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                  <text>‘Take
charge’ of
recovery
OPINION s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

40°

56°

50°

Partly sunny and breezy today. Clear tonight;
there will be a freeze. High 61° / Low 31°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Lady
Eagles
win title

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 166, Volume 72

Feeding our Friends

AG awards $111.8
million in grants to
victim service providers
Local agencies
receive funding
Staff Report

COLUMBUS, Ohio
— Ohio Attorney
General Mike DeWine
announced last week
that his ofﬁce is awarding $111.8 million in
grants to crime victim
service providers
across Ohio, including
$29 million to help
child victims.
The grants are being
awarded to support
more than 400 programs throughout the
state through Victims
of Crime Act and State
Victim Assistance Act
funding.
“These grants will
help provide comprehensive care and critical services for victims
of crime,” Attorney
General DeWine said.
“The funding will
support and expand
existing programs
throughout Ohio and
allow new, innovative
programs to develop.
This year, we placed
a special emphasis on
providing funding for
programs that help
Ohio’s youngest and
most vulnerable – child
victims.”
Among the grants
awarded were funds
to several programs
which serve local residents.
Victims of Crime
Act (VOCA) and State
Victim Assistance Act
(SVAA) grants were
awarded to local agencies as follows:
Survivor Advocacy
Outreach Program
(based in Athens,
serves Meigs, Gallia and others) —
$312,417.29, VOCA;
Athens County
Child Advocacy Center (based in Athens,
serves Meigs, Gallia and others) — $
208,524.95, VOCA;
City of Gallipolis
Victim Assistance —
$137,068.33, VOCA;
$5,648.24, SVAA; total
of $142,716.57;
Gallia County
Prosecutor’s Ofﬁce —
$51,092.29, VOCA;
$57,156.00, SVAA;
total of $108,248.29;
Community Assault

Prevention Services
(based in Jackson
County, serves Meigs,
Gallia and Jackson)
— $97,468.20, VOCA;
$10,560.00, SVAA;
total of $108,028.20;
Meigs-Gallia CASA
Program (serves
Gallia and Meigs) —
$53,320.84, VOCA;
Meigs County
Prosecutor’s Ofﬁce
Victim Assistance —
$58,656.46, VOCA;
$79,411.12, SVAA;
total of $138,067.58.
Adena Health Systems - Sexual Assault
Nurse Examiner
(serves Gallia and others) — $175,412.00,
VOCA;
Hope’s Place Inc.
Child Advocacy Center
(based in Kentucky,
serves Gallia and Lawrence) — $201,366.11,
VOCA;
Sojourners Care Network for at-risk youth
victimization (based in
Vinton, serves Meigs,
Gallia and others) — $
229,234.44, VOCA.
One new program
funded in the area
was the Gallia County
Survivor Services
which serves victims
of domestic violence,
child abuse and sexual
assault — $89,382.87,
VOCA.
Of the total grant
funding announced, an
estimated $28 million
will go toward providing services to domestic violence victims, an
estimated $25 million
will go toward services
for victims of sexual
assault or human trafﬁcking, and about $29
million will go toward
programs that serve
child victims. Funding
also will go to programs that serve victims with disabilities,
elderly victims, and
other victims of crime.
Some of the children’s programs funded
by the grants include:
University Hospitals Health System,
$670,293: Grant
funding will be used
to provide intensive
trauma-informed crisis
care and holistic case
management services
for children who are
treated for gunshot
See AG | 5

INDEX
Obituaries: 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.

Wednesday, October 17, 2018 s 50¢

Courtesy photo

The 2018 Pomeroy Firemen’s Association “Feeding Our Friends” food drive was held on Saturday, Oct. 13. With the help of our community,
the firemen’s association donated 1,056 food items along with $1,039.06 to the Meigs Cooperative Parish. Both numbers are records for
the 6th annual drive, which is held at Powell’s Foodfair. Pictured are representatives from the Pomeroy Firemen’s Association presenting
a portion of the donated non-perishable food items along with a check to a representative from the Meigs Cooperative Parish.

Meigs Democrats hold fall dinner
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Democratic Party hosted its
fall spaghetti dinner last
week with guest speakers Valarie Gerlach and
Shawna Roberts.
Gerlach is a candidate for the 4th District
Court of Appeals against
Republican Mike Hess.
This race is for the seat
currently held by William
Harsha who cannot seek
reelection. The other 4th
District Court of Appeals
race has Democrat Marie
Hoover (incumbent)
against Jason P. Smith.
Gerlach is from
Portsmouth, and previously ran for the Court of
Appeals in 2016.
She explained that the
Court of Appeals, for
which the 4th district

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Democratic candidate for the 4th District Court of Appeals Valarie Gerlach addressed the Meigs
County Democrats at their fall spaghetti dinner last week.

serves 14 counties, is
the court of last resort
for many people in their
criminal or civil cases.

The recent presence of
the Supreme Court nomination in the news highlights the importance

of judicial candidates,
stated Gerlach.
See DINNER | 5

Tales in the tavern returns
By Erin Perkins
eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT — As Halloween approaches, many people
are searching out different ways
to celebrate this harvest season.
During Fort Randolph’s Harvest Fest and Tales in the Tavern, visitors at the fort will be
able to listen to stories that Fort
Randolph Committee Member
Ed Cromley described as having
more of a thrilling nature than a
scary one, punching a surprise
twist at the end. Many of the
stories will be set in the colonial
era. All of the stories will be suitable for children as this event is
all-around family friendly.
The event is set for Saturday,
Oct. 27 from 4-8 p.m. at Fort
Randolph located inside Krodel
Park in Point Pleasant and is put
on by the Fort Randolph Committee. As with several events at
Fort Randolph, this event is free
of charge, but donations to the
fort are welcomed and appreci-

Courtesy photo

Tales in the tavern is an event fit for the
entire family, all can enjoy activities held
within Fort Randolph.

ated.
People will be able to explore
the grounds of the fort, seeing
re-enactors busy with various
activities. Food, such as beans,
will be cooked on an open ﬂame
and other snacks will be available

as well.
The telling of the tales will
begin at 7 p.m. Craig Hesson will
be one of the storytellers for the
evening and Cromley commented
if an individual has an applicable
tale to share, they are welcome
to offer their story as suggestion
to committee members. The stories must be family oriented and
can either be set in the colonial
era or of a generic time setting.
A gentleman was even welcomed
to sing a song during this sharing hour last year.
“We like to get together at the
fort and have a good time,” said
Cromley.
Harvest Fest and Tales in the
Tavern is another opportunity
for the residents, as well as visitors of Mason County to come
and visit Fort Randolph. The last
time the fort was open, during
Liberty Days.
Erin Perkins is a staff writer for Ohio Valley
Publishing. Reach her at (304) 675-1333,
extension 1992.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, October 17, 2018

OBITUARIES
DREWY M. GORE
RUTLAND — Drewy
M. Gore, 81, of Rutland,
Ohio, went to be with his
Lord Monday, Oct. 15,
2018, in his home.
Born Sept. 21. 1937,
at Gallipolis, Ohio, son
of the late Cassie M and
Myrtle Lawson Gore.
Drewy was a supervisor
at Lakin State Hospital,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., a
maintenance clerk at Kaiser-Century Alnminum
Plant, Ravenswood, W.Va.
He was a member of End
Time Harvest Church,
Jackson, Ohio.
He is survived his wife,
Dorothy J. Combs Gore;
son, Michael R. Gore;
granddaughter, Elaine M.
Gore; brother-in-law, Lee

(Peggy) Combs and families; cousins, Caroline
(Corby) Neason and families, and Joe (Shirley)
Williams and families; a
host of other cousins, and
special friends.
Drewy was also preceded by a son, Timothy
A. Gore.
Services are Saturday,
Oct. 20, 2018, at noon
at Rutland Civic Center,
Rutland, Ohio, with Dr.
David Rahamnt ofﬁciating. Burial to follow at
Miles Cemetery, Rutland,
Ohio. Family will receive
friends from 11 a.m. until
time of services Saturday.
Online condolences
may be sent at birchﬁeldfuneralhome.com.

KING
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. — Pauletta Virginia
Randolph King, age 68, of Point Pleasant, W.Va. died
Sunday, Oct. 14, 2018 at Holzer Hospice of Holzer
Hospital in Gallipolis.
Services for Pauletta will be at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home on Friday, Oct. 19. Visitation will be from
noon- 1 p.m. with the funeral service ofﬁciated by Rev.
John Bumgarner beginning at 1 p.m. Pauletta will be
laid to rest at Oak Grove Cemetery in Letart, W.Va.,
following the funeral service.

Daily Sentinel

Area Trick-or-Treat times
Editor’s Note: Listed are the
Trick-or-Treat times as submitted to The Daily Sentinel. Halloween events and Trick-or-Treat
information may be submitted by
email to tdsnews@aimmediamidwest.com.
RACINE — Trick-or-Treat will

be held on Thursday, Oct. 25 from
6-7 p.m. with a party to follow at
the ﬁre station.
SYRACUSE — Trick-or-Treat
will be held on Thursday, Oct.
25 from 6-7:30 p.m. All village
streets, with the exception of
State Route 124 will be closed

during this time.
RUTLAND — Trick-or-Treat
will be held on Thursday, Oct. 25
from 6-7 p.m.
POMEROY — Treat Street will
take place in downtown Pomeroy
from 6:30-8 p.m. on Thursday,
Oct. 25.

Hurricane blamed for 16 deaths in Florida
By Jay Reeves

storm’s fury became
clearer after nearly a
week of missing-persons
PANAMA CITY, Fla. reports and desperate
searches of the Florida
— Hurricane Michael
killed at least 16 people Panhandle neighborin Florida, most of them hoods devastated by
the most powerful hurin the coastal county
ricane to hit the contithat took a direct hit
nental U.S. in nearly 50
from the storm, state
years.
emergency authorities
The count of 16 dead
said Tuesday. That’s in
was twice the number
addition to at least 10
deaths elsewhere across previously tallied by
The Associated Press.
the South.
Emergency authoriThe scope of the

Associated Press

ties said 12 of the
deaths were in Bay
County, where the
storm slammed ashore
with 155 mph winds
and towering storm
surge last Wednesday.
Bay County includes
Mexico Beach, the
ground-zero town of
1,000 people that was
nearly obliterated, as
well as Tyndall Air
Force Base, Panama
City and Lynn Haven,
all of which were heav-

ily damaged.
Florida emergency
authorities gave no
details on how the victims died.
The AP’s tally also
includes 10 deaths in
Virginia, Georgia and
North Carolina.
Mexico Beach Mayor
Al Cathey said two
deaths were conﬁrmed
in his town, a man and
a woman who did not
evacuate and whose
homes were destroyed.

