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                  <text>8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

70°

78°

75°

T-storms this a.m.; showers and a t-storm. A
t-storm tonight. High 81° / Low 59°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Ohio
Valley
Business

Five locals
set for
state meet

WEATHER s 3

BUSINESS s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 86, Volume 73

Thursday, May 30, 2019 s 50¢

New
attorney
retained in
Tucker case
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Photos by Lorna Hart

Drew Webster American Legion Post 39 conducted a gun salute as part of the Memorial Day service in Pomeroy.

Memorial Day service held in Pomeroy
By Lorna Hart
Special to the Sentinel

POMEROY — With
the Flag raised to half
mast, members of the
Drew Webster American Legion and Auxiliary Post 39 began their
Memorial Day services
along the river in Pomeroy.
Steve VanMeter
accepted the role of
emcee in the absence of
Commander John Hood,
and Dan Arnold ﬁlled
the role of Post Chaplin
for Jerry Frederick, both
of whom are recovering
from surgery.
Following the invocation, JoAnn Newsome

continued the tradition
of reading “Flanders
Field” that was begun by
Gladys Cumings , who
passed away last year.
The poem was written
during the First World
War by Canadian physician Lieutenant-Colonel
John McCrae, and references red poppies that
grew over the graves of
soldiers in Europe. This
resulted in the poppy
becoming a symbol of
soldiers who died in conﬂict.
Chief Petty Ofﬁcer
Doug Dixon was the
keynote speaker. Dixon,
a 30-year Navy veteran, currently heads the
See SERVICE | 3 Navy Chief Petty Officer Doug Dixon was the keynote speaker for the service.

AS THE OLD OHIO FLOWS…

Remembering Meigs County’s fallen soldiers
By Jordan Pickens
Special to the Sentinel

Memorial Day has come to
be the unofﬁcial start to summer. In Meigs County, bikers
from all over our region gather
on Main Street in Pomeroy to
begin their annual run. Cookouts can be seen as you pass
by many houses in the area,
and the American Legions and
VFWs of the county hold their
annual Memorial Day ceremonies. As a kid in the band at
Southern High School, one of
my favorite things was what

INDEX
Obituary: 2
Weather: 3
Local: 4
Business: 5
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Comics: 8
Classifieds: 9

we called our “Memorial Day
Tour.”
We began our day at the
Racine American Legion Post
602 ceremony, and then headed
to Pomeroy for their ceremony.
I will never forget the late
Gladys Cumings always reciting Flanders Field. Once I was
at the age to be able to understand the poem and what it was
about, I took it upon myself to
memorize it. Today, as a history teacher, it is part of my
curriculum when I teach World
See SOLDIERS | 4

Photo courtesy of Gary Coleman

The Soldiers and Sailors Monument in Middleport.

Throwback Thursday: Antiquity School
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.
Photo from the Collection of Bob Graham

This photo from the Collection of Bob Graham shows a class of students at Antiquity School.
According to the names attached to the photos, pictured are (bottom row left to right) Teacher
Cora Balser, Eve Sayre, Betty Buck, Irene Ward, Betty Roberts, Mary Shain, Adria Diddle; (second
row) Mary Donovan, Faye Donovan, Alberta Sayre, Dixie Stobart, Elmer Ribel, Dean Sayre, Bill
Arnott, Darrell Sayre, Gene Gill; (third row) Darlene Stobart, Bernard Diddle, Clint Donovan, Alfred
Stitts, Ted Parsons, Arthur Stitts, Mary Arnott; (in doorway) Mildred Varian holding Evelyn Roush .

POMEROY — As the
case against former corrections and probation
ofﬁcer Larry Tucker
moves toward the sentencing phase, he has
hired a new attorney.
Tucker, 56, of Pomeroy, was convicted on
May 2 of 24 of the 25
charges considered by
the jury in the case
against him.
Tucker worked as a
corrections ofﬁcer at the
Middleport Jail and as a
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court probation
ofﬁcer. Tucker allegedly sexually assaulted
or attempted to sexually assault 12 different
See TUCKER | 2

Farmers’
Market set
to open
June 1
Staff Report

MEIGS COUNTY
— The Meigs County
Farmers market is slated
to open for its inaugural
season, June 1st from
10 a.m. to 1 p.m. after
months of preparation.
The market will continue to be held every
Saturday from June 1st
to October 26th on the
Pomeroy levee parking
lot between Court St. and
Farmers Bank, rain or
shine, from 10 a.m.-1 p.m.
weekly.
The market will feature
three types of vendors
including farmers, producers, and artisans.
Patrons of the market will
be able to enjoy in fresh
produce, deliciously made
products, and handcrafted
works of art.
The market’s Grand
Opening will be a celebration not only for Meigs
County, but also the surrounding community.
Meigs County Commissioner, Randy Smith
will open the market by
conducting an opening
prayer to bless the 2019
market season. Additionally, there will be live
entertainment, food, and
all three types of vendors
previously mentioned.
Please join us to share in
this exciting opportunity
for Meigs County.
The Meigs County
Farmers’ Market’s Board
is continually looking
to expand the market
to better serve the area.
If you are a vendor and
interested in sharing
your products with the
community please do
not hesitate to ﬁll out
an application online at
www.meigscountyfarmersmarket.com, or contact
the Market Manager,
Chris Hamm at (740)
416-5893 or meigscountyfarmersmarket@gmail.
com.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Thursday, May 30, 2019

Storms cause damage

OBITUARIES
BETTY FAYE WILL WAGNER LOUCKS
CHARLESTON,
S.C. — Betty
Faye Will Wagner
Loucks, 98, passed
away November 26, 2018 in
Charleston, South
Carolina.
Betty was born the
tenth child and fourth
daughter of her parents’
11 children. She was
born on January 15, 1920
to William A. and Edna
Garen Will of the Texas
community, in the family
home built by her grandfather Moses Will. She
was preceded in death by
her parents, husbands,
siblings, three nieces and
two nephews. She is survived by her two daughters and son-in-laws, Jacolyn Ann and Sam Zeilah
of Charleston, South
Carolina and Elizabeth
Jane and Terry Foreman
of Colonial Beach, Virginia, three granddaughters,
seven great-grandchildren
who called her Grandma
Great, and 14 nieces and
nephews and “Puppy,”
her beloved dog.
Betty graduated from
Chester High School in
1938. She continued her
education in nurse’s training at Holzer Nursing
School, Gallipolis, graduating in 1941.
Before WW II began
she married Robert
Andrew Wagner giving
birth to their daughter
Jacolyn Ann in 1950,
before his death in 1951.
At that point, Betty
moved from the home
Bob had built in Addison
to Canal Winchester to
be close to her siblings.

There she met her
second husband,
Lewis Bailey
Loucks. They married in 1954 and
had one daughter
Elizabeth Jane.
Betty continued
in the nursing profession
for the next 42 years.
She also worked wherever the service moved
her husband Bob, from
Indiana to New Jersey
and then Missouri. For
her contribution to the
war effort, she worked at
Curtis Wright inspecting
split gears on airplane
propellers. She spent the
later years as a nurse in
the baby nurseries of St.
Ann’s Women’s Hospital
and Mount Carmel Hospital in Columbus.
A memorial service
of a Life Well Lived will
be held Saturday, June 1
at 11 a.m., Mt. Hermon
United Brethren church,
Wickham Road, Pomeroy.
Service will be performed
by Pastor Adam Will,
Betty’s great nephew, in
the church founded by
her Grandfather Moses
Will. Betty’s ashes will
be buried at Mound Hill
Cemetery, Sunday, June 2
at 1:30 p.m. Processional
will start at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home
in Gallipolis.
From the birth of Betty’s eldest brother in 1897
to her death in 2018, her
family spanned a period
of 121 years. Passing on
her love of family and the
Ohio River Valley, her
daughter purchased the
family homestead and the
legacy continues.

LARRY HUDNALL
MIDDLEPORT —
Larry Hudnall, 79, of
Middleport, passed away
at 2:47 a.m. on Wednesday, May 29, 2019, in the
St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
Born June 13, 1939, he
was the son of the late
Charles Hudnall and the
late Stella Brickles Colburn. He was the owner
and operator of Hudnall
Heating and Cooling. He
was well known around
the community for being
a repair man.
Larry is survived by
his wife of 34 years,
Phyllis Pettit Hudnall; a

brother, Roger (Janet)
Hudnall, a sister, Dorothy Hudnall, both of
Marion; and numerous
nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents he is preceded in
death by a sister, Elaine
Hudnall.
Graveside services
will be held at 1 p.m. on
Saturday, June 1, 2019,
in the Burlingham Cemetery with Pastor James
Keesee ofﬁciating. Interment will follow. Friends
may call from 6-8 p.m. on
Friday at the CremeensKing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy.

ROSE
ENGLEWOOD — Edwin G. Rose, 98, of Englewood, passed away on Monday, May 27, 2019 at Dayton VA Hospice.
Family and friends may join us graveside on Saturday, June 1 at 2 p.m.

Veterans office Closed
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Veterans
Service Ofﬁce will be closed June 3-7 for training. If
transportation needs to be scheduled, please call the
ofﬁce and leave a message and we will return your call
conﬁrming your transportation appointment.

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Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@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.

Daily Sentinel

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Rachel Bales photo

Rachel Bales photo

Storms which rolled through Meigs County on Wednesday
afternoon caused downed trees and power lines, while knocking
over a large Home National Bank billboard in Pomeroy. The
sign at Francis Florist in Pomeroy, as well as the door of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church sustained damage. Trees were
also down on Bashan Road and surrounding areas. Power was
out to more than 1,500 AEP Ohio customers in Meigs County
on Wednesday afternoon. Additional storms were possible
later in the day on Wednesday and on Thursday.

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

LEBANON TWP. — The
Lebanon Township Trustees
will hold there regular monthly
meeting at 6 p.m. at the Township garage.

roll. Delivery is available to locations where ﬁve or more dinners
are purchased. To order on the
day of the BBQ, call the ﬁre station at 740-992-2663, beginning
at 9 a.m.
SYRACUSE — The Syracuse
Mission Church, Bridgeman
Street, Syracuse, invites the
public to a Sunday evening service at 6 p.m. with Dr. Michael
Panjio from Abundant Ministries Fellowship in Struthers,
Ohio.
RACINE — Racine American
Legion will be having a dinner
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. This will
be at the Legion Hall located at
715 5th St. in Racine. This is
across from the Star Mill Park.

Sunday, June 2

Monday, June 3

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

Thursday, May 30

Wednesday, June 5
HARRISONVILLE — A free
dinner will be held at the Scipio
Township Fire Department in Harrisonville, State Route 684, featuring roast turkey, mashed potatoes
and gravy, buttered corn, rolls and
butter, lemon cake and beverages.
Dinner will be served from 5-6 p.m.
RACINE — Summer Reading
Kickoff, Racine Library, 2-4 p.m.
Bounce houses, snow cones, face
painting, space photo props, intergalactic crafts, physical activities,
and more.

Friday, June 7

MIDDLEPORT — Snack &amp;
Canvas with Michele Musser will
be held at 6 p.m. at the Riverbend
Art Council, 290 North Second
Ave. Middleport, Ohio. The
POMEROY — The Pomeroy
POMEROY — The Meigs
project this month is 12 x 32 all
Firemen’s Association will be
County Cancer Initiative, Inc.
hosting a chicken BBQ, with
(MCCI) will meet at noon in the wood “God Bless America” sign.
Paint kit will include everything
serving to begin at 11 a.m. The conference room of the Meigs
BBQ will be held at the Pomeroy County Health Dept. New mem- you need. Supplies are provided
by Michele. For more information
Fire Department, located at 125 bers are welcome. For more
and to reserve a spot call Michele
Butternut Avenue. Meals cost $9 information, contact Courtney
at 740-416-0879 or Julie at 740and include chicken half, baked
Midkiff at 740-992-6626 ext.
416-1784.
potato, baked beans, and dinner 1028.

