WhebZÇ�&gt;_bb"�-/"�e\�=Wbb_polis, died on Monday, October 30, 2017 at his daughter’s residence. Arrangements will be announced later
Xo�j^[�M_bb_i�&lt;kd[hWb�&gt;ec[$

Middleport Church of Christ Fam_bo�B_\[�9[dj[h$�A[odej[�if[Wa[h�
_i�\ehc[h�EIK�\eejXWbb�YeWY^�
Ed Voss will be turning 90 on
EB?L;�JMF$�Å�J^[�Eb_l[�
Nov. 12. Cards may be sent to
Township Trustees will hold regu- @e^d�9eef[h$�7�ieY_Wb�^ekh�m_bb�X[�
held from 5-6 p.m.
^_c�Wj�)(('&amp;�M[bY^jemd�HeWZ"�
lar meeting at 6:30 p.m. at the
9&gt;?BB?9EJ&gt;;�Å�J^[�Iekj^Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
jemdi^_f�]WhW][�ed�@effW�HeWZ$
ern Ohio Council of Governments
(SOCOG) will hold its next
board meeting at 10 a.m. at 27
M[ij�I[YedZ�Ijh[[j"�Ik_j[�(&amp;("�
RACINE — An American Red
POMEROY — A recovery
Chillicothe, Ohio, 45601. Board
Cross Blood Drive will be held
services town hall meeting will
meetings usually are held the ﬁrst
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Southern be held from 5:30-7 p.m. at the
Thursday of the month. For more
High School. Sponsored by South- Fec[heo�B_XhWho$
C?::B;FEHJ�Å�J^[�C[_]i� information, call 740-775-5030,
ern National Honor Society.
ext. 103.
County Chamber of Commerce
Gala will be held at 6 p.m. at the

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Wednesday, Nov. 1
C?::B;FEHJ�Å�7i^�Ijh[[j�
Church, 398 Ash Street, Middleport, Ohio, is having a Fall Family
Festival at 5:30 p.m. There will be
a campﬁre, games, food, and fellowship. Everyone is invited.

Nov. 2-4

STOCKS
AEP (NYSE)
Akzo Nobel
Big Lots, Inc.
Bob Evans Farms
BorgWarner (NYSE)
Century Alum (NASDAQ)
City Holding (NASDAQ)
Collins (NYSE)
DuPont (NYSE)
US Bank (NYSE)
Gen Electric (NYSE)
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
JP Morgan (NYSE)
Kroger (NYSE)
Ltd Brands (NYSE)
Norfolk So (NYSE)

74.17
30.13
51.22
77.18
52.39
13.50
70.65
135.69
83.93
54.26
20.41
47.20
101.41
20.64
42.83
132.80

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)

35.50
49.11
33.23
109.65
20.10
187.00
16.70
62.19
5.64
86.95
15.08
40.08
45.92

Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions Oct. 30, 2017.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

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

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

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
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

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

Enter To Win

50

$

Online photo submissions begin
Oct. 13th ends Nov. 9th.
Voting will begin Nov. 2nd thru Nov. 9th
WINNER announced Nov. 10th

Sunday, Nov. 5

&gt;;CBE9A�=HEL;�Å�&gt;[clock Grove Christian Church
Thanksgiving Outreach will be
held at 10 a.m. Guest speaker will
be Nancy Haney, Point to Hope
RACINE — Mt. Moriah Church Ministries, of Nikiski, Alaska.
of God on Mile Hill Road, Racine, There will be worship, fellowship
and free Thanksgiving meal. The
m_bb�^ebZ�W�M^_j[�;b[f^Wdj�IWb[$�
Soup and sandwiches will be pro- church is located at 38387 Hemlock Grove Road, Pomeroy.
vided free.

Saturday, Nov. 4

HEAP

cards for all household
members. You will also
be asked for proof of
landlord, including
From page 1
address and phone number. If the grandparents
HEAP requires the
have custody of the chilprevious 12 months
dren in the home, we
income while the past
three months income is will need the custody
acceptable for Emergen- papers also.
The following income
cy HEAP. The 12-month
levels by household
period or three-month
size should be used to
period for the help is
determine eligibility.
determined from date
These income guideof application making
lines represent the 175
it possible for some
percent calculation
with decreased income
and are revised annuduring these periods
ally. Allowable annual
to qualify later in the
income for a 1 person
program. Examples of
these types of situations household is $21,105;
2 persons $28,420;
could occur from lay3 persons $35,735;
off, strike, retirement,
4 persons $43,050;
disability or death of
5 persons $50,365; 6
a spouse or household
persons $57,680; 7 permember. Documentation verifying all house- sons $64,995; 8 persons
$72,310. Households
hold income must be
provided when applying with more than eight
members should add an
for HEAP. Child supadditional $1,828 per
port must be veriﬁed,
member to the yearly
for the last 3 months
income.
and up to 5 days from
Both Emergency
your appointment. Also
a copy of the applicants HEAP and Regular
most recent gas/electric HEAP applications will
be completed at both
bill is required. It is
ofﬁces; Central Ofﬁce,
also required that you
Gallia County at 8010
provide social security

N. SR 7, Cheshire or the
Meigs County Ofﬁce
at 1369 Powell Street,
Middleport. Appointments will be made
by our IVR System,
appointment times will
range from 9-10:30 a.m.
and from 1-3 p.m., Monday through Thursday
and Friday from 9-10:30
a.m. GMCAA will see
the ﬁrst 12 walk-in at
the Cheshire ofﬁce and
the ﬁrst 3 walk-ins at
the Middleport ofﬁce
Monday through Friday. However, again,
GMCAA cannot assist
with the Emergency
HEAP application process until Nov. 1.
Required Documents:
�Fhee\�e\�=heii�
Income for Everyone in
the Household for the
FWij�)�cedj^i��MW][i0�
M[[abo�#�BWij�')�fWostubs/ Biweekly - last 7
paystubs
�Kj_b_jo�7bbemWdY[%
B[Wi[
�II%II?%II:�#�8Wda�
Statement or Current
7mWhZ�B[jj[h
�F;HI%L7%I;HI%
PENSION —Copy of
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Virtual

Costume Contest

�9ebb[][�IjkZ[dj#�
Financial Aid Documents (Refund Page)
�EM&lt;%J7D&lt;%:7#�
Fh_dj�Ekj�e\�j^[�BWij�)�
Months or Bank Statement
�9^_bZ�Ikffehj"�
Ordered to Pay or
Receive
o Print Out (documented proof for the last
3 months, veriﬁcation
of whether receiving or
not)
�IeY_Wb�I[Ykh_jo�
Cards for Everyone in
the Household
�9khh[dj�&gt;[Wj_d]�8_bb�
or Statement (Columbia
Gas/Knox, Propane,
&lt;k[b�E_b"�9eWb"�eh�MeeZ��
�9khh[dj�;b[Yjh_Y�8_bb�
(AEP or Buckeye)
�?\�oek�fWo�ekj�
e\feYa[j�\eh�&gt;;7BJ&gt;�
?DIKH7D9;"�ZeYkmented proof for 3
months o Aﬂac, AARP,
Blue Cross Blue Shield,
etc.
�C[Z_YW_Z�9WhZ�eh�
Case Number (if applicable)
�BWdZbehZi�DWc["�
Address, and Phone
Number (if renting)
For appointment call
1-866-409-1361.

It’s easy to enter.
Just submit a photo of
your child in costume at:
mydailytribune.com
mydailyregister.com
mydailysentinel.com

OH-70007654

Sponsored by:

HKJB7D:�Å�HkjbWdZ�Kd_j[Z�

Methodist Church will hold an
indoor yard sale. Hours will be 9
a.m.-4 p.m. on the 2nd and 3rd,
and 9 a.m.-noon on the 4th.

Non-Emergency Medical Transport

(740) 645-2268

Proud Sponsors of 2017 Online Kids Halloween Costume Contest!!

�Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 31, 2017 3

POMEROY
HOLIDAY
OPEN HOUSE
MONDAY
NOVEMBER 6TH
9AM - 9PM
Stroll through the beautiful and
unique shops that make Pomeroy
your destination for your holiday
shopping. Visit each shop for
special offers and drawings.
Experience the personalities of
small town businesses...
Clark’s
Jewelry Store
Invites you to a

Christmas Party
Join us Monday Nov. 5th for savings
store-wide. Great time for creating
your wish list. Enjoy refreshments,
prizes and fun.

113 Court St. Pomeroy Ohio
OH-70010154

15th Annual Open House
Monday November 6th, 2017
9am-9pm
Hourly Door Prizes
106 E. Main Street
OH-70010151

Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-1702

Shop Local &amp; Save.
Call (740) 992-2955
to transfer your
prescriptions today!

# Hartwell House #
15th Annual
Holiday Open House
Monday November 6, 9-9

Be sure to stop in for our Trollbead Trunk Show
with a glass artist demonstration.

100 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

636 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
SwisherandLohse.com
(740) 992-2955
OH-70008933

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

OH-70010098

#

740-992-7696

Like us on facebook
www.hartwellhouse1995.com

OH-70010121

Where
Convenience
&amp; Quality
Care Meet

#

�4 Tuesday, October 31, 2017

LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Trick-or-Treat in Meigs County
Photos of Trick or Treat 2017 around Meigs County. Additional
photos will be running throughout the week.

Submitted photos

Andrew Pickens was Elliot from the movie E.T., with E.T. riding safely
along in his basket while trick or treating in Syracuse.

Waylon Sellers, Leo Poole, Max Poole, Henry Rodriquez and Kendra Smith are pictured before Trick-or-Treat in Syracuse.

Blake Powell dressed as a blue Lego to head out trick or treating
in Middleport.

Graecyn
Eskew
dressed
as Beetlejuice to go trick or
treating in Middleport.

Macy Thomas and Taylor Werry were ready for Thursday’s Treat
Street in Pomeroy, dressed as JoJo and a Jelly Fish.

Terri Mullins, Maddee Mayer, Grace Hanna, Jason Barstow, Harlee Wandling and Dominick Mullins are
pictured at Middleport Trick-or-Treat.

Rylie Wolfe dressed up for
Pomeroy’s Treat Street.

Three-year-old Kaia was a scarecrow for Middleport Trick-or-Treat.

Ava and Zeke Richardson enjoyed the firetrucks while trick or treating during Pomeroy’s Treat Street.

Brae’lynn Hubbard was ready to go to Pomeroy’s Treat Street.

Ella Carleton prepares to take part in Pomeroy’s Treat Street.

Cianna and Zoey Kinder dressed up to to trick or treating in
Syracuse.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Eastern High School Honor Roll

From page 1

Staff Report

making false alarms, two
counts of inducing panic,
one count of aggravated
menacing,one count of
falsiﬁcation, one count
of criminal trespass,
one count of unlawful
restraint, one count of
resisting arrest, one
count of obstructing ofﬁcial business, one count
of possession of drugs,
and one count of public
indecency.
Abduction as charged is
a third degree felony. The
charges state that Ritchhart is alleged to have
restrained the liberty of
the two minor victims
using force or threat,
under circumstances that
created a risk of physical
harm to the victim or
placed them in fear.
Assault of a peace
ofﬁcer is a fourth-degree
felony. According to the
indictment, Ritchhart is
alleged to have knowingly
caused or attempted to
cause physical harm to a
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Deputy.
In the felonious assault
case, Ritchhart reportedly rammed a vehicle in
Racine which had four
individuals inside it.
Meigs County Prosecutor James K. Stanley told
the Sentinel, at the time
of the arraignment, that
during the incident Ritchhart allegedly believed
her children were in the
trunk of the vehicle and
she reportedly rammed it
in order to get the vehicle
to stop. There were no
children in the trunk,
Stanley stated.

REEDSVILLE —
Eastern High School
has announced its ﬁrst
nine weeks honor roll
for the 2017-18 school
year.
All “A” Honor Roll
— 12th grade: Jessica
Adams, Elayna Bissell, Madison Bissell,
Kaitlyn Hawk, Morgain
Little, Katelyn Butcher,
Madison Kuhn, Sidney
Cook; 11th grade: Alyson Bailey, Jonathan

Record
From page 1

individuals verbal statements that the caller,
Felicia Hopkins, 19, was
the probable primary
aggressor in the alleged
domestic. She was
arrested and transported
to the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce.
Domestic — 911
received a call of an
active domestic from
a child at a residence
on State Roue 681 and
contact was made to the
sheriff’s ofﬁce. Dispatch
also received a call from
an adult about the same
time of the same domestic. Deputies were sent
to the address on State
Route 681 and made
contact with the victim
and a witness at the end
of the driveway. They
advised that the suspect,
Gregory Hatﬁeld, age 32
of Pomeroy was still in
the house. They stated
they had come home

Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

36°

47°

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.

0.00
4.79
2.71
40.92
35.74

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Wed.
7:56 a.m.
6:28 p.m.
5:20 p.m.
4:44 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Full

Last

Nov 4

New

First

Nov 10 Nov 18 Nov 26

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

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

Major
9:05a
9:48a
10:32a
11:21a
12:14p
12:44a
12:47a

Minor
2:53a
3:36a
4:20a
5:07a
6:00a
6:58a
7:02a

Major
9:29p
10:13p
10:58p
11:47p
---1:13p
1:17p

Minor
3:17p
4:00p
4:45p
5:34p
6:28p
7:27p
7:32p

WEATHER HISTORY
Much of Saudi Arabia is a desert, but
on Oct. 31, 1984, a thunderstorm
poured 4.81 inches of rain on Al
Wajh. That surpassed their total
rainfall for the previous decade.

THURSDAY

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™
The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local
weather with a number of demographic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.

0

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™

66°
56°

Cloudy and chilly with
a touch of rain

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

Mostly cloudy, a
shower or two;
warmer
Logan
45/28

Adelphi
46/29
Chillicothe
47/30

Lucasville
49/30
Portsmouth
50/31

SATURDAY

66°
49°

AIR QUALITY

65°
53°

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 13.49 +0.28
Marietta
34 17.10 +1.01
Parkersburg
36 21.84 +0.30
Belleville
35 13.13 +0.28
Racine
41 13.20 +0.23
Point Pleasant
40 25.63 +0.85
Gallipolis
50 13.20 +0.86
Huntington
50 25.39 none
Ashland
52 34.02 -0.19
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.59 -0.09
Portsmouth
50 14.80 +0.50
Maysville
50 33.70 -0.20
Meldahl Dam
51 14.60 +0.40
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

Ashland
51/33
Grayson
51/32

MONDAY

Still cloudy

71°
51°
Intervals of clouds
and sunshine

NATIONAL CITIES
Murray City
46/27
Belpre
49/30

St. Marys
49/30

Parkersburg
49/30

Coolville
48/29

Elizabeth
50/31

Spencer
50/32

Buffalo
52/32

Ironton
51/33

Oct. 21
Neighbor complaint
— Deputies were called
to a residence near
Reedsville in reference
to a neighbor complaint.
The Meigs County Dog
Warden was contacted
to rescue a canine. An
investigation is still
pending in this matter.

69°
51°

Marietta
48/29

Wilkesville
49/28
POMEROY
Jackson
51/31
49/29
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
51/32
51/32
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
44/32
GALLIPOLIS
52/33
51/32
51/33

South Shore Greenup
51/32
49/30

38

Oct. 20
Dispute — Deputies
were called to a residence near Long Bottom
concerning a dispute
between boyfriend and
girlfriend. Upon arrival,
the female stated she
would like to take her
belongings and leave
with her mother. Deputies stood by while the
female gathered her personal items.

SUNDAY

Cloudy with a passing Cloudy with a couple
shower
of showers

Athens
47/28

McArthur
46/27

Waverly
47/28

FRIDAY

A: Dew

Today
7:55 a.m.
6:29 p.m.
4:46 p.m.
3:41 a.m.

WEDNESDAY

0

Q: What weather word spelled backward means to get married?

SUN &amp; MOON

EXTENDED FORECAST

41°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

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

on a call in reference to a
domestic disturbance. A
female suspect, Marissa
Starcher, had left the residence prior to the deputies’ arrival. Charges
have been ﬁled through
Meigs County Court.

