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                  <text>One paper
towel at
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Rain,
High 74,
Low 62

Purdue
blasts
Ohio

EDITORIAL s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 145, Volume 71

Tuesday, September 12, 2017 s 50¢

Remembering 9-11, 16 years later

PARTY IN
THE PARK
COVERAGE
RACINE — Additional
coverage of Racine’s
Party in the Park —
including the Queen
contest, Chase Roush
Memorial 5K, parade,
music and Cruisin’
Saturday Night Car
Show — will appear in
the Wednesday and
Thursday editions of The
Daily Sentinel.

Meigs
County
receives
grant
Staff Report

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

First responders from fire, EMS and law enforcement were joined by active duty and military veterans for the 9-11 Ceremony on Saturday at Star Mill Park in Racine.

Racine pays tribute to first responders
By Sarah Hawley
hawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE — “Where were
you when the world stopped
turning?” asked Albert Profﬁtt,
quoting an Alan Jackson song,
during Saturday’s 9-11 Ceremony at Racine’s Star Mill Park.
Those old enough to remember the attacks of Sept. 11,
2001, at the World Trace Center, the Pentagon and the plane
brought down in Pennsylvania,
are likely to be able to tell you
exactly where they were that
day.
On Saturday, a ceremony was
held at Racine’s Star Mill Park
as part of Party in the Park as
has been done for the past few
years.
The remembrance ceremony
and tribute to ﬁrst responders
and military personnel is an
annual part of Racine’s Party in
the Park.
Profﬁtt thanked those in
attendance for coming to pay
“respect and show appreciation
to all who work to keep America safe.”
To open the ceremony, representatives from the sheriff’s
ofﬁce, Racine Police Department, EMS and numerous local

ﬁre departments came to the
park in a procession which
began at Southern High School.
Once arriving at the park, the
ﬁrst responders walked from
their vehicles in a silent procession as the Southern Marching Band played the National
Anthem.
Profﬁtt told the background
of the steal cross which stood
behind the veterans, military
personnel and ﬁrst responders.
Two days after the attacks,
those searching through the
rubble for survivors came
across beams which formed a
20 foot steal cross. Three others
were also located in the same
conditions.
During the emotional cleanup at Ground Zero, the cross
became the symbol of solace
and peace. The original cross
was one of four found that day
in New York City, thus the artifact provided a signiﬁcant inspiration to those who continued
to search for survivors.
The replica is on display each
year at the Racine ceremony as
a reminder of that day.
“Lets never forget,” said Profﬁtt.
Profﬁtt said that the planning
of the ceremony is bittersweet

See GRANT | 2

Ethan Redman, age 6, of Mason County stands in his military uniform along with
the other participants in the 9-11 Ceremony on Saturday afternoon.

with the remembrance of those
who gave their all, as well as
handing out the ﬂyers and having the opportunity to say thank
you to those who serve.
Also during the ceremony,

Profﬁtt called up ﬁrst responders Jason Ridenour, Lowell
Ridenour and Dax Holman.
The three men were the ﬁrst
See TRIBUTE | 2

St. Jude Trail Ride set for Saturday

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

By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

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

COLUMBUS — The
Meigs County Ofﬁce of
Economic and Workforce
Development has been
awarded a $5,000 grant
for economic development by AEP Ohio, a
unit of American Electric Power.
AEP Ohio awarded the
grant to the Meigs County Ofﬁce of Economic
and Workforce Development through their
Local Economic Assistance Program (LEAP).
LEAP provides funding
to help local communities grow with a focus on
retention and expansion
of manufacturing jobs.
Through LEAP, AEP
Ohio is directing dollars
back into the communities they serve to invest
in their growth.
Meigs County Economic Development will
use the grant money to
support a new website
design, mobile accessibility and a streamlined
statistical and demographic data base for site
searchers. The goal of

RUTLAND — As has become a
tradition in the Rutland Twp. area of
Meigs County, the third Saturday of
September marks the annual St. Jude
Trail Ride at the Dill Farm.
For the past 21 years, riders and
their horses have gathered at the family’s farm for a day of riding, fun and
food with the proceeds beneﬁting St.
Jude Children’s Research Hospital.
Saturday will mark the 22nd annual
event held at the farm on Beech Grove
Road near Rutland. The event brings
riders from around the region and
sometimes states away to take part
and raise money for the cause.
Over the past 21 trail rides, more
than $250,000 has been raised

File Photo

Horses and their riders from around the area
took part in the 21st annual St. Jude Trail Ride
at the Dill Farm last fall. The 22nd annual event
will take place Saturday, Sept. 16 near Rutland.

through the event, including $18,836
in 2016. There were 208 riders registered for the 2016 event.
Isabel and Mike Dill, along with
See RIDE | 2

Southern
clinic serves
community
Staff Report

RACINE — For the
past 6 years, Coplin
Health System, provider
for the Southern Health
Clinic, has sponsored the
free May Sports physicals at Southern. This
past Spring the clinic
at Southern completed
over 138 physicals. This
is an in-kind donation of
$2,760 in services provided to the Southern community. During the past
six years over $16,560 in
services to the community have been provided
to the athletic program
and school district.
Superintendent Tony
Deem said, “We are very
happy to have Coplin
Health Systems as part
of our Southern family.
See CLINIC | 2

�NEWS

2 Tuesday, September 12, 2017

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Sunday,
Sept. 17

STOCKS
in dinner at 1 p.m. No
evening service.
POMEROY — Zion
Church of Christ
Homecoming will be
held with a program
from 10-11:30 a.m.

will be held with Sunday School at 10 a.m.,
Worship Service 11:30
a.m. with preaching
and singing. Speaker
will be Evangelist
Corey Carroll. Carry

RUTLAND — Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church Homecoming

Daily Sentinel

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Tribute

remembered seeing the
devastation that day and
there is the daily fear of
situations as the “nation
moves away from God.”
Bell said that we need to
“unite as Christians” and
need to stand with one
another.

Clinic

of another way the clinic
adds value to our school
community.”
“We are so privileged
to have Coplin Health
Systems teaming with
Southern Local. I wanted
to take a minute to
report this good news,”
said Nurse Practitioner
Junie Maynard. “It has
been a win-win experience for us to provide
services right here at
home for our students

and athletes.”
Since the clinic has
come on campus, student
absences have been fewer
as most medical needs
can be handled in-house.
The Southern Clinic is
open to the public every
day that Southern Local
is in session and is now
open Mondays throughout the summer.

in Ohio,” said Perry
Varnadoe, director of the
Meigs County economic
development ofﬁce.
“These funds will help
us tell more potential
employers about the
great workforce and
advantages of doing business in Meigs County.”
Meigs County Economic Development was
one of 21 local economic

development organizations to receive a LEAP
grant in 2017.
“AEP Ohio is proud to
partner with our communities through our
ongoing LEAP grants,”
said Tim Wells, manager
of economic and business development for
AEP Ohio. “Our goal is
to help the communities
we serve thrive.”

Camping is available
at the ride site and Friday evening will include
From page 1
music with a DJ sponsored by the Ohio Horse
other friends and family,
have organized the annual Council.
Registration begins at
event which has grown
over the years to a multi- 9 a.m., and the ride will
day event which includes leave at noon on Saturday,
Sept. 16, taking particicamping and events on
both Friday and Saturday. pants along a 10-mile trail
60734298
through the wooded hills
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 of the area. Everyone is
welcome to “saddle up”
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
and take part in the ride
Hand in Hand: A Benefit
America's Got Talent "Semi Finals 2" Semi-finalists
with whatever donation
for Hurricane Relief (L)
perform for a chance to win $1 million. (N)
Hand in Hand: A Benefit
America's Got Talent "Semi Finals 2" Semi-finalists
they want to make as
for Hurricane Relief (L)
perform for a chance to win $1 million. (N)
their registration fee,
Hand in Hand: A Benefit
Black "Being Black "Sister, Somewhere Between
with all proceeds going to
for Hurricane Relief (L)
Bow-racial" Sister"
"Ghost" (N)
St. Jude.
Martin Luther: The Idea That Changed the World The
Frontline "Abacus: Small
radical events, compelling personalities, and exciting
Enough to Jail" (N)
While registering for
drama of the Reformation. (N)
the
ride, those in attenHand in Hand: A Benefit
Black "Being Black "Sister, Somewhere Between
dance can signup for door
for Hurricane Relief (L)
Bow-racial" Sister"
"Ghost" (N)
Bull "Dirty Little Secrets"
Hand in Hand: A Benefit
NCIS "Something Blue"
prizes, as well as pur-

chasing 50-50 and rafﬂe
tickets.
The drawings, a hog
roast, hot dogs and bean
dinner will be held following the ride. There will
also be prizes for the top
3 money collectors for the
event.
For those interested in
the trail ride, just show
up for registration on
Saturday. The Dill Farm
is located at 34015 Beech
Grove Road, Rutland.
Just follow the GPS and
look for the horses. Also,
Isabel can be reached by
calling 740-742-2849 or
email her at isabeldill@
hotmail.com.

From page 1

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���Local Photos
����Local Names
Know what’s going on in your community.

Our clinic has been a
great asset to our students, families, and staff.
The additional services
that Coplin provides for
our athletes has been
an invaluable resource
and we appreciate the
efforts of the clinic staff.
This is just an example

Grant
From page 1

the project is to create
25 new jobs within three
years.
“We appreciate the
continued support from
AEP Ohio and their
longstanding support of
economic development

Ride

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BROADCAST

3

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6:30

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Wheel of
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Fortune (N) (N)
Entertainm- Access
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for Hurricane Relief (L)
Hand in Hand: A Benefit
The Orville "Old Wounds"
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Martin Luther: The Idea That Changed the World The
radical events, compelling personalities, and exciting
drama of the Reformation. (N)
Hand in Hand: A Benefit
NCIS "Something Blue"
for Hurricane Relief (L)

8

PM

8:30

9

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9:30

29 (FREE)
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31 (NICK)
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Information provided by Southern
Local Schools.

Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Frontline "Abacus: Small
Enough to Jail" (N)
Bull "Dirty Little Secrets"

10

PM

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Grey's "Deterioration of the Dance Moms "All Choked Dance Chat (:50) Chloe
Fight or Flight Response"
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Does It (N) Decision: Part 1" 1/2 (N)
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(:10)
Just Go With It ('11, Com) Adam Sandler. A plastic surgeon (:50)
Matilda ('96, Fam) Danny DeVito, Mara Wilson. A young girl
convinces his assistant to pose as his soon-to-be ex-wife. TV14
with telekinetic abilities uses her powers against grown-ups. TVPG
Ink Master "Drill Baby,
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(:35) MASH
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(:25) Raymond "Ally's Birth" Loves Ray
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10

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Impossible II
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Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

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18.19
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79.08
14.81
37.56
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ca’s Finest” on the back.
Speaking to the crowd
during
the ceremony in
From page 1
addition to Profﬁtt was
Racine Marshal Shane
responders on a call a
Bell, Racine First Baptist
few years ago and were
responsible for saving the Church Pastor Duke Hollife of Profﬁtt’s girlfriend bert, American Legion
representative Kevin
Pat Barnette. Barnette
came up to thank the men Willford and Sheriff Keith
Wood.
and present them with
Bell said that he
shirts which read “Ameri-

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OBITUARIES

OBITUARIES/NEWS
GRACE BELL WINNINGS

DOTTIE SUE LUCAS TURNER

Langsville, Ohio; daughMIDDLEPORT —
ters, Kathryn Mitchell,
Grace Bell Winnings,
Diane Brickles and Linda
81, of Middleport, Ohio,
Turner, Sr.; her
POMEROY —
Miller all of Middleport;
sister, Nancy Lucas passed away Saturday,
Dottie Sue Lucas
brothers, Forest Long and
Sept. 9, 2017, in Holzer
Hawkins; and
Turner, 74, of
his wife Nancy of Redman
Medical Center, Galliher son, Roger C.
Pomeroy, Ohio,
Ridge, Johnny Long and
polis, following a brief
Turner, Jr.
went to be with
his wife Emma of Point
illness.
She is surthe Lord on FriShe was born Sept. 30, Pleasant; sister Betty
vived by her four
day, Sept. 8, 2017,
1935, in Mason County, a Hupp and her husband
daughters, Denise
at her residence.
daughter of the late Cody Terry of Clifton; grand(Steve) Bunce, of ChesShe was born at
children, Danny Ray,
and Catherine (Pierson)
ter, Ohio; Charmele
McRoberts, Kentucky,
Timmy, Matthew, Cyn(Jerry) Spradling, of New Long. In addition to her
on Sept. 24, 1942, the
parents, she was preceded thia, Danny Jr., Sandra,
Haven, W.Va.; Monica
beloved daughter of the
Willie, Nathaniel, Crystal,
in death by her ﬁrst husTurner, of Shade, Ohio;
late Willard and Alka
and Katrina (Kevin) Lam- band, Willis Daniel Marr Jeremy, Jenny, Zach,
June (Howell) Lucas.
and her second husband, Christina, Tamera; and 26
She was a 1960 graduate bert, of Cypress, Texas.
Harold Winnings; daugh- great-grandchildren.
She is also survived
of Rutland High School.
Service will be 1 p.m.,
ter, Grace Lewis; brothby her sisters, Mary E.
Dottie married Roger C.
Wednesday, Sept. 13,
ers, Bobby and Charles
(Wilbern) Merrick, of
Turner on April 3, 1961,
2017, at the Foglesong
Nicholasville, Ky.; Ronda Long; sisters, Virginia
at Clintwood, Virginia.
Funeral Home, Mason,
Sayre and Jean Butler;
Her much loved husband, (Rondal) Vanover, of
Dorton, Ky.; Ann (Frank) grandson, Travis; and two W.Va., Pastor Randy
Roger, predeceased her
Smith ofﬁciating. Burial
Kourt, of Richmond, Ky.; great-grandchildren.
on Nov. 30, 1983. They
will follow in Kirkland
Grace devoted most
Rose Edmonds, of Galwere blessed to be the
Memorial Gardens, Point
of her life taking care of
lipolis Ferry, W.Va.; and
parents of ﬁve children,
Pleasant, W.Va. Visitation
others in their time of
including their son, Roger Jo (David) Collins, of
Racine, Ohio. She is also need. She was a member will be from 6-8 p.m.,
C. Turner, Jr., who died
of the Clifton Tabernacle, Tuesday at the funeral
survived by 11 grandin Iraq in 2004.
Clifton, and enjoyed ﬁsh- home.
children, namely, Steven
Sadly, she discovered
Condolences may be
she had cancer two years Turner, Kaylyn Spradling, ing, bowling, ﬂowers, and
shared with the family at
spending time with her
Hayley Spradling, Roger
ago, beginning a courafoglesongfuneralhome.
grandchildren.
Bunce, Tabitha Turner,
geous battle that ended
com.
Survivors include her
at her death. Even in her Andrew Lambert, Sarah
son, Danny Marr Sr. of
last illness, she remained Bunce, Emily Bunce,
an inspiration for her fam- Jared Turner, Jesse Stuepfert, and Ashlyn Lambert. COLLINS JR.
ily and friends, with her
Dottie is also survived by
loving, uncomplaining
her special pet, Lilly.
nature.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Toney Collins Jr., 86,
Funeral services will be of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Sunday, September 10,
Dottie was an intelligent, strong-willed, inde- held at 11 a.m. on Tues2017 in Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation
pendent woman who had day, Sept. 12, 2017, at the Center, Point Pleasant.
First Southern Baptist
a lifelong enjoyment of
Funeral services will be held at the Deal Funeral
learning, crossword puz- Church in Pomeroy, with Home in Point Pleasant, Wednesday, September 13,
Pastor David Brainard
zles, Sudoku, shopping,
2017, at 1 p.m., with Rev. Joe Hammack ofﬁciating.
travel, and Fox News. She ofﬁciating. Burial will
Burial will follow in the Forest Hills Cemetery in Flatfollow at the School Lot
was a long-time member
rock, W.Va. Friends may visit the family at the funeral
Cemetery. Visitation for
of the First Southern
home from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., prior to the service.
Baptist Church in Pome- family and friends will
be held from 6-8 p.m.,
roy, Ohio and a member
Monday at the Anderson
of the Racine Chapter of
the Eastern Star. She will McDaniel Funeral Home
MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
in Pomeroy.
be greatly missed by her
An online registry is
many friends and family.
closed for the annual
available at www.anderShe is preceded in
workforce development/
sonmcdaniel.com.
death by her parents;
staff training day. Norher husband, Roger C.
mal business hours will
resume on Sept. 14.
SYRACUSE — The
SCIPIO TWP. — The
Syracuse Community
Center Board of Direc- Scipio Township Trusttors will meet at 7 p.m. ees regular monthly
MEIGS BRIEFS
meeting will be held at 7
POMEROY — The
p.m. at the Harrisonville
Meigs County Board
Fire House.
of Health Meeting will
Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs will only list event infortake place at 5 p.m. in
mation that is open to the public and will be printed
the conference room
on a space-available basis.
of the Meigs County
Health Department,
which is located at
112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy,
RACINE — Heritage College Community
Ohio.
Health Programs will be offering a women’s cancer
SUTTON TWP. —
screening clinic with same-day mammography on
The regular monthly
Wednesday, Sept. 27 at the First Baptist Church on
meeting of Sutton
5th Street in Racine, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. AppointTownship Trustees
ments are required. Patients should call 740-593will be held at 6
2432 or 1-800-844-2654 to schedule an appointp.m. in the Council
ment.
Chambers of Racine
Village Hall.
CHESTER TWP.
— The Chester
Township Trustees
CHESTER — A Genealogy Fair will be held from 9
will hold their regua.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 16 at the old Chester
lar meeting at 7 p.m.
Academy in Chester. It is sponsored by the Chesterin the Chester Twp.
Shade Historical Association and Bedford-Lodi HisHall.
torical Group.

Tuesday,
Sept. 12

Tuesday, September 12, 2017 3

VANMETER JR.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Robert William Vanmeter Jr., 61, of Point Pleasant, W.Va, died September
9, 2017, at Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center in Point Pleasant.
Memorial services will be held at the Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant, Tuesday, September 12,
2017, at 7 p.m., with Sampy Hart ofﬁciating. Burial
will be at the convenience of the family. Friends may
visit the family at the funeral home from 5-7 p.m.
prior to the service.
BLACK
HUNTINGTON, W.VA. — Aaron William Black,
20, of Huntington, passed away Sunday, September 3,
2017 at Cabell Huntington Hospital, Huntington.
Funeral service will be conducted noon Thursday,
September 14, 2017 at 16th Street Baptist Church,
Huntington. Burial will follow in Riverview Cemetery,
Greenup, Ky. Visitation will be held one hour prior to
the service at the church.
CALHOUN
GALLIPOLIS — Ronald Calhoun, 85, formerly of
Gallipolis, died in Las Vegas, Nevada on September
7, 2017. Arrangements will be announced later by the
Willis Funeral Home.
CHAPMAN
PROCTORVILLE — Naomi Jean Chapman, 85, of
Proctorville, Ohio passed away Saturday, September
9, 2017 at Cabell Huntington Hospital, Huntington,
W.Va. A graveside service will be held 2 p.m. Wednesday, September 13, 2017 at White Chapel Memorial
Gardens, Barboursville, W.Va. with Pastor Peter Barclay ofﬁciating. Entombment will follow. The family
will receive friends 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. Wednesday,
September 13, 2017 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville.

Thursday,
Sept. 14

6 p.m. All proceeds go
into expenses at the Star
Mill Park. Food will be
served by the Syracuse
Community Center.
SYRACUSE — The
POMEROY — Alpha
Star Mill Park Board will
be holding basket, purse, Iota Masters will meet at
11:30 a.m. at New Begincookware, etc… Luau
nings United Methodist
Games at the Syracuse
Church. Carol Adams
Community Center.
and Jean Powell hostDoors open at 5 p.m.
with games beginning at esses.

