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                  <text>Halloween
fun in
Meigs

Eagles
soar past
Southern

NEWS s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

43°

51°

42°

Partly sunny and chilly today. Partly cloudy
and colder tonight. High 54° / Low 29°

SPORTS s 6

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 10

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 175, Volume 73

Tuesday, November 5, 2019 s 50¢

Eastern wins rivalry game

Southern board
OKs agenda items,
recognizes students
Staff Report

RACINE — The
Southern Local Board
of Education approved
multiple agenda items
and honored STORM
Students of the Month
during the recent meeting.
STORM Students of
the Month were Skyla
Thacker (1st grade),
Carlee Noel (2nd grade)
and Andre Chandler
(6th grade).
A professional waiver
day was approved for
staff on Nov. 26. The
staff will be trained by
Nationwide Children’s
on signs of suicide, as
well as vision screenings by the Prevent
Blindness Foundation.
In personnel matters,
the board accepted the
resignation of Charlie
Lawrence as a bus driver, effective Oct. 31, for
retirement purposes.
Approved the following substitutes for the
2019-20 school year:
Rebecca Parsons, aide,
cook and custodian;
Linda Harrison, bus
driver; Holly McQuaid,
secretary; Shari Cogar,
bus driver; Krystal
Coe-Pickett, bus driver,
aide; Faith Holbert,
secretary; Brittany Hill,
aide, secretary; Melissa
Reedy, bus aide; Evelyn
Stanley, aide; Lora
Blackhurt, aide.
Substitute teachers
approved were as follows: Michael Adkins,
Lora Blackhurst, Pam
Douthitt, Ken Green,
Ed Safranek, Rebecca
Zuspan, Linzie Causey,
Jacob Duty, Jamie Friel,
Craig Knight, Ephram
Ausseresses, Kristin
Buckley, Cynthia Facemyer, Agnes Hapka,
Elizabeth Slucher, John
Bailey, Caleb Cole,
Erika Fox, Kim King
and Bruce Martin.
Supplemental contracts for the 201920 school year were
approved as follows:
Stephen Randolph,
freshman basketball;
Marcy Wyatt, junior
high winter cheerleaders; Katie Ash, math/
science expo; Bill Whitlock, senior play; Audra
Wilkinson, marching
band and pep band;
Daniel Otto, Saturday
school; Ann Ohlinger,

Courtesy photo

STORM Students of the
Month Carlee Noel, Andre
Chandler and Skyla Thacker
were honored at the recent
meeting.

LPDC Chairperson;
Daniel Otto, Amy
Roush, Shelly Barr, and
Rachel Hupp, LPDC;
Russ Fields, VLA coordinator; Tim Prange,
Science Olympiad; Ed
Baker, safety coordinator; Larry Smith, vocational bus route; Kathy
Miller, mid-day bus
route; Tim Thoren, preschool EMIS; Lori Warden, Study Island; Jeff
Beaver, head custodian;
Becky Bradford, head
cook; Beth Bay, winter
ﬁtness; Jenna Meeks,
extended days for vocational agriculture.
Dock days were
approved for Hazel
Knotts and Audra
Wilkinson.
The board approved
two SLO committee
— elementary and secondary — consisting
of seven members each
to review and evaluate
SLOs (student learning
objectives).
The board approved
a resolution to waive
competitive bidding and
authorize a contract
with Dynamix Energy
Services LLC for
mechanical upgrades to
the elementary school
chiller and installation
of energy controls in the
elementary school/integration with the high
school energy controls.
The board approved the
resolution, designating
it an “urgent necessity.”
In other business, the
board:
Approved the continued agreement
with Management
Council-Ohio Education
Computer Network for
limited information processing services.
See BOARD | 2

INDEX
Obituary: 2
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
Weather: 10

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

The Eastern football team defeated Southern on Saturday evening in Racine to claim the first “Rivalry on the River” trophy, as well as
their first postseason appearance since 2001. The Rivalry on the River contest — with the slogan voted on by the two high schools —
was presented by Farmers Bank and RPG Management. The traveling trophy will stay with the Eagles throughout the year, before being
presented to the winner of the 2020 game between the two schools. For more on the game, see page 6 of The Daily Sentinel or visit
mydailysentinel.com.

Meigs board recognizes students
Staff Report

ROCKSPRINGS —
The Meigs Local Board
of Education honored
its ﬁrst Students to the
Month for the 2019-20
school year, as well as
approving multiple personnel matters during its
recent meeting.
Students of the Month
recognized at the Oct.
30 meeting were Sky
Green, Bryson McCoy,
Nova Watson, Catherine
Haggy, Ashton Jude, Mya
Smith, Lincoln Thomas,
Morgan White, Colton
Burns, Kiana Boyles,
Ryan McConaha, Payton
Kranyik, Suzy Bickford,
Logan White, Willow
Kuck, Brady Spaun, Jacob
“Jake” Harrison, Kyleigh
Cunningham, Maddalyn
Metheney, Peyton King,
Chloe Wilson and Riley
Runyon.
In personnel matters,
the board accepted the
resignation of Joni Jeffers as a Meigs Primary
School teacher, effective
Jan. 6, 2020, for retirement purposes.
Coaching hires
approved included,
Nathan Becker as varsity wrestling coach;
Craig Knight as middle
school wrestling coach;
Gary Adams, 8th grade
girls basketball; Mitch
Meadows, 7th grade girls
basketball; and Tricia
Adams, volunteer middle
school girls basketball.
Kevin Dunigan was
approved as the boys
basketball junior varsity

Courtesy photo

Meigs Local Students of the Month in attendance at the meeting are pictured with Student
Achievement Liaison Heather Hawley.

coach, rescinding the
previous approval for him
to serve as a volunteer
varsity assistant.
The board accepted
the resignation of Amber
Blackwell as 8th grade
girls basketball coach and
Madison Hendricks as
7th grade girls basketball
coach. The resignations
of Lisa Froehlich and
Elizabeth Massie as 8th
grade class advisors were
accepted.
Julie Randolph, Calyssa
Mayes and Samantha
Smith were approved as
after-school instructors
for Meigs Middle School
under the 21st Century
After-School Program.
Tanisha Dangerﬁeld,
Anna Peterson, Tracy
Erwin and Shannon Korn
were approved as afterschool instructors for
Meigs Elementary School
under the 21st Century
After-School Program.
Jamie Causey was
approved as a personal

assistant for two students
at Meigs Primary School.
Amber McKenzie was
approved as a substitute
teacher as approved by
Athens-Meigs ESC.
The transfer of Tony
Carnahan to the position
of bus driver, retroactive
to Oct. 21 was approved.
The transfer of Thomas
Tucker to the vacant position of head mechanic was
accepted, effective Nov. 4.
Maternity leave
requests were approved
for Mandy McCarthy
and Samantha Carroll.
Approved a two week
extension of FLMA leave
for middle school teacher
John Sharp.
In other business, the
board:
Approved the overnight
ﬁeld trip request for the
8th grade ﬁeld trip to
Gettysburg and Washington D.C. for May 11-13,
2020.
Approved the request
from 21st Century

administrative staff Josie
Russell, Emily Hill, Amy
Cremeans and Chelsea
Barnes to attend the
Rural After School Conference in Beaver Creek,
Colorado in November.
Approved the purchase
of a 2007 Chevy maintenance truck from Main
Street Motors in Rutland.
Approved transfers as
requested.
Accepted the donation
of a refrigerator from
Elliot Appliance in Gallipolis to be placed in the
8th grade teacher lounge.
Approved the ﬁve-year
forecast as presented by
Treasurer/CFO Roy Johnson.
Adopted the new and
revised guidelines and
policies as recommended
by NEOLA.
The next meeting of
the Meigs Local Board of
Education will take place
during the annual Capital
Conference in Columbus
on Monday, Nov. 11.

Eastern board approves agenda items
Staff Report

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Caleb Cole and Erika Fox. Matthew Bledsoe was approved as a
classiﬁed substitute.
REEDSVILLE — The Eastern
Bill Salyer was approved as an
Local Board of Education recently
after school special education tutor.
met, approving several agenda
Jessica Anderson was approved as
items.
an after school tutor/home-bound
In personnel items, the board
accepted the resignation of Ryland instructor. Patreece Beegle was
approved as a substitute homeMichael as a bus driver.
bound instructor.
Supplemental contracts were
In other business, the board,
approved as follows: Deborah KerApproved establishing the stuwood, mentor, quiz bowl coach and
Model United Nations advisor; Todd dent wellness and success funding
Bean, Science Olympiad coordinator. line item, to account for funding
established in House Bill 166.
Certiﬁed substitutes approved
Approved an amendment to the
were as follows: Linzie Causey,

permanent appropriation resolution and certiﬁed additional revenue to the county auditor.
Approved participation in the
Jefferson Health Plan to provide
medical and prescription coverage.
Approved the ﬁrst reading of
new, revised, and updated bylaws
and policies as recommended by
NEOLA.
The next regular meeting of the
Eastern Local Board of Education is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. on
Thursday, Nov. 21 in the Eastern
Elementary Library conference
room.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, November 5, 2019

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.

Bitanga’s
Breakathon
MIDDLEPORT — The
annual Bitanga’s Breakathon will take place
on Nov. 8 and 9 at the
Middleport Church of
Christ Family Life Center.
Friday will include a concert by Jake Dunn &amp; The
Blackbirds at 6 p.m. and a
craft show beginning at 4
p.m. Tickets for the concert are $10. On Saturday,

OBITUARIES
events will begin at 10
a.m. with the Breakathon,
craft show and musical
performances by the
local high school bands.
Admission on Saturday is
free. All proceeds beneﬁt
the Southern, Meigs and
Wahama marching bands.