Gregory Hatﬁeld for the
alleged domestic upon
his release from the ER.
He was transported to
the Meigs County Jail
and incarcerated until he
appeared in court on the
charge.

Chilly today with times of sun and clouds. Partly
cloudy tonight. High 52° / Low 33°

HEALTH TODAY

(in inches)

and made contact with
several subjects from the
neighborhood outside
looking for the subject.
After all the guns were
put away, he spoke with
the caller and his son.
They live in separate
homes but share the
same driveway. It was
Oct. 22
determined that the
911 hang up — Dissuspected prowler was
patch received a call
a friend that had been
from the 911 center
staying with the son. He
advising they had
had called his girlfriend
received a hang-up call
and was walking down
from the guard shack at
the mine on Yellow Bush the driveway to meet her
when he was seen by the
Rd. A deputy was sent
father who was unaware
and located the guard
who was unaware of the that his son had a guest
and he confronted him
call being made. The
with a gun. The situaphone was checked and
tion was calmed, and all
did not show that any
calls had been made from involved were advised of
it. The area was checked, the legal use of a ﬁrearm
when confronting an
and nothing was found.
unknown subject. No
No further action was
further action was taken
taken on this call.
on this call.
Oct. 23
Prowler- Dispatch
Day Shift
received a call of a
Oct. 19
prowler at a residence
Domestic — Sgt Grifon State Route 833. Sgt. ﬁn responded to a resiMohler arrived on scene dence on Pomeroy Pike

and suspect had allegedly been drinking and
was upset about money
and allegedly assaulted
her after an argument.
They later gave written
statements about the
incident. Sgt. Mohler
and Deputy Fennell
started up the driveway
to the home and found
a 4-wheeler along the
side of the driveway and
the suspect laying in the
ditch with a head injury.
He was searched and
found to have several
shotgun rounds in his
possession. The gun
was not found to be in
the immediate area.
When asked about the
gun Gregory reportedly
advised it had fallen off
the 4-wheeler. It was
later found several hundred feet away in the
yard back toward the
house. A squad arrived
and checked Gregory’s
injuries and transported
him to the Meigs ER.
He was treated and later
released. A deputy waiting at the ER arrested

49°
45°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

Precipitation

Ronna Robinson, Megan
Ross, Kaylee Savoy,
Alyssa Smith, Kristyn
Stewart, Emily VanMeter; 9th grade: Isabella
Arix-Michael, Matthew
Blanchard, Jonna Epple,
Kylie Gheen, Ashton
Guthrie, Alysa Howard,
Owen Johnson, McKenzie Long, Trevor Morrissey, Blake Newland,
Brianna Nutter, Alisa
Ord, Kelsey Roberts,
Tessa Rockhold, Kaylee
Schreckengost, Hunter
Sisson.

Sarah Bunce, Emily
Bunce, Taylor Carleton,
Mattison Finlaw, Abigail Litchﬁeld, Brittany Long, Courtney
Lyons, Allyson Miller,
Allison Putman; 11th
grade: Primo Averion,
Ciara Browning, Shelby
Carter, Sylvia Chuang,
Jacob Creath, Hannah
Damewood, Blaise
Facemyer, Cera Grueser,
Ryan Harbour, Hannah
Hill, Austin Hudnell,
Madison Keney, Donald
Lauria, Ashley Long,

8 PM

ALMANAC
54°
31°
64°
41°
83° in 1950
23° in 1965

Alessandra Martella,
Brooke Mayes, Anna
Pierce, Garrett Rees,
Katie Ridenour, Kylee
Tolliver; 10th grade: Ivy
Adams, Brandon Baer,
Berry Bailey, Gabrielle
Beeler, Shannan Brewer,
Jordan Buckley, Kevin
Burke, Haley Burton,
Teddi Casto, Wyatt
Fox, Rylee Haggy, Lexa
Hayes, Nathan Litchﬁeld, Eion Marcinko,
Derrick Metheney, Cameron Nelson, Madelyn
Nutter, Bailey Putnam,

Bollweg, Kelsey Casto,
Ally Durst, Emmalea
Durst, Caden Goff, Mollie Maxon, Rhiannon
Morris, Jessica Parker;
10th grade: Faith Bauerbach, Haylie Blankenship, Autumn Honaker,
Michael Letson, Aubree
Lyons; 9th grade: Jake
Barber, Olivia Barber,
Layna Catlett, Jenna
Chadwell, Whitney
Durst, Skylar Honaker.
All “A and B” Honor
Roll — 12th grade:
Mackenzie Brooks,

Milton
52/31
Huntington
52/32

St. Albans
53/32

NATIONAL FORECAST

Clendenin
53/32
Charleston
53/32

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

110s
100s
Seattle
Winnipeg
59/45
90s
Montreal
32/24
51/32
80s
70s
Billings
Toronto
60s
53/39
48/35
Minneapolis
50s
Detroit
New York
37/28
45/31
40s
56/43
Chicago
30s
San Francisco
43/31
20s
66/51
Washington
Kansas City
Denver
10s
61/43
43/32
53/42
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
69/60
T-storms
Atlanta
Rain
69/48
Showers
El Paso
Snow
71/51
Flurries
Ice
Houston
Chihuahua
Cold Front
75/64
Miami
79/47
Warm Front
Monterrey
79/67
Stationary Front
77/62

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
60/43/c
44/30/pc
69/48/s
60/42/s
59/35/s
53/39/c
57/37/pc
58/41/s
53/32/pc
69/44/s
51/37/c
43/31/pc
46/31/pc
45/34/pc
47/32/pc
60/49/r
53/42/sf
44/31/pc
45/31/pc
85/75/sh
75/64/pc
45/32/pc
43/32/pc
79/58/c
56/42/pc
69/60/pc
50/36/s
79/67/pc
37/28/pc
56/40/s
78/61/pc
56/43/s
53/39/r
75/57/s
58/39/s
82/62/pc
46/30/pc
56/35/s
67/43/s
64/42/s
48/39/pc
58/42/pc
66/51/pc
59/45/s
61/43/s

Hi/Lo/W
71/45/s
41/31/s
72/54/pc
59/53/pc
56/46/c
45/27/r
63/35/s
55/48/pc
54/48/sh
72/52/pc
63/34/pc
49/44/c
49/48/r
52/43/c
50/47/r
79/63/pc
70/38/pc
52/42/pc
49/43/c
87/73/t
80/69/sh
49/46/r
56/47/pc
79/57/s
65/58/t
68/58/pc
53/50/r
82/71/pc
42/31/sn
63/55/c
79/66/c
55/50/pc
73/53/pc
78/62/pc
56/50/c
83/60/s
48/44/r
52/40/s
71/49/c
66/50/c
54/51/c
70/44/s
65/52/s
55/44/sh
59/51/c

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

85° in Needles, CA
14° in Angel Fire, NM

Global
High
Low

113° in West Roebuck, Australia
-36° in Verkhoyansk, Russia

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

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Ritchhart

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Tuesday, October 31, 2017 5

�Sports
6 s Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Durst advances to state meet
By Paul Boggs

district champions, they aimed
to return to the coveted state
championships as a team — for
the second time in four years.
PICKERINGTON, Ohio —
But, for the third straight
For the Eastern High School
girls cross country squad, both year — and after back-to-back
regional meets in which they
bad and good, this has hapfell one spot shy of qualifying
pened before.
Only this time, it’s a different for the state as a team — Eastern ended up on the outside
Lady Eagle advancing to the
looking in.
ﬁnal 5K race of the campaign.
As the top ﬁve teams at PickThat’s because Ally Durst, an
EHS junior, did qualify for next erington qualiﬁed for the state,
the Lady Eagles earned an
weekend’s Ohio High School
Athletic Association state meet eighth-place ﬁnish with a score
of 214.
—after placing inside the top
The top ﬁve featured cham20 at Saturday’s Division III
pion Mount Gilead (40), runregional meet at Pickerington
ner-up Fredericktown (120),
North High School.
third-place Zane Trace (124),
While the Lady Eagles
advanced to the regional for the fourth-place Garaway (136)
and ﬁfth-place Centerburg
seventh consecutive season as

pboggs@aimmediamidwest.com

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

Eastern senior Jessica Cook competes in the girls high school race as part of
the Patty Forgey Invitational cross country meet on Sept. 23 in Rio Grande, Ohio.