Health Screenings Sept. 27

Genealogy Fair Sept. 16

Art in the Village Oct. 7
MIDDLEPORT — Entry forms and guidelines
for the annual Art in the Village on Oct.7 sponsored
by the Riverbend Arts Council are now available at
Farmers Bank, Pomeroy and Riverbend Arts Council’s
Facebook page. Entries must be in by Sept.27. Call
Rhojean at 740-992-3842 for more information.

Wednesday,
Sept. 13
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health
Department will be

60734064

60720833

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

How 9/11
permanently
changed us
The front page of The New York Times from the
morning of Sept. 11, 2001, conjures up a world
both familiar and distant. The lead story highlights talk of tax cuts on Capitol Hill
while a major feature conveys the
Walter
worries of public school ofﬁcials that
Shapiro
Contributing dress codes are being ﬂouted: “The
days when torn jeans tested the limcolumnist
its are now a fond memory.”
In this era before iPhones and
Androids, the Times headlined a page-one article
about Paula Zahn’s new CNN contract: “In a
Nation of Early Risers, Morning TV Is a Hot Market.” The Times front page also brooded about
continuing threats like nuclear smuggling in Asia
and the depressing verities of foreign policy: “Mideast Still Roiling.”
The 16th anniversary of the day that the Twin
Towers were toppled, the Pentagon was attacked
and an airliner plowed into the ground in Pennsylvania is a middle-distance commemoration.
Enough time has passed so that a grave silence
has replaced the anguished tears. Yet almost
everyone over the age of 21 can recount where
they were when they learned that America was
suddenly at war with a shadowy enemy.
It is a telling indication of our unhealed wounds
that it is difﬁcult to think of a major novel, movie
or dramatic TV series that has tackled 9/11 as its
central theme. In contrast, popular culture during
the 1950s was dominated by World War II retrospectives like the 1953 (“From Here to Eternity”)
and 1957 (“The Bridge on the River Kwai”) Oscarwinning best pictures.
An easy explanation is that World War II ended
with the Japanese surrender aboard the battleship
USS Missouri. But the 2011 death of Osama bin
Laden brought with it neither peace in Afghanistan nor a lessening of the worldwide terrorist
threat.
The passage of time has made some moments
that seemed minor in the post-9/11 blur glow
in memory. George W. Bush visited an Islamic
center on Sept. 17 and declared, “America counts
millions of Muslims amongst our citizens, and
Muslims make an incredibly valuable contribution
to our country. … And they need to be treated
with respect. In our anger and emotion, our fellow
Americans must treat each other with respect.”
An inescapable cliche in the days after Sept. 11
was the refrain that Americans had to continue
some ordinary aspect of life (taking airplanes, buying major appliances or entering crowded movie
theaters) “or else the terrorists will have won.”
And 16 years later, things do appear normal on
the surface. We visit the dentist, get obsessed with
TV series and plan our futures as if 9/11 never
happened. But the fears of terrorism have left a
permanent imprint on our psyches.
A revealing June Gallup Poll found that 38 percent of Americans say they are less likely to attend
large events and 26 percent are less likely to enter
skyscrapers because of terrorism fears. Surprisingly, according to Gallup, fewer Americans (32
percent) were skittish about going to such large
gatherings in November 2001, two months after
the attacks.
There is a political component to these numbers
— Republicans are more fearful than Democrats
by every measure.
Most dramatically, 57 percent of Republicans
compared to 35 percent of Democrats say they are
“very worried” or “somewhat worried” that they
or a family member will be a victim of terrorism.
Needless to say, Democrats are disproportionately
likely to live in major cities like New York that
are more obvious terrorist targets than, say, Enid,
Okla.
Our daily life has changed in other ways that we
barely notice, but that would seem obvious to our
20th-century counterparts.
Seeing lethally armed military personnel guarding our airports and train stations is now a routine
occurrence. These days, we are forced to produce
our driver’s licenses several times a day — and
rarely do these demands have anything to do with
our ability to operate a motor vehicle. And the
right to privacy, once an ingrained part of the frontier spirit, is constantly being eroded in the name
of security.
These are trade-offs that most Americans would
accept in return for our 16 years of freedom from a
terrorist attack anything like Sept. 11. But popular
consensus should not blind us to the reality that
we have made decisions in the name of security
that earlier generations of Americans might ﬁnd
hard to grasp.
Another half-forgotten change over the past
16 years is the building of a metaphorical moat
between ordinary Americans and their government.
It wasn’t too long ago that security was light in
most government buildings — and you could wander down corridors without an escort. While there
is no easily available quantitative information (for
See 9/11 | 5

THEIR VIEW

One paper towel at a time
Blood dripping,
I yanked the paper
towel from the roll and
wrapped it around my
hand the best I could.
The glass candle holder
had broken in my hand.
I was used to performing ﬁrst aid on my boys
when they were young,
but they have their own
paper towels now—have
the ability to take care of
themselves.
Maybe I felt sentimental because I’d lost
too much blood, but the
silver paper towel holder
seemed to be shinier
than ever. It stood at
regal attention, ready to
serve any needy hand
that reached out, not just
the young ones.
The past few months,
many hands are reaching for more help than a

hug. Each person’s
paper towel offers.
pain is eased on an
Thousands of
individual basis.
hands are reaching
When the shiny
for help as tropical
Twin Towers fell
storm Irma blasts
on September 11,
the South. Lending
2001, each person
a helping hand is
a prevalent theme Michele Z. was pulled from
the rubble by a
when disasters
Marcum
shake our founda- Contributing caring hand. Each
pot of soup was
tion like Hurricolumnist
ladled into indicane Harvey did
vidual bowls for
thousands of folks
individual bellies. Each
in Texas, but lending a
wound was soothed one
hand to a single person
bandage at a time. Fireis just as important as
helping the masses. Each ﬁghter hero from Middleport, Ohio, Alan Wallace,
person in need feels the
rescued victims from the
direct impact of that
Pentagon Building, one
hand offering food or
person at a time.
water or other assisI look down at my
tance.
blood-soaked paper
Each child feels the
towel, my injury seeming
softness of a dry towel
so minor compared to
wiping away their tears.
those in the path of torEach lonely senior feels
rential storms and terrorthe warm embrace of a

driven planes. Knowing
the pain of those people
was more intense than
mine doesn’t make mine
completely diminish,
but does make me feel
relieved that the cut on
my hand only needs
stitches and not an
amputation.
I will focus on helping
one person at a time,
each day, no matter that
the gigantic numbers of
people hurt in cataclysmic events. I’ll contribute
to the humanitarian
needs of my society by
comforting the masses,
one paper towel at time.
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native
of Meigs County, author of “Rain
No Evil” and host of Life Speaks
on AIR radio. Access more at
soundcloud.comlifespeaks. She
will be appearing in Point Pleasant
at the Mothman Festival on
Saturday, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at
the Mason Jar.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday,
Sept. 12, the 255th day
of 2017. There are 110
days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On September 12,
1942, during World War
II, a German U-boat off
West Africa torpedoed
the RMS Laconia, which
was carrying Italian
prisoners of war, British
soldiers and civilians;
it’s estimated more than
1,600 people died while
some 1,100 survived
after the ship sank. The
German crew, joined by
other U-boats, began
rescue operations. (On
September 16, the rescue effort came to an
abrupt halt when the
Germans were attacked
by a U.S. Army bomber;
as a result, U-boat commanders were ordered
to no longer rescue civilian survivors of submarine attacks.)
On this date:
In 1814, the Battle of
North Point took place
in Maryland during the
War of 1812 as American forces slowed British troops advancing on
Baltimore.
In 1846, Elizabeth
Barrett secretly married
Robert Browning at St.
Marylebone Church in
London.

In 1914, during World
War I, the First Battle
of the Marne ended in
an Allied victory against
Germany.
In 1938, Adolf Hitler
demanded the right
of self-determination
for the Sudeten (sooDAYT’-un) Germans in
Czechoslovakia.
In 1944, the Second
Quebec Conference
opened with President
Franklin D. Roosevelt
and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill
in attendance.
In 1953, Massachusetts Sen. John F. Kennedy married Jacqueline
Lee Bouvier (boo-veeAY’) in Newport, Rhode
Island.
In 1960, Democratic
presidential candidate John F. Kennedy
addressed questions
about his Roman Catholic faith, telling the
Greater Houston Ministerial Association, “I do
not speak for my church
on public matters, and
the church does not
speak for me.”
In 1974, Emperor
Haile Selassie (HY’lee sehl-AH’-see) was
deposed by Ethiopia’s
military after ruling for
58 years.
In 1977, South African black student leader
and anti-apartheid activist Steve Biko (BEE’-

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“Find the good. It’s all around you. Find it,
showcase it and you’ll start believing it.”
— Jesse Owens
Olympic gold medal track and field athlete (born this date
in 1913, died in 1980)

koh), 30, died while
in police custody, triggering an international
outcry.
In 1986, Joseph Cicippio (sih-SIHP’-ee-oh),
the acting comptroller
at the American University in Beirut, was kidnapped (he was released
in December 1991).
In 1987, reports surfaced that Democratic
presidential candidate
Joseph Biden had
borrowed, without
attribution, passages
of a speech by British
Labour Party leader Neil
Kinnock (KIHN’-ik) for
one of his own campaign
speeches. (The Kinnock
report, along with other
damaging revelations,
prompted Biden to drop
his White House bid.)
In 1992, the space
shuttle Endeavour blasted off, carrying with it
Mark Lee and Jan Davis,
the ﬁrst married couple
in space; Mae Jemison,
the ﬁrst black woman
in space; and Mamoru
Mohri, the ﬁrst Japanese national to ﬂy on a

U.S. spaceship. Police in
Peru captured Shining
Path founder Abimael
Guzman. Actor Anthony
Perkins died in Hollywood at age 60.
Ten years ago: Russian President Vladimir
Putin replaced longserving Prime Minister
Mikhail Fradkov with an
obscure Cabinet ofﬁcial,
Viktor Zubkov. Japanese
Prime Minister Shinzo
Abe (shin-zoh ah-bay)
announced his resignation.
Five years ago: The
U.S. dispatched an elite
group of Marines to
Tripoli, Libya, after the
mob attack in Benghazi that killed the
U.S. ambassador and
three other Americans.
President Barack Obama
strongly condemned
the violence, and vowed
to bring the killers to
justice; Republican challenger Mitt Romney
accused the administration of showing
weakness in the face of
tumultuous events in
the Middle East.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 12, 2017 5

Remembering 9-11

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

First responders from around the area were on hand for the 9-11 Ceremony on Saturday morning at Star Mill Park.