Straw
available
The Meigs County
Humane Society will
be providing straw for
animal bedding during
the months of November, December, January,
and February. Vouchers
may be picked up at the
Humane Society Thrift

via SR-248, SR-7, and
SR-681. The project is
scheduled for completion
in mid-November, weather permitting.
MIDDLEPORT — Mill
Street “Middleport Hill”
is closed due to a slip
until further notice. Tickets will be issued to those
who drive through the
closed portion of the road.
MEIGS COUNTY —
State Route 124 will close
MEIGS COUNTY —
on Monday, Sept. 9 to
Meigs County Road 3,
allow crews to replace
New Lima Road, will be
a culvert that carries
closed beginning Monthe route over Forked
day, Oct. 28, to allow
Run.The closure will be
county forces to repair a
between the entrance
slip just north of T-369A,
to Forked Run State
McMurray Road. This
Park and Curtis Hollow
closing will be in effect
Road. During the work,
for approximately three
trafﬁc will be detoured
weeks.

Shop, 253 North Second Street, Middleport,
Ohio, for a fee of $2 per
bail. Vouchers are to be
redeemed at Dettwiller
Lumber in Pomeroy. For
more information call
992-6064.

Road closures

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

Thursday,
Nov. 7

OLIVE TWP. — The
Olive Township trustees
will hold their regular
meeting at 6:30 p.m. at
the township garage on
Joppa Road.
CHESTER — Chester
Shade Historical Association is having their
monthly board meeting
at 6:30 p.m., at the court
house. Every one is welcome to attend.
GALLIPOLIS — River
Cities Military Family Support Group bingo fundraiser. Supports Gallia, Meigs
and Mason County veterPOMEROY — The
ans, deployed or stateside.
Meigs County CourtHeld at VFW, 134 Third
house will close at noon
Avenue. Doors open at 5
for Election Day.
p.m. and bingo begins at 6
SYRACUSE — The
p.m. For more information,
Syracuse Community
Center will serve Election email iamaburns@yahoo.
com or call 740-441-7251.
Day lunch beginning at
10:30 a.m. with soups,
ATHENS — Free comnoodles, pulled pork,
munity, faculty and staff
desserts and other items hearing screenings will
available.
take place from 1-3 p.m.

Tuesday,
Nov. 5

in Ohio University’s Grover Center room W174.
For more information call
the Hearing, Speech and
Language Clinic at 740593-1404.

Sunday,
Nov. 10

be closed in observance
of Veterans’ Day. Normal
business hours resume at
8 a.m. on Nov. 12.

Saturday,
Nov. 16

ROCKSPRINGS —
Meigs County Trade Days
MIDDLEPORT — Rev. Craft Bazaar will be held
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in
Kathy Brammer will be
the Rutland Bottle Gas
speaking at Ash Street
Building at the Meigs
Church, Middleport,
County Fairgrounds. For
Ohio, in the 10:30 a.m.
more information contact
and 6:30 p.m. services.
Wendi at 740-416-4015 or
The original ‘Earthen
Vessels’ will be singing in Tara at 740-416-5506.
the 6:30 p.m. service.

Sunday,
Nov. 17

Monday,
Nov. 11
BEDFORD TWP. —
The Bedford Township
trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting
at 7 p.m. at the Bedford
Town Hall.
POMEROY — Meigs
County Health Dept. will

MIDDLEPORT —
Rev. Dennis Karp will be
speaking at Ash Street
Church, Middleport,
Ohio, in the 10:30 a.m.
and 6:30 p.m. services.
‘Anchor Holds’ will be
singing in the 6:30 p.m.
service.

US pulling out of climate deal
By Seth Borenstein

“In international climate
discussions, we will continue to offer a realistic
WASHINGTON — The and pragmatic model —
backed by a record of real
United States has begun
world results — showing
the process of pulling
out of the landmark 2015 innovation and open marParis climate agreement. kets lead to greater prosSecretary of State Mike perity, fewer emissions,
and more secure sources
Pompeo said Monday
of energy,” Pompeo said in
that he submitted a fora statement.
mal notice to the United
Nations. That starts a
The U.S. started the
withdrawal process that
process with a hand-delivdoes not become ofﬁcial
ered letter, becoming the
for a year. His statement
only country to withdraw.
touted America’s carbon
The United Nations will
pollution cuts and called
soon set out procedural
the Paris deal an “unfair
details for what happens
economic burden” to the next, UN deputy spokesU.S. economy.
man Farhan Haq said.
Nearly 200 nations
Agreement rules presigned the climate deal
vented any country from
in which each country
pulling out in the ﬁrst
provides its own goals to three years after the Nov.
curb emissions of heat4, 2016, ratiﬁcation. The
trapping gases that lead
U.S. withdrawal doesn’t
to climate change.
become complete until

AP Science Writer

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)

the day after the 2020
election.
President Donald
Trump has been promising withdrawal for two
years, but Monday was
the ﬁrst time he could
actually do it.
Trump’s decision was
condemned as a reckless
failure of leadership by
environmental experts,
activists and critics such
as former New York City
Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
“Donald Trump is the
worst president in history for our climate and
our clean air and water,”
said Michael Brune, the
executive director of the
Sierra Club. “Long after
Trump is out of ofﬁce his
decision to withdraw the
United States from the
Paris Agreement will be
seen as a historic error.”

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CONTACT US

EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

The agreement set
goals of preventing
another 0.9 degrees to
1.8 degrees of warming
from current levels. Even
the pledges made in 2015
weren’t enough to prevent
those levels of warming.
The deal calls for
nations to come up with
more ambitious pollution cuts every ﬁve years,
starting in November
2020. Because of the
expected withdrawal, the
U.S. role in 2020 negotiations will be reduced,
experts said.
Climate change, largely
caused by the burning
of coal, oil and gas, has
already warmed the world
by 1.8 degrees since the
late 1800s, caused massive melting of ice globally, triggered weather
extremes and changed
ocean chemistry.

‘Walk away’ inmate
recovered Saturday
Staff Report

Telephone: 740-992-2155

REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com

Daily Sentinel

CHESHIRE —
Gallia Sheriff Matt
Champlin reported
that James Raines,
41, who reportedly
walked away from
the Gallia Work

Raines

Release, Friday, was
recovered by law
enforcement as of
4:50 p.m., Saturday.
Raines was held
at the work release
center for a charge
of driving under
suspension.

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com

Board

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

From page 1

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.

Approved the minutes,
bills, ﬁnancial statement,
bank reconciliation statement and all checks for
the month of September
as presented.
Approved the ﬁrst
reading of additions, revi-

sions, or deletions to the
board bylaws and policies
as presented.
Approved revised
appropriations
in the amount of
$13,017,333.58.
The next Southern
Local Board of Education
meeting is scheduled for
6:30 p.m. on Monday,
Nov. 25 in the Kathryn
Hart Community Center.

BETTY GAUL
CHESTER — Betty
Gaul, 82, of Chester,
passed away Saturday,
Nov. 2, 2019, at Meigs
Holzer Emergency
Room in Pomeroy.
Born May 27, 1937,
in Bashan, Ohio, she
was the daughter of the
late Ralph Warden and
Murl Trussel Ours. She
attended the Chester
Nazarene Church and a
1955 graduate of Chester High School.
She is survived by
her husband of 57 years
Richard Gaul; three
sons, Mark (Gwen) of
Long Bottom, David
(Beth) of Amanda, Ohio
and Phillip (Patti) of
Plymouth, Indiana; six
grandchildren Audra
(Buddy) Funk, Jared

(Jamie) Gaul, Morgan
Hall, Garret Hall, Meredith Gaul and Christian
Gaul; two great-grandchildren, Kristlynn Funk
and Wyatt Gaul; one sister-in-law, Gayann and
Ronald Clay; and several
special cousins.
Funeral services will
be held at 2 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2019, at the
Ewing-Schwarzel Funeral
in Pomeroy with Dwight
Umbel ofﬁciating. Burial
will be in the Chester
Cemetery. Visitation
will be held Monday
evening from 6-8 p.m.
at the Ewing-Schwarzel
Funeral Home.
Friends are encouraged to sign the online
guestbook at ewingfuneralhome.net.

GEORGE CLAYTON OLDAKER
HARTFORD —
George Clayton Oldaker,
of Hartford, West Virginia, passed away on
Saturday, November 2,
2019 at his residence.
He was born on May 4,
1958 in Mason, West
Virginia, a son to the
late Otho Oldaker and
Alice Fields.
Clayton was a truck
driver for 32 years.
He is survived by his
wife Cathy Oldaker;
beloved step-mom Jewell
Derrick; son, Joshua
(Mariah) Oldaker; brother, Charles (Martha)

Oldaker; sister, Marie
(Harry) Pettit; half sisters, Doreen Fields, Lisa
Bable, and Sue Bryant;
half brothers, Andrew
ﬁelds and Frank Love.
He is preceded in death
by his father Otho Oldaker and sister Patty Powell.
A graveside service
will be announced at
a later time. Arrangements are under the
direction of the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com

FREDDIE ALESHIRE
DAYTON — Freddie
Aleshire, 69 of Dayton
was born August 20,
1950 in Lundale, Logan
County West Virginia.
Son of the elate Freeman and Fannie Evans
Aleshire. He departed
this life on Thursday,
October 31, 2019 at the
Maria Joseph Nursing
Home in Dayton.
Freddie was a graduate
of Meigs High School in
Pomeroy and lived with
his parents most of his
young adult years. Later
he lived with his brother
Richard and his sister
Diana and then his with
other sister, Janet.
Freddie was always
listening to music. His
favorite was “Country
Roads” by John Denver.
His sister Janet took
him to Church, to ballgames, out to eat and
shared her grandkids
with him. He loved to
watch ballgames. He
loved all the Ohio teams,
especially Ohio State.
He also loved to watch
the American Idol.