(148).
Immediately ahead of the
Lady Eagles were Galion
Northmor at 184 and Grandview Heights at 191, as Eastern
was sixth last season — when
once again ﬁve teams made it
to National Trail Raceway.
Two years ago, when the
top four teams and top 16
individuals advanced, Eastern
once again was the ﬁrst one
out — thanks to the ﬁfth-score
tiebreaker with Fairﬁeld Christian.
Speaking of 16, though,
Durst ﬁnished 16th overall
in exactly 20 minutes and 18
seconds.
Thus, by crossing among the

See DURST | 7

Gallia Academy
annihilates
Pointers, 47-0
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SOUTH POINT, Ohio — Going out in style.
The Gallia Academy football had seven different
players, including four seniors, ﬁnd the end zone
on Friday night in Lawrence County, as the Blue
Devils rolled to a 47-0 victory over Ohio Valley
Conference host South Point in the season ﬁnale
for both squads.
The Blue Devils (5-5, 4-3 OVC) — who ﬁnish
with a non-losing record for the ﬁrst time since
2013 — scored from the other side of the ﬁeld to
break the scoreless tie, as junior Justin McClelland
hit senior Matthew Moreaux for a 59-yard scoring
pass. Trentin Waller added the extra-point kick for
the guests, his ﬁrst of ﬁve makes in the game.
Next, McClelland found senior John Stout for
a seven-yard scoring pass to give the Blue and
White a 13-0 edge.
Still in the ﬁrst period, the McClelland completed his third scoring pass to a GAHS senior, ﬁnding
Tanner Allen for an eight-yard score to give the
guest a 20-0 lead.
The Blue Devil offense didn’t slow down in
the second period, with McClelland opening the
quarter with a seven-yard scoring pass to senior
Garrett Burns.
The GAHS run game got in on the fun next, as
James Armstrong broke a 97-yard scoring run,
increasing the Blue Devil lead to 34-0.
The big plays continued for Gallia Academy,
as Cory Call threw a 61-yard touchdown to Caleb
Henry, extending the GAHS lead to 40-0.
The Blue Devils added their ﬁnal touchdown of
the game before the half, with Boo Pullins rushing
into the end zone from 19 yards out.
The Gallia Academy offense ﬁnished the game
with 431 total yards, including 208 on the ground.
Meanwhile, South Point (3-7, 0-7) was held to just
15 passing yards and 24 rushing yards.
The Blue Devils held a 17-to-4 advantage in ﬁrst
downs, with the guests converting on 5-of-7 third
down tries as well as 1-of-2 fourth down attempts.
South Point was 2-of-12 on third down and came
up empty on a trio of fourth down tries.
Gallia Academy won the turnover battle by a 3-0
count, intercepting two passes and recovering one
SPHS fumble. The Blue and White were penalized
nine times for a total of 70 yards, while the Pointers were ﬂagged twice for 15 yards.
McClelland was 8-of-12 passing in the win,
tossing four touchdowns and earning 154 yards.
Call was 1-for-1 with a 61-yard scoring pass, while
Noah Vanco was 1-of-4 passing for eight yards.
Armstrong’s one carry earned him a team-high
97 rushing yards and one score. Pullins was next
with 51 yards and one touchdown on eight carries, followed by McClelland with 28 yards on a
pair of totes. Michael Beasy ran ﬁve times for a
total of 22 yards, while Burns and Cade Roberts
each rushed for 11 yards on one and three carries
respectively.
Henry, Stout and Allen each caught two passes,
See GALLIA | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Oct. 31
Class AA Volleyball
Nitro at Point Pleasant,
7 p.m.
Class A Volleyball
Hannan at Buffalo HS,
TBA
Wahama at Parkersburg
Catholic HS, TBA
College Football

Miami (OH) at Ohio, 8
p.m.
Friday, Nov. 3
Football
Cameron at Hannan, 7:30
Wahama at Buffalo, 7:30
College Football
Marshall at Florida
Atlantic, 6 p.m.

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Eastern senior Josh Brewer (9) is swarmed by Southern defenders Gage Barrett (44), Sean Myers (60), Alex VanMeter (50) and Austin
Arnold (77) during a first half carry Saturday night in a Week 10 TVC Hocking football contest at Roger Lee Adams Memorial Field in
Racine, Ohio.

Southern shuts out Eagles, 27-0
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE, Ohio — Once
again, the Tornadoes got
it done on defense.
The Southern football
team forced a trio of turnovers and allowed just
89 yards of total offense
to Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division guest
Eastern on Saturday at
Roger Lee Adams Memorial Field, as the Purple
and Gold picked up a 27-0
victory for their third
shut out of the season.
Southern (7-3, 5-3
TVC Hocking) forced
the Eagles (3-7, 2-6) into
a three-and-out on the
opening possession of
the game, and SHS junior
Austin Baker blocked the
punt to give the Tornado
offense just 24 yards to
paydirt.
The Tornadoes needed
seven plays to cover the
distance, with senior
Riley Roush ﬁnding the
end zone on a four-yard
run with 7:01 left in the
opening period. Andrew
Evans kicked in his ﬁrst
of three successful extrapoints to make the margin 7-0.
After a punt by each
side, Eastern put together
its best drive of the game,
covering 38 yards in
eight plays. However, the
Eagles failed to convert a
fourth-and-three from the
SHS 12, giving the ball
back to the hosts with
10:30 left in the half.
A combination of ﬁve
running plays and a
defensive holding penalty against the Eagles,

moved Southern across
midﬁeld to the EHS 48.
On the ﬁrst play from the
Eagles’ side of the 50,
Southern junior Logan
Drummer found senior
Dylan Smith for a 48-yard
scoring pass, giving the
Purple and Gold a 13-0
advantage.
Eastern picked up a
pair of ﬁrst downs on
the ensuing drive, but
had a fourth down pass
intercepted by SHS junior
Auston Colburn. Southern went three-and-out
and punted back to EHS,
however, as the Green,
White and Gold took
over at the Tornado 42.
The SHS defense
backed the Eagles up
across midﬁeld before
taking possession on
downs. Southern gained
one ﬁrst down before
heading to half with a
13-0 edge.
Southern lost a fumble
on its ﬁrst possession
of the second half, but
Roush intercepted an
EHS pass to give the
Tornadoes possession at
their own 33.
After a seven-yard
rush on ﬁrst down and a
two-yard rush on second
down, Roush broke his
third straight carry for
a 58-yard touchdown,
increasing the SHS
advantage to 20-0 with
5:51 left in the third quarter.
On the ensuing EHS
drive, the Eagles fumbled
the ball away at their
own 39. Four plays later,
Smith rushed in from the
one-yard line, for the ﬁnal
touchdown of Southern’s

Southern senior Dylan Smith (7) tries to break away from Eastern
defender Wyatt Bissell (54) during a first half carry Saturday night
in a Week 10 TVC Hocking football contest at Roger Lee Adams
Memorial Field in Racine, Ohio.

