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Text
Salute
to our
veterans
Mostly sunny.
High of 61,
low of 48
Runners
place at
state meet
INSIDE
WEATHER s 5
SPORTS s 6
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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com
Issue 181, Volume 69
Meigs veteran
reflects on
time in Vietnam
Wednesday, November 11, 2015 s 50¢
‘Miss Ohio’ perseveres
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com
POMEROY — After graduating from Pomeroy High School in 1967, Ron Eastman knew
exactly what he wanted to do.
“I wanted to better myself,” he said.
Eastman attended Ohio State University for
a year, where he joined the Reserve Officers’
Training Corps, or ROTC. However, beyond
his time with ROTC he found that
military pride was not something
he could display on campus.
“You couldn’t wear your uniform to class,” he said. “There
was demonstrating and rioting.
The military was looked down
upon, and anyone in the military
Eastman
was sort of ostracized. If you
were in class, you were spit upon.
There were highway patrol troopers on every
corner just to keep (the university) open.”
Because of this, Eastman said he needed a
change.
“They were not the kind of people I wanted
to be around, “he said. “They were not a very
good influence. There was a lot of anti-government sentiment.”
So in spring 1969, Eastman traveled to Fort
Jackson, S.C., where he practiced combat and
aerial assaults with helicopters. He became a
member of the 1st Air Cavalry Division in Vietnam in the summer of 1969. Eastman said that
during his time in Vietnam, he learned how
many misconceptions the United States had
about Vietnamese soldiers. He said civilians
believed that most Vietnam veterans were draftees, but learned that less than 25 percent were
actually drafted. He said the loss of extremities
from explosives in Vietnam were worse than he
imagined back home as well.
“(Civilians) would just say that Vietnam
vets were the lower dregs of society — and
they weren’t,” he said. “There were intelligent
people there, just like any other society. There
were a lot of misconceptions about Vietnam.”
One of the 1st Cavalry’s duties, one of the
main things that Eastman remembers about the
war, was traveling into Cambodia for the Cambodian Incursion in May 1970. Eastman said
one of the cavalry’s main goals while there was
to destroy supplies being transported along the
Cambodian roads by the Viet Cong — the Vietnamese group fighting against American forces.
“There was not a bare field in the countryside that wasn’t covered with captured supplies,” he said.
Eastman said that looking back on his experience he wishes to remain humble and gives all
of the credit to the others in his cavalry group.
“I didn’t do anything other than be there,” he
said. “I just served and did my job to the best
of my ability. I don’t want to take any credit.
Everybody supported each other.”
Eastman was honorably discharged in October 1970. Today, he is a member of American
Legion Post 128 in Middleport, Veterans of
Foreign Wars, the 1st Cavalry Association, Vietnam Veterans, AMVETS, the 5th U.S. Cavalry
Association and Disabled American Veterans.
Photos courtesy of Edwin Shaw
Miss Ohio 2016 Megan Wise is pictured front row, third from left. Also pictured, Miss Ohio Teen 2016 Ollivia Turk, Miss USA 2004 Shandi
Finnessey, Miss USA 2003 Susie Castillo, Executive Director of The Valley/Creative Service Director fo NBC/CW affiliates Dayton, Steve
Bailey, Broadcast Personality Melissa Clemente, Suvivor’s Blood vs Water/MSU Outside Linebacker Jon Misch, Attorney, Real Estate
Agent Jody Ketchersid, Former Professional Baseball player and broadcaster Roberto Clemente Jr., Executive Director/Miss Ohio USA
Melissa Pitchford and husband Bryan.
Gallia native takes state title
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com
GALLIPOLIS —In a world of instant gratification
and feedback via Facebook, sometimes the act of
persevering to succeed over time gets lost in the
shuffle.
Megan Wise of Gallipolis, was crowned Miss Ohio
USA over the weekend in Springfield but being
crowned wasn’t a stroke of luck, it was an act of
perseverance.
Wise had previously competed in the competition
nine times, starting when she was 18 in the “teen”
Megan Wise of Gallia County is crowned Miss Ohio on Saturday in
See TITLE | 5 Springfield.
The art of bravery under pressure
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com
Courtesy photo
POMEROY — On Aug. 7, 2015, Codey
Gerlach, 26, of Wichita, Kan., and formerly
of Pomeroy, along with Aircraft Commander
Capt. Patrick J. Rish and co-pilot 1st Lt. Marc
D. Nelson, were tasked to support the deployment of equipment from Elmendorf Air Force
Base to Misawa Airbase in Japan.
Along with the main jet on the journey,
other planes fly alongside. As a boom operator, Gerlach has the responsibility of fueling
other airplanes in flight.
“Usually, when I’m talking to people on the
outside (of the military), I say I’m an official
in-flight refueler,” Gerlach said.
However, mid-flight in the middle of the
Pacific Ocean, one of the fighter jets flying
along experienced a cabin pressure failure and
disconnected from the main aircraft in a rapid
drop.
“It wasn’t personally scary for me, but it
wasn’t our plane,” Gerlach said. “We were
Pictured, from left, Aircraft Commander Capt. Patrick J. Rish, Boom Operator
Senior Airman Codey A. Gerlach and co-pilot 1st Lt. Marc D. Nelson.
See BRAVERY | 5
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.
— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Give a helping hand during the holidays
By Lorna Hart
— SPORTS
Cross Country: 6
Volleyball: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 2
Classified: 8
Comics: 9
11 will be donated to the Veterans
Outreach Thanksgiving Dinner.
The Veterans Outreach in PomePOMEROY — Reed and Baur
roy is planning a Thanksgiving Day
Insurance Agency is asking people dinner for veterans and their famito “Give a Helping Hand During
lies. The center will open at 9 a.m.
the Holidays” by donating nonperishable items to their food drive for coffee and doughnuts while
guests watch the Thanksgiving
now through Dec. 16.
Day parades. A full turkey dinner
The collected items will be diswill be served at noon and guests
tributed throughout the area to
are encouraged to stay to watch
help families in need during the
football games.
holiday season.
Items collected by the food drive
Items received from the beginning of the drive Nov. 4 to Nov.
after Nov. 11 will be donated to the
lhart@civitasmedia.com
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
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share your thoughts.
Mulberry Community Center for
their Thanksgiving and Christmas
dinners.
The agency is collecting food
items locally at their office at 220
E. Main St., Pomeroy. They are
also accepting donations at their
Athens office at 2097 E. State St.,
which will be donated to The Salvation Army. Donations made in
the Logan office at 111 E. Second
St. will go the Smith Chapel Food
Pantry.
Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 Ext. 2551.
�LOCAL
2 Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Daily Sentinel
Tops discusses inspiration at meeting
DEATH NOTICES
Contributed Article
BENNETT
ARVADA, Colo. — Alma Ruth Bennett, 69, of
Arvada, formerly of Chesapeake, Ohio, passed away
Saturday, Nov. 7, 2015, in Colorado. A graveside service will be 2 p.m. Friday, Nov. 13, 2015, at Highland
Memorial Gardens, South Point, Ohio. Burial will follow. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,
Ohio, is in charge of arrangements.
weight loss winner
was Judy Morgan; she
TUPPERS PLAINS
received a certificate and
— Tops 2013 Tuppers
a charm. Mary Rankin
Plains met Nov. 9 with
was the runner up
11 members present. The weight loss winner and
meeting opened with a
she received a certificate.
reading of the Tops &
The group discussed
Kops pledges and the
the Relay for Life, which
Pledge of Alligence being will be held next May,
recited by all.
and discussed ideas
to raise money for the
The weekly best
DEWITT
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Jack C. Dewitt, 61,
of Point Pleasant, died Sunday, Nov. 8, 2015. Funeral
services will be 1 p.m. Friday, Nov. 13, 2015, at Deal
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant. Friends may visit the
family at the funeral home between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.
prior to the service. Burial will be at the convenience
of the family.
event. Leader Connie
Rankin presented a
program on Inspiration.
The message was about
putting yourself first
and emphasized that the
choice is yours and to
celebrate your success.
The group then closed
with the helping hand circle.
Tops meets every Monday evening at the St.Paul
United Methodist Church
on Ohio 7 in Tuppers
Plains. Weigh-in begins at
5:15 p.m. and is followed
by a short meeting at 6
p.m. Anyone interested
can attend a free meeting.
For questions, call
Connie Rankin at 740667-6329.
Submitted by Connie Rankin
MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
EDMONDS
ASHTON, W.Va. — Franklin D. Edmonds, 79, of
Ashton, passed away Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2015, at Lakin
Hospital, West Columbia, W.Va. Funeral service will
be 1 p.m. Friday, Nov. 13, 2015, at Heck Funeral
Home, Milton, W.Va. Burial will follow in Pete Meadows Cemetery, Glenwood, W.Va. Visitation will be 6-8
p.m. Thursday at the funeral home.