The steal cross which stood at the center of the display at
Saturday’s 9-11 ceremony looked like one of those found by crews
going through the rubble at the World Trade Center.

Holman and Ridenour hold their shirts which were presented to
them by Pat Barnette.

9/11

hard to top a Republican
House voting to impeach
a Democratic president.
Conspiracy theories
have ﬂourished in the
21st century in part
because America was
victimized in 2001 by
the worst conspiracy
imaginable — 19 ter-

travel with a protective
cordon of armed guards.
Perhaps the biggest
From page 4
transformation in the
past 16 years is the
growth of a climate of
security reasons, of
course), many more gov- mistrust in America. Of
course, there were bitter
ernment ofﬁcials below
partisan differences in
the level of president
the 1990s. In fact, it is
and vice president now

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

59°

2 PM

65°

68°

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.

66°
52°
81°
58°
96° in 1931
43° in 1943

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
2.04
1.10
35.45
31.35

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:07 a.m.
7:41 p.m.
none
1:48 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

First

Sep 13 Sep 20 Sep 27

Full

Oct 5

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

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

Major
5:29a
6:26a
7:22a
8:16a
9:08a
9:57a
10:46a

Minor
11:43a
12:11a
1:08a
2:02a
2:54a
3:44a
4:33a

Major
5:57p
6:55p
7:52p
8:45p
9:36p
10:25p
11:11p

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Minor
---12:41p
1:37p
2:31p
3:22p
4:11p
4:58p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Sept. 12, 1988, the remains of
Hurricane Florence spawned a small
tornado that skipped through downtown Indianapolis, Ind. There were no
fatalities and only scattered damage.

70°
59°

Mostly cloudy, a
shower in the p.m.

Variably cloudy;
cooler with a shower

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

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Very High

AIR QUALITY
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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 13.29 +0.76
Marietta
34 15.94 +0.20
Parkersburg
36 21.50 +0.19
Belleville
35 12.87 +0.17
Racine
41 12.90 -0.10
Point Pleasant
40 24.61 -0.51
Gallipolis
50 12.94 -0.04
Huntington
50 25.87 +0.65
Ashland
52 34.62 +0.58
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.25 +0.44
Portsmouth
50 15.30 +0.60
Maysville
50 34.00 +0.20
Meldahl Dam
51 13.60 -0.10
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

offer the innocent victims of 9/11 — ordinary
people whose only mistake was going to work
or boarding an airplane
— the honor and respect
that their memories
deserve. At the same
time, let us avoid selfcongratulatory rhetoric

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

77°
60°
Low clouds and
warmer

SUNDAY

86°
67°

Pleasant with clouds
and sunshine

Warm with times of
clouds and sun

Marietta
70/60
Belpre
71/60

Athens
70/60

MONDAY

86°
53°
Clouds and sun with a
t-storm possible

Today

St. Marys
71/60

Parkersburg
69/60

Coolville
71/60

Elizabeth
72/61

Spencer
74/62

Buffalo
74/62
Milton
75/61

Clendenin
76/61

St. Albans
75/62

Huntington
73/62

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
75/54
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
78/63
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
84/66
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Roll Call columnist Walter Shapiro
is a veteran of Politics Daily, USA
Today, Time, Newsweek and The
Washington Post.

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
74/61

Ashland
74/61
Grayson
75/61

about how America
remains unchanged after
the wrenching events on
a sunny day in September 2001.

81°
61°

Wilkesville
71/60
POMEROY
Jackson
73/61
72/60
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
74/62
73/61
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
71/61
GALLIPOLIS
74/62
75/62
73/61

South Shore Greenup
74/61
71/60

36
300

Portsmouth
72/61

Law enforcement, firefighters and EMS were among those who
took part in Saturday’s 9-11 ceremony at Star Mill Park. Pictured
(from left) are Racine Firefighter Brent Rose, Meigs County Sheriff
Keith Wood, Deputy Chris Jones and Racine Marshal Shane Bell
during the National Anthem.

Murray City
69/59

McArthur
70/59

Lucasville
71/60

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
71/60

Very High

Primary: ragweed, elm, other
Mold: 1452

Logan
68/59

Adelphi
69/59

Waverly
70/59

Pollen: 54

Low

MOON PHASES
Last

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

THURSDAY

78°
61°

4

Primary: cladosporium

Wed.
7:08 a.m.
7:40 p.m.
12:13 a.m.
2:52 p.m.

WEDNESDAY

A little rain this afternoon. A passing shower or
two tonight. High 74° / Low 62°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

rorists pretending to
be ordinary passengers
forcibly seizing four
airplanes. And faith in
Washington was undermined by the government’s failure to prevent
the worst attack since
Pearl Harbor.
This Monday let us

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

First responders Jason Ridenour, Lowell Ridenour and Dax Holman
were recognized by Pat Barnette as the men who saved her life
when she suffered a heart attack. Here, Barnette hugs Holman.
She presented shirts to each of the men, thanking them for the
work that they do.

Charleston
73/61

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
91/55
Montreal
74/55

Billings
91/62

Toronto
76/54

Minneapolis
83/61
Chicago
76/60

Denver
87/60

Detroit
78/59

New York
82/66
Washington
74/66

Kansas City
82/56

Chihuahua
87/59

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

IRMA

104° in Phoenix, AZ
32° in Saranac Lake, NY

Global
High
120° in Basrah, Iraq
Low -10° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
88/67
Monterrey
92/65

Wed.
Hi/Lo/W
90/63/pc
54/50/r
76/64/pc
77/68/pc
78/64/pc
81/55/pc
84/52/pc
81/65/s
80/61/c
79/62/pc
85/55/pc
73/59/c
66/58/r
78/63/pc
72/60/c
93/69/s
89/58/pc
85/58/pc
75/60/sh
87/74/sh
91/71/pc
70/59/r
83/59/pc
95/70/pc
81/60/pc
78/63/pc
66/60/r
91/77/pc
84/62/s
64/59/r
86/68/s
78/66/pc
88/64/s
89/73/pc
77/67/sh
105/82/s
79/61/pc
78/56/s
84/65/pc
84/64/pc
74/61/c
86/65/pc
74/60/pc
69/52/pc
83/67/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
Atlanta
68/59

El Paso
94/69

City
Hi/Lo/W
Albuquerque
89/64/s
Anchorage
57/51/c
Atlanta
68/59/r
Atlantic City
77/65/pc
Baltimore
74/62/pc
Billings
91/62/s
Boise
90/62/pc
Boston
85/62/s
Charleston, WV
73/61/r
Charlotte
79/60/r
Cheyenne
84/56/pc
Chicago
76/60/pc
Cincinnati
69/60/r
Cleveland
79/62/pc
Columbus
71/61/r
Dallas
86/65/s
Denver
87/60/pc
Des Moines
86/58/s
Detroit
78/59/pc
Honolulu
87/74/r
Houston
88/67/s
Indianapolis
73/61/r
Kansas City
82/56/s
Las Vegas
100/77/pc
Little Rock
68/61/r
Los Angeles
84/66/pc
Louisville
72/61/r
Miami
92/77/s
Minneapolis
83/61/s
Nashville
68/58/r
New Orleans
82/65/s
New York City
82/66/pc
Oklahoma City
82/59/s
Orlando
88/71/pc
Philadelphia
80/65/pc
Phoenix
108/84/s
Pittsburgh
74/60/pc
Portland, ME
81/54/s
Raleigh
79/65/r
Richmond
75/66/r
St. Louis
78/62/r
Salt Lake City
91/68/pc
San Francisco
78/63/pc
Seattle
75/54/s
Washington, DC 74/66/pc

Miami
92/77

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

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The 9-11 Ceremony recognized
the first responders and military
personnel for their work to
Firefighters were among the protect and serve, as well as
first responders on the scene of honoring the fallen soldiers,
the attacks on the morning of first responders and victims of
the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.
Sept. 11, 2001.

�Sports
6 s Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Boilermakers blast Ohio, 44-21

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Ohio University redshirt junior A.J. Ouellette (45) breaks away from a Hampton
University defender, during the Bobcats’ season opener on Sept. 2 in Athens,
Ohio.

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind.
(AP) — When Jeff Brohm
left Western Kentucky for a
struggling Purdue program, he
promised to bring an entertaining, high-scoring offense to a
Boilermaker team that was 9-39
during the past four seasons.
Brohm didn’t disappoint Friday night during his ﬁrst home
game, watching the new-look
Boilermakers amass 558 yards.
David Blough led Purdue
on a 24-0 ﬁrst-half run and the
Boilermakers pulled away for
a 44-21 victory over Ohio for
Brohm’s ﬁrst program victory.
Sophomore Elijah Sindelar
started at quarterback and
helped Purdue (1-1) take a 10-7
lead. But Blough took over
with 11:07 remaining in the

second quarter and produced
24 points in four possessions,
including a 62-yard touchdown
pass to Cole Herdman and a
31-yarder to Anthony Mahoungou.
Blough had six completions
in seven attempts for 172 yards
in the ﬁrst half. He added a
5-yard TD pass to Jackson
Anthrop in the third and ﬁnished 11-for-13 passing for 235
yards and three scores.
“Tonight was huge,” Blough
said. “Coach Brohm is so big
on just a one-game season, and
this was the next one up. We
had to win this one. Having a
good team in Ohio that is supposed to win their conference
come in and play hard in front
of our crowd, this was the most

fun I’ve had playing football in
about two years.”
Tario Fuller led Purdue with
16 rushes for 142 yards and
his ﬁrst career touchdown. He
had just eight carries for 29
yards last week against No. 17
Louisville.
“There’s nothing better than
having conﬁdence and knowing that you know what you
are doing,” Fuller said. “I got
out there, and it did not matter
what Ohio was bringing. I’m
going to pick it up, and that
helps us.”
Brohm said Fuller’s effort
was the perfect complement to
Blough and Sindelar.
“Tario has a great attitude,

See OHIO | 7

Sooners lower
the boom on
Buckeyes, 31-16
By Jim Naveau
jnaveau@limanews.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio – If this had been a road
game, Ohio State would have heard the dreaded,
“Overrated, overrated,” chant.
As it was, Oklahoma’s fan were too happy, too
outnumbered or too polite to say it after the No.
5 Sooners dominated No. 2 Ohio State 31-16 on
Saturday night at Ohio Stadium.
But they might have been thinking it. And probably quite a few Ohio State fans were thinking it,
too, and wondering if there are any quick ﬁxes for
the Buckeyes’ problems.
Oklahoma, led by quarterback Baker Mayﬁeld
(27 of 35, 386 yards passing and three touchdowns), came on strong in the second half after
the two teams traded ﬁeld goals on their way to a
3-3 halftime tie.
Mayﬁeld nulliﬁed Ohio State’s highly rated
defensive line with his quick feet and took apart
its inexperienced defensive backﬁeld with precision passing. He was 16 of 17 for 228 yards and
three TDs in the second half.
After it was over, he grabbed an Oklahoma team
ﬂag, ran along the back of the north end zone,
along the west sideline and then to the block O at
See SOONERS | 7

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Marshall wide receiver Marcel Williams (9) picks up yardage after a first quarter catch against Miami (OH) in a Sept. 2 non-conference
football contest at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington, W.Va.

