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                  <text>EHS Class
of ’68
reunion

Taking,
teaching
advice

Tornadoes,
Eagles at
district

NEWS s 3

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 158, Volume 72

Reedsville man
arrested for felony in
Washington County
Staff Report

WASHINGTON COUNTY — A Meigs County
man was arrested on Monday in Washington
County after allegedly stealing a vehicle in Meigs
County.
According to a news release from
the Washington County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce, WCSO Deputy Robert
McKee assisted the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce in reference to a stolen vehicle. Meigs County requested
the WCSO patrol Sealy Ridge Road
Griffin
for a stolen 2004 Chevrolet Trailblazer. After an extensive search the
Trailblazer was located at 2346 Sealy Ridge Road
in Dunham Township.
Deputy McKee located the vehicle and suspect,
Christopher Grifﬁn, who reportedly admitted
to driving the vehicle to the Sealy Ridge Road
address after stealing it from a business in Meigs
County.
The vehicle was returned to the owner and
Christopher Corey Grifﬁn, age 34, 52031 Rye
Road, Reedsville, Ohio, was placed under arrest
for receiving stolen property, a fourth degree
felony.
Grifﬁn was transported to the Washington
County Jail for processing and will appear in Marietta Municipal Court.

Wednesday, October 3, 2018 s 50¢

Growing local business
Local businesses grow, add jobs
with help from Revolving Loan Fund
Staff Report

MEIGS COUNTY —
Two new locally owned
businesses will open
this fall, and a third well
known and respected
business will continue to
grow with help from the
Meigs County Revolving
Loan Fund (RLF).

These small business
projects will add 12
new jobs in our county,
according to a news
release from Meigs
County Economic Development Director Perry
Varnadoe.
Munchkin City Day
Care has recently
opened and will provide

day care services in the
county, revitalizing a
vacant building in Middleport.
“Meigs County is a
great place to live and
raise our children, and
we are grateful to be
able to help in that process for working families
in this county,” said
Munchkin City owners
Josh and Serena Larsen.
Uplift Fitness will
soon open in Pomeroy,
ﬁlling a vacant building

on Main Street with a 24
hour ﬁtness center.
“The Revolving Loan
Fund ﬁlled a ﬁnancial
gap that allowed my
start-up to become
exactly what I envisioned it to be. The
resources the RLF
provided to Uplift Fitness was the difference
between just trying to
get by and doing things
the right way. Thank
See LOCAL | 2

MLAA to present
Distinguished Alumni
and Service Awards
Staff Report

ROCKSPRINGS —
The Meigs Local Alumni Association (MLAA)
will present the Distinguished Alumni and
Service Awards prior to
the Marauders’ Homecoming game on Friday
evening.
The 2018 Distinguished Alumni and
Service Award recipients are Phillip Moon,
Gary Coleman, Jillian
Wilt-Kranyik and Dave
and Jamie Deem.
Awards will be presented by Meigs Local
Superintendent, Scot
Gheen; Meigs High
School Principal, Travis Abbott; and Meigs
Local Alumni Association Co-Presidents,
Dru Reed and Jennifer
Bartrum.
Phillip Moon —
Class of 197
Phillip A. Moon
was born in Pomeroy,
Ohio on Feb. 6, 1955
to John W. and Annie
L. Moon, the oldest of
three sons. As a young
child he always had an

interest in music, and
at the age of nine, after
witnessing The Beatles
in their ﬁrst television
appearance, he knew he
wanted a guitar, which
was purchased later
that year with money
earned from mowing
lawns with his father.
That began a journey of
learning and enjoyment
that continues now. In
ﬁfth grade he joined
the school band and
began learning to play
the drums, and continued as a drummer in
the band until graduation from Meigs High
School and through a
year of college at Rio
Grande.
Phillip was a founding member of the
rock band, “Blitzkrieg”
in the mid ‘70’s and
remains lead guitarist
of that band to this day.
He is also a member of
the band “Marauder”,
as well as being the
drummer in the “Renee
Stewart Band”. He has
enjoyed working with
many ﬁne musicians for
See MLAA | 5

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Comics: 8
Classifieds: 9
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

Courtesy photos

Devin Henry, pictured, a native of Gallipolis, currently signed to Nashville Entertainment Weekly Records, will be performing at the
Relocation Jam this Saturday to benefit the relocation of the Gallia County Jr. Fairgrounds. Food, concessions, prize drawings and
inflatables will also be offered at the family-friendly, fundraising event.

‘Relocation Jam’ benefit
Proceeds to Gallia
Jr. Fairgrounds
Relocation Project
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS — The
dream of building a new
home takes creativity,
patience and an extended
family…some with guitars.
This Saturday is the
“Relocation Jam” with all
proceeds beneﬁting the
Gallia County Jr. Fairgrounds Relocation Project. Gates open at 4 p.m.
and the music, provided
by popular, local musicians Devin Henry and
Matt Metheney, starts
at 6 p.m. In addition to
the music, there will be
food, inﬂatables, prize
drawings and more at
this family-friendly event
held at the Gallia County
Jr. Fairgrounds, with the
concert performed from
the Holzer Main Stage.
Pre-sale tickets are $10
or $15 at the gate the day
of the event. Tickets can

be purchased online at
https://app.donorview.
com or go to the Relocation Jam’s Facebook
event page for a quick
link to buy tickets. Those
who purchase tickets
early are entered into a
prize drawing. Each gate
admission will be entered
to win a prize.
Volunteers have been
steadily raising funds
for that “Fair For Our
Future” they hope to see
someday, following years
of ﬂooding issues at the
current location.
Danella Newberry is
one of the fair relocation
committee members and
said this project isn’t
something that will happen all at once.
“We have to do this
piece by piece,” Newberry said about the grassroots efforts to bring this
dream into a reality one
step at a time.
She explained the
Matt Metheney, pictured, a native of Rutland, will be performing
this Saturday at the Relocation Jam.
committee is currently focused on raising
sewer, water and electric
location, on the back
enough funds to put the
are vital to the new fair
section of the property
proper infrastructure in
where ﬂooding isn’t an
the new location which
See JAM | 5
issue. Things like roads,
is behind the current

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, October 3, 2018

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS BRIEFS

CARL MALCOM NEASE
WESTERVILLE —
Nease, Carl Malcolm, 85,
of Westerville, passed
away peacefully on September 14, 2018.
Carl was born to Vernon and Helen (Hayes)
Nease on September 23,
1932 in Minersville . Carl
was married to the love of
his life, Helen (Click), for
52 years. He was preceded in death by Helen, his
parents, and two brothers
Arthur and Stanley. Survivors include his sons Phillip (Nancy) of Ft. Collins,
Colorado, and John of
Columbus; grandchildren
Rachel, Chloe and Joseph
Nease, and sister, Eleanor
“Ruth” Powers of Grove
City, plus nieces, nephews
and many friends.
Carl was employed
from 1958 through 1995
as a supervisor and vicepresident of the George
Igel Company. He was a
proud 32-Degree Mason
at the Linden Chapter of
the Masonic Lodge, Scout
Master for several years,

and worked part-time for
Job Placement Services
after retirement. Carl and
Helen were charter members of Epworth United
Methodist Church, and
Carl was active as Chairman of the Church Trustees and performed general maintenance at the
church. Carl was devoted
to his family and enjoyed
traveling with family and
friends.
A memorial service
will be held at Epworth
United Methodist Church
at 11 a.m. on October 6,
2018. A luncheon will be
held immediately after the
service from noon until 2
p.m. at the church. In lieu
of ﬂowers, memorial contributions may be made
to Epworth United Methodist Church, 5100 Karl
Road in Columbus, Ohio
43229. Interment will be
at Ravenswood Cemetery
in Ravenswood, West
Virginia. Arrangements
entrusted to Schoedinger
Funeral Home.

BLAIN
GLENWOOD — Dwain Morgan Blain, 90, of Glenwood, died Monday, Oct. 1, 2018.
Funeral services will be held Thursday, Oct., 4 at
1:30 p.m. at Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant.
Burial will follow in the Pete Meadows Cemetery in
Glenwood. Friends may visit the family at the funeral
home from noon-1:30 p.m., prior to the service. A full
obituary for Dwain will run in the Thursday edition of
the Point Pleasant Register.
HOLLEY
ASHTON — Charles William Holley, 90, of Ashton,
died Oct. 1, 2018.
Arrangements will be announced by Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant at a later date.
COMBS
RACINE — Vickie Lynn Combs, 62, of Racine,
Ohio, died Tuesday morning, Oct. 2, 2018, at her
residence. Arrangements have been entrusted to and
will be announced by Cremeens-King Funeral Home,
Racine, Ohio.
RAINEY
APPLE GROVE — Christopher Allen Rainey, 47, of
Apple Grove, died Oct. 1, 2018.
A full obituary will run in the Point Pleasant Register in an upcoming edition. Deal Funeral Home is
serving the family.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

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.

On-ramp to US 33/US 50/
OH 32 East to close for work
ATHENS — The on-ramp to US 33/US 50/OH 32
East at Bob Evans in Athens will be closed at East
State Street from 7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 3, until 8
a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 17, for work associated with
US 33 bridge deck overlay projects.

MHS Class of 1978
reunion to be held
POMEROY — Meigs High School Class of 1978
is holding their 40th class reunion on Saturday, Oct.
6, at the Ewing-Schwarzel Family Center, at 116 W.
Second Street in Pomeroy. (Corner of Mechanic
and Second Streets) We want to encourage all classmates to attend. We will begin with a “Meet and
Greet” at 5 p.m., followed up with food at 6 p.m.
This will be held in conjunction with the “Reunion
on the River” party on Court Street that evening.
Music begins at 7 p.m. Cost to attend is donation
only if able. The class would also like to extend this
invitation to the teachers that taught at high school
from 1974-1978. For questions or more information,
contact Jennifer Harrison at 740-709-0346, Paige
Cleek at 740-992-0777 or Susan Dingess at 740-9922054.