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Community Calendar will only list event
information that is open to the public.
WEDNESDAY, NOV.11
POMEROY — A Veteran’s Day
ceremony will be 11 a.m. by the
levy in Pomeroy. The program will
include Ron Eastman, guest speaker, Dennis Moore, chaplain, Porter
Midkiff , pledge of allegiance, Gladys Cumings, Flanders Fields, Dale
Thoene, speaking about the American Flag and Southern Local High
School marching band will perform.
The public is invited to attend.
RACINE — Southern Local School
District will celebrate Veterans Day
at 9 a.m. with a tribute to all area
veterans. Opening ceremonies will
begin outside at the flagpole, where
the Southern Local marching band
will play the National Anthem. After a
welcoming ceremony, the tribute will
move inside where a local veteran will
be honored. All veterans and the public are invited to attend and refresh-
KING
MASON, W.Va. — Dolores “Peggy” Jean (Bond)
King, 77, of Mason, passed away Monday, Nov. 9,
2015, in Pomeroy. Service will be 1 p.m. Friday, Nov.
13, 2015, at Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason. Burial
will follow at Kirkland Memorial Gardens Cemetery,
Point Pleasant, W.Va. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m.
Thursday.
PANCAKE
SAN ANTONIO, Texas — Services for Sandra
Joanne Pancake, 62, of San Antonio, formerly of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., will be 2 p.m. Friday, Nov. 13, 2015,
at Chapel of the Air at Land of Memory Cemetery.
Arrangements under the direction of Herrington/
Land of Memory Funeral Home, Palestine, Texas.
Friends may call the funeral home between 6-8 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 12, 2015.
ments will be on hand for veterans
following the ceremony.
invited to the program. For more
information call 740-992-5628.
THURSDAY, NOV.12
SUNDAY, NOV. 15
SATURDAY, NOV. 14
TUESDAY, NOV. 17
BURLINGHAM — Please note
date change for meeting, originally published as Sat. Nov. 14:
There will be a public meeting of the
Burlingham Cemetery Association
at 1 p.m. at the Burlingham Church.
SYRACUSE — The Wildwood Garden Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the
Syracuse Community Center. Prospective new members are welcome.
BURLINGHAM — Modern
Woodman Chapter 7230 will have
their Thanksgiving dinner and
meeting at First Southern Baptist
Church, Pomeroy. Doors open at
3:30 p.m., dinner at 4 p.m. and program at 5 p.m. Randy Sheets will
be the guest speaker on the topic
of “The Constitution: Where did
our laws come from.” The public to
HEMLOCK GROVE — The
Hemlock Grove Christian Church
will host a Day of Thanksgiving at
10 a.m. This worship service will feature recording artist Andrea Kimble,
grateful testimonies and a brief message by Pastor Diana Kinder. A traditional Thanksgiving meal will follow. Contact Pastor Diana Kinder at
7405915960 for more information.
SYRACUSE — A snowman painting class will be taught by Michelle
Musser at 6 p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center. Bring masking
tape, brushes, a 16-inch by 18-inch
canvas, slate or board and crackle
paint. Prepare a surface by painting
it black, dark brown or burgundy in
preparation for the class. For more
information, call 740-992-2365.
MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Briefs will only list event
information that is open to the public.
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel will
host Fall Revival Services
POMEROY — Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, 39589 St.
Rt. 143 in Pomeroy, will host Fall Revival Services at
7 p.m. nightly Nov. 11-14 and 6:30 p.m. Nov. 15, with
Evangelist the Rev. Pat Mayle. For more information,
contact Pastor Mark Nix at 740-992-2952.
Society Thrift Shop in Middleport will have a moving sale Nov. 9 through Nov. 12. The shop will be
closed Nov. 13 and Nov. 14 and reopen Nov. 16 at its
new location, 235 N. Second St. Middleport. A grand
opening is planned for Nov. 17.
Card Shower for
Ann Taylor’s 89 birthday
RACINE — There will be a card shower for Ann
Taylor’s 89 birthday on Nov. 13. Mail your cards to
Ann Taylor, 48394 Karr Rd., Racine, OH 45771.
Nov. 14 at Eastern Elementary School. Vendors
from the tri- state area will be showcasing fabulous
handmade crafts. Donated items will be raffled off
throughout the day and concessions are available. At
9 a.m. the High School Concert Band will perform
on the cafeteria stage. The Middle School Concert
Band performs at 9:45 a.m. and at 10:30 a.m. the
High School Choir will take the stage. The Marching Band will perform at 11:15 a.m. and at noon the
Eastern Handbell Choir will take the stage. Come
enjoy the music, buy some great Christmas gifts and
maybe one for yourself. Admission to the craft show
is $1.00 and includes 1 door prize ticket. Proceeds
go the the Eastern music program.
Meigs County Humane
Music Boosters Craft Show
Society Thrift Store relocating REEDSVILLE — The 28th annual Eastern Music Alpha Omicron Chapter of
Boosters Craft Show will be from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Humane
Delta Kappa Gamma Meeting
WEDNESDAY EVENING
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POMEROY —The Alpha Omicron Chapter of
Delta Kappa Gamma will meet Nov. 14 at Trinity Church in Pomeroy at 10:30 a.m. Delta Kappa
Gamma is a national teacher’s honorary society.
The program will be a bake-less bake sale. Bring
a dish for the pot luck lunch and ten copies of the
recipe to share. Donations will be collected to raise
money for teaching scholarships. The society will
hold Papered Chef show to raise funds for the chapter. Paper products will be collected for Serenity
and Shepherds House women shelters and members
are asked to bring Christmas gifts for the shelter
residents to be collected in November and December. Hostesses for this event are Gay Perrin and Jo
Ann Hays. For further information please call Jo
Ann Hays or Gay Perrin.
Meigs County Election
Board to hold official count
POMEROY — The official count for the Nov. 3
General Election for the Meigs County Board of
Elections will be 9 a.m. Nov. 16 at the Meigs County
Annex on Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy.
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�LOCAL/STATE
Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, November 11, 2015 3
Hamilton board
sets hearing
on poll problems
Courtesy photos
Puppies, puppies and more puppies at the Meigs County Animal Shelter.
DOGS OF THE WEEK
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Dog Shelter has puppies ready
for adoption to a forever
home.
These eight-week-old
collie/sheep dog mix each
have their own personality. If you have decided to
get a puppy, one of these
is sure to fit into your
family — and your lap.
They are fluffy, well taken
care of pups and are part
of the puppy program; the
adoption fee is $100, and
includes first dhpp vaccine, rabies, spay/neuter
and license.
Before you get that new
puppy, here are some tips
from pets.webmd.com:
Once household discussions have established
that everyone wants
to get the pup from a
shelter, family meetings
should cover scheduling
of who will take the pup
to the papers or backyard
and when? Who will be in
charge of feedings three
to four times a day? Who
will make veterinary
appointments for vaccinations and deworming?
Also, it is recommended that you take time
to create a vocabulary
list everyone will use. If
Mom says “down” when
the puppy climbs on the
couch, Dad says “down”
when he wants him to
lie down, and Junior
utters “sit down” when
he expects the pup’s rear
to hit the floor, the result
will be one confused dog.
Decide which words will
be used to communicate
you wishes and be consistent.
Putting the schedule
and vocabulary list in
writing prevents confusion and will help everyone involved in raising
this new addition to the
family.
Next, draft a shopping
list and purchase supplies, including food and
water bowls, chew toys,
grooming supplies, bedding, collar and leash,
identification tag, crate,
chew-proof gate and odor
neutralizer.
It is important to
puppy-proof the area
where the youngster will
spend most of his time
the first few months. This
may mean taping loose
electrical cords to baseboards, storing household chemicals on high
shelves, removing plants,
rugs, and breakables from
puppy’s reach, setting up
the crate and installing
chew proof gates. Once
you think you’ve completely puppy-proofed,
lie on the floor and look
around once more to get
a puppy’s-eye view.
If you have children,
getting a puppy is a very
exciting event in their
lives. It is advisable to
hold one last meeting
and remind them to not
overwhelm Pup the first
day and that Pup is not a
toy. As the children not
fight over him or create
mob scenes showing him
to the neighborhood. Let
Pup get acclimated to his
new surroundings before
you introduce him to the
world.
Remember, Pup is a
baby, going to a forever
home. You will have this
friend for awhile and it
is best to establish rules
and training immediately
so he will know what to
expect. And of coarse, he
will need all the love you
can give him as he grows
and thrives in his new
home.
The Meigs County
Animal Shelter is located
at 41790 Fairgrounds
Rd. in Pomeroy. It is best
to call and leave a message at 740-992-3779
before heading out to the
Shelter. Your call will be
returned as soon as possible.