Tucker

ney William Lee Burton
last week, days before
the “sentencing memorandum” was to be ﬁled
From page 1
in the case. The sentencing memorandums from
inmates and/or probationers between January both the prosecution
and defense were to be
2011 and November
ﬁled 21 days after the
2017.
order, which was ﬁled
The jury found him
on May 6.
guilty on six counts of
Tucker had been
kidnapping, six counts
represented by Public
of sexual battery, ﬁve
Defender Kirk McVay
counts of attempted
during the trial. Papersexual battery, four
work was ﬁled last week
counts of gross sexual
regarding a substitution
imposition, one count
of council in the case.
of soliciting, one count
Burton then ﬁled for
of attempting to compel
an extension to ﬁle the
prostitution and one
sentencing memorancount of theft in ofﬁce.
dum in the matter.
The lone not guilty
In addition to the sexverdict came on a misdeual assault and related
meanor count of sexual
charges, the theft in
imposition.
Tucker retained attor- ofﬁce charge dealt with

the overlap of time when
Tucker was on the clock
at both Meigs County
Common Pleas Court
and the Middleport Jail,
being paid at both locations.
In addition to being
found guilty of the 24
charges, the jury ruled
on speciﬁcations on each
of the kidnapping charges. They determined
that Tucker did not
release the respective
victims in a safe place
unharmed, and that the
kidnapping offenses
were committed with
sexual motivation.
Tucker also faces
further proceedings on
sexually violent predator
speciﬁcations contained
in the indictment, which
will be presented to the

court at a later date. If
Tucker is found guilty
of the speciﬁcations,
additional time in prison
may be added to the
court’s sentence.
Tucker is facing more
than 100 years in prison
when he is sentenced.
Tucker was originally
indicted on 32 total
counts, with seven of the
charges dismissed before
being considered by the
jury.
No sentencing date
has been set, and Judge
Linton Lewis ordered a
pre-sentence investigation to be completed in
he case.
Tucker remains held
in the Washington County Jail after his bond was
revoked following the
guilty verdicts.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 30, 2019 3

Service
From page 1

Meigs County Veterans
Service Ofﬁce in Middleport.
He began by thanking
fellow veterans in attendance, and “those who
are not with us today.”
In reviewing the history
and meaning of Memorial Day, a tradition that
began as Decoration Day
following the Civil War,
Dixon reminded everyone
that “the day is meant to
honor and ‘decorate’ the
graves of those who have
died in military service.
A day that began as a day
to honor the fallen in our
Civil War now extends to
all who have served.”
“It has become a day
set aside to honor all veterans,” Dixon said. “It
is a time for everyone to
remember the sacriﬁces
that were made not only
by those who served, but
by their families.”
He reminded the
crowd that when a loved
one serves, sacriﬁces
are made by not only
by those who serve, but

The flag was raised to half mast
prior to the service.

their families as well.
“Families make sacriﬁces, and we need to
honor them as well as
honoring our veterans,”
he said in closing.
As the Post was called
to arms, a red, white,
and blue wreath was
placed in the Ohio River
in honor those lost at
sea. A gun salute and the
playing of taps followed.
The Southern Local
Marching Band, under
the direction of Audra
Wilkinson played several
pieces during the ceremonies, including the
Star-Spangled Banner
and a tribute to the four

Dan Arnold presented a tribute to the American Flag.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

70°

78°

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. Wed.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.14
5.34
4.38
19.44
17.76

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:06 a.m.
8:46 p.m.
4:09 a.m.
4:57 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Jun 3

First

Full

Last

Jun 10 Jun 17 Jun 25

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

Today
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.

Major
9:16a
9:54a
10:36a
11:23a
12:15p
12:44a
1:46a

Minor
3:05a
3:43a
4:24a
5:10a
6:01a
6:59a
8:01a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Major
9:37p
10:17p
11:00p
11:49p
12:43p
1:13p
2:16p

Minor
3:26p
4:06p
4:48p
5:36p
6:29p
7:28p
8:31p

WEATHER HISTORY
On May 30, 1968, ﬂooding in northeastern New Jersey caused $133
million in damage. This followed a
severe drought in the mid-1960s that
had led to water restrictions in the
Northeast.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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
13.18
17.71
22.27
13.01
13.12
24.66
12.25
26.34
34.44
12.53
20.10
34.40
18.80

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.68
+0.67
+0.55
+0.15
+0.23
-0.18
-0.33
none
-0.44
-0.40
+1.70
none
+0.50

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

TUESDAY

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

Some sun, a t-storm
or two in the p.m.

A couple of showers
and a thunderstorm

Pleasant with plenty
of sunshine

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

Chillicothe
77/57

Belpre
79/58

Athens
76/56

Parkersburg
78/58

Coolville
78/58

Elizabeth
80/58

Spencer
80/57

Buffalo
82/59

Ironton
82/61

Milton
82/60

St. Albans
83/58

Huntington
80/62

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
75/56
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
64/53
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
77/57
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Mostly sunny and
nice

St. Marys
78/58

Wilkesville
78/57
POMEROY
Jackson
80/57
78/58
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
81/58
80/59
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
74/59
GALLIPOLIS
81/59
82/58
80/60

Ashland
81/62
Grayson
82/61

81°
61°

Marietta
78/57

Murray City
75/56

McArthur
76/55

Portsmouth
80/61

WEDNESDAY

79°
63°
Clouds and sunshine

NATIONAL CITIES

Logan
74/56

Adelphi
75/57

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

MONDAY

75°
48°

South Shore Greenup
81/61
80/60

45

SUNDAY

76°
49°

Lucasville
80/60
Very High

A wreath was placed in the river as a tribute to those lost at sea.

79°
59°

Very High

Primary: oak, grass, trees
Mold: 1611

Lorna Hart is a freelance writer for
The Daily Sentinel.

SATURDAY

Waverly
78/58

Pollen: 231

Low

MOON PHASES
New

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

under it and is loyal to
it, is loyal to truth and
justice by the people, for
the people, shall not perish from the earth.”
Following the Benediction, the Flag was
lowered, and then raised
to full staff at noon as is
customary on Memorial
Day.
Post 39 then had lunch
before continuing with
observances in multiple
cemeteries in the area.

78°
58°

6

Primary: cladosporium
Fri.
6:06 a.m.
8:47 p.m.
4:37 a.m.
5:58 p.m.

FRIDAY

75°

HEALTH TODAY

JoAnn Newsome read “Flanders Field” .

EXTENDED FORECAST

Heavy t-storms this morning, then showers and a
heavier t-storm. A t-storm tonight. High 81° / Low 59°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Wed.

85°
68°
78°
56°
96° in 1914
38° in 1949

branches of the military.
In closing, Dan Arnold
recited a tribute to the
Flag:
“We direct your attention to the Flag of our
beloved country. It is
always displayed where
it is accorded the position of highest honor.
It is a constant inspiration to every lover of
his country. It demands
unswerving loyalty and
whole-hearted devotion to the principles
of which it is the glorious representative. It
is the majestic symbol
of Freedom under Constitutional government.
Beneath its protecting
folds Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity have
become the heritage
of every citizen, while
the oppressed of many
nations have found peace
and happiness in the
land over which it ﬂoats.
The ﬂags of mighty
empires have come and
gone, but the Stars and
Stripes remain. Alone of
all ﬂags it expresses the
sovereignty of the people
which endures when all
else passes away. Speaking with their voice
it has the sanctity of
revelation. He who lives

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Photos by Lorna Hart

Southern Local High Marching Band preformed the National Anthem and other patriotic songs as part of the service.

Clendenin
84/57
Charleston
82/60

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
83/51
Montreal
73/45

Billings
80/55

Minneapolis
Detroit
82/60
71/55

Toronto
70/46
New York
78/63

Chicago
73/54
Denver
68/44

Washington
90/70

Kansas City
72/57

City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
76/53/pc
57/48/c
91/72/pc
76/68/t
87/65/t
80/55/s
74/55/c
68/58/c
82/60/t
96/68/pc
63/43/s
73/54/c
76/61/t
70/56/t
74/57/t
84/66/s
68/44/c
75/57/c
71/55/sh
89/75/s
88/75/t
74/61/t
72/57/pc
89/71/pc
85/61/pc
77/57/pc
78/66/t
91/79/s
82/60/s
87/67/t
93/77/pc
78/63/t
79/57/s
97/75/s
87/65/t
96/72/s
73/58/t
62/52/c
97/69/pc
98/73/pc
78/62/pc
73/55/pc
64/53/pc
75/56/pc
90/70/t

Hi/Lo/W
82/58/pc
59/47/c
89/68/pc
76/64/s
83/63/pc
77/54/pc
78/57/t
71/57/pc
76/57/t
88/63/pc
69/45/pc
81/62/pc
77/62/pc
75/61/s
79/60/pc
84/68/pc
74/48/pc
81/58/s
78/60/s
89/75/sh
91/75/pc
78/63/pc
81/62/s
92/71/pc
85/64/pc
75/57/pc
79/65/pc
91/77/pc
86/56/pc
84/63/pc
93/79/pc
78/62/s
81/59/s
93/75/pc
81/64/s
98/71/s
75/60/pc
68/49/pc
87/63/pc
86/65/t
83/65/pc
75/56/pc
70/53/s
77/56/pc
83/68/pc

EXTREMES WEDNESDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

El Paso
90/67

High
Low

Atlanta
91/72

102° in Jacksonville, FL
24° in Aspen Springs, CO

Global
Chihuahua
97/63

High
119° in Mitribah, Kuwait
Low -15° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
88/75
Monterrey
95/77

Miami
91/79

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

OH-70107872

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financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
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�NEWS

4 Thursday, May 30, 2019

Soldiers
From page 1

War I that my students
memorize Flanders Field.
We would then ﬁnish the
day in Chester Cemetery
for their annual service
where the DAR would
place ﬂowers on the
graves of veterans.
Some more notable
Memorial Days I can
remember are going to
Washington D.C. to watch
the Meigs Band in the
annual Memorial Day
parade, and laying a rose
on a headstone in Arlington National Cemetery.
I also recall heading to
various Meigs County
cemeteries with Gary
Coleman to play TAPS
for some of Meigs County’s fallen. Whatever a
person does on Memorial
Day, they should at some
point pause to remember
those in our armed forces
who have given their life
for our freedoms. Today,
we pay respect to those
of Meigs County who
have paid the ultimate
sacriﬁce.
The following list
of Civil War dead was
compiled by the wife of
Samuel W. Pomeroy and
submitted to The Meigs
County Telegraph in
November of 1870, she
served at the secretary
of the Soldiers’ Monument Association which
erected the Civil War
monument on the courthouse lawn.
ARCHER, James O., 7th battery; died
ALEXANDER, Henry, Co. K, 18th reg.; died
ALEXANDER, Jacob, do. do.
ALLEN, Milton, Co. H, 36th reg.; killed
ALLKIRE, J.C., do. do. ; killed
AUSTIN, Phacelius J., 7th battery; Vicksburg
ATKINSON, Joseph, Co. I, 18th reg.; Shiloh
ALESHIRE, Thomas J., 53rd reg.
ALESHIRE, George W., unknown; died
ACKLEY, Price P., Co. D, 18th reg.; died
BOSWORTH, Milton, Co. K, 18th reg.; killed
at Stone River
BURKE, Michael, Co. I, 33rd reg.; Perryville
BLACKWOOD, Isaac, Co. I, 92nd reg.; Andersonville
BUSH, Wm. Lt., Co. B, 116th reg.; killed
BUCK, Lewis, Co. C, 63rd reg.; killed
BUCK, Eli, do. do. ; died
BAILEY, Theophilus, 2nd heavy artillery;
died
BAILEY, Wm., 1st Va. Cav.; killed
BYER, Wm., Co. H, 36th reg.; died
BELL, James, ———- ———BELL, Wm., Corp., Co. E, 4th Va. reg.; Vicksburg
BANKS, Wm., do. do. ; died
BRETZLER, Charles, Co. M, 1st Va. cav.;
Andersonville
BLUMENTHAL, Fritz, do. do. ; Port Republic
BAKER, Jacob, Co. E, 9th Va. reg.; died
BAKER, G.W., do. do. ; Cloyd Mountain
BLACK, Harvey L., 1st Lieut., Co. H, 53rd
reg.; died
BUTTS, Jacob, Co. G, 116th reg.; died
BECKLEY, William, Co. B, 92nd reg.; died
BOLTON, F.M., Sergt, do. do. ; Danville
BURLEY, Wm., Co. B, 92nd reg.; died in
hospital
BURLEY, Geo., do. do.
BAILEY, Erasmus, Corp., Co. A, 9th Va.;
died
BLACK, John T., Co. B, 92nd reg.; killed
BARNES, J.W.F., Co. E, 75th reg.; Bull Run
BAKER, Alexander, Co. C, 30th reg.; killed
BOWERS, Elza A., Co. G, 116th reg.; died
BULLOCK, James, do. do.
BRADFIELD, John 2nd, Co. H, 36th reg.;
died
BRATTON, John, Co. E, 75th reg.; died
BOYD, James, Co. C, 63rd reg.; died
BROWN, Harvey, Co. I, 53rd reg.; killed
BUCKLEY, Thomas, Co. I, 33rd reg.
BOSWORTH, Milton K., Co. I, 53rd reg.;
died
BLACKBURN, Joseph, Co. E, 4th Va. reg,:
Charleston
BRIDGEMAN, Austin, Co. F, 63rd reg.; Perished on steamer Sultana
BRIDGEMAN, Emory J., Lieut., Adj’t of the
13th Va. reg.; killed in battle
BARTLETT, Gamaliel, Co. I, 4th Va. reg.;
died
BRADFIELD, Jefferson, Co. H, 36th reg.;
Berryville
BABEL, Isaac, Co. D, 194th reg.; died
BLACK, Hiram, 174th reg.; died
BOYCE, Wm., M., Corp., Co. F, 60th reg.,
Pittsburg Landing
BATES, Abraham, Co. D, 1st Michigan
BABCOCK, Nathan R., Co. D, 18th reg.;
died
BIRAM, Jacob, 63rd reg., New Madrid
BROWNING, E.H., Co. H, 193rd reg.; reg.
BRADSHAW, Wm., 75th reg.; South Mountain
BUTCHER, George, 4th Va.; Vicksburg
BLAZER, Mordecai, Sergt., Co. D, 18th reg.;
killed
BAIN, Alex., 53rd reg.; died
BLACKLIDGE, Clarkson, 8th Wisconsin;
Iuka
BLAZER, William, Corp., Co. D, 18th reg.;
died
BOSWORTH, Horace W., Corp., Co. D, 18th
reg.; died at Augusta Ga.
BREWER, Ashford T., Corp., Co. D, 18th
reg.; died
BROWN, Isem; died
BAILEY, Joseph N., Co. C, 63rd reg.; killed
BROOKS, Joseph, Co. E, 4th Virginia reg.
BISHOP, George, Co. F, 9th Va. reg.; killed
BERRY, James F., Co. C, 53rd reg,: died at
Evansville, Ind.
BURRIS, David, Co. C, 9th Va. reg.; Cloyd’s
Mt.
BOWERS, Sylvester, Co. C, 9th Va. reg.;
Gauley Bridge
BRINKER, Marion, Co. K, 4th Va. reg.; Petersburg
BRADSHAW, Wm., Co. C, 36th reg.; died
BARTLEY, Joseph, Co. H, 75th reg.; died in
prison
BLACKWOOD, Jasper; died
BYRNE, William
CROSS, Lewis C., Co.C., 4th Ind. Battery;
died
CLELAND, George, Co. C, 63rd reg.
CARSON, Theodore, Lt., 7th battery; died
CLARK, Charles E.
CLARK, Oscar, Co. D, 18th reg.; killed at
Stone River
CONELY, Patrick, Co. C, 4th Va. reg.; died
CAMP, Archaleous S., Co. D, 18th reg.;
killed
CLARK, Wm. Henry, ———- ———-; died
CROSBIE, Wm. B., Co. D, 118th reg.; killed
COLEMAN, John, Co. B, 116th reg.; killed
CADY, John C., 9th Ills. Reg.; killed
CADY, John, 7th battery