Trump warns Honduras over migrant caravan

SPEAR
LAS VEGAS — Samuel Robert Spear, 34, of Las
Vegas, Nevada died on Monday, September 24, 2018
in Las Vegas.
The memorial service for Samuel Robert Spear will
be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, October 20, 2018 at
Bethesda United Methodist Church with Pastor Jim
Holman ofﬁciating. The family will have a private
burial in Bethesda Cemetery at a later date.

MEIGS BRIEFS

Southern craft
and vendor fair
RACINE — The Southern Craft Show will be held
on Oct. 20, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Southern Elementary.
Free admission, food available for purchase.

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.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Wednesday, Oct. 17
POMEROY — Common Ground Mission will host
movie night beginning at 6 p.m. Refreshments will be
served. The movie is The Investigator.

Saturday, Oct. 20
HEMLOCK GROVE — The Hemlock Grove Christian Church is hosting a Harvest Costume Party from
2:30-5:30 p.m. There will be Trunk or Treat, food,
games, face painting, pictures, fellowship and costume judging. The Church is located at 38387 Hemlock Grove Road in Pomeroy. For more information,
contact Courtney Midkiff at 740-992-1158.

Sunday, Oct. 21
RACINE — Morning Star United Methodist
Church homecoming will be held with lunch at 12:30
p.m., service of singing at 1:30 p.m. Public invited.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

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

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

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com

EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

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

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

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

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

By Sonia Perez D.
Associated Press

ESQUIPULAS, Guatemala — U.S. President
Donald Trump threatened Tuesday to cut aid
to Honduras if it doesn’t
stop a caravan of some
2,000 migrants, even
as they resumed their
northward trek through
Guatemala with hopes of
reaching the U.S. border.
Despite having walked
the entire previous day

with swollen, blistered
and aching feet, the
group was up shortly
after sunrise after sleeping on the ground in
their clothes.
Dozens attended Mass
at the Basilica in the city
of Esquipulas, just across
the border from Honduras and about 90 miles
(150 kilometers) east
of Guatemala City, to
receive a blessing, before
continuing the journey
escorted by Guatemalan

police.
The group’s numbers
have snowballed since
some 160 migrants
departed Friday from
San Pedro Sula, Honduras, with many
people joining spontaneously carrying just a few
belongings. A Guatemalan priest estimated that
more than 2,000 had
been fed at three shelters
run by the Roman Catholic Church.
Three weeks before

midterm elections in
the United States, the
caravan elicited a tough
response from Trump.
“The United States
has strongly informed
the President of Honduras that if the large
Caravan of people heading to the U.S. is not
stopped and brought
back to Honduras, no
more money or aid will
be given to Honduras,
effective immediately,”
Trump tweeted.

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.

Wednesday, Oct. 17
POMEROY — A blood drive
will be held at the Mulberry Community Center from 1-6 p.m.
POMEROY — The Meigs
Local Board of Elections will hold
its public test at 11 a.m. at the
Board of Elections ofﬁce.

Thursday, Oct. 18
POMEROY — Pomeroy
Library, Pumpkin Painting, 6 p.m.
The library will provide all the
supplies needed to create your
own festive work of art. Don’t forget to wear your painting clothes.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Republican Executive
Committee will hold its annual
bean dinner at 6 p.m. at the Mulberry Community Center. Meet
the Republican candidates. Free
admission, door prizes and 50/50
drawing. Public is invited. Doors
open at 5 p.m.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Retired Teachers will
meet at noon at the Meigs County
Senior Center. The speaker will
be Vicki Hanson from the Meigs
County Historical Society. Members are asked to call Charlene
Rutherford at 740-444-5498 by
Tuesday for lunch reservations.
Guests are welcome.

Friday, Oct. 19
POMEROY — Pomeroy
Library, Cookbook Club, 11 a.m.
Bring a dish and sample others’
dishes. This month’s theme is
open ﬁre pit cooking.
ROCKSPRINGS — The Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club will
have a chili/soup supper at the Rio
Grande Center prior to the Meigs
Football game, from 5-7 p.m. Help

the Rotary Club raise funds for
the various service projects.
POMEROY — Meigs County
Health Dept. will be closed to
the public for its annual cleaning
day. Normal business hours will
resume at 8 a.m. on Mon., Oct.
22. We apologize for the inconvenience.LONG BOTTOM — The
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
of the NSDAR will meet at noon
at the site of the George Washington Historical Plaque. The site is
just south of Long Bottom, Ohio
on State Route 124. This is the
Chapter’s Community Service
project. Bring a chair, gloves,
tools, water and snack. It is a
beautiful location for enjoying the
Ohio River.

Saturday, Oct. 20
MIDDLEPORT — Chicken
BBQ at the Middleport Fire Dept.
This is their last chicken BBQ
of 2018. Serving will begin at
11 a.m. at the BBQ pit on Race
Street in Middleport.
RUTLAND — Rutland United
Methodist Church will hold a free
community dinner from 4-6 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS — St.
Paul United Methodist Church
in Tuppers Plains will host a free
community meal fo soup and hot
dogs from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
CHESTER — Meigs Chapter
of the NSDAR members will be
assisting with the Meigs Heritage
Festival being held on the Chester
Commons, Chester, Ohio. Hours
are 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., come and
help out, have some fun, meet
some old friends and bring your
favorite pie.
CHESTER — The Ohio’s Best
Pie Contest ND Auction will be
held during the Meigs Heritage
Festival on the Chester Commons, Chester, Ohio. Bring your
pies between 9 and 11 a.m., judging by 3 of Meigs’ ﬁnest pie eaters will take place at 11:30 a.m.
with the uncut wining pie being
auctioned at 2 p.m. Makers of the
1st, 2nd and 3rd place pies will
receive trophies, cash prizes and
the thrill of seeing their pie being
sold to the highest bidder. The
winners will be announced just
prior to the Auction. All pie makers are encouraged to donate their
favorite pie to the Festival to help
feed the hungry and raise funds

for the Chester Shade Historical
Assoc. that maintains the Chester
Academy and Historical Courthouse.
SALEM CENTER — Star
Grange #778 meeting for Saturday, Oct. 20 has been cancelled
due to out of town State meeting.
The next meeting will be Saturday, Nov. 3 with potluck at 6:30
p.m. and meeting at 7:30 p.m.

Monday, Oct. 22
RUTLAND — Rutland Village
will host a public meeting at 7
p.m. regarding the levy which will
appear on the November ballot.
POMEROY — Pomeroy
Library, Book Club, 6 p.m. Read
and discuss “Millers Valley” by
Anna Quindlen. Refreshments are
served.
POMEROY — The regular
meeting of the Meigs County
Library Board will be held at 3:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.

Tuesday, Oct. 23
POMEROY — Pomeroy
Library, Acoustic Night at the
Library. Join the group at 6 p.m.
for an informal jam session.

Friday, Oct. 26
MARIETTA — The Regional
Advisory Council for the Buckeye
Hills Regional Council (Aging
and Disability Division) will
meet at 10 a.m. in the Buckeye
Hills ofﬁce at 1400 Pike Street,
Marietta.

Saturday, Oct. 27
CHESTER TWP. — The Meigs
County Ikes Club will hold its
monthly meeting following the
7 p.m. meal. The meal ($10) is
being renewed in an effort to
increase the attendance.

Monday, Oct. 29
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs
County Veterans Service Commission will meet at 9 a.m. at the
ofﬁce located at 97 North Second
Avenue in Middleport.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 17, 2018 3

‘Block Party’ to return
Event to expand
to Main Street

ROOM
TO GROW

A major change will
be the move back to
Main Street to allow
more room for the
many activities, after
having been held at the
riverfront park.

By Mindy Kearns
Special to OVP

OHIO VALLEY — The
reins are in different
hands this year, but the
Point Pleasant Halloween
Block Party, one of the
largest holiday events in
the area, promises to be
just as much fun, with
many activities for the
children.
The block party is now
under the auspices of the
“Get to the Point” co-op,
following the retirement
last year of Denise Scarberry, who headed the
event for 20 years. Dustin
Morrison is serving as
this year’s block party
chairman.
The event will be held
Oct. 25 from 6 to 9 p.m.
A major change will be
the move back to Main
Street to allow more
room for the many activities, after having been
held at the riverfront
park, Morrison said.
There will be a haunted
house, free hotdogs, a
trunk-or-treat, games,
costume contest, and live
music. New this year will
be the addition of an outdoor movie.
The inﬂatable maze
haunted house is being
sponsored by The Mothman Museum. It will be
open from 6 to 8 p.m. in
the vacant lot on the 400
block of Main Street.
Also during that time,
free hotdogs will be
given out in Gunn Park,
with the hotdogs being
provided by AEP River
Operations. A trunk-ortreat and games will be

offered from the 400 to
the 200 block. The games
will be operated by the
individual businesses and
volunteers. Morrison said
operators have been told
to use their imaginations
to create fun, but simple
games.
“We’ve been in contact
with several businesses
on Main Street who have
expressed their desire
to host games and pass
out candy at their storefronts,” said Morrison.
“We really think that this
will be a win-win for the
community and Main
Street businesses alike.”
Representatives from
the Point Pleasant Fire
Department, Red’s Rollen
Garage, and the Mason
County EMS will be on
hand during that time
to give kids an opportunity to meet local ﬁrst
responders, see a ﬁre
truck, ambulance, and
tow truck. The Mason
County Library will have
representatives there, as
well.
Levi Billiter and his
band mates in “Blue
Moves” will provide live
music starting at 6 p.m.
The costume contest will
begin at 7 p.m., and will
take place on the steps
of the post ofﬁce. The
movie “Hocus Pocus”
will start roughly at 7:30
p.m. and continue until 9
p.m. It will be shown in

Courtesy photo

Jessica Finley, with her children Dylan and Joanna, are pictured wearing a limited edition “Get to the Point” t-shirt, being sold at Counter
Point Cooperative, 424 Main Street, to benefit the Point Pleasant Halloween Block Party. The shirt is being sold for $15, with 100 percent
of the profits going to the event.

the vacant lot on the 200
block, with free popcorn.
Morrison said members
of the Get to the Point
co-op felt it was important to continue the block
party after Scarberry’s
retirement because it
is one of a very limited
number of kid-centered
events that happen in
Point Pleasant.
“Seeing the amount
of work Denise has put
into the block party over
the years has made us
determined to continue
the legacy she started,”
Morrison said. “Without Denise’s and Darla
Jackson’s help this year,
we don’t know where we
would be. They’re always
there to answer questions, and Denise has
been an absolute MVP
when we need a contact
at a local business.”