Immunization clinic
to be conducted Tuesday
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department will conduct an Immunization Clinic on Tuesday, from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m., at 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/
legal guardian. A $30.00 donation is appreciated for
immunization administration; however, no one will
be denied services because of an inability to pay an
administration fee for state-funded childhood vac-

cines. Please bring medical cards and/or commercial
insurance cards, if applicable. Shingles and pneumonia vaccines are available as well as ﬂu shots. Call
for eligibility determination and availability or visit
our website at www.meigs-health.com to see a list of
accepted commercial insurances and Medicaid for
adults.
The Ohio Department of Health (ODH) does
NOT recommended for routine Hepatitis A vaccination of Healthcare Workers. Additionally, the
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices
(ACIP) does NOT recommend routine Hepatitis
A vaccination for Food Workers. Currently, ODH
is strongly recommending the following groups to
get the Hepatitis A vaccine: men who have sex with
men, persons who inject drugs and person who use
illegal non-injection drugs. These are the highest
risk groups for transmission of Hepatitis A. Call
740-992-6626 for vaccine availability.

Benefit yard sale
to be held Oct. 5-6
POMEROY — A beneﬁt yard sale for the Meigs
Veterans Outreach will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
on Oct. 5 and 6 at the building located at 391 West
Main Street in Pomeroy.

Meigs County
Libraries storytime
MEIGS COUNTY — Storytime at all four locations, Sept. 10-Dec. 13. The following is the schedule: Mondays at 1 p.m., Racine Library; Tuesdays at
1:30 p.m., Eastern Library; Wednesdays at 1 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library; Thursdays at 1 p.m., Middleport
Library.

Southern Craft
and Vendor Fair
RACINE — The Southern Craft Show will be
held on Oct. 20, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Interested vendors may contact Alan at 740-444-3309 or visit
southernlocalmeigs.org and click on forms for
application.

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.

Friday, Oct. 5

POMEROY — The regular
meeting of the Meigs County
Public Employee Retirees Inc.,
Chapter 74, will be held at 1
p.m. at the Mulberry Community
Center, located at 156 Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy. Guest speaker will
be Andrea Bussert, Association
Member Beneﬁts Advisor with
AMBA. She will be explaining
beneﬁts and programs available
through AMBA. Greg Ervin, District 7 Representative will provide
retirees with update on statewide
HARRISONVILLE — Free
issues effecting PERI. All retired
Firehouse Community Dinner at
the Scipio Township Fire Depart- Meigs County Public Employees
ment in Harrisonville, State Route are urged to attend.
684. Dinner will be served from
5-6 p.m., and will feature braised
pork chops, stufﬁng with gravy,
seasoned green beans, homemade
SALEM CENTER — Star
rolls and butter, apple caramel
Grange #778 will meet in regular
dump cake and beverages.
session with potluck supper at
6:30 p.m. followed by meeting at
7:30 p.m. Final plans for Chicken
BBQ and meet the candidates on
October 7 will be made. All memCHESTER — Chester Shade
Historical Association will be hav- bers and interested persons are
urged and invited to attend.
ing their monthly board meeting
at 6:30 p.m. Everyone is welcome.
CHILLICOTHE — The Southern Ohio Council of Governments
(SOCOG) will hold its next
SALEM CENTER — Star
board meeting at 10 a.m. at 27
Grange #778 Chicken BBQ will
West Second Street, Suite 202,
be held with serving from 11 a.m.
Chillicothe, Ohio, 45601. Board
until 2 p.m. Meet the candidate
meetings usually are held the ﬁrst will be held at 1 p.m. The public
Thursday of the month. For more is invited to attend.
information, call 740-775-5030,
ext. 103.

Wednesday, Oct. 3

Saturday, Oct. 6

Oct. 5-7
MIDDLEPORT — Special services at Ash Street
Church, 398 Ash Street, Middleport, Ohio, will be
held October 5, 6, and 7. Times are 6:30 p.m. each
evening and 10 a.m. Sunday morning. Special speakers and music. Come join us.

Sunday, Oct. 7
HEMLOCK GROVE — Homecoming at the Hemlock Grove Christian Church will be celebrated on
Sunday, Oct. 7. Festivities include a program of praise
and worship music beginning at 10 a.m. followed by a
potluck meal at 11:30 a.m. and a concert by recording
artist Chosen Road at 2 p.m. The Church is located
at 38387 Hemlock Grove Road, Pomeroy. For more
information, contact Rosalie Johnson at 740-696-1313,
Paula Welker at 740-992-7291 or Dagmar Hite at 740334-4379.

Thursday, Oct. 4

Sunday, Oct. 7

their regular monthly meeting at
7 p.m. at the Bedford Town Hall.

Tuesday, Oct. 9
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Board of Health meeting
will take place at 5 p.m. in the
conference room of the Meigs
County Health Department,
which is located at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy, Ohio.

Thursday, Oct. 11
SYRACUSE — RACO Roundup
Games at 6 p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center. Doors open
at 5 p.m. All prizes from local
businesses. Come out and enjoy
the evening with RACO and The
Syracuse Community Center.

Friday, Oct. 12
POMEROY — Pomeroy
Library, Inspirational Book Club,
10:30 a.m. Read and discuss
“Wake the Dawn” by Lauraine
Snelling with us! Coffee and light
refreshments are served.
POMEROY — Pomeroy
Library, Family Movie Night.
Hotel Transylvania 3 will be
shown at 5 p.m. on the big
“screen” at the library. Popcorn
and lemonade will be served.

Monday, Oct. 15

NELSONVILLE — The Appalachian Recovery Project (ARP)
will hold a public meeting to
MEIGS COUNTY — All Meigs discuss the future of the former
Nelsonville prison facility on Oct.
Library locations are closed in
15 from 4-5:30 p.m. at the Inn at
observance of Columbus Day.
POMEROY — Pomeroy
Hocking College in Nelsonville.
POMEROY — Meigs County
Library, Book Sale.The Friends
Representatives of ARP, local law
Health Dept. will be closed in
of the Library Book Sale will be
enforcement, treatment providers
observance of Columbus Day.
Thursday, Oct. 4th 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
and Friday, Oct. 5th 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Normal Business Hours resume at and other project partners will be
on hand to discuss future plans,
8 a.m. on Oct. 9.
Items are not pre-priced. Donaanswer questions and listen to
BEDFORD TWP. — The Bedtions will be accepted for all mateideas for the facility.
ford Township trustees will hold
rial.

Monday, Oct. 8

Oct. 4 and 5
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Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
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CONTACT US
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bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

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MANAGING EDITOR
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109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
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Local
From page 1

you to the Meigs County Economic Development Ofﬁce for
allow us to put our plan into
action and set forth to become a
blessing to our community.” said
Chase Jenkins, owner of Uplift
Fitness.
Bartee Photography, a locally
owned success story, is growing
as well.
“After a period of unexpected
and rapid growth of our busi-

ness we needed to acquire new
equipment to serve our new
customers. The RLF enabled us
to acquire the capital we needed
to grow our business and we are
very excited to be the next success story from the RLF,” said
Brandon Bartee. The Bartees
chose to invest in downtown
Pomeroy for their ofﬁce and production facility.
The Revolving Loan Fund,
administered by the Meigs
County Community Improvement Corporation, is designed
to help small, locally owned
businesses grow in Meigs Coun-

ty. A total of 21 businesses have
used the program over the last
four years, leading to over 70
jobs in the community.
“Small business is the fabric and economic heartbeat of
our community,” said Perry
Varnadoe of the Meigs County
Economic Development Ofﬁce.
“There are many barriers facing small business so we want
this program to encourage them
to grow right here in Meigs
County.”
For more information on the
RLF contact Brenda Roush at
740-992-3034.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 3, 2018 3

EHS Class of 1968 holds reunion

RACO discusses
community events

Courtesy photo

The Eastern High School, Class of 1968, 50th reunion was held Sept. 8 at the Long Bottom Community Center. The event was hosted by
Pat and Hugh Martin. Classmates attending were, first row, Pam (Buckley) Hoffman, Rosie (Cowdery) Taccino, David Reed, Kathy (Griffin)
Bush, Patty (Goeglein) Pickens, Pat (Boring) Martin, Vicki (Pooler) Woods, Penny (Wolf) Koren; second row, Roger Hoffman, Pat Bahr,
Karen (Boothe) Baker, Karen (Matheny) Morris, Sharon (Matheny) Tuttle, Don Rood, Jo (Toney) Hill, Steve Cowdery, Joe Bailey; third row,
Elmer Newell, Ronnie Dodderer, Steve Frost, Larry Spencer, Randal Sloter, Gary Miller.

MU represented in New Zealand
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
— Representatives of
the Marshall University
Department of Biomechanics traveled to Auckland, New Zealand, Sept.
10-14 to attend the 36th
International Conference on Biomechanics in
Sports.
Three graduate
students and two faculty members within
the department each
had papers accepted for
presentation at the conference, according to Dr.
Suzanne Konz, director
of the university’s biomechanics program.
“This was an annual
event for the presentation
of academic research in
sports biomechanics,”
Konz said. “Participants
came from a wide range
of backgrounds including
exercise science, education, engineering, computer science, rehabilitation and medicine, to
name a few. We were so
grateful to be able to provide our students with an
opportunity to exchange
ideas and to help bridge

the gap between researchers and practitioners.”
The students involved
included:
· Andrew Ebert, 26, of
Avon, Indiana, who led a
poster presentation titled
“A Correlation Between
Vertical Jump and Isokinetic Measurements in
Female Basketball Athletes.”
· Mahalie Hargis, 23,
of Hamlin, West Virginia,
who led a poster presentation titled “Examining
the Reliability and Validity of the Fitbit Charge
2™ Technology on Heart
Rate During Treadmill
Exercise.” She also presented on the reliability
and validity of the Fitbit
Charge 2™ Technology
on step count during
treadmill exercise.
· Kevin Moore, 26,
of Wayne, New Jersey,
who led an oral presentation titled “Associations
Between Clinical and Performance Tests in Soccer
Athletes.”
Ebert said the International Society of
Biomechanics in Sports

conference was truly an
eye-opening experience.
“I was honored to present my own research and
represent Marshall University. I was able to network with fellow professionals as well as some
of the top corporations,”
Ebert said. “The opportunity to listen to some
of the most distinguished
professionals in biomechanics discuss innovative technology and
research has conﬁrmed
my passion for the ﬁeld
of biomechanics.”
The faculty who presented included:
· Dr. Suzanne Konz,
associate professor and
director of the biomechanics program, who
presented an oral presentation titled “Analyzing
Vertical Jump and Standing Long Jump Power
Ratios to Determine
Lower Extremity Injury
Risk Using AUROC
Curves” and a poster session titled “Optimizing
Exercise Selection for
Power Development in
Athletes Using Velocity-

Based Training.”
· Dr. Steven Leigh,
assistant professor of
biomechanics, presented
a poster presentation
titled “Return-To-Play
Criteria Following ACL
Reconstruction Surgery:
A Case Study Over Nine
Months.”
To learn more about
the conference, visit
https://sprinz.aut.ac.nz/
isbs-2018. For more
information about the
university’s biomechanics program, visit www.
marshall.edu/biomechanics. Call 877-GOHERD-1
to schedule a visit and
learn more at www.marshall.edu.
Submitted by Marshall University.