COOK, Britton J., Co. E, 4th Va. reg.; Vicksburg
CHRISTY, Joseph F., Co. G, 116th reg.; died
CORT, John, 4th Va. reg.; died
COULTER, Warren, Co. K, 9th Ohio cav.;
died
CORBIN, Wm. C., 7th battery; died at
Vicksburg
COOK, A.J., Co. B, 92nd reg.; Died at MartinsCOY, John, do. do. ; died
COY, Austin, Co. E, 188th reg.; died
CHALFAN, Joseph, Co. E, 188th reg.; died
CHASE, Sumner,, Co. A, 2nd Va. cav.; killed
at Wytheville
CROWELL, Austin, Co. I, 53rd reg.; died
CARR, H. Harrison, do. do. ; died
CHASE, Harrison, Co. M, 4th Va. cav.; died
CORCORAN, Henry, Co. C, 63rd reg.; Iuka
CUMMINGS, Albert, Co. A, 9th Va.; Winchester
COOPER, John M., Co. B, 116th reg.; died
COBB, James, Co. G, 9th Va. reg.; Halstown
CUMSTOCK, Josephus, Co. G, 116th reg.;
died
CAMPBELL, Samuel, 33rd; died
CAMERON, Henry H., Co. C, 194th reg.;
died
CHANEY, John, Co. E, 75th reg.; Chancellorsville
CONANT, Ellis, 1st Lieut., 7th battery; died
COURTNEY, Adolphus, Co. C., 5th U.S. cav.;
CHRISTMAN, ———-, 4th Va. reg.; Vicksburg
COLEMAN, Henry, Co. D, 75th reg.; died
COLEMAN, John R., Co. E, 75th reg.; died
CHANEY, John, Co. I, 186th reg.; died
CHEESEMAN, Aleman, Co. C, 9th Virginia
reg.; died of wounds
COMPSON, Thomas, Co. C, 9th Virginia
reg.; Sandy Hook, Maryland
COMPSON, Daniel, Co. C, 9th Va. reg.;
Cloyd’s Mt.
CIRCLE, John, Co. E, 9th Virginia reg.; died
CIRCLE, Madison G., Co. K, 18th reg.; died
CIRCLE, Joseph C., Co. K, 3rd Virginia cav.;
Winchester
CALVERT, John P., Serg., Co. H, 77th reg.
CARSEY, Juina, Co. K, 73rd reg.; Cross Keys
DOUGHERTY, Levi, Co. F, 174th reg.; died
DOUGHERTY, Ferree, do. do.
DURNBURGUR, George, Co. C, 9th Va. reg.;
Andersonville
DONAHUE, Salathiel, Co. C, 9th Va. reg.;
Cloyd’s Mountain
DAVIS, John C., 53rd reg.; died
DEAN, eth*, Co. I, 4th Va. reg.; Vicksburg
*this appears to be a typo in the newspaper
DAVIS, Jacob, Co. —, do. do.
DOUGLAS, Darius, Co. C, 36th reg.; died
DIKE, Henry, Co. I, 33rd reg.; died
DUDLEY, Frank, Co. E, 75th reg.; died
DODSON, Henry, Co. I, 33rd reg.; killed at
Perryville
DUNBAR, Theo., Co. —, 2nd Va. Cav.; Petersburg
DYE, Thomas, 63rd reg.
DAY, Charles, 60th reg.; Richmond
DORL, Henry M., Co. C, 63rd reg.; died
DAVIS, Charles, Co. B, 116th reg.; died
DOUGLAS, Martin V., Co. F, 9th Virginia
reg.; died of wounds
DONNARD, Presley, 36th reg.; died
DOTSON, George W.., Co. H, 75th reg.;
Belle Isle
DICKERSON, William; Vicksburg
ELIOTT, Morton, Co. H, 73rd reg.; died
ELIOTT, John, Co. C, 4th battery
EDMONSON, Chas., Co. I, 53rd reg.; died
EDMONSON, Winfield, 36th reg.
EDMONSON, Theodore, Co. C, 36th reg.;
South Mountain
EARLY, James, Co. C, 5th U.S. cav.; Petersburg
EVANS, Oliver
EASTMAN, Samuel; died
ERVIN, Lewis, Co. C, 63rd reg.; died
EVANS, James
FOGG, Stephen G., Miss. Marine; died
FARMER, Wm., Co. H, 53rd reg.; died at
Memphis
FITCH, Joseph, Co. C, 63rd reg.; killed
FARLEY, Joshua, Co. G, 116th reg.; Stony
Ford
FINLAN, James, Co. K, 18th reg., Andersonville
FRACH, John, 7th Ohio Battery
FOX, Chas., Co. H, 53rd reg.; killed
FRISBY, John, ———- ———FIGLEY, Joseph D., Co. E, 3rd reg.; killed
FINDLING, Philip, Co. C, 63rd reg.; Atlanta
FINDLING, Valentine, Co. C, 33rd reg.; died
FINDLING, Jacob, ———-; Vicksburg
FUGATE, Marion, Co. K, 7th cav.; killed
FORBES, Arthur, Co. B, 4th Va. reg.; died
FOSTER, Azariah, Co. ? , 63rd reg.
FOGG, Clarkson, Co. E, 4th Va.
reg.;Vicksburg
FULLERTON, Joseph, Co. K, 18th reg.; Andersonville
FOREMAN, J.W., Co. H, 36th reg.; died
FRAZER, Jasper, Co. H, 75th reg.; died
GILMORE, Horace, Co. H, 36th reg.; died
GRIMES, John C., 36th reg.; killed
GILES, William H., 2nd Virginia; died
GROW, Samuel, 4th Va. reg.; died
GABRIEL, Abram, Co. B, 4th Va. reg.
GILBRATH, Thomas, Co. C, 63rd reg.; died
GRUNER, Bart, Co. M, 1st Va. cav.; Warrenton
GOODWIN, Samuel, Co. D,, 9th Va. reg.;
died
GOSLIN, Charles William, 75th reg.; died
GODDARD, William J., Co. D, 4th Va. reg.;
died
GOFF, Sylvester, do. do. ; killed
GORBY, William H., Co. C, 194th reg.; died
GORBY, William, Co. I, 53rd reg.; died
GREEN, John P., Co. I, 33rd reg.; died
GAMBLE, Samuel, do. do.
GUTHRIE, G.S., Surgeon; died at Huntsville, Ala.
GREEN, Abbot, Co. K, 18th reg.; died
GILLAND, Jacob, Co. D, 18th reg.; died
GARRET, Addison, Co. B, 9th U.S. Heavy
Artillery
GILLILLAND, John W., Co. I, 33rd reg.;
Lookout Mountain
GISSLINE, Co. E, 75th reg.; died
HARLEY, Joshua
HOLLMAN, Samuel, Co. F, 60th reg.; died
HARPER, Dustin, Co. K, 7th cavalry; Andersonville
HICKS, Wesley, Co. C, 63rd reg.; Iuka
HOWARD, J.H., Co. G, 4th Va. reg.; died
HYSELL, Leeman, Co. A, 9th Va.; died
HYSELL, James M., Co. C, 9th Va.; died
HAYWARD, Charles, Co. D, 18th; died
HOTCHKISS, William, Co. I, 33rd reg.; died
HOLT, Merrill, 1st Sergt., Co. H, 36th reg.;
killed at Berryville
HIGLEY, Sardine, 7th Ohio Battery; died
HIGLEY, Joel P., Capt., Co. K, 7th Ohio cav.;
killed
HARKINS, David S., Co. I, 53rd reg.; Andersonville
HYSELL, Owen, 7th battery; died at Vicksburg
HENNESSEY, Thomas, Co. I, 33rd reg.;
killed
HEATON, Ethel, Co. C, 63rd reg.; killed
HOWELL, Samuel L., Co. B, 92nd reg.;
Chickamauga
HARTINGER, Wesley, do. do. ; Mission
Ridge
HULL, Samuel, 187th reg.; died
HYSELL, Bartlett, Co. D, 18th reg.
HYSELL, Acquila, 7th battery; died
HYSELL, Richard, 75th reg.; killed
HYSELL, Boswell, 7th battery; Baton
Rouge
HYSELL, Martin, Co. G, 116th reg.; Petersburg
HYSELL, John H., Co. H, 75th reg.; died
HANLON, Thomas, Co. H, 36th reg.
HAYMAN, Jeremiah, Co. F, 9th Va. reg.;
Summerville
HUMPHREY, F.E., 1st Sergt., Co. B, 116th
reg.; Petersburg
HOLMES, Arnold, 4th Va. reg.; Vicksburg
HYSELL, Gabriel, Co. F, 60th reg.
HINKLEY, Abner, Co. I, 33rd reg.; died
HEWITT, Carpenter, Co. A., 2nd Va. cav.
HOYT, Royal, Co. B, 116th reg.; Andersonville
HARTLEY, James, do. do. ; died
HOWELL, W.H., 36th reg.; killed
HANING, Eli, Co. H, 35th reg.; died
HUDSON, T.C., Co. D, 18th reg.; died
HUDSON, Coulborn C., do. do.
HUDSON, Wm. P., Co. F, 60th reg.; Wilderness
HUDSON, Austin, do. do. ; Petersburg
HILLERMAN, Madison R., Co. G, 4th reg.;
died
HOLTER, Wm., Co. F, 60th reg.; Wilderness
HARPER, Allen, Co. I, 53rd reg.; died
HOWELL, Harrison, Co. H, 36th reg.; Summerville