Morrison also applauded Counter Point Cooperative, which he said has
been the largest monetary
contributor to the block
party fund so far. Counter
Point has donated all of
the proceeds of a limited
edition “Get to the Point”
t-shirt, which remains on
sale at 424 Main Street
for $15.
The chairman said local
businesses are still being
canvassed for participation or donations of any
kind. He added the City
of Point Pleasant has
been very supportive,
donating funds, as well
as the use of a projector and screen from the
parks and recreation
department.
In order to set up on

OVP File Photo

Another large crowd is expected for the annual Point Pleasant
Halloween Block Party which this year moves from Riverfront Park
back to Main Street, to allow more space for activites. Pictured is
a scene from last year’s block party.

the day of the event,
Main Street will be
closed to trafﬁc at 4 p.m.
For more information

on the party, a Facebook
event page has been set
up at “Point Pleasant
Block Party 2018.”

The 15th Annual

Brian &amp; Family Connections Homecoming

304-721-4003 | pvalley.org

Fall Harvest Gospel Sing

In Loving Memory of Brian Frederick
Please come and help us Honor Brian and continue what he started

Fri Oct. 19th
5:00 pm-11:00 pm (??)
Sat. Oct. 20th
1:00 pm – 11:00 pm (??)
Special Recognition of all Veterans 5:00 pm

Larry Wilson &amp; God’s
Country Band

Ophthalmic Surgical Services
at Pleasant Valley Hospital

Sun. Oct. 21st
Pot Luck Dinner at 1:00 pm
SPECIAL CONCERT at 2:00 pm

Brian’s vision for the Fall Harvest Gospel Sing was
to reach his community with the Good News he
found during his life. For 12 years he invited people
&amp; advertised the sing so people would come and
hear. This is the 3rd year that the sing is being held
in his memory and there are still many people in the
community that have not attended the sing, so on
this - the 15th Annual event, Angela wants to share
the Good News Brian wanted to share with you:
1. God loves you and has a plan for you!
The Bible says, “God so loved the world that He gave
His one and only Son, [Jesus Christ], that whoever
believes in Him shall not perish, but have eternal life”
(John 3:16).
2. Man is sinful and separated from God.
We have all done, thought or said bad things, which
the Bible calls “sin.” The Bible says, “All have sinned
and fall short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23).
The result of sin is death, spiritual separation from
God (Romans 6:23).
The good news?
3. God sent His Son to die for your sins!
Jesus died in our place so we could live with Him for
eternity in Heaven.
“God demonstrates His own love toward us, in
that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us”
(Romans 5:8).

Right here in our region there
is a place - a hospital that
combines the latest technology
with experienced physicians
who perform ophthalmic
surgeries with skill and
compassion. Pleasant Valley
Hospital has grown and become
more advanced every day. It’s a
commitment that we’ve made to
better serve a community that
we all call home.

For additional information:
Text 513-508-7766
or Email giraffeangela@hotmail.com
But it didn’t end with His death on the cross.
“Christ died for our sins. … He was buried. …
He was raised on the third day, according to the
Scriptures.” (1 Corinthians 15:3-4).
Jesus said, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life;
no one comes to the Father, but through Me”
(John 14:6).
4. Would you like to receive God’s forgiveness?
We can’t earn salvation; we are saved by God’s grace
when we have faith in His Son, Jesus Christ. All you
have to do is believe you are a sinner; that Christ
died for your sins, and ask His forgiveness. Then turn
from your sins—that’s called repentance. No one can
change themselves, God changes us. Jesus Christ
knows you and loves you. Years ago Brian prayed a
prayer like this and you can do the same. This is the
Good News he wanted to share with you at the Fall
Harvest Gospel Sing
“Dear Lord Jesus,
I know I am a sinner, and I ask for your
forgiveness. I believe that you died for my sins on
the cross and rose from the dead. Please save
me and be my Lord and Savior. Guide my life and
help me to do your will.
In your name, amen.”
OH-70079465

OH-70081535

Additional Artists include: David &amp;
Sheila Bowen, Ron Shamblin, Rick Towe,
Randy Parsons, River of Life Quartet, New
Salvation, Edification, Danny LaMasters,
Everett Caldwell, Diana &amp; Jerry Frederick,
Marilyn Phillips, Vicki Moore, The Dollys,
Sharon Kelp, Debbie Dodrill, Mike Cadle,
Brian’s Family Connection, Angela Gibson,
Joe McCloud, Debbie Falcon…and more

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

Surgical Capabilities:
Pleasant Valley Hospital

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West Virginia Cornea &amp; Cataract Center
Of Excellence - Charleston, WV

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�Opinion
4 Wednesday, October 17, 2018

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

‘Take Charge’ of
your recovery
from addiction
It’s no secret that America is ensnared in
a national opioid epidemic that is exacting a
devastating toll on families and communities.
We’ve all read the tragic headlines,
watched the videos or heard radio
news reports of deaths resulting
from a lethal dose of heroin and/or
other opioids.
Lost in the shufﬂe, it seems, is
the one thing that will absolutely
bring healing and wellness to our
Mark
families and communities — hope.
Hurst, M.D. Revered South African theologian,
Contributing human rights activist and Nobel
columnist
Prize winner Desmond Tutu once
said, “Hope is being able to see
that there is light despite all of the
darkness.”
Under Gov. John R. Kasich’s leadership, Ohio
has put into action one of the nation’s most
aggressive and comprehensive strategies for
ﬁghting addiction and
preventing overdose
In Ohio, we
deaths. We are makbelieve there
ing progress — deaths
are multiple
attributed to prescription painkillers and
pathways to
heroin reached new lows recovery and
last year — but much
wellness and
work remains. We face
people should
new challenges from
even more dangerous
have access to all
substances like fentanyl of them.
and street drugs like
cocaine and methamphetamine that are laced with opioids.
Despite the shroud of “darkness,” there is,
indeed, hope. Tens of thousands of Ohioans in
recovery from a substance use disorder are living proof that treatment works; people recover.
The State of Ohio is illuminating the way to
wellness through TakeChargeOhio.org – an
online resource that promotes medication safety,
self-screening tools, warning signs and, most
importantly, links on how and where to get help
for self of a loved one.
In Ohio, we believe there are multiple pathways to recovery and wellness and people
should have access to all of them. We know that
treatment works and that there is no “one size
ﬁts all” approach. It is essential that Ohioans
are aware of all of the different treatments available so they can work with their provider and
select the approach that best addresses their
needs and preferences. Various forms of counselling are very helpful, and when combined with
appropriate medication treatments the results
are even better. Support groups and faith-based
approaches are also a very important part of a
recovery process for many individuals.
The only way to discover the best pathway
forward is to take that ﬁrst step, to Take Charge
of your recovery and pathway to wellness. Every
journey of a million miles begins with a single
step. I encourage you to shut out the darkness,
follow the light and discover the hope can be
found through addiction treatment and recovery. With persistence, recovery is not only possible, it is likely.
Visit the “Get Help” section of the TakeChargeOhio.org website for valuable aids, including
a searchable database of community treatment
resources, that will help guide you or a loved
one on the pathway to a healthier, brighter,
drug-free future.
Hope is just a click away.
Mark Hurst, M.D., is Director of Ohio Department of Mental Health and
Addiction Services.

ELECTION LETTERS POLICY
The deadline for The Daily Sentinel to receive
election-related Letters to the Editor pertaining
to issues or candidates in the Nov. 6 general election is 4 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 30.
Election-related Letters to the Editor must be
250 words or less and are subject to editing by
the Sentinel. Letters must maintain a degree of
civility and good taste, and any that are potentially libelous will not be published.
Election-related letters are limited to one per
household. Letters from candidates or their families will not be published. Due to space restrictions, we will try, but cannot guarantee, that all
letters will be published in the print version of
the Sentinel.
Letters should be emailed to The Daily Sentinel at tdsnews@aimmediamidwest.com and
include the writer’s name, community of residence, and a daytime phone number to verify
authorship (and to answer any questions we may
have). Signed letters may also be dropped off at
The Daily Sentinel at 109 West Second Street,
Pomeroy, during normal business hours.