27-0 victory.
“We won four touchdowns to nothing, anytime we can do that we’re
happy,” Southern head
coach Mike Chancey said.
“It was a good football
game and a great way to
end a respectable 7-3 season. We’d love to go back
and play a couple of those
over again, but you don’t
get do-overs.
“I can’t ask for anything
more that what these
kids have given to this
football program,” added
Chancey. “All year, I’ve
been able to come here
and just coach football.
We have not had one
problem with any of these
kids. They show up and
they play hard. I keep
saying it, it sounds like a

broken record, but they’re
a bunch of good kids and
they do everything we
ask them to do.”
For the game, the Tornadoes outgained EHS by
a 246-to-89 clip, including
162-to-71 on the ground.
Southern won the turnover battle by a 3-1 count
and was penalized just
once for ﬁve yards, while
Eastern was sent back
three times for 20 yards.
“This has kind of been
the way it went this year,”
EHS head coach Pat Newland said. “We’ve played
hard, the kids give great
effort, but it just seems
like when we get a little
something going, something bad happens. We
See EAGLES | 7

�SPORTS

Tuesday, October 31, 2017 7

RV, GA runners end CC season
By Paul Boggs

pboggs@aimmediamidwest.com

PICKERINGTON,
Ohio — Once again, for
River Valley’s Nathaniel
Abbott, it was a matter
of a mere three more
spots.
That’s because the
senior Abbott, for the
second consecutive and
ﬁnal season, ended up
three places shy of individually qualifying for
the state cross country
meet — following Saturday’s Division II boys
regional meet at Pickerington North High
School.
That’s correct.
Abbott, competing
in his third and ﬁnal
regional, only missed
making the coveted state
championship by three
ﬁnishers — as the top
seven teams and 28 individuals in the regional
advance to the state.
Abbott ended up 31st
overall in 17 minutes and
ﬁve seconds, as the ﬁnal
two spots went to a pair
of Buckeye Valley runners, which both crossed
the line at 16:59.
A year ago, when
the top 24 individuals
automatically moved
on, Abbott was 27th in
17:16.
Two years ago, like
they did on Saturday,
the Raiders reached the
regional as a Division II
team —and almost made
it three straight squad
appearances after ﬁnishing one position shy last

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

River Valley senior Nathaniel Abbott competes in the boys high school race as part of the Wellston
Cross Country Invitational on Aug. 26 in Wellston, Ohio.

fall.
This year, River Valley
was 21st out of 22 teams
with a score of 456, as
only Eastern Brown —at
486 —ﬁnished behind
the Raiders.
All of the remaining
Raiders ranged from
92nd to 172nd — with
their ﬁnishing times
between 18 and 20 minutes.
In addition to Abbott,
River Valley’s remaining runners included
senior George Rickett
(92nd in 18:06), junior
Rory Twyman (121st
in 18:34), junior Cole
Franklin (154th in
19:25), junior Caleb
McKnight (163rd in
19:37), senior Kyle

Coen (166th in 19:39)
and sophomore Austin
Livingston (172nd in
19:58).
Gallia Academy’s
boys were represented
by senior twin brothers
Kyle Greenlee and Caleb
Greenlee, who ﬁnished
just 13 places and 15 seconds apart.
Kyle Greenlee was
43rd in 17:20, while
Caleb Greenlee landed
a 56th-place ﬁnish in
17:35.
Last season, both
Greenlees ran in the
regional as part of the
Blue Devils’ qualiﬁcation as a club, as Caleb
crossed in 44th and Kyle
ﬁnished in 62nd.
Both improved their

times by 17 seconds this
year.
Speaking of Buckeye Valley, Zach Kreft
defended his overall
individual championship, completing the 5K
course in 15 minutes and
52 seconds.
There were 181 runners in the boys race —
and 153 for the girls.
Gallia Academy freshman Sarah Watts was the
only area female runner,
placing 91st in 21 minutes and 44 seconds.
Visit www.baumspage.
com for a complete list of
results of the 2017 Division II regional meet.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

Steelers lean on D in win over Lions
DETROIT (AP) —
JuJu Smith-Schuster
made an inside move
like a veteran and used
his young legs to do the
rest.
The rookie receiver
scored on a 97-yard
touchdown pass from
Ben Roethlisberger late
in the third quarter, and
the Pittsburgh Steelers
forced the Detroit Lions
to turn the ball over on
downs twice in a 20-15
win Sunday night.
Smith-Schuster, selected No. 62 overall out of
Southern California, had
season highs with seven
receptions for 193 yards.
“A lot of people said,
‘He’s young, he’s immature,’” Smith-Schuster
said. “I’m 20 years old,
but when I’m on the
ﬁeld, playing with my
boys, I’m going to get
the job done.”
Smith-Schuster also
knows how to have a
little fun. When he got
to the sideline after his
touchdown, he put a
chain that he purchased
Sunday on a stationary

bike, making light of his
bike being stolen and
recovered recently.
“He’s a little kid, excited for the moment,” veteran defensive end Cameron Heyward said. “You
appreciate the energy he
brings. Us old farts don’t
know how to deal with it
sometimes, but I’m glad
we got him.”
Roethlisberger is, too,
because he has a reliable
receiver to go to when
Antonio Brown is covered and Martavis Bryant is pouting.
His last catch converted a third-and-1 from
the Steelers 32, allowing them to run out the
clock.
“He’s not playing like
a rookie,” Roethlisberger
said. “He’s playing like a
seasoned veteran.”
The AFC Northleading Steelers (6-2) go
into their bye week with
a three-game winning
streak.
“We weren’t perfect,
obviously, but boy we
showed ﬁght,” coach
Mike Tomlin said.

Pittsburgh’s defense
put up a curtain in front
of it end zone, forcing
the Lions to settle for
ﬁeld goals. When they
went for touchdowns,
the Steelers stopped
them.
Detroit coach Jim
Caldwell chose to go for
it on fourth down from
the Steelers 1 trailing by
one in the third quarter.
Matthew Stafford was
sacked as he stepped
up out of a collapsing
pocket and tried to run
up the middle.
“Just as I thought I
could do something, I
got hit,” Stafford said.
A snap after missing
wide-open tight end
Jesse James on the ensuing drive, Roethlisberger
dropped back into his
end zone and perfectly
lofted a pass to SmithSchuster. The rookie
receiver ran for about
70 yards after the catch,
running past cornerback
Quandre Diggs and pulling away from safety
Glover Quin on his way
to the end zone.

“I told him I didn’t
know he had that much
speed,” Roethlisberger
recalled. “He said he
didn’t, either.”
Matt Prater kicked his
ﬁfth ﬁeld goal on the
next possession after
Caldwell didn’t want
to go for it on another
fourth down from the
Pittsburgh 1, drawing
boos from a crowd that
included a lot of blackand-yellow clad, toweltwirling fans cheering
for the visitors.
“We tried to be
aggressive the ﬁrst
time,” Caldwell said.
“And then it was later in
the game, so we kicked
it. We gave ourselves
a chance to win the
game.”
Then, receiver Golden
Tate gave it away.
Detroit got the ball
back with a chance to
drive for a go-ahead TD,
but Tate blew it with an
unforced fumble at the
Steelers 24.
“It just slipped,” Tate
said. “It was just a bad
play by me.”

Eagles

passing for 36 yards —
rushed 10 times for 45
yards and one score,
while catching one pass
for 48 yards and a touchdown.
Drummer was 1-of-5
passing for 48 yards and
one touchdown, Gage
Barrett hauled in one
36-yard pass, while Gage
Shuler rushed once for
one yard.
EHS senior Josh
Brewer led the way for
the Eagles, rushing 21
times for a total of 80
yards. Eagle freshmen
Steven Fitzgerald and
Blake Newland each
added nine yards on the
ground, rushing four and
two times respectively.
EHS freshman Conner
Ridenour was 5-of-14
passing for 18 yards
in the setback. Mason
Dishong and Nate Durst
both caught two passes,
for eight and seven

yards respectively, while
Dylan Creath hauled in
one three-yard pass.
Prior to the game,
Southern honored
seniors Andrew Evans,
Ryan McCabe, Riley
Roush, Dylan Smith,
Connor Thomas and
Garrett Wolfe, playing
for the ﬁnal time in the
Purple and Gold.
“These seniors have
done a great job providing leadership to our
team,” Coach Chancey
said. “Their attitudes
have been great and they
are the reason why we
had a successful year.
Because of their leadership and their work
ethic, they set the tone
for everybody. They’re a
bunch of good kids that
make it fun to coach.”
Eastern also has six
seniors to replace before
next fall, in Wyatt Bissell, Josh Brewer, Wyatt

Carter, Brandon Colburn, Trenton Delacruz
and Brayden Holter.
“They’ve been great,
we love all of these
seniors, they’ve been
good leaders.” said
Coach Newland. “A
couple of them didn’t get
to ﬁnish out the season,
our seniors were a lot of
the ones we had hurt. I
was glad to see Brayden
Holter got a tackle. His
knee’s been hurt and
we haven’t been playing
him. He said ‘coach, you
gotta let me play,’ so he
went in for a play and
he got a tackle in his
last Eastern-Southern
game.”
Southern has now
won three straight over
Eastern for the ﬁrst this
millennium. The Eagles
were the last team in the
series to win three consecutive meetings, from
2009-to-2011.