Daily Sentinel

Photo courtesy of Gary Coleman

The Buffington Island Battlefield Monument as it stands today.
HUGGINS, David, Co. H, 75th reg.; died
HARRISON, James M., Co. C, 93rd reg.;
Corinth
HALLIDAY, John M., Co. I, 53rd reg.; died
HOLT, Arthur A., Sergt., Co. D, 53rd reg.;
died
HOYT, Royal C., Co. K, 7th cav.; Andersonville
HART, Benjamin
HEWAL, Henry, Co. C, 5th U.S. cav.; New
Market
HETZER, O.S., Co. B, 116th reg.; killed at
Winchester
HAYDEN, William H., Co. K, 9th Virginia
reg.; died at Winchester
HOGAN, James, do. do. ; killed at Winchester
HAYNES, John, Co. E, 9th Va. reg.; Cloyd’s
Mt.
HAMILTON, Benjamin, Co. C, 9th Virginia;
died of wounds
HYSELL, Addison, 7th battery
HARRISON, Martin, Co. C, 63rd reg.;
Corinth
IRWIN, Frank, Co. H, 36th reg.; died
IHLE, Simeon, Co. F, 60th reg.; Spottsylvania
JONES, Absalom, Co. B, 4th Va. reg.; died
JOHNSON, Lewis, Co. E, 4th Va. reg.; Vicksburg
JOHNSON, Harvey S., Co. H, 36th reg.;
Mission Ridge
JENKINS, G.W., Lieutenant, Co. C, 9th Virginia, died of wounds
JAY, David, Co. K, 18th reg.; died
JENNINGS, Samuel P., Co. K, 39th reg.;
Atlanta
KARR, Joseph, Co. F, 63rd reg.; killed
KIRKENDALL, Samuel, Co. H, 36th reg.;
died
KEYSE, Elias, Co. G, 63rd reg.; Corinth
KEEBAUGH, Isaac, Co. D, 18th reg.; died at
Elizabethtown, Kentucky
KENT, Alfred, 56th reg.; died
KENT, Emmanuel, do. do.
KINNERMAN, James H., 116th reg.
KERNS, Joseph, Co. I, 33rd reg.; Resaca
KARR, Otho W., Lieut., Co. H, 9th Va. reg.;
Halltown
KINKADE, Robert, Co. E, 4th Va. reg.; died
KEYES, Edwin, Captain, Co. B, 116th reg.;
died
KALE, John B., Co. B, 16th U.S.; died
KING, Thomas, Co. A, 2nd Va. cav.; died
KINKADE, John, 18th reg.; Nashville
KEEPERS, Allen, Co. I, 53rd reg.; died
LAWRENCE, Charles, Co. E, 9th Va.; Andersonville
LONIS, John, Co. D, 18th reg.; Prison
LEE, Henry H., Co. B, 92nd reg.; prisoner
LYON, Joseph M., Co. B, 92nd reg.; died
LEE, James, Co. H, 73rd reg.; killed
LEE, William J., Co. I, 33rd reg.; Perryville
LENZ, John, Co. H, 5th Va. reg.; Cross Keys
LEYSHON, Wm., Co. I, 2nd Va. cav.; Andersonville
LOBDELL, William; died
LEDLIE, William Allen, Co. B, 90th reg.;
died
LITTLE, Levi, Capt., Co. K, 7th cav.; killed
LIPPERT, William, Co. M, 1st Va. cav.; Berryville
LYMAN, Irvin J., Co. I, 33rd reg.; perished
on steamer Sultana
LONG, Thos., Co. D, 18th reg.; killed at
Stone River
LYON, Charles, Co. H, 53rd reg.; killed
LASLEY, Arius A., Co. D, 18 reg.; killed
LYONS, Isaac, 7th battery; died
LINCH, John, Co. H, 53rd reg.; died
LOGWOOD, Lewis, Co. B, 9th U.S. Heavy
Artillery
LEWIS, Birchfield, Co. F, 174th reg.; died
LEE, Willis, Co. E, 75th reg.; Gettysburg
LONG, Wm., 7th battery; died
McKNIGHT, William, Lieut., Co. K., 7th cavalry; Cynthians
McCORMICK, Wesley, Co. A, 2nd cav.;
killed
McGRAW, John, Co. H, 5th Va. reg.; Cross
Keys
MOORE, David A., Co. G, 116th reg.; Andersonville
METCALF, Ben F., Capt., Co. H, 13th cav.;
killed
MURRAY, Melvin, Co. E, 4th Va. reg.;
drowned
MOORE, Hiram, 7th battery; died
MILLER, Phillip, Co. M, 1st Va. cav.; Kelly’s
Ford
MARION, Edward, Co. D, 98th reg.; died
McMASTER, Thomas, Co. A, 2nd Va. cav.;
killed
McMORRIS, James C.; Cedar Creek
MOORE, Alonso, Co. E, 174th reg.; killed
McKAIN, Wm., Captain, Co. I, 33rd reg.;
Resaca
McDOLE, H., Co. C, 63rd reg.
MILLER, William A., Co. K, 187th reg.
MORRISON, Hugh, Co. B, 92nd reg.; killed
MORRISON, John, 4th cavalry; died
MORRISON, James, Co. H, 36th reg.; killed
MORRISON, George, do. do.
MASON, William W., Lieut., 63rd reg.
McELPHETIC, James, Co. H, 36th reg.
MARTIN, Jasper, Co. C, 63rd reg.; Florence
McGRAW, F.M., Co. E, 9th Va. reg.; Cloyd’s
Mountain
McKENZIE, James T., 1st Sergt., Co. G,
116th reg.; died
McCAIN, Frank, 7th battery
MEANOR, Isaac, Co. K, 7th cavalry
MORRIS, William, Jr.
McCULLOUGH, Joseph, Co. C, 63rd reg.;
killed
MORRIS, Francis W., Sergeant, Co. I, 33rd
reg.; Perryville
McELROY, John M., Co. B, 92nd reg.; Danville
MOLDER, Henry, 36th reg.; killed
MEDCALF, Reuben; died
McMILLEN, Joseph, Co. H, 76th reg.; died
MOORE, William, Co. K, 18th reg.; Stone
River
MORRIS, James, Co. E, 9th Va.; Cedar
Creek
MELVIN, Weaver, Co. C, 1st Va. cav.; Andersonville
NICHOLAS, Thomas
NORMAN, Henry, 7th cav.; died
NEASE, George W., Co. E, 4th Va.; Winchester
NELSON, Isaac, Co. K, 7th cav.; Belle Isle
NELSON, Silas, do. do.
NEFF, Jackson, Co. H, 53rd reg.; died
NOLTON, David, Co. E, 75th reg.; Bull Run
NEIL, James C., Color Sergt., Co. C, 4th Va.
reg.; Vicksburg
NEIGHBORGALL, John L., 92nd reg.; died
ORR, James, Co. A, 7th Va. cav., died
ORR, John
OTY, Henry, 194th reg.; died
OGDEN, John, Co. I 53rd reg.; died
OURS, Jehu, Co. E, 4th Va. reg.; Vicksburg
OSBORNE, William H., Co. E, 174th reg.;
died

PRICE, Jerome, Co. F, 174th reg.; died
PATTERSON, Alex, Co. K, 36th reg.; Cloyd’s
Mt.
PARKER, T.A., Co. H. 76th reg.; killed at
Florence
PRICE, Joseph R., Co. E, 4th Va. reg.; died
PENCE, David, Co. D, 9th Va. reg.; died
PAULK, George W., 7th battery; died
PIERCE, James, Co. H, 36th reg.; died at
Summerville
PARTLOW, Amos, Co. C, 63rd reg.; killed
PHELPS, Matthew, 4th Virginia reg.; died
PHILLIPS, William, 75th reg.; Bull Run
PHILIPS, Nathan, Co. I, 33rd reg.; died at
Andersonville
PHELPS, Elisha, Co. ¡, 4th Virginia reg.
PARR, William H.H., Co. C, 9th Virginia reg.;
died
PARSONS, Philander, Co. C, 9th Virginia
reg.; died at Guyandotte
PARSONS, Eleazer, Co. ¡, ¡ reg.; Winchester
POMEROY, Charles R., Lieut., Jr., Co. A,
33rd reg.; killed at Atlanta
PULLINS, Marion, Co. C, 63rd reg.; died
PRITCHELL, Ducket, Co. I, 4th Virginia reg.;
killed
PRICE, John H., Co. H, 187th reg.; died
PARISH, Harry; died
PACKARD, Frederick M., Co. H, 10th reg.;
died
PACKARD, Warren L., Co. D, 18th reg.; died
PACKARD, Belton L., 7th battery; died
PACKARD, Myron S., Co. I, 2nd Virginia
Cavalry; Andersonville
PAINTER, Charles G., Co. F, 9th Virginia
reg.; Andersonville
POWERS, Ezekial, 4th Virginia reg.; Vicksburg
QUILLEN, James, Co. I, 75th reg.
RUNNIONS, Samuel, Co. F, 60th reg.
RUTHERFORD, John, 60th reg.; Fort Gregg
RIDGELEY, Charles
ROSE, Amos, Co. F, 174th reg.; died
RUTHERFORD, George E., Co. E, 30th reg.;
Antietam
RUSSELL, Charles R., Co. A, 2nd Va. Cav.;
killed at Sailor’s Crossing
ROBERTSON, John, Co. A, 2nd Va. Cavalry;
killed
ROMINE, Ozias, Co. H, 36th reg.
ROMINE, John, 75th reg.
ROMINE, George
ROMINE, Harrison
ROMINE, Amos, 75th reg.
RUSSELL, Hiram, Co. D, 18th reg.
RUMFIELD, Peleg M., Co. H, 53rd reg.; died
RIFE, Henry, Co. I, 53rd reg.; Corinth
RUSSELL, John G., Co. G, 116th reg.; Andersonville
RUPERT, Fred, Co. M, 1st Virginia Cavalry;
Rappahannock
RADFORD, Isaac, Co. H, 53rd reg.; killed
RADFORD, Joseph, Co. A, 2nd Va. Cav.;
killed
REEVES, Richard D., Co. B, 92nd reg.; died
REEVES, Amazia, Co. ¡, 36th reg.; killed at
Mission Ridge
REEVES, Elisha, Co. C, 36th reg.; killed in
battle
RIGG, Marion, Co. H, 36th reg.; Berryville
RUGG, John P., Co. C, 9th Virginia; died
RYTHER, Rossel; killed
REED, Amos W., Sergt., Co. D, 18th reg.;
killed
ROUSH, John, Co. E, 4th Virginia reg.; died
RICHARDS, Samuel, Sergt., Co. M, 11th
Pennsylvania Cavalry; Ream Station
RUTHERFORD, John W., Co. F, 60th reg.;
Rull Run (Bull Run?)
RITZ, Peter, Co. A, 4th Virginia reg.; killed
at Vicksburg
ROUSH, Isaac, Co. D, 4th Virginia reg.; died
ROGERS, William, Co. F, 9th Virginia reg.;
died
RHOADES, Joseph, do. do.
REYNOLDS, Leslie, Co. A, 2nd Va. Cav.;
killed
ROACH, Calvin, Co. C, 194th reg
RANIER, William H., Corp., Co. D, 18th reg.;
died
SLOAN, Joseph, Co. D, 18th reg.; Antietam
SHREWSBURY, Samuel, 4th Virginia
SHEPARD, William
SCHREINER, Frederick, Co. M, 1st Va. Cavalry, Culpepper
SHUMWAY, Sylvester, Co. B, 116th reg.;
killed
STILL, Davis, Co. C, 63rd reg.; died
STANDISH, Miles, Co. I, 53rd reg.; died
SHERMAN, William
STEWART, Christopher, 60th reg.; Andersonville
SCHREIBER, George, Co. M, 1st Virginia
Cavalry; died at Andersonville
STIVERS, George, Captain, Co. K, 18th reg.,
killed at Stone River
STONE, Presley, Co. H, 36th reg.; killed at
Mission Ridge
SIMMS, Oliver, 7th battery; died at Vicksburg
SCHREIBER, Philip, Co. C, 63rd reg.; killed
at Atlanta
SUTTON, John P., Sargt., Co. G, 9th Va.;
killed
STEVENS, Joal C.; died
SEELIG, Peter, Co. M, 1st Va. Cavalry; killed
at Kelly’s Ford
SHOEMAKER, George, Lieutenant, Co. H,
2nd Va. Cavalry; Louisburg
SHINER, Thomas W., Co. I, 33rd reg.; died
at BaCon Creek, Kentucky
SWICKARD, John M., Co. ¡, 63rd reg.
SHIPMAN, John, Co. ¡, 30th reg.; killed at
Vicksburg
SIVEARENGER, James, Sergt., Co. F, 63rd
reg.; died at Memphis
SULLIVAN, Samuel, Co.I, 33rd reg.
STARKS, John, Co. ¡, 5th Virginia reg.; killed
near Winchester
SIBERT, Peter, Co. C, 63rd reg., died
SPONAGLE, Jacob, Co. C, 63rd reg.; died
SMALLEY, Lewis, do. do.
SMALLEY, Benjamin, Jr., Co. C, 63rd reg.;
died
SINCLAIR, Ferman; died
STEWART, Christopher, Co. I, 2nd Virginia
Cavalry; Libby Prison
SMITH, John, Co. B, 63rd reg.; died
SHINER, Henry, Co. K, 7th cav.; Libby
Prison
SMITH, Charles, Co. G, 5th U.S. cavalry;
Washington, North Carolina
SLOAN, David, Co. K, 18th reg.
SHUMWAY, Lawrence, Co. D, 18th reg.
SNOW, Reed, Co. C, 63rd reg.; died
SWAN, David M., Co. C, 4th Va. cavalry;
died
SISSON, J.W., Co. K, 7th cavalry; died
STANLEY, Francis M., Co. C, 9th Virginia
reg.; Cloyd’s Mountain
STOUT, Marcellus, Co. F, 9th Virginia reg.;
died
SAYRE, David, 18th reg.; died
SMITH, Josiah, Co. C, 63rd reg.; died
SKIELS, Thomas, 2nd Virginia Cavalry
SANDS, Jacob, Co. B, 28th reg.; Piedemont

Photo courtesy of Jordan Pickens

The original Buffington Island Battlefield Monument as it was in
the 1930s. A total of 77 Union and Confederate soldiers died during
the battle.