An empty space
THEIR VIEW

Last night my granddaughter’s old Honda was
stolen. Not a fancy car.
Just a car for a teenager
to drive to school and
back. A car to take her to
her Health Career studies
at another school. A car
to give her that ﬁrst taste
of trust and freedom. She
awakened to an empty
spot where her car had
been last night.
I was living in an apartment for a couple of years
and knew my neighbors
fairly well. Kevin and his
partner lived in an upper
apartment. I lived on
the lower level next to
resident parking. I had
just gone to bed when
I heard glass breaking.
I ran to the window in
time to see someone
had broken in the back
window of Kevin’s car
right outside my apartment. The guy was still
in the car! I called 911,
and brainlessly, ran out
of my building yelling at
the guy who by then was
running to a car on the
street. I ran up to Kevin’s
door to tell him the news

Dad saying it was
at the same time
probably just kids.
the police pulled
Well, that’s not an
in. Needless to say,
excuse, is it?
I was the witness
What bothers me
eyes on the crime.
is that like my parKevin was heartents we would give
broken as many
anyone the shirts
things had been
Pamela
off their backs. We
ripped from his car. Drake
It was a beautiful
Contributing would do anything
to help someone in
car now covered
columnist
need. Dad would
with glass. How
have ﬁlled a gas
could someone be
can if someone needed
so bold! The actions of
that thief took away more it. In fact, he would have
than what was in the car. driven it to them. Kevin
is such a dear person that
It took away trust and
he found it unbelievable
security. It shook me to
that there was someone
my very core.
so cruel or so desperate.
We see news about
As for Gabby, someone
thefts. Articles that
took her ﬁrst car. Someperhaps we pass over
one hurt her in a way that
if we don’t know those
she has never been hurt
involved or maybe some
before or ever should be.
people look just for a
reward. I remember when Her world of security has
been broken. Gabby has a
someone was stealing
gasoline from the tank by tender heart and for her
there are no words.
the back driveway that
So where do we go
led to the barnyard. Dad
picked up his shotgun and from here? Well, social
media has allowed us to
headed out the door. By
spread the word and picthe time he headed out,
ture of the car. The police
the culprits were gone.
here are very vigilant. We
Who would steal from a
will all be on the lookout.
neighbor? I remember

My two granddaughters
just learned something
about being a target. We
will do our best to support them and protect
them even more ardently.
I do not believe that
someone can purposely
hurt someone else and
not feel remorse. It is a
guilt that will follow these
thieves throughout life.
As for our family, as for
Kevin, as for our farm
family, the peace we had
has a chink in it. Trust in
humanity is shaken. Safety even in our own home
has been violated.
Be vigilant. Know your
neighbors. Care for one
another and protect each
other. Listen to the news
and know what is happening in your area. Be aware
of your surroundings.
Take steps to protect
yours and those around
you. We want no more
empty spaces in our lives.

Pamela Loxley Drake is a former
resident of Darke County and is
the author of Neff Road and A
Grandparent Voice blog. She can be
reached at pamldrake@gmail.com.
Viewpoints expressed in the article
are the work of the author.

TODAY IN HISTORY
evasion. (Sentenced to 11
years in prison, Capone
was released in 1939.)
In 1939, Frank Capra’s
comedy-drama “Mr.
Today’s Highlight in History Smith Goes to Washington,” starring James
On Oct. 17, 1933,
Stewart as an idealistic
Albert Einstein arrived
junior U.S. senator,
in the United States as a
had its premiere in the
refugee from Nazi Gernation’s capital.
many.
In 1941, the U.S.
destroyer Kearny was
On this date
damaged by a German
In 1610, French King
Louis XIII, age nine, was torpedo off the coast of
Iceland; 11 people died.
crowned at Reims, ﬁve
In 1967, Puyi (poomonths after the assasyee), the last emperor of
sination of his father,
China, died in Beijing at
Henry IV.
age 61.
In 1777, British
In 1973, Arab oilforces under Gen. John
producing nations
Burgoyne surrendered
announced they would
to American troops in
Saratoga, New York, in a begin cutting back oil
turning point of the Revo- exports to Western
nations and Japan; the
lutionary War.
result was a total embarIn 1807, Britain
declared it would contin- go that lasted until March
ue to reclaim British-born 1974.
In 1979, Mother Teresa
sailors from American
ships and ports regardless of India was awarded the
of whether they held U.S. Nobel Peace Prize.
In 1989, an earthquake
citizenship.
measuring 7.1 on the
In 1931, mobster Al
Capone was convicted in Richter scale struck
northern California, killChicago of income tax
Today is Wednesday,
Oct. 17, the 290th day of
2018. There are 75 days
left in the year.

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“The thinking of a genius does not proceed
logically. It leaps with great ellipses. It pulls
knowledge from God knows where.”
— Dorothy Thompson
American journalist (1894-1961)

ing 63 people and causing
$6 billion worth of damage.
In 1992, Japanese
exchange student Yoshi
Hattori was fatally shot
by Rodney Peairs in
Baton Rouge, Louisiana,
after Hattori and his
American host mistakenly knocked on Peairs’
door while looking
for a Halloween party.
(Peairs was acquitted of
manslaughter, but was
ordered in a civil trial to
pay more than $650,000
to Hattori’s family.)
In 2000, the New York
Yankees followed the
Mets into the World
Series, beating the
Seattle Mariners 9-7 and
winning the American
League championship
series four games to two.

Ten years ago: Wall
Street ended a tumultuous week that turned
out to be its best in ﬁve
years. The Dow Jones
industrial average lost
127 points, closing at
8,852.22, but turned in
the strong week because
of two huge days of gains
— a record 936-point
jump the previous Monday and an increase of
401 points on Thursday.
Four Tops frontman Levi
Stubbs died in Detroit at
age 72.
Five years ago: The
government reopened
its doors hours after
President Barack Obama
signed a bipartisan
congressional measure
passed the night before
to end a 16-day partial
shutdown.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

AG
From page 1

wounds and violent
assaults.
Cincinnati Children’s
Hospital - Joining Forces
for Children, $655,323,
and Mayerson Center for
Safe and Healthy Chil­
dren, $319,025: Grant
funding will be used
for programs that help
children who have experi­
enced adverse childhood
experiences (ACEs) and
that work to reduce ACEs
and build resilience.
YMCA of Central Ohio,
$203,443: Grant fund­
ing will be used to assist
students who have been
identified as experiencing
trauma from abuse, loss,
or chronic stressors, or
who have stated specifi­
cally that they have been
victims of crime.
Grant Us Hope,
$239,990: Grant funding
will be used to mediate
the impact of crime-related trauma on students
throughout Ohio, includ­
ing by training school
staff in trauma-informed
approaches, training stu­
dent peer leaders, and
creating a crisis/trauma
response team to respond
to and support schools if
a tragic or violent event
occurs.
Public Children Ser­
vices Association of Ohio
- Ohio START, $3 mil­
lion: Grant funding will
be used to expand the
Ohio START (Sobriety,
Treatment, and Reducing
Trauma) program, which
provides specialized
victim services, such as
intensive trauma counsel­
ing, to children who have
suffered victimization due
to parental drug abuse.
Kinnect - 30 Days to
Family, $1.9 million:
Grant funding will be used
to expand the 30 Days to
Family program, a family
finding and foster family
recruitment program.

Additionally, some of
the programs receiving
new grant awards this
year are:
Mercy Health - St.
Vincent Medical Center
(Lucas) $600,000: Grant
funding will be used
to establish a trauma
recovery center at Mercy
Health - St. Vincent Medi­
cal Center to provide case
management and support
services to victims of
crime who enter the emer­
gency department.
Reaching Above Hope­
lessness and Brokenness
Ministries (RAHAB)
(Summit) $1.3 million:
Grant funding will be used
to provide safe houses and
trauma-informed holistic
healing and support ser­
vices for female victims
of human trafficking in
northeast Ohio.
Tiffin University (Sene­
ca) $116,500: Grant fund­
ing will be used to provide
trauma-informed counsel­
ing, advocacy, and sup­
port services to student
victims of sexual violence,
dating violence, domestic
violence, and stalking.
The Linda Vista (Mont­
gomery) $79,927: Grant
funding will be used to
provide case management
and support services to
women and families who
are exiting domestic vio­
lence shelters.
Of the total awards
announced today, $108.4
million is from the
Victims of Crime Act
(VOCA) grant funding
awarded to Ohio from the
U.S. Department of Jus­
tice, financed by federal
settlements, fines, and
fees. Another $3.4 million
is from the State Victim
Assistance Act (SVAA).
The announcement is
part of the “Ohio Attor­
ney General’s Expanding
Services and Empowering
Victims Initiative,” which
Attorney General DeWine
created in 2015 to deter­
mine how grant funds
could best be spent to
serve victims of crime.

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.

Clinic
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. Chil­
dren 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 inabil-

“It is an important
position,” stated Gerlach.
Roberts is a can­
didate for the 6th
Congressional District
against incumbent
Republican Bill John­
son.
Roberts, who resides
in Belmont County, is
the mother of five and
was a small business
owner for 15 years,
owning a bee keeping
business.
She emphasized the
importance of voting in
the upcoming election.
“Talk your friends
into voting,” said Rob­
erts. She added that
there are more Demo­
crats that Republican,
but that the Democrats
are harder to get to go
vote.
“When the people
vote, the people win,”
said Roberts.
Meigs County
resident Mike Struble
THURSDAY

40° 56° 50°

ALMANAC

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

0.13
1.67
1.40
50.14
34.43

SUN &amp; MOON
Today Thu.

Sunrise 7:40 a.m.
Sunset 6:47 p.m.
Moonrise 3:21 p.m.
Moonset 12:39 a.m.

7:41 a.m.
6:46 p.m.
3:59 p.m.
1:33 a.m.

Remaining cool with
plenty of sunshine

) | g| |

SOLUNAR TABLE
Major

Minor

1:12p
1:56p
2:38p
3:18p
3:58p
4:37p
5:18p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Oct. 17,1977, heavy, wet snow
downed thousands of trees and cut
power in the mountains of central
and northeastern Pennsylvania. The
storm foreshadowed a harsh winter
there.

6th

Congressional

District,

vice Center board.
“Consider becoming
involved,” Struble told
those in attendance.
Likewise, Roberts
encouraged the local
Democrats to become
involved and think
SUNDAY

spoke

to

the

Meigs

County

about running for
office.
“We need to vote and
need to run for office,”
concluded Roberts.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Mainly cloudy with a
couple of showers

MONDAY

0 31°°
Cool with sun and
some clouds

57/29

57/28

Waverly
58/29

7 ÈÈ

▼I

High Very High
Low Moderate
Primary: ragweed and other

Wilkesville

0

58/29

o

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Jackson

Lucasville

POMEROY,
60/31

59/29

60/30

Mold: 1884

o

I
Low Moderate High Very High
Primary: acscospores, unk.
Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

POINT
Portsmouth

South Shore Greenup

Buffalo

60/30 v*1/33 ,

61/31

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&gt; 62/33

500
62/34

Grayson

o 62/34

NATIONAL FORECAST

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Milton

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62/32

Huntington
61/33

o

62/30 o

St. Albans
62/33

o

Charleston
o 61/33
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

110s

OHIO RIVER

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

9

Spencer
59/31

34

Flood
Stage

PLEASANT

61/31

61/31

AIR QUALITY

100s

Level

13.24
17.98
22.15
12.82
12.87
25.42
11.91
28.62
35.62
12.47
25.40
35.00
25.30

90s

24-hr.
Chg.

