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                  <text>Ohio Valley
Business
page

Showers,
cooler
H-80, L-51

High
school
volleyball

INSIDE s 3

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 168, Volume 70

Thursday, October 20, 2016 s 50¢

Health Dept. replacement levy to be decided on by voters
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

Courtesy photo

Meigs County Health Department staff

By Dave Harris
For the Sentinel

ROCKSPRINGS
— October 18, 1996
was a Friday night
like any other Friday
in Southeastern Ohio.
The Meigs Marauders
and the Waverly Tigers
were battling in a football game at Waverly
High School. The contest was hard fought
from the opening kickoff and with the clock
winding down, Waverly
was on the drive for the
winning touchdown.
Meigs was clinging to
a 21-20 lead with about
a minute to go in the
contest when Matt Williams stepped in front
of a Waverly receiver
and picked off a pass in
the Meigs end zone to
preserve the nail biting

win.
The Marauders celebrated and when the
clock went to 0:00 they
went to the locker room
to prepare for the long
ride home. But outside
the Meigs locker room
it became apparent that
this Friday night wasn’t
like any other. In fact, it
was one that is burned
in the memory of the
Meigs community and
affects them to this day.
Matthew Ault, a
senior defensive back
who had played in
the game took off his
helmet when walking
off of the ﬁeld, began
staggering and told an
assistant coach that
the lights were bothering his eyes and then
suddenly collapsed outside the Meigs locker
room and was nonresponsive. One of the
assistant coaches knew
that Dr. Kelly Roush
was nearby and ran and
asked her to come and
See EVENT | 5

INDEX
Obituary: 2
Local: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

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

valued at $100,000 the
cost would be $100 annually.
The levy was approved
to be placed on the ballot by the Meigs County
Commissioners during a
July meeting.
When considering the
tax levy for the health
department, Administrator Courtney Midkiff
and Health Commissioner Marc Barr spoke
of the services that are
provided to the residents
of Meigs County by the
agency.
“Residents beneﬁt
See LEVY | 5

Fall is in the Air

Concussion
awareness event
to be held Sunday
Event to be held
in memory of
late MHS player

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health
Department one-mill
replacement levy will be
one of the three countywide items voted on by
Meigs County voters in
the November general
election on Nov. 8.
The ﬁve-year onemill levy was approved
by voters as a renewal
in both 2006 and 2011
according to previous
Sentinel reports.
The difference this
time is that the levy presented to voters is as a

replacement rather than
a renewal.
So what is the difference?
A renewal levy, if
approved again, continues to generate funds
based on the tax value
of the property at the
time the levy was initially
approved by voters. The
replacement levy would
place the tax amount
on the current property
value.
A one-mill levy means
that a property owner
would pay $1 in property
tax for every $1,000 of
taxable value of the property. So for a property

Photos by Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

Dave Diles Park and the surrounding areas in Middleport are showing signs of fall as the leaves of red, orange and yellow begin to fall
from the numerous trees in the area. Trees around the Depot still have numerous green leaves which will likely be turning colors over
the upcoming days and weeks, before falling to the ground in the park.

Reports of ‘creepy clown’ sightings reach Mason Co.
No sighting reported to Meigs County Sheriff’s Office
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

MASON COUNTY,
W.Va. — The national
trend of creepy clown
sightings has made its
way to Mason County,
W.Va.
These local clown
sightings were ﬁrst
reported by the Mason
Deputies Facebook page
last week. Though there
were reports of s0me
people being followed
and chased by clowns,
there have been no
reports of assaults or
attacks, according to the
deputies page.
On Tuesday, Mason
County Sheriff Greg
Powers said at this time
these so called “clown
sightings” have not been
veriﬁed, only called in
and there have been
no arrests or citations

issued. At least one
clown was reported in
the Tribble Road area.
Powers said the West
Virginia Code actually
does address the wearing
of masks, hoods or face
coverings and though
being in violation of this
code is a misdemeanor,
other charges could arise
as a result of this behavior. For example, if someone dressed as a clown
is carrying a weapon
or inciting panic, more
serious charges and consequences could happen,
even amid what could be
intended as a prank.
Meigs County Sheriff
Keith Wood said on
Wednesday that his ofﬁce
had not received any
reports of clown sightings.
This week, multiple
media outlets in Southern California reported

a man allegedly ﬁred a
warning shot at a creepy
clown.
“My biggest concern,
and the concern of my
deputies, is the safety
of people,” Powers said,
adding he doesn’t want
any harm to come to anyone, clown or otherwise.
According to the
Mason County sheriff’s
department, the state
code dealing with the
wearing of masks, hoods
or face coverings is 61-622 and reads as follows:
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, no person, whether
in a motor vehicle or
otherwise, while wearing
any mask, hood or device
whereby any portion of
the face is so covered as
to conceal the identity of
the wearer, may:
(1) Come into or
appear upon any walk,

alley, street, road, highway or other thoroughfare dedicated to public
use;
(2) Come into or
appear in any trading
area, concourse, waiting room, lobby or foyer
open to, used by or frequented by the general
public;
(3) Come into or
appear upon or within
any of the grounds or
buildings owned, leased,
maintained or operated
by the state or any political subdivision thereof;
(4) Ask, request, or
demand entrance or
admission to the premises, enclosure, dwelling
or place of business of
any other person within
this state; or
(5) Attend or participate in any meeting
upon private property
of another unless written permission for such
See CLOWN | 5

L
E
N
I
T
N
E
S
THE DAILY CE HAS MOVED!
OFFI
BE SURE TO STOP
WE ARE NOW AT 109 W.2ND STREET POMEROY, OHIO (at the intersection of Mulberry &amp; 2nd)
740-992-2155 | www.mydailysentinel.com

BY AND SEE US!

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�NEWS/WEATHER

2 Thursday, October 20, 2016

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS COUNTY BRIEFS

RANDY WILSON
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio
— Randy A. Wilson, 61,
of Middleport, Ohio,
passed away in Myrtle
Beach, South Carolina,
on Saturday, October 8,
2016.
He is survived
by his wife, Jeannie France; daughter Caroline, (Murfreesboro, TN)
and son, David,
(Bidwell, OH); sister Mary Lea Wilson, (Parkersburg,
WV); brother Todd
Wilson, (Marietta, OH);
aunt Judy (Jim) Jonas
(Parkersburg, WV) and
uncle Larry (Brenda)
Cain (Elizabeth, WV).
Randy is preceded in
death by his parents,
Virgil and Virginia Lea
Wilson and his father-inlaw, Paul Eddy France.
Randy was born
on September 19,
1955 in Tanner, West
Virginia. He was a
34-year employee with
Frito-Lay, serving as a
District Sales Leader
for the Gallipolis and
Belpre/Parkersburg
areas. He was an active
member and Past Exalted Ruler of the BPOE
#107, where he enjoyed
heading up the Brunch
Committee and cooking
for friends. Randy loved
to travel, spend time

with his friends and
family, and cheer on the
WVU Mountaineers.
He treated Caroline’s
closest friends Kelsey
Hudson, Addy Coldren,
and Dempsey Rupe, as
if they were all
his own children, always
laughing and
teasing them.
And mostly,
loved being
with his loyal
companion,
Tucker.
Memorial services
will be 11 a.m., Saturday, October 22, 2016
at Christ Episcopal
Church, 804 Main
Street Point Pleasant,
with Rev. Marie Mulford ofﬁciating. Friends
may call on Friday at
the Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home 810 2nd.
Ave. Gallipolis from 5-8
p.m., concluding with
the Elk’s Memorial Service at 8 p.m.
In lieu of ﬂowers,
please consider making
a donation to the Christ
Episcopal Church
Stained Glass Window
Fund, PO. Box 419
Point Pleasant, WV,
25550, in celebrating
Randy’s life.
An online guest
registry is available at
waugh-halley-wood.com

WARD II
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Jeffrey C. Ward II, 31, of
Gallipolis, Ohio died Monday evening.
Funeral Services will be held 2:p.m., Friday, at
the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton. Burial
will follow in the Ward Family Cemetery. Friends
and family may call on Friday, 1 - 2 p.m., prior to
the service.

SHEETS
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Dale Richard Sheets, 79,
of Gallipolis, Ohio, died Monday morning, Oct.
17, 2016.
Burial will be 4 p.m., Friday, at Ridgelawn Cemetery.

RILEY
WHITEHALL, Ohio — Carolyn Ann Riley, 71,
of Whitehall, passed away Tuesday at Mt. Carmel
East Hospital, Columbus, Ohio.
Arrangements are incomplete.

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

Elementary. We are currently looking for crafters.
If interested contact Jenny Ridenour at jenny.ridenour@yahoo.com to get an application.

Card
Shower

Immunization
Clinic

POMEROY — The Meigs County Health DepartMarie Spaun, formally of Racine, will be celebrating
ment
will conduct an Immunization Clinic each
her 95th Birthday on Oct. 20. Cards can be sent to
her at Overbrook Center 333 Page Street. Middleport, Tuesday from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
OH, 45760.
records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/
legal guardian. A $15 donation is appreciated for
immunization administration; however, no one will
be denied services because of an inability to pay an
administration fee for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please bring medical cards and/or commercial
insurance cards, if applicable. Zostavax (shingles);
LONG BOTTOM — Township Road 359, Sorpneumonia ; inﬂuenza vaccines are also available. Call
den Road, will be closed for bridge repair between
Scout Camp Road and Sand Ridge Road for approx- for eligibility determination and availability or visit
our website at www.meigs-health.com to see a list of
imately one month. The closure began on Wednesaccepted commercial insurances and Medicaid for
day, Oct. 12, 2016.
adults.
RACINE — County Road 29, Bowmans Run
Road, will be closed for a culvert replacement
beginning Monday, Oct. 31, 2016 and continuing
for two weeks. This culvert is located approximately 200 feet west of the intersection of County Road
28, Bashan Road.

Road
Closures

Retired Teachers
Scholarship

Flu Shot
Clinic
MEIGS COUNTY — The Meigs County Health
Department will hold ﬂu shot clinics in Rutland
and Reedsville on Saturday, Oct. 29. The clinic in
Rutland will be at the Rutland Department Store.
The clinic in Reedsville will be at Reed’s Country
Store. Both will run from 9 a.m. to noon. For more
information contact the Health Department at 740992-6626.