RACINE — The Racine Area Community Organization held their monthly meeting on Tuesday,
Sept. 25, at the Star Mill Park Building. Tonja
Hunter had prayer before our potluck meal. Secretary and Treasurer’s reports were presented and
approved.
In old business: The fall yard sale was held on
August 28, 29, and 30 and all money made will
be going toward scholarships for the Southern
2019 graduating class. RACO also participated in
Party in the Park by having the information table
and sponsoring a rafﬂe. RACO had donated $500
for Party in the Park. The rafﬂe winners were as
follows: Stihl weedeater – Chris Wolfe, Coleman
camp chairs — Penny Thorla, and 10th year anniversary quilt – Ruby Brewer.
In new business: RACO “Round Up” games will
be held on Thursday, Oct. 11 at Syracuse Community Center (doors open at 5 p.m.). All prizes
will be from our local businesses. (Support Meigs
County). Prizes are being posted daily on Facebook. There will be a prize for best Western Gear!
Tickets may be purchased from Alice Wolfe (740)
949-2286, Kim Romine (740) 992-2067 or (740)
992-7079, Dale Hart (740)949-2656, or message
RACORACINE.
RACO also voted to again sponsor the costume
judging prizes at the town Halloween party held
at the Racine Fire Department. There will be ﬁrst,
second, and third prizes awarded for three age
groups (0-6, 7-12, and 13-adult). RACO donated
$200 to Racine Fire Department to help with the
Halloween party.
Also discussed brieﬂy were new RACO shirts,
possibility of a winter yard sale, and Christmas in
the Park.
David Zirkle led in the Pledge to the Flag to
close our meeting. There were 15 members and
one visitor in attendance. RACO’s next meeting
will be held on Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2018 at 6:30 p.m.

IN BRIEF

Trouble ferry
reaches port

by Copenhagen-based
DFDS Seaways, was in
international waters off
Kaliningrad, a Russian
coastal enclave between
COPENHAGEN,
Poland and LithuDenmark (AP) — A
ania, when the engine
ferry stranded in the
Baltic Sea for about six stopped working.
Smoke poured out
hours with an estimated
of the engine room
300 people on board
safely reached its desti- and triggered the ﬁre
extinguisher inside the
nation Tuesday night,
room, the ferry operator
the Lithuanian port of
Klaipeda, port authori- said. The breakdown
paralyzed the boat for
ties said.
about six hours.
The ferry, operated

The Vaughan Agency
is hosting an
Educational
Event for
Medicare Eligible
Individuals
Tuesday October 9th 4-5 pm at the
������������ ������ ���������������� ���� ������ �������� �

STOP BY THE POMEROY LIBRARY BASEMENT
SPEND AN HOUR OF YOUR TIME &amp; LET US HELP YOU
WITH YOUR INSURANCE QUESTIONS!
Health insurance
can be complicated,
and it seems to get
more confusing the
older we get.

Marshall University | Courtesy

Pictured from left are Dr. Steve Leigh, Dr. Suzanne Konz, Kevin Moor, Andrew Ebert, and Mahalie Hargis
at the 2018 36th International Conference on Biomechanics in Sports in Auckland, New Zealand.

We would like to
help clear up some
of this confusion!

WE HAD A GREAT SUMMER
AT THE WILDHORSE CAFE!

We will discuss:
Open Enrollment
Medicare Part A &amp; B
Supplements &amp; Advantange Plan Differences
Prescription Drug Plans &amp; Choosing the right 1 for you

Starting October 8th, we will
start our off season days &amp; times
Closed on Monday
Tuesday-Thursday: 11-9
Friday &amp; Saturday: 11-10
Sunday 11-9

OH-70080219

OH-70080943

Stop in and enjoy our great
atmosphere and delicious food!
www.thewildhorsecafe.com
Main Street Pomeroy, Ohio 740-992-0099

Refreshments
will be served

�Opinion
4 Wednesday, October 3, 2018

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Those left
behind when
suicide occurs
Some of my saddest moments have been in
the presence of mothers and fathers whose children died by suicide or adult children that lost a parent to suicide.
Anyone who has lost a loved one to
suicide is considered a survivor of
suicide.
The American Psychiatric Association ranks the trauma of losing a
loved one to suicide as “catastrophic.” Shock, confusion, despair,
Melissa
abandonment, guilt, helplessness,
Martin
Contributing hopelessness, and the gamut of
emotions ensue. And the “why”
columnist
question.
“The loss of a loved one by suicide is often shocking, painful and unexpected.
The grief that ensues can be intense, complex
and long term. Grief and bereavement are an
extremely individual and unique process. There
is no given duration to being bereaved by suicide. Survivors of suicide are not looking for
their lives to return to their prior state because
things can never go back to how they were. Survivors aim to adjust to life without their loved
one.” www.suicidology.org/.
In 2016, Ohio State Representative Marlene
Anielski introduced legislation (House Bill
440) that would designate the Saturday before
Thanksgiving as “Ohio Survivors of Suicide
Loss Day” to recognize those Ohioans who
have been affected by suicide loss. Gov. Kasich
signed House Bill 440 into law in 2017. Anielski’s son, Joseph Anielski, was an 18-year-old
high school senior when he died by suicide in
March 2010.
According to the National Institute of Mental
Health, family history of suicide and mental or
substance abuse disorder are among the most
prevalent risk factors for suicide in the United
States. “A well-known case is the novelist
Ernest Hemingway’s family, in which ﬁve members over four generations died from completed
suicides.”
A person’s risk factor is increased to complete
suicide if a family member has taken his or her
own life.
Ohio Outreach to Suicide Survivors
The Franklin County Local Outreach to Suicide Survivors (LOSS) support the bereaved
by suicide as ﬁrst responders and through the
months that follow. As First Responders, Franklin County LOSS provides 24/7 accessibility of
trained volunteers to the Coroner’s ofﬁce, local
law enforcement and hospital chaplains.
The LOSS model is an active model of postvention—the word used to describe the support
those of a suicide loss need. A LOSS Team is
made up of trained volunteers, many of whom
are survivors of a suicide loss, who go to the
scene of a suicide to provide support, resources
and to be an installation of hope to those who
are left behind. www.franklincountyloss.org/.
There are 27 Ohio counties with LOSS programs. The Four County L.O.S.S. Team includes
Fulton, Deﬁance, Henry, and Williams Counties.
www.4countysuicideprevention.org/. Delaware,
Knox, Tuscarawas, Carroll, Licking, Montgomery, Lorain, Columbiana, Allen, Auglaize, Hardin, Ashtabula, Clark, Greene, Madison, Champaign, and Logan Counties utilize the LOSS
model as well.
How to Help Someone Who Lost a Loved One to Suicide
“People who have lost a loved one to suicide
can experience an intense form of grief. Experts
recommend the following strategies for supporting them. To help a suicide loss survivor feel
less alone, be physically and emotionally present for them. To help reduce feelings of guilt,
remind them that suicide is complex and they
are not to blame for the death of their loved
one. Reassure them that feelings such as anger,
sadness, and self-doubt are normal. Follow the
loss survivor’s lead in the conversation—let
them decide how much they want to share. Celebrate the life of the person who died instead of
focusing on the details of their death.” Suicide
Prevention Resource Center. www.sprc.org/.
There are residents in Scioto County that
have experienced mental health trauma, grief,
and loss from loved ones that died from suicide.
According to a 2016 article in the Portsmouth
Daily Times, ﬁve employees died by suicide in 1
year at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility.
Coworkers are left with grief and questions.
For questions about a LOSS Team in southern
Ohio, contact the ADAMHS Board of Adams,
Lawrence, and Scioto Counties at 740-354-5648.
(Editor’s note, locally the ADAMHS Board
of Gallia-Jackson-Meigs can be reached at 740446-3022. The National Suicide Prevention
Lifeline can be reached at 1-800- 273-talk.)
Melissa Martin, Ph.D, is an author, columnist, educator, and therapist.
She resides in Southern Ohio. www.melissamartinchildrensauthor.
com. Contact her at melissamcolumnist@gmail.com.

THEIR VIEW

Taking, teaching business advice
In addition to teaching
communication classes
at my local community
college, I also teach union
telecommunication
employees from around
the country using Blackboard Ultra.
To those of you not up
to speed on technology,
I’ve just indicated that I
ﬁre up my computer and
mount my PowerPoint.
Participants from around
the country log on in real
time, and we begin the
class. They can see me,
and if they opt, I can see
them.
In my communication
classes at the college, students prepare resumes,
do job searches, and
engage in mock job interviews. A good number of
my college students are
already employed – some
in fast food and some
in health care facilities
or major manufacturing
companies. Some have a
sense of their work plans
after college; some don’t.
In other words, business
is always a hot topic for
those already there and
those preparing to enter.
Recently, President
Trump spoke at the
United Nations General
Assembly in New York
where he touted his success in making America
great – especially in
the business sector:
“In less than two years,
my administration has
accomplished more than
almost any administration in the history of
our country. America’s
economy is booming like
never before.”
He failed to get the
reception for which
he had hoped as some
attendees laughed.
I’ll be the ﬁrst to admit
that I like the way my
401(k) is performing