80s

+0.51
+0.58
+0.03
+0.13
+0.02
-0.40

60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
0s

-0.19
-1.90
-0.70
-1.10

\IZ Rain
Is C xl Showers
1-*V1 Snow

Ice

w w w Cold Front
^

Today
Hi/Lo/W

Thu.
Hi/Lo/W

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

53/41/pc
51/40/c
74/54/pc
66/44/s
64/39/s
62/39/s
65/40/s
62/37/s
61/33/s
76/46/pc
50/30/s
49/31/s
57/33/s
52/38/sh
57/33/pc
53/48/r
54/35/s
52/35/s
50/30/pc
87/73/pc
65/58/c
53/32/s
60/35/s
74/57/s
62/46/pc
83/61/s
63/37/s
89/79/s
47/35/pc
67/40/s
80/68/pc
60/39/pc
63/48/s
92/73/pc
63/40/s
78/61/s
52/33/c
58/31/pc
71/43/pc
72/44/sh
61/37/s
63/42/s
71/52/pc
70/49/s
68/44/s

54/43/sh
49/41/c
72/52/s
54/40/s
54/35/s
66/39/s
67/41/s
47/35/s
53/33/s
64/43/s
59/39/s
53/40/s
55/36/s
50/38/s
53/36/s
57/50/r
62/38/s
58/45/s
51/36/s
86/73/s
72/58/c
55/38/s
59/46/pc
76/58/s
59/48/pc
84/61/s
58/39/s
89/79/s
62/48/s
61/44/s
81/72/s
49/40/s
56/48/r
90/75/s
51/37/s
80/62/s
48/33/s
46/27/s
60/39/s
59/40/s
59/44/s
63/40/s
71/54/pc
68/49/pc
56/42/s

Global
High 109° in Wyndham, Australia
Low -52° in Summit Station, Greenland

I- I Flurries

^

City

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
93° in Winter Haven, FL
Low
-6° in Bodie State Park, CA

T-storms

K,VJ

Partly sunny

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

□ -10s

0.86

-

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

70s

-0.12

-1.37

36°

NATIONAL CITIES
City

56/29

McArthurc

Q 61°

Mostly sunny

O
Murray

TUESDAY

61°
gf 43°

52

Athens O

57/30

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

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

the

SATURDAY

Mostly cloudy

9

Pollen: 3

Location

encouraged fellow
democrats to become
involved on local boards
and local positions.
Struble was recently
appointed to an at-large
seat on the AthensMeigs Educational Ser­

Chillicothe

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Today 7:00a 12:48a 7:24p
Thu.
7:45a
1:33a 8:08p
Fri.
8:27a
2:16a 8:50p
Sat.
9:07a
2:56a 9:30p
Sun.
9:47a
3:35a 10:09p
Mon. 10:26a
4:15a 10:48p
Tue. 11:07a 4:56a
11:30p

for

56/29

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

The solunar period indicates
for fish and game.

candidate

^56»
„ J 60°
'i
' i 40°
*^50”

Adelphi

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.

Oct 24 Oct 31 Nov 7 Nov 15

Major Minor

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of cur” rent 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.

300
0 50 100150200
Primary pollutant: Particulates

Full Last New First

Roberts,

Democrats during the fall dinner held last week.

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures 9
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Logan
56/28
a

*t\ I I I

MOON PHASES

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel
Shawna

FRIDAY

W 31°

Partly sunny and breezy today. Clear tonight;
there will be a freeze. High 61° / Low 31°

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

POMEROY — The Daily Sen­
tinel front office will be closed
Wednesday, Oct. 17 through
Friday, Oct. 20. Normal business
hours will resume on Tuesday,
Oct. 23 (the office is normally
closed on Mondays). For assis­
tance during this time call our
Gallipolis office at 740-446-2342.

EXTENDED FORECAST

WWJ

Precipitation (in inches)

Office Hours

From page 1

55«

53°
43°
68°
45°
87° in 1947
30° in 1945

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.

Dinner

8AM 2PM 8PM

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

ity to pay an administration
fee for state-funded childhood
vaccines. Please bring medical
cards and/or commercial insur­
ance cards, if applicable. Shin­
gles, influenza 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. Addition­
ally, the Advisory Committee
on Immunization Practices
(ACIP) does NOT recommend
routine Hepatitis A vaccination
for Food Workers. Currently,

Immunization

TODAY

Temperature

Wednesday, October 17,2018 5

^

Warm

Front

^ ^ Stationary Front

Miami

S9/J9

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

You’ll Feel Right At Home.
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.

HOME

NATIONAL BANK

www.homenatlbank.com

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

FDIC t=i

�Sports
6 Wednesday, October 17, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Southern sweeps Lady Vikings in sectional semi
By Alex Hawley

and the ﬁrst game by a 25-17
count.
The Lady Vikings took a 10-6
lead to open the second set,
WILLOW WOOD, Ohio —
The road trip was long enough, but Southern scored ﬁve in a
row and led for the ﬁrst time
the Lady Tornadoes didn’t
at 11-10. The hosts tied the
want to waste any time once
game at 11 and 13, but never
they were there.
regained the edge, eventually
The ninth-seeded Southern
falling by a 25-22 tally.
volleyball team claimed a
SHS scored the ﬁrst four
straight games sweep of eighthseeded host Symmes Valley, in points of the third game, but
Monday’s Division IV sectional the Red and Silver took the
semiﬁnal in Lawrence County. lead at 6-5. Southern was back
in front at 8-7 and never trailed
Southern (6-15) — which
again on its way to the matchalso ousted the Lady Vikings
sealing 25-16 victory.
from the 2016 sectional tourFor the match, Southern had
nament — took the opening
a 54.4 side-out percentage,
lead in the ﬁrst game, but fell
while Symmes Valley earned a
behind 6-2.
40.3 side-out percentage. The
Symmes Valley (7-14)
extended its lead to ﬁve points, Lady Tornadoes had an 89.2
serve percentage with eight
at 17-12, but the Lady Tornadoes claimed the next 13 points aces, while the Lady Vikings

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Southern’s Saelym Larsen (17) attempts a spike, during the Lady Tornadoes’
TVC Hocking match against Eastern on Aug. 29 in Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

had an 85.5 serve percentage
with nine aces.
The Purple and Gold picked
up 21 kills for an 11.6 hitting
percentage, while the hosts had
14 kills, but a hitting percentage of zero.
SHS junior Baylee Wolfe
led the victors with 18 service
points, including ﬁve aces.
Sydney Adams was next with
12 points and one ace, followed
by Phoenix Cleland with ﬁve
markers. Baylee Grueser and
Peyton Anderson had four
points apiece, with an ace by
Grueser, while Marissa Brooker
ﬁnished with two points and
one ace in the win.
Brooker led Southern at the
net with six kills and a block,
followed by Cleland with four
See SOUTHERN | 7

Busch loss raises
questions about
NASCAR officiating
TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) — Kurt Busch is not
the most sympathetic ﬁgure. When he loses a race
he was one turn away from winning because he
ran out of gas, few likely felt sorry for him.
Then came his post-race assessment in which he
criticized NASCAR for blowing two calls that led
to him being short on fuel. Because the complaints
came from Busch, a polarizing driver with past
bad behavior, he didn’t get the condolences he felt
he deserved.
There are conspiracy theorists who believe
NASCAR ofﬁciated the end of Sunday’s race at
Talladega Superspeedway in a way that put Busch
in position to lose. Of course, the scoring tower
could not guarantee Busch would run out of fuel
while leading through the ﬁnal turn in overtime,
but his criticism deserves a look.
Busch led a race-high 108 laps as the strongest
car in the Stewart-Haas Racing lineup. He led his
three other teammates all day as the SHR group
had the ﬁeld covered. The four SHR Fords had a
healthy lead on the competition when Alex Bowman brought out the caution that sent the race
into overtime.
The SHR cars were already conserving fuel, and
those additional laps drained their gas tanks to
nearly bone dry. Why? Well, NASCAR didn’t redﬂag the race after Bowman’s crash and instead ran
ﬁve laps under the yellow ﬂag. That’s 13.3 extra
miles around Talladega with fuel lights ﬂickering.
Just one fewer lap under caution and Busch
doesn’t run out of gas — and likely wins the race.
Instead, he led the ﬁeld to green in overtime — an
additional two more laps around the 2.66-mile
track — as teammate Kevin Harvick forfeited the
gamble and ducked to pit road for gas.
Like many, Busch wondered why there were
so many caution laps and why the race wasn’t
stopped for a cleanup. Then came another accident, while he was still leading in overtime, and
NASCAR did not call a caution. Had the yellow
been called on that ﬁnal lap, Busch probably would
have won the race.
Instead, he was still hard on the gas for the ﬁnal
2 miles and his tank ﬁnally went dry with the
checkered ﬂag in sight. SHR teammate Aric Almirola slid past Busch’s sputtering car for the win.
“There was two missed calls by NASCAR at the
end,” Busch said. “Why did we have an extra yellow ﬂag lap is beyond me — the track was ready
to go.”
Busch also blasted the decision not to call a caution for the ﬁnal accident.
See NASCAR | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, Oct. 17
Volleyball
(7) Jackson at (2) Gallia
Academy, 6 p.m.
(8) River Valley at (1)
Unioto, 6 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 18
Volleyball
(7) Ironton St. Joseph at
(2) Eastern, 6 p.m.
(6) South Gallia at (3)
Trimble, 6 p.m.
(9) Southern at (1)
Waterford, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca, 6
p.m.
Boys Soccer
(6) Gallia Academy at (3)
Marietta, 5 p.m.
Cross Country
Region IV Championships
at Mineral Wells, TBA

Rio Grande Athletics
Women’s soccer at Ohio
Christian, 2 p.m.
Men’s soccer at Ohio
Christian, 4 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 19
Football
Buffalo at Hannan, 7 p.m.
Miller at South Gallia, 7:30
Wellston at Meigs, 7:30
Trimble at Southern, 7:30
Gallia Academy at Ironton,
7 p.m.
River Valley at Athens,
7:30
Eastern at Belpre, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Man,
7:30
Rio Grande Athletics
Volleyball vs. IndianaSoutheast, 7 p.m.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Pictured above are members of the 2018 Eastern cross country team. Standing, from left, are Rhiannon Morris, Ally Durst, Alysa Howard,
Colton Reynolds, Whitney Durst, Lexa Hayes and Megan Ross.