CINCINNATI (AP) — A southwest Ohio county’s elections board planned Tuesday to examine
what caused Election Day problems that disrupted
some voters’ efforts to cast their ballots.
The Hamilton County board of elections set
a special meeting, one week after possibly thousands of voters ran into issues with a new electronic check-in system.
Elections officials have said everyone who
wanted to vote should have been able to, even if
they had to use provisional ballots. However, voters complained about delays and other issues at
polling stations where some have voted for years.
A judge extended voting Nov. 3 for 90 minutes in
the county that includes Cincinnati.
Officials have blamed a “learning curve” for poll
workers and a possible glitch in the system from
an incorrect date
Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted said last Friday that he wants a report from the county board
by Dec. 11.
Civil rights leader Jesse Jackson said during
a Cincinnati visit on Monday that the problems
are typical of various voting issues that pop up
across the country, in some cases disenfranchising
minority voters. He said there needs to be more
attention on a nationwide basis to making sure
everyone can participate.
“Hamilton County’s issue reminds us again that
we’re putting too little time into making voting
work for everyone,” Jackson, a former presidential
candidate, told The Cincinnati Enquirer’s editorial
board. “We’re still schizophrenic about democracy.
We tout ourselves as the world’s greatest democracy, and we do so much to undercut it.”
Do we have your
attention now?
Advertise your
business in this
space, or bigger
Call us at:
740.992.2155
Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9922155 Ext. 2551
Buckeyes’ QB pleads
guilty to impaired driving
By Andrew Welsh-Huggins
rett’s attorney, Phil Templeton. Barrett’s
sense of responsibility as an Ohio State
captain played a part in that decision,
COLUMBUS — Ohio State quarterTempleton said.
back J.T. Barrett pleaded guilty Tuesday
“He now recognizes, of course, that
to a count of driving while impaired and was a poor decision given what has
was sentenced to a three-day driverhappened to him,” Templeton said. He
intervention program and fined $400.
wouldn’t identify the friend.
His license was also suspended for six
Templeton also said that Barrett was
months.
home that night, Halloween, instead of
Barrett, 20, apologized to his family,
out “reveling” like so many other people
Ohio State and OSU football fans in a
his age.
brief statement at a hearing in Colum“He wasn’t out doing the things that
bus Municipal Court where his lawyer
so many other college kids around the
said Barrett took responsibility for driv- country were doing,” Templeton said.
ing under the influence. “I’m just truly
The lawyer noted to the judge that
sorry,” Barrett said.
Barrett’s blood-alcohol level of 0.099
Barrett must complete the class and
was only slightly above the legal limit
pay the fine by Feb. 15 or face jail time, of 0.08 for adults, though he acknowlsaid Judge H. William Pollitt as he
edged Barrett was underage. In Ohio,
accepted Barrett’s plea.
the limit is 0.02 for people under 21.
Columbus police cited Barrett early
Unlike other people charged with
on the morning of Oct. 31 after he was drunken driving, Barrett had the added
stopped at a police check point. In addi- punishment of being publicly ridiculed
tion to being suspended for last week’s with his picture everywhere on TV after
Minnesota game, Barrett will forfeit
his arrest. “He’s paying the ultimate
his summer financial aid, coach Urban
price,” Templeton said.
Meyer said.
Judges in Ohio have the option to
Meyer said Barrett, who turns 21 in
sentence first-time drunken driving
January, came to his home the day of
defendants to a three-day residential
the incident to apologize. Meyer said
driving-intervention program instead
Barrett told him he did not believe he
of jail time. Private counseling services
was impaired.
typically offer the program in hotels at
Barrett was home Oct. 31 relaxing
costs ranging from $300 to $500.
with friends when a “heavily intoxiBarrett is considered the starter heading into the No. 2 Buckeyes’ game at
cated” friend stopped by and Barrett
Illinois this Saturday.
decided to drive him home, said Bar-
Story ideas or suggestions?
Let us know! Call 740.992.2155
60621504
Associated Press
�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Daily Sentinel
OUR VIEW
Never forget
America’s vets
The men and women who defend the liberties
and freedoms of the countries they represent hold
a special place in people’s hearts and an eternal
spot in their countries’ histories.
Any opportunity is a good time to commemorate the bravery and selfless deeds of military
personnel, but certain prominent holidays in
November make this an especially important time
to thank veterans for their service.
Today is one of those days.
Veterans all across this nation will be honored
with ceremonies, parades and thanked numerous
times for their service with handshakes, discounts
and freebies. In the Ohio Valley, such celebrations
and discount opportunities began last weekend —
and more are planned today
In 1919, President Woodrow Wilson honored
the first commemoration of Armistice Day — the
official end of World War I on the 11th hour of the
11th day of the 11th month — with these words:
“To us in America, the reflections of Armistice
Day will be filled with solemn pride in the heroism of those who died in the country’s service and
with gratitude for the victory, both because of the
thing from which it has freed us and because of
the opportunity it has given America to show her
sympathy with peace and justice in the councils of
the nations …”
In 1954, Congress, at the urging of the veterans
service organizations, replaced the word “Armistice” with “Veterans” and Nov. 11 became a day
to honor American veterans of all wars. That year
President Eisenhower issued the first Veterans
Day Proclamation.
In Canada, today is known as “Remembrance
Day.” Whatever you call it wherever you may be,
they each share one commonality — honoring
past and current military for their service and
sacrifice.
While we honor those who have died, we also
should be aware that Veterans Day is for those
who are still with us — the brave men and women
who are making and have made a difference in
communities around the U.S. and abroad.
There are currently more than 23 million veterans in the U.S. Each of them helped keep America,
and much of the world, free.
From the first patriots encamped at Valley Forge
in our nation’s infancy to the “Greatest Generation” of World War II; from those who fought the
cold and a determined foe in Korea to those who
fought in the humid rice paddies of Vietnam; from
the warriors of Desert Storm and Kosovo, to the
current veterans of the war on terror Afghanistan,
Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East, each generation has contributed to the freedoms we all enjoy.
We owe our nation’s veterans a debt of gratitude
that can never be repaid.
All Americans should appreciate — and show
that appreciation — of our veterans every day of
the year — but especially on Nov. 11.
The Daily Sentinel
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor
should be limited to 300
words. All letters are subject
to editing, must be signed and
include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be
in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities.
“Thank You” letters will not be
accepted for publication.
Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:
740.992.2155
THEIR VIEW
Your year-end financial checklist
By Nathaniel Sillin
Guest Columnist
It will begin soon enough — all
those “beat the rush!” ads for
holiday shopping, activities and
events.
Right now, you have a great
opportunity to beat the rush to
organize your year-end finances
and make some smart moves for
the New Year.
Consider the following tasks for
your year-end financial to-do list.
Total up your year-to-date
spending. Whether you organize
by computer or on paper, make
sure your tracking system for
spending, saving and investment
is up to date. This way, you can
make sure you are on budget for
the year and ready with data for
tax time. Once you are finished,
determine your net worth – what
you own less what you owe – and
get an early idea of what you need
to change next year.
Check in with your planner or
tax professional. Late December
is a busy time for financial
professionals. Take a minute to see
if they can review your numbers
and make suggestions on year-end
financial activities and new moves
you should make in 2016.
Make sure you’ve reviewed all
your credit reports for the year.
You are entitled to one free copy
(https://www.annualcreditreport.
com) of each of your three major
credit reports from TransUnion,
Equifax and Experian. It’s
generally wise to schedule
delivery of each at different points
in the year to catch errors or
irregularities.
Check and rebalance your
portfolio. With the dramatic
market swings this past year, be
sure to check if your retirement
and other investments are still on
track with your investment goals.
Get qualified help if necessary to
see if the assets you own still fit
your needs. And if you need to
do any tax selling by the end of
the year, now is the time to start
thinking about it.
Check your insurance coverage.
If you buy your own home, auto,
life or other insurance policies,
contact two or three agents
representing highly rated insurers
to review the adequacy and pricing
of your coverage. If you have
made any structural changes or
improvements to your home, make
sure those actions are reflected
in your homeowners insurance.
Such work may boost your home’s
replacement value.
Also, if you’ve had a major life
or financial event like a new baby
or the purchase of a new home
it’s time to make sure all your
coverage is sufficient.
Update your W-2, benefits and
estate plan if necessary. While
you’re updating your insurance
and investment needs for big life
events related to family, property
or marital status, see if your tax
withholding and employee health
coverage and investments need
review. Get qualified help to make
this assessment if you are not sure.
Empty out your flexible
spending accounts. If you have
a Flexible Spending Account for
health care or other qualifying
expenses, it’s time to submit
outstanding claims from the
doctor, dentist or optometrist.
Remember you can only transfer
$500 in your remaining balance
over to the next year. Make
any appointments or medical
purchases you need to now and
get the paperwork in fast.