From page 6

turn the ball over, or we
miss a block and instead
of being second-and-seven, it’s second-and-14.
“We have to get surge
on the line,” Newland
added. “We had it at
times tonight, but at
times we didn’t. We
have to have it all the
time. Our freshman
center did a great job
against a very good
nose guard tonight, but
when he gets beat he
gets beat. We have a ton
of freshmen playing,
we have ﬁve starting or
something like that, it’s
crazy.”
Roush led Southern’s
offensive surge with 130
yards and two touchdowns on 26 carries.
Smith — who was 1-of-3

NFL

New England
Buffalo
Miami
N.Y. Jets

W
6
5
4
3

L
2
2
3
5

T
0
0
0
0

Jacksonville
Tennessee
Houston
Indianapolis

W
4
4
3
2

L
3
3
4
6

T
0
0
0
0

Pittsburgh
Baltimore
Cincinnati
Cleveland

W
6
4
3
0

L
2
4
4
8

T
0
0
0
0

Kansas City
Denver
L.A. Chargers
Oakland

W
5
3
3
3

L
2
3
5
5

T
0
0
0
0

Philadelphia
Dallas
Washington
N.Y. Giants

W
7
4
3
1

L
1
3
4
6

T
0
0
0
0

New Orleans
Carolina
Atlanta
Tampa Bay

W
5
5
4
2

L
2
3
3
5

T
0
0
0
0

Minnesota
Green Bay
Detroit
Chicago

W
6
4
3
3

L
2
3
4
5

T
0
0
0
0

Seattle
L.A. Rams
Arizona
San Francisco

W
5
5
3
0

L
2
2
4
8

T
0
0
0
0

All Times EDT
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
Pct PF PA Home Away
.750 216 179 3-2-0 3-0-0
.714 153 115 4-0-0 1-2-0
.571 92 152 2-1-0 2-2-0
.375 157 186 2-2-0 1-3-0
South
Pct PF PA Home Away
.571 183 110 1-2-0 3-1-0
.571 158 173 2-1-0 2-2-0
.429 215 188 2-2-0 1-2-0
.250 142 246 2-2-0 0-4-0
North
Pct PF PA Home Away
.750 167 131 2-1-0 4-1-0
.500 170 148 2-2-0 2-2-0
.429 122 135 2-2-0 1-2-0
.000 119 202 0-5-0 0-3-0
West
Pct PF PA Home Away
.714 207 161 2-1-0 3-1-0
.500 108 118 3-1-0 0-2-0
.375 150 152 1-3-0 2-2-0
.375 169 190 2-2-0 1-3-0
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
Pct PF PA Home Away
.875 232 156 4-0-0 3-1-0
.571 198 161 1-2-0 3-1-0
.429 160 180 2-2-0 1-2-0
.143 112 156 0-3-0 1-3-0
South
Pct PF PA Home Away
.714 191 145 2-1-0 3-1-0
.625 148 142 1-2-0 4-1-0
.571 153 152 1-2-0 3-1-0
.286 148 168 2-2-0 0-3-0
North
Pct PF PA Home Away
.750 179 135 4-1-0 2-1-0
.571 164 161 3-1-0 1-2-0
.429 176 169 1-3-0 2-1-0
.375 134 171 2-2-0 1-3-0
West
Pct PF PA Home Away
.714 175 132 3-0-0 2-2-0
.714 212 138 2-2-0 3-0-0
.429 119 191 2-1-0 1-3-0
.000 133 219 0-3-0 0-5-0

Thursday’s Games
Baltimore 40, Miami 0
Sunday’s Games
Minnesota 33, Cleveland 16
Carolina 17, Tampa Bay 3
New England 21, L.A. Chargers 13
Buffalo 34, Oakland 14
Atlanta 25, N.Y. Jets 20
Philadelphia 33, San Francisco 10
New Orleans 20, Chicago 12

Durst
From page 6

top 20, she will represent
Eastern individually —
as senior Jessica Cook
claimed that honor the
past two years.
There were 133 runners in the girls high
school race, as Durst’s
time was eight seconds
faster than the 20th overall time.
This will be Durst’s
ﬁrst trip to the state, as
she ﬁnished 30th overall
in 21:38 in last season’s
regional.
For Cook, she was
vying for a fourth and
ﬁnal berth, including the
past two as an individual.
But unfortunately she
placed 31st, completing the weather-slopped
course in 20 minutes and
58 seconds.
Last season, she ended
up 18th in 20:45, while
ﬁnishing ﬁfth overall as a
sophomore — in exactly
a minute faster than her
time in 2016.
The remaining runners for Eastern included
freshman Whitney Durst

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

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

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

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

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

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

AFC
4-1-0
4-2-0
3-3-0
0-7-0

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

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

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

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

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

NFC
6-0-0
4-2-0
2-3-0
0-5-0

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

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

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

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

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

NFC
4-1-0
3-3-0
3-3-0
1-5-0

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

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

NFC
3-1-0
3-2-0
2-4-0
0-7-0

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

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

Cincinnati 24, Indianapolis 23
Seattle 41, Houston 38
Dallas 33, Washington 19
Pittsburgh 20, Detroit 15
Open: L.A. Rams, Arizona, N.Y. Giants,
Jacksonville, Tennessee, Green Bay
Monday’s Games
Denver at Kansas City, 8:30 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 2
Buffalo at N.Y. Jets, 8:25 p.m.

(73rd in 22:31), junior
Rhiannon Morris (75th
in 22:32), senior Kaitlyn
Hawk (81st in 22:51),
sophomore Lexa Hayes
(86th in 23:00) and
freshman Alyssa Howard
(129th in 26:43).
Morris, Hawk and
Hayes all ran in last season’s regional, and all
improved their places and
times from a year ago.
Southern sophomore
Sydney Roush ran in her
initial regional race, and
ﬁnished 82nd in seven
seconds shy of an even 23
minutes (22:53).
On the boys side, both
Eastern runners competed at the regional, as
senior Owen Arix (37th
in 17:40) and sophomore
Colton Reynolds (48th in
17:56) ﬁnished 11 places
and 16 seconds apart.
Southern senior Larry
Dunn, after a 38th-place
performance last season,
was 68th overall in 18
minutes and 21 ticks.
Visit www.baumspage.
com for a complete list of
results of the 2017 Division III regional meet.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

Gallia

The Blue Devils have
now defeated South Point
in back-to-back meetings.
This is Gallia Academy’s
From page 6
ﬁrst road win in a league
game since Oct. 17, 2014,
including a touchdown
apiece, while earning 95, when the Blue Devils
topped Warren by a 20-6
31 and 12 yards respeccount in Southeastern
tively. Moreaux had
Ohio Athletic League
one 59-yard touchdown
play. GAHS lost its next
reception, while Burns
two road games in the
hauled in one pass for a
seven-yard score. Call and SEOAL and then dropped
its ﬁrst six road games in
Armstrong contributed
the OVC.
a reception apiece, pickThe triumph also ends
ing up 11 and eight yards
the Blue Devils’ ﬁve-game
respectively.
The Blue Devil defense losing skid in Lawrence
County, where GAHS
was led by Roberts and
hadn’t won since Sept.
Waller with four tackles
12, 2014.
apiece, including two
This is the ﬁnal game
tackles for a loss by
in the Blue and White for
Waller. Trenton Johnson
came up with a team-best seniors Garrett Burns,
John Stout, Tanner Allen,
three tackles for a loss,
Matt Moreaux, Nathan
including a sack.
Mitchell and Jonas
Beasy and Justin Wilcoxon intercepted a pass McCreedy.
apiece for Gallia AcadAlex Hawley can be reached at 740emy, while Burns recov446-2342, ext. 2100.
ered a fumble.