Lady Eagles win 8th straight title
Eastern cross
country also lands all
4 All-TVC honorees

away with All-TVC Hocking accolades with respective ﬁnishes of third and
ﬁfth.
Lexa Hayes (23:25.06)
just missed making
all-league after placing
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
eighth overall, while Ashton Guthrie (23:43.23)
completed the Lady
ALBANY, Ohio —
Eagles’ winning tally by
There’s never enough,
but eight will do this time ﬁnishing ninth. Alyssa
Howard (25:22.33) and
around.
The Eastern girls cross Megan Ross (26:31.67)
country team secured the also placed 18th and
program’s eighth consecu- 22nd for Eastern.
Southern had one
tive Hocking Division
female athlete earn Alltitle on Saturday at the
TVC Hocking honors
2018 Tri-Valley Conferas junior Sydney Roush
ence Championships
ﬁnished fourth with a
hosted by Alexander
time of 21:27.57. MalHigh School in Athens
lory Johnson (23:52.34)
County.
and Kathryn Matson
The Lady Eagles post(25:40.42) were also 11th
ed a perfect score of 15
in the TVC Hocking race, and 19th, respectively, for
the Purple and Gold.
although the outcome
Jessica Luther led
was already pre-deterSouth Gallia with a 13th
mined due to the Green
and White being the only place effort of 24:01.37,
while Cara Frazee was
program with enough
also 24th overall with a
entrants for a team tally.
mark of 26:38.43.
The Lady Eagles also
Ashlynn Jarvis
came away with a trio
(22:30.28) of Federal
of top-seven ﬁnishes —
Hocking and Kelly Erb
including the individual
champion — en route to (23:23.21) of Belpre
earned the remaining
earning three All-TVC
all-league honors with
Hocking honorees, the
respective ﬁnishes of
most of any program
sixth and seventh.
competing in that diviThe Belpre boys won
sion.
Senior Rhiannon Mor- the TVC Hocking championship with a ﬁnal
ris defeated the 26-parscore of 27 points, edging
ticipant ﬁeld to win the
Trimble (28) for the title
TVC Hocking girls race
by a single point. Federal
with a mark of 20:30.01.
Hocking was third in the
Kaylor Offenberger
three-team ﬁeld with 85
(20:50.49) of Waterford
was the overall runner-up. points.
Eastern had a single
Senior Ally Durst
participant in the boys
(21:14.66) and sophoevent in Colton Reynolds,
more Whitney Durst
and the junior earned all(21:38.97) also came

league honors with a ﬁfth
place ﬁnish of 17:15.71.
Garrett Frazee led
South Gallia, but missed
the all-league cut, with
an eighth place ﬁnish of
18:21.06. Grifﬁn Davis
was also 29th overall with
a mark of 23:37.12.
Southern did not have
a male participant in
the 32-person boys race,
which was won by Eli
Fullerton of Belpre with a
time of 16:24.80.
Brayden Weber
(17:11.57) and Danuel
Persinger (17:13.64) of
Trimble were second and
third overall, with Jackson Plummer of Belpre
placing fourth with a time
of 17:13.71.
Eric Everett (17:28.78)
of Trimble and Evan
Wells (18:06.13) of
Belpre completed the
all-league efforts with
respective ﬁnishes of
sixth and seventh.
On the TVC Ohio side
of things, the Vinton
County girls defeated
a four-team ﬁeld with a
ﬁnal winning tally of 29
points. Athens (32) was
the overall runner-up,
while Alexander (91) and
River Valley (93) completed team standings
in the third and fourth
spots.
Rylee Fee of VCHS
defeated the 52-participant ﬁeld to win the
individual TVC Ohio
girls title with a mark of
19:19.02. Raney Riddlebarger (19:49.61) of Athens was the runner-up.
The Lady Vikings also
had All-TVC Ohio honorees in Olivia Mayers
(20:12.60), Lilly Cheva-

lier (20:15.65) and Lexi
Walker (20:55.64), who
respectively placed third,
fourth and seventh.
The Lady Bulldogs
completed the all-league
honorees as Cami Hibbard (20:34.14) and
Sylvie Wilson (20:45.64)
respectively placed ﬁfth
and sixth.
Lauren Twyman led
the locals and the Lady
Raiders with a 12th place
time of 22:15.50, followed
by Hannah Culpepper
(23:35.83) and Julia
Nutter (25:43.12) with
respective ﬁnishes of
23rd and 36th.
Kaylee Gillman
(26:01.74) and Kate Nutter (27:22.10) completed
the Silver and Black tally
by placing 37th and 41st
overall. Connie Stewart
(27:25.41) and Lexi Stout
(29:07.24) also ﬁnished
43rd and 45th for RVHS.
Meigs had two female
competitors at the event,
with Madison Cremeans
leading the way with
a 26th place time of
23:57.91. Taylor Swartz
was also 31st with a mark
of 24:56.12.
Athens won the TVC
Ohio boys championship
with a ﬁnal score of 18
points. Vinton County
was the runner-up in the
six-team ﬁeld with 57
points, while River Valley (83), Wellston (117),
Meigs (131) and Nelsonville-York (134) rounded
out the three through six
spots.
Tony Tonkovich of
Athens won the 58-participant boys race with a
See EAGLES | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Lady Knights sweep TVCS

MLB
2018 Postseason Baseball Glance
WILD CARD
Tuesday, Oct. 2: Colorado 2, Chicago 1,
13 innings
Wednesday, Oct. 3: New York 7, Oakland
2
DIVISION SERIES
(Best-of-5)
American League
All Games on TBS
Boston 3, New York 1
Friday, Oct. 5: Boston 5, New York 4
Saturday, Oct. 6: New York 6, Boston 2
Monday, Oct. 8: Boston 16, New York 1
Tuesday, Oct. 9: Boston 4, New York 3
Houston 3, Cleveland 0
Friday, Oct. 5: Houston 7, Cleveland 2
Saturday, Oct. 6: Houston 3, Cleveland 1
Monday, Oct. 8: Houston 11, Cleveland 3
National League
Milwaukee 3, Colorado 0
Thursday, Oct. 4: Milwaukee 3, Colorado
2, 10 innings
Friday, Oct. 5: Milwaukee 4, Colorado 0
Sunday, Oct. 7: Milwaukee 6, Colorado 0
Los Angeles 3, Atlanta 1
Thursday, Oct. 4: Los Angeles 6, Atlanta
0
Friday, Oct. 5: Los Angeles 3, Atlanta 0
Sunday, Oct. 7: Atlanta 6, Los Angeles 5
Monday, Oct. 8: Los Angeles 6, Atlanta 2
LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
(Best-of-7, x-if necessary)
American League
All Games on TBS
Boston 2, Houston 1
Saturday, Oct. 13: Houston 7, Boston 2
Sunday, Oct. 14: Boston 7, Houston 5
Tuesday, Oct. 16: Boston 8, Houston 2

Wednesday, Oct. 17: Boston (Porcello
17-7) at Houston (Morton 15-3),
8:39 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 18: Boston at Houston,
8:09 p.m.
x-Saturday, Oct. 20: Houston at Boston,
5:09 p.m.
x-Sunday, Oct. 21: Houston at Boston,
7:39 p.m.
National League
All Games on FS1
Milwaukee 2, Los Angeles 1
Friday, Oct. 12: Milwaukee 6, Los
Angeles 5
Saturday, Oct. 13: Los Angeles 4, at
Milwaukee 3
Monday, Oct. 15: Milwaukee 4, Los
Angeles 0
Tuesday, Oct. 16: Milwaukee (Gonzalez
10-11) at Los Angeles (Hill 11-5),
9:09 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct. 17: Milwaukee (Miley
5-2) at Los Angeles (Kershaw 9-5),
5:05 p.m.
x-Friday, Oct. 19: Los Angeles at
Milwaukee, 8:39 p.m.
x-Saturday, Oct. 20: Los Angeles at
Milwaukee, 9:09 p.m.
WORLD SERIES
(Best-of-7, x-if necessary)
All Games on FOX
Tuesday, Oct. 23: National League at
American League
Wednesday, Oct. 24: National League at
American League
Friday, Oct. 26: American League at
National League
Saturday, Oct. 27: American League at
National League

By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. —
A collective triumph.
The Point Pleasant volleyball
team used all 12 of its players,
had seven different people serve
up at least one point and another
eight recorded at least one kill
on Monday night during a 25-10,
25-23 victory over visiting Teays
Valley Christian in a non-conference matchup in Mason County.
The Lady Knights (23-3) —
fresh off their Buffalo Pumpkin
Tournament championship from
Saturday — rode that momentum
into Senior Night festivities as
the hosts honored seniors Lanea
Cochran, Madison Hatﬁeld and
Savanah Wroten for their individual efforts over the years.
The Red and Black recorded
25 service points, 10 aces, 17
kills and a block over the course
of two games, but the depleted
Lady Lions — who were missing four players and two starters
— did their best to keep things
interesting.
The Blue and White jumped
out to early leads of 1-0 and 2-1
before ﬁnding themselves tied at
three-all, but Hatﬁeld came up
with eight straight service points
during a 9-0 run that resulted in