Do a last-minute tax review.
If you work alone or with a tax
professional, review your annual
income, investment and spending
data to see if there’s anything
you can do in the final weeks
of the year to save on taxes.
If tax-deductible donations to
qualified charities and nonprofits
are recommended, consult sites
such as GuideStar (http://www.
guidestar.org), CharityWatch
(https://www.charitywatch.org/
home) and Charity Navigator
(http://www.charitynavigator.org)
to evaluate your choices so you
know your contribution is being
well spent.
Save time and cut back on
waste with online bill pay and
deposits. Automatic online bill pay
means you won’t have to waste
time writing checks or risk late
payment fees. Scheduling bill
payment through your checking
and savings accounts can save
time and money, while setting
up regular electronic deposits to
savings and investment accounts
can also help you save money
before you are tempted to spend it.
Bottom line: Doing a last-minute
review of your finances can
potentially save money and help
you save, spend and invest smarter
in the coming year.
Nathaniel Sillin directs Visa’s financial education
programs. To follow Practical Money Skills on
Twitter: www.twitter.com/PracticalMoney.
TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Wednesday,
Nov. 11, the 315th day of
2015. There are 50 days
left in the year. This is
Veterans Day in the U.S.,
Remembrance Day in
Canada.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Nov. 11, 1918, fighting in World War I came
to an end with the signing
of an armistice between
the Allies and Germany.
On this date:
In 1620, 41 Pilgrims
aboard the Mayflower,
anchored off Massachusetts, signed a compact
calling for a “body politick.”
In 1778, British redcoats, Tory rangers and
Seneca Indians in central
New York killed more than
40 people in the Cherry
Valley Massacre.
In 1831, former slave
Nat Turner, who’d led a
violent insurrection, was
executed in Jerusalem,
Virginia.
In 1889, Washington
became the 42nd state.
In 1921, the remains of
an unidentified American
service member were
interred in a Tomb of
the Unknown Soldier at
Arlington National Cemetery in a ceremony presided over by President
Warren G. Harding.
In 1938, Irish-born
cook Mary Mallon, who’d
gained notoriety as the
disease-carrying “Typhoid
Mary” blamed for the
deaths of three people,
died on North Brother
Island in New York’s East
River at age 69 after 23
years of mandatory quarantine.
Today’s Birthdays:
Jazz singer-musician Mose
Allison is 88. Actress Bibi
Andersson is 80. Country
singer Narvel Felts is
77. Sen. Barbara Boxer,
D-Calif., is 75. Americana
roots singer/songwriter
Chris Smither is 71. Rock
singer-musician Vince
Martell (Vanilla Fudge) is
70. The president of Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega, is
70. Rock singer Jim Peterik (Ides of March, Survivor) is 65. Golfer Fuzzy
Zoeller is 64. Pop singermusician Paul Cowsill
(The Cowsills) is 64. Rock
singer-musician Andy
Partridge (XTC) is 62.
Singer Marshall Crenshaw
is 62. Rock singer Dave
Alvin is 60. Rock musician
Ian Craig Marsh (Human
League; Heaven 17) is 59.
Actor Stanley Tucci is 55.
Actress Demi Moore is
53. Actress Calista Flockhart is 51. Actor Philip
McKeon is 51. Rock musician Scott Mercado is 51.
Actor Frank John Hughes
is 48. TV personality Carson Kressley is 46. Actor
David DeLuise is 44.
Actor Adam Beach is 43.
Actor Tyler Christopher
(TV: “General Hospital”)
is 43. Actor Leonardo
DiCaprio is 41. Actor
Scoot McNairy is 38.
Rock musician Jonathan
Pretus (Cowboy Mouth)
is 34. NFL quarterback
Mark Sanchez is 29.
Actress Christa B. Allen is
24. Actor Tye Sheridan is
19. Actor Ian Patrick (TV:
“The Neighbors”) is 13.
�LOCAL
Daily Sentinel
So Wise, who makes all the
decisions in her classroom at
Meigs Primary School where she
From Page 1
teaches first grade, decided to take
charge of her own fate and pageant
category and then moving up
outcome by doing things the
to the “miss” division where,
way she wanted them done. She
over the last few years, she
said rather than go with outside
was first runner-up and second consultants, she made the choices
runner-up multiple times. She
of what to wear, how to physically
was so close so many times,
train and about a million other
only to come up short.
details down to what earrings she
This year was her final year
wanted to wear. By the way, her
of eligibility and after a tough
earrings came from New York and
second runner-up finish last
Company - nothing fancy but they
year, she wasn’t sure if she’d
were what she liked.
attempt one more try.
“Everybody tells you to
“It was a hard loss,” Wise
be yourself but really, being
said of the 2015 competition. “I yourself in the moment is so
had to really reevaluate if this
hard and so difficult to do. It’s
was something I wanted to do
scary. But when you truly let it
and why.”
go and think, ‘here I am, take
After a few months of
me or leave me,’ it fell into
contemplation, she says she
place for me.”
decided this was something
Wise said when her name
she loved doing, and as she put was finally called as the winner,
it, she wanted to “take every
the room “exploded.”
opportunity to do what I love
“I was yelling so loud,”
one last time.”
she said. “I kept going ‘I
She said as for why this
can’t believe it.’ I was yelling
year’s pageant had a different
so loud I couldn’t hear and
outcome, it was an evolution
other people were yelling
that wasn’t about the dress or
and screaming and crying. It
the makeup coming together.
was such an overwhelming
“Something came together
moment, I can’t even describe
on the inside and I felt at peace it because I just witnessed what
no matter which way it went,”
could be the best moment of
she said. “I had the confidence my life.”
to know I can do this and the
Next up for Wise is a big
loss won’t affect me anymore.” adventure to the Miss USA
pageant where she will
compete on a national level.
The pageant, formerly owned
by Donald Trump, has been
purchased by WME/IMG out of
California and will be broadcast
on FOX in 50 countries.
“I’m looking forward to Miss
USA, it’s a once in a lifetime
thing for a select group of
people,” she said. “People say
you have a better chance of
having a son play in a Super
Bowl than a daughter in Miss
USA…the odds are so small.”
She’ll also be working with
two former Miss USA’s to
help her train for the national
competition - Miss USA 2004
Shandi Finnessey and Miss
USA 2003 Susie Castillo, both
of whom were on the judges
panel in Springfield. Wise
called the two women “two of
the most elite pageant holders
in the history of Miss USA.”
As for what excites her most
about all these new opportunities,
the girl from Southeast Ohio says
she wants to do as many local
appearances as possible to be
a “presence in the community”
where she is not just recognized
for a title but what she is doing in
the communities of the Buckeye
State.
Despite all the hoopla over the
weekend, Wise went right back
to work on Monday to find her
fellow teachers, staff members and
Bravery
at 20,000 feet at 600 miles per hour, with
two-and-a-half hours in between (each malfunction),” he said. “That is uncommon. To
From Page 1
happen once, sure, but to happen twice to
two different jets, it doesn’t happen a lot.”
over the Pacific, so we weren’t around any
Gerlach said that in both cases the errors
land.”
were mechanical, not human. He, along with
The trio of the main jet declared an
Rish and Nelson, received an Air Force safety
emergency over high frequency radio, and
award, which is under the safety category
were able to support the aircraft by relaying
Excellence in Airmanship, for safely operatweather information and assigned clearances.
ing their own aircraft while assisting others
With their help, the jet needing assistance
in distress, Gerlach said.
was able to divert to Eareckson Air Station in
“All three of us were coordinating on it,”
Shemya, Alaska.
he said.
The trio on the main jet also coordinated
Gerlach joined the Air Force in September
with the Tank Airlift Control Center through 2010. He became mission-ready at McConsatellite in order to deliver equipment to the nell Air Force Base in Kansas, where he now
station for repairs. However, while Gerlach
resides. He said he still flies all the time with
said a day like that wasn’t an ordinary day,
1,300 flying hours under his belt, and is an
the day was about to be even more unusual.
instructor for future boom operators.
“It happened to another plane at the same
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.
time, and all that happened extremely fast,
TODAY
8 AM
WEATHER
2 PM
42°
56°
51°
HEALTH TODAY
Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday
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.
51°
48°
59°
38°
80° in 2002
23° in 1957
(in inches)
24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date
0.14
0.27
1.09
41.66
36.93
Today
7:06 a.m.
5:18 p.m.
6:49 a.m.
5:38 p.m.
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset
Thu.
7:07 a.m.
5:18 p.m.
7:45 a.m.
6:18 p.m.
MOON PHASES
New
First
Full
Nov 11 Nov 19 Nov 25
Last
Dec 3
SOLUNAR TABLE
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for fish and game.
Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Major
10:48a
11:07a
11:58a
12:56a
1:52a
2:49a
3:47a
Minor
4:36a
5:23a
6:14a
7:08a
8:05a
9:03a
10:00a
0
Chillicothe
59/47
AccuWeather.com Cold Index™
The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local
weather with a number of demographic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.
0
Lucasville
60/47
WEATHER TRIVIA™
Major
11:11p
------1:21p
2:18p
3:16p
4:13p
Minor
4:59p
5:47p
6:39p
7:34p
8:31p
9:29p
10:26p
WEATHER HISTORY
On Nov. 11, 1990, a large storm in
the northern Pacific generated waves
of 6-10 feet, reaching all the way
south to the Hawaiian Islands.
Portsmouth
61/49
AIR QUALITY
41
500
Primary pollutant: Particulates
Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.
Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services
OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday
Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam
Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51
Level
12.28
15.54
21.03
12.58
13.40
24.71
12.95
26.04
34.71
13.17
16.40
34.00
14.80
24-hr.
Chg.
-0.31
-0.58
-0.29
-0.27
+0.22
-0.39
-0.27
+0.16
+0.10
+0.27
-0.10
-0.10
-0.50
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
Let’s Talk
About Your
BBT (NYSE) —38.33
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.39
Pepsico (NYSE) — 98.83
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.47
Rockwell (NYSE) — 104.18
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 11.57
Royal Dutch Shell — 50.54
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 24.81
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 58.70
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.57
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.99
Worthington (NYSE) — 30.51
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Nov.10 , 2015, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.
SUNDAY
50°
34°
Cool with plenty of
sunshine
63°
42°
Milder with sunshine
and patchy clouds
Plenty of sunshine
Marietta
58/43
Murray City
58/43
Belpre
59/43
Athens
59/44
St. Marys
59/44
Parkersburg
59/44
Coolville
59/44
Elizabeth
59/45
Spencer
59/47
Buffalo
60/48
Milton
61/48
Clendenin
61/47
St. Albans
61/48
Huntington
60/48
NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
51/41
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
San Francisco
0s
62/48
-0s
Los Angeles
73/47
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front
TUESDAY
60°
47°
Clearing, a
thunderstorm possible
NATIONAL CITIES
Ironton
60/49
Ashland
60/49
Grayson
61/49
MONDAY
59°
37°
Wilkesville
60/45
POMEROY
Jackson
60/46
60/46
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
60/47
61/48
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
60/50
GALLIPOLIS
61/48
60/47
60/49
South Shore Greenup
61/49
61/48
300
Logan
59/45
McArthur
59/44
Waverly
59/47
0-2 Low; 3-4 Moderate; 5-6 High; 7-8 Very High; 9-10 Extreme
0 50 100 150 200
Sunny and cooler
Adelphi
59/47
Q: What is a broken spectre?
SUN & MOON
A morning shower;
clouds breaking
SATURDAY
52°
34°
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
A: A shadow cast upon fog or low
clouds beneath the observer.
Precipitation
FRIDAY
64°
41°
ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low
AEP (NYSE) — 55.10
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.10
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 111.15
Big Lots (NYSE) — 47.67
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 41.97
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 42.05
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 3.75
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.210
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 50.63
Collins (NYSE) —87.12
DuPont (NYSE) — 66.34
US Bank (NYSE) — 43.36
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 30.13
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 49.60
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 67.69
Kroger (NYSE) — 37.27
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 95.15
Norfolk So (NYSE) —88.63
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 24.68
THURSDAY
Not as cool today. A thunderstorm tonight. High
61° / Low 48°
The other message she hopes
students ready to congratulate her
with matching t-shirts celebrating her story conveys is gratitude.
her win. There was even a note on
“I worked hard for something
the Meigs Elementary sign outside and I appreciate it so much
the school that said “Miss Ohio
more,” she said.
works here.”
Beyond the story of winning Wise is a 2008 graduate of Gallia Academy;
has a bachelor’s degree from the University
the crown and title of a
of Rio Grande in elementary education; a
prestigious pageant, Wise said master’s degree from Concordia University
she hopes her story is more of
of Chicago in education leadership. She is
the daughter of Tonya Kincaid and Kevin
a message of perseverance.
Wise, both of Gallia County. She is the
“Set a goal and try for it, no
granddaughter of Sherry McBride of Gallia
matter what,” she said. “I think County and the late Wayne Kincaid, Jr.,
of it like riding a bike, if you
formerly of Mason County, W.Va. She is the
great granddaughter of the late Wayne and
quit the first time you fell off,
Margaret Kincaid, formerly of Mason County.
you’d never learn to ride. Get
back on constantly so you can
Reach Beth Sergent at bsergent@
eventually get to where you
civitasmedia.com or on Twitter @
BSergentWrites.
want to go.”
LOCAL STOCKS
EXTENDED FORECAST
8 PM
Courtesy photo
Megan Wise, pictured at center, was greeted by teachers, students and staff on
Monday at Meigs Elementary where she is a first grade teacher.
Charleston
61/47
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
37/28
Billings
46/31
Toronto
54/39
Minneapolis
51/39
Denver
41/24
Montreal
49/41
New York
58/49
Chicago
62/44
Detroit
58/46
Washington
64/50
Kansas City
70/41
Chihuahua
73/39
High
Low
90° in Boca Raton, FL
12° in Mammoth Lakes, CA
Global
Miami
87/75
GOALS
Thu.
Hi/Lo/W
55/29/s
30/15/c
67/47/pc
63/51/sh
62/43/r
44/29/s
45/31/s
54/48/r
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71/43/pc
40/20/pc
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86/75/sh
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66/43/s
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77/50/s
61/40/s
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45/32/c
64/41/s
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60/49/r
64/35/s
88/65/s
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50/44/r
72/46/pc
67/45/pc
60/39/s
47/28/pc
63/48/s
50/48/r
65/47/sh
National for the 48 contiguous states
Houston
82/58
Monterrey
90/64
Today
Hi/Lo/W
53/27/s
30/22/sf
70/57/pc
62/51/pc
64/45/pc
46/31/c
46/28/pc
51/41/r
61/47/pc
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37/27/sn
62/44/r
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59/46/s
58/46/pc
78/47/t
41/24/sn
63/40/t
58/46/pc
86/75/sh
82/58/t
63/45/pc
70/41/t
61/40/s
75/48/t
73/47/s
65/52/pc
87/75/pc
51/39/r
71/53/pc
79/69/s
58/49/c
68/39/s
86/62/pc
65/51/pc
69/46/s
57/43/pc
47/33/r
66/47/pc
65/46/pc
68/47/t
44/30/pc
62/48/s
51/41/pc
64/50/pc
EXTREMES YESTERDAY
Atlanta
70/57
El Paso
62/35
City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC
High
Low
109° in McArthur, Australia
-47° in Delyankirskiy, Russia
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589
Title
Wednesday, November 11, 2015 5
www.fbsc.com
740-992-2136
�Sports
Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, November 11, 2015 s Page 6
Rio women 2nd in KIAC
By Randy Payton
cia’s time of 18:57 was tops
among the 82 runners in the
5K race, helping the Pioneers
RIO GRANDE, Ohio —
to the team title and a trip
Lucy Williams was one of
to the national meet, which
three top 10 finishers for the is scheduled for Nov. 21 in
University of Rio Grande,
Charlotte, N.C.
helping the RedStorm
Sophomores Keri Lawrence
women’s cross country team
(Reedsville, OH) and Rachel
to a runner-up finish at the
Ball (Chillicothe, OH) fin2015 Kentucky Intercollegiate ished ninth and 10th, respecAthletic Conference champi- tively, for the RedStorm with
onship, Saturday morning, at times of 20:02 and 20:20.
the Rio Grande Cross CounRio Grande finished with
try Course.
63 points as a team, 13
Williams, a freshman from behind Point Park, while
Athens, Ohio, finished fourth Asbury University finished a
in a time of 19:25 and earned distant third with 91 points.
one of four berths to the
Among the others who
NAIA National Championparticipated in the championship reserved for individuals
ship for the RedStorm were
freshman Maggie Dellinger
not on the winning team.
Point Park’s Katie Guarnac- (Washington Court House,
Rio Grande freshman
Lucy Williams
placed fourth in
Saturday’s Kentucky
Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference
championship at the
Rio Grande Cross
Country Course,
earning a spot in
the NAIA National
Championship,
scheduled for Nov. 21
in Charlotte, N.C., in
the process.
For Ohio Valley Publishing
Photo courtesy of URG
OH), who was 17th in a time
of 21:00; junior Alex Ellis
(Ona, WV), who placed 23rd
in a time of 21:39; sophomore
Aubrey Dunfee (Baltimore,
OH), who was 24th in 21:39;
junior Katie Glover (Ashville,
OH), who finished 25th in
a time of 21:41; sophomore
Emili Sannes (Carlisle, OH),
who crossed in 36th place
with a time of 22:19; freshman Jennifer Case (McArthur, OH), who was 53rd in
24:00; and junior Marissa
McConaha (Duncan Falls,
OH), who placed 66th in
27:50.