Southern
Craft Show
RACINE — A craft show sponsored by the
Southern softball team will be held from 9 a.m. to
3 p.m. on Oct. 22 at Southern High School. Admission is free. Refreshments will be available from
the Southern Athletic Boosters. Prize drawings
throughout the day. For more information contact
Alan Crisp at 740-444-3309.

Eastern Music
Booster Craft show
TUPPERS PLAINS — The Eastern Music
Boosters will have their 29th annual craft show
Saturday, Nov. 12 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Eastern

MILAN, Ind. — Summer Ann Bonecutter, 32, of
Milan, Ind. and formerly of Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
died Monday, October 17, 2016, at her residence.
A memorial service will be announced at a later
time by the family. Cook Rosenberger Funeral
Home of Brookville and Sunman, Ind., is assisting
the family.

7
8

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

11

Thursday, Oct. 20
POMEROY — The Meigs County Republican Executive Committee is hosting a free all-you-can-eat bean
dinner at the Mulberry Community Center, Pomeroy,
Ohio. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. A variety of soups, hot
dogs, sloppy joes, pop, coffee, water and desserts will be
served. Several state and local candidates will be on hand
to speak.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Retired Teachers will
meet at noon at the Meigs Senior Center. Please call lunch
reservations to 740-992-3214 by Oct. 18. The speaker will
be Rick Edwards of Athens-Meigs Educational Service
Center. There will also be a music program.

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Telephone: 740-992-2155
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Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
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bhunt@civitasmedia.com

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
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jschultz@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
Michael Johnson, Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Tyler Wolfe, Ext. 2092
twolfe@civitasmedia.com

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

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

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BONECUTTER

POMEROY — The Meigs County Retired Teachers
Association is looking for candidates for a scholarship
to be given in early December. Applicants must be a
college junior or senior education major whose home
residence is Meigs County. A GPA of 2.5 or higher is
also a requirement. Questions or applications can be
obtained by calling Becky at 740-992-7096 or Charlene at 740-444-5498.

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(:05) Divorce Insecure

"Next Day"

"Messy as
F*ck"
(:55)
Road House (‘89,
Act) Sam Elliott, Patrick
Swayze. TV14
Shameless "Home Sweet
Homeless Shelter"

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 20, 2016 3

Ohio ReUse competition registration underway
Staff Report

value as feedstock for new products. The number of products
OHIO VALLEY — Reuse
tagged as upcycled on www.etsy.
Industries is pleased to announce com, for example, grew by over
the third annual Appalachian
3,900 percent since 2009 – from
Ohio ReUse Competition. Open
7,900 to over 316,000.”
to youth and adult residents of
The ReUse Competition is
Appalachian Ohio, the competiamong several “making and
tion offers a showcase and over
ﬁxing” initiatives launched by
$3,000 in cash prizes for artistic
ReUse in recent years, laying the
and functional products made
foundation for Athens Makerfrom re-used materials.
Space, which ReUse will establish
“We saw close to 200 amazin upcoming months in Athens
ing entries in our ﬁrst two
following facility renovations.
competitions, shining a light on
The makerspace will prove tools,
the ingenuity, innovation and
workspace, materials, instruction
resourcefulness at the heart of our and entrepreneurial support to
region’s culture and economy,”
help people make products includsaid Zachary Holl, ReUse execuing upcycled products.
tive director.
“Our makerspace will include
“Beyond celebrating creativity, some retail space to sell locallywe aim to promote and grow an
made upcycled products,” said
upcycled product economy in our Holl. “We see the ReUse Competiregion,” said Holl. “Many people tion exhibition on November 12
don’t recognize the real economic as a great opportunity for local
opportunities being lost when we upcyclers to show off their products.”
throw away materials that have

The 2016 competition has ﬁve
categories — artistic, clothing/
fashion/jewelry, home and garden,
furniture and technology — in
three age groups: youth (age 12
and under), young adult (age
13-17) and adult (age 18+).
Competition partners and supporters include Rural Action,
Ohio University’s Voinovich
School of Leadership and Public
Affairs, the Ohio Valley Museum
of Discovery, the Sugar Bush
Foundation, the Athens Foundation and the Appalachian Ohio
Zero Waste Initiative.
The deadline to register for the
competition is Nov. 1. The exhibition and awards event is Saturday,
November 12 at the Hocking
College gymnasium, followed by
Rural Action’s annual Zero Waste
Celebration. The registration
form and competition details can
be found at www.reuseindustries.
org.

Rowe recognized as Resident of the Month
Staff Report

HUNTINGTON,
W.Va.— Melissa A.
Rowe, M.D., has been
selected as the October
2016 Resident of the
Month, announced Paulette S. Wehner, M.D.,
vice dean for graduate
medical education at
the Marshall University
Joan C. Edwards School
of Medicine.
Rowe is currently
completing her ﬁnal
year of a four-year
obstetrics and gynecology residency program.
“Dr. Rowe was nominated by an adjunct
clinical faculty member
who watched her grow
from year to year into
an outstanding resident
and surgeon,” Wehner
said. “The nominator
spoke of how Dr. Rowe
is an outstanding chief
resident who continues
to help him with very
difﬁcult cases.”
Kevin J. Conaway,
M.D., obstetrics and

gynecology residency
director added, “We are
very pleased that Dr.
Rowe was recognized by
our clinical faculty for
her dedication and hard
work. It is gratifying to
see the development of
our students and residents into caring and
competent physicians.”
Rowe, who also has a

port from businesses
as diverse as trucking,
pharmaceuticals and even
DENVER — Business gambling.
owners are replacing
In 2012, Colorado and
idealists in the pot-legal- Washington became the
ization movement as the ﬁrst states to pass balnascent marijuana indus- lot initiatives legalizing
try creates a broad base
recreational marijuana for
of new donors, many of
adults. Oregon, Alaska
them entrepreneurs will- and Washington, D.C.,
ing to spend to change
followed in 2014. The
drug policy.
result is a bigger pool of
Unlike in the past,
existing businesses that
these supporters are not see expansion potential
limited to a few wealthy
in more states authorizpeople seeking change for ing use of the drug.
personal reasons. They
Take Darren Roberts of
constitute a bigger coali- Boca Raton, Florida, cotion of business interests. founder of High There!,
And their support proa social network for fans
vides a signiﬁcant ﬁnan- of pot. He donated $500
cial advantage for prothis year to a campaign
legalization campaigns.
to legalize marijuana
“It’s mainly a socialfor medical purposes in
justice movement. But
Florida. Roberts is also
undoubtedly there are
encouraging his custombusiness interests at
ers to donate to legalizawork, which is new in
tion campaigns in their
this movement,” said
own states.
Kayvan Khalatbari, a one“I would say it’s a
time pot-shop owner and combination of both
now head of a Denver
the philanthropic social
marijuana consulting
interest and the potential
ﬁrm.
ﬁnancial interest,” RobThe donors offer a
erts said.
wider foundation of supAll ﬁve states conport for the marijuanasidering recreational
related measures on the
marijuana — Arizona,
ballot next month in nine California, Maine, Masstates. The campaigns
sachusetts and Nevada
are still largely funded by — have seen more money
national advocacy organi- ﬂowing to groups that
zations such as the Drug favor legalization than
Policy Alliance, the Mari- to those ﬁghting it. The
juana Policy Project and
same is true in the four
the New Approach PAC. states considering startBut those groups are
ing or reinstating medical
less reliant on billionaire marijuana — Arkansas,
activists.
Florida, Montana and
On the other side,
North Dakota.
legalization opponents
The donors who conare attracting new suptribute to anti-legaliza-

Associated Press

Holzer recognizes
pediatric fund sponsors
Staff Report

The Earl Neff Pediatric Fund at Holzer continues
to be supported enthusiastically by area businesses
and organizations. The Pediatric Fund, in existence
for over 45 years, has supplied needed toys, equipment and entertainment to the thousands of pediatric
patients who have received care at Holzer Gallipolis
Medical Center’s Inpatient Pediatric Unit. Marchi’s
Carry-Out, represented in the photo by Mike Marchi,
and Gallipolis Emblem Club, represented by Karen
McGhee, are recent sponsors.
The entire staff of Holzer joins in expressing their
gratitude, along with the young children and their
families, for these generous contributions to the Earl
Neff Pediatric Fund. For more information, please call
Linda Jeffers-Lester, Manager, Holzer Heritage Foundation, at (740) 446-5217.

Courtesy photo

Melissa A. Rowe, M.D., October Resident of the Month, is pictured with Kevin J. Conaway, M.D.,
residency director for the obstetrics and gynecology program.

nursing degree, graduated from the Marshall
University Joan C.
Edwards School of
Medicine in 2013. As
a medical student, she
received honors including induction into the
Alpha Omega Alpha
(AOA) Honor Medical
Society and the Gold
Humanism Honor Soci-

ety.
Rowe plans to enter
practice upon completion of her residency
program in June 2017.
As part of her recognition as the October
Resident of the Month,
Rowe received items
including a certiﬁcate of
recognition and a designated parking spot.

Businesses replace idealists in legal-pot movement
By Kristen Wyatt

Courtesy photos

Gallipolis Emblem Club, represented in the photo by Karen McGhee,
pictured here.

tion efforts have changed,
too.
Some deep-pocket
donors who drove opposition campaigns in years
past are opening their
pocketbooks again.
Casino owner Sheldon
Adelson of Nevada, for
example, gave some $5
million in 2014 to oppose
a medical-pot measure in
Florida. This year, as his
home state considers recreational pot and Florida
takes a second look at
medical marijuana, Adelson has spent $2 million
on opposition in Nevada
and $1 million to oppose
legalization in Massachusetts.
Other casinos are
donating to Nevada
opposition efforts, too,
including MGM Resorts
International and Atlantis
Casino &amp; Resort. Nevada
gambling regulators have
warned that marijuana
violates federal law.
Some new opponents
have also emerged,
moving beyond the
typical anti-pot base that
includes law enforcement
groups, alcohol companies and drug-treatment
interests.
A pharmaceutical
company that is working
on a synthetic version of
marijuana’s psychoactive
ingredient, Insys Therapeutics Inc., has given at
least $500,000 to oppose
full marijuana legalization in its home state of
Arizona.
The company did not
return a message for
comment on the donation. Company ofﬁcials

said in a statement last
month that Insys opposes
the Arizona ballot measure because marijuana’s
safety has not been
demonstrated through
the federal regulatory
process.
Other new names popping up in opposition disclosures include U-Haul,
which gave $25,000 to
oppose legalization in
Arizona, and Julie Schauer, a Pennsylvania retiree
who gave more than $1
million to a group opposing legalization. Neither
returned messages seeking comment on their
donations.