NFL

New England
Miami
N.Y. Jets
Buffalo

W
4
4
3
2

L
2
2
3
4

T
0
0
0
0

Tennessee
Houston
Jacksonville
Indianapolis

W
3
3
3
1

L
3
3
3
5

T
0
0
0
0

Cincinnati
Baltimore
Pittsburgh
Cleveland

W
4
4
3
2

L
2
2
2
3

T
0
0
1
1

Kansas City
L.A. Chargers
Denver
Oakland

W
5
4
2
1

L
1
2
4
5

T
0
0
0
0

Washington
Dallas
Philadelphia
N.Y. Giants

W
3
3
3
1

L
2
3
3
5

T
0
0
0
0

New Orleans
Carolina
Tampa Bay
Atlanta

W
4
3
2
2

L
1
2
3
4

T
0
0
0
0

Chicago
Minnesota
Green Bay
Detroit

W
3
3
3
2

L
2
2
2
3

T
0
1
1
0

L.A. Rams
Seattle
Arizona
San Francisco

W
6
3
1
1

L
0
3
5
5

T
0
0
0
0

All Times EDT
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
Pct PF PA Home Away
.667 176 148 4-0-0 0-2-0
.667 130 145 3-0-0 1-2-0
.500 165 139 2-1-0 1-2-0
.333 76 138 1-1-0 1-3-0
South
Pct PF PA Home Away
.500 87 107 2-1-0 1-2-0
.500 135 137 2-1-0 1-2-0
.500 109 126 2-1-0 1-2-0
.167 152 180 0-2-0 1-3-0
North
Pct PF PA Home Away
.667 174 158 2-1-0 2-1-0
.667 153 77 2-0-0 2-2-0
.583 171 154 1-2-0 2-0-1
.417 128 151
2-1-1 0-2-0
West
Pct PF PA Home Away
.833 215 172 2-0-0 3-1-0
.667 175 144 2-1-0 2-1-0
.333 120 154 2-2-0 0-2-0
.167 110 176 1-2-0 0-3-0
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
Pct PF PA Home Away
.600 106 104 2-1-0 1-1-0
.500 123 103 3-0-0 0-3-0
.500 137 117 2-1-0 1-2-0
.167 117 162 0-3-0 1-2-0
South
Pct PF PA Home Away
.800 180 140 2-1-0 2-0-0
.600 121 114 3-0-0 0-2-0
.400 141 173 1-1-0 1-2-0
.333 167 192 2-2-0 0-2-0
North
Pct PF PA Home Away
.600 139 96 2-0-0 1-2-0
.583 140 148 2-1-0
1-1-1
.583 148 144 3-0-1 0-2-0
.400 125 137 2-1-0 0-2-0
West
Pct PF PA Home Away
1.000 196 118 3-0-0 3-0-0
.500 143 117 1-1-0 2-2-0
.167 82 139 0-3-0 1-2-0
.167 148 179 1-1-0 0-4-0

Eagles
From page 6

time of 16:08.69. Teammates Bozeman Koonce
(17:17.51), Walker Evans
(17:44.24), Kieran Delach
(17:46.08) and Zachary
Kessler (17:46.16) also
won all-league honors
with respective ﬁnishes of
second, fourth, ﬁfth and
sixth.
Ethan East (17:31.43)
of Vinton County was
third overall, while
Wellston’s Justin Anderson (17:56.27) completed
the All-TVC Ohio team by
placing seventh.
Dylan Fulks led the
locals and the Raiders
by ﬁnishing ninth with
a time of 18:14.05, followed by Cody Wooten
(18:34.08) and Rory
Twyman (18:40.20) with
respective ﬁnishes of 14th
and 17th.
Caleb McKnight

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

NFC
3-0-0
2-2-0
1-5-0
1-3-0

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

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

(19:54.91) was next
for RVHS in 30th
place, while Ian Eblin
(20:20.65) completed
the team tally by ﬁnishing 36th. Nathan Young
(22:21.53) was also 50th
overall for the Silver and
Black.
Colton Heater paced
the Marauders with
a 22nd place time of
19:27.54. Christian Jones
(20:12.70) and Landon
Davis (20:14.95) were
next with respective ﬁnishes of 34th and 35th.
Tucker Smith was next
with a 47th place time of
21:52.70, while Brandon
Justis (29:14.31) completed the MHS team tally by
placing 58th.
Visit baumspage.com
for complete results of the
2018 TVC Cross Country
Championships hosted by
Alexander High School.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

a permanent lead at 12-3.
The guests twice closed to
within eight points, but PPHS
reeled off a dozen of the ﬁnal 17
points en route to a 15-point win
and a 1-0 match lead.
There were eight ties and ﬁve
lead changes in the ﬁnal game,
with Teays Valley Christian twice
holding an advantage of ﬁve
points — the last of which came
at 10-5.
The Lady Knights broke away

competition said the
race was nothing at all
like the Truck Series
event a day earlier,
From page 6
when that event ended
under caution because
“There was two cars
of a late accident.
dead in the water,”
“Two different races
Busch said of NASand every race is difCAR’s need to call a
caution and send a med- ferent,” O’Donnell
ical crew to the disabled said during his weekly
appearance on Sirivehicles.
usXM NASCAR Radio.
Busch left Talladega
with a 14th-place ﬁnish. “Every call is a judgment call. The (inciA victory would have
dent) on Saturday was
put him into the third
in front of the ﬁeld …
round of the playoffs,
we always want to try
but that berth instead
to end under green, but
went to Almirola.
in that case we just felt
NASCAR’s Steve
like we couldn’t. Then
O’Donnell waited until
on Sunday, very similar
Monday to address
in terms of a car hitting
Busch’s criticism and
the wall, but where it
was adamant the sanchappened was different
tioning body was corand in terms of where
rect in its ofﬁciating.
the ﬁeld was.”
The head of NASCAR

from a 20-all tie and claimed
their largest lead of two points
on four different occasions en
route to the minimal two-point
win that wrapped up the 2-0
match triumph.
Hatﬁeld led the hosts with
eight service points, followed
by Cochran with ﬁve points and
Wroten with four points. Nancy
Vettese and Olivia Dotson were
next with three points apiece,
while Peyton Jordan and Olivia
Boggess completed things with a
point each.
Wroten, Cochran and Vettese
each recorded three aces, with
Hatﬁeld also adding an ace.
Cochran led the net attack with
ﬁve kills and a block, followed by
Dotson with three kills. Vettese,
Hatﬁeld and Tristan Wilson also
had two kills apiece in the win,
while Wroten, Boggess and Baylie Rickard each had one kill.
Chloe Ferrell paced TVCS with
four service points, followed by
Chloe Harper and Havyn Jones
with two points apiece. Beth
Ray also had one service point in
the setback. Harper and Adora
Campbell also recorded a kill
each for the guests.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

In other words,
because the accident
Sunday was behind the
leaders, NASCAR preferred to let the drivers
race to the ﬁnish under
green. But that’s a judgment call and one that
cost Busch, an unpopular driver with NASCAR
brass, an important
victory.
While every race
is different, ofﬁciating should be as close
to black and white as
possible and NASCAR
should never open itself
to the idea it intentionally tried to prevent a
driver from winning.
Once the implication
was made, O’Donnell
should have been front
and center to address it.
The Truck Series
race the day before

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wasn’t NASCAR’s ﬁnest
moment, either. For at
least 15 minutes after
the race, the pylon, timing and scoring, and
NASCAR’s ofﬁcial website all listed Wendell
Chavous as the winner.
But Chavous was actually ﬁfth and Timothy
Peters was the race winner. Chavous thought
he won until he learned
all the statistics were
incorrect, and NASCAR
simply moved on to the
next race as if nothing
bizarre had happened.
NASCAR has got to
tighten up in every area,
particularly accountability.
There are ﬁve races
left in what’s been a trying NASCAR season.
Improvement needs to
start at the very top.

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followed by Kylee Jenkins and Payton Hunter
with three apiece. Kylie
Deer had two kills in the
From page 6
setback, while Ross and
Jenkins had one each.
kills. Wolfe posted three
Third-year SHS head
kills and a match-best ﬁve
blocks, Jordan Hardwick coach Kim Hupp is
hoping that the Lady
added three kills of her
Tornadoes can carry the
own, while Mickenzie
momentum into ThursFerrell had one kill and
one block. Adams, Kassie day’s sectional ﬁnal at
Waterford.
Barton, Abby Cummins
“Tonight was a great
and Saelym Larsen each
had one kill for the Purple team win,” Hupp said.
“Everyone worked well
and Gold.
together. After a long
Symmes Valley was
bus trip and winning
led by Alison Klaiber
the game in three sets,
and Morgan Jenkins
with eight points apiece, it gives us momentum
going into Thursday’s
including three and two
game with Waterford.”
aces respectively. Ericca
The Lady Wildcats are
Ross had six points and
the top-seed and claimed
two aces, Ellie Johnson
a pair of victories over
added three points and
the Purple and Gold in
an ace, while Emily
the regular season.
McCleese earned one
point on an ace.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740Klaiber led SVHS at
446-2342, ext. 2100.
the net with four kills,

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant senior Savanah Wroten
dives for a bump attempt in front of
classmate Lanea Cochran (11) during
Game 1 of Monday night’s non-conference
volleyball contest against Teays Valley
Christian in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

NASCAR

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�COMICS

8 Wednesday, October 17, 2018

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Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 17, 2018 9

Bengals pick up pieces after another late loss
trying to ﬁgure out what
happens next. That ﬁnal
play will stick with them
for a while.
Defensive coordinator
Teryl Austin said Monday that he decided to
blitz in hopes of pushing
the Steelers (3-2-1) out
of Chris Boswell’s range.
The Steelers trailed 21-20
and could have won with
a ﬁeld goal.
“We just decided to go
after them,” Austin said.
“I want our guys to play
aggressive, we’re playing
to win, and they had a
good play called.”
When Roethlisberger
saw the Bengals had no

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NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY
DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT
SECTION 594
VILLAGE OF RUTLAND WASTEWATER SYSTEM
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The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Huntington District, by this
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out.
“That was one there
that he found the hole
in the coverage,” Austin
said. “Every coverage has
got a little bit of a weakness in it, and where they
hit us was right behind
the linebackers and just
in front of the safeties.”
Although Boswell has
struggled this season, he
has never missed a kick
at Paul Brown Stadium.
He had a game winner
with 14 seconds left in
Pittsburgh’s 18-16 playoff
victory in 2015. He had
another on the ﬁnal play
of a 23-20 victory last
December.