Runner-up Katy Falkenberg of Asbury University
(19:06), third-place finisher
See RIO | 10
URG volleyball
sweeps regular
season finale
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing
LAURINBURG, N.C.
— The University of Rio
Grande volleyball team
closed out its regular
season schedule with
two more wins, posting
straight sets victories
over Montreat (N.C.) College and match host St.
Andrews University on
Saturday afternoon.
The RedStorm defeated
Montreat 25-16, 25-13,
25-19 in their opening
match of the day, before
taking down the host
Knights 25-22, 25-23,
25-23 in the regular season finale.
Head coach Billina Donaldson’s squad
improved to 26-7 with
the sweep, giving the
program its most wins in
a single season since the
1992 team finished 37-9
when Donaldson - then
known as Billina Cooper
- was earning the first of
her consecutive Mid-Ohio
Conference and District
22 Player of the Year
honors.
The wins also extended
Rio’s winning streak to
eight straight, the program’s longest such streak
since a seven-match win
streak from Oct. 15-28,
2012.
Montreat, which also
lost to St. Andrews earlier
in the day, slipped to 7-29
with the two losses, while
the Knights ended the
day at 20-9 after the split.
Junior Kayla Briley
(Marion, OH) led the
way against Montreat,
tallying a team-high 32
assists and 13 digs to go
along with a service ace.
Senior Alex Phillips (Orient, OH) and sophomore
Aleah Pelphrey (Piketon,
OH) finished with 11 kills
each.
Sophomore Kylan
Strausbaugh (Kingston,
OH) and junior Chandler
Brown (Stockdale, OH)
added 11 and 10 digs,
respectively, in the win,
while junior Autumn
Snider (Marion, OH) had
five blocks - three solos
and two assists.
Anyla Kryeziu had nine
kills to lead the Cavaliers
in a losing cause, while
Abby Graham finished
with 16 assists and 10
digs and Hitomi Fujikura
added 10 assists.
Sara Rawls had a teamhigh 13 digs in the loss
for Montreat.
Against St. Andrews,
Pelphrey and Phillips led
the winning effort along
the net with 13 and 10
kills, respectively. Briley
had 38 assists and Brown
had 22 digs in the victory.
Angelica Arroyo had 13
kills to pace SAU in the
loss, while Jaden Lynch
had 33 assists and Tessa
Smith had 13 digs.
Rio Grande finished
with a .303 attack percentage against Montreat,
while recording a .241
mark in the triumph over
St. Andrews.
Rio Grande returns to
action on Friday night in
the quarterfinal round of
the KIAC Tournament at
the Newt Oliver Arena.
The RedStorm will be
the tourney’s No. 6 seed
and will face third-seeded
Point Park at 5 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.
OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, Nov. 12
College Soccer
Asbury at URG men, 7 p.m.
URG women at Point Park, 7 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 13
Football
Musselman at Point Pleasant, 7:30
College Volleyball
Point Park at Rio Grande, 7 p.m.
College Basketball
URG men vs Marian at MVNU, 3 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 14
College Basketball
URG women at St. Catharine, 2 p.m.
URG men at Mt. Vernon Nazarene, 5 p.m.
Photo courtesy of Paul Boggs | Jackson Times Journal
Eastern sophomore Jessica Cook runs during the Division III Regional Cross Country meet at Pickerington High School North.
Cook 43rd, Wolfe 52nd at state meet
By Alex Hawley
her first mile was a little quick. She
still broke 20 minutes which, on
that course, isn’t a bad time at all.”
HEBRON, Ohio — And they still
Jessica joins 2015 EHS graduhave two years left.
ate Asia Michael as the only Lady
Eastern sophomore Jessica Cook Eagles to make it to the state cross
and Southern sophomore Concountry meet twice and as the only
ner Wolfe finished 43rd and 52nd
Lady Eagles to make the state as
respectively at the OHSAA Diviindividuals. Micahel also finished
sion III State Cross Country meet, 43rd when she qualified as an indion Saturday at National Trail Race- vidual in 2013.
way in Licking County.
The Division III girls team comCook, who also qualified for the
petition was won by St. Thomas
state meet as a freshman, posted a
Aquinas with a score of 69, foltime of 19:55.5 in the girls’ compelowed by Minster with an 87. St.
tition, including a 5:44.4 opening
Thomas Aquinas senior Athena
mile.
Welsh led the field of 144 with
“I think I could have done beta time of 17:58.6, followed by
ter,” said Jessica. “I went out way
junior teammate Kalee Soehnlen
too fast, normally Laura (Pullins)
(18:10.0).
paces me at the beginning, and I
Wolfe, a first-time state qualifier,
didn’t have her. My team pushes
finished
with a time of 16:55.2,
me most of the season, I’ll have
just
1:36.3
off the pace in the boys’
them all back next year so hoperace.
fully that will help me.”
“I think I did fine, but I wish I
Cook was 12th after the opening
mile, just 7.2 seconds off the pace, could have ran a lot faster,” Conner
but she fell to 31st at the two-mile said. “I was really nervous all day,
mark and was a full minute behind I stared to get sick before the race,
but afterwards I was fine. My first
the leader.
mile was fine, my second mile was
“I thought that she did alright,
but she went out a little too quick,” a little to slow, and my third mile
Eastern coach Josh Fogle said. “We was just normal.”
Wolfe’s opening mile was ran
talked before the race about where
she had to be at the mile mark, and in 5:10.4, which placed him 64th.
ahawley@civitasmedia.com
He then moved up to 52nd after a
5:33.2 second mile.
“Conner ran a great race, I am
very proud of him” said Tornadoes
coach Joe Cornell. “He trained
hard all season long and it is nice
to see all that hard work pay off
for such a great young man. I look
forward to seeing him compete at
that level hopefully as a junior and
senior.”
Conner joins his older brother
Kody Wolfe, a three-time state
qualifier and two-time All-Ohioan
who currently is a junior on the
Ohio University men’s cross country team, as the lone state cross
country qualifiers from Southern.
Like Conner, Kody’s first trip to
the OHSAA state meet came as a
sophomore.
Maplewood won the Division III
boys team competition with a score
of 61, followed by St. Thomas
Aquinas with an 87. Tristan Dahmen, a senior at Maplewood, paced
the field of 156 with a time of
15:18.8, while Antwerp senior Sam
Williamson (15:36.7) was second.
Complete results of the 2015 OHSAA Division III
State Cross Country meet can be found on the
web at www.ohsaa.org
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.
�SPORTS
Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, November 11, 2015 7
RedStorm men
outlast Taylor
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of
Rio Grande coughed
up an 11-point first
half lead before rallying from eight points
down in the second half
to post an 86-79 win
over Taylor University
in the second round of
the Saunders Insurance
Tip-Off Classic, Saturday afternoon, at the
Newt Oliver Arena.
The RedStorm upped
their record to 2-0 with
the victory.
Taylor slipped to 1-1
with the loss.
Rio appeared to have
things well in hand
early on after a conventional three-point play
by junior forward Corey
Cruse (Fort Mitchell,
KY) gave the RedStorm
a 33-22 advantage with
5:31 left in the first
half, but the Trojans
sliced the deficit to just
two at halftime before
taking a 50-49 lead following a three-pointer
by Keaton Hendricks
with 15:12 remaining in
the game.
Taylor extended its
lead to as many as eight
points, 67-59, after
a Lane Vander Hulst
three-pointer with just
under nine minutes
left, but the RedStorm
responded with a 10-2
run of their own and
knotted the score at
69-69 when senior
guard Travis Elliott
(Ironton, OH) connected on one of two
free throws with 6:17
remaining.
Cruse tied the game
again at 71-71 by nailing a pair of free throws
with 5:51 left, but it
was a driving layup by
senior guard Kevonta
Black (Nashville, TN)
just over a minute later
which put Rio Grande
in front to stay.
Senior center
Dwayne Bazemore
(Columbus, OH) led
five Rio players in
double figures with
19 points, while also
snaring a game-high
six rebounds. Senior
guard D.D. Joiner
(Columbus, OH) added
18 points, while Black
had 16 - including 10
in the second half - and
the duo of Elliott and
sophomore Will Hill
Rio women edge
Carlow in double OT
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing
Photo courtesy of URG
Rio Grande’s D.D. Joiner attempts to block the shot of Taylor’s
Keaton Hendricks during the first half of Saturday’s game in
the Saunders Insurance Tip-Off Classic at the Newt Oliver
Arena. The RedStorm rallied from an eight-point second half
deficit to post an 86-79 win.