Marchi’s Carry-Out, represented in the photo by Mike Marchi.

Lane joins Gallipolis
Chiropractic Center
Staff Report

Gallipolis Chiropractic
Center and Dr. Joey Wilcoxon have welcomed
a new Doctor of Chiropractic, Dr. Aubrey
Devin Lane.
Lane recently graduated from Palmer College of Chiropractic
in September and is
accepting new patients
currently. Lane treats
patients of all ages
and she has training in
Instrument Assisted Soft
Tissue Techniques such
as gua sha, as well as,
experience in the care
and treatment of sports
injuries. She uses taping
techniques in addition
to a variety of modali-

Courtesy photo

Dr. Aubrey Devin Lane

ties such as ultrasound
and electric stim along
with adjusting to amplify
healing. Gallipolis
Chiropractic Center is
located at 990 2nd Ave
Gallipolis, Ohio. Call
1-740-441-0200 for more
information.

Sponsored by: Panucci and Jackfert Orthodontics

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�E ditorial
4 Thursday, October 20, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Help fight breast
cancer through a
smarter diet
By Linda deGraffenried
Contributing columnist

Every October, the inﬂux of pink shows up
everywhere — from ribbons to clothing to pen
ink — as the designated color for Breast Cancer
Awareness Month. This extra attention helps
save lives as people focus on prevention strategies such as regular mammograms and genetic
testing.
But although these measures are critical, incidences of breast cancer remain high. About 12
percent of American women will cope annually
with a breast cancer diagnosis, according to the
National Cancer Institute.
One prevention and survival strategy needs
more attention: diet. Doctors, as well as those
they diagnose with breast cancer, must focus
more on what patients eat because making
simple changes in diet can signiﬁcantly improve
one’s odds against developing breast cancer.
Right now, Americans’ dependence on processed foods and convenient, budget-friendly
fast foods contributes to cancer, according to
the American Cancer Society.
Because the Western diet is high in omega-6
fatty acids like corn and soybean oil — as well
as simple sugars — many people experience
low-grade inﬂammation linked to obesity. This
increases the risk of breast cancer, especially in
women past the age of menopause.
Inﬂammation interferes with cancer treatment. Numerous studies have shown that obesity, coupled with a Western diet, induce changes
in the body that make surviving breast cancer
more difﬁcult.
The immune system can’t respond as it usually would, so many cancer therapies, including
hormone and radiation therapy, have a harder
time working effectively. This gives cancer more
of a chance to progress, spreading throughout
the body.
The good news is that researchers now know
more about how certain foods affect the body,
including how they can improve survival chances after a devastating cancer diagnosis.
We have known for years that food is medicine. In fact, many of our current pharmaceutical drugs have a natural compound — a plant
part that could otherwise be food — as a key
component. Clinicians and researchers are using
what’s known about food to improve patients’
responses to therapy.
For example, several recent studies have
found a link between decreasing chronic lowgrade inﬂammation in the body and helping
patients improve their odds against developing
cancer. This is why making simple changes to
the diet can have a major impact on breast cancer development and survival.
Although the body needs food with omega-6
fatty acids for brain function, bone health and
normal metabolism, many Americans get almost
four times as much omega-6 fat as people need
to be healthy. Compounding the problem, most
people don’t ingest enough anti-inﬂammatory
omega-3 fatty acids.
These factors contribute greatly to inﬂammation that leads to cancer and other health
problems. Not only does decreasing the amount
of omega-6 fat and increasing the amount of
omega-3 fat in the diet improve chances of
surviving breast cancer, it also improves heart
health and decreases complications associated
with immune disorders like arthritis and Type 2
diabetes.
Patients can also take action, without forgoing
taste and convenience, by paying attention to
how they cook and eat. Instead of cooking with
vegetable oils such as corn oil, they should opt
for olive oil. Instead of grabbing the can of tuna
packed in oil for a sandwich, select tuna packed
in water.
At restaurants and at home, people should be
more mindful of dressings — margarine, mayonnaise and spreads — as these often contain
many omega-6 fatty acids and are derived from
soybeans or corn. Instead, seek out alternatives
made with olive or macadamia oil.
People must challenge themselves to add
more cancer-ﬁghting foods to their diet. Ask
questions such as: Can I eat two more servings of ﬁsh each week instead of beef? Can I
make a practice of ﬁnding foods enriched with
DHA and EPA (the two most common forms of
omega-3 fatty acids), or buy free-range or pasture-fed meats (omega-3s are higher when livestock eats grass instead of grain)? These tactics
support a healthier, anti-inﬂammatory diet.
Doctors and patients alike can do a better job
of talking frankly about how certain foods can
function as medicine. When that happens, more
people will be taking advantage of a powerful strategy that helps the ﬁght against cancer
become easier to win.
Linda deGraffenried, Ph.D., is an associate professor of nutritional
sciences at the University of Texas at Austin. She wrote this for the
Dallas Morning News.

THEIR VIEW

Presidential campaign: Evil Queen vs. Evil Clown
By John Kass

Contributing columnist

With only a few weeks
left in this ugly presidential race to the bottom,
Americans ﬁnally have a
clear choice:
The Evil Queen vs. The
Evil Clown.
Hillary Clinton, the ice
queen of the American
political establishment,
a practiced deceiver who
will make Nixon look
like an angel before she’s
through.
She is the darling of
the frightened bipartisan
elites, and she is protected by their imperial
guard, those in the media
who ignore her sins to
focus on Trump’s.
And Donald Trump is
the meat-faced barbarian at the establishment
gates, swinging his angry
rhetorical ax against the
arrogant elites, like an
Andrew Jackson of our
time.
Trump spent years
bragging about his sexual
prowess, acting like a pig
(or Bill Clinton) around
women. And now he’s so
enraged by allegations of
sexual aggression that he
threatens, like an angry
clown, to use the power
of the federal government
against his enemies.
Both Clinton and
Trump are statists. Both
believe in using the federal hammer.
Clinton would appoint
liberals to the Supreme
Court, weaken the Second Amendment if not
others, and most likely
end federalism.
Trump promises to
appoint conservatives
to the court, but there’s
nothing remotely conservative about promising
to use the government to
carry out a political vendetta. That’s something
that the IRS did, targeting
conservatives, under the
Obama administration.
So this is where we are

now, an uncertain people
in a post-constitutional
society. The establishment center is corrupt
and has been collapsing
for years. And the people,
tired of their lies, become
angry. And now anything
goes.
A political realignment
is coming, no matter how
this election turns out,
but that won’t happen
for a while. In the meantime, we wait, stunned,
and in a few weeks we’ll
all become quite gamy.
That’s probably why
Americans dream of taking a long, hot shower, to
scrub our brains out with
soap.
The presidential campaign is now centered
below the American belt,
where Hillary Clinton
desperately needed it to
go.
It is all about using
Donald Trump’s history
of alleged sexual aggression to destroy him with
women voters.
And this is necessary
for Clinton, because it
distracts media attention
away from hacked and
WikiLeaked emails that
would otherwise damage
her campaign.
Sex sells. And Trump
denies the allegations, but
he’s spent decades boasting about his prowess
with the babes and the
chicks, and now he’s paying for it.
Hillary Clinton, the
enabler or defender of a
sexually predatory presidential husband, now
plays on Victorian sensibilities to get what she
wants: power.
Women have come forward to tell their stories,
some almost 40 years old,
unsubstantiated and loudly denied by Trump, yes,
but perfect for television
and Clinton. The political
left goes crazy over all
this and the media runs
with it and everyone is

breathlessly angry.
Unfortunately, they
weren’t so breathless and
angry when their liberal
lion, the late Sen. Ted
Kennedy was making
“waitress sandwiches” in
Washington.
Establishment news
organizations largely forgave Kennedy his sexual
aggressions, even though
he drove off a bridge,
quite possibly while
drunk, and swam away to
leave secretary Mary Jo
Kopechne to drown.
But Kennedy was a
liberal. And Trump is not.
So he is not excused.
Now Hillary herself pretends, in some precious
manipulative fantasy
expressed to Ellen DeGeneres on her TV show,
that Trump stalked her
as well during their last
debate.
“He was really trying
to dominate and then
literally stalk me around
the stage,” Clinton said.
“And I would just feel this
presence behind me, and
I thought, ‘Whoa, this is
really weird.’ … I was just
trying to stay focused,
trying to keep my composure.”
Whoa, Mrs. Clinton.
Please keep your composure. Please.
She knows what buttons to push, and she’s
using emotion and sexual
allegations to run out the
clock on this campaign.
So the hacked Clinton camp emails from
WikiLeaks are ignored.
Purposely. Partisans on
the left now discredit the
lot, saying they’re the
work of the Russians,
although when Julian
Assange of WikiLeaks
leaked other State Department cables, putting the
U.S. in a bad light, the
left embraced him as their
champion.
Those emails offer
important revelations
about Clinton’s dreams

of open borders in her
speech to Brazilian bankers, possible collusion
between the Justice
Department and the State
Department to protect
her in her private server
email scandal, discussions
of big money from the
Saudis and more emails
come out every day.
One of the most frightening, contemptible of all
is the Democrats’ plan to
build and nourish front
groups to undermine the
Roman Catholic Church.
This should be front
and center in the campaign. Catholics and evangelicals and Trump tend
to focus on some of the
more bigoted statements
of the Clintonistas in the
emails. But who is surprised by anti-Christian
bigotry by the left?
It is the establishment
of Catholic front groups
by big-government Democratic strategists to work
surreptitiously against
the church that is truly
horriﬁc.
According to the
emails, John Podesta,
Clinton’s campaign chairman, had a plan to
unleash the pro-Clinton/
Obama front organizations against the bishops
at just the right time.
“We created Catholics
in Alliance for the Common Good to organize
for a moment like this,”
Podesta says in an email.
“But I think it lacks
the leadership to do so
now. Likewise Catholics
United. Like most spring
movements, I think this
one will have to be bottom up.”
Podesta was correct
about one thing. We’re
at the bottom. To have a
hope of winning, Hillary
had to take Donald there,
and now he’s rolling in it.
And the rest of us? We
need that shower.
John Kass is a columnist for the
Chicago Tribune.