Wolfpack rallies past Marshall

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

By Bryan Walters

Tuesday, Sept. 12
Volleyball
OVCS at Pike Christian,
6 p.m.
Wahama at Eastern, 6
p.m.
South Point at Gallia
Academy, 6:30
Meigs at River Valley, 7
p.m.
Southern at Williamstown,
7 p.m.
Trimble at South Gallia,
7:15
Boys Soccer
Gallia Academy at
Chesapeake, 7 p.m.
Huntington St. Joe at
Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Boys Golf
Wahama, Belpre, Eastern,
South Gallia at Federal

RALEIGH, N.C. —
When things appeared at
their best, they unexpectedly took a turn for the
worst.
Marshall built a 20-10
lead with 5:07 remaining
in the ﬁrst half, but host
North Carolina State
reeled off 27 unanswered
points en route to a 37-20
victory Saturday in a
non-conference contest at
Carter-Finley Stadium.
The Thundering Herd
(1-1) had just established
their second 10-point
lead of the half following a 75-yard scoring

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Hocking, 4:30
Fairland at Gallia
Academy, 4 p.m.
Girls Golf
Fairland, Eastern at Gallia
Academy, 4 p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 13
Boys Golf
Miller, South Gallia,
Waterford, Southern at
Trimble, 4:30
River Valley at Wahama,
4 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Cabell-Midland at Point
Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Cross Country
Meigs, South Gallia,
Southern at NelsonvilleYork, 4:45

strike from Chase Litton
to Tyre Brady, which
allowed the guests to
secure a 20-10 cushion
with just over ﬁve minutes left in the half.
The Wolfpack (1-1),
however, answered with
a pair of Ryan Finley
scoring passes on their
next two drives before
halftime, giving the Red
and White a slim 23-20
advantage at the break.
From there, NCSU
simply took control after
forcing two Marshall
turnovers while adding
a pair of rushing touchdowns in each quarter
— allowing the hosts to
secure their ﬁrst win of

the 2017 campaign with
the 17-point decision.
The Herd trailed 3-0
following a 31-yard ﬁeld
goal by Carson Wise ﬁve
minutes into play, but
the Green and White
responded by coming
away with points on four
their ﬁrst ﬁve possessions.
Marshall grabbed its
ﬁrst lead of the game
following a 1-yard touchdown pass from Litton to
Willie Johnson, capping
a nine-play, 85-yard drive
for a 7-3 edge with 6:23
remaining.
After forcing a Wolfpack punt, the guests
responded with a six-

play, 66-yard drive that
resulted in a successful
33-yard ﬁeld goal by
Kaare Vedvik — putting
MU up 10-3 at the 3:09
mark of the ﬁrst.
MU forced another
North Carolina State
punt, then took its ﬁrst
second quarter possession 56 yards in nine
plays before Vedvik
tacked on a career-best
45-yard ﬁeld goal at the
8:20 mark for a 13-3
advantage.
NCSU answered with
a six-play, 68-yard scoring drive that resulted in
a 24-yard TD pass from
See MARSHALL | 7

60734281

PLAYER

Meigs LocalLane Cullums
#35 Senior

6 carries for 35 yards,
10 tackles and
1 for a loss.

OF THE

WEEK

Eastern Local Josh Brewer
#58 Senior

18 rushes for 142 yards
and a long 41 yard rush,
with 4 touchdowns.

Anderson www.andersonmcdaniel.com Meigs
Memory
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#8 Senior

29 carries for 132 yards
and 4 touchdowns.
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992-7440
spaces available
See WOLFPACK | 7
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�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

MLB

Boston
New York
Baltimore
Tampa Bay
Toronto

W
81
77
71
71
66

L
62
65
72
73
77

Cleveland
Minnesota
Kansas City
Detroit
Chicago

W
87
74
71
60
56

L
56
69
71
82
86

Houston
Los Angeles
Texas
Seattle
Oakland

W
86
73
71
71
63

L
57
70
71
72
80

x-Washington
Miami
Atlanta
New York
Philadelphia

W
88
68
64
63
54

L
55
75
78
80
89

Chicago
St. Louis
Milwaukee
Pittsburgh
Cincinnati

W
77
75
75
67
62

L
66
68
68
77
82

W
92
83
78
65
56

L
51
60
65
79
89

Los Angeles
Arizona
Colorado
San Diego
San Francisco
x-clinched division

All Times EDT
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Pct GB WCGB L10
Str Home
.566 —
— 5-5
L-1 44-27
.542 3½
— 7-3 W-2 40-27
.497 10
3 3-7
L-4 44-30
.493 10½
3½ 5-5 W-1 36-34
.462 15
8 5-5 W-2 37-35
Central Division
Pct GB WCGB L10
Str Home
.608 —
— 10-0 W-18 39-29
.517 13
— 4-6
L-2 35-37
.500 15½
2½ 6-4 W-2 38-34
.423 26½
13½ 2-8
L-2 32-38
.394 30½
17½ 4-6 W-2 34-40
West Division
Pct GB WCGB L10
Str Home
.601 —
— 6-4
L-4 41-31
.510 13
1 5-5 W-1 38-31
.500 14½
2½ 5-5
L-2 38-32
.497 15
3 5-5
L-1 39-36
.441 23
11 5-5 W-5 42-33
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Pct GB WCGB L10
Str Home
.615 —
— 7-3 W-1 43-28
.476 20
10 2-8
L-2 36-35
.451 23½
13½ 5-5 W-2 33-39
.441 25
15 5-5
L-1 33-41
.378 34
24 4-6
L-1 28-37
Central Division
Pct GB WCGB L10
Str Home
.538 —
— 4-6
L-3 40-32
.524 2
3 8-2 W-3 40-31
.524 2
3 6-4 W-3 39-32
.465 10½
11½ 4-6
L-5 39-34
.431 15½
16½ 5-5 W-1 36-36
West Division
Pct GB WCGB L10
Str Home
.643 —
— 0-10 L-10 52-23
.580 9
— 8-2 W-1 46-25
.545 14
— 6-4 W-4 41-31
.451 27½
13½ 6-4
L-1 39-35
.386 37
23 3-7
L-2 32-38

Sooners
From page 6

midﬁeld and planted the
ﬂag pole into the artiﬁcial turf at Ohio Stadium,
where he and his teammates celebrated.
“It was awful,” Ohio
State coach Urban Meyer
said. “We got beat by a
good team, a very good
team and a quarterback
that was dynamic. I
thought our defense hung
in there. Our offense was
bad, so we’re going to
do what we do, which is
go back to work as hard
as we possibly can. We’ll
start tonight or tomorrow and ﬁgure this thing
out.”
OSU quarterback J.T.
Barrett was 19 of 35
for 183 yards, no touchdowns and one interception. It was the fourth
time in the last ﬁve
games he has thrown for
fewer than 200 yards and
the third time in the last
ﬁve games he hasn’t had
a touchdown pass.
When Meyer was asked
why the passing game
was inefﬁcient, he said,
“It’s not one thing. It’s
several things. I have
some ideas we’re going to
work on as a staff but I’m
not going to share them
right now. Last week
(against Indiana) we
threw the ball decently
and this week we did not.
“I want to make it perfectly clear there is not a
bulls eye on J.T. Barrett.
He’s part of a system and
a group that has to get
better,” Meyer said.
He also said he is not
considering starting a
different quarterback.
“We’ve seen him (Barrett) play exceptional and
he will play exceptional
next week. We’ve worked
extremely hard at it (the
passing game). It wasn’t
good tonight. We’ve got
to get the damn thing
ﬁxed and we will.”
After a ﬁrst half in
which neither team had
a touchdown, Ohio State
and Oklahoma both

Away
37-35
37-38
27-42
35-39
29-42
Away
48-27
39-32
33-37
28-44
22-46
Away
45-26
35-39
33-39
32-36
21-47
Away
45-27
32-40
31-39
30-39
26-52
Away
37-34
35-37
36-36
28-43
26-46
Away
40-28
37-35
37-34
26-44
24-51

scored on their ﬁrst possession of the second
half.
OSU went 44 yards in
seven plays for a scorer
after Parris Campbell
returned the opening kickoff 56 yards to
Oklahoma’s 44-yard line.
Freshman J.K. Dobbins
got the touchdown on a
6-yard run at 12:37 of the
third quarter for a 10-3
Ohio State lead.
Oklahoma answered
with a ﬁve-play, 67-yard
drive, which ended with
Mayﬁeld throwing a
36-yard touchdown pass
to Dimitri Flowers to tie
the game 10-10.
Ohio State went up
13-10 on a 24-yard ﬁeld
goal by Sean Nuernberger with 8:10 to play
in the third quarter.
Oklahoma took the
lead back at 17-13 with
a four-play, 92-yard drive
that ended with Mayﬁeld
throwing an 18-yard
touchdown pass to Lee
Morris.
That was just the
beginning. The Sooners
scored two more secondhalf touchdowns as Ohio
State ﬂailed and failed
offensively and defensively, and went up 31-13
with nine minutes left in
the game.
Ohio State was also
outplayed by a signiﬁcant
margin by Oklahoma in
the ﬁrst half also but did
not pay for it.
Oklahoma outgained
Ohio State 221 yards to
87 by halftime. It did not
punt in the ﬁrst two quarters and advanced into
OSU territory on all ﬁve
of its drives but had only
a ﬁeld goal to show for it.
Two Sooners fumbles
and a missed ﬁeld goal
helped Ohio State stay
even despite the disparity
in yardage and time of
possession.
Oklahoma’s ﬁrst four
drives ended at Ohio
State’s 36-yard line, its
25-yard line its 49-yard
line and its 20-yard line.
Freshman J.K. Dobbins
rushed for 72 yards on
13 carries to lead Ohio
State’s ground game.