their advice for
although I have no
those graduating
plans for expensive
from high school
cars, a ﬁne house,
or college would
or world-class
resonate with my
travel. I’ve done the
community college
travel (been out of
students or me:
the country 30-plus
�I[l[hWb�WZl_i[�
times), and as long Dr. Vivian
working
in a career
as my car is reliBlevins
able, I’m satisﬁed. Contributing for which students
have great passion.
My house is mod- columnist
This is ideal, but
est and that means
a career in child
less space to clean
care will not pay for rent,
and no worries when
groceries, medical care or
toddlers Kohl or Parker
pours orange juice on the reliable transportation.
�Ed[�ik]][ij[Z�Y^eeicarpet.
ing a ﬁrst-class school.
So in preparing to
This works – if parents
teach my Communication Workers of America, are wealthy and are willing to invest in this large
mostly employees of
expense.
AT&amp;T, to write opinion
�7dej^[h�X_j�e\�WZl_Y[�
pieces, I am reading a
was to take a trip to
book entitled “Advice
another country for two
from the Top: 1001 Bits
of Business Wisdom from weeks. And where does
the average student get
the Great Leaders of the
the requisite dollars?
Recent Past” (2018).
�7�fWhj�j^Wj�?�ÒdZ�
The advice comes in
difﬁcult to digest was a
carefully parsed tidbits
comment that in the end,
that are easy for today’s
hard work and dedication
busy readers, no complipay handsome dividends.
cated essays with referAs one who is aware
ences to Greek philosophers or even summaries of states competing for
successful businesses/
of American history.
corporations with a long
This is a no-nonsense
“do this or don’t do that” list of incentives, I’d like
to see how this resonates
volume from commentawith employees whose
tors such as NBA and
Olympic basketball coach company merged, went
Larry Brown on positive bankrupt, or moved to
another state, leaving
coaching to Carnival
Cruise Lines CEO (2003- them jobless.
I’d like to share a few
2007) Bob Dickinson
gems of advice that I
on grunt work to Cisco
endorse in their recomSystems CEO (19952015) John Chambers on mendations to graduating high school seniors
embracing technology.
and college students:
The advice of these
�B[Whd�je�Yecckgreat leaders is diverse
– and at times contradic- nicate effectively with
people from all walks of
tory as disparate voices
life.
vociferously proclaim
�&lt;ebbem�j^[�^_]^[h�
their wisdom.
standard: Is it right?
Since I teach college
�Adem�j^Wj�^em�oek�
students – some still in
treat others deﬁnes who
high school and enrolled
you are.
for dual credit – I was
�Adem�oekh�_dj[hinterested in whether

personal characteristics
and select a career that
matches with you.
�Ki[�oekh�ademb[Z][�
about technology and
culture to your advantage.
In conclusion, Jim
Quigley, CEO of Deloitte
&amp; Touche Tohmatsu
(2007-2012), indicates,
“Nearly half of all teens
say they would act
unethically to get ahead,
to make more money, if
they knew for sure they
would not get caught.”
He’s troubled by that as
am I, yet we see unethical behaviors played out
regularly in politics and
business. Are our teens
seeing that often the winners are those who break
the law, lie and steal?
The American business environment is
global, is complex. Each
decision on debt, tax
cuts, tariffs, energy,
crop/steel production
and a host of issues has
a global impact. We
should not as a country
be making decisions willy-nilly without thoughtful consideration of the
ramiﬁcations of our
actions. And after all
things are considered,
we should be making the
best decisions based on
“Is it right?”
Comments:
vbblevins@woh, rr.com
Vivian B. Blevins. Ph.D., a graduate
of The Ohio State University,
served as a community college
president for 15 years in Kentucky,
Texas, California, and Missouri
before returning to Ohio to teach
telecommunication employees
from around the country
and students at Edison State
Community College and to work
with veterans. You may reach her
at 937-778-3815 or vbblevins@
woh.rr.com. Viewpoints expressed
in the article are the work of the
author. This publication does
not endorse these viewpoints or
the independent activities of the
author.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday,
Oct. 3, the 276th day of
2018. There are 89 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On Oct. 3, 1995, the
jury in the O.J. Simpson murder trial in Los
Angeles found the former
football star not guilty
of the 1994 slayings of
his former wife, Nicole
Brown Simpson, and
Ronald Goldman (however, Simpson was later

found liable for damages
in a civil trial).

THOUGHT FOR TODAY

On this date
In 1789, President
George Washington
declared Nov. 26, 1789,
a day of Thanksgiving to
express gratitude for the
creation of the United
States of America.
In 1863, President
Abraham Lincoln proclaimed the last Thursday
in November Thanksgiving Day.

“The worst disease in the world is the plague
of vengeance.”
— Dr. Karl Menninger
American psychiatrist (1893-1990)

In 1932, Iraq became
independent of British
administration.
In 1941, Adolf Hitler
declared in a speech
in Berlin that Russia
had been “broken” and

would “never rise again.”
”The Maltese Falcon”
— the version starring
Humphrey Bogart and
directed by John Huston
— premiered in New
York.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

MLAA

Wednesday, October 3, 2018 5

Jam

ing band that sparked a connection between them. They
were married in 1995.
David ﬁrst became a
From page 1
Marauder in the fall of 1991
when Toney Dingess welover 50 years and considers
comed him as a volunteer
this area to be blessed with
band director. This is his
so many talented individu28th year with the Maraudals.
er Band Program. Jamie is
Phillip has devoted his
not only an alumnus of the
life to the performance and
Marauder Band but has volpromotion of music and
unteered as the Color Guard
the arts in the Meigs Local
Dave and Jamie Deem —
Instructor for the past 15
area. He has donated a conDistinguished Service Award
years.
siderable amount of time
David and Jamie Deem
The Deems have served
to the Meigs Local Alumni
have both been lifelong resiour community in more
Association through playing
dents of Meigs County and
annually at the Reunion on
are both currently employed ways than previously mentioned. Jamie was a member
the River. He takes great
by the Meigs Local School
of the Pomeroy Emergency
pride in being a Marauder
District. Jamie is a 1980
Squad for ﬁve years. David
and in the opportunity to
graduate from Meigs
coached for the Pomeroy
make the event a success
Local. After graduation,
Youth League and served
year after year. He enjoys
she attended Ohio Univeron the Pomeroy Village
fostering a creative spark in
sity where she earned her
Council. They are memothers as much as he enjoys
degree in Elementary Eduplaying himself. Other local Jillian Wilt-Kranyik —
cation and Early Childhood bers of the Sacred Heart
Church in Pomeroy where
musicians describe him as
Development. She began
Class of 2000
a kind and gracious mentor,
her teaching career at Meigs they were Directors of ReliJillian is a Master Serstating that his dedication
Local in the fall of 1984 and gious Education and Youth
geant serving on Active
and encouragement are tire- Duty with assignment to the is currently completing her Activities for several years.
The Deems feel their
less.
35th year as a Meigs Local
Army Reserve, where she
greatest accomplishment
Aside from music, Philteacher.
currently provides support
to this day is the raising
lip worked a 27 year career
David graduated from
as the Retention NCO to the
of their three children
with the Ohio Department
0779 Engineer Company in University of Rio Grande
Jessica Miller, Michael
of Transportation. PhilParkersburg, West Virginia, with a degree in ElemenBlaettnar and Emily Grace
lip lives along the river in
tary Education and later
the 0444 Postal Company
Pomeroy with his wife of
in Millwood, West Virginia, earned his Master’s Degree Deem. After the loss of
ten years, Jane.
from Marshall University in their daughter Emily, and
and the 305th Military
Leadership Studies. He has along with the help and
Police Company in Big
support of our community,
worked at Meigs Local for
Bend, West Virginia.
Gary Coleman —
26 years, and has served the they were able to design
After graduating from
Class of 1986
and create the Emily Grace
past 10 years as the Assishigh school, Jillian joined
Gary is a member of the
Deem Remembrance Park.
the U.S. Army in 2002. She tant Principal at the Meigs
Class of 1986 and a 1991
Emi’s Place continues to
graduate of Ohio University, has been assigned to numer- Middle School. Together
where he received his bach- ous units across the United the Deems have taught over provide a place for the
families of the community
1,200 children.
elor’s in political science and States and was deployed to
to enjoy time together.
As educators at Meigs
Iraq in support of Operation
a Russian minor.
Throughout each year
Local, they were part of
Iraqi Freedom.
He is an active Freethere are numerous events
the ﬁrst school-wide Title I
Jillian enjoys spending
mason, belonging to
Middleport and Shade-River her free time helping coach program that involved team that take place there: birthday celebrations, communiteaching and full inclusion
youth softball. She has
Lodges and both the York
of students with disabilities. ty gatherings, Live Nativity
coached the Pomeroy Lady
Rite and Scottish Rite bodScenes, Art in the Park and
Panthers minor and peewee Throughout their careers
ies. He is the 2018 Grand
the Summer Food Program
Photographer for the Grand team, the Knockouts minor the Deems have served on
numerous educational com- are just a few that provide
Council of Royal and Select team, the Xplosions Peeopportunities for the youth
mittees.
wee team, the Ohio Valley
Masons of Ohio and has
in our community. The
It was while teaching
10U all-star team, and head
been selected as the 2021
Deems will continue to
at Pomeroy Elementary
Grand Photographer for the coaches the Amanda Afterprovide service to the comthat David and Jamie ﬁrst
shock 10U travel team.
Grand Commandery of the
munity by maintaining and
met. Even though Jamie
She and her husband are
State of Ohio.
caring for this wonderful
and David had each been
He is nationally published, owners/operators of the
place for many, many years
involved in various extraincluding an image in “Ohio Hitting Barn set to open in
to come.
the late fall. The facility will curricular activities such
in Photographs” from the
as cheerleader advisor and
be used to give local youth
Ohio University Press. He
Information provided by the Meigs
somewhere to practice dur- basketball coach it was the
was also a ﬁnalist in FootLocal Alumni Association.
love of teaching and marchball Friday Night Magazine’s ing the off season.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

67°

76°

75°

A thunderstorm in spots this afternoon. Partly
cloudy tonight. High 82° / Low 67°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

79°
68°
73°
50°
92° in 1953
31° in 1946
(in inches)

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

Trace
Trace
0.17
48.47
33.20

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:26 a.m.
7:08 p.m.
12:57 a.m.
3:50 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

Oct 8

First

Full

Last

Oct 16 Oct 24 Oct 31

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

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

Major
7:20a
8:15a
9:07a
9:56a
10:44a
11:32a
12:22p

Minor
1:05a
2:00a
2:53a
3:43a
4:31a
5:20a
6:09a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Major
7:49p
8:44p
9:35p
10:23p
11:10p
11:58p
12:47p

Minor
1:35p
2:29p
3:21p
4:10p
4:57p
5:45p
6:34p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Oct. 3, 1979, Connecticut’s ﬁrst
recorded October tornado struck
north of Hartford. The twister killed
three, injured 500 and caused over
$200 million in damage around
Bradley International Airport.