Christopher E. Tenoglia
Attorney at Law

Help Right Here At Home
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8 Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Buckeyes rally past Penn State, 39-38
By Jim Naveau

jnaveau@limanews.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio – It
looked like there was no
way. No way at all.
But there was a way.
No. 6 Ohio State was
behind for all but the last
one minute, 48 seconds
of its 39-38 win over No.
2 Penn State on Saturday
at Ohio Stadium.
The Buckeyes fell
behind 21-3 early in the
second quarter. They
were down 35-20 with 12
minutes left in the game.
And all of that came
after Penn State’s Heisman Trophy candidate
Saquon Barkley had
delivered a stunning
blow when he ran the
opening kickoff back 97
yards for a touchdown
that started the Nittany
Lions on their way to
their dominance of the
scoreboard until the ﬁnal
two minutes.

Somehow. Some way,
Ohio State found a way
to win a game that had a
huge impact on its hopes
of reaching the College
Football Playoff and on
the Big Ten East Division race.
Ohio State (7-1, 5-0
Big Ten) is all alone at
the top of the East Division. Penn State (7-1,
4-1 Big Ten) would need
OSU to lose twice to go
around the Buckeyes for
a spot in the Big Ten
championship game.
Michigan State, with one
loss, is the only other
team in the East with
fewer than two Big Ten
losses.
Even OSU coach
Urban Meyer was a
little amazed at the turnaround that produced
maybe the best comeback of his coaching
career.
“Wow. What the heck
just happened?” Meyer

said after the game.
“That was one of the best
fourth quarters I’ve ever
watched in my career. In
31 years I can’t remember one quite like this.”
Quarterback J.T. Barrett was 13 of 13 and
threw three touchdown
passes in the fourth
quarter. He was 33 of 39
for 328 yards and four
touchdowns overall and
was Ohio State’s leading
rusher with 95 yards on
17 carries.
He threw touchdown
passes of 38 yards and 10
yards to Johnnie Dixon
in the fourth quarter,
then hit Marcus Baugh
with a 16-yard scoring
pass with 1:48 to play to
put OSU up 39-38.
Penn State, whose only
points in the fourth quarter came on a chip shot
24-yard ﬁeld goal, ﬁelded
a short kickoff at its own
41-yard line after Baugh’s
touchdown.

But with its defensive
line leading the way,
OSU pressured Penn
State quarterback Trace
McSorley into incompletions on ﬁrst, third
and fourth downs and
dropped him for a 5-yard
loss on a sack by Jalyn
Holmes on second down
to wrap up the win.
“I think we just played
dominant up front. They
couldn’t get anything
going. As a defense, we
played great. Those last
four plays really sums
up what we’ve got – four
of the best defensive
linemen in the country,”
defensive end Sam Hubbard said. “We knew if
we got them in that situation we were going to
close the game.”
Statistically, Ohio State
dominated throughout
the game. It had 529
yards of total offense,
nearly twice the 283
yards Penn State had.

What created the discrepancy between those
numbers and what the
scoreboard showed for
most of the afternoon
was a series of mistakes
early in the game by
OSU.
It started with Barkley
returning the opening
kickoff for a touchdown
and continued with four
false starts by offensive
players, two interceptions in the end zone
that were nulliﬁed by a
penalty and a replay and
a fumble and a second
instance of poor kickoff
coverage that set Penn
State up deep in Ohio
State territory.
While special teams
were a weak link on kick
coverage, they produced
the play that might have
turned the game around.
Penn State led 35-20
when Denzel Ward
blocked a punt at Penn
State’s 41-yard line in a

play Meyer described as
“the play that might have
save the game.”
Ohio State’s defense
kept Penn State’s biggest
weapons in check most
of the game.
Barkley had a net overall gain of 44 yards on 21
carries. He had a 36-yard
touchdown run but also
was thrown for 36 yards
in losses. McSorley
threw for 192 yards and
two touchdowns but had
only 49 yards rushing.
“We held probably the
No. 1 tailback in America
to 40 yards. The offense
was moving the ball. I
kept looking at the stats
and it was overwhelming. We really didn’t get
stopped,” Meyer said.
And once it was over,
it was time to celebrate.
“It was like a party in
the locker room,” linebacker Jerome Baker
said. “We’re going to celebrate this one.”

Astros blast by Dodgers 13-12 in 10th, lead World Series 3-2
HOUSTON (AP) —
Blast off!
Jose Altuve, Carlos
Correa and the Houston
Astros kept hammering
away in a wild slugfest
that no one saw coming,
rallying against Clayton
Kershaw and rocking
the Los Angeles Dodgers 13-12 in 10 thrilling
innings Sunday night for
a 3-2 lead in the World
Series.
In a tension-ﬁlled
game of monster
momentum swings
at pulsating Minute
Maid Park, the last one
belonged to Alex Bregman. With the packed
crowd still standing well
past midnight, Bregman
hit an RBI single with
two outs off Kenley Jansen to win it — ﬁnally
— after 5 hours, 17 minutes.
“The best game ever,
for sure,” Correa said.

Wacky and whacky
with seven home runs,
this one perhaps topped
Toronto’s 15-14 win over
the Phillies in 1993 as
the craziest World Series
classic ever.
Now, with both
bullpens worn down,
the teams get a day to
recover. It’ll be Game
6 on Tuesday night at
Dodger Stadium, where
Justin Verlander will try
to clinch the Astros’ ﬁrst
championship and Rich
Hill hopes to save Los
Angeles’ season.
Altuve, Correa, Yuli
Gurriel, George Springer
and Brian McCann homered for Houston, the
highest-scoring team in
the majors this season.
Cody Bellinger and Yasiel Puig went deep for
the Dodgers, who scored
three times in the ninth
to make it 12-all.
Silent when ace Dallas

Keuchel got crushed, the
orange-clad fans erupted
over and over as the
Astros sent balls careening all around — and out
of — the park.
Yet on another night of
Home Run Derby in the
Year of the Home Run,
no lead was safe.
Puig lined a two-run
shot in the ninth, the
record 22nd homer in a
single Series, and Chris
Taylor’s two-out single
off Chris Devenski tied
it.
“I think this whole
series has been an emotional roller coaster,”
Dodgers manager Dave
Roberts said. “It’s the
two best teams playing
for a championship. And
these are two teams that
play 27 outs.”
With two down in the
10th, Jansen hit McCann
on the hand with a pitch
and Springer walked.

TUESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

6

PM

WSAZ News
3 (N)
WTAP News
at Six (N)
ABC 6 News
at 6pm (N)
(5:30) Arthur

6:30

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31
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 World Series
TV
News (N)
Theory
Pre-game (L)
BBC World Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inNews:
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

Bregman, who homered off Jansen in Saturday night’s loss, lined the
next pitch over shortstop
to score pinch-runner
Derek Fisher, who slid
home ahead of the throw
from left ﬁelder Andre
Ethier.
“I got him on a slider
last night, so I knew he
wasn’t going to throw
that,” Bregman said.
“Looking for a cutter.
Correa, all our hitting
coaches, they all said,
‘Hey, you better stay on
top of that cutter.’ Tried
to stay on top, and we’re
up 3-2, baby.”
Out of nowhere, the
Astros climbed out of
a four-run hole against
Kershaw and then erased
two more deﬁcits later in
the game, tying it each
time on a homer.
Correa leaped and
twirled after launching
a two-run drive made

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

The Voice "Best of the
Season" (N)
The Voice "Best of the
Season" (N)
The Middle Fresh Off the
(N)
Boat (N)
Finding Your Roots
"Immigrant Nation" (N)

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

This Is Us "The 20's" (N)

Law &amp; Order (N)

This Is Us "The 20's" (N)

Law &amp; Order (N)

10:30

Black "Public Mayor "The Saves the World "Brutal
Fool" (N)
Strike" (N)
Acts of Kindness" (N)
The Vietnam War On the eve of the Tet
The Draft
holiday, North Vietnamese &amp; Viet Cong
forces launch shock attacks.
The Middle Fresh Off the Black "Public Mayor "The Saves the World "Brutal
(N)
Boat (N)
Fool" (N)
Strike" (N)
Acts of Kindness" (N)
Bull "The Exception to the NCIS: New Orleans
NCIS "Trapped" (N)
Rule" (N)
"Acceptable Loss" (N)
MLB Baseball World Series Houston Astros at Los Angeles Dodgers Game 6 Site: Dodger
Stadium -- Los Angeles, Calif. (if necessary) (L)
Finding Your Roots
The Vietnam War On the eve of the Tet
Shades of
"Immigrant Nation" (N)
holiday, North Vietnamese &amp; Viet Cong
Grey
forces launch shock attacks.
NCIS "Trapped" (N)
Bull "The Exception to the NCIS: New Orleans
Rule" (N)
"Acceptable Loss" (N)