YOUR VIEW

Athens resident supports
Grace for State Rep.
Dear Editor,
I am very proud to say that I will be voting for
Sarah Grace to represent the 94th District at the Ohio
Statehouse this November 8th. Without a doubt,
Sarah Grace is the most qualiﬁed candidate in this
race. Sarah sincerely cares for our communities and
understands the need to be a strong voice for all
residents across the district. I have had the privilege
to work in collaboration with Sarah, bringing people
together and cultivating resource advantages for fami-

lies to educate and empower the youth. She is intelligent and well informed and will work hard for our
families by bringing better employment opportunities
to our region as well as improving and expanding
the educational needs for our children. Her positive
attitude, genuineness, and solid work ethic are far
superior to her opponent. Sarah will work diplomatically, always striving to ﬁnd realistic solutions and
balance, in order to create a better home and future
for all of us who live here. Please join me in support
for Sarah Grace as our next State Representative this
November 8th.
Megan Almeida
Athens, Ohio

�NEWS/WEATHER

Clown

Levy

Event

and it is possible that the
injury was sustained playing football.”
From page 1
The days leading up
to
the game Matt didn’t
help. Matt was treated
show
any signs of a head
by Dr. Roush, Meigs and
injury
or that anything
Waverly EMS personnel
might
be wrong. He comand a certiﬁed athletic
plained
of a slight headtrainer and transported
ache
the
day before the
to a local hospital. From
game
and
a stiff neck the
there he was ﬂown to
morning
of
the game.
The Ohio State UniLooking back, it is
versity Trauma Center
quite possible that Matt
in Columbus where he
passed away the next day. sustained the injury in
the days or even weeks
An autopsy was conprior to that night. The
ducted and it was suggested that Matt had died contest the week before
was very physical and
from the result of swelling of the brain caused by Matt delivered and
a brain hemorrhage. The received many hard hits.
autopsy report stated, “It Since then, everyone
affected by Matt’s death
is possible that the hemorrhage was caused by a has learned a great deal
direct blow to the head,
about head injuries, the

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

77°

65°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
0.06
1.66
38.00
34.80

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:43 a.m.
6:43 p.m.
10:54 p.m.
12:34 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

New

Oct 22 Oct 30

First

Nov 7

Full

Nov 14

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

Major
Today 4:02a
Fri.
5:06a
Sat.
6:04a
Sun. 6:58a
Mon. 7:46a
Tue. 8:30a
Wed. 9:10a

Minor
10:17a
11:20a
12:18p
12:45a
1:34a
2:18a
2:59a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Lucasville
77/51

Moderate

High

Very High

Major
4:32p
5:34p
6:32p
7:24p
8:11p
8:53p
9:33p

Minor
10:46p
11:48p
---1:11p
1:58p
2:41p
3:21p

WEATHER HISTORY
On October 20, 1987, Seattle, Wash.,
set a record high for the date with a
temperature of 69 degrees. This was
the 29th record high Seattle set in
the year.

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

Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam

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

Level
13.14
16.43
21.39
12.85
13.40
25.61
13.18
25.94
34.79
13.34
15.30
34.20
13.40

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.62
+0.27
-0.07
-0.12
-0.16
+0.59
+0.05
+0.24
+0.22
+0.27
+0.40
+0.20
+0.10

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Murray City
74/50
Belpre
81/52

St. Marys
82/52

Parkersburg
80/49

Coolville
79/51

Elizabeth
82/52

Spencer
81/52

Buffalo
81/52

Ironton
81/53

Milton
82/52

St. Albans
83/53

Huntington
80/49

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
61/48
100s
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
75/57
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
99/64
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

67°
47°

Times of clouds and
sun

Marietta
81/51

Athens
77/50

Ashland
81/53
Grayson
79/51

WEDNESDAY

67°
42°

Sunshine

Wilkesville
79/49
POMEROY
Jackson
81/51
76/50
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
81/52
78/50
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
65/48
GALLIPOLIS
80/51
81/52
79/51

South Shore Greenup
80/52
76/50

56
0 50 100 150 200

Portsmouth
77/51

This Sunday, Oct. 23,
at 2 p.m. there will be a
Concussion Awareness
Program in the Meigs
High School Auditorium.
This event is being held
in memory of Matt Ault
and is open to the public.
This gathering will not
only be a sharing of the
life of Matt but also provide education of head
trauma, prevention and
treatment. Speakers will
include Southern football
coach Mike Chancey, who
was Matt’s coach at the
time. Matt’s close friend
Chad Dodson, and Dr.
Kelly Roush.
This event is open to
the public. All athletes,
coaches, ﬁrst responders,
teachers and parents are
welcome to attend.

TUESDAY

69°
40°

Mostly sunny and
warmer

provided through the
state. Grant funding
is not a consistent ﬁgure each year and can
vary depending on if
a program receive the
grant fund and to what
amount it is funded.
The only source of yearto-year consistent funding is the tax levy.
The Meigs County
Commissioners provide
the building to house
the health department,
as well as utilities and
a part-time janitor. The
Meigs TB Clinic, which
is housed in the same
building as the health
department, is not part
of the health department or its funding
structure.
The health department is open from 8
a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday
through Friday at 112
East Memorial Drive in
Pomeroy. Those with
questions about the levy
or services provided by
the health department
may contact Midkiff at
740-992-6626.

Partly sunny

NATIONAL CITIES

Logan
72/50

McArthur
75/49

Very High

Primary: ragweed/cedar/other
Mold: 2412

MONDAY

65°
50°

Cool with a blend of
sun and clouds

Adelphi
70/49
Chillicothe
70/49

honor Matt by helping
people become aware
of concussion signs and
symptoms and possible
safety precautions to
help prevent catastrophic
injury caused by head
trauma. Since Matt’s
injury, the athletic world
has become more aware
from the professional
ranks down to the biddy
leagues about concussions and head injuries.
Education and technology have helped improve
the prevention of these
injuries and outcomes
when they do occur.
Nearly every level of
athletics now has a concussion protocol allowing
doctors to gauge when an
athlete can safely return
to action.

SUNDAY

54°
41°

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

Waverly
74/50

Pollen: 16

Low

MOON PHASES

SATURDAY

Cooler with rain

4

Primary: cladosporium

Fri.
7:44 a.m.
6:41 p.m.
11:53 p.m.
1:31 p.m.

FRIDAY

Cooler today with rain and a thunderstorm. A bit
of rain tonight. High 80° / Low 51°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

87°
68°
67°
44°
87° in 2016
26° in 1948

Holzer Sports Medicine,
is a strong advocate for
athletics stating that
there are a multitude of
beneﬁts from participating in athletics. She recommends learning about
the signs and symptoms
of a concussion, staying
out of participation until
you have been cleared
to return by a sports
medicine professional
and following some
simple preventative tips.
Concussion can occur
in any sport, in a motor
vehicle accident, riding a
four wheeler, riding your
bicycle or from a simple
fall.
Dr. Roush, along with
former Meigs Coach
Mike Chancey and
Matt’s family, wish to

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

signs and symptoms and
the devastating results
that can take place.
The Center for Disease
Control estimates that
between 1.6 and 3.8 million concussions occur
every year, and the majority of them are due to
playing athletics.
Since that night it has
been a passion for Dr.
Roush to ﬁnd out how
this could happen to a
healthy young kid who
just moments before was
jumping up high ﬁving
teammates after a tremendous victory. She has
written a book entitled
Sports Concussion and
Neck Trauma: Preventing Injury For Future
Generations. Dr. Roush
who is the Director of

57°
39°
63°

swimming pools and
many other sites and
locations to enforce
state laws.
In 2015, the environmental health division
collected approximately
4,200 scrap tires, conducted 328 food safety
inspections and 130
septic system inspections, among many
other inspections and
investigations.
The health department also worked with
the Ohio River Medical
Mission to provide services to to almost 3,000
people and animals.
The BLUMED mobile
hospital is housed and
manged by the health
department and could
provide care in case of
emergency situations.
Additionally, the
health department
partners with the Ohio
State University Mobile
Mammography Clinic
to provide screenings
four time a year.
The health department is funded by this
levy and grant funding

eral grants and private
sources, include WIC
(Women, Infants and
Children), public health
From page 1
emergency preparedfrom public health from ness, Creating Healthy
birth to death,” stated
Communities/Together
Midkiff of the imporon Diabetes, child and
tance of the county
family health services,
health department.
children with medical
There are 17 full and
handicaps, environmenpart-time employees at
tal services, vital statisthe health department. tics and public health
Midkiff explained that nursing.
many of those employThe public health
ees have not received
nursing portion, in
raises since 2010,
2015, conducted lead
including cost of living and hemoglobin screenincreases. Additionally, ings for preschool
as staff have retired,
children, immunized
the positions have not
nearly 1,100 individubeen ﬁlled, leading to
als, provided head lice
employees “wearing
screenings and conmany hats.”
ducted pregnancy tests.
The health departThey are also certiment provides many
ﬁed in Project DAWN
services to residents
(Deaths Avoided with
of Meigs County,
Naloxone).
whether or not the indiThe environmental
vidual has ever walked
division oversees the
through the doors of the licensing and inspecbuilding.
tions of food service
Programs provided by establishments, solid
the health department
waste and infectious
through the tax levy, as waste facilities, septic
system installations
well as state and fed-

while participating in a
winter sport.
(c) Any person who
violates any provision of
From page 1
this section is guilty of a
meeting has ﬁrst been
misdemeanor, and, upon
obtained from the owner conviction thereof, shall
or occupant thereof.
be ﬁned not more than
(b) The provisions of
ﬁve hundred dollars or
this section do not apply imprisoned in the county
to any person:
jail not more than one
(1) Under sixteen years year, or both ﬁned and
of age;
imprisoned.
(2) Wearing a traditionIn Ohio, Ohio Revised
al holiday costume;
Code does not directly
(3) Engaged in a trade address masks, but disor employment where
guises. ORC 3761.12
a mask, hood or device
states, “No person shall
is worn for the purpose
unite with two or more
of ensuring the physical
others to commit a missafety of the wearer;
demeanor while wearing
(4) Using a mask, hood white caps, masks, or
or device in theatrical
other disguise.” The law
productions, including
went into effect in Octouse in mardi gras celebra- ber 1953.
Also this week, multitions or similar masquerple national media outlets
ade balls;
reported Target was pull(5) Wearing a mask,
hood or device prescribed ing some clown masks
from shelves and online,
for civil defense drills,
exercises or emergencies; after a rash of menacing
clown sightings around
or
the country.
(6) Wearing a mask,
hood or device for the
Reach Beth Sergent at bsergent@
sole purpose of proteccivitasmedia.com or on Twitter @
tion from the elements or BSergentWrites.