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

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Very High

AIR QUALITY
300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
12.63
19.52
23.34
12.93
12.99
25.69
12.19
31.62
37.64
12.76
30.60
37.30
34.60

Portsmouth
83/68

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.05
-1.11
-1.37
+0.40
-0.01
-2.51
-2.06
-6.50
-4.68
-1.46
-8.70
-3.40
-5.00

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

From page 1

ground’s future, though they are not
cheap.
Newberry added there are currently
three buildings on the new relocation
site, one of which was built and donated
by Thomas Do-It Center while the other
two were built with grant and insurance money that had to be used within
a speciﬁc period of time, or the money
would’ve been lost.
Newberry said Henry came to the
relocation committee with the idea for a
concert after seeing Facebook posts concerning efforts to raise funds. Saturday’s
concert is ofﬁcially called “Devin Henry
&amp; Friends In Concert with Metheney.”
Henry stated: “The fair and 4-H was a
big part of my life growing up, I know it
is still very thriving in our community…
it’s time we get a new fair grounds.”
Henry has developed a large, local
following and more recently has performed at venues in Nashville, Tenn.,
including the storied Bluebird Cafe. He’s
also signed to Nashville Entertainment
Weekly Records. He describes himself
as an Ohio-Made Country Artist, making a new type of country music which
can be found on Spotify, Apple Music,
or Google. His latest single “23 Empty”
about the loss of a close friend, has been
picking up steam on country music
stations across the country. Henry’s parents are originally from Mason County
where he still has several family members.
Metheney also has a large, local fan
base. A native of Rutland in Meigs
County, he also has performed in Nashville, Tenn., at The Adelphia Music Hall
in Marietta, The Colony Club in Gallipolis, as well as at several local events,
including the Mayor’s Night Out concert series in Point Pleasant.
Newberry said people in the community are often looking for events and
activities to attend and “this is a great
thing to do for a good cause.”
She added, “We’re trying really hard
to get those kids out of ﬂoodwaters…
it’s such a concern for us, we don’t want
anyone hurt.”
This is a rain or shine event. Contact
Ginger Thompson 740-645-7596 for
more information.
Follow A Fair For Our Future Facebook page for more information on
upcoming, fundraising events, like
the Fall Festival and Haunted House
planned for 3-11 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 27
at the Gallia County Jr. Fairgrounds.

SUNDAY

87°
65°

Partly sunny with a
t-storm in spots

A shower in the
morning; partly sunny

85°
63°
Partly sunny, very
warm and humid

Marietta
81/67

Murray City
81/67
Belpre
81/67

Athens
81/67

St. Marys
81/67

Parkersburg
81/66

Coolville
81/67

Elizabeth
81/67

Spencer
81/66

Buffalo
82/67
Milton
82/67

St. Albans
83/67

Huntington
81/67

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
60/46
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
71/61
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
73/63
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

81°
64°
Partly sunny and
warm

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
81/68

Ashland
81/68
Grayson
82/68

MONDAY

86°
65°

Wilkesville
81/67
POMEROY
Jackson
81/67
82/67
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
82/67
82/68
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
83/71
GALLIPOLIS
82/67
82/67
82/67

South Shore Greenup
81/68
82/68

52

Logan
81/67

McArthur
81/67

Lucasville
83/69

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
83/69

Very High

Primary: elm, ragweed, grass
Mold: 1708

SATURDAY

80°
65°

Adelphi
82/68

Waverly
82/69

Pollen: 13

Low

MOON PHASES

FRIDAY

A shower and
Clouds and sun with a
thunderstorm around
passing shower

1

Primary: cladosporium
Thu.
7:27 a.m.
7:07 p.m.
2:02 a.m.
4:39 p.m.

THURSDAY

84°
62°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC

Precipitation

A graduate of Woodﬁeld
University with a bachelor’s
degree in business management, Jillian resides
in Meigs County with her
husband James and three
daughters Payton, Kyleigh
and Jessa. She and her
family enjoy all sports and
traveling to the Caribbean
Islands.

“Ohio Photographer of the
Year.”
In 2017, he received the
OHSAA Respect the Game
State Award for contribution and service by Meigs
High School. He has taken
images of the football team
and band since 2010 from
Football Friday Nights to
performances in Columbus
to Washington D.C. and
looks forward to alumni
band each year with his fellow alumni ﬁeld-commanders and band family.
Finally, he enjoys sharing
his images with others in
what he calls the beauty of
his slice of Appalachia.
He is married to Tanya,
Class of 1983, and father
to Shaun and Kassandra,
Classes of 2015 and 2020.

Clendenin
82/64
Charleston
82/67

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
41/24
Montreal
59/49

Billings
50/30
Minneapolis
78/39

Toronto
62/60
Detroit
77/69

New York
76/63

Chicago
84/58

Denver
81/41

Washington
82/66

Kansas City
88/57

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
82/59/pc
56/47/sh
89/70/s
80/63/pc
81/62/pc
50/30/pc
70/50/pc
71/58/pc
82/67/pc
87/69/s
74/36/pc
84/58/c
84/69/pc
80/71/c
84/69/pc
88/73/pc
81/41/s
84/44/t
77/69/c
88/75/pc
87/74/pc
86/71/pc
88/57/pc
85/67/t
89/71/s
73/63/r
86/72/pc
89/77/pc
78/39/t
87/69/pc
89/76/pc
76/63/pc
86/71/pc
90/73/pc
80/63/pc
88/69/t
75/66/pc
67/51/pc
86/67/s
87/67/pc
92/69/pc
73/57/t
71/61/sh
60/46/pc
82/66/pc

Hi/Lo/W
81/53/pc
53/43/r
90/70/s
82/69/pc
85/63/pc
47/37/c
59/37/r
78/58/pc
85/65/pc
90/69/s
56/39/c
61/53/pc
80/63/t
77/50/t
81/54/t
89/73/pc
65/48/c
58/52/pc
71/45/sh
87/75/pc
87/75/t
77/60/t
62/57/sh
81/66/pc
89/71/s
74/62/pc
85/70/t
88/79/sh
53/44/pc
89/70/s
90/73/t
80/59/pc
86/70/pc
90/72/pc
85/62/pc
86/66/s
78/51/t
70/49/c
88/69/s
91/70/pc
75/64/t
68/47/r
67/54/pc
60/48/c
89/66/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
89/70

High
Low

El Paso
89/69
Chihuahua
86/61

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

95° in Tampa, FL
26° in Cotton, MN

Global
High
112° in Abadan, Iran
Low -28° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
87/74
Monterrey
86/70

Miami
89/77

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

You’ll’llFeel
F Right
l At Home.

Racine 740-949-2210
Syracuse 740-992-6333
Middleport 740-691-5131

w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
OH-70030880

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OH-70020470

Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close
a loan quickly. Please come see us for all your bank needs, we
promise to make you feel right at home.

�Sports
6 Wednesday, October 3, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Tornadoes 4th, Eagles 5th at district
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

McDERMOTT, Ohio
— All good things must
come to an end.
The Southern and
Eastern golf teams — cochampions of the Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division — both teed it
up for the ﬁnal time this
fall in in the Division III
Southeast District tournament at Elks Country
Club in Scioto County on
Monday.
With just one team and
one individual who is not
on that team moving on
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
Southern’s Jarrett Hupp follows through on an approach shot in to the state tournament,
front of Eastern’s Jasiah Brewer, during a Sept. 5 TVC Hocking Crooksville took the
team championship with
match at Riverside Golf Club in Mason, W.Va.

a 333, ﬁve strokes ahead
of second-place Manchester and 11 strokes
ahead of third-place West
Union.
Western senior Elias
Montgomery earned
district medalist honors
with a ﬁve-over par
77, one stroke ahead
of the nearest competitor, Crooksville’s Brock
White.
The Tornadoes — who
in addition to sharing the
league’s regular season
crown with the Eagles,
also won the TVC Hocking one-day tournament
for the second straight
year — ﬁnished fourth in
the district with a 352 in
the play ﬁve, count four

format.
The Tornadoes were
led by the senior duo of
Jensen Anderson and
Jarrett Hupp, who tied
for the 12th-best round
of the tournament with
12-over par 84s. Fellow
SHS senior Ryan Acree
was next for the Tornadoes with a 91, followed
by Landen Hill with a 93.
Joey Weaver recorded a
99 as the Tornadoes’ ﬁfth
score.
Eastern counted scores
from a quartet of seniors
and took ﬁfth in the district with a score of 367,
15 stokes behind Southern and 15 stroke ahead
of Whiteoak in sixth.
Jasiah Brewer led the

Eagles with a 14-over par
86, the 17th-best round
of the day. Ryan Harbour
and John Harris each
scored 92, while Kylee
Tolliver came in with a
97. Nick Durst contributed a 101 as Eastern’s
ﬁfth score.
South Webster and
Southeastern both had
four-man totals of 383,
with the Jeeps earning a
three-stroke edge on the
ﬁfth-score tie-breaker.
North Adams and Waterford rounded out the
team standings with
scores of 387 and 395
respectively.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Fed Hock
downs
Southern
By Scott Jones
sjones@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE, Ohio — It’s not how you start, but
rather how you ﬁnish that makes the difference.
The Southern volleyball team led 2-0 through
two sets of Monday night’s Tri Valley Conference Hocking Division contest in Meigs County,
but Federal Hocking rallied to take the ﬁnal
three games on to en route to a 3-2 victory.
The Lady Tornadoes (3-12, 3-9 TVC Hocking)
earned a 25-19 victory in the opening contest,
followed by a tightly contested 25-22 win in the
second set.
Federal Hocking answered in the third game,
outscoring SHS 25-18 to close the match to 2-1
overall.
The Lady Lancers extended the contest to
a decisive ﬁfth game, following a 25-16 win in
game four.
Federal Hocking closed out the ﬁnale with
a 15-11 win to edge past the host with a 3-2
match victory.
The Lady Tornadoes service attack was led by
Marissa Brooker with 16 points, while Sydney
Adams followed with 14 service points.
Mickenzie Ferrel was next with 11 service
points, as Phoenix Cleland followed with eight
points. Jordan Hardwick and Baylee Wolfe
rounded out the SHS service attack with three
points apiece.
Jaylen Rogers posted 13 points to lead the
Lady Lancers service attack, followed by Makayla Bowen and Gabbi McCoy with 10 points
apiece. Lindsey Parsons followed with seven
points, as Chloe McCune posted six service
points. Kendra Tabler closed out the FHHS service attack with one point.
The victory for Federal Hocking provided a
season sweep of the Lady Tornadoes, as the
Purple and Gold suffered a 3-1 match setback on
Sep. 6 in Stewart.
Southern returned to action on Tuesday to
host Tri Valley Conference Hocking foe South
Gallia.
Scott Jones can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext 2106.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, Oct. 3
Volleyball
Meigs at Eastern, 7
p.m.
Cross Country
River Valley, Meigs,
Eastern, South Gallia
at Alexander, 4:30

Wahama, 7 p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 7
p.m.
Point Pleasant at Lincoln County, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Vinton
County, 7 p.m.