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Child's Play 2 ('90, Hor) Alex Vincent. TVM
Child's Play 3 ('91, Hor) Brad Dourif. TVMA
NCAA Football Virginia at Pittsburgh Site: Heinz Field -- Pittsburgh, Pa.
The Dan Patrick Show (N)
FballPlayoff "Top 25" (L)
MLS Soccer Playoffs (L)
ESPN Films
Baseball T. SportsC. (N) NCAA Football Miami (OH) at Ohio University Site: Peden Stadium -- Athens, Ohio (L)
Grey's Anatomy "Haunt
Grey's Anatomy "Thriller" The Watcher in the Woods (2017, Thriller) Tallulah Evans, The Watcher in the Woods
Nicholas Galitzine, Anjelica Houston. TVPG
Anjelica Houston. TVPG
You Every Day"
(4:30) Hocus (:40)
Hocus Pocus (1993, Comedy) Sarah Jessica
(:50)
Hocus Pocus Bette Midler. Three 17th century witches are
Pocus TVPG Parker, Kathy Najimy, Bette Midler. TVPG
accidentally conjured into the 20th century on Halloween. TVPG
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Ink Master: Angels "Smells Ink Master: Angels "Angels
Like Seattle Spirit"
in Hotlanta" (N)
LoudH.
Lip Sync
H.Danger
Thunder
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 The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Joker's (N)
Drop the Mic
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
M.Crimes "Intersection"
Major Crimes
Major Crimes
Major Crimes (N)
Major Crimes
(5:00)
Halloween 2 ('09, Hor) Chase
Halloween (1978, Horror) Jamie Lee Curtis, P.J.
Halloween H2O: 20 Years Later ('98,
Wright Vanek, Sheri Moon Zombie. TVMA Soles, Donald Pleasence. TV14
Hor) Adam Arkin, Jamie Lee Curtis. TV14
Naked "The Swarm"
Naked "Fear the Unknown" Naked and Afraid "Nightcrawlers" (N)
Naked "The Hunted"
Remini: Scientology "The Remini: Scientology "The Leah Remini: Scientology Remini: Scientology "The Remini: Scientology
'Perfect' Scientology Family" Rise of David Miscavige"
and the Aftermath
Ranches"
"Lifetime of Healing" (N)
(5:00) Yeti or Not
Megalodon: The Extended Cut
The Cannibal in the Jungle
Chicago P.D. "A Little Devil Chicago P.D. "Erin's Mom" Chicago P.D. "What Do You Chicago P.D. "What Puts
Chicago P.D. "Say Her Real
Complex"
Do?"
You on That Ledge"
Name"
Law&amp;Order "Undercovered" Law &amp; Order "DR 1-102"
Law &amp; Order "Missing"
LawOrder "Access Nation" Law &amp; Order "Born Again"
The Kardashians
E! News (N)
What Lies Beneath ('00, Thril) Harrison Ford, James Remar, Michelle Pfeiffer. TV14
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
Inside Combat Rescue "The Inside Combat Rescue
Inside Combat Rescue "The Inside the Iraq War An in-depth look at the grim reality of
Last Stand"
"Into the Hot Zone"
Golden Hour"
the war.
Racing Roots Racing Roots Curling Night "Women's Division: USA vs. Japan" (N)
Curling Night "Men's Division: Scotland vs. USA"
Speak for Yourself (N)
Pre-game
NFL Films (N) UFC UFC Fight Night
To Be Announced
Forged in Fire "The Shotel" Forged in Fire "Hunga
Forged in Fire "Knights
Forged in Fire "Viking
(:05) Drive
(:35)
Counting (N)
Munga"
Templar" (N)
Edition" (N)
(N)
Below Deck "Blindsided"
Chef Jr. "Battle of the Buds" B.Deck "Under Cover Boss" Below Deck (N)
B.Deck "Hot Mess Express"
(4:00) To Be Announced
Lip Sync Battle
To Be Announced
Tales
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
House Hunt. House
(5:00) A Nightmare on Elm
A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child
Freddy's Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991, Horror)
Street 4: The Dream Mast... ('89, Hor) Lisa Wilcox, Robert Englund. TVM
Lisa Zane, Yaphet Kotto, Robert Englund. TVM

6

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

Real Time With Bill Maher Vice News
Tonight (N)

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Split (2016, Horror) Anya Taylor-Joy, Betty Buckley, James Curb "Thank (:35) Deuce
The Ring
McAvoy. Three teenagers are kidnapped by a man with 24 You for Your "My Name Is
Service"
Ruby"
TV14
personalities warring inside his mind. TV14
(:55)
Orphan (2009, Horror) Peter Sarsgaard, Isabelle
American Psycho Christian Bale. A (:45) American Psycho 2 An assault
Fuhrman, Vera Farmiga. A couple adopts a psychotic nine- wealthy Wall Street financier struggles with victim takes charge of her own destiny by
year-old girl after the death of their baby. TVMA
his homicidal tendencies. TVMA
killing anyone who gets in her way. TVMA
(:15) Black Sabbath: The End of The End (2017,
Ray Donovan "Time Takes a Inside the NFL "2017 Week Ray Donovan "Time Takes a
8" (N)
Cigarette"
Documentary) Geezer Butler, Tony Iommi, Ozzy Osbourne. Cigarette"
Black Sabbath's final tour is documented. TVMA
(4:30)

in Game 4, trying to get
a visual for the biggest
start of his career.
This was deﬁnitely not
how he pictured it.
The three-time NL Cy
Young Award winner
cruised into the fourth
with a 4-0 lead before
things suddenly fell
apart. After Correa hit
an RBI double, Gurriel
hit a tying, three-run
drive.
Kershaw whipped his
head around to watch
Gurriel’s drive sail,
his face immediately
showing shock, utter
disbelief and frustration,
all wrapped up in one
expression before he
bent over, hands on his
knees.
Yanked in the ﬁfth,
Kershaw trudged off
with a dubious distinction — he has allowed a
postseason-record eight
home runs this year.
Hardly a repeat performance from the opener,
when Kershaw dominated while outpitching
Keuchel for a 3-1 win.
Gurriel’s second
homer of the Series also
kept open this possibility: Imagine the scene if
Major League Baseball
presents Gurriel with
the MVP trophy, so soon
after Commissioner Rob
Manfred suspended him
for the ﬁrst ﬁve games
next year for making a
racist gesture toward
Dodgers pitcher Yu Darvish.

10:30

M*A*S*H
18 (WGN) M*A*S*H
24 (ROOT) N. Dame (N) Pirates Ball
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption
27 (LIFE)

it 11-8 in the seventh.
McCann’s shot in the
eighth added a muchneeded insurance run.
“We knew going into
this series, this is the
best offensive ballclub
that we were going to
see all year,” Roberts
said. “They can slug
you. They spoil pitches.
They’re athletic. And
credit to them. But our
guys did the same thing.
They just got the hit
when they needed it.”
Bellinger homered for
Los Angeles, a three-run
drive in the ﬁfth that
made it 7-4 and seemed
to swing things back in
the Dodgers’ favor. By
the end of the mayhem
on the mound, it was a
mere afterthought.
Each team had 14 hits,
eight for extra bases, and
both used seven pitchers.
The Astros (13) and
Dodgers (9) topped the
Series mark for homers,
set when Barry Bonds
and the Giants lost to
the Angels in seven
games in 2002.
But really, who imagined this?
No wonder there’s a
bright sign high above
the center ﬁeld wall for
a popular taco place in
town — it says Torchy
and ﬁt perfectly for a
game where pitchers got
lit up.
A day earlier, Kershaw stood alone on
the mound after the
Dodgers’ dramatic win

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, October 31, 2017 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

Written By Brian &amp; Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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