Photo courtesy of Jordan Pickens

The Meigs County Civil War Monument as seen in 1910.
THOMPSON, Nye, Co. I, 33rd reg.; died at
Nashville, Tennessee
TAYLOR, Calihill, Co. C, 30th reg.; died
THOMPSON, Hugh, Co. C, 2nd Virginia cavalry; died at Andersonville
TIFFANEY, Edmund P., Co. B, 116th reg.;
killed
TORRENCE, Thomas Corwin, ———-,
———THOMA, Martin, Co. ¡, ¡ reg.; killed Winchester
THOMAS, David, Co. H, 53rd reg.; died
THROCKMORTEN, T., Co. H, 36th reg.;
died
TOWNSEND, John S., Co. B, 53rd reg.;
killed in battle
TOPE, Thomas, Co. G, 140th O.N.G.; died
THOMAS, Ralph, Co. I, 186th reg.; died
THOMPSON, William H., Co. K, 18th reg.;
Stone River
THOMAS, Alonzo, do. do.
TUTTLE, Joseph, Co. I, 53rd reg.; died
TOLAND, John, Co. C, 63rd reg.; New Madrid
VALE, Samuel M., Co. D, 4th Va.; died
VINING, James T., Co. A, 9th Va. reg.; Halstown
VANPELT,, James N., Corpt., Co. D, 18th
reg.
WINN, Arthur A., Co. G, 35th reg.
WILSON, Robert, Co. B, 92nd reg.; died
WOGAN, John W., Co. F, 60th reg.; died in
prison
WOLF, Charles, Co. F, ¡ reg.; died in Salisbury
WELLER, Gideon, Co. M, 1st Va. cav.; killed
at Gettysburg
WATERMAN, George, Co. K, 39th reg.; died
WEIRIG, Anthony, Co. M, 1st Va. cav.; killed
at Winchester
WHITE, Lyman S., Lieutenant, Co. E, 4th
Va. reg.; Winchester
WILLIAMS, Orlando, Co. K, 7th cav.; killed
WILLARD, George H., Co. E, 4th Va. reg.;
killed at Vicksburg
WALKER, John E., do. do. ; killed
WALTER, James, Co. ¡, 36th reg.; died
WOLF, Silas D., Co. D, 18th reg.; Stone River
WALTON, Samuel, ———-, ———-; died
WYANT, Isaac, Co. I, 92nd reg.
WHITE, Jackson, 21st reg.; died
WHITE, James H., 39th reg.; died
WILSON, Austin, 194th reg.; died
WOOD, George, 4th Va.; died
WAYSON, W.W., Co. C, 63rd reg.; Florence
WILL, Jonas M., 194th reg.
WILLIAMSON, James H., Co. A, 9th Va.;
died
WOOD, Benjamin, Co. I, 53rd reg.; Pittsburg Landing
WETZEL, Aaron, Sergeant, Co. G, 9th Va.
reg.; Halltown
WILLIAMS, Oralena, Co. K, 7th cav.; Andersonville
WALKELY, Samuel C., K, 13th Va.; killed
WILLIAMS, Jeremiah M., Co. D, 18th reg.;
died
WISEMAN, Zachariah, Co. K, 7th cav.; died
WOLF, Ephriam, Co. F, 174th reg.; died
WILLIS, John S., Corp., Co. K, 18th reg.;
died
WILLIS, John, 4th Virginia; Vicksburg
WATERS, David, Co. F, 60th reg.; Spottsylvania
YOUNGER, James, Co. F, 174th reg.; died
YOUNG, Luke, Co. K, 187th reg.; died
ZEIPRECH, Peter, Co. M, 1st Va. cav.; died
World War I
Frank Alkire
John Bennett
William S. Bissell
Charles V. Bumgerdner
William Clouse
Frank L. Colwell
Albert R. Dorst
Cornelius Feeney
Albert Harper
Orla T. Hecox
John A. Hetzer
Curtis V. Howell
Ira R. Hysell
William Karr
Samuel J. Matthews
Clive Price
Norman M. Reed
Cideon A. Serals
Eddie Snedden
Luther D Suthers
Kinney Thompson

Allen Townsend
Drew S. Webster
Jasper Whaley
Otis L. White
World War II
Allen Malson
John Andrew
George Bearhs
Chester Bell
Charles Bennett
Floyd Blake
Earl Brown
James Boring
Howard Collins
Kibble Cowdery
Howard Crary
Elmer Daily
Jake Daily
Thurman Daily
Paul Damewood
David Davison
Robert Davis
Walter Dunfee
Danny Dunn
Emmett Eastman
Charles Crislip
John Fisher
Alexander Focle
William Freeman
Oval Gandee
George Gibson
George Gillian
Max Gorby
George Hayman
Henry Hermsen
Charles Hunnel
Gerald Hysell
Robert Jackson
Harold Jones
David Joseph
Arthur Kaylor
Phillip Killinger
Floyd Koblentz
Howard McCloud
Herbert MacNamee
Albert Miller
Charles Miller
Hobart Nelson
Wendell Nelson
George Parker
Bruno Pierotti
Miller Prince
John Radekin
Clarence Reed
David Reed
Lewis Rockwell
Harley Rood
Harold Russell
Harold Sarson
Edward Schoonover
Marning Seyfried
Jewell Sinclair
Samuel Smith
Clair Spires
Chester Steward
Chester Stobart
Dana Van Meter
William Venable
Paul Ward
Charles Weed
Leo Wells
Calvin Will
Ray Wolfe
Leonard Wood
James Wylie
Korean War
Earl Elswick
William Friley
Gail Smalley
Arthur Wise
Vietnam War
Thomas Lind
Ralph Triplett
William Neutzling
Jimmy Stewart
James Brewer
Michael Deeter
Ronald Manley
Iraq War
Roger Turner Jr.
Josh Jones

Jordan Pickens is a local historian
and educator.

�BUSINESS/LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Meet the Gallia
Chamber Board
Meagan Wood joined
Superior Marine in
2014 with ﬁfteen years
experience in business
development and marketing. She is the Chief
Administrative Ofﬁcer,
where she handles
ﬁnance, business development, safety, environmental, new ventures,
marketing efforts,
human resources and
the management of The
Port of South Point for
Superior Marine. She
began her career in
banking, holding various positions including
Marketing Coordinator
and Branch Administration Coordinator. She
worked for The Ohio
State University South
Centers serving as
Business Development
Director. The programs
she managed provided
technical assistance to
businesses in 22 counties in Appalachian
Ohio. In 2018, Wood
was selected as one of
the Top 40 Under 40
nationally for the Inland
Waterways industry. In
2016, she was selected
to represent the Ohio
River Basin on a trip
to the Panama Canal to
sign a Memorandum of
Understanding with the
Panama Canal for joint
marketing efforts with
the inland waterways of
the US.
Wood has been very
active in community
service for most of her
adult life. She has
served on the Gallia
County Chamber of
Commerce board since
2012, and currently
ended her term as
president in January of
2019. Wood co-chaired
Chilifest for six years
and has volunteered

Thursday, May 30, 2019 5

Farm Day at Munchkin City
With the help of
Fitch Family Farms
in Long Bottom
and Triple J Farm &amp;
Livestock Transport
in Waterford, children
an Munchkin City
recently had a visit
from several farm
animals. The children
had been celebrating
Farm Week, learning
about animals and
doing other farm
related activities,
with the week
capped off by a visit
with goats, cows and
other animals.

Gallia County Chamber of
Commerce | Courtesy

Meagan Wood has served on
the Gallia County Chamber of
Commerce board since 2012.

at the Gallipolis River
Recreation Festival
since 2010. In addition
to Chamber activities,
she has been active
with The Hoop Project
and The Downtown
Revitalization Project
for several years. She
currently serves on the
Inland Rivers Ports and
Terminals Association
actives Board of Directors for the Ohio River,
The Point Pleasant
River Museum and
Learning Center Board
of Directors, Ohio River
Basin Alliance Advisory Committee and
The University of Rio
Grande Alumni Council,
where she is immediate
past chair. Wood holds
a bachelors degree from
the University of Rio
Grande in communications with emphasis
in public relations and
a Masters in Business
Administration from
Ohio University. She
and her husband, Joel,
share three children,
Nick, Abby and Jake
and reside in Jackson,
Ohio.

Courtesy photos

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Members of the Farmers Bank Junior Board of Directors are pictured with those in attendance at the Business After Hours event.

Junior Board hosts Business After Hours
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Submitted by the Gallia County
Chamber of Commerce.

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

State Route 143 Yard Sale
MEIGS COUNTY — The 9th annual 143 Yard
Sale will take place from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, June 1. The yard sales go from State Route
7 to U.S. Route 50 along State Route 143. The
Scipio Volunteer Fire Department and Columbia
Volunteer Fire Department will be serving food
at the respective ﬁre stations. Spaces will also be
available to rent at both ﬁre stations and in the
parking lot at the ball ﬁelds in Harrisonville. For
more information call 740-416-9083 or 740-5916086.

Village-Wide Yard Sale
SYRACUSE — The village-wide yard sale in the
Village of Syracuse will be held on Saturday, June
1.

Benefit Yard Sale
RUTLAND — Rutland FWB is having a yard
sale May 30, 31 and June 1, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Rain or
shine in an air conditioned building and food will
be available.

OVP STOCK REPORT
Wendy’s Company(NASDAQ).……..……...….$18.40
Walmart Inc(NYSE).……..……..……..…….….$102.12
Big Lots, Inc(NYSE).……..……..……..……...…$26.64
Harley-Davidson Inc(NYSE)…………..…...…..$33.27
PepsiCo, Inc.(NASDAQ)………..……..……....$128.17
Peoples Bancorp Inc.(NASDAQ)……….........$31.77
Kroger Co(NYSE)………..……..……..……..…...$23.03
BB&amp;T Corporation(NYSE)………..……..……..$47.66
City Holding Company(NASDAQ).……….....$75.14
American Electric Power(NYSE)……….........$85.69
Ohio Valley Bank Corp(NASDAQ).……...…..$37.06
Century Aluminum(NASDAQ)……….......…….$6.03
Rocky Brands Inc(NASDAQ)………..……....…$24.97
Apple(NASDAQ)……..……..……..……..….…..$177.38
The Coca-Cola Co(NYSE)…………..……..…....$48.61
Post Holdings………..……..……..……..……......$104.99
Far Eastern New Century Corp (TPE) ……..$32.25
McDonald’s(NYSE)………..……..……..……....$196.02
Stock reports are the closing quotes of transactions on May 29.

POMEROY — The
Farmers Bank Junior
Board of Directors
recently hosted the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce for a Business
After Hours event in the
Farmers Bank Community Room in Pomeroy.
The event was a time
for Junior Board members to meet with individuals from numerous
area businesses, as well
as a time for the business
community to learn more
about the Junior Board
program.
This is the 10th year
for the program which
brings together high
school juniors from Eastern, Meigs, Southern and
Wahama.
Michael Letson, who is
one of the Eastern High
School representatives
to the board, spoke to
those in attendance at
the Business After Hours
event about the program
and the experiences the
board has taken part in
this year.
Letson stated, “As the
name implies, the Junior
Board is the board of
directors to a mock bank.
The board held monthly
meetings. In the monthly
meetings, we board members made decisions that
were critical in forming
and keeping our mock
business successful.”
“Each meeting had a
different objective that
was important in starting and maintaining a
business. They are as
follows: Forming the Corporation, Introduction to
Banking, Understanding
Business Accounting,
Getting Started, Products
and Services, and Long
Range Planning,” said
Letson.
He explained that in
“Forming the Corporation”, the members discussed the requirements
associated with forming a
corporation, their duties

Michael Letson told those in attendance about the Junior Board
program.