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against the Steelers, the
defense failed to hold on.
The Steelers got the
ball at their 23-yard line
with 1:12 left and three
timeouts. Roethlisberger
completed passes of 8
and 10 yards to JuJu
Smith-Schuster. A holding call on cornerback
Dre Kirkpatrick provided
a ﬁrst down.
Roethlisberger completed another pass that
Smith-Schuster turned
into a 23-yard gain and
put them in ﬁeld goal
range with 15 seconds
left and two timeouts.
That play put the Steelers in position to pull it

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Linebacker Nick Vigil
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half and didn’t return.
Safety Shawn Williams
left with a concussion in
the third quarter. Others
were in and out of the
lineup with injuries.
The defense starred in
Cincinnati’s solid start,
scoring three touchdowns and ﬁnishing off
three games by getting
turnovers. With a chance
to end the Bengals’
streak of abysmal ﬁnishes

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safety guarding against a
big play, he knew Brown
would have a clear path
to the end zone. He took
the snap and quickly
tossed it to Brown, who
ran untouched for Pittsburgh’s seventh straight
win in the series.
In the aftermath, the
Bengals were left trying
to pick up the pieces
of a defense that lost
numerous players and is
headed to Kansas City
for a game Sunday night.
The Chiefs (5-1) have
one of the league’s top
offenses and are coming
off a 43-40 loss to New
England.

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CINCINNATI (AP) —
The Bengals’ depleted
defense went with an
all-out blitz, hoping to
push the Steelers out of
ﬁeld goal range. Instead,
Ben Roethlisberger threw
a short pass that Antonio Brown turned into a
31-yard touchdown with
10 seconds left, and the
Bengals’ litany of lastsecond losses grew with
another mindboggling
ﬁnish.
Brown’s catch-and-run
into the end zone gave
Pittsburgh a 28-21 victory Sunday that evened
up the AFC North and
left the Bengals (4-2)

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�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, October 17, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Lady Knights knock off Ravenswood, 6-0
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — They say it’s
tough to beat a team
three times in the same
season, but they forgot
to tell the Lady Knights.
The Point Pleasant girls soccer team
began play in the Class
AA/A Region IV Section 1 tournament on
Monday at Ohio Valley
Bank Track and Field in
Mason County, with the
Lady Knights claiming a
6-0 victory over visiting
Ravenswood for their
third win over the Red
Devilettes this fall.
Point Pleasant (10-64) — winner of three
out of its last four
contests —broke the
scoreless tie 3:25 into
play, when junior Ashley
Staats scored from 18
yards out on an assist
from classmate Morgan
Miller.
Another 3:16 seconds ran off the clock
before the Lady Knights
increased their lead to
2-0, with freshman Kady
Hughes scoring from
close-range on an assist
from senior Teagan Hay.
Point Pleasant needed
only 2:25 to increase
its lead to 3-0, as Miller
found the back of the
net from 12-yards away
on an assist from senior
Lexi Watkins-Lovejoy.
The Lady Knights
were held off the board
for the remaining 30
minutes of the ﬁrst half,

but had all-16 shots on
goal and all-5 corner
kicks in the period.
Freshman goal keeper
Alyssa Smith picked up
11 saves in the net for
the Red Devilettes (2-151) — who have now
dropped ﬁve consecutive
decisions.
After the break, Point
Pleasant needed just
6:29 to make its lead
4-0, as Hay found the
bottom right corner of
the goal from six yards
out, with PPHS sophomore Katey Woomer
earning the assist.
Hay and Woomer
ﬂipped roles exactly
four minutes later, as
the sophomore scored a
close-range goal on an
assist from her senior
teammate with 29:31 to
play.
PPHS dialed longdistance for its ﬁnal goal
of the game, as Staats
found the back of the net
from over 20 yards out,
on an assist from freshman Alivia Ahlers with
25 minutes to play.
Point Pleasant had ﬁve
shots on goal after the
break, as well as three
of the second half’s four
corner kicks. Ravenswood got its only shot
on goal late in the game,
with PPHS junior goal
keeper Monica Cook
coming up with the save.
For the guests, Smith
added two more saves in
the second half, giving
her a baker’s dozen for
the match.
The Lady Knight

offense was led by Staats with two goals, the
longest two of the night.
Hay ﬁnished with one
goal and two assists
in the victory, while.
Miller and Woomer both
contributed a goal and
an assist to the winning
cause. Hughes chipped
in with a goal, and Watkins-Lovejoy added an
assist for the victors.
Point Pleasant’s
regular season wins over
Ravenswood included an
8-0 triumph on Sept. 18
in Jackson County and
an 8-1 victory on Oct. 2
at OVB Track and Field.
Following the victory,
sixth-year PPHS head
coach Chris Errett was
happy with the postseason mentality his
team possessed from the
opening kick.
“The girls came out
focused, they know that
with every game the
season is on the line
now,” said Errett. “They
came out ready to get
control of the game early
and that’s what they did.
After that, it was just
them playing hard like
they always do.”
Errett was hopefully
that the Lady Knights
could take the momentum from Monday’s win
into their matchup with
Williamstown on Tuesday.
“They played good,
they played hard, it was
a good warm-up to get
us ready for some tough
competition tomorrow,”
Errett said. “It was good

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

PPHS senior Bailey Thomas (22) kicks the ball in front of teammate Lexi Watkins-Lovejoy (8), during
the Lady Knights’ 6-0 victory on Monday in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

to see them in a good
rhythm tonight, and
ready to go for tomorrow.”
Point Pleasant is
slated to meet the Lady
YellowJackets at 7:30 in
Dunbar.
WHS has a pair of
victories over the Lady
Knights in the regular
season, winning 1-0
on Aug. 23 in Wood
County, and 2-0 on Oct.
6 in Mason County.
Williamstown hasn’t
been defeated in over a
month, winning eight of
its last 10 matches, with
the others being draws.
WHS is also the only
team to defeat Point
Pleasant on its home
turf this month.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Bosa leaves OSU to prep for career
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Injured defensive end Nick Bosa has
decided to leave to school
to focus on getting ready
for the NFL draft in the
spring, Ohio State said
Tuesday.
The junior All-American from Fort Lauderdale,
Florida, already had four
sacks this season when
he suffered a core muscle
injury on Sept. 15 in the
third game of the season.
He had surgery ﬁve days
later, and no timetable
was set for his return to
the team.
Considered one of the
best players in college
football, Bosa had left
no doubt that he would
leave school after this
season to enter the draft.
He planned to follow the
same path as his older
brother, Joey, who left
Ohio State a year early
and now plays for the Los

Angeles Chargers.
Nick Bosa had tied his
career high of ﬁve tackles
twice in the ﬁrst three
games this season, and he
was leading the team in
tackles with 14, including
six for losses.
That came to an abrupt
halt when he went down
early in the third quarter
against TCU in Arlington, Texas, and had to
be helped to the locker
room.
“I was hopeful that Nick
would be able to return
to play again for us,”
Ohio State coach Urban
Meyer said. “I know this
was an extremely difﬁcult
and emotional decision
for Nick and his family,
and I wish him well as he
moves on to get himself
100 percent healthy and
ready for his next chapter.”
Ohio State’s defense
hasn’t been the same

since Bosa’s departure.
The unit has dealt with
other injuries, including
to Bosa’s replacement,
Jonathan Cooper, and has
shown a weakness for
surrendering big plays.
Bosa was dominating
from the start of his Ohio
State career.
The 6-foot-4,
263-pounder, who wore
the same No. 97 his
brother did for the Buckeyes, played in 30 games,
with 29 tackles, 17½
sacks and two fumble
recoveries, one of them
for a touchdown.
Both Bosa brothers
earned Big Ten defensive
lineman-of-the-year honors.
“I want to thank Nick
for the remarkable efforts
he gave for this program,”
Meyer said. “He is a ﬁrstclass young man who we
have been honored to
coach.”

PPHS freshman Ellie Wood (28) plays a ball in the attack zone,
during the Lady Knights’ 6-0 win on Monday in Point Pleasant,
W.Va.

Ugly sight: Browns’ lopsided
loss an ‘eye opener’ for team
BEREA, Ohio (AP)
— The Browns have
endured all types of
losses over the past
few seasons. They’ve
been painful, lopsided,
comical, heartbreaking,
head-scratching and lastsecond.
Jarvis Landry
described Sunday’s
defeat differently.
“An eye-opener,” the
receiver said.
After being so
competitive through
their ﬁrst ﬁve games,
Cleveland was simply
overmatched by the
Los Angeles Chargers,
who rushed for 246
yards, contained and
confused rookie quarterback Baker Mayﬁeld
and wrecked a pictureperfect day near Lake

OH-70080000

life happens. fast.

Erie for Browns fans
hoping to see their team
win two straight home
games for the ﬁrst time
in four years.
Instead, they watched
the Browns (2-3-1) get
pounded.
“They got after us,”
said Landry, adding he
left FirstEnergy Stadium
without speaking to
reporters following the
game because he was
frustrated. “Truthfully,
it really wasn’t nothing
to be said. I think it was
evident. They came in,
and they were the better
team.”
Better by far.
The Chargers took
it to the Browns, who
were coming off an
emotional overtime win
against Baltimore, a

victory that altered the
national narrative about
Cleveland’s season. But
just when the Browns
turned trendy, they got
knocked back.
“I hate to say that we
needed it, but it’s something that we needed
to happen to us,” said
Landry, who then
backtracked, saying he
meant the Browns got
tested and failed.
“I didn’t really mean
like we NEEDED it,”
he said with emphasis.
“Obviously, I want to
win, that’s what I really
meant.”
What the Browns do
need is help, especially
to replenish a wide
receivers group that has
been drained by departures and injuries.

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OH-70084239

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