(Worthington, OH) had
10 points each.
The RedStorm shot
57.4 percent from the
field (31-for-54) for the
second straight outing.
Kyle Stidom had a
game-high 23 points in
a losing cause for Taylor. Evan Crowe added
14 points for the Trojans, while Hendricks
and Vander Hulst net-
ted 12 and 11 points,
respectively. Stidom
also had six rebounds.
Rio Grande returns
to action on Tuesday
night when it travels to
Portsmouth for a meeting with rival Shawnee
State. Tipoff is set for
7 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Kasey Crow’s goal 27 seconds into the second overtime period lifted the thirdseeded University of Rio Grande to a 1-0 win over No.
6 seed Carlow University in the quarterfinal round
of the Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
Women’s Soccer Tournament, Saturday night, at Evan
E. Davis Field.
The RedStorm, which won for the fourth straight
time and for the third time under interim head coach
Craig Davies, improved to 8-9 with the victory - their
second over the Celtics in a span of 14 days.
The win also sends Rio Grande into the semifinal
round of the tournament to face second-seeded Point
Park University on Thursday, at 7 p.m., at Highmark
Stadium in Pittsburgh, Pa.
Carlow, which was playing its fourth game in as
many days after traveling to Asheville, N.C. to participate in the United States Collegiate Athletic Association National Tournament earlier in the week, finished
8-11.
Crow, a senior from Chillicothe, Ohio, scored her
game-winner in the opening moments of the second
extra stanza after the two teams had battled for 100
minutes to a scoreless draw.
Freshman Olivia Slone (Huntington, WV) gathered
in a loose ball off the opening kickoff of the period
and lofted a pass toward the goal which cleared the
head of Carlow defender Karina Wallace, who quickly
recovered and tried to kick the ball out of bounds.
However, the kick ricocheted off of an oncoming
Crow and past Celtics goal keeper Lexie Mirenda for
the golden goal.
Rio Grande finished with a whopping 26-7 edge in
shots, including a 17-4 advantage in the second half
and two overtime appearances. The RedStorm also
had an 11-4 cushion in shots on goal.
Sophomore Kristin Garn (Morrow, OH) had four
saves in goal for Rio, recording her fifth shutout performance of the season.
Mirenda had 10 saves in a losing cause for Carlow.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the University of Rio
Grande.
Bengals focused more on postseason than perfect record
CINCINNATI (AP) — The
Bengals spent their Sunday off
watching other NFL games on
television and enjoying a rare,
free weekend. One thing they
spent no time on: the standings.
Everybody else is, though.
The Bengals (8-0) had a
weekend free after they beat
Cleveland 31-10 on Thursday
night.
When Denver lost at Indianapolis on Sunday, Cincinnati
and New England were the
only two AFC teams left with
perfect records.
So, how far can this go? How
deep in the season can the AFC
North leaders get before losing
a game?
Shrug.
“It gets talked about every
week by the media,” safety
George Iloka said on Monday.
“Me personally, I couldn’t care
less about being undefeated in
the regular season. What’s 16-0
if you go 0-1 when it matters?
See what I’m saying?”
The best start in franchise
history is nice, but it’s overshadowed by the only thing
that really matters for this Cincinnati team: Finally winning a
game in the playoffs.
The Bengals haven’t done
that since the 1990 season, the
sixth-longest stretch of postseason futility in NFL history.
They’ve reached the playoffs
each of the past four years and
lost in the first round all four
times, so that’s the lens they
use to view that 8-0 record.
Sure, they’re in position to
get home-field advantage for
the start of the playoffs, but
nobody in these parts cares
about it until they get there and
win one.
And the deeper they get into
the season undefeated, the
more they’re going to get the
spotlight and the pressure.
“As it extends, it’s only
going to get harder,” left
tackle Andrew Whitworth said.
“You’ve just got to continue to
be what got you there.”
History is on their side.
The Bengals, the Patriots
and the Panthers in the NFC
are still undefeated, the most
teams to go 8-0 in NFL history. During the Super Bowl
era, 21 teams have opened the
season 8-0. All of those teams
made the playoffs, 12 of them
reached the Super Bowl and
eight of them won it.
They’ll be trying to become
only the 29th team in NFL
history to start 9-0 when
they host Houston (3-5) on
Monday night. The Texans
have knocked them out of the
playoffs twice in the past four
years.
After that game, the Bengals go to Arizona (6-2) for a
Sunday night game, their third
straight in prime time.
The Bengals have been particularly fortunate in terms of
injuries. The only key player
missing for an extended time
was middle linebacker Vontaze
Burfict, who sat out the first
six games while recovering
from offseason knee surgery.
He’s played in the past two.
Roughly half the starters are
in contract years, so it’s the
last time this collection will
be together regardless of what
happens. That seems to have
contributed to the Bengals’
success, providing a sense that
this is a last chance for some of
them to win a playoff game in
Cincinnati.
“We’ve got enough guys
hungry and at a place in their
career where nobody’s relaxing,” Whitworth said.
Notes: Iloka has appealed
his $23,152 fine for a helmetto-helmet hit on Pittsburgh’s
Heath Miller during the Bengals’ 16-10 win at Heinz Field
on Nov. 1. Iloka said he didn’t
target the tight end after he
made a catch. “I thought it was
a clean hit,” the safety said. “I
didn’t leave my feet. I made
contact with my shoulder to his
shoulder. In football, your head
will hit just because of momentum.”
Cleveland’s McCown not practicing, will start if healthy
BEREA, Ohio (AP) —
The cries to start Johnny
Manziel are growing
louder by the loss.
Browns coach Mike
Pettine hears them, and
so far is ignoring them.
Pettine said Tuesday
that quarterback Josh
McCown, who remains
sidelined with injured
ribs, will start Sunday
against the Pittsburgh
Steelers — as long as he’s
physically able.
Pettine spent part of a
long weekend off discussing Cleveland’s QB situation with his staff and
came to the conclusion
that a healthy McCown
is a better option than
Manziel.
“We’ve said all along
that Josh McCown started the season as our No.
1 quarterback, and he’s
been out due to injury
and potentially coming
back,” Pettine said. “I
get the call for ‘Hey, why
not?’ but we’re tasked as
coaches to put the roster
out there that’s going to
give us the best opportunity to win. I understand
that as the year goes on
those circumstances can
change, but we’ll see.”
McCown initially injured
his ribs on Oct. 25 at St.
Louis and aggravated them
the following week against
Arizona. Last week he was
having trouble breathing
and sleeping.
Pettine said McCown’s
health is “improving” but
he remains “day to day.”
The Browns (2-7) are
eager to find out if he can
play as soon as possible.
“That’s not a decision,
especially with the quarterback, that you want to
wait until the end of the
week,” Pettine said.
Manziel started in
place of the 36-yearold McCown last week
in Cincinnati, and the
second-year QB may
be called upon again to
face the Steelers (5-4) if
McCown isn’t cleared.
Manziel had an impressive first half against the
unbeaten Bengals. But
they adjusted at halftime,
kept him from scrambling
outside the pocket and
rolled to a 31-10 win.
Manziel finished 15 of
33 for 168 yards and one
touchdown, but he was
just 4 of 15 for 40 yards
in the second half.
While the performance
showed some of those
Johnny Football flashes, it’s
unclear whether Manziel
can be a quality NFL starter.
The only way for the
Browns to find out is to
play Manziel, but Pettine
hasn’t reached that point.
Although another season
in Cleveland is spiraling
downward, Pettine isn’t
ready to look toward the
future and begin benching
veterans in favor of developing younger players.
“It’s something that
you have to walk that
fine line between forcing
it — ‘Hey, listen, we’re
just going to wholesale
play these players,’” Pettine said. “It’s a disservice
to the other guys in the
room. We’re tasked with
winning football games.
At the point, essentially
just past the midway
point, I understand that
talk is there, especially
at the quarterback position, but from a coaching
standpoint, the thinking
is a little different.”
Manziel is 1-1 as a
starter this season. The
22-year-old, who remains
under NFL investigation
for a recent domestic incident, has completed 43 of
83 passes for 561 yards
and four touchdowns
with one interception.
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8 Wednesday, November 11, 2015
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be selling food
& drinks
LIBRARY PAGE/SHELVER
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seeks applicants for the
position of Library
Page/Shelver.