In addition to his parents he is preceded in
death by his two older
brothers, Ron and Richard Aleshire.
He is survived by his
four sisters, Patty (Bill)
Abbott, Sissonville,
West Virginia, Janet
Johnson, Dayton, Sandy
(Andy) Wilson, Greenville and Diana Aleshire
of Dayton and a host of
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m., on Tuesday, November 5, 2019 at
the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Pastor Randy
Smith of the Trinity
Congregational Church
ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow in the Rocksprings
Cemetery, where Freddie
will be buried next to his
mom and dad. Visitation
will be held one our prior
to the service.
Family and friends
will serve as the pallbearers
Till we meet again,
dear brother! You will
be missed by all.

DEATH NOTICES
SCHWARZ
MASON, W.Va. — Dorothy Irene (Fischer)
Schwarz, 89, of Mason, W.Va., died Sunday,
November 3, 2019, at her home following an
extended illness.
Graveside service will be 1 p.m., Wednesday,
November 6, 2019 at Kirkland Memorial Gardens,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., with Pastor Donnie Dye
ofﬁciating. A procession to the cemetery will leave
Foglesong Funeral Home at 12:30 pm.
BOLES
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Rodger L. Boles,
69, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Saturday,
November 2, 2019 at home.
A funeral service will be 1 p.m., Tuesday,
November 5, 2019, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant, with Pastor Joe Johnson ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at Kirkland Memorial
Gardens in Point Pleasant. The family will receive
friends one hour prior to the funeral service Tuesday at the funeral home.

Missing teen found
Staff Report

been reunited
with her family
Haeden Kinder,
GALLIA
15, was declared,
COUNTY — The
around 1 p.m. via
Gallia County
an announcement
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
on the sheriff’s
stated Sunday
Kinder
ofﬁce Facebook
that a juvenile
page, as being
who was reportfound after being reported as missing from her
ed as missing around 4
residence in Morgan
p.m., Friday.
Township, Friday, has

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 5, 2019 3

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL HONOR ROLL

Sophie Carson | Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel via AP

Mahud Villalaz, 42, of Milwaukee gestures to the second-degree burns on his face at a news conference Saturday, one day after a
man threw acid at him outside a restaurant on Milwaukee’s south side. He is joined by, from left, state Rep. JoCasta Zamarripa, his
sister, and Forward Latino leader Darryl Morin.

Hispanic man attacked with acid
By Ivan Moreno

accused him of being in
the U.S. illegally. Villalaz,
42, is a U.S. citizen who
MILWAUKEE — Mil- immigrated from Peru.
The attack comes
waukee police arrested a
man suspected of throw- amid a spike in hate
crimes directed at immiing battery acid on a
grants that researchers
Hispanic man who says
and experts on extremhis attacker asked him,
“Why did you come here ism say is tied to mainand invade my country?” stream political rhetoric.
At a news conference
Police said Monday
Monday, Milwaukee
they arrested a 61-yearold white man suspected Mayor Tom Barrett
expressed shock at
in Friday night’s attack,
the attack and blamed
but they have not
released his name. Police President Donald Trump
for inciting hatred
said they are investigatagainst minorities. The
ing the case as a hate
president has repeatcrime and charges are
edly referred to migrants
expected Tuesday.
attempting to cross the
Mahud Villalaz sufU.S.-Mexico border as
fered second-degree
an “invasion.”
burns to his face. He
“To single out somesaid the attack happened
one because they’re
after a man confronted
from a Hispanic origin
him about how he had
is simply wrong. And we
parked his car and

Associated Press

know what’s happening,”
Barrett, a Democrat,
said. “Everybody knows
what’s happening. It’s
because the president
is talking about it on a
daily basis that people
feel they have license to
go after Hispanic people.
And it’s wrong.”
The White House did
not immediately comment.
A report issued
last year by the AntiDefamation League said
extreme anti-immigrant
views have become part
of the political mainstream in recent years
through sharp rhetoric
by anti-immigration
groups and politicians,
including Trump.
Surveillance video
shows the confrontation
but does not include
audio.

Villalaz told reporters
on Saturday that he was
headed into a Mexican
restaurant for dinner
when a man approached
him and told him, “You
cannot park here. You are
doing something illegal.”
He said the man also
accused him of being in
the U.S. illegally and of
invading the country.
He said he ignored
the man and moved his
truck to another block.
But when he returned to
the restaurant, the man
was waiting for him with
an open bottle, Villalaz
said.
The man again
accused him of being in
the U.S. illegally, Villalaz
said. He then told the
man that he was a citizen and that “everybody
came from somewhere
else here,” Villalaz said.

Diplomat lays out campaign to oust her
WASHINGTON
(AP) — It started with
a warning to watch her
back, that people were
“looking to hurt” her.
From there, former U.S.
Ambassador to Ukraine
Marie Yovanovitch
told House investigators, it escalated into
a chilling campaign to
ﬁre her as President
Donald Trump and his
allies angled in Eastern
Europe for political
advantage at home.
Testimony from
Yovanovitch, released
Monday, offered a ﬁrst
word-for-word look at
the closed-door House
impeachment hearings.
Inside, Democrats and
Republicans are waging
a pitched battle over
what to make of Trump’s
efforts to get Ukraine’s
leaders to investigate
political rival Joe Biden,
Biden’s son and Democratic activities in the
2016 election.

J. Scott Applewhite | AP file

Former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch is quoted
in a transcript from the House impeachment panels as saying
that Ukrainian officials warned her in advance that Rudy Giuliani
and his allies were planning to “do things, including to me.”

The transcript came
out on the same day
that four Trump administration ofﬁcials deﬁed
subpoenas to testify,
acting on orders from
a White House that is
ﬁghting the impeachment investigation with
all its might. Among
those refusing to testify: John Eisenberg,
the lead lawyer at

the National Security
Council and, by some
accounts, the man who
ordered a rough transcript of Trump’s phone
call with Ukraine’s leader moved to a highly
restricted computer
system.
During nine hours of
sometimes emotional
testimony, Yovanovitch
detailed efforts led by

Rudy Giuliani and other
Trump allies to push
her out of her post. The
career diplomat, who
was recalled from her
job in May on Trump’s
orders, testiﬁed that a
senior Ukrainian ofﬁcial
told her that “I really
needed to watch my
back.”
While the major thrust
of Yovanovitch’s testimony was revealed in her
opening statement, Monday’s 317-page transcript
provided new details.
Yovanovitch offered
signiﬁcant threads of
information including the possibility that
Trump was directly
involved in a phone
call with Giuliani, the
president’s personal lawyer, and the Ukrainians
dating back to January
2018. And she pushed
back on Republican
suggestions that she
harbored opposition to
Trump.

Court: Trump tax returns can be turned over
NEW YORK (AP)
— President Donald
Trump’s tax returns can
be turned over to New
York prosecutors by his
personal accountant,
a federal appeals court
ruled Monday, leaving
the last word to the
Supreme Court
The decision by the
2nd U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals in Manhattan
upholds a lower court
decision in the ongoing ﬁght over Trump’s
ﬁnancial records. Trump
has refused to release his
tax returns since he was
a presidential candidate,
and is the only modern
president who hasn’t
made that ﬁnancial information public.
In a written decision,

three appeals judges said
they only decided whether a state prosecutor can
demand Trump’s personal ﬁnancial records from
a third party while the
president is in ofﬁce.
The appeals court
said it did not consider
whether the president is
immune from indictment
and prosecution while
in ofﬁce or whether the
president himself may be
ordered to produce documents in a state criminal
proceeding.
“We hold that any
presidential immunity
from state criminal process does not bar the
enforcement of such a
subpoena,” 2nd Circuit
Chief Judge Robert A.
Katzmann wrote.

According to the decision, a subpoena seeking Trump’s private tax
returns and ﬁnancial
information relating to
businesses he owns as a
private citizen “do not
implicate, in any way,
the performance of his
ofﬁcial duties.”
“We are not faced, in
this case, with the President’s arrest or imprisonment, or with an order
compelling him to attend
court at a particular time
or place, or, indeed, with
an order that compels
the President himself to
do anything,” the 2nd
Circuit said. “The subpoena at issue is directed
not to the President, but
to his accountants; compliance does not require

the President to do anything at all.”
Several weeks ago,
U.S. District Judge Victor Marrero in Manhattan tossed out Trump’s
lawsuit seeking to block
his accountant from letting a grand jury see his
tax records from 2011.
Manhattan District
Attorney Cyrus R.
Vance Jr. sought the
records in a broader
probe that includes payments made to buy the
silence of two women,
porn star Stormy Daniels and model Karen
McDougal, who claim
they had affairs with
the president before the
2016 presidential election. Trump has denied
them.