Tuesday, September 12, 2017 7

Rio volleyball splits pair in California
By Randy Payton

Ryanne Stoffel (Englewood, OH) had 17 and
15 assists, respectively.
Sophomore Katie
Hemsley (Jackson, OH)
added 19 digs to the
winning effort, while
senior Aleah Pelphrey
(Piketon, OH) ﬁnished
with 10 digs of her own.
Sameenah Muhammad had six kills in the
loss for the Cylcones
(0-5), while Alexandra
Fitzmaurice ﬁnished
with 12 assists and Vivian Kang had a matchhigh 20 digs.
The wrapup against
Simpson - a member of
the NAIA’s California
Paciﬁc Conference proved to be a back-andforth affair, with the two
teams alternating set
victories throughout.
Rio Grande hurt its
own cause against the
Red Hakws with 25
attack errors and 15
reception errors.
Pelphrey had a careerhigh 19 kills and a
match-high 16 digs to
lead the RedStorm in
a losing cause, while
Shriver and Stoffel

ﬁnished with 29 and
13 assists, respectively.
Stoffel also had a pair of
service aces.
Hemsley also had 16
digs, while freshman
Victoria Jones (Washington Court House,
OH) added 11 digs and
freshman Abigail Grasso
(Minford, OH) had four
block assists.
Sara Salmons had 11
kills and 13 assists to
lead Simpson, while

Mariah Chavez had 10
kills, 15 digs, four service aces and a pair of
block assists in the winning effort.
Madison Stouder had
16 assists and three
service aces for the Red
Hawks, while Cameron
Wallace had nine kills,
three blocks and three
service aces.

NC State added to
its advantage out of the
second half gates as the
hosts strung together
From page 6
a 13-play, 70-yard drive
Finley to Stephen Louis that ended with a 1-yard
with 5:26 left until half- TD run by Reggie Galtime, trimming the lead laspy at the 7:58 mark
of the third for a 30-20
down to 13-10.
contest.
On the ﬁrst play of
Keion Davis — who
Marshall’s ensuing
returned two kickoffs
drive, Litton found
for TDs the week prior
Brady — who had six
— received the ensuing
catches for 188 yards
boot and raced 94 yards
in the ﬁrst half — on
to paydirt. The apparent
a deep route. Brady
TD, however, was wiped
hauled in the pass and
out due to a holding
out-ran the defense to
penalty.
the goal line — giving
The Herd responded
the guests a 20-10 cushion with 5:07 remaining. with a thorough 16-play,
56-yard drive that led
Then, momentum
to a 46-yard ﬁeld goal
shifted.
attempt by Vedvik, but
The Wolfpack strung
the kick sailed wide left
together an 80-yard
— giving NCSU the ball
drive in eight plays as
back at its own 29 with
Jaylen Samuels capped
14:52 left in regulation.
things with a 39-yard
Both teams traded
TD reception, allowing
a pair of possessions,
the hosts to close to
which included a Marwithin 20-17 with 2:05
shall fumble at its own
left until halftime.
The Herd went three 22 with 4:04 remaining.
The Wolfpack needed
and out on their next
just one play to seal the
drive, then NCSU
deal as Gallaspy ran 23
marched 82 yards in
seven plays while secur- yards to paydirt, giving
the hosts a 37-20 cushing a lead headed into
ion with 3:58 left in the
the break. Kelvin Harmon hauled in a 34-yard contest.
Marshall put together
pass from Finley with
a nine-play, 50-yard
16 seconds remaining,
making it a 23-20 Wolf- drive on its ensuing
drive, but Litton was
pack lead at the interpicked off by Airius
mission.

Moore on a fourthand-goal pass from the
two — which ultimately
wrapped up the verdict.
The Wolfpack outgained the guests by a
485-451 overall margin
in total yards of offense,
with MU claiming a slim
350-341 edge in passing yards. The Red and
White also managed a
23-18 advantage in ﬁrst
downs and ﬁnished the
game plus-2 in turnover
differential.
Brady set a CarterFinley Stadium record
by an opposing player
with 248 receiving yards
on 11 catches, including
one score.
Litton ended the night
26 of 43 passing for 350
yards, including two
scored and an interception. Litton is now seventh all-time at MU in
completions and moved
up to ninth all-time in
passing yards.
Marcel Williams and
Willie Johnson also
hauled in four passes
apiece for 46 yards and
20 yards, respectively.
Ryan Yurachek extended
his consecutive games
with a catch streak to
31 after hauling in three
passes for 24 yards.
Davis led the MU
ground attack with 74
yards on eight carries,
followed by Trey Rodri-

guez with 20 yards on
11 touches.
Malik Gant led the
Herd defense with 17
tackles, while Chase
Hancock and Frankie
Hernandez each recorded 10 tackles. Artis
Johnson and Ryan Bee
also had a sack apiece in
the setback.
Gallaspy paced the
NC State rushing attack
with 61 yards on 12
carries, while Finley
ﬁnished the night 29
of 36 passing for 341
yards — including three
touchdowns and no
interceptions.
Harmon led the wideouts with nine catches
for 121 yards and Louis
had 73 yards on ﬁve
grabs. Samuels also
hauled in ﬁve passes for
60 yards.
A trio of tacklers led
the Wolfpack with seven
apiece, with Bradley
Chubb recording the
hosts’ lone sack of
the game to go along
with three tackles for
loss. Moore had the
interception and Justin
Jones came away with a
fumble recovery for the
defense.
Marshall returns to
action Saturday when it
hosts Kent State at Joan
C. Edwards Stadium.
Kickoff is tentatively
scheduled for 6:30 p.m.

Ohio

quarter, but the second
quarter was all Purdue.
The Boilermakers ran
35 first-half plays for
360 yards.
“Offensively, they
have balance,” Ohio
coach Frank Solich said
of Purdue. “They are
capable of beating you
with the running game
or the throwing game.

There is a lot of imagination in the offense.”
A crowd of 45,633
attended Purdue’s first
night game with the
new permanent lights.
Purdue leads this
series 8-0 and has
outscored the Bobcats
264-47. Ohio returns
to action on Sept. 16
when it hosts Kansas.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

OAKLAND, Calif. —
The University of Rio
Grande volleyball team
snapped its six-match
losing streak before
dropping a tough ﬁveset decision during
Friday’s opening day of
play at the Mills College
Invitational.
The RedStorm posted
a 28-26, 25-14, 25-12
triumph over the host
Cyclones in their ﬁrst
match of the day before
falling to Simpson
(Calilf.) University in
the nightcap by scores
of 25-17, 24-26, 25-23,
19-25, 15-9.
In the win over Mills
College, an NCAA Division III school, Rio
Grande overcame 11
ﬁrst set kills to end its
losing slide.
Freshman Taylor Carroll (Atlanta, GA) and
Macy Roell (Farmersville, OH) led the RedStorm with nine kills
each, while freshman
Carly Shriver (Gallipolis, OH) and freshman

Marshall

From page 6

and he came ready to
play,” Brohm said. “He
got yards after contact.
I know he was happy
with his performance.
Good football teams
have balance, and that

takes pressure off the
quarterback. We have
two solid quarterbacks.”
The Bobcats (1-1),
who opened the season with a 59-0 victory against Hampton,
closed to within 10-7
on A.J. Ouellette’s
4-yard run with 27
seconds left in the first

Courtesy photo

Rio Grande freshman Taylor Carroll had nine kills in Friday’s win
over Mills College in Oakland, Calif. The win stopped a six-match
losing slide for the RedStorm.

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

60734066

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elec. fence collar, lost between
Syracuse Pool &amp; Trailer court.
Call 740-992-3301 or
740-416-2758

Illinois"Bunn Special"
23 Jewell, 60-hour, Pocket
Watch $1100, Remington
Model 1100, 16- GA $600.
100 peace type silver dollars,
common dates $21.00
each must buy all,
Ironton, Ohio
740-533-3870

Yard Sale
Yard Sale
September 11-15
11327 Jerry's Run Rd
Apple Grove WV
Christmas items, dolls, good
clothing and lots of misc items

Apartments/Townhouses
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Rentals

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

For Sale By Owner
1991 Brookwood II
14 x 65 mobile home
2 Bedroom 1 bath
ask for Charles Rice
934 Mill Creek Rd
Gallipolis, Oh 45631
740-446-7580
Houses For Rent
Near Holzer Hospital,
3 Br., kitchen, dinning rm.,
1 &amp; 1/2 baths, 2 car garage.
No smoking. No pets. Gas
heat &amp; air. $690 mo.
plus utilities &amp; deposit.
Available Sept. 20. Phone
740-645-3836
New 2 bedroom
1 bath on US 35
$600.00 month
740-645-1286

LEGALS
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

SEEKING TENANTS
For 55+ Community
2 and 3 bedrooms.
Water and trash paid.
In city limits; walking
distance to stores and
restaurants.

Jerry Wray, Director
Ohio Department of Transportation
Plaintiff,
v.

Rents starting at
$425 per month!