as Directors, and whether
our business would be
state or federally chartered.It was at that time
the board members made
their $1 million investment to form the “2020
Corporation.”
In “Introduction to
Banking”, members
learned how a bank operates and how fees and
interest rates make a bank
money. The distinction
was made to board members between national,
regional, and community
banks.
“In similar suit to The
Farmers Bank and Savings Co., The 2020 Corporation chose to become
a community bank,” said
Letson.
“Understanding Business Accounting” was a
meeting that taught members about assets, liabilities, and equity. It also
showed the difference
between a balance sheet
and an income sheet.
During the “Getting
Started” meeting, the
board found what qualities they wanted their
management team to
possess. The board also
debated on where they
wanted to locate their
bank. Members took into
account internet speeds
for the constant growth
of mobile banking, state
taxes on banks, the demographics of the people
who are in and around
the state, and state regulations on banks.
“Products and Services” was the meeting in which the board
discussed what type of

products they wanted
their business to offer.
There was a big discussion about what type of
services lead people to
choose one business over
another.
Letson spoke of an
example given to them by
Farmers Bank President
and CEO Paul Reed. Letson recalled, “He asked
the board members if
they would be more likely
to do business with Farmers Bank because of a service in their Mobile App,
or because of services like
the Junior Board of Directors. The majority of the
Board was in agreement
that being involved in the
community and offering
services like the Junior
Board would gain their
business.”
During the ﬁnal meeting, “Long Range Planning”, the Junior Board
displayed resilience and
a sense of pride for what
they formed. They were
approached by another
bank wanting to buy each
of their shares for 5 million dollars.
“The representative
sent from the bank wanting to buy the 2020 Corporation was being very
stern and hard nosed. But
the Junior Board saw fear
behind the representative
and it fueled the decision
to expand the bank and
not sell,” said Letson.
He said it was a hard
decision with the possibility of proﬁting $4 million.
“Then I remembered
why we started the 2020
Corporation. It was not
only an investment for us

board members, but an
investment in the community,” said Letson.
Each year the Junior
Board takes a trip to
Columbus where they
visit with the Ohio Bankers League, as well as
elected ofﬁcials. This
trip allows them to learn
about the workings of the
banking industry, as well
as get to know each other
better.
“On behalf of the Farmers Bank Junior Board of
Directors, thank you for
your community involvement. Without people like
you, Meigs County would
not be what it is today,”
concluded Letson.
Members of the 201819 Farmers Bank Junior
Board of Directors were
as follows:
Eastern High School
— Gabby Beeler, Lexa
Hayes, Autumn Honaker,
Michael Letson, Aubree
Lyons and Emily VanMeter;
Meigs High School
— Cole Arnott, Weston
Baer, Austin Mahr, Bobby
Musser, Emily Myers and
Breanna Zirkle;
Southern High School
— Kasandra Barton,
Phoenix Cleland, Trey
McNickle, Coltin Parker,
Raeven Reedy, Sydney
Roush and Baylee Wolfe;
Wahama High School
— MacKenzie Barr,
Olivia Johnson, Emily
Mattox, Zach Roush,
Hannah Rose and Emma
Tomlinson.
Farmers Bank President and CEO Paul Reed
and Human Resources
Director Erin Krawsczyn
serve as board advisors,
with Dru Reed, Lola
Sanders, Edna Weber,
Ben Reed and Heather
MacKnight serving as
student advisors for
the program. Economic
Development Director
Perry Varnadoe also
assists with the program
each year.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

�Sports
6 Thursday, May 30, 2019

Daily Sentinel

D-3 District baseball teams
Marauders, Raiders combine for 5 East selections

By Bryan Walters

area with four selections, all of
whom were chosen to the honorable mention squad. The honorees included seniors Chase
A total of ﬁve players from
Kemper and Andrew Mershon,
the Ohio Valley Publishing
area were selected to the 2019 sophomore Chase Barber and
freshman Dalton Mershon.
Ohio High School Baseball
The lone Marauder on the
Coaches Association Southeast
District Division III East team, list was senior Wesley Smith,
who also happened to be the
as voted on by the coaches
area’s only ﬁrst team selection.
within the district.
Division III was broken down Meigs ﬁnished the year with a
10-11 overall mark.
into east and west divisions,
Logan Hankins of Rock Hill
with Meigs and River Valley
representing the tri-county area was named the Division III
in the eastern half of the break- East Player of the Year, while
Michael Hill of Fairland was
down.
honored as the D-3 East Coach
The Raiders (5-16) led the

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Bryan Walters|OVP Sports

River Valley sophomore Chase Barber (16) takes a throw at second base during
an April 1 baseball game against Meigs in Bidwell, Ohio.

of the Year.
Macky McDonald of Paint
Valley was chosen as the Division III West Player of the
Year, while Anthony Knittel of
Minford was picked as the D-3
West Coach of the Year.
East Division III
First team
Logan Hankins, Rock Hill;
Reece Robson, Nelsonville
York; Trey Carter, Wheelersburg; Nick Headley, Crooksville; Bayley Clutters, Oak Hill;
Hunter Cardwell, Wellston;
See DISTRICT | 7

Transfer, play right
away? Don’t bank on
it, NCAA cases show
By Ralph D. Russo
Associated Press

A string of recent high-proﬁle transfers gave
the college football world the impression it was
getting easier for players to switch schools and
compete right away.
The reality is much different, with the percentage of waiver approvals dropping during 20182019 — even as the NCAA changed rules to give
athletes a better shot at transferring without needing to sit out a year.
Shea Patterson to Michigan, Justin Fields to
Ohio State and Tate Martell to Miami seemed
to usher in a new era of free agency, but waiver
approvals are still far from a sure thing. That is
prompting athletes, coaches and others to complain about a process that can be somewhat mysterious.
Through May 24, the NCAA committee for legislative relief had approved 66% of transfer waiver
requests across all sports for the 2018-19 academic year, down from 73% in the four previous years
combined, according to the NCAA. In football, the
transfer waiver approval rate for 2018-19 was 68%,
down 2 percentage points compared with the previous four academic years.
Players frustrated by denials vent on social
networks, while coaches question the NCAA’s consistency. Their complaints, along with those from
fans, illustrate how a dearth of public information
muddles comparisons and leads onlookers to draw
conclusions without knowing the full story behind
each case.
“If we’re going to have an ambiguous waiver
system let’s just either have a one-time transfer,
everybody can play (immediately) and its only one
time or you can transfer and you got to sit and
you can get (the year of eligibility) back,” Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald said. “One way or
the other it eliminates this ambiguity that’s in this
waiver process.”
The NCAA Division I council plans to review
the rules next month.
Guidelines haven’t changed for what justiﬁes a
waiver. The shift in April 2018 simply put immediate eligibility back in play for all cases. Previously, the option was tightly restricted to only
instances of egregious behavior by the school the
player wanted to leave.
Generally, athletes must sit out a year of competition after transferring. In many sports, a onetime exception can be used for an athlete to play
right away, but not in high-proﬁle sports such as
football and basketball.
Immediate eligibility for transfers was effectively taken off the table after the 2014-15 academic
year, though from 2015-18 athletes could attempt
to restore a year of eligibility after switching
schools. Waiver requests dipped during those
three years, then bounced back in 2018-19 after
the NCAA softened its rules.
The requests fall into several categories, each
with speciﬁc guidelines but governed by the
same basic principle: Schools have to show the
See NCAA | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, May 30
Region 15 Baseball
Southern vs. Newark
Catholic at Beavers Field,
2 p.m.
Toronto vs. Huntington
Ross at Beavers Field, 5
p.m.
Friday, May 31
Region 15 Baseball

Championship game at
Beavers Field, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
OHSAA meet at Jesse
Owens Stadium, 9:30
Saturday, June 1
Track and Field
OHSAA meet at Jesse
Owens Stadium, 9:30

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern junior Caterina Miecchi finishes fourth in the shot put at the Region 11 championships at Fairfield Union High School on
Wednesday in Rushville, Ohio.

Five locals set for OHSAA state meet
By Alex Hawley

in the Region 11 meet.
Browning’s 200m qualifying time of 23.36 is 18th
in the ﬁeld and 1.72 secCOLUMBUS, Ohio
onds behind Josh Verhorf
— Four schools, ﬁve
of Kalida with the fastest
athletes, six chances for
mark headed into the
gold.
Athletes from Eastern, event.
Browning will be in the
Meigs, River Valley and
South Gallia will all take second heat of both prepart in the 2019 OHSAA liminary races on Friday,
Track and Field Champi- with the 400m dash set
for 11:10 a.m. and the
onships being held this
200m dash beginning at
Friday and Saturday at
11:50 a.m. Nine athletes
Jesse Owens Memorial
from each event will
Stadium on the campus
of Ohio State University. advance to ﬁnals at 10:35
and 11:25 a.m. respecEastern — the only
tively on Saturday.
program from the Ohio
The Eagles haven’t
Valley Publishing area
scored at the state level
to have multiple particisince Tyler Cline ﬁnished
pants in this weekend’s
fourth (5 points) in the
meet — will compete
discus back in 2012.
in three events in total,
with senior Noah Brown- EHS also hasn’t scored a
ing in the 400m dash and point in a running event
at the Division III boys
200m dash, and junior
meet since Kyle ConCaterina Miecchi in the
nery placed fourth in the
shot put.
400m dash back in 2011.
Browning is making
Miecchi — extending
his second state appearthe Lady Eagles’ streak
ance in the 400m dash
after winning the Region of consecutive years at
the state tournament
11 title with a time of
to 10 — claimed fourth
49.84. Browning — the
in the shot put with a
EHS boys’ ﬁrst regional
distance of 37 feet, 5
champion since Mikey
inches at the Region 11
Johnson won back-tochampionships, a mark
back high jump titles in
2009 and 2010 — enters that places her 14th
entering Friday’s comwith the fourth fastest
petition. Wheelersburg’s
qualifying time in the
Paige Emnett has the top
400m dash, .98 seconds
qualifying mark (44-8) in
behind the fastest mark
the D-3 shot put, which
set by Cooper Braun of
will begin at 4 p.m. on
River.
Friday. Miecchi will be
Browning is 1-of-8
the fourth thrower in the
seniors in the 400m
ﬁrst ﬂight.
dash, and 1-of-9 seniors
South Gallia junior
in the 200m dash, an
Kyle Northup claimed
event he qualiﬁed for
with a fourth place ﬁnish fourth in the high

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

jump at the Region 11
championships and will
make his school’s ﬁrstever appearence at the
OHSAA state meet at 1
p.m. on Friday. Northup
cleared 6 feet, one inch
at the regional meet,
a mark that puts him
tied for 15th entering
the Division III ﬁnals.
There’s a three-way tie,
at 6-6, for the best mark
in the 18-athlete ﬁeld,
which features 10 seniors
and seven juniors. Northup will be 17th in the
jumping order.
Meigs senior Kassidy
Betzing — an Ohio University signee — is making her fourth consecutive state appearance in
the Division II long jump
event and enters the Saturday competition with
the second-best regional
mark — 17 feet, 10.5
inches.
Betzing — who owns
the Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division and
D-2 Southeast District
records in this event
— placed seventh as a
freshman, was the overall runner-up as a junior,
and took fourth last
spring.
Betzing’s leap of 18
feet, 5 inches in this
year’s district meet is
the longest postseason
jump from any of the 18
competitors by a full ﬁve
inches.
Simone Green of
Toledo Central Catholic enters the D-2 girls
long jump with the
best regional mark (1711.25), but Beachwood’s

Ashley Perryman has
the only other postseason leap of 18 feet this
spring.
The Division II girls
long jump is set to start
at 9:30 a.m. on Saturday,
with Betzing as the second jumper in the ﬁrst
ﬂight.
RVHS freshman Lauren Twyman was fourth
in the 800m run at the
Region 7 championships
and enters Saturday’s
ﬁnal with the 18th-fastest qualifying mark —
2:21.38. Shelby’s Makenna Heimlich owns the
fastest qualifying time in
the event — 2:14.64 —
which is slated to begin
at 2:30 p.m. on Saturday.
Twyman — 1-of-4
freshmen in the D-2
girls 800m run — will
be the ﬁrst Lady Raider
at the state meet since
Jessica Hager and Katie
Blodgett represented the
Silver and Black in 2011.
Neither Gallia Academy nor Southern have
a state qualiﬁer at the
2019 meet this weekend.
GAHS had one qualiﬁer last year — John
Stout in the Division II
200m dash — while SHS
last appeared at state
when Jaylen Blanks competed in the Division III
200m dash in 2015.
The 2018 OHSAA
Track and Field Championships start at 9:30
a.m. on both Friday and
Saturday at Jesse Owens
Memorial Stadium.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Durant travels with team to Toronto