Meigs High School recently announced its Honor
Roll for the ﬁrst nine weeks of the 2019-20 school
year.
Freshmen: Matthew Barr, Brittany Bass, Jack
Braley, Mary Caruthers, Austin Chapell, Brady Collins, Presleigh Colwell, Katy Cox, Emily Davidson,
Ezequiel Diaz, Corey Dotson, Lily Dugan, Conner
Ervin, Logan Eskew, Brennen Gheen, Catherine
Haggy, Hannah Hart, Skylin Haye, Audrey Hysell,
Charlotte Hysell, Nathan Hysell, Riley Lanham,
Melinda Lawson, Rylee Lisle, Owen McClure, Kymber Mitch, John Musser, Salem Napper, Sara Nitz,
Aaliyah Ogdin, Caleb Ogdin, Gunnar Peavley, Edena
Reynolds, MaKayla Runyon, Kelly Schartiger, Rece
Sigman, Ethan Stewart, Dylan Tillis, Emily Young,
Jaela Young.
Sophomore: Amara Barrett, Georgia Brown, Caleb
Burnem, Kelly Burns, Stephon Chapell, Coulter Cleland, Shelbe Cochran, Jewels Conley, Kenneth Cooke,
Cameron Davis, Emilee Davis, Reece Dearth, Donald
Denney, Andrew Dodson, Bostic Eason, Samantha
Eblin, Jaret Fackler, Mycah Farley, Logan Fink, Jadyn
Floyd, Gretchen Frontz, Jenna Gilmore, Jasmine
Goss, Samantha Haggy, Mallory Hawley, Garrett
Howard, Nathaniel Hysell, Corbin Martin, Alexis
Medley, Christopher Miles, Layla Milliron, Doris Morgan, Jacob Musser, Dakota Nicholson, Alexis O’Brien,
Adam Pierce, Morgan Roberts, Aaliyah Robinson,
Chloe Runyon, Morgan Smith, Layne Stanley, Kylan
Stone, Tamra Timmons, Cadence Vance, Donald
Vaughan, Josie Ward, Matthew Will, Kadynce Wolfe,
Jessica Workman.
Junior: Marissa Allen, Nicholas Bolin, Payton
Brown, Marjorie Chapman, Shayna Connolly, Breanna
Cundiff, Rebecca Cundiff, Jocelyn Cunningham, Valerie Darnell, Hannah Durst, Alex Eblin, Elizabeth Fackler, Zara Gilland, Olivia Goble, Olivia Haggy, Noah
Kimes, Kara Klein, Sylvia Klein, Nicholas McConnell,
Annika McKinney, Kylee Mitch, Alexandria Ogdin,
Blake Pitchford, Nathan Pooler, Emma Powell, Destiny Ramsey, Ethan Reitmire, MacKenzie Runyon,
Alexa Russell, Will Sargent, Madeline Shope, Joshua
Smith, Brycen Smith, Katlyn Smith, Tresiliana Smith,
Evan Tolliver, Audrey Tracy, Baylee Tracy, Hunter
Wood.
Senior: Brian Ackley, Landon Acree, Adam Arnott,
Weston Baer, Halley Barnette, Taylor Bass, Bethany
Bickford, Adam Billingsley, Katilyn Brinker, Karington Brinker, Corbyn Broderick, Cameron Burnem,
Cody Burns, Austin Carnahan, Tyler Collins, Warren
Combs, Rebecca Council, Cory Cox, Zachary Dailey,
Katie Dailey, Caitlynn DeLaCruz, Brayden Ervin,
Matthew Gilkey, Brittany Gilmore, Drake Hall, Valerie
Hamm, Maci Hood, Aleya Huffman, Damion Hysell,
Autumn Jones, Dawson Justice, Augustus Kennedy,
Michael Kesterson, Christian Klein, Madison Klein,
Trinity Laudermilt, Austin Mahr, Madison Mankin,
Dawson McClure, Jacob McConnell, Annie McGrath,
Kristi McKnight, Robert Musser, Emily Myers, Gracie
Parker, Alyssa Parsons, Alexandria Pierce, Sophie
Quillen, Mikayla Radcliffe, Josephine Ryder, Johnathon Salser, Haley Smith, Tucker Smith, Chonslyn
Spaun, Easter Swain, Bailey Swatzel, Christopher
Ward, Ethan Watson, Zachary Williams, Tamara Willis, Rochell Wolfe, Jacob Wolfe, Breanna Zirkle.
Submitted by Meigs Local School District.

IN BRIEF

Airbnb will
give records

ly applied misdemeanor
sentences for simple drug
possession and low-level
property crimes that state
voters approved in 2016.
HONOLULU (AP) —
Stitt has made reducing
Airbnb Inc. has agreed
Oklahoma’s highest-into provide Hawaii with
the-nation incarceration
records of many of its
rate one of his top priisland hosts as the state
tries to track down vaca- orities and has appointed
tion rental operators who reform-minded members
haven’t been paying their to the state’s Pardon and
Parole Board.
taxes.
Releasing the inmates
Airbnb and the state
will save Oklahoma an
Department of Taxation
estimated $11.9 million
reached the agreement
over the cost of continulast week after negotiating the scope of a subpoe- ing to keep them behind
bars, according to the
na sought by the state.
First Circuit Court Judge governor’s ofﬁce.
Bert Ayabe approved the
agreement. He’s also due
to evaluate the state’s
claim that there are a signiﬁcant number of hosts
who haven’t been paying
NEW YORK (AP) —
their taxes. A hearing
An advice columnist who
before Ayabe has been
says President Donald
scheduled for Wednesday. Trump raped her in a
The state needs the
department store dresscourt’s permission to
ing room in the 1990s
serve the subpoena
sued him Monday for
because its investigation
calling her a liar he had
targets a group of taxpay- never even met.
ers and not speciﬁc indiE. Jean Carroll’s lawviduals.
suit, ﬁled Monday in
New York, says Trump
“smeared her integrity,
honesty and dignity —
all in the national press”
when he responded to her
allegations, ﬁrst broached
OKLAHOMA CITY
in New York magazine
(AP) — More than 450
this past June as Carroll
inmates walked out the
prepared to release a
doors of prisons across
Oklahoma on Monday as book.
“Nobody is entitled
part of what state ofﬁcials
to conceal acts of sexual
say is the largest singleday mass commutation in assault behind a wall of
defamatory falsehoods
U.S. history.
The release of inmates, and deﬂections,” Carroll’s
lawyer Roberta Kaplan
all with convictions for
wrote in the suit.
low-level drug and propThe lawsuit seeks
erty crimes, resulted
from a bill signed by new unspeciﬁed damages and
a retraction of Trump’s
Republican Gov. Kevin
Stitt. The bill retroactive- statements.

Columnist
sues Trump

450 inmates
released

�NEWS

4 Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Halloween Fun

Courtesy photos

Jenna and Kate Hill are pictured in front of Wolfe Mountain Entertainment in Pomeroy.

Aubree Bixler poses for a picture at Isabella Nelson, age 5 months, at her first Trick or Treat in
Pomeroy’s Treat Street.
Tuppers Plains.

Clara Pickens as a Ladybug and her big brother Andrew Pickens as
Rubble at Pomeroy’s Treat Street.

Courtlynn Krautter, age 8, is ready to Trick or Treat.

Jase Bable, age 6, as Woody for Trick or Treat.

Kartyr Taylor, age 18 months, was dressed as Buzz Lightyear for Josalyn Lavender and Abigail Patterson are ready for Trick or Treat.
Treat Street.

Avery Hill was dressed as a witch to go trick-or-treating.

Lydia (age 3 years) and Brooke (age 20 months) Butcher are ready
for Trick or Treat in Tuppers Plains.

The Collins siblings, Shadyn, age 4, Caleb, age 3, and Aaliyah, age 7, Jaiva, Jazlyn, and Elizabeth Demarco trick-or-treating in Rutland.
are ready for Pomeroy’s Treat Street.

�Daily Sentinel

NEWS

Tuesday, November 5, 2019 5

Halloween Fun in Racine
RACINE — Trick or Treat, a party at
the ﬁre station and a costume contest
were among the activities in Racine for
Halloween.
RACO Halloween Costume Contest
winners were as follows: Age 0-6, Alia
Cooper, ﬁrst place as an old lady; Dalis
Sellers, second place as Willie Nelson;
Hazel Coppick, tird place as a chicken;
Age 7-12, Miyah Pickett, ﬁrst place as a

scarecrow; Gavin Proﬁtt, second place
as an Indian; Kallie Roush, Kiersten
and Kianna Rose, third place as the
Sanderson Sisters from Hocus Pocus;
Age 13-adult, Samantha Michael and
Shelly Pavich, ﬁrst place as hospital
patients; Alexis Waugh, second place as
a Christmas tree; and Logan Browning,
third place as Bob Ross. Winners were
presented cash prizes by RACO.

Photos courtesy of RACO and Jen Holt-Hill

�S ports
6 Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Marshall rolls past Rice, 20-7
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Marshall quarterback Isaiah Green (17) releases a pass downfield to Armani
Levias (15) during the second half of an Oct. 26 contest against Western
Kentucky at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington, W.Va.

HOUSTON, Texas — No
late-game heroics needed this
week.
The Marshall football team
scored 17 unanswered points
through the middle quarters
and ultimately captured the
program’s fourth straight win
on Saturday with a 20-7 decision over host Rice in a Conference USA matchup at Rice
Stadium.
The Thundering Herd (6-3,
4-1 CUSA East) built a 3-0
advantage after one quarter
of play, but the Owls (0-9, 0-5
CUSA West) countered with
their only points less than ﬁve
minutes into the second frame

— giving the hosts their only
lead at 7-3.
The guests needed less than
a minute to recapture the lead
for good as the Green and
White produced back-to-back
touchdowns before halftime,
allowing MU to secure a 17-7
edge entering the break.
Marshall tacked on a late
third quarter ﬁeld goal to
increase its cushion out to 13
points, then both teams simply
traded possessions the rest of
the way — allowing the Herd
to wrap up the 20-7 triumph.
Neither team committed a
turnover in the contest, which
remained scoreless through
most of the opening period.
Marshall, however, drew ﬁrst
blood as Justin Rohrwasser

capped a 9-play, 67-yard drive
with a 22-yard ﬁeld goal, giving
the guests a 3-0 edge with 1:08
left in the ﬁrst quarter.
RU countered with an
11-play, 66-yard drive that
resulted in a 7-3 advantage as
Austin Trammell hauled in a
2-yard pass from JoVone Johnson with 10:20 left in the ﬁrst
half.
Marshall retaliated with a
quick strike as the guests needed only two plays to cover 64
yards while retaking the lead.
Xavier Gaines hauled in a
63-yard pass from Isaiah Green
on the ﬁrst play of the drive,
then Brenden Knox plunged
in from a yard out with 9:33