TODAY

Thursday, October 20, 2016 5

Clendenin
85/53
Charleston
83/53

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
43/31
Minneapolis
52/35

Billings
60/45

Montreal
57/48

Detroit
59/44

Toronto
58/48

New York
69/63

Chicago
58/40
Denver
62/36

Washington
80/64

Kansas City
62/41

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
68/43/s
44/29/sh
87/58/pc
73/64/pc
79/61/pc
60/45/pc
64/43/pc
61/56/c
83/53/c
86/64/s
56/36/s
58/40/pc
66/48/r
63/50/r
64/48/r
77/53/pc
62/36/s
59/40/s
59/44/r
86/75/pc
84/59/t
59/45/r
62/41/s
81/60/s
69/47/r
99/64/s
70/51/r
86/71/pc
52/35/pc
77/51/t
89/65/pc
69/63/sh
71/45/s
86/65/pc
78/61/c
97/71/s
73/48/t
59/48/c
85/59/s
83/60/s
65/45/pc
61/39/s
75/57/s
61/48/r
80/64/pc

Hi/Lo/W
72/47/s
35/28/c
70/48/c
71/46/sh
67/44/sh
65/42/pc
68/44/pc
68/54/r
56/41/sh
70/45/pc
69/37/s
54/38/pc
58/40/pc
56/43/sh
56/40/r
74/53/s
75/40/s
62/44/s
55/38/pc
85/74/sh
78/51/s
57/40/pc
63/46/s
86/62/s
68/45/s
96/60/s
64/44/pc
87/70/pc
54/39/pc
64/41/pc
79/62/pc
72/52/sh
72/50/s
87/61/pc
73/46/c
97/69/s
53/39/r
64/51/r
73/48/sh
72/48/sh
62/46/s
69/46/s
71/55/s
59/47/sh
68/49/c

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
87/58

High
Low

El Paso
74/50
Chihuahua
79/46

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

97° in McAllen, TX
11° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global
Houston
84/59
Monterrey
86/63

High
Low
Miami
86/71

109° in Mecca, Saudi Arabia
-17° in Eureka, Canada

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

60647073

Daily Sentinel

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 20, 2016 s 6

Mogadore continues
a century of success

RedStorm volleyball rolls Ohio Christian
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — One of the most
successful football schools in Ohio is celebrating
its 100th year since the start of the program by
doing what it usually does — win.
Mogadore (7-1) is ﬁfth in this week’s Associated
Press Division VII poll and ﬁrst in Region 25 in
the computer ratings.
The Wildcats from Summit County have made
29 playoff appearances, reaching the ﬁnals eight
times, including last season when they lost to Fort
Recovery 33-14. With championships in 1979, ‘96
and 2002, Mogadore is one of 12 schools with at
least three titles. The Panthers last missed qualifying for the postseason in 1998.
Mogadore ﬁrst ﬁelded a team in 1916 by playing
a single game and, naturally, won it. The Wildcats entered this season with a 644-271-22 (69.9.
percent) record and have had one losing season
since 1975 (3-7 in 1997). They could reach double
ﬁgures in wins for the ﬁfth straight season and
10th time in 11 years and have had 12 undefeated
regular seasons throughout their history.
LONG TIME COMING
Port Clinton (8-0), No. 4 in the Division IV poll,
defeated Sandusky Bay Conference rival Clyde
(6-2) for the ﬁrst time in 25 years with a 27-21
win. The Redskins have not won the SBC since
its ﬁrst year in existence in 1948. Emerson Lowe
rushed for 140 yards and two scores and caught a
46-yard touchdown from Joey Brenner in the win.
FOOTNOTABLES
Canal Fulton Northwest’s Brian Hull ran for a
school-record 355 yards on 34 carries in a 56-36
victory over Madison. Hull had touchdown runs of
6, 26, 10, 3, 42, 9 and 7 yards. Northwest ﬁnished
with 579 yards rushing on 60 carries. . Hicksville’s
Jake Greer set a school record with six touchdown passes in a 48-13 win against Antwerp. He
threw for 262 yards while adding 132 yards on
the ground. . Deﬁance Ayersville’s Dauson Dales
threw ﬁve touchdown passes in the ﬁrst half of a
55-8 win over Holgate. . Marion Harding senior
quarterback Ryan Sayre completed 19 of 25 passes
for 323 yards and ﬁve touchdowns to ﬁve receivers in a 41-21 win at Marion Pleasant. Sayre also
rushed for a touchdown. . Cardington senior quarterback Luke McCarrell was 14 of 25 for 193 yards
and two touchdowns, plus 120 yards rushing and
two more touchdowns in a 49-13 win over Howard
East Knox.
Hamler Patrick Henry’s Donny Johnson rushed
for 146 yards and two touchdowns on nine carries
in a 46-12 triumph over Metamora Evergreen to
break Justin Buenger’s single-season school rushing mark set in 2009. Johnson has 1,466 yards. .
Napoleon ran 26 plays and Whitehouse Anthony
Wayne one in the ﬁrst quarter of Napoleon’s 14-7
victory.
Cory-Rawson’s Mason Warnimont rushed for
238 yards on 17 carries and scored four touchdowns in the Hornets’ 41-6 win over Vanlue.
OH, BROTHER
Mount Blanchard Riverdale’s Loveridge brothers combined for six touchdowns in the Falcons’
49-13 win over Arcadia. Aidan, a junior running
back, rushed for 201 yards and three TDs (77, 26,
19 yards); Alec, a sophomore quarterback, threw
three touchdown passes.
AIR-MAIL
Leipsic and North Baltimore combined for 63
passes and almost 550 yards through the air in
their Blanchard Valley Conference matchup on Friday. Leipsic’s Dylan Schroeder completed 15 of 22
passes for 310 yards and four TDs in the Vikings’
60-20 win. Schroeder’s counterpart, North Baltimore quarterback Brady Rader, completed 22 of
41 passes for 228 yards and three TDs in the losing effort.
See MOGADORE | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, October 20
Volleyball
South Gallia at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Symmes Valley at Southern, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Winﬁeld at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Soccer
Waverly at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Cross Country
Point Pleasant at AA-Regional, TBA
College Volleyball
Rio Grande at Shawnee State, 7 p.m.
Friday, October 21
Football
South Gallia at Southern, 7:30
Wellston at Meigs, 7:30
Gilmer County at Hannan, 7:30
Eastern at Belpre, 7:30
River Valley at Athens, 7:30
Gallia Academy at Ironton, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Man, 7:30
Wahama at Miller, 7:30
College Cross Country
Rio Grande RedStorm Classic, 4:30

URG courtesy photo

Rio Grande senior Autumn Snider, shown here
in action from earlier this season, had a matchhigh 12 kills in Tuesday night’s straight sets win
over Ohio Christian University at the Newt Oliver
Arena.

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The
University of Rio Grande nearly
led from start to ﬁnish and
cruised to a straight sets win
over Ohio Christian University,
Tuesday night, in River States
Conference volleyball action at
the Newt Oliver Arena.
The RedStorm, who won for
an eighth straight time overall
and the seventh consecutive
time in league play, took down
the visiting Trailblazers by
scores of 25-17, 25-20, 25-20.
Head coach Billina Donaldson’s squad improved to 17-10
overall and 7-3 inside the RSC,
while also maintaining the distinction of being the only team
in the league with a perfect
record at home (8-0).
Ohio Christian suffered a
10th straight loss, falling to 6-22
overall and 0-10 in league play.
Rio Grande, which had just
nine attack errors in 114 trips

to the net, ﬁnished with a .281
attack percentage and never
trailed in sets one and three.
The Trailblazers did lead
early in set two and trailed just
21-20 late in the stanza, but the
RedStorm tallied the ﬁnal four
points of the set en route to the
sweep.
Senior Autumn Snider (Marion, OH) had a match-high 12
kills to lead Rio, while fellow
seniors Kayla Briley (Marion,
OH) and Chandler Brown
(Stockdale, OH) had 31 assists
and 15 digs, respectively.
Junior Aleah Pelphrey (Piketon, OH) added 12 digs of her
own in the winning effort, while
junior Kylan Straughsbaugh
(Kingston, OH) had two service
aces and freshman Rachael
Gilkey (Nelsonville, OH)
recorded four blocks.
Lexi Jacobs had nine kills
to pace OCU in the loss, while
Katie Bush had 17 assists and
See REDSTORM | 7

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

River Valley’s Rachel Horner (5) goes up for a kill as teammate Angel Toler looks on during the Lady Raiders’ Division III sectional
semifinal volleyball match against Oak Hill on Tuesday night at River Valley High School.

Oaks outlast Raiders in sectional
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

BIDWELL, Ohio —
Unfortunately for the
Raiders, their errors
seemed to snowball on
Tuesday night.
As a result, River Valley will next return to the
volleyball court following
the winter.
In an anticipated ﬁvefull games marathon
match, the Oak Hill Lady
Oaks outlasted host
River Valley 23-25, 25-20,
25-20, 22-25 and 15-9 in
a Division III sectional
semiﬁnal tilt.
In a battle of evenlymatched clubs, eighthseeded River Valley and
ninth-seeded Oak Hill
went toe-to-toe for close
two hours, trading leads
and point-spurts — with
the Oaks forcing a third
set and the Raiders forcing a ﬁfth game.
And, it was that decisive ﬁfth set that the
Lady Raiders let get
away, as they led 3-1
before the Oaks outscored them 14-6 the rest
of the way.
With the loss, River
Valley ends its season
at 2-20, while Oak Hill

— which will travel to
top-seeded Alexander on
Saturday for the sectional
championship — is now
3-20.
Megan Edwards, completing her ﬁrst season
as River Valley volleyball
coach, admitted errors
have been her squad’s
downfall in matches all
year.
“Once we make one
or two errors, it kind
of snowballs,” said
Edwards. “It’s like quicksand. One or two turns
into a few of them and
it’s hard to get ourselves
back from that.”
The Raiders did rally
on two occasions — in
games one and four.
Oak Hill had the opening three points in the
ﬁrst set, but the Raiders
reversed the margin into
leads as large as 20-11
and 21-12.
River Valley, despite
the Oaks outscoring it
11-4 from there, captured
the ﬁrst game on a Carley Gilmore kill.
In the next two games,
the Raiders held slim
leads early on, but the
Oaks overcame those
deﬁcits — and posted a
pair of 25-20 triumphs.