Boys Soccer
Point Pleasant at St.
Marys, 7 p.m.

Girls Soccer
South Point at Gallia
Academy, 5:30
Point Pleasant at Poca,
7 p.m.

Thursday, Oct. 4
Volleyball
Eastern at South Gallia,
7 p.m.
South Point at Gallia
Academy, 6:30
Federal Hocking at

Boys Soccer
Midland Trail at Point
Pleasant, 6:30
South Point at Gallia
Academy, 7 p.m.
Ironton St. Joseph at
Ohio Valley Christian, 5:30

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern sophomore Sydney Sanders dives for a pass during the Lady Eagles’ win over Miller on Monday in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

Lady Eagles sweep Miller
By Alex Hawley

and come back. I felt like
we had rallies where we
played really hard, really
strong, and didn’t let up
TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — Off and running through those. We need
to do that for an entire
in October.
The Eastern volleyball set, but we’ll go one at a
time.”
team began the ﬁnal
Sheppard acknowlmonth of the regular seaedged that, along with a
son in grand fashion on
Monday at ‘The Nest’, as better serve percentage,
the Lady Eagles defeated communication is the key
to her team taking the
Tri-Valley Conference
next step.
Hocking Division guest
“We can’t miss serves
Miller in straight games.
Eastern (10-3, 9-2 TVC the way we did, ideally
we don’t miss any, but I’d
Hocking) —currently in
sole possession of second like to keep it under two,”
place in the league stand- Sheppard said. “Our communication, it was like we
ings —took its ﬁrst lead
of the match at 6-5 in the heard each other, but we
didn’t quite listen, or it
opening game and the
was too late. We have to
hosts led the rest of the
clean that up, but I was
way to a 25-16 victory.
happy with them, and I’m
The Lady Eagles tied
proud of them as always.”
the score twice before
For the match, Eastern
taking a 4-3 lead in the
— which earned 18 aces
second game. Miller —
as a team — missed a
which is now 9-4 in the
total of eight serves for
league — tied the it at
a 89.2 serve percentage.
four, but never regained
Meanwhile, the Lady
the advantage. Eastern
led by as many as eight in Falcons had 16 aces and a
the game, winning it by a serve percentage of 87.3.
Eastern had a 54.5 side25-17 tally.
out percentage in the win,
The hosts scored the
while Miller’s was 39.2.
ﬁrst four points of the
Eastern senior Alexus
third game and jolted
Metheney led the hosts
out to a nine-point, 14-5
with 15 service points,
lead. Miller fought back
including a match-best
to within three points,
seven aces. Kelsey Casto
at 23-20, but Eastern
ﬁnished with seven points
claimed back-to-back
and two aces in the win,
markers to take the
match-sealing 25-20 win. while Caterina Miecchi
and Allison Barber had
Following the victory,
six points apiece, with
ﬁrst-year Lady Eagles
head coach Mykala Shep- ﬁve aces and one ace
pard credited the victory respectively.
Jenna Chadwell conto her team’s ability to
tributed ﬁve points to
keep errors from piling
the winning cause, while
up.
Kylie Gheen and Haley
“We were trying to
Burton had three points
minimize mistakes,”
apiece, including two
Sheppard said. “There
are going to be some mis- aces by Gheen and one by
takes made, but we were Burton.
Miecchi earned a
able to rally around those

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Eastern senior Kelsey Casto (10) passes the ball during the Lady
Eagles victory on Monday in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

match-best 14 kills to lead
the victors at the net. Allison Barber was next with
seven kills, followed by
Olivia Barber with ﬁve.
Layna Catlett had four
kills and two blocks for
the hosts, Gheen added
a pair of kills, while
Chadwell had one kill,
one block and a team-best
19 assists.
Sydney Sanders led the
EHS defense with 11 of
the squad’s 46 digs.
Josie Crabtree led
the guests with eight
points, half of which
came from aces. Josie
Perani had seven points
and four aces for Miller,
Askya McFann added
four points and one ace,
while Brooklyn Wilson
and Haille Joseph earned
three points apiece,
with three and two aces
respectively.
Joseph and Crabtree
paced the Lady Falcons
at the net with seven

kills apiece, with Joseph
earning a team-best three
blocks. Wilson had four
kills for MHS, while
Taylor Hinkle chipped in
with a trio of kills and a
pair of blocks. McFann
earned one kill and two
blocks, while Perani had
one kill, 20 assists and 13
of the team’s 33 digs.
The Lady Eagles are
back at home on Wednesday, as they welcome
Meigs to start a string
of three matches in four
days.
“These girls have to
stay up,” Sheppard said.
“We need the motivation
and we need the momentum going into Wednesday, Thursday and then
Saturday.”
Eastern — winner of
four straight matches —
also defeated Miller on
Sept. 6 in Hemlock.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Indians prepared to open ALDS

MLB

x-Boston
y-New York
Tampa Bay
Toronto
Baltimore

W
108
100
90
73
47

x-Cleveland
Minnesota
Detroit
Chicago
Kansas City

W
91
78
64
62
58

x-Houston
y-Oakland
Seattle
Los Angeles
Texas

W
103
97
89
80
67

x-Atlanta
Washington
Philadelphia
New York
Miami

W
90
82
80
77
63

x-Milwaukee
y-Chicago
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati

W
96
95
88
82
67

W
x-Los Angeles
92
y-Colorado
91
Arizona
82
San Francisco
73
San Diego
66
x-clinched division
y-clinched wild card

All Times EDT
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
54 .667
—
—
62
.617
8
—
72 .556 18
7
89
.451 35
24
115 .290 61
50
Central Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
71 .562
—
—
84
.481 13
19
98 .395 27
33
100 .383 29
35
104 .358 33
39
West Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
59 .636
—
—
65 .599
6
—
73 .549 14
8
82 .494 23
17
95
.414 36
30
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
72 .556
—
—
80 .506
8
9
82 .494 10
11
85
.475 13
14
98
.391 26½ 27½
Central Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
67 .589
—
—
68 .583
1
—
74 .543 7½
3
79 .509 13
8½
95
.414 28½
24
West Division
L
Pct GB WCGB
71 .565
—
—
72 .568
1
—
80 .506
9
9
89
.451 18
18
96 .407 25
25

L10
5-5
7-3
5-5
4-6
3-7

Str Home
W-1 57-24
L-1 53-28
W-2 51-30
L-2 40-41
W-1 28-53

Away
51-30
47-34
39-42
33-48
19-62

L10
6-4
7-3
3-7
2-8
6-4

Str
W-1
W-6
L-5
L-5
L-1

Home
49-32
49-32
38-43
30-51
32-49

Away
42-39
29-52
26-55
32-49
26-55

L10
8-2
6-4
5-5
5-5
3-7

Str
L-1
L-1
W-3
W-1
L-3

Home
46-35
50-31
45-36
42-39
34-47

Away
57-24
47-34
44-37
38-43
33-48

L10
6-4
5-5
2-8
7-3
4-6

Str
L-2
L-1
W-2
W-2
L-2

Home
43-38
41-40
49-32
37-44
38-43

Away
47-34
41-40
31-50
40-41
25-55

L10
9-1
6-4
4-6
5-5
2-8

Str Home
W-8 51-30
L-1 51-31
L-1 43-38
W-1 44-36
L-1 37-44

Away
45-37
44-37
45-36
38-43
30-51

L10
7-3
8-2
4-6
1-9
6-4

Str Home
W-4 45-37
L-1 47-34
L-1 40-41
L-4 42-39
W-1 31-50

Away
47-34
44-38
42-39
31-50
35-46

KANSAS CITY, Mo.
(AP) — Cleveland manager Terry Francona
conﬁrmed Sunday the
club would open its
American League Division Series in Houston
on Friday with reigning
Cy Young winner Corey
Kluber in Game 1.
Carlos Carrasco is set
for Game 2.
Both hurlers ﬁnished
the season among the
top 10 in the league in
ERA, wins and strikeouts.
Kluber was 1-0 with
17 strikeouts and two
runs allowed in two
starts against Houston

CINCINNATI (AP)
— The Reds’ worst
start since the Great
Depression led them to
make the ﬁrst managing
change of the season,
ﬁring Bryan Price after
a 3-15 beginning . They
ended with their fourth
straight 90-loss season,
unsure who will be the
next manager.
Interim Jim Riggleman led the Reds to a
64-80 mark . He’s one
of several in-house
candidates being interviewed by Dick Williams, the president of
baseball operations, and
his staff. They’re also
considering outside
candidates and plan to
hire someone by the
end of October.
“I thought Jim has
handled this as professionally as anyone,”
Williams said. “He has
been extremely cooperative and done a very
nice job of stepping
into this role knowing
that there would be a
search at the end.”
Dusty Baker led the
Reds to three 90-win
seasons from 2010-13,
their best showing
since the days of the
Big Red Machine, but

By Scott Jones
sjones@aimmediamidwest.com

Scott Jones can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext 2106.

BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)

By Bryan Walters

12 (WVPB)

11 (WVAH)

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
13 (WOWK)

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

“Ever since we
clinched the division
and knew we were
going to be playing in
the postseason, I think
as much as you want
to still go out and win
these (ﬁnal regularseason) games you
know there’s that at the
end of the road,” he
said. “After (Sunday’s
regular-season ﬁnale)
we’ll start preparing for
the Astros and hopefully
a couple more teams
after that.”
Carrasco (17-10) is
prepared for Saturday’s
start.
“Everybody celebrated

John Minchillo | AP

Cincinnati Reds interim manager Jim Riggleman (35) works in
the seventh inning Sunday against the Pittsburgh Pirates in
Cincinnati.

he was ﬁred for failing
to get the Reds deep
into the playoffs. They
then launched a massive rebuild and have
lost 98, 94, 94 and 95
games.
Hall of Fame shortstop Barry Larkin isn’t
interested in the job
at this time. Pat Kelly,
Billy Hatcher, Freddie
Benavides and former
Red Sox manager John
Farrell are among the
in-house possibilities.
Whoever gets the job
will have less to do with
a turnaround than the
front ofﬁce, which has
hoped that young pitch-

ers acquired in trades
for stars would have
emerged by this point.
The lack of dependable starting pitching
has been the common
thread in the losing.
“We know pitching is
a priority for us moving
forward,” Williams said.
“We are currently discussing every free agent
player, starting with
pitching by design.
We will also be talking
about trading targets.
There are a lot of possibilities out there.”
Some things to watch
in Cincinnati’s offseason:

WEDNESDAY EVENING

Point CC competes
at Huntington
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — The Point Pleasant girls
and boys cross country teams came away with a pair
of top-ﬁve ﬁnishes on Saturday at the 2018 Huntington High School Invitational held on the grounds of
the YMCA Kennedy Center in Cabell County.
The Lady Knights posted a third place effort of 63
points in the girls competition, which Hurricane won
with a ﬁnal tally of 20 points. Huntington was the
overall runner-up with 51 points.
Danielle Ray won the 41-competitor girls events
with a time of 19:48.7, while teammate Asha Bora
was second with a mark of 20:00.6.
Allison Henderson paced the Lady Knights with a
sixth place effort of 22:54.0, followed by Isabella Sang
(25:20.3) and Ava Yonker (26:59.1) with respective
ﬁnishes of 15th and 20th.
Naomi Meisser (27:34.7) and Amber Hatﬁeld
(28:49.8) completed Point’s team score with respective placements of 21st and 28th.
The Hurricane boys also came away with a team
title after posting a winning score of 26 points.
Ravenswood was second in the six-team event with
61 points, while Riverside was third overall with 66
points.
The Black Knights ended up ﬁfth with 137 points
and were led by Luke Wilson with a 10th place time of
17:42.4. Kyelar Morrow (21:03.4) was next in 32nd,
while Ethan Scott (21:44.4) ended up 35th overall.
Isaac Daniels (25:25.1) and Tanner Durst (27:46.4)
respectively ﬁnished 58th and 63rd in the 63-competitor event.
Wyatt Hanshaw of Hurricane won the individual
title with a time of 16:29.5, with teammate Justin
Belcher taking runner-up honors with a mark of
16:41.5.
Visit runwv.com for complete results of the 2018
Huntington Invitational.

this year. Carrasco split
two decisions while
allowing three homers
in his two starts against
the Astros.
“He threw the ball
really well,” Francona
said of Carrasco’s limited ﬁnal start Sunday.
“Good changeup and
breaking ball. I think
he’s situated in a really
good place heading to
the playoffs.”
Francona would not
identify the expected
starter for Game 3 in
Cleveland on Oct. 8.
Kluber (20-7) looks
forward to getting the
postseason started.

(when we clinched),”
he said. “But I never
stopped doing my work.
I just worked hard, trying to do my best to get
ready for the postseason. I got experience
last year in New York.
I think I’ve just got to
prepare myself the same
way I’ve been doing for
the season.”
Carrasco likes the
Indians’ chances.
“I think we have a
pretty good chance,” he
said. “Starting on Friday
and we go from there,
so one game at a time.
But I think this team is
really good.”

Reds looking for manager after 90-loss season

Blue Devils turn
back Chesapeake
CENTENARY, Ohio — The ﬁrst half told the
story.
The Gallia Academy soccer team ended the ﬁrst
half of play leading a 4-1 in Monday night’s Ohio
Valley Conference match against visiting Chesapeake, en route to 6-1 victory at Lester Field in Gallia County.
Chesapeake opened the scoring in the 30th minute when Jacob Martin’s shot beat GAHS goalkeeper Andrew Toler to take a 1-0 lead.
The Blue Devils tied the contest at 1-all when
Justin Day scored in the 24th minute following an
assist by Dalton Vanco.
Brody Wilt propelled GAHS to the lead with two
goals in a span of 28 seconds, scoring at the 13:35
mark and 13:07 mark of the ﬁrst half to push the
hosts ahead at 3-1.
Pedro Moreno staked Gallia Academy to a 4-1
advantage with 8:44 left until intermission.
GAHS accounted for all of the scoring in the second half, as Tristen Posley extended the lead to 5-1
off an assist by Wilt in at the 23:27 mark. Moreno
provided the Blue Devils with a 6-1 lead with 13:38
remaining in the match, as Posley provided the
assist.
Toler was credited with two saves in the game, as
the Blue Devils also claimed a 2-1 advantage in corner kicks. The visitors committed a total of three
fouls in the match, while GAHS had 11.
The Blue Devils tied the Panthers 1-1 in their
previous meeting on Aug. 21 in Chesapeake.
Next up for Gallia Academy, a home date with
South Point on Thursday.

Wednesday, October 3, 2018 7

CABLE

6 PM

6:30

WSAZ News
3 (N)
WTAP News
at Six (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

Fixing the rotation
Top starter Anthony
DeSclafani has been
hurt each of the last
three seasons. The Reds
acquired Matt Harvey
from the Mets in May
and he helped solidify
the rotation, going 7-9
with a 4.94 ERA, but
he’s a free agent. The
young pitchers were
inconsistent again, and
the Reds ended the season moving youngsters
around from bullpen to
rotation to see where
they might ﬁt. Until the
Reds ﬁx that part of the
roster, they’re going to
be hard-pressed to show
much improvement.
What to do with Homer
Homer Bailey went
1-14 in 20 starts with a
6.09 ERA, still showing
the effects of three signiﬁcant arm operations
over the last four years.
The Reds considered
moving him to the bullpen, but the 32-year-old
pitcher felt he wasn’t
prepared for it. He has
one year left on his
contract that includes
a salary of $23 million
in 2019 and a buyout
for an option year at $5
million.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3

7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune (N) (N)
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune (N) (N)
Ent. Tonight Access
(N)
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
News at 6
ABC World Judge Judy Ent. Tonight
(N)
News (N)
(N)
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
(N)
Fortune (N)
Daily Mail
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
TV
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

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

Chicago Fire "Going to
War" 1/3 (N)
Chicago Fire "Going to
War" 1/3 (N)
Goldberg (N) Am.Housewife (N)
Nature "Animal Misfits"
Explore creatures that seem
ill-equipped for survival.
Goldberg (N) Am.Housewife (N)
Survivor "The Chicken Has
Flown the Coop" (N)
Empire "Pay for Their
Presumptions" (N)
Nature "Animal Misfits"
Explore creatures that seem
ill-equipped for survival.
Survivor "The Chicken Has
Flown the Coop" (N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Chicago Med "When to Let
Go" 2/3 (N)
Chicago Med "When to Let
Go" 2/3 (N)
Modern "Kiss Single
and Tell" (N) Parents (N)
Nova "Operation Bridge
Rescue" (N)

Chicago P.D. "Endings" 3/3
(N)
Chicago P.D. "Endings" 3/3
(N)
A Million Little Things
"Band of Dads" (N)
Secrets of the Dead "The
Woman in the Iron Coffin"
(N)
Modern "Kiss Single
A Million Little Things
and Tell" (N) Parents (N) "Band of Dads" (N)
SEAL Team "Fracture" (SP) Criminal Minds "300" (SP)
(N)
(N)
Star "Who's the Daddy" (N) Eyewitness News at 10
p.m. (N)
Nova "Operation Bridge
Secrets of the Dead "The
Rescue" (N)
Woman in the Iron Coffin"
(N)
SEAL Team "Fracture" (SP) Criminal Minds "300" (SP)
(N)
(N)

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Last Man St. Last Man St.
24 (ROOT) In Depth (N) Spotlight
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Horn (N)
Interrupt (N)
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

Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St.
NCAA Volleyball Clemson vs. Georgia Tech Women's (L) DFL Soccer RB Leipzig at Hoffenheim
Poker World Series
Poker World Series
Poker World Series
Poker World Series
NFL Live
NFL's Greatest Games
Kickboxing Glory 59
Grey's Anatomy "How to
Grey's Anatomy "She's
The Holiday (‘06, Romance) Kate Winslet, Jack Black, Cameron Diaz. Two women
with romance issues swap homes and fall for men in their new neighbourhoods. TVPG
Save a Life"
Leaving Home" 1/2
(4:00) Willy
Monsters University Billy Crystal. Two monsters remember their
Monster House (2006, Animated) Voices of Sam
Wonka &amp; t... lives together in University before they became friends. TVG
Lerner, Steve Buscemi, Mitchel Musso. TVPG
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friday (1995, Comedy) Chris Tucker, Nia Long, Ice
Next Friday (‘00, Com)
Cube. TV14
Mike Epps, Ice Cube. TVMA
Loud House Loud House Loud House Loud House Double Dare Double Dare To Be Announced
Law &amp; Order: S.V.U. "Hell" Law&amp;O: SVU "Baggage"
Law&amp;O: SVU "Gone Fishin'" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Mood" Law&amp;O: SVU "Contrapasso"
Family Guy Family Guy MLB on Deck
MLB Baseball American League Wild Card Oakland Athletics vs. New York Yankees (L)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(5:30) Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (:45) Hercules (‘14, Adv) Dwayne Johnson. TV14
(:45) Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines
(:15) The Walking Dead
(:15) Walking Dead "When (:15) The Walking Dead
(:15) The Walking Dead
(:15) The Walking Dead
"Hounded"
the Dead Come Knocking" "Made to Suffer"
"Home"
"The Suicide King"
Expedition Unknown
Expedition Unknown
Expedition Unknown
Hunt for Yeti
To Be Announced
Storage
Storage
S. Wars "Pay S. Wars "The Storage Wars: Auction Mayhem (N)
Wars
Wars
the Dan"
Gutfather"
Tanked!
Tanked!
Tanked: Sea-lebrity Edition "Pro Bowl Fish Bowls" (N)
Tanked!
NCIS "A Desperate Man"
NCIS "Life Before His Eyes" NCIS "Secrets"
NCIS "Psych Out"
NCIS "Need to Know"
CSI "Stand Your Ground"
A League of Their Own (‘92, Com/Dra) Tom Hanks, Geena Davis. TVPG
A League of Their Own
(4:30) The Other Guys TV14 E! News (N)
Divas "This Is My House"
Divas "The Real Nicole" (N) Divas "The Real Nicole"
(:15) MASH
(:55) MASH "Point of View" (:25) MASH
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Goldberg
Goldberg
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Alaska State Troopers "Too Alaska Troopers "Drugged, Alaska State Troopers
Alaska State Troopers
Alaska State Troopers
Drunk to Drive"
Drunk and Deranged"
"Moose/ Man Hunt"
"Loaded for Bear"
"Backwoods Bust"
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Boston Bruins at Washington Capitals Site: Capital One Arena (L)
NHL Hockey
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
Inside Slant NFLTP (N)
UFC Tonight (N)
TUF 28 "Life is a Fight"
The Ultimate Fighter (N)
Forged in Fire "The
Forged in Fire "Akrafena" Forged in Fire "The
Forged in Fire "Tournament (:05) Forged In Fire:Knife
Sawback Hunting Sword"
Landsknecht Sword"
Round 1" (N)
"Forged in Fire All Stars" (N)
The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives
Real Wives Dallas
Dallas "Off the Leash" (N) Below Deck
Hustle and Flow (‘05, Dra) Anthony Anderson, Terrence Howard. TVMA
(:55) Black
Black-ish
WhenWeAll Movie
Property Brothers
HGTV (N)
Property Brothers
Property "Color Clash" (N) Reno. (N)
House (N)
Avengers: Age of Ultron (‘15, Act) Robert Downey Jr.. Tony Stark develops an
The Purge "Rise Up" (N)
Avengers: Age of
artificial intelligence that decides that humans must be destroyed. TV14
Ultron TV14