See MARSHALL | 7

Harvick has Cup title
shot after 3rd straight
Texas fall win
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — Kevin Harvick
and the Stewart-Haas Racing team had already
been preparing for NASCAR’s ﬁnale. With another
win at Texas, they now know they will be racing
for a Cup title in two weeks.
Harvick won the fall race at Texas for the third
year in a row Sunday, again securing one of the
championship-contending spots for the Nov. 17
season-ending race at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
“Well, we’ve already been going down the road,”
Harvick said from Victory Lane in Texas. “We’ve
already been to the simulator, we’ve already built
the car, and now we’ve just got to make sure that
we do what we think is right and go with our gut
and see what happens.”
After starting from the pole, Harvick led 119 of
334 laps and paced a 1-2-3 ﬁnish for Stewart-Haas.
He had gotten to Texas ﬁfth in points, below the
cutline for a championship run.
“It’s a scenario that takes a lot of pressure off
next week,” car owner Tony Stewart said. “It does
take that edge off. … It’s big for the organization.”
Harvick led six times in the No. 4 Ford, including the ﬁnal 21 laps and 73 of the last 80, and
ﬁnished 1 1/2 seconds ahead of teammate Aric
Almirola. Daniel Suarez, the Stewart-Haas driver
still unsigned for next season, was third.
With Martin Truex Jr. already locked in for the
ﬁnal four at Homestead, the ﬁnal two spots for the
title run will be determined next week at Phoenix.
At least one driver will get in on points.
“It is going to be a good battle for sure,” said
Logano, the defending Cup champion who
remained in fourth in points after ﬁnishing fourth
in the No. 22 Team Penske Ford at Texas. “We
are deﬁnitely racing for that last spot just in case
someone behind us outside of the top four wins. …
It’s going to be fun.”
Kyle Busch is third in the standings, only two
points ahead of Logano.
“We all know one guy is going to move through
on points and we have to do whatever we have to
do in order to be that guy,” Busch said.
Truex ﬁnished sixth at Texas, a week after
clinching his title chance with a win at Martinsville. Playoff contenders Busch and Ryan Blaney
were seventh and eighth, with Kyle Larson 12th.
The other contenders, Denny Hamlin and Chase
Elliott, had accidents that put them deep in the
ﬁeld.
Hamlin’s 28th-place ﬁnish, six laps behind
Harvick, dropped him from second to ﬁfth in the
standings. He is 20 points behind Logano, and
only three ahead of both Larson and Blaney. Elliott
is 78 points outside the ﬁnal four.
Harvick’s fourth win this year was the 49th of
his career, matching Stewart for 14th on NASCAR’s career list. Harvick’s only championship in
his 19 Cup seasons came after a win in the ﬁnale
See HARVICK | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Nov. 5
Volleyball
Point Pleasant at Sissonville HS, TBA
Wahama at Ravenswood HS, TBA

Tolsia at Hannan, 7
p.m.
Wahama at Buffalo,
7:30
Point Pleasant at
James Monroe, 7:30

Wednesday, Nov. 6
College Football
Miami at Ohio, 8
p.m.

Saturday, Nov. 9
Football
(6) Gallia Academy
at (3) Waverly, 7 p.m.
(7) Eastern at (2)
Newark Catholic, 7
p.m.

Friday, Nov. 8
Football

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eagles’ Nick Little (56) and Jake Barber sack SHS quarterback Gage Shuler (1) during Eastern’s 63-6 victory on Saturday in Racine, Ohio.

Eagles soar past Southern, 63-6
Eastern clinches
first postseason
spot since 2001

By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE, Ohio — A
rivalry rout and a return
to the postseason.
The Eastern football
secured its third playoff
appearance in school history and its ﬁrst since
2001 on Saturday at
Roger Lee Adams Memorial Field, as the Eagles
rolled to a 63-6 victory
over rival Southern in TriValley Conference Hocking Division action.
Eastern (8-2, 6-2 TVC
Hocking) — winning in
Racine for the ﬁrst time
since 2011 — scored
on just the second play
from scrimmage, with a
55-yard touchdown run
by junior Blake Newland,
his ﬁrst of four trips to
the end zone. Mason Dishong made his ﬁrst of six
consecutive extra-point
kicks to give EHS a 7-0
lead 47 seconds into play.
Southern (5-5, 4-4)
turned the ball over on
its ﬁrst possession of the
game, with EHS junior
Steve Fitzgerald picking
off a pass and returning
it to the Tornado 38. Five
plays later, Eastern was
ahead 14-0 on a nine-yard
touchdown run by Blake
Newland at the 7:47 mark
of the ﬁrst quarter.
The Tornadoes made
it as far as the Eagle 13
on the ensuing drive, but
were backed up 19 yards
by a penalty and a sack,

SHS senior Gage Barrett hauls in a touchdown reception with 10
seconds left in the first half of Saturday’s TVC Hocking bout at
Roger Lee Adams Memorial Field in Racine, Ohio.

giving the ball back to
Eastern at the 32.
Eastern covered the 68
yards in seven consecutive run plays, and the
Eagles were ahead 21-0
with 27 seconds left in
the ﬁrst, with Fitzgerald
ﬁnding the end zone for
the ﬁrst of four times on a
four-yard run.
After forcing a threeand-out, Eastern went 34
yards in ﬁve plays, and
stretched its edge to 28-0
with a three-yard scoring
run by Fitzgerald with
7:06 left in the half.
A second straight threeand-out by the Eagle
defense gave the guests
possession at their own
44. Five plays later, Eastern settled for a 32-yard
ﬁeld goal by Dishong,

making the margin 31-0
with 6:31 left in the half.
EHS sophomore
Brayden Smith intercepted an SHS pass
at the Eagle 41 on the
hosts’ next drive. Eastern
converted a pair of third
down tries before Blake
Newland broke a 19-yard
touchdown run, giving
EHS a 38-0 lead with 1:04
until halftime.
Southern picked up a
trio of ﬁrst downs before
senior Gage Shuler tossed
a 19-yard touchdown pass
to classmate Gage Barrett, ending the shut out
bid with 10 seconds left
in the half.
After stopping the
two-point conversion try,
Eastern recovered an onside kick attempt at the

SHS 49. A screen pass
from Conner Ridenour
to Blake Newland on the
next play gave EHS a 45-6
halftime edge.
The Eagles went up
51-6 5:21 into the second
half, with Fitzgerald scoring on a 19-yard run. The
EHS defense forced its
second straight three-andout in the third quarter,
and then Fitzgerald found
paydirt on a 25-yard run
with 1:40 left in the third,
giving EHS a 57-6 lead.
Southern fumbled the
ball away three plays into
the fourth quarter, and
Eastern went 73 yards
in six plays, with Colton
Combs scoring the game’s
ﬁnal touchdown on a
four-yard run.
In the 63-6 win, Eastern claimed a 531-to137 advantage in total
offense, including a 468to-50 clip on the ground.
The Eagles earned a
24-to-8 edge in ﬁrst
downs and won the turnover battle by a 3-0 tally.
EHS was penalized four
times for 45 yards, while
SHS was sent back three
times for 30 yards.
Blake Newland ﬁnished
with a 196 yards and three
touchdowns on 13 carries,
to go with one 49-yard
touchdown reception.
Fitzgerald toted the ball
21 times for 177 yards and
four scores, Combs had
73 yards and a touchdown
on ﬁve carries, while Ryan
Ross ran three times for a
total of 25 yards.
Ridenour was 3-of-5
passing for 63 yards in
the win, with Dishong
See EAGLES | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Eagles
From page 6

catching a team-best two
passes for 14 yards.
For the Purple and
Gold, Shuler completed
6-of-14 pass attempts 61
yards, Barrett completed
1-of-2 tries for 27 yards,
and Andy Doczi completed 1-of-2 attempts for
minus-1 yard.
Barrett caught a gamebest three passes for 16
yards, Chase Bailey had
two catches for 37 yards,
while Shuler, Will Wickline and Jonah Diddle
caught a pass apiece for
27, eight, and minus-1
respectively.
Trey McNickle led the
hosts on the ground with
45 yards on three carries,
followed by Josh Tanksley
with 13 yards on four
totes, and Diddle with six
yards on two tries.
Following the 57-point
win, sixth-year EHS head
coach Pat Newland talked
about the team’s mentality coming into this ‘win
and you’re in’ game.
“These young men,
they’ve really been practicing well,” Coach Newland said. “On Thursday
we were going to practice
inside, but it stopped raining, and I told them ‘we
have to work on doubleteams and kick-out blocks,
we have to go outside’,
and they agreed, ‘yeah
we do’, and they snapped
right to it. That’s the way
these guys have been all
year, and I think we’re
peaking at the right time.
“I can’t say enough
about these guys, there’s
no complaining or anything like that. They want
the team to do well, they
don’t care who gets the
carries. Steve (Fitzgerald) made it over 1,000
all-purpose yards for
the season tonight, and
the offensive line was
just so happy, the whole
team was elated. This is
a team, you know, not a
group of individuals, this
is a team.”
Coach Newland also
noted that the stepping
stones to get back to the
postseason were laid by
the players who’ve come

Tuesday, November 5, 2019 7

Broncos kick Browns while they’re down

through the program.
“It’s been a grind,
it’s been a lot of work,”
Newland said. “All the
past players that didn’t
get this, they built the
foundation for this.
These guys are a team,
and I think that started
about six years ago with
those guys. We’ve been
a team, the players have
played together for all
those years, and to see it
ﬁnally come through for
these boys to get to the
playoffs, I’m so happy for
them. I’m about ready
to cry right now I’m so
happy for them.”
For Southern, head
coach Cassady Willford
noted that he will miss
his departing seniors,
but is hopeful that new
leaders will emerge this
offseason.
“They’re a great group
of young men,” Willford
said of his senior class.
“Moving forward I hope
they can take some of
the life lessons that were
learned from our coaching
staff and from this game,
and really apply them and
use them in their everyday life. Hard work, being
respectful, and really
doing the little things in
life, hopefully they realize how important those
things are. They are a
great group of kids and
I’m excited to watch them
on the hardwood this winter, and on the baseball
diamond this spring.
“We’re going to move
forward with the program, and hopefully these
young guys step up and
have a good offseason.
They need to have their
own identity and kind of
let the past roll. We need
leadership, it’s something
we’re lacking right now.
We need young guys to
step up and really lead
us this offseason in the
weight room, lead us
moving into next season
and lead us moving forward. A huge thing for us
is leadership, and we really need that right now.”
The Eagles’ ofﬁcial
postseason destination
will be announced by the
OHSAA on Sunday.