In the fourth game,
River Valley led the
entire set except at 13-12
and 14-13, as the game
stood tied at 10-10,
12-12, 13-13, 14-14,
15-15, 16-16, 20-20 and
21-21.
By scoring four of the
ﬁnal ﬁve points, including Cierra Roberts’ ace
for the ﬁnal marker, the
Raiders had momentum
going into game ﬁve.
However, River Valley’s 3-1 edge in game
ﬁve soon turned into
a 6-3 deﬁcit, thanks to
the Oaks reeling off ﬁve
points in a row.
An Oak Hill service
error and an Isabella
Mershon ace got the
Raiders tied at 7-7, but
their only other points
from there were a net
violation and an attack
error.
“With the short game
to 15 (in game ﬁve), we
had errors and Oak Hill
had some nice kills and
we just weren’t able to
bring it back in time,”
said Edwards. “I felt for
sure and the girls felt
for sure we could pull
off that ﬁfth game, but a
couple of mistakes here
and there, and we lost

ourselves all in it.”
The Lady Oaks were
paced by 10 kills and six
digs by Carlee Dempsey
and Caitlyn Brisker, as
Dempsey delivered three
blocks and Brisker tallied
one.
Taylor Ross recorded
nine kills and Abby Meldick managed ﬁve, as the
setter Meldick was also
the leader in assists.
Gilmore garnered a
match-high 14 kills and
six blocks, as River Valley had 26 kills as an
entire team.
Angel Toler set for 28
assists, as Gilmore, Toler
and Mershon served up
four aces apiece.
Tuesday’s tilt was the
ﬁnal match for ﬁve RVHS
seniors: Toler, Brianna
McGuire, Jessica Steele,
Destiny Williams and
Emily Adkins.
“It was a good season
to come in but it was also
a building season,” said
Edwards. “We’re losing
a lot of experience with
the ﬁve seniors, but we
have ﬁve or six juniors
coming back next year.
We’ll have more experience next year.”
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 20, 2016 7

Roethlisberger Rio’s Freed named RSC Runner of the Week
officially out
for Steelers
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

PITTSBURGH (AP) — As a general rule, Pittsburgh Steelers coach Mike Tomlin doesn’t get too
caught up in the emotional toll of a loss or the carnage it can leave behind.
Yes, going over Sunday’s lifeless, sloppy showing
in Miami wasn’t pleasant. It’s not supposed to be
when you get whipped by a last-place team.
“We can’t spend any time lamenting that performance and who is available or who is not available,”
Tomlin said Tuesday.
Going through the injury list would probably
take too much time anyway, especially now that it
includes quarterback Ben Roethlisberger.
The tweaked left knee Roethlisberger suffered in
the second quarter against Miami while trying to
avoid a sack resulted in surgery on Monday. While
Roethlisberger prides himself on his toughness, he
won’t be in the lineup when Tom Brady and the
New England Patriots visit on Sunday. Tomlin ofﬁcially ruled Roethlisberger out and Landry Jones the
starter for a showdown with the AFC East leaders.
Tomlin declined to give a timeline for Roethlisberger’s potential return. The Steelers (4-2) are off
next week and travel to Baltimore on Nov. 6. It’s
possible Roethlisberger could be back by then, but
Tomlin won’t speculate on that now. Trying to ﬁgure
out a way to slow down the Patriots (5-1) without
his franchise quarterback takes precedence anyway.
Besides, Roethlisberger is just one of a number
of bold-faced names that may be out of the lineup.
Defensive end Cam Heyward will miss his second
straight game with a balky left hamstring and linebacker Ryan Shazier (knee) and right tackle Marcus
Gilbert (ankle) will likely need to make signiﬁcant
strides this week if they want to be in uniform.
Shazier, Pittsburgh’s most dynamic defender, hasn’t
played since Week 3, while Gilbert’s left ankle is still
aching from a Week 4 win over Kansas City.
Running back DeAngelo Williams (knee), safety
Rob Golden (foot), safety Mike Mitchell (knee) and
wide receiver Markus Wheaton (shoulder) are also
hurting. If the mystifying 30-15 setback in Miami
proved anything, it’s that the Steelers hardly look
like a legitimate threat in the AFC with so many
contributors in sweatpants and sneakers instead of
cleats.
Minus Heyward and Shazier, Pittsburgh allowed
Miami’s Jay Ajayi to become the ﬁrst opposing back
to go over 200 yards against the Steelers since Fred
Taylor in 2000. The offensive line, which survived
just ﬁne without Gilbert in a victory over the Jets,
struggled to protect Roethlisberger against the Dolphins.
A little bit of help, however, may be on the way.
Tight end Ladarius Green will attempt to practice
this week as he works his way back from offseason
ankle surgery and other issues that have kept Pittsburgh’s rare splurge in free agency on the physically
unable to perform list. The team has 21 days once
Green begins practicing to determine whether to
put him on the 53-man roster.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Hunter omitted from
TVC CC meet report
McARTHUR, Ohio — Southern’s Lucas Hunter
was inadvertently omitted from the Tri-Valley
Conference cross country meet report, which
appeared in Tuesday’s Pomeroy Daily Sentinel.
Hunter was one of four Southern runners in the
boys high school race, and ﬁnished ninth in the
TVC-Hocking Division — with a time of 19 minutes and 42 seconds.
He was the third Tornado runner to cross the
ﬁnish line.

Mogadore

goals and also caused
and recovered a fumble
on a kickoff in a 33-7
win over Middletown. .
From page 6
Deﬁance Tinora’s MarSTILL KICKING
cus Reeves kicked three
The big story for
ﬁeld goals, including a
Springboro when it
38-yard game-winning
defeated Fairborn 66-42 boot with 2:08 remainwas its senior kicker
ing, in a 23-20 victory
Charlie Kuhbander.
over Sherwood FairHe ﬁnished the game
view. Luke Breininger,
with 286 career points, a quarterback most
breaking the state
of the season, had 11
record for kicked points receptions for 207 yards
of 282 set by Michael
and a pair of TDs for
Busch of Findlay
Sherwood Fairview.
Liberty-Benton from
Breinger also had a
2003-06. . West Chester touchdown run for the
Lakota West placekick- Apaches. Fairview QB
er Will Nguyen tied a
Jackson Hart threw for
school record with four 367 yards.

RedStorm
From page 6

Karee Neff had 16 digs.
Kiara Rohrer also had
13 digs for the Trailblazers and Cayla Allen
ﬁnished with two solo
blocks and two block

assists.
Rio Grande returns to
action Thursday night,
traveling to rival Shawnee State University
for a 7 p.m. ﬁrst serve
at the Frank and Janis
Waller Gymnasium.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

FLORENCE, Ky. —
University of Rio Grande
senior Blake Freed had
a strong performance
last Friday to earn River
States Conference Men’s

Cross Country Runner of
the Week honors for Oct.
10-16.
The announcement was
made by the league ofﬁce
on Monday night.
Freed, a native of
Uhrichsville, Ohio, placed
ﬁfth among 395 runners

at the Jenna Strong Classic hosted by Wilmington
College after crossing the
ﬁnish line in 25 minutes,
16 seconds.
Freed was the top individual ﬁnisher among
NAIA runners in the 8k
event and it led the Red-

Storm to a second-place
showing out of 38 teams.
Rio Grande is currently
“receiving votes” in the
NAIA Men’s Cross Country Top 25 Poll.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

RT Ogbuehi expected back in lineup
CINCINNATI (AP)
— Cedric Ogbuehi got
a holding penalty that
wiped out a ﬁrst down.
On the next play, Andy
Dalton was sacked for a
safety , and the New England Patriots had grabbed
the momentum.
Ogbuehi’s latest ﬂub
prompted the Cincinnati Bengals to bench the
right tackle for the next
three series. It didn’t
make much difference —
the Patriots soon were in
total control and on their
way to a 35-17 victory
. And now the Bengals
(2-4) are trying to ﬁgure
out what to do with their
struggling offensive line.
Coach Marvin Lewis
said Ogbuehi — a ﬁrstround pick last year who
is starting for the ﬁrst
time this season — will
be back at right tackle
when the Bengals host
the winless Cleveland
Browns on Sunday. It’s
unclear how much leeway he’ll get if the rough
times continue.
“Every young guy has
growing pains, so these
are his,” offensive coordinator Ken Zampese said.
“He’ll work through them
like every other young
guy does. We just hope

we can speed up the process.”
The offensive line has
been one of several glaring problems during the
Bengals’ worst start in
six years. Dalton has
been sacked 19 times,
tied with Cleveland
for second-most sacks
allowed in the NFL.
Indianapolis has allowed
23 sacks.
Ogbuehi took over for
Andre Smith, who went
to Minnesota as a free
agent. He has struggled
in the past two games, a
pair of lopsided losses in
Dallas and New England.
He wound up compounding his mistakes as
defenses went after him,
resulting in the benching.
“He’s a really talented
guy,” Dalton said. “He’s
going to get it ﬁgured
out, I believe that. But
for him, he’s got to put in
the time and effort and
really look deep down in
himself and make sure he
does everything the right
way. I don’t expect anything different from him.”
Eric Winston replaced
Ogbuehi in the third
quarter on Sunday and
sat next to him on the
ﬂight home, providing
advice and reassurance.

Frank Victores | AP file

Cincinnati Bengals offensive tackle Cedric Ogbuehi stands on the
sidelines in the first half of a 2015 preseason game against the
Chicago Bears, in Cincinnati. Ogbuehi got benched once in college
for a subpar play. It happened again during the Bengals’ loss in
New England as the first-year starter struggled. He expects to be
back in the lineup against Cleveland on Sunday.

Left tackle Andrew Whitworth and guard Clint
Boling also reassured him
that every ﬁrst-year lineman struggles.
“We watch guys like
Eric and Whit and you
can tell they have been
playing the game a long
time,” Ogbuehi said.
“The game looks slow.
Basically, it’s just getting
to the point where the
game is slow.”
Ogbuehi was benched
one other time, during
his ﬁrst season as a starter at Texas A&amp;M. On
Sunday in New England,
the Bengals put him back

on the ﬁeld for the ﬁnal
series, which amounted
to a pair of run plays.
“He had some time to
sit and think, and then
get back out there a
little bit,” Zampese said.
“Hopefully there’s something learned in that.”
Lewis said without hesitation that Ogbuehi will
be the starting right tackle against the Browns.
“We expect big things
from Ced,” Lewis said.
“We’re going to continue
to coach him hard to get
it done right, all the time.
That’s what he’s expected
to do.”