For Sale By Owner
Miscellaneous

Daily Sentinel

Safe and quiet!
HUD friendly!
Well maintained!
Great neighbors!
No application fees!
Call (740) 578-4177
Extension #1
SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

Troyers Greenhouse
Fall Decorations
MUMS variety of six colors
Quantity Discounts
Pumpkins, Gourds,
Indian corn
No sunday Sales
Troyer’s Green House
37770 Dye Road
Rutland OH 45775

Help Wanted General
WANTED: Licensed Social Worker position available at a large
non-profit agency serving Individuals with intellectual disabilities
in Jackson. Bachelor's Degree from an accredited Social Work
program, a current license to practice Social Work in Ohio and
at least two years' experience working in a human services
related field required; experience working with individuals with
intellectual disabilities preferred. Must have a valid driver's
license, three years good driving experience and adequate
automobile Insurance, Travel Required. Salary; Negotiable.
Send resume to: Buckeye Community Services, P.O. Box 604,
Jackson, OH 45640; or email; beyecserv@bcs77.org.
Deadline for applicants: 9/20/17. Equal Opportunity Employer.

Help Wanted General

Pleasant Valley Hospital has a full-time opening
for a Certified Pharmacy Tech. Two years
pharmacy tech. experience preferred. Hospital
experience preferred. Must pass the National
Pharmacy Technician certification board test and
be registered with the WV Board of Pharmacy.

See Simon ride his bike.
See Simon leave his bike in
the driveway.
See Simon’s
dad drive over the bike.
See Simon cry.
Simon’s
mom is so smart.
She looks
through the classiﬁeds.
Now Simon has a new bike.
See Simon smile.
See Simon
ride his new bike.

The above described tract contains 0.028 acres, of which the
Present Road Occupies 0.000 acres and of which 0.027 acres is
contained in Auditor's Permanent Parcel No. 16·02581.009
which contains 0.640 acres, and 0.001 acres is contained in
Auditor's Permanent Parcel No. 16-02581.010, which contains
0.211 acres.
This description was made by the Ohio Department of Transportation under the direction and supervision of Gregory K.
Wright Registered Surveyor No. S-6535
All iron pins set are 3/4" x 30” with attached aluminum cap
stamped "ODOT R. W DISTRICT 10".
Bearings are based on the State Plane Coordinate System
(Ohio South Zone, NAD 83).
Prior instrument record as of this writing is recorded in Volume
366, Page 571, Official Records of Meigs County

Contact Human Resources at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, 2520 Valley Dr., Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550,
fax to (304) 675-6975 or apply on-line at
www.pvalley.org.
EOE: M/D/F/V

60733695

Help Wanted General

School Based Occupational Therapist
Pleasant Valley Hospital is actively seeking a

Per Diem School Based
Occupational Therapist(OT)

Pursuant to Civil Rule 12(A)(1), said persons mentioned above
shall take further notice that they have 28 days after the completion of the Service by Publication within which to answer or
otherwise defend against Plaintiffҋs petition.
The original of any such answer or other pleading defending
against Plaintiffҋs petition must be filed with the Clerk of Courts
of Meigs County, Ohio, whose office is located at 100 E 2nd St
#303, Pomeroy, OH 45769, and whose mailing address is 100 E
2nd St #303, Pomeroy, OH 45769. A copy of any such answer
or other pleading defending against Plaintiffҋs petition must be
served upon Plaintiffҋs attorney, namely: William J. Cole, Assistant Attorney General, at 150 East Gay Street, 22nd Floor,
Columbus, Ohio 43215-3167.
A failure to answer or otherwise defend within said 28 days will
result in Plaintiff, pursuant to Civil Rule 55, asking the court to
grant a judgment by default against any such person who fails to
answer or otherwise defend.
Jerry Wray
Director, Ohio Department of Transportation.

The OT will be responsible for providing therapy
services to students of all ages.
New graduates welcome. Current state
certification as an Occupational Therapist.
Current registration with the
American Occupational Therapy Association.
EEOC/Drug Free Workplace.

Submit resumes or apply online
at www.pvalley.org

The following parties, namely: Robert L. Rogers, Unknown
Address and Unknown Transferees, Assigns, Executors,
Administrators, Devisees and Heirs of Roscoe Mills, Jr.,
Deceased, and all persons claiming by, through, or under
them; will take notice that they have been named as defendants by Jerry Wray, Director of the Ohio Department of Transportation, who instituted Case No. 17CV043 now pending in the
Common Pleas Court of Meigs County, Ohio, which is an action
to appropriate certain property for highway purposes, namely the
making, constructing, repairing or improving of State Route 833,
Section 0.20 and to fix the value of said property.
The property sought to be appropriated is more specifically described as:
PARCEL 1-SH
MEG-833-0.20
PERPETUAL EASEMENT FOR HIGHWAY PURPOSES
WITHOUT LIMITATION OF EXISTING ACCESS RIGHTS
Pursuant to R.C 5713.04, the County Auditor shall deduct 0.027
acres of land more or less, of which the present road occupies
0.00 acres, from the value of Meigs County Auditor's Permanent Parcel No. 16-02581.009, and deduct 0.001 acres of land
more or less, of which the present road occupies 0.00 acres,
from the value of Meigs County Auditor's Permanent Parcel No.
16-02581.010.
An exclusive perpetual easement for public highway and road
purposes, including, but not limited to any utility construction, relocation and/or utility maintenance work deemed appropriate by
the State of Ohio, Department of Transportation, its successors
and assigns forever.
Grantor/Owner, for himself and his heirs, executors, administrators, successors and assigns, reserves all existing lights of ingress and egress to and from any residual area (as used herein,
the expression "Grantor/Owner" includes the plural, and words
in the masculine include the feminine or neuter).
Being a parcel of land lying on the right side of State Route 833,
and situated in The Village Of Pomeroy, 160 Acre Lot 1225,
Town 2, Range 13, Salisbury Township, Meigs County, Ohio.
COMMENCING at the calculated Southeast Corner of 160 Acre
Lot 1225 being 351.94 feet right of Centerline Station 46+5g.88;
Thence along a random line North 18° 55' 48" West a distance
of 808.32 feet to an iron pin set 29.25 feet right of Centerline
Station 54+00.00, THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING of the
tract herein described;
Thence along said line, North 08° 36' 10" East a distance of
55.24 feet to an iron pin set, 32.64 feet right of Centerline Station 54+55.96;
Thence leaving said right-of-way line and across the land of the
grantor, South 82° 38' 57" East a
distance of 15.46 feet to an iron pin set, 48.09 feet right of
Centerline Station 54+55.61;
Thence across the land of the grantor, South 05° 32' 10" East a
distance of 55.23 feet to an iron
pin set on said easterly right-of-way line, 58.26 feet right of
Centerline Station 54+00.00;
Thence along said line, North 85° 24' 04" West a distance of
28.79 feet to an iron pin set, 29.25 feet right of Centerline Station 54+00.18 THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING;
Subject to all legal easements and rights of way.

9/5/17, 9/12/17

60734108

See Simon.

Case No. 17-CV-043

Robert L. Rogers, et al.,
Defendants.

60733232

8 Tuesday, September 12, 2017

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, September 12, 2017 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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By Hilary Price

�$IFFICULTY ,EVEL
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DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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Today’s Solution

By Bil and Jeff Keane

Having A Yard Sale?
Call your classified department
to schedule your ad today!

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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Thornhill widens
lead in Riverside
senior league
Staff Report

MASON, W.Va. — Randall Thornhill has extended his lead to ﬁve points with just three weeks
remaining in the 2017 Riverside Senior Men’s Golf
League season.
Thornhill, who held a three-point lead a week
ago, has a current total of 134 points, while Dewey
Smith is in second place with 129.
A total of 55 players braved the conditions on
Tuesday, making up 13 foursomes and one trio.
The low score for the day was an 11-under par
59, ﬁred by the team of Charlie Hargraves, Randall
Thornhill, Ed Coon and Cecil Gillette Sr.
One shot behind the winning foursome, there
was a three-way tie for second, between the team
of Lantz Repp, Larry Davis, Buzz Faudree and
Norman Roush, the group of Jimmy Gress, Randy
Kinzel, Glenn Long, Dave Seamon, and the foursome of Dewey Smith, Rex Young, Ralph Six and
Carl Stone.
The third place team, at 12-under par, was made
up of Charlie Hargraves, Jim Cunningham, Phil
Burgess and Jack Fox.
The closest to the pin winners were Bobby Watson on the ninth hole and Richard Mabe on No. 14.
The current top-10 standings are as follows: Randall Thornhill (134.0), Dewey Smith (129.0), Carl
Stone (115.5), Cecil Gillette Sr. (113.5), Charlie
Hargraves (113.0), Paul Maynard (112.5), Albert
Durst (111.5), Jim Lawrence and Jimmy Gress
(111.0), and Larry Davis (110.5).