12 hours per week; minimum
wage; includes weekend and
evening shifts. Must be a
minimum of sixteen (16) years
of age and pass background
check. Job description and
application available at
Library or online at
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Attention: Debbie Saunders,
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Ohio 45631
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
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Daily Sentinel
BLONDIE
Wednesday, November 11, 2015 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 & Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne
THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE
By John Hambrock
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by Dave Green
By Dave Green
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11/11
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�SPORTS
10 Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Daily Sentinel
Rio men finish 2nd, send 3 to nationals
SPORTS BRIEFS
By Randy Payton
Presale tickets
available at PPJSHS
For Ohio Valley Publishing
RIO GRANDE, Ohio —
Blake Freed ran to a runner-up finish and led the
University of Rio Grande
men’s cross country
team to a runner-up finish as a team at the 2015
Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference championship, Saturday afternoon, at the Rio Grande
Cross Country Course.
Freed, a junior from
Uhrichsville, Ohio,
crossed the finish line
just ahead of fellow
junior Dallas Guy (Buffalo, OH), although both
officially finished the 8K
course in 26:53.7.
Freed, Guy and freshman Mike Norris (Dayton, OH) - who finished
fifth in a time of 27:14
- qualfied for the NAIA
National Championship
on Nov. 21 in Charlotte,
N.C. as being among the
top four individuals who
weren’t members of the
winning team.
Senior Matt Engstrom
(Dover, OH) narrowly
missed making it a quartet
of national qualifiers for
the RedStorm by finishing
seventh in a time of 27:33.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Presale tickets
for the Class AAA opening round football contest
between Point Pleasant and Musselman will be on
sale at the school during school hours on Thursday and Friday. The cost is $7 apiece for adults
and $5 each for students. All tickets at gate will
be $7 and there is no reserve seating. No county
passes will be accepted at the game. Only WVSSAC courtesy passes will be accepted. If you leave
the game before it ends, you must pay to re-enter.
2015 football
statistics needed
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — All West Virginia varsity
football coaches in Mason County are asked to
submit regular season statistics from their respective teams to the Ohio Valley Publishing sports
department for all-state considerations with the
West Virginia Sports Writers Association.
Along with the 10-game stats, please include the
heights, weights, positions played and grade of
each nominee — as well as an order of recommendation for possible selections. Stats can include
anything related to offense, defense or special
teams for a nominee.
Submissions should be mailed to the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, c/o Bryan Walters, 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Statistics may also be emailed to either bwalters@civitasmedia.com or sent via fax to (740)
446-3008.
All statistics and nominations must be received
before 5 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 12, for consideration.
Photo courtesy of URG
Rio Grande junior Blake Freed finished second in Saturday’s
Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference championship at the
Rio Grande Cross Country Course and was one of three RedStorm
runners to qualify for the NAIA National Championship, scheduled
for Nov. 21 in Charlotte, N.C.
Rio Grande finished
with 53 points as a team,
13 behind champion and
national qualifier Point
Park (40 pts.). Asbury
University was a distant
third place finisher with
108 points.
Freshman Brian Moore
fueled Point Park’s title run
by taking top individual
honors in the 93-runner
field with a time of 26:32.
Rounding out the day
for the RedStorm was
freshman Dustin Edens
(Westerville, OH), who
was 40th in a time of
30:30; freshman Phil Colbert (North Philadelphia,
PA), who crossed in 43rd
place with a time of 30:52;
freshman Brody Ferris
(New Philadelphia, OH),
who was 60th in a time of
32:43; and sophomore D.J.
Hickman (Clayton, OH),
who finished 80th in 30:55.
Indiana-Kokomo senior
Javier Vasquez, who
finished fourth in a time
of 27:10, joined the Rio
Grande trio as qualifiers
for the national championship event.
Freed, Guy, Norris
and Engstrom were also
rewarded with All-KIAC
First Team honors based
on their finish in the race.
Engstrom was also Rio’s
Champions of Character
representative.
The top seven individual finishers were named
All-KIAC First Team,
while finishers 8-14 were
designated as Second
Team selections.
Point Park head coach
Kelly Parsley was named the
league’s Coach of the Year.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.
Team Penske battling each other with title on line
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at Phoenix to advance is
if they continue to work
together. A good problem
to have would be both
cars running up front
1-2.”
But that’s almost a fantasy at Phoenix, where
reigning series champion
Kevin Harvick has run
wild the last 2 1/2 years.
He’s won four straight
and five of the last six,
creating the foreboding
sense that the field is all
running for second on
Sunday.
Harvick can’t really sit
back and coast, either.
He is no lock to make
it into the finale, and
he has not run as well
as Team Penske in this
Chase.
Keselowski, the
2012 series champion,
has taken a pragmatic
approach to the Penske
situation. With so much
on the line for the teammates, it would be easy
for either or both to
falter.
He doesn’t believe that
will happen.
“It isn’t pressure, it is
opportunity,” he said. “I
am happy to have those
opportunities with a
great team. As strong as
we ran (at Texas), if we
carry that over to Homestead, good Lord, watch
out. We know we need to
win the next two to win
the championship. The
good news is we have
that opportunity. That’s
the way I look at it.”
Logano also sees only
opportunity ahead. Once
his road to the final was
derailed by Kenseth, the
Daytona 500 winner has
done nothing but focus
on the only thing he can
control: Trying to win a
race.
He is last in the eightdriver field, and that’s
got to be a bitter pill to
swallow because without
Kenseth’s act of retribution, Logano is locked
into the finale instead of
Gordon.
“Sometimes you just
have to roll with the
punches,” Logano said.
“We will be ready for
Phoenix. This team is
strong. We didn’t take
any wind out of our sails.
I feel great about our
chances at Phoenix.”
Indiana-Kokomo (19:25),
joined Williams as qualifiers for the national chamFrom Page 6
pionship event.
Williams was among
Ivy Aleshire of WVU Tech
those earning All-KIAC
(19:22) and fifth-place
First Team honors based
finisher Taryn Thor of
on her finish in the race,
while Lawrence and Ball
were All-KIAC Second
Team members. Dellinger
was Rio’s Champions of
Character representative.
The top seven individual finishers were named
All-KIAC First Team,
while finishers 8-14 were
designated as Second
Team selections.
Point Park head coach
Kelly Parsley was named
the league’s Coach of the
Year.
Keselowski out of victory
lane. It was a shrewd win
for Hendrick Motorsports, which blocked one
of the top title contenders from moving into
the final, where Gordon
awaits.
It’s going to be Logano
vs. Keselowski in Phoenix for a spot in the
finale that neither may
ultimately earn. It’s a
worst nightmare scenario
for Team Penske, which
coughed away the IndyCar championship when
Juan Pablo Montoya lost
on a tiebreaker in the
finale.
“Racing teammates
is tough, there’s nothing easy about it,” said
Johnson, who battled
teammate Gordon to the
wire in 2007. He called
on team owner Roger
Penske to figure out a
way for Phoenix to benefit both of his drivers.
“The way those two cars
have become so successful and fast is the way
they’ve worked together.
I’m sure Roger is going
to continue to preach
that. The only way one
of them will have a shot
Rio
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bined 10 victories, three
of them Chase wins.
It seemed such a
shame that two of the
most dominant drivers of
the year were kept out of
the finale, but that’s how
it played in this knockout
format.
Now Logano, who
reeled off three consecutive wins in the second
round of the playoffs, is
in a must-win situation
heading into Sunday’s
race at Phoenix International Raceway. He was
intentionally wrecked by
Matt Kenseth after leading 207 laps at Martinsville Speedway, where
the victory he seemed
poised to claim would
have moved into the final
four.
A blown tire in the
opening minutes of Sunday’s race at Texas has
him in a deep hole and
he needs a win at Phoenix.
Then there’s Keselowski, who set a Texas
record with 312 laps
led on Sunday. But he
couldn’t hold off Jimmie
Johnson, who led the
final four laps to keep
RAISE YOUR
GLASSES TO
VETERANS
James R.
Ingels Sr.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.
www.mydailysentinel.com
race for the championship. It’s possible one
of the drivers may still
CHARLOTTE, N.C.
snatch one of the three
— Nobody seems better remaining slots in race.
prepared for the third
But both? That’s going
round of NASCAR’s play- to take a small miracle.
offs than Team Penske,
Yet that is part of the
which has led 662 of the quirks of the Chase for
last 834 laps raced.
the Sprint Cup champiJoey Logano and Brad onship format. The most
Keselowski have been on deserving drivers won’t
their game at this pivotal necessarily race for the
point in the championtitle. They instead fall
ship race, and they’ve got victim to the cutthroat
nothing at all to show for elimination system that
their efforts.
pares the field over a trio
With one race remain- of three-race segments.
ing to set the field of
During last year’s format
four for NASCAR’s title- debut, both Keselowski
deciding season finale,
and Jeff Gordon failed
it’s highly possible both
to make the finale even
Penske drivers will not
though they had a com-
Associated Press
Visit us at
By Jenna Fryer
Cody
Gerlach
JIMMY’S SPORTS BAR
60622788
�
Dublin Core
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11. November
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November 11, 2015
bennett
bond
dewitt
edmonds
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pancake