Browns scrapping, still losing as injuries mount
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Tired
of losing, and maybe just tired,
Browns coach Hue Jackson spent
much of Sunday night staring at
the ceiling. Sleep eluded him.
His insomnia is understandable given his team is 0-6, riddled
with injuries, starting a rookie
quarterback, and has lost nine in a
row and 16 of 17 overall since last
season.
Those issues would keep the
soundest sleeper awake.
Jackson, though, believes the
Browns are on the cusp of victory.
“We know it is coming,” he said.
A day after Cleveland’s comeback
in the fourth quarter fell short in a
28-26 loss at Tennessee , Jackson,
whose decision to go for a 2-point
conversion has divided pundits and
Browns fans, remains conﬁdent his
young team is improving despite
the litany of losses.
“We continue to stub our toe a
little bit in some areas,” said Jackson. “We just have to continue to
ﬁght to get over that hump. We
are not going to stop doing what
we do. I’m more determined — I
say that every week — than ever
before.”
Jackson’s resolve is commendable, as is the ﬁght in his players
despite a rash of injuries that
would affect any team — never
mind one with 18 rookies.
But Jackson isn’t using his team’s
youth or health as excuses. The
baby Browns are taking baby steps.
Jackson doesn’t think it will be
long before they’re off and running.
“Our guys are scrapping and

clawing and trying to get there,”
he said. “We are going to continue
to harp on the fundamentals to
get there. I truly believe we will
get these things done. We have
10 more opportunities to get this
thing done right.”
As has been the case in most
of their games this season, the
Browns had their share of bright
spots, none shinier on Sunday than
rookie quarterback Cody Kessler,
who completed 26 of 41 passes for
336 yards and two touchdowns.
In his fourth start, Kessler didn’t
make any major mistakes, survived
being sacked six times, and showed
poise and playmaking ability outside the pocket.
Jackson feels Kessler, who had to
be rushed into the lineup after injuries to Robert Grifﬁn II and Josh
McCown, is steadily improving.
“He continues to impress with
his courage,” Jackson said. “He
stands in there. He gets walloped
a few times. He gets back up. He
stands up and on he goes. That is
pro football. Nobody likes their
quarterback getting hit that much.
I know I don’t. There are some
third down things we can do better and need to do better, but I
think he’s growing week by week,
moment by moment, play by play.”
Kessler’s progress could make
the Browns rethink their future
plans at quarterback, but that’s a
discussion for another day.
Still, Jackson was effusive in
his praise of the 23-year-old, who
became emotional following Sunday’s loss when reﬂecting on his

younger brother recently being
hospitalized, as well as the death of
his great-grandmother.
“This guy is playing as good as I
have had in a long time,” Jackson
said.
While Jackson’s choice of Kessler in the draft isn’t being panned
as it once was, he was still being
second-guessed Monday for his
decision on a 2-point try.
Down 15, the Browns scored
with 2:10 left on a pass from Kessler to Terrelle Pryor. Rather than
kick an extra point, which would
have pulled them within eight
of the Titans, Jackson decided
to attempt a 2-point conversion,
which failed, left Cleveland trailing
28-19 and essentially ended the
game.
The Browns recovered an onside
kick and scored again with 30 seconds left. They were within two
after a PAT kick, but they couldn’t
recover a second onside kick and
the Titans ran out the clock.
“I felt very comfortable, and still
do, with the decision we made,” he
said. “Trust me you guys (reporters) made me think of it all night.
I turned, tossed, pillow over my
head, cover over my head, said,
‘Hue, OK.’ I have even called
everybody that was involved with
this with me, and I feel even better about what we decided to do
today than even I did yesterday. I
know there are two sides to every
situation there. I respect how you
all feel, but I feel very comfortable
with the decision that we made for
our team.”

NASCAR returns to Mexico for 2017
CHARLOTTE, N.C.
(AP) — NASCAR will
resurrect its series in
Mexico behind new title
sponsor PEAK, an automotive products company seeking to boost its
proﬁle.
The rebranded NASCAR PEAK Mexico
Series will mark its
return with an exhibition race in Mexico City
in December. The series

plans to run a full championship schedule next
year.
The announcement
Tuesday night in Mexico
City was attended by
Daniel Suarez, who used
the series as a starting
point that led to his current ride with Joe Gibbs
Racing.
Suarez is currently
tied for the lead in the
Xﬁnity Series champi-

onship. He spent four
years racing in NASCAR
Mexico and won 10
races before graduating
to the national series
level. He’s the ﬁrst
Mexican driver to win a
national series race and
lead a national series in
points.
NASCAR Mexico has
also helped the development of Ruben Garcia
Jr., who has three career

Xﬁnity Series starts,
and German Quiroga,
who has 53 starts in the
Truck Series.
Lou Garate, vice
president of partnership
marketing for NASCAR,
believes the return of
the series in Mexico will
bolster the popularity
of stock car racing and
provide opportunities
for aspiring drivers and
crew members.

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, October 20, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Miscellaneous

Money To Lend

For Sale By Owner

Apartments/Townhouses

Rentals

Help Wanted General

NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

167 Acre Farm For Sale
364 Wray Road
Patriot, Oh 45658
call 740-924-9557

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

For Rent
One Bedroom Mobile Home
NONE SMOKING, NO PETS
Private lot @ 989 State Rt 588
Call 740-446-2266

Help Wanted General

$$$$$$$$$

BUSINESS
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Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor under
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Substitute Teachers needed,
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740-245-5334
EEO

Houses For Sale
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Business &amp; Trade School
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Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
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Special Notices

A Public Notice for Proposed Changes
to the Flat Rents for Public Housing
The Gallia Metropolitan Housing Authority (GMHA) announces a
public comment and review period for the proposed changes to
GMHAҋs current flat rents. There will be a forty-five day comment period commencing on October 18 through December 6,
2016. A public hearing will be held on December 6, 2016 at 1:00
P.M. for any person or organization wishing to be heard on this
topic.
Copies of the proposed revisions to the Flat Rent Schedule are
available for review and inspection at GMHAҋs administrative
offices at 381 Buck Ridge Road, Bidwell, OH during regular
business hours. An electronic version of the revised schedule is
available online at www. galliamha.org (Notices).
10/20/16,10/27/16

LEGALS

THE HOME NATIONAL BANK WILL AUCTION THE FOLLOWING ITEMS ON SATURDAY OCTOBER 22, 2016 AT 9:00 A.M.
AT RIVERSIDE AUTO 34139 BASHAN ROAD LONG BOTTOM,
OHIO. PLEASE NOTE TIME AND LOCATION OF THIS SALE.
TRAILER W/THERMAL KING
FORD 3910 TRACTOR
INTERNATIONAL 274 TRACTOR
FORD 5610 TRACTOR
TOMATO GRADER
6ҋINTERNATIONAL DISC
IRRIGATION PIPE
IRRIGATION TRAVELER
3 BOTTOM FORD PLOW
ELECTRIC PALLET JACK
MYERS AIR BLAST SPRAYER
FORKLIFT
TOMATO STAKES
GENERATOR
PALLET JACK
IRRIGATION GUN

60583312

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Miscellaneous
For Sale
50's Era Blonde
4 pc. bedroom suite $1500
60's Era French Provential
3 pc. bedroom suite $900
both excellent condition
740-339-3233
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

8825667
2130007J008117
19108
T0ATTS820

THE HOME NATIONAL BANK RESERVES THE RIGHT TO
REJECT ANY AND ALL BIDS. ALL ITEMS ARE SOLD, AS IS
WHERE IS, WITH NO WARRANTIES EXPRESSED OR
IMPLIED. FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE, CALL 949-2210,
ASK FOR SHEILA
10/19/16,10/20/16,10/21/16
LEGALS

NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY
DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT
CONTINUING AUTHORITIES PROGRAM (CAP) SECTION 14
EMERGENCY STREAMBANK PROTECTION
VILLAGE OF POMEROY, OHIO
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Huntington District, by this
Notice of Availability (NOA), advises the public that the Draft
Environmental Assessment (DEA) for the CAP Section 14 Emergency Streambank Protection Project is complete and available
for public review. The project is located in the Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio. A Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) is
anticipated for the proposed project. A Draft FONSI is included
with the DEA for public review.
In compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
and 40 CFR 1501.4, the DEA and draft FONSI must be available to the public in the affected area for thirty (30) days for
review and comment. Final determination regarding the need for
additional NEPA documentation will be made after the public
review period, which begins on or about September 29, 2016.
Copies of the documents may be viewed at the following
location:
Meigs County District Public Library 216 West Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone: (740) 992-5813
The documents may also be viewed at the following website:
http://www.lrh.usace.army.mil/Missions/PublicReview.aspx.
Copies of the DEA and draft FONSI may be obtained by contacting the Huntington District Office of the Corps of Engineers at
(304) 399-5924. Comments pertaining to the documents may be
submitted by letter to:
Ms. Rebecca Rutherford
Chief, Environmental Analysis Section, Planning Branch
Huntington District Corps of Engineers 502 Eighth Street
Huntington, West Virginia 25701-2070
9/29/16, 10/6/16, 10/13/16, 10/20/16

Houses For Rent
Nice House
2 bedroom
Homestead Realty Broker
$475.00/plus deposit
304-675-5540
Rentals

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

2 bdrm mobile home
on farm. $500.00 mo.
includes water,
new paint, carpet
540-729-1331
Miscellaneous

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, October 20, 2016 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

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

by Dave Green

By Hilary Price

9
2

5
5

6

9
1

1
3

5

6 9
4

7 4
8 9

10/20

Difficulty Level

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

10/20

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3
6
5
1
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9
4
8

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2
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7
6
8
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2016 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