DENVER (AP) —
Odell Beckham Jr. is ﬁt
to be tied — over a controversy with his cleats
and with his faltering
team.
The Cleveland Browns
receiver was told by
the league to change
his shoes at halftime of
a 24-19 loss to Denver
on Sunday. That didn’t
sit well with Beckham
or fellow receiver Jarvis
Landry, who also was
informed his cleats
didn’t conform with the
dress code and needed
to be changed.
It almost felt like a case
of style over substance
for a Browns team heading in the wrong direction. Cleveland dropped
to 2-6 with a loss to a
reeling Broncos team
featuring a quarterback,
Brandon Allen, making
his ﬁrst career start.
The aftermath: Coach
Freddie Kitchens is on
the hot seat. Quarterback Baker Mayﬁeld
can’t seem to get the
offense on the same page
(one touchdown against
Denver in ﬁve trips to
the red zone). Safety
Jermaine Whitehead
sent threatening posts
on Twitter following
the loss that led to the
team condemning his
behavior in a statement.
Star receiver Beckham
was frustrated after a

late fourth-down pass
didn’t come his way and
was overheard expressing that frustration as he
walked off the ﬁeld.
“It was a tough loss,”
Beckham repeated over
and over when asked
about it later.
Asked if the Browns
were headed in the right
direction, Beckham said
to check back later.
“Once we put a complete game together, you
can come back and ask
me,” said Beckham, who
had ﬁve catches for 87
yards. “We’ll see. It’s just
tough. When you don’t
play a complete game
and (have) stuff left on
the ﬁeld, or plays left
on the table, it’s hard to
beat any team.”
That said, Beckham
hasn’t written off the
season.
“Win the division. See
what happens. Finish
the season 10-6. That’s
all you can do,” said
Beckham, whose team
is mired in a four-game
skid. “Just keep going,
see what happens. That’s
all you can really do.”
Mayﬁeld feels a similar
way. He threw for 272
yards and one TD, but he
couldn’t convert a fourthand-short on a QB sneak
at the Broncos 5 with
5:23 left in the third.
“Singular focus on the
next week ahead,” May-

Marshall

— converted a 49-yard
ﬁeld goal with 2:47
remaining in the third to
wrap up the scoring.
From page 6
Marshall claimed an
remaining for a 10-7 edge. 18-16 edge in ﬁrst downs
and also outgained the
Rice was forced to
hosts by a 391-231 overpunt on its ensuing
all margin in total yards
drive, then the Herd
of offense. The Owls did
strung together a
produce six more rush13-play, 95-yard drive
ing yards (128-122) in
that ended with a
19-yard touchdown pass the setback.
Knox accounted for
from Green to Talik
130 rushing yards on 27
Keaton — making it a
17-3 contest with 28 sec- carries, while Sheldon
onds left in the ﬁrst half. Evans added 17 yards on
four attempts.
Rohrwasser — who
Green completed
also had a ﬁeld goal
17-of-22 passes for 269
attempt blocked on the
opening drive of the game yards, including one

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

ﬁeld said. “Look at the
ﬁlm, see what happened.
Obviously not getting
touchdowns in the red
zone is the biggest problem.”
Kitchens called the
loss “disappointing” and
added, “we just didn’t
make enough plays to
win the game.” As for his
job security, he said he
doesn’t give it a thought.
Whitehead posted
threatening comments
toward fans on Twitter.
A few hours after the
game, the Browns issued
a statement.
“Jermaine Whitehead’s
social media posts following today’s game were
totally unacceptable and
highly inappropriate,”
the statement read. “We
immediately spoke with
Jermaine upon learning of these comments.
The Browns in no way
condone that type of language or behavior. This
matter will be further
addressed internally.”
At his locker after the
game, Beckham talked
almost as much about
his footwear choice as
his feats on the ﬁeld.
At issue were a pair
of clown-themed Nike
cleats. He said he wore
them for comfort, but
they didn’t match the
Browns’ deep orange and
brown color scheme.
So he switched to a

dark pair that had “OBJ”
stitched in white lettering on the side. He
wasn’t the only one to
draw the league’s attention, with Landry being
told to change his gold
ones featuring orange
laces. He went to a
brighter orange pair.
Still, Landry didn’t
understand.
“You see guys wear
highlighted green cleats
not playing for the
Seahawks, that don’t
have highlighter in their
jersey at all — and they
still wear the cleats,”
said Landry, who caught
a 9-yard TD pass with
10:47 remaining. “Again,
out of my control, those
things. I switched cleats
and tried to go back out
there and win a game.”
Same with Beckham.
But he did wonder if the
cleat controversy had
everything to do with
him (Beckham caused
a stir earlier this season
by wearing a nearly
$200,000 watch that the
NFL told Beckham not
to wear again).
“I’ve seen people wearing cleats that are a completely different color
from their team and they
can wear them all game,
on a prime-time game,”
Beckham said. “For
some reason, when it
comes to me, it’s just not
the case.”

touchdown. Levias led
the guests with seven
catches for 96 yards and
Gaines added 74 yards
on two grabs.
Nazeeh Johnson,
Tavante Beckett and
Omari Cobb paced the
Herd defense with nine
tackles apiece. Koby
Cumberlander, Jamare
Edwards and Darius
Hodge recorded a sack
apiece for the victors.
Juma Otoviano paced
Rice with 66 rushing
yards on 14 carries and
Johnson added 65 yards
on 13 attempts. Johnson completed 10-of-17
passes for 97 yards and

a score. Trammell led
the wideouts with four
catches for 35 yards.
Antonio Montero led
the Owls with a gamehigh 11 tackles and
Adrian Bickham blocked
Rohrwasser’s 28-yard
ﬁrst quarter ﬁeld goal try.
RU also recorded three
sacks in the setbacks.
The Thundering Herd
now have a bye week
before returning to Conference USA action on
Friday, Nov. 15 when
they host Louisiana Tech
at 7 p.m.

TUESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

Harvick
From page 6

at Miami ﬁve years ago.
“I think every year is
different. For me, I would
tell you that I don’t think
we’ve run as well as we
probably wanted to run
week in and week out
compared to the things
that we expect,” Harvick
said. “But this particular
year has been neat for
me to sit back and watch
the evolution of how we
progressed with the race
cars, how the conversations have progressed,
how my theories and
things I think are right
and wrong have changed.”
Hamlin got loose coming out the fourth turn on
the 81st lap and slid off
the track and through the
inﬁeld. The No. 11 Joe
Gibbs Racing Toyota was
damaged after slamming
hard across the grass and
over asphalt.

Elliott said.
Elliott was the runnerup at Kansas last month
but ﬁnished 36th at Martinsville last week after a
mechanical failure. There
was also his last-place
ﬁnish among 38 cars at
Dover, where his engine
gave out after only eight
laps.

Flashback at front
Seven-time Cup champion Jimmie Johnson has
gone a career-long 93
races without winning,
but he led nearly half of
the second stage at Texas.
Johnson led 40 laps in
the second 85-lap segment
at Texas, where he has
won a record seven times.
His last win there came
in the 2017 spring race,
about two months before
his last Cup win at Dover.
His only pole this season was at Texas in the
spring race seven months
ago, when he led 60 laps.
He had led only 27 total
laps in the 26 races since
then before Sunday.
Just a few laps after the
Contending with trouble
Elliott was in the eighth race resumed following
the second stage, while
and ﬁnal playoff spot
coming into the race, and still in the top three,
stayed there after getting Johnson got loose and
into trouble early. He will couldn’t keep the No. 48
have to win at Phoenix to Chevrolet off the wall.
The Hendrick team got
get in the ﬁnal four.
him back on the track for
On the ninth lap Sunday, Elliott got loose and a brief time, but the car
had too damage to conslammed hard into the
tinue. He ﬁnished 34th.
wall. After an extended
time on pit road for
repairs, he got back on
Six to none
the track and ﬁnished the
There were six cautions
race. He ﬁnished 22 laps in the ﬁrst stage, but the
behind in 32nd place.
second 85-lap segment
“I made a mistake, got was run without a yellow
loose and crashed. I really ﬂag. There were 11 cauhate that happened,”
tions overall.