District

Lynchburg Clay; Tanner
Cunningham, Valley; Elijah Vogelsong, Minford;
Ethan Lauder, Minford;
From page 6
Matt Baemel, Westfall;
Brandon Cornell, West
Ethan Duncan, Ironton;
Drew Smith, South Point; Union; Kannon Pack,
Reilly Sowards, Fairland; Piketon; Titan Williams,
Westfall; Elijah Young,
Connor Mullins, WheelNorth Adams.
ersburg; Luke Chapman,
Coach of the Year:
Alexander; Wesley Smith,
Anthony Knittel, MinMeigs; Jalen Miller,
ford.
Wheelersburg.
Coach of the Year:
Michael Hill, Fairland.
Second team
Lane Mettler, Paint
Valley; Parker ClemSecond team
mons, Pike Eastern;
Gavin Hunt, Fairland;
Roman Long, Adena;
Trent Dearth, ChesaConner Spohn, Westfall;
peake; Chase Inglalls,
Ethan McConnaughey,
Wellston; Brody Blackwell, South Point; Logan Lynchburg Clay; Luke
Lindamood, Minford;
Adams, Belpre.
Darius Jordan, Minford; Ian Wiles, Eastern
Honorable mention
Logan Hines, Oak Hill; Brown; Zach Osborne,
North Adams; Dylan
Brycen Thomas, IronBradford, Portsmouth
ton; Hunter Lahrmer,
West; Zach Fout, Adena;
Oak Hill; Jesse Collins,
Jesse Jones, Valley;
Belpre Thomas Sentz,
Chesapeake; Chase Kem- Bryce Wallace, Portsmouth.
per, River Valley; Cole
Ratcliff, Wheelersburg;
Dalton Mershon, River
Honorable mention
Valley; Isaac York, AlexBrock Blanton, Paint
ander; Chase Barber,
Valley; Reid Shultz,
River Valley; Landon
Minford; Bryce NewSmith, Rock Hill; Brenland, Paint Valley; Alex
nan West, Fairland;
Hirsch, West Union;
Kaleb Kidd, Rock Hill;
Scott Lightle, Piketon;
Alex Rogers, Fairland;
Ryan Rothwell, West
Ike Diehl, Southeastern;
Union; Shane VulgaTucker Adkins, Fairland; more, Piketon; Colton
Bryce McWhorter, South- Vaughn, Eastern Brown;
eastern; Jake Blagg, Rock Caleb Fogelsong, Adena;
Hill; Athan Temponeras,
Luke Blackburn, WestWheelersburg; Bryce
fall; Jarrett Garrison,
Richards, Nelsonville
Adena; Sam Frazier,
York; Mike BaughWestfall; Jared Morman, Crooksville; Nate
row, Valley; Garrett
Frisby, Wellston; Mason
Hurd, Portsmouth West;
Hanning, Alexander;
Logan Clemmons, Pike
Andrew Mershon, River
Eastern; Cave Powell,
Valley; Drake McClure,
Portsmouth West; Cody
South Point.
Weaver, Pike Eastern;
Josh Wolfe, Lynchburg
Clay; Bruce South,
West Division III
Northwest; Caden Hess,
First team
Lynchburg Clay.
Macky McDonald,
Paint Valley; Ethan KunBryan Walters can be reached at
kel, Adena; Drew Pitzer,

OAKLAND, Calif.
(AP) — Kevin Durant
is traveling with the
Golden State Warriors
to Toronto for the ﬁrst
two games of the NBA
Finals, leaving open
the chance he could be
ready to return from
a strained right calf in
time for Game 2.
Durant, the two-time
reigning Finals MVP
who has missed the
past ﬁve games since
getting hurt in Game 5
of the Western Conference semiﬁnals against
Houston, has already
been ruled out for
Game 1 on Thursday
night.
As of Tuesday, when
Golden State held an
optional practice before
ﬂying, he had yet to do
any full-speed work on
the court. He has done
some shooting, coach
Steve Kerr said.
“If he did anything on

the court, it would have
been pretty light,” Kerr
said.
Warriors spokesman
Raymond Ridder conﬁrmed Durant was on
the two-time defending champions’ team
plane that took off early
afternoon West Coast
time and landed late in
Canada.
There will be two full
days off before Game
2 on Sunday, giving
Durant time to get
further on-court work
done that the Warriors
would need to see
before he is medically
cleared.
“We’ll see where it
goes from here,” Kerr
said Monday. “This
is where the fact that
there’s a lot of days in
between games during
the ﬁnals helps us, so
we’ll see.”
Durant didn’t travel
to Houston for Game 6

of that round or to Portland for the two road
games against the Trail
Blazers in the Western
Conference ﬁnals. He
remained in the Bay
Area to rehab, and the
Warriors are unbeaten
without him.
An impending free
agent this summer, he
was hurt May 8 when
he landed awkwardly on
his right foot following
a baseline jumper late
in the third quarter of
a 104-99 victory over
the Rockets at Oracle
Arena. Durant is averaging 34.2 points per
game this postseason.
Kerr said Durant has
been spending countless hours rehabbing to
recover — hoping to
get back soon to what
he loves most.
“You get that fear of
missing out on stuff,
like practices and
shootarounds and new

game plans and stuff
like that. That’s what
I miss the most, obviously, grinding on the
court individually and
with my team. But
that’s out of my hands.
Out of my control,”
Durant said Friday.
“My task is to try
to conquer this, and I
think that’s the journey
(we’re) on as basketball
players. So I’m pretty
much down for anything but I’m excited
that I’m making progress.”
Center DeMarcus
Cousins, out with a
torn left quadriceps
muscle he injured in
Game 2 of the ﬁrst
round against the Clippers, hadn’t been ruled
out for Game 1 though
Kerr mentioned the
magnitude of coming
back on the ﬁnals stage
after so much missed
time.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

NCAA

process.”
Illinois tight end Luke
Ford (from Georgia),
Cincinnati offensive
From page 6
lineman James Hudson
(from Michigan) and
transfer is because of
Virginia Tech offensive
“circumstances outside
lineman Brock Hoffof the student-athlete’s
man (Coastal Carolina)
control and directly
impacts the health, safe- all garnered headlines
recently when the NCAA
ty or well-being of the
student-athlete,” accord- denied their waiver
requests. All three new
ing to NCAA bylaws.
schools are currently
The most common
asking for reconsidwaiver requests are for:
— Injury or illness to eration of the ruling or
appealing.
a family member
Hoffman said he was
— Being pushed out
transferring to be closer
of the program by a
to his ailing mother and
coach at the original
the denial was based on
school
— Egregious behavior Virginia Tech’s location
more than 100 miles
by the original school
away from his home and
— Mental health.
his mother’s improving
Waiver requests are
condition. Hudson said
judged individually and
mental health issues
subjectivity bakes into
prompted his transfer
the process — which
but because he did not
can make results seem
reveal them at Michigan
ambiguous.
his request was denied.
“If you get lawyers
“You can ﬁnd general
you’re going to get it,
themes in the cases that
but if you can’t afford
the lawyers, you’re not,” are successful. But I also
Fitzgerald said. “If some- think that I understand
body’s sick you will, but the confusion that people are seeing out there,”
if somebody’s better
said attorney Travis
you won’t. If you say
Leach, who worked on
the coach ran you off,
Martell’s case. “Because
but he really didn’t, is
the coach going to come some cases do look
similar, but when you
back and ﬁght?”
delve into the facts and
Attorney Tom Mars,
who has assisted Fields, circumstances there are
some nuances that make
Patterson and others
them different.”
with successful waiver
The NCAA does not
requests, said ire at
comment on speciﬁc
the NCAA over rulings
waiver cases and rarely
might be misdirected,
as individual schools are do schools, even when
an athlete waives protecresponsible for applying and presenting their tion under federal privacy laws.
cases.
“When appropriate,
“Whatever real or
apparent inconsistencies we do weigh in to eduthere are in these waiver cate about the process
and give details we can,
decisions are driven,
but we will not comproin large part, by the
mise personal informavarying levels of effort,
tion for the sake of a
resources, and quality
better headline for us,”
of the advocacy that go
NCAA spokeswoman
into the preparation,”
Emily James said.
Mars said. “The comThe absence of inforpliance personnel who
work for the AD at those mation leads to speculation ﬁlling the void.
schools own the whole

Thursday, May 30, 2019 7

Tri-County Junior
Golf schedule

304-675-6135 if you can contribute or have questions concerning
the tour.

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The
schedule for the 2019 Frank
Capehart Tri-County Junior Golf
League has been released.
The tour ofﬁcially begins on
Wednesday, June 5, at Cliffside
Golf Course in Gallipolis. Age
groups for both young ladies and
young men are 10 and under,
11-12, 13-14, 15-16, and 17-19.
The remaining tournaments,
courses and dates of play are as
follows: Wednesday, June 12, at
Riverside Golf Course in Mason;
Tuesday, June 18, at Meigs
County Course in Pomeroy;
Wednesday, June 26, at Riverside
Golf Course in Mason; and Tuesday, July 9, at Meigs County Golf
Course in Pomeroy.
The fee for each tournament is
$12 per player. A small lunch is
included with the fee and will be
served at the conclusion of play
each week. Registration begins
at 8:30 a.m. with play starting at
9 a.m. Please contact Jeff Slone
at 740-256-6160, Jan Haddox at
304-675-3388, or Bob Blessing

GAHS youth
basketball camp

rison at 740-441-7856 or Coach
Jordan Deel at 740-853-2654.

GAHS youth
baseball camp

CENTENARY, Ohio — The
Gallia Academy boys and girls
basketball staff will be conducting a youth basketball camp for
boys and girls entering grades
3-8. The camp will be held from
June 10-12 from 1-3 p.m. each
day. The camp will be held at
Gallia Academy High School.
Camp participants will be
instructed by both staff and players.
The cost of the camp is $40
per student if registered by June
3 and $50 per child after June 3.
Families with additional children
can attend for $25 per child. Students can register the ﬁrst day of
camp. All campers will receive a
T-shirt. Water will be provided
but a water bottle is recommended.
For questions or to register,
please contact Coach Gary Har-

CENTENARY, Ohio — The
Gallia Academy baseball program
will be holding a youth baseball
camp for any boy entering grades
3-7 on Monday, June 3, through
Wednesday, June 5, at Bob Eastman Field on the campus of
GAHS.
The three-day event will run
from 9 a.m. until noon, and the
campers will receive basic fundamental instruction from the
GAHS baseball coach staff and
players. The cost is $50 per camper and there is a family package
that costs $40 apiece for two or
more children, and each camper
will receive a t-shirt.
There will also be daily competitions and a Camper of the Week
award will also be presented on
the ﬁnal day of camp.
For more information, contact
GAHS coach Justin Bailey at 740339-0318.

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�COMICS

8 Thursday, May 30, 2019

BLONDIE

Daily Sentinel

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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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

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Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 30, 2019 9

Steelers’ Boswell aims past bumpy kicks
PITTSBURGH (AP)
— Chris Boswell doesn’t
do panic.
So rather than blow
up his offseason routine
following a nightmarish
2018 in which the Pittsburgh Steelers kicker
struggled to ﬁnd the
form that made him a
Pro Bowler in 2017 —
a mini meltdown that
contributed to his team’s
failure to reach the playoffs for the ﬁrst time in
ﬁve years — Boswell
decided to just hang out
back home in Texas and
get to work.
No kicking camps. No
soul searching. No guru
shopping. Outside of a
trip to Paris that gave
him a chance to propose
to his now-ﬁance, the
28-year-old kept it simple. Just like always.
“I just kind of went
home and decompressed
a little bit,” Boswell said
Tuesday. “Just kind of
let everything sit in and
I just kind of went from
there. I didn’t really do
anything special.”
There really wasn’t
any need. Boswell knows
the Steelers didn’t hand
him a ﬁve-year deal
worth nearly $20 million
last summer so he could
make just 13 of 20 ﬁeld
goals and miss a leagueworst ﬁve extra points.
That contract — awarded after Boswell nailed a
handful of game-winners

for a club that ﬁnished
13-3 in 2017 — was a
lucrative display of conﬁdence in him.
It also made it difﬁcult for the Steelers to
bail on Boswell — who
signed with the team in
2015 after winning a tryout in the rain at Heinz
Field — even as weeks
went by last fall and the
accuracy that deﬁned
his ﬁrst three seasons in
Pittsburgh abandoned
him. He ﬁnished 2018
on injured reserve after
tweaking his groin, then
watched ﬁll-in Matt
McCrane earn the game
ball after kicking three
ﬁeld goals in the regularseason ﬁnale against
Cincinnati.
That moment didn’t
last for Boswell or
McCrane. The Steelers
did not re-sign McCrane
during the offseason,
bringing in rookie free
agent Matthew Wright
to serve as Boswell’s primary competition during
organized team activities and minicamp. The
Steelers are clearly banking on a bounce-back
year from the player
who became an integral
part of the “Killer B’s”
in 2017, when he made
35 of 38 ﬁeld goals and
developed a reputation
for his resolve under
pressure.
Boswell has no plans
to turn the next three

Gary Landers | AP file

Pittsburgh Steelers kicker Chris Boswell (9) kicks a field goal from the hold of Jordan Berry (4) against the Cincinnati Bengals in
December 2017 in Cincinnati. The Steelers kicker knows his underwhelming 2018 season directly contributed to the Steelers missing
the playoffs. Yet rather than reinvent his offseason routine, he doubled down confident, he could bounce back.

months into an extended
duel with Wright.
“No matter who’s out
here, it’s me versus me,
it’s not me versus anybody,” Boswell said. “As
long as I can conquer
that, I should be pretty
good.”
That didn’t happen
often enough last fall.
The issues started
early. Boswell missed a
42-yarder in overtime
in the wind and rain in

Week 1 in Cleveland, a
game that ended in a tie.
It was a sign of things
to come. Boswell missed
at least one kick — be it
a ﬁeld goal or an extra
point — in nine games
in 2018. He had 11 such
games in his ﬁrst three
seasons in the NFL combined.
The nadir came in a
road loss to Oakland
on Dec. 9. Footing on
the always treacherous

O.co Coliseum is always
iffy. The Steelers used a
hook-and-lateral play to
get into ﬁeld goal position in the ﬁnal seconds.
When Boswell planted
his left foot for the
40-yard kick, he slipped.
The ball smacked into
the wall of linemen in
front of him and he landed on his rear, a wildly
uneven season boiled
down to a wildly memorable play.