By Dave Green

�SPORTS

10 Thursday, October 20, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Big Ten quarterback carousel keeps spinning out changes
By Michael Marot

should have been expected
after losing four straight and
being outscored 174-14.
Halfway through the season,
Other coaches, with fewer
the Big Ten’s quarterback carproblems, have made similar
ousel is still spinning.
decisions.
Nearly half the teams in the
Wisconsin coach Paul Chryst
conference have already made
benched ﬁfth-year senior Bart
QB changes for a variety of
Houston in favor of redshirt
reasons — injuries, poor play
freshman Alex Hornibrook less
or a coach just looking to shake
than a month ago. Hornibrook
things up. So far, the results
has lost two straight — to No.
have been mixed.
2 Ohio State and No. 3 MichiJust days after four coaches
gan — since winning at Michiwent with ﬁrst-time starters,
Rutgers coach Chris Ash joined gan State and the Badgers are
the bandwagon by naming Gio still ranked No. 10.
Minnesota got its ﬁrst conRescigno as his new quarterference
win behind former
back Saturday against Minwalk-on Conor Rhoda, who
nesota.
was 7 of 15 for 82 yards against
“I thought he went out and
Maryland ﬁlling in for injured
led the offense, executed the
calls, made good decisions. He starter Mitch Leidner (concussion). Leidner could miss Satstill needs to be more consistent,” Ash said Tuesday. “I like urday’s game against Rutgers,
his personality, his energy and too. The Terrapins lost with
the leadership he brings to the Tyrrell Pigrome, who replaced
Perry Hills (shoulder). It’s not
offense.”
clear if Hill will return this
Perhaps Rutgers’ move

Associated Press

Browns’ Pryor ‘angered’
by Titans player
bragging about hit
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Browns wide receiver
Terrelle Pryor delivered a few verbal shots at
Tennessee running back Antonio Andrews for
posting a video of his vicious hit that hospitalized Cleveland safety Jordan Poyer.
Andrews nailed Poyer with a devastating,
illegal blindside hit on a punt return in Sunday’s
game. Poyer suffered a lacerated kidney and
spent two nights in a Nashville hospital before
he was discharged and returned to Cleveland.
On Monday, Andrews posted the video of his
hit on Instagram — while Poyer was still in the
hospital — with the caption: “Relentless.”
Pryor said that was over the line.
“It kind of angered me,” Pyror said Wednesday. “If you’re going head up with a man face
to face and he sees you, you see him, all right,
cool.
“But if you’re a special teams guy and you’re
popping that stuff on there like you’re some type
of superhero or something just because you’re
hitting a guy blindsided and you think that’s
cool, that’s where the problem comes in.

weekend.
At Illinois, ﬁrst-time starter
Chayce Crouch replaced Wes
Lunt (back) and helped new
Illinois coach Lovie Smith celebrate his ﬁrst conference win
by beating Rutgers.
The most shocking decision
may have come from Michigan
State coach Mark Dantonio,
who started Brian Lewerke
over Tyler O’Connor on Saturday then brought O’Connor
back in the third quarter of a
54-40 loss to Northwestern.
That change didn’t help
much as the defending Big Ten
champs head to Maryland with
a four-game skid and a starting
quarterback still to be named.
“We’ll see how the practices
work out this week. We’ll make
some determinations as we go,
sort of go from there,” Dantonio said. “It will probably be
more of a game time decision.”
Just to keep everyone on
their toes.

Here are some other notable
items around the Big Ten:
MORE CHANGES
Purdue interim coach Gerad
Parker got thrown right into
his new role Tuesday. First,
he took questions from local
reporters before participating in the conference’s weekly
coaches’ call. This is going to
take the 35-year-old, ﬁrst-time
head coach a little getting used
to.
“I know our administration
didn’t see some things they
wanted to from our staff,” he
said, explaining the ﬁring of
Darrell Hazell. “It’s been a different situation for our staff
and our players and a weird
situation for me.”
FILLING IN THE LINES
The Big Ten has 10 bowl
tie-ins and the lines are already
starting to ﬁll up. The Buckeyes, Wolverines and No. 8

Nebraska all became bowleligible last weekend. If Iowa
protects its home ﬁeld against
the Badgers this weekend, the
Hawkeyes would join the list.
Four other teams — Maryland,
Minnesota, Penn State and
Wisconsin — can all move
within one win of becoming
bowl-eligible with victories
Saturday.
ROAD MAGIC
The Hawkeyes broke the
school record for consecutive
road wins (nine) last weekend. In fact, all six conference
games were won by the visiting team — the ﬁrst time that
has happened since Nov. 7,
2009. And this weekend at
Penn State, Ohio State can
break the Big Ten record for
most consecutive road wins in
conference play. With the win
at Wisconsin, Ohio State tied
the mark set by Michigan (17)
from 1988-92.

Forget about points, Logano racing to win at Talladega
KANSAS CITY, Kan.
(AP) — Joey Logano
knows he is in the most
precarious of positions
heading to the Chase
elimination race at Talladega, tied for the eighth
and ﬁnal spot for advancing to the next round of
NASCAR’s playoffs.
There are two clear
strategies his Penske Racing team could employ.
The ﬁrst is the relatively low-risk option: They
could spend the entire
race at the unpredictable
superspeedway spying
on Austin Dillon, who is
even with him in points,
and Denny Hamlin and
Brad Keselowski, who
are also within striking
distance, and ensure they
get through on points.
The riskier option?
Race to win, points be
damned.

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“That’s the way I race.
I don’t know a different
way,” said Logano, whose
third-place ﬁnish behind
Kevin Harvick and Carl
Edwards on Sunday at
Kansas at least made the
points route possible.
“I’m sure we’ll talk
about it this week,”
Logano added, “but I’m a
racer.”
At least three Chase
contenders don’t have the
same dilemma. Harvick
and Jimmie Johnson are
already locked into the
next round by virtue of
their wins in the ﬁrst two
stops of the round, and
Chase Elliott’s trouble for
the second straight week
left him in a must-win
situation.
The other nine drivers
are much like Logano,
racing to win but keeping
a wary eye on points.
“The big thing that
swung everything around
was Kevin winning.
We would have been in
pretty good shape if he
had ﬁnished second,”
Logano said. “It isn’t
disappointing because we
still should be proud of
the effort we had, but it
would have meant a lot if
he ﬁnished second.”
That’s because Harvick
had problems of his own
in the round at Charlotte,
which means even second
place at Kansas would
have put him squarely
on the bubble heading to
Talladega.
Logano should at least
have some conﬁdence
heading to the volatile
restrictor-plate track.
After years of mostly terrible results, he won there
to complete a sweep of
the entire round last fall.
Meanwhile, Dillon was
third there earlier this
year, Hamlin won there a
couple of years ago and
Keselowski won for the
fourth time there earlier
this year.
“I don’t think it’s a
must-win situation,” said
Keselowski, who spun
into the grass and tore
up his car before ﬁnishing 38th at Kansas. “I’m
not worried about it. I’m
going to go there and
bust my butt to try to
win, but I don’t think it’s

a must-win yet.”
Matt Kenseth, Kyle
Busch, Edwards and Kurt
Busch are relatively safe
after steering clear of
major trouble the last two
rounds, and Martin Truex
Jr. has a 13-point cushion
over eighth place.
For each of them, winning at Talladega would
be great. But they also
know that simply by staying out of trouble, their
spot in the next round is
virtually assured.
“It’s a what-have-youdone-for-me-lately sport
and to a huge extreme
with the Chase now with
this format,” Truex said.
“You’ve got to perform
every single week. You’ve
got a bad week, it could
ruin your whole season.
… We’ve just got to go to
Talladega and hope that
nothing crazy happens.”

Of the 30 Xﬁnity races
this season, 19 have been
won by Sprint Cup regulars.
TAKING A BREAK
The Xﬁnity Series is on
a two-week break after
Kyle Busch trumped the
eight Chase contenders at
Kansas on Saturday. Justin Allgaier plans to do
some endurance racing in
Brazil, and Daniel Suarez
will squeeze in a trip to
Mexico before racing
trucks at Martinsville.
“It’s been a while since
the last time I went to
Mexico to visit my family,
my mom, my sisters and
my dad,” he said. “We’re
going to do something
fun with the people from
NASCAR.”

SKIPPING THE SUN
Truex’s team decided
not to take part in this
week’s testing at HomeMAKE YOUR PICK
stead, even though it’s
NASCAR could take
steps soon to limit Sprint the site of the season-ending race next month. One
Cup driver participation
reason is that it’s far from
in lower series, a point
Denver, where his Furnidriven home after Kyle
Busch won his ninth Xﬁn- ture Row Racing team is
ity Series race of the year based, and another is that
at Kansas. NASCAR exec- he isn’t convinced it does
utive vice president Steve any good.
“Every time we’ve
O’Donnell was asked
tested this year, we’ve
about the dominance
gone to the race track and
on SiriusXM NASCAR
Radio this week and said spent the ﬁrst day-and-ahalf trying to regroup,”
something could change
in the rules by next year. he said. “It seems like it’s
probably hurt us more
“We’ve heard the fans.
than helped us.”
It’s interesting, it’s been
a balance throughout the
years,” he said. “We have HAAS F1 DECISIONS
Formula 1 team owner
always had Sprint Cup
Gene Haas said Sunday
drivers come into the
Xﬁnity Series and some- that he wants to see how
Esteban Gutierrez fares
times dominate.
the rest of the season
“As the sport has
evolved, one of the great before deciding on a second driver for his team.
things is we’ve got more
Romain Grosjean has
of a fan following in the
been solid in the team’s
Xﬁnity and Camping
World Truck Series. They debut, and his spot for
next year is secure. But
like seeing those drivwhile Gutierrez has been
ers come up through the
improving in recent
ranks and it’s our job to
make sure that Xﬁnity is races, he still has not
where names are made.” earned a championship
point.
NASCAR is already
“We haven’t deﬁnitively
prohibiting any Sprint
said whether Esteban is
Cup driver who was in
the driver for next year
last year’s Chase from
or not,” said Haas, whose
competing in this year’s
season ﬁnale for the Xﬁn- Sprint Cup team won at
Kansas. “That doesn’t
ity and Truck Series at
Homestead-Miami Speed- necessarily mean that he
won’t be, either.”
way.

60680181

Influential Mormons pushed for
church-owned BYU in Big 12
SALT LAKE CITY
(AP) — Some of Utah’s
most inﬂuential Mormons, including Mitt
Romney, Gov. Gary Herbert and the president of
the Utah Jazz, lobbied to
get the private, Mormon
church-owned Brigham
Young University an invi-

tation to join the lucrative
Big 12 athletic conference.
Jazz President Steve
Starks said BYU was
asked not to directly
lobby other universities,
so he instead worked to
drum up support for the
Provo school and enlisted

help from the governor’s
ofﬁce.
Starks, a Mormon,
didn’t attend BYU but
said he’s always been a
fan and the university’s
entrance into the conference would have been
good for Utah and Utah
sports.

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