RV boys 4th, girls
5th at ZT Invite
By Paul Boggs

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio — Running against some
new faces on Saturday, you can’t complain too loudly about River Valley.
That’s because the Raiders and Lady Raiders —
competing in the annual Zane Trace cross country
invitational — placed fourth and ﬁfth respectively
among the many participating teams.
In addition, South Gallia — for both boys and
girls — had two runners apiece.
The Raiders, even without their top runner in
senior Nathaniel Abbott, amounted a fourth-place
showing with a team score of 125.
There were a massive 18 boys teams which
scored points, as only Eastern Brown (64), Piketon
(91) and Miami Trace (98) placed ahead of River
Valley.
On the girls side, the Lady Raiders took ﬁfth with
a team score of 135, as Vinton County — on the
strength of three placers among the top ﬁve — captured the team championship with a 38.
Host Zane Trace was the girls team runner-up at
61, as Westfall (111) was third and Eastern Brown
(131) fourth.
There were exactly a dozen girls squads which
posted team scores.
Evan without Abbott, the Raiders did land four
scorers inside the top 31 — and all ﬁve scorers
inside the top 45.
George Rickett in 12th (18:02) and Rory Twyman
in 13th (18:05) led the way, as Austin Livingston
in 30th (19:04) and Kyle Coen in 31st (19:05) were
the next two Raider placers.
The other three River Valley boys which scored
were Cole Franklin (44th in 19:33), Ethan Cline
(68th in 20:35) and Ian Eblin (95th in 21:43).
The Rebels’ two runners were freshmen Garrett
Frazee (17th in 18:34) and Grifﬁn Davis (137th in
24:05).
There were 173 runners in the boys high school
race, as Belpre freshman Eli Fullerton ﬁnished ﬁrst
in 16 minutes and 56 seconds.
For the Lady Raiders, senior Kenzie Baker — in
21-and-a-half minutes — paced the club with a
seventh-place effort.
Hannah Culpepper placed 14th in 22:21, as Akari
Michimukai was 37th (24:30) and Josie Jones 38th
(24:34).
The Lady Raiders’ other three counting times
were those of Julia Nutter (69th in 28:03), Connie
Stewart (73rd in 28:23) and Lexi Stout (86th in
30:07).
For South Gallia, junior Jessica Luther was 17th
in 22:43, while sophomore Alex Lu was 79th in
29:09.
There were 110 runners in the girls high school
race, as Washington Court House senior Maddy
Garrison captured the championship in 19:19.
Fullerton for the boys and Garrison for the girls
were the only individuals in under 17 minutes and
20 minutes respectively.
Visit www.baumspage.com for complete results
of the 2017 Zane Trace Invitational.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2106

Christopher E. Tenoglia
Attorney at Law

740-992-6368

60732756

Help Right Here At Home

200 E. 2nd�6WUHHW�3RPHUR\��2+�Ř�WHQODZ#VXGGHQOLQNPDLO�FRP

Late goal lifts Rio men to victory
By Randy Payton

Mobile and improved to
3-1 on the season.
Indiana Wesleyan
slipped to 2-3 with the
MARION, Ind. —
Harry Reilly’s goal with loss.
Reilly, a junior from
4:31 left to play snapped
Coventry, England,
a 1-1 tie and lifted
gathered in a pass from
the University of Rio
Grande to a hard-fought freshman Ben Andoh
2-1 victory over Indiana (Glasgow, Scotland)
near the top of the
Wesleyan University,
18-yard box and took
Saturday night, in nonconference men’s soccer two steps before reaction at Wildcat Field. positioning the ball and
whistling a shot past
The RedStorm,
a diving IWU goalie
ranked No. 5 in the latLucas Fancello and into
est NAIA coaches’ Top
the net for what proved
25, rebounded from a
to be the game-winner.
shutout loss one week
Rio Grande grabbed a
ago at the University of

For Ohio Valley Publishing

1-0 lead just six minutes
into the contest on an
unassisted marker by
junior Eduardo Zurita
(Sant Boi de Llobregat,
Spain), but the host
Wildcats knotted the
score on an unassisted
goal by Sammy Conti
with 12:28 left before
halftime.
That’s how things
stayed until Reilly
scored his second goal
of the season.
Indiana Wesleyan
ﬁnished with a 12-11
edge in shots overall,
although both teams
recorded eight shots on

goal and Rio ﬁnished
with a 5-1 edge in corner kicks.
Freshman Luis Rodriguez (San Jose, Costa
Rica) had ﬁve saves in
a winning effort for the
RedStorm.
Facello stopped ﬁve
shots in a losing cause
for the Wildcats.
Rio Grande will return
to action on Thursday
when Indiana Tech visits Evan E. Davis Field
for a 7 p.m. kickoff.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Buffaloes blank RedStorm women
By Randy Payton

Cundiff scored just over 22 minutes into the ﬁrst period when she
worked her way behind the RedStorm’s defensive back line and
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Milbeat Rio junior keeper Kelsey Lee
ligan College’s Bekah Cundiff
scored an unassisted goal midway (West Chester, OH) in a one-onthrough the opening half and the one showdown for what proved to
Buffaloes made it stand up, hand- be the game’s lone goal.
Lee was making her ﬁrst start
ing the University of Rio Grande
a 1-0 loss, Saturday afternoon, in in goal for Rio while regular
net-minder Andrea Vera (Quito,
non-conference women’s soccer
Ecuador) was serving a one-game
action at Evan E. Davis Field.
suspension after receiving a red
The RedStorm suffered a second straight loss and fell to 1-3 on card in Thursday’s loss at Mount
Vernon Nazarene.
the season.
The RedStorm controlled the
Milligan picked up its third
consecutive victory and improved action for most of the day on
Saturday, outshooting Milligan,
to 3-1.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

12-6, overall and, 5-3, in shots on
frame. Rio also enjoyed a 4-2 edge
in corner kick opportunities.
Freshman goalie Eva Bower
recorded ﬁve saves en route to
her second straight clean sheet.
Lee had two stops in the loss
for Rio.
Rio Grande returns to action
on Wednesday when it travels
to Georgetown (Ky.) College for
a meeting with its former MidSouth Conference rival.
Kickoff is set for 7 p.m. at Toyota Stadium.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director at the University of Rio Grande.

Rio volleyball closes road swing with win

pboggs@aimmediamidwest.com

Mesothelioma • Lung Cancer
Wrongful Death

Daily Sentinel

By Randy Payton

mark to 3-10 with a
25-8, 25-13, 25-18 victory over the Eagles, a
member of the National
OAKLAND, Calif.
Christian College Ath— The University of
letic Association.
Rio Grande closed out
Head coach Billina
a three-game weekend
Donaldson’s squad talroad trip to the West
lied a season-best .248
Coast with a dominatattack percentage (35
ing straight sets win
kills-10 errors,-101
over West Coast Bapattacks) in the victory,
tist College, Saturday
while WCBC had just
afternoon, as part of
the Mills College Invita- 14 kills as a team in the
match.
tional.
Senior Aleah Pelphrey
The RedStorm
(Piketon, OH) had a
improved their season

For Ohio Valley Publishing

match-best 14 kills to
lead Rio, while sophomore Katie Hemsley
(Jackson, OH) had 21
digs and freshman Carly
Shriver (Gallipolis, OH)
tallied 17 assists in the
win.
The RedStorm also
received 10 assists from
freshman Ryanne Stoffel
(Englewood, OH) and
six blocks - three solos
and three assists - from
freshman Macy Roell
(Farmersville, OH).
Tiffany Cashman

had six kills and three
blocks to lead West
Coast Baptist in a losing cause, while Hannah
DeLeon had 18 digs and
Valerie Cole ﬁnished
with 11 assists.
Rio Grande returns to
action on Tuesday night
when Kentucky Christian University visits
the Newt Oliver Arena
for a 7 p.m. ﬁrst serve.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Pittsburgh fends off Cleveland, 21-18
CLEVELAND (AP)
— For Pittsburgh’s ﬁrst
road game, Antonio
Brown wore a bow tie
and purple and black suit
embroidered with ﬁrebreathing gold dragons.
He completed his outlandish outﬁt with ruby
red-sequined sneakers.
The ﬂashy look was
both dazzling and jawdropping — just like
Brown’s game.
The All-Pro wide
receiver made a crucial,
leaping catch with less
than three minutes left
and Ben Roethlisberger
threw two touchdown
passes to tight end Jesse

James as the Steelers,
with minimal help from
Le’Veon Bell, opened the
season by holding off the
Cleveland Browns 21-18
on Sunday.
Roethlisberger
improved to 21-2 in
his career against the
Browns, who led by
rookie quarterback
DeShone Kizer gave
their rivals all they could
handle — a positive sign
for coach Hue Jackson
and Cleveland fans after
a horrid 1-15 season.
But the Browns
couldn’t stop Brown.
With the Steelers clinging to their 3-point lead,

he somehow caught and
held onto Roethlisberger’s throw in trafﬁc for
a 38-yard gain with 2:26
left to seal Pittsburgh’s
win. Brown ﬁnished
with 11 receptions for
182 yards.
“I’ve watched him
make unbelievable
plays like that from the
stands,” said Steelers
rookie running back
James Conner, who
played at Pitt and grew
up rooting for Pittsburgh. “So to be out
there with him when he
does it is crazy. He’s an
amazing football player.”
Kizer, who ran for a

TD and threw a scoring
a scoring in an impressive debut, had pulled
the Browns within three
on a 3-yard TD pass to
Corey Coleman followed
by a 2-point conversion
with 3:36 left.
With Pittsburgh needing a big play, Brown
delivered one — as
usual.
Roethlisberger rolled
left to buy some time
and lobbed his deep pass
near Pittsburgh’s sideline
toward Brown, who went
up over defensive back
Jason McCourty and
hauled in the game’s biggest catch.

Blue Angels compete at Fairland Invite
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@aimmediamidwest.com

LAVALLETTE, W.
Va. — When half of
your half-dozen is honored, then it’s been a
pretty good day.
That’s because the
Gallia Academy High
School girls golf team
competed on Saturday
in the annual Fairland

Invitational, and three
members of the Blue
Angels captured alltournament team accolades.
The nine-hole event
took place at Creekside
Golf Club, as the sixmember Blue Angels
shot a team total of
213.
By ﬁnishing in the
top ﬁve individually,

Molly Fitzwater with a
50, Hunter Copley with
a 51 and Ryelee Sipple
with a 52 all earned
spots on the all-tournament club for GAHS.
Lilly Rees, with a 60,
was Gallia Academy’s
other counting score.
The two non-counting
cards were Avery Minton with a 62 and Abby
Fitzwater with a 66.

Cabell-Midland’s Skyler Sayre was the match
medalist with a 47.
The Blue Angels
return home to Cliffside
Golf Course on Tuesday, and will play host
to Fairland and Eastern
with a tee time of 4
p.m.
Paul Boggs can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2106

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Wahama girls basketball
holding softball tourney
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. — The Wahama girls basketball team will be holding a co-ed slow-pitch
softball tournament at the New Haven ball ﬁelds
on Saturday, Sept. 16.

The tournament will be a double elimination
format and each game will have a one hour time
limit. Games begin at 8 a.m. and will continue
until a champion is determined.
The cost is $125 per team, plus each team must
supply two softballs. The tournament will be limited to 10 teams.
For more information, contact Wahama girls
basketball coach John Arnott at 304-674-5956.

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