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

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

6 PM

6:30

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

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

6 PM

6:30

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

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5
7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
Fortune (N)
Wheel of
Fortune (N)
Columbus

Jeopardy!
(N)
Jeopardy!
(N)
Ent. Tonight
(N)
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy Ent. Tonight
News (N)
News (N)
(N)
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
(N)
News (N)
(N)
Fortune (N)
America
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
Says
News (N)
Theory
Theory
BBC World Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inNews:
Business
depth analysis of current
events. (N)
America
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition (N)

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

The Voice "The Knockouts, This Is Us "The Dinner and New Amsterdam "Good
Part 4" (N)
the Date" (N)
Soldiers" (N)
The Voice "The Knockouts, This Is Us "The Dinner and New Amsterdam "Good
Part 4" (N)
the Date" (N)
Soldiers" (N)
The Little Mermaid Live! A mermaid princess wants to be Emergence "Mile Marker
human. (N)
14" (N)
Finding Your Roots "Black Frontline "In the Age of AI" The promise &amp; perils of AI;
Like Me"
fears about work &amp; privacy to rivalry between the US &amp;
China. (N)
The Little Mermaid Live! A mermaid princess wants to be Emergence "Mile Marker
human. (N)
14" (N)
NCIS: New Orleans
NCIS "Institutionalized" (N) FBI "Outsider" (N)
"Matthew 5:9" (N)
Empire "Stronger Than My Eyewitness News at 10:00
The Resident "Choice
Words" (N)
Rival" (N)
p.m.
Finding Your Roots "Black Frontline "In the Age of AI" The promise &amp; perils of AI;
Like Me"
fears about work &amp; privacy to rivalry between the US &amp;
China. (N)
NCIS "Institutionalized" (N) FBI "Outsider" (N)
NCIS: New Orleans
"Matthew 5:9" (N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Ocean's Eleven (‘01, Cri) Brad Pitt, George Clooney. TV14
Ocean's Twelve (‘04, Act) George Clooney. TVPG
18 (WGN)
NCAA Basketball Sacred Heart University at Providence (L) NCAA Basketball Kennesaw State at Creighton (L)
24 (ROOT) Pirates Ball Pirates (N)
25 (ESPN) SportsC. (N) GameDay
NCAA Basketball Champions Classic Kansas vs. Duke (L) CFP Rank
NCAA Basketball Champions Classic (L)
26 (ESPN2) Daily Wager SportsC. (N) The American Game (N)
NCAA Football Ball State at Western Michigan Site: Waldo Stadium (L)
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (PARMT)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

Kristin's Christmas Past (2013, Family) Will Kemp,
Christmas in the City (2013, Family) Beverly Leech,
(:05) The Christmas Gift
Elizabeth Mitchell, Shiri Appleby. TVPG
Ashanti, John Prescott. TVPG
Michelle Trachtenberg. TVPG
(5:00)
Shrek (‘01,
Toy Story (1995, Animated) Voices of Tim Allen,
Toy Story 2 (1999, Animated) Voices of Tim Allen,
Ani) Mike Myers. TVPG
Don Rickles, Tom Hanks. TVG
Kelsey Grammer, Tom Hanks. TVG
Two and a
Two and a
White House Down (‘13, Act) Jamie Foxx, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Channing Tatum. Ink Master: Grudge Match
A man finds himself protecting the President after being denied the very same job. TV14 "Quitters and Outfitters" (N)
Half Men
Half Men
Loud House Loud House Smarter
Smarter
To Be Announced
Friends
Friends
SVU "Spiraling Down"
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Missing" SVU "Dearly Beloved"
The Purge "Grief Box" (N) Treadstone (N)
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Misery (N)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(5:30)
The Book of Eli Denzel Washington. TV14
Shooter (‘07, Act) Michael Peña, Mark Wahlberg. TVMA
Movie
(5:30)
Ferris Bueller's Day Off (1986, Comedy)
Vegas Vacation (1997, Comedy) Beverly D'Angelo,
(:05)
National
Alan Ruck, Mia Sara, Matthew Broderick. TV14
Randy Quaid, Chevy Chase. TVPG
Lampoon's Vacation TV14
Moonshiners
DaveTurinMine "Chapter 2" DaveTurin "Chapter 3" (N) Bering Sea Gold "Nome Strikes Back" (N)
The First 48 "Bad Love"
The First 48 "Snapshot"
The First 48 "Predator"
The First 48 "Devil in Me/ The First 48 Atlanta "The
Trail of Blood"
Girl Next Door" (N)
Woods Law "On the Loose" Woods Law "Circle of Life" North Woods Law: Uncuffed "Poking the Bear" (N)
Northwest Law
Chicago P.D. "The Price We
Chicago P.D. "Chin Check" Chicago P.D. "Now Is
Chicago P.D. "Thirty
Chicago P.D.
"Conventions"
Always Temporary"
Balloons"
Pay"
Law &amp; Order "Seer"
Law &amp; Order "Kid Pro Quo" Law &amp; Order "House Calls" Law &amp; Order "Sheltered"
Law &amp; Order "Couples"
Chrisley
Chrisley
E! News (N)
Divas "Damage Control"
Divas "The Real Ronda"
Divas "Mountain Mania"
(:25) Griffith "TV or Not TV" A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Ray
(:45) Ray
(:20) Loves Ray "The Skit"
(:55) 2½ Men Two 1/2 Men
Life Below Zero "Passing
Life Below Zero "Weather Life Below Zero "By Any
Life Below Zero "New
Running Wild "Brie Larson
the Torch"
the Storm"
Means" (N)
Horizons" (N)
in the Pearl Islands" (N)
NHL Top 10 NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Boston Bruins at Montréal Canadiens Site: Bell Centre (L)
NHL Hockey Chi./S.J. (L)
Race Hub
NCAA Basketball Wagner at Seton Hall (L)
NCAA Basketball Army vs. Villanova (L)
Hoops Extra
The Curse of Oak Island
The Curse of Oak Island
Drilling Down "Finding
The Curse of Oak Island "The Torch Is Passed" The Oak
"Seismic Matters"
"Lost and Founding"
Answers" (N)
Island team continues the search. (SP) (N)
Wives NJ "Reunion Part 2" The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives (N)
The Real Housewives (N)
Housewives Atlanta
(5:25) Baggage Claim (‘13, Com) Paula Patton. TVPG
(:55) Seriously Funny
Diary of a Mad Black Woman Kimberly Elise. TV14
Home Town
Home Town
Home Town
Fixer to Fabulous (N)
Fixer to Fabulous
(4:05)
Seven Morgan
Journey to the Center of the Earth (‘08, Adventure)
Fantastic 4: Rise of the Silver Surfer (2007, Action)
Freeman. TVMA
Josh Hucherson, Anita Briem, Brendan Fraser. TV14
Chris Evans, Julian McMahon, Jessica Alba. TVPG

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

Real Time With Bill Maher His Dark Materials
400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

The A-Team (2010, Action) Bradley Cooper, Jessica Daniel Sloss: X
Biel, Liam Neeson. Veterans try to clear their names when
the military suspects them of committing a crime. TV14
(:20) Lying and Stealing (2019, Crime Story) Theo James, The Stepford Wives A former executive
(:35) She's Funny That Way A married
Emily Ratajkowski. A talented art thief named Ivan wants uncovers the dark secret behind the
Broadway director solicits a prostitute, who
out of the business when he meets actress Elyse. TVMA
seemingly perfect town of Stepford. TVPG ends up landing a role in his play. TVMA
(:15)
The Patriot (2000, Drama) Heath Ledger, Joely Richardson, Mel Gibson. A
Inside the NFL "2019: Week Desus &amp;
Desus &amp;
9" (N)
Mero Anna Mero Bernie
pacifist is drawn into the American War of Independence in order to protect his son.
TVMA
Kendrick
Sanders

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, November 5, 2019

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

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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OH-70149531

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(740) 992-2155 or fax to (740) 992-2157

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HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

Amy Carter

amycarter@markporterauto.com

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

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

Product Specialist
�� ���� �������!�������������� ��
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Daily Sentinel

The Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A. as Trustee
for Specialty Underwriting and Residential Finance Trust Mortgage Loan Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2005-BC1
Plaintiff,
vs.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
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under an agreement with
the Point Pleasant Register?
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The Daily Sentinel?
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Delivery times is approx. 3 hours daily
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or call 740-446-2342 ext: 2097
STOP BY OUR LOCAL OFFICE FOR
AN APPLICATION:
825 3rd Ave Gallipolis, Oh 45631 or
510 Main St. Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
or 109 West 2nd St. Pomeroy, Oh 45679

Ronnie Johnson, AKA Ronnie Gene Johnson, et al.
Defendants.
Case No. 19-CV-050
Judge Linda R. Warner
LEGAL NOTICE
Ronnie Johnson, AKA Ronnie Gene Johnson, whose last
known address is 407 Walker Alley, Racine, OH 45771, Jane
Doe, Name Unknown, the Unknown Spouse of Ronnie Johnson, AKA Ronnie Gene Johnson (if any), whose last known address is 407 Walker Alley, Racine, OH 45771, will take notice
that on August 22, 2019, The Bank of New York Mellon Trust
Company, N.A. as Trustee for Specialty Underwriting and Residential Finance Trust Mortgage Loan Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2005-BC1 filed its Complaint in the Meigs County
Court of Common Pleas at 100 East 2nd Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769, assigned Case No. 19-CV-050 and styled The Bank of
New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A. as Trustee for Specialty
Underwriting and Residential Finance Trust Mortgage Loan
Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2005-BC1 vs. Ronnie Johnson, AKA Ronnie Gene Johnson, et al. The object of, and demand for relief in, the Complaint is to foreclose the lien of
Plaintiff's mortgage recorded upon the real estate described below and in which Plaintiff alleges that the foregoing defendant
has or claims to have an interest:

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The defendant named above is required to answer the Complaint within twenty-eight (28) days after the last publication of
this legal notice. This legal notice will be published once a week
for three successive weeks.
Angela D. Kirk
Manley Deas Kochalski LLC
P. O. Box 165028
Columbus, OH 43216-5028
614-220-5611
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, November 5, 2019 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Bengals only winless NFL team

Steelers edge Colts 26-24
PITTSBURGH (AP)
— Mike Tomlin sighed
and let out a sentence
that, after 13 years on
the job, surprised the
Pittsburgh Steelers
coach for the sincerity
with which he meant
it. Considering what
his team has endured
during the ﬁrst half of a
wildly uneven season, it
was hard to blame him.
“It’s good to be sitting
at 4-4,” Tomlin said after
the Steelers held on to
beat the Indianapolis
Colts 26-24 on Sunday.
“I never thought I’d hear
myself say that.”
He never thought he’d
have to. But that was
before franchise quarterback Ben Roethlisberger
was lost for the year in
mid-September with
a right elbow injury.
Before backup Mason
Rudolph was knocked