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

(5:45) The Greatest Showman Legendary

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

7:30
Vice News
Tonight (N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Man on Fire (2004, Action) Dakota Fanning, Marc Anthony,
Real Sports
With Bryant
showman P. T. Barnum launches his iconic
Denzel Washington. A disillusioned mercenary seeks vengeance when a
circus despite countless doubters. TVPG
girl in his care is kidnapped. TVMA
Gumbel
(:15)
Get Out (‘17, Hor) Allison Williams, Daniel
John Wick: Chapter 2 (‘17, Act) Common, Ruby (:05)
X2: X-Men
Kaluuya. A black man is invited to his white girlfriend's
Rose, Keanu Reeves. Forced out of retirement, John Wick United (‘03, Sci-Fi) Patrick
family estate, but finds himself trapped. TVMA
heads to Rome to face off against deadly killers. TVMA
Stewart. TV14
(5:00) Lynyrd (:45)
The Hunt for Red October (1990, Action) Alec Baldwin, Sam
Clear and Present Danger (1994, Action) Willem
Skynyrd If I Neill, Sean Connery. A Soviet nuclear submarine captain plans to defect to Dafoe, Anne Archer, Harrison Ford. A CIA analyst is drawn
the U.S. during its maiden voyage. TV14
into an illegal war against a Colombian drug cartel. TV14

�COMICS

8 Wednesday, October 3, 2018

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

"Y $AVE 'REEN

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

By Hilary Price

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�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 3, 2018 9

Buckeyes coach issues ‘call to arms’
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — The victory
over Penn State was not
enough. Urban Meyer
woke up Sunday still
troubled. So much so, the
Ohio State coach gathered his players for a “call
to arms” meeting.
The message: Those
who aren’t contributing
better start doing so.
“We still need to get
some more production
out of some people who
have either been with
the program for a year or
two, or freshmen that are
talented but they got to
play,” Meyer said Mon-

day, without mentioning
names. “Every team is
dealing with it right now.
Game six is coming up,
and we’re banged up
like every team in the
country, so guys have to
contribute in some way
or another.”
Among the hurting
are defensive tackle
Dre’Mont Jones (ankle)
and cornerback Damon
Arnette, who left Saturday’s 27-26 victory in the
fourth quarter with an
apparent head injury. Tailback Mike Weber (foot)
and defensive tackle Robert Landers (undisclosed)

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

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

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Wanted
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AUCTIONS
Auto Auction
The following vehicle(s)
will be available for public
sale on Friday, October 5,
2018 at Dave's Supreme Auto
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Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631,
at 1:00 pm.
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2008 Ford Edge

played Saturday but are
still not 100 percent.
Meyer said all are probable when No. 3 Ohio
State (5-0, 2-0 Big Ten)
hosts Indiana (4-1, 1-1
Big Ten) on Saturday, but
that could change as the
week progresses.
Making Jones’ situation
all the more troublesome
is that he was expected
to help keep the pass
rush rigid after the loss
of All-American defensive
end Nick Bosa, who is
out after surgery on an
abdominal muscle.
And safety Isaiah Pryor
will miss the ﬁrst half of

the Indiana game after he
was ejected for targeting
last week. Brendon White
and Jahsen Wint could
help pick up the slack
there, Meyer said.

through and wrapped
up Miles Sanders to preserve the Buckeyes’ victory. Young added two
pass breakups and two
quarterback hurries for
good measure.
Quarterback Dwayne
Top performers
Haskins was named Big
Defensive end Chase
Ten offensive player of
Young was a monster
against Penn State, earn- the week for the third
ing Big Ten co-player of time. He passed for 270
yards — 212 of them in
the week honors.
the second half — and
All he did was make
three touchdowns.
six tackles, three for
losses, including two
sacks. The most imporUnselfish play
tant stop was on Penn
Meyer said receiver
State’s last offensive
Terry McLaurin was
play, when he burst
the player of the game

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

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

despite no catches. It
was McLaurin’s downﬁeld blocking that
impressed the coach. He
called the senior captain’s performance the
epitome of the team’s
unselﬁsh culture.
McLaurin managed
to take out three Penn
State defenders to clear
the way to K.J. Hill, who
caught a screen pass
from Haskins and ran in
for a 24-yard touchdown
to put Ohio State ahead
in the fourth quarter.
McLaurin also had three
tackles on punt coverage.

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

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

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�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, October 3, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Lady Raiders sweep South Gallia

OH-70081532

BIDWELL, Ohio —
Twice as nice.
The River Valley volleyball team picked up
a three games to one
victory to earn a season
sweep over non-conference visitor South Gallia
in Monday night’s contest
between Gallia County
squads.
The win provided a season sweep for the Lady
Raiders over the Lady
Rebels, having previously
earned a 3-0 match victory on Aug. 23 in Mercerville.
The match also served
as the Lady Raiders’
annual Volley For The
Cure fundraiser event.
The Lady Rebels (7-10)
charged to a 5-0 advantage in game one, but the
Lady Raiders (8-9) managed to cut the deﬁcit to
just three points at 10-7.
SGHS, however, manufactured a 15-6 run en route
to a 25-13 win.
The second game

favored RVHS early, as
they surged to a 7-1 lead.
The host never trailed
in the set, as they closed
on a 18-10 scoring run to
take a 25-16 victory.
Following a 1-all tie in
the third set, River Valley
outscored South Gallia
24-13 the rest of the way,
en route to a 25-14 win
and 2-1 advantage in the
match.
The fourth game tightly
contested as SGHS
jumped to a 7-0 advantage, but a 14-7 scoring
run by the hosts knotted
the contest at 14-all. From
there, the two squads
engaged in a see-saw
exchange for the lead
before again tying the
game at 19-apiece.
River Valley, however,
closed on a 6-3 scoring
run, earning a 25-22 win
and 3-1 match victory.
The Lady Raiders
service attack was led by
Mikenzi Pope with 19
points, including seven
aces, while Alex Woods
was next with eight service points, including six

attack with one point.
South Gallia ﬁnished
the match with 23 kills,
58 digs and four blocks.
Following the triumph, second-year
RVHS head coach Brent
Smith focused on the
life lessons such a match
encompassed for this
players.
“Whether it’s Volley
For The Cure or some of
the other clubs the school
has that offers charitable
work, it gives them the
Scott Jones | OVP Sports
chance to see the world
RVHS senior Rachel Horner attempts a spike during the Lady
Raiders 3-1 match victory over South Gallia on Monday in Bidwell, is bigger than this small
area,” Smith said. “I also
Ohio.
think it was tremendous
that we could honor
blocks.
aces.
one of the past greats in
The Lady Rebels serKelsey Brown was next
River Valley athletics in
with seven service points, vice attack was led by
coach Sharon Vannoy. To
Rachal Colburn with 15
as Rachel Horner and
have her former players
points, including three
Kasey Birchﬁeld each
here to recognize her also
followed with ﬁve points aces, while Christine
Grifﬁth followed with 10 showed that her reach
apiece, respectively.
was far and wide and
service points.
Lora Kinney and Cierra
nice for the girls to see
Amaya Howell was
Roberts rounded out the
that the team concept
RVHS service attack with next with seven points,
carries on into adulttwo points apiece, respec- including one ace, as
Emma Shamblin followed hood. I’m glad the girls
tively.
with four service points. got to experience that.”
The Silver and Black
Despite the setback,
ﬁnished the contest with Makayla Waugh closed
third-year SGHS head
31 kills, 21 digs and four out the SGHS service

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coach Sarah Shirley was
candid in her response
regarding the game’s
greater purpose.
“It’s huge,” Shirley
said. “To be present for
such an event and to see
such a great coach honored gives not only the
players but coaches something to strive toward.”
River Valley returned
to action on Tuesday
traveled to face Tri Valley
Conference Ohio Division foe Nelsonville-York.
The Silver and Black
looked to avenge a 3-1
setback to NYHS on
Sept. 6 in Bidwell.
South Gallia also was
back in action on Tuesday with a road date
against Southern in a
TVC Hocking Division
contest. The Lady Rebels
were in search of a season sweep of the Lady
Tornadoes, having previously earned a 3-1 match
victory on Sept. 11 in
Gallia County.

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OH-70081529

sjones@aimmediamidwest.com

OH-70081370

By Scott Jones

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