The problem was
equal parts mechanical and mental, though
Boswell is reluctant to
dive into details. Ultimately, it doesn’t matter.
“I’m going to stick to
what I did going into
my fourth year here,” he
said. “It didn’t work last
year. But I’m not just
going to scratch everything. I’m here to do a
job, and I’m going to
focus on that job.”

Gruden challenges Antonio Brown during Raiders offseason
ALAMEDA, Calif. (AP) —
Antonio Brown’s credentials
were well established long
before he arrived in Oakland as
the Raiders new No. 1 receiver.
Brown posted six straight
100-catch seasons for the
Steelers with quarterback Ben
Roethlisberger and was the
NFL’s most proliﬁc receiver

before he forced his way out of
Pittsburgh to join the Raiders
in March.
Those impressive credentials mean little to coach Jon
Gruden, who is pushing Brown
as hard as any of his other
receivers as Oakland begins
preparations for the 2019 season. It’s a similar approach to

(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008

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Automotive
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Apartments/Townhouses
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AUTOS
Autos For Sale
For Sale: 2007 Ford Edge
AWD, V6, 3.5 engine, 245K
miles-304-593-0361
YARD SALE
Garage/Yard Sale

Apartments/Townhouses
Ellm View Apts.
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Equal Housing Opportunity

the one Gruden took during his
ﬁrst stint in Oakland, when he
inherited future Hall of Fame
receiver Tim Brown and then
added the game’s most productive receiver ever in Jerry Rice.
“He challenged me from the
meeting room to the ﬁeld,”
Brown said Tuesday of Gruden.
“Lining me up at all kind of

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positions, hurrying up the
offense’s tempo to see if I’m
able to mentally pick up what
I’m doing, where I’m lining up
really fast. So, it’s never a dull
day with coach. Always challenging, always high energy
and always detailed and fundamental in regards to our assignment.”

While Gruden is holding
Brown to a high standard,
Brown does the same to his fellow receivers on the roster. He
has instituted a ﬁne system for
dropped passes in practice and
wants to set an example with
his strong work ethic for the
rest of the players in the receivers’ room.

(304) 675-1333 or fax to (304) 675-5234

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Garage/Yard Sale
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Sealed quote proposals for LETART TWP CANTER ROAD
REPAIR Project and/or HILL ROAD REPAIR Project will be
received by Letart Township at the Letart Township Trustees’
Building located at 49457 SR 124, Racine, Ohio 45771 until
3:00pm June, 3, 2019.
Plans and Specifications can be secured from May 23, 2019 to
May 31, 2019 from 8:00 a.m. to 2 p.m. All companies must
furnish, as a part of their Quote, all materials, tools, labor at
prevailing wage, and equipment.
5/24/19

�SPORTS

10 Thursday, May 30, 2019

Jurassic Park adds
college vibe to Finals
TORONTO (AP) —
There’s nothing quite
like Jurassic Park anywhere else in the NBA.
The college vibe
of the writhing,
rowdy mass of bodies
crammed into an area
that covers about two
city blocks to cheer for
their beloved Raptors
outside their downtown
Toronto arena makes
for one of basketball’s
best parties.
“It’s so energetic,”
Raptors fan Katie Thiessen said of the atmosphere at Jurassic Park
as she and friends visiting from Australia and
New Zealand prepared
to enjoy the festivities
during the Eastern
Conference ﬁnals.
“Everybody is just
so great. You have so
many people, you make
so many friends. The
energy is just amazing,
the atmosphere. It feels
great to come together
instead of watching at
home.”
And it’s free.
With every playoff
game, home or away,
thousands gather to
watch on the big screen
ﬁxed to the arena’s
west wall. Ofﬁcially, it’s
called ‘Raptors Tailgate
in Maple Leaf Square,’
but it’s better known
as Jurassic Park. On
Thursday, when the
Raptors host Game 1 of
the NBA Finals against
the mighty Golden
State Warriors, the
party will get cranked
up to a whole new level.
It’s Toronto’s ﬁrst trip
to the ﬁnals since entering the league in 1995
and for those fans who
can’t get their hands on
tickets, or can’t afford
them, Jurassic Park is a

popular alternative. The
fans who gather there
are mostly young, in
their late teens or 20’s,
and represent a crosssection of Toronto’s
broad ethnic diversity.
Rapper Drake, who
sits courtside at Toronto games and holds a
role as the team’s “global ambassador,” said the
Raptors and their fans
are reminiscent of a college team.
Toronto guard Fred
VanVleet, who went
to the Final Four with
Wichita State, agrees
with the four-time
Grammy winner.
“I think there are
some similarities there,”
VanVleet said. “Somebody was saying it’s
more soccer, like how
those fan bases are so
passionate. I just think
we’ve got a really good
fan base. I don’t know
what to compare it to.
It’s deﬁnitely unique in
the NBA.”
It’s almost like
Krzyzewskiville —
Duke students camping
out for basketball games
— meets the “World’s
Largest Outdoor
Cocktail Party” — the
tailgating for the annual
Florida-Georgia football
game.
It’s been so successful, Toronto suburbs
Mississauga and Brampton are opening their
very own versions of
Jurassic Park for the
NBA Finals. Outdoor
viewing parties for Raptors playoff games ﬁrst
became a thing in 2014,
when Toronto ﬁnished
as surprise Atlantic
Division winners and
returned to the postseason following a ﬁve-year
absence.

Nicklaus part of major discussion again
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) —
Jack Nicklaus and Tiger
Woods had their ﬁrst
conversation about rivalries while in South Africa
for the Presidents Cup in
2003, right around the
time Woods was about
to get his fourth rival in
Vijay Singh.
The message Nicklaus
preached from experience that day: Make sure
you’re part of the conversation.
It’s still true.
Woods is the Masters
champion.
And that makes Nicklaus part of the conversation again.
All it took was one
major — especially
because Woods had gone
11 years and ﬁve surgeries since his last one —
to consider the possibility
of Woods reaching the
Nicklaus standard of 18
professional majors.
For so many years,
Nicklaus was asked more
about whether Woods
could break his record
than about the golf ball.
And then the injuries
piled up, and the questions stopped.
“Kind of nice,” Nicklaus said Tuesday.
Nicklaus smiled,
because he doesn’t mind
talking about it. He’s part
of the conversation again,
even though it has been
19 years since he played
all four majors.
He spoke about winning his ﬁnal major in the
1986 Masters at age 46, a
time in his life when his
interests were divided
between golf and business. Nicklaus won two
majors when he was 35
and two when he was 40,
and he didn’t ﬁnd it any
more difﬁcult the older
he was.
“I thought winning

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Tony Dejak | AP ile

Jack Nicklaus, left, talks with Tiger Woods after Woods won the Memorial in 2012 at the Muirfield
Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio. Winning his 15th major has renewed the conversation of whether he
can catch the record of 18 majors held by Nicklaus.

them at age 40 was just as
easy as winning them at
20,” Nicklaus said. “The
only difference was that
I knew what I was doing
at 40 and I wasn’t sure
what I was doing at 20. I
got lucky when I was 20
because talent carried me
through there. But at age
40 I had to be smarter
because I didn’t have the
talent I had at 20. I suppose I had the talent, I
just didn’t know how to
get it out of me.
“But I think as you get
older you accommodate
your aches and pains,”
he said. “But you get
smarter, too.”
And that’s what makes
Nicklaus curious about
whether Woods can catch
or surpass him.
He remembers how
miserable Woods looked
at the Champions Dinner on the Tuesday night
before the 2017 Masters
— “He was not a happy
camper,” Nicklaus said —
a few weeks before a lastditch effort to heal his
back with fusion surgery.
Nicklaus described
Woods as “almost cocky”
at this year’s dinner.
“He had an abundance
of conﬁdence he would
play well,” Nicklaus said.
Nicklaus says he only
watches the majors, and
even then he isn’t fully
engaged in front of a TV.
After hitting the honorary
tee shot Thursday morning, he went ﬁshing in
the Bahamas. He was on
his boat Sunday morning
during the ﬁnal round,

chasing after boneﬁsh.
He came back just in time
to see the Masters turn in
Woods’ favor at the par-3
12th hole, where Francesco Molinari lost his
two-shot lead with a tee
shot into Rae’s Creek.
“I didn’t move again,”
Nicklaus said. “It was
fun to watch. It was fun
watching his mind work.
It was fun watching how
he thought, and how I
thought he was thinking,
and how I would have
thought.”
And he watched the
players around Woods
make it easier for him
with mistakes that can’t
be made on the back nine
Sunday in the majors.
Woods followed that
15th major by missing the
cut in the PGA Championship two week ago at
Bethpage Black. Woods
wasn’t as prepared, from
the emotional toll of ﬁnally winning another major
to feeling sick enough
that week to play only
nine holes of practice.
The next chance is
the U.S. Open at Pebble
Beach, where Woods
won by 15 shots when
he was 24. Nicklaus said
Woods is one of the favorites, though he said the
competition is deeper —
Brooks Koepka, anyone?
— and it won’t be easy
for Woods to dominate
like he once did.
Nicklaus also recalled
another moment this
year, when he played with
Woods and President
Donald Trump in early

February, which showed
why it won’t be easy.
“He played just fantastic, but his neck was bothering him,” Nicklaus said.
“And I’m sitting there,
‘Really?’ He shot 64 and
everything was just perfect. But he said, ‘I have a
little problem with it.’”
Woods played at Riviera and Mexico City, and
then decided to sit out
Bay Hill as a precaution
because of a sore neck.
“He’s going to have a
lot more of those problems,” Nicklaus said. “We
all have a lot of those
problems. But if you
manage them and you
know how to take care of
yourself, you know how
to pace yourself, you can
do that. He can’t just do
everything everybody
asks him to do. He’s got
to be a little selﬁsh. And
that’s OK.”
Nicklaus never ruled
out that Woods could
reach 18 majors or
beyond, even when
Woods went two straight
years without even playing majors. If Woods’
back holds out, Nicklaus
suspects Woods has 10
more years of competing.
Can he do it?
Nicklaus hasn’t
changed his answers.
He doesn’t want his
record broken, but he
doesn’t want Woods
to not have a chance
because of bad health.
Woods is one major
closer. He still has three
to go.
But it’s a topic again.

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Herrera arrested
in domestic case
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) —
Philadelphia Phillies outﬁelder Odúbel
Herrera was placed on administrative
leave Tuesday by Major League Baseball following his arrest in a domestic
violence case at an Atlantic City casino
a day earlier.
Herrera was arrested Monday night
on an assault charge at the Golden
Nugget Casino.
Police say they were called on a
report of a domestic assault and found
a 20-year-old woman “with visible signs
of injury to her arms and neck,” which
they said were caused by Herrera,
whom they described as her boyfriend.
The 27-year-old, whose full name is
David Odúbel Herrera, was released
on a summons pending a future court
date.
The Phillies issued a statement Tuesday saying they were taking the matter
seriously and support the joint agreement between the league and players’
union covering domestic violence.
“This morning we were made aware
of an alleged incident involving Odúbel
Herrera,” the statement read. “Upon
receiving this information, we immediately reported the incident to Major
League Baseball, which has informed
us that Herrera has been placed on
administrative leave.”
The leave was effective Tuesday and
can last up to seven days. In previous

MLB investigations, the length of the
administrative leave frequently has
been extended while the probe continues.
The center ﬁelder is hitting .222 with
1 home run and 16 RBIs in 39 games
this season.

Ex-NFL player pleads
not guilty in child death
LAS VEGAS (AP) — A former
pro football player pleaded not guilty
to murder and child endangerment
charges in the death of his girlfriend’s
5-year-old daughter at his Las Vegas
apartment.
Former NFL and Canadian Football
League running back Cierre Wood’s
attorney, Thomas Ericsson, didn’t
immediately respond Wednesday to
messages about their Tuesday court
appearance.
Wood’s next court date is June 12.
Wood played for the University of
Notre Dame before brief NFL stints
with three teams and the Montreal
Alouettes in Canada.
He’s now 28 and is being held without bail. He could face up to life in
prison if he’s convicted.
The child’s 25-year-old mother, Amy
Taylor, is jailed pending a preliminary
hearing Aug. 5.
Her daughter, La’Rayah Davis, died
April 9, after they lived less than two
weeks at Wood’s apartment.

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