CINCINNATI (AP)
— The Bengals returned
from their bye week with
their overriding questions
answered: How far would
they fall? All the way to
the bottom, it turns out.
The Dolphins’ win over
the Jets on Sunday left
Cincinnati (0-8) the only
winless team in the NFL.
The Bengals are two
losses away from matching the longest losing
streak in franchise history. They’ve switched to
rookie quarterback Ryan
Finley as they ofﬁcially
begin looking ahead to
next year.
“It’s a fresh season,
eight games,” Finley said
Monday.
The next two months
will be allocated to ﬁguring out what they need
to do to give coach Zac
Taylor a ﬁghting chance
in his second season as
head coach. For now,
there’s not much that
can be done about a
porous offensive line and
a defense that’s worst in
the league at stopping the
run.
One intriguing development ahead: A.J. Green
returning from ankle surgery. Green has missed
the ﬁrst eight games after
hurting his left ankle
in training camp. He
practiced on a limited
basis last week and could
return for a game Sunday
against the Ravens (6-2)
at Paul Brown Stadium.
Green put contract discussions on hold while he
recuperated. The Bengals’
best player can become
an unrestricted free
agent after the season
and would like to stay in
Cincinnati if the team is
willing to offer a suitable
deal. He said last week
he’ll be upset if it chooses
instead to keep him for
one more season on a
franchise tag.

kicker,” Steelers defensive end Cam Heyward
said. “We just tried to
get after him, get your
hands up, see if we could
get another one.”
The Steelers had
blocked an extra point
attempt by Vinatieri in
the third quarter. The
47-year-old managed to
get the ball over a sea
of outstretched hands
this time, but the NFL
all-time leading scorer’s
707th career attempt
started left and stayed
left. A week after his
55-yarder in the waning
seconds against Denver
propelled the Colts
(5-3) to their third
straight victory, Vinatieri could only shrug
his shoulders after
missing his ﬁfth of the
season in 17 attempts,
his most in any season
since 2012.

unconscious against
Baltimore. Before a 1-4
start that had the Steelers on the brink of irrelevance.
Not so much anymore.
Pittsburgh is very
much alive in the muddled AFC after pulling
out a third straight victory, one built on another electrifying play by
safety Minkah Fitzpatrick — whose 96-yard
interception return for
a touchdown in the second quarter revived the
Steelers after another
slow start — and a dash
of luck when Indianapolis kicker Adam Vinatieri’s go-ahead 43-yard
ﬁeld goal attempt with
1:14 remaining was an
ugly, low snap-hook that
went nowhere near the
uprights in the open end
of Heinz Field.
“We know he’s a great

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TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

51°

42°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

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.

62°
30°
62°
40°
82° in 2003
19° in 1991
(in inches)

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

0.00
0.00
0.45
40.49
36.29

Today
7:00 a.m.
5:24 p.m.
2:29 p.m.
12:10 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Wed.
7:01 a.m.
5:23 p.m.
2:59 p.m.
1:08 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Full

Last

New

Nov 12 Nov 19 Nov 26

First

Dec 4

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

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

Major
6:21a
7:03a
7:42a
8:18a
8:54a
9:31a
10:11a

Minor
12:11a
12:52a
1:31a
2:08a
2:44a
3:21a
4:00a

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

1

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: What is the record low temperature
for the lower 48 states in November?

SUN &amp; MOON

Major
6:44p
7:25p
8:03p
8:39p
9:15p
9:52p
10:33p

Minor
12:33p
1:14p
1:52p
2:28p
3:04p
3:42p
4:22p

WEATHER HISTORY
Cooperstown, N.Y., home of
baseball’s Hall of Fame, entered the
“weather hall of fame” on Nov. 5,
1971, with its third-latest ﬁrst frost
on record. The cold made only a
short stop.

THURSDAY

AIR QUALITY

Adelphi
52/25

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. Mon.

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

Level
12.50
17.67
22.05
12.56
12.36
24.89
11.98
28.19
35.15
12.50
22.80
35.00
23.80

Waverly
55/27
Lucasville
55/28
Portsmouth
55/29

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.27
-1.42
-1.35
+0.12
-0.21
-1.45
-0.24
-0.56
-0.27
+0.22
-3.00
+0.40
-1.70

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

What’s working
Well, they’re now in
line for the ﬁrst overall
pick in the draft. The
last time they chose No.
1 was 2003 — Marvin
Lewis’ ﬁrst season as
head coach — when they
took Carson Palmer.
Palmer led the Bengals
through 2010 before saying he’d retire rather than
continuing to play for
Cincinnati, which he felt
lacked a commitment to
winning. He was dealt to
the Raiders.

SATURDAY

Mostly sunny and
cold

Stock down
Dalton. He’s got one
year left on his deal. The
Bengals declined to try
to trade him before the
deadline last week, leaving him stuck for half a
season as Finley’s backup.
It’s not how the secondround pick in 2011 imagined his career playing
out in Cincinnati.

MONDAY

53°
35°

Cold with plenty of
sunshine

Cool with times of
clouds and sun

50°
28°
Chance for snow
showers in the
morning

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
53/27

Murray City
52/25
Belpre
53/27

St. Marys
53/28

Parkersburg
53/28

Coolville
53/27

Elizabeth
53/29

Spencer
54/30

Buffalo
54/31

Ironton
55/32

Milton
55/32

Clendenin
55/30

St. Albans
56/32

Huntington
55/30

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
54/42
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
71/50
0s
-0s
-10s
T-storms
Los Angeles
Rain
81/56
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Stock up
Finley. For now. Wait
and see how he fares
against the Ravens’ blitzing defense before making any assessments.

SUNDAY

48°
28°

Wilkesville
53/26
POMEROY
Jackson
54/29
54/27
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
54/30
54/27
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
51/29
GALLIPOLIS
54/29
54/31
54/29

Ashland
55/30
Grayson
55/32

game but still gave up big
plays.

Key number
17 —The number of
Bengals starting quarterbacks since their previous
playoff victory in the 1990
season. Finley will become
the 18th quarterback to
start at least one game
for Cincinnati during that
span, joining Boomer
Esiason, Donald HolWhat needs help
las, Erik Wilhelm, David
The run defense.
Klingler, Jay Schroeder,
Lamar Jackson ran for
Jeff Blake, Neil O’Donnell,
152 yards during the
Paul Justin, Akili Smith,
Ravens’ 23-17 win over
the Bengals in Baltimore Scott Mitchell, Jon Kitna,
Gus Frerotte, Palmer,
on Oct. 13. The BenRyan Fitzpatrick, Dalton,
gals had several players
focused on the dual-threat AJ McCarron and Jeff
Driskel.
quarterback during that

Athens
53/26

McArthur
53/26

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

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

Chillicothe
53/26

South Shore Greenup
55/31
54/29

28

Logan
52/25

In the short term,
there’s the question of
how long it will be until
Taylor gets to celebrate
that ﬁrst win. After hosting the AFC North-leading Ravens, the Bengals
play at Oakland, host the
Steelers, and then get the
Jets at Paul Brown Stadium on Dec. 1.
That team record of 10
straight losses in one season is in play.

41°
22°

Chilly with periods
of rain

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

Frank Victores | AP file

Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver A.J. Green could return for a game
Sunday against the Ravens (6-2) at Paul Brown Stadium, a ray of
hope as the Bengals come back from their bye week with an 0-8
record and an untested quarterback in Ryan Finley.

FRIDAY

48°
26°

Partly sunny

0

A: -53 F Lincoln, Montana; Nov. 16,
1959

Precipitation

WEDNESDAY

Partly sunny and chilly today. Partly cloudy and
colder tonight. High 54° / Low 29°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

58°
37°
43°

Daily Sentinel

Charleston
54/31

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
24/13

Billings
49/20

Montreal
50/29

Minneapolis
36/26

Toronto
46/28

New York
60/41

Chicago
42/29
Detroit
46/26
Denver
57/30

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
69/44/s
38/33/c
68/47/pc
64/45/sh
64/37/sh
49/20/pc
60/35/s
61/41/r
54/31/c
70/44/pc
56/28/s
42/29/pc
53/30/pc
49/31/pc
51/28/pc
67/58/c
57/30/s
44/36/pc
46/26/pc
87/73/pc
78/60/pc
49/31/pc
54/39/pc
77/53/s
61/44/pc
81/56/s
56/34/pc
88/77/pc
36/26/pc
61/36/s
74/60/pc
60/41/sh
62/48/c
87/73/pc
62/39/r
88/66/s
50/29/sh
57/35/r
69/44/pc
66/40/pc
53/37/pc
61/37/s
71/50/s
54/42/pc
65/42/sh

Hi/Lo/W
64/45/t
40/38/sn
69/48/s
56/46/s
57/38/s
26/19/sn
58/32/pc
52/41/s
60/37/s
66/42/s
42/20/s
46/24/c
58/40/pc
51/36/pc
54/39/pc
71/58/pc
48/27/s
46/20/pc
46/28/c
87/74/pc
77/60/pc
56/35/pc
61/30/c
78/53/s
60/52/pc
78/55/s
61/45/pc
88/78/t
35/17/pc
64/47/s
75/65/pc
53/43/s
66/40/t
86/71/t
55/40/s
86/64/pc
50/37/pc
49/32/s
66/40/s
59/39/s
59/37/pc
63/36/s
67/50/s
55/41/c
57/42/s

EXTREMES MONDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
68/47

El Paso
80/55
Chihuahua
80/56

Washington
65/42

Kansas City
54/39

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

High
Low

90° in Naples, FL
4° in Lake George, CO

Global
Houston
78/60
Monterrey
84/68

Miami
88/77

High 110° in West Roebuck, Australia
Low -47° in Summit Station, Greenland
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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