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                  <text>Cloudy,
showers
H-67, L-45

NEWS s 3

WEATHER s 5

Vote

Valarie

Gerlach
FOR
FOURTH DISTRICT
COURT OF APPEALS

Paid for by Gerlach for Court of Appeals, Franklin T. Gerlach
Treasurer, 814 Seventh Street,Portsmouth, OH. 45662

60689563

Today
in
history

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 178, Volume 70

Tuesday, November 8, 2016 s 50¢

Shoppers pack downtown Pomeroy

Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

The Meigs County Historical Society has Meigs County
memorabilia and items, including the latest Cat’s Meows,
Sugar Run Mill and the Meigs Theatre.

Museum highlights
Meigs County’s past
in series of displays,
memorabilia
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Historical Society is prepared
for the holiday season
with its latest display
and several local items
available in the Meigs
County Museum gift
shop.
The museum’s latest
display is a tribute to
veterans, titled “I’ll be
home for Christmas.”
The display includes
items from as early as
the Revolutionary War,
up to recent wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan.
Items include those
from local veterans, uniforms and items from
throughout the eras, as
well as recognition to
the local soldiers lost in
Vietnam who’s names
are on the Vietnam
Wall.
Currently, the museum has the Cat’s Meow
statues for the Meigs
Theatre and Sugar Run
Mill, as well as taking

pre-orders for Adolph’s
and the Meigs Inn, both
of which are expected
before Christmas.
Rafﬂe tickets are also
available for a fourwheeler to be drawn
later this month.
Upcoming special
events at the museum
include kid’s weekend
Nov. 19 and 20, as well
as Dec. 18. The November kids weekend will
include the making of
Meigs County applesauce ornaments.
Santa Claus will be
at the museum Dec.
18, from 1-4 p.m., with
photos being taken.
Dec. 18 will be the
last day the museum is
open for 2016.
The museum will be
open on Black Friday
with yet to be determined specials for
shoppers. Members of
the historical society
receive a 10 percent
discount every day.
Memberships are currently being accepted
for 2017.

Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

Perfect fall weather on Monday brought shoppers from near and far to Pomeroy to take part in the annual Christmas Open House event.
From browsing the shops on Main Street, as well as those on Butternut, Court Street and other locations, shoppers carrying packages of
all shapes and sizes could be seen throughout town. While the open houses may be over, there will be continued shopping opportunities
throughout the area leading up to Christmas, including the Cash Mob event this Thursday at King’s Ace Hardware in Middleport (see
more in the Wednesday edition of the Sentinel) and Shop Local Saturday on Nov. 26. For more open house scenes, including those from
the open house at The Daily Sentinel see page 5 of today’s edition.

Inaugural Veterans Award
Rio honors Jim
Marshall at
special event
By Jessica Patterson
Special to OVP

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande and Rio Grande
Community College takes
pride in honoring veterans who have served and
are continuing to serve
the United States.
As part of this endeavor, Rio has created the
“Jim Marshall Veteran of
the Year Award” to recognize veterans who have
gone above and beyond
the call of duty. Athletic
Director Jeff Lanham said
Courtesy URG
this award is a reﬂection
Jim Marshall is pictured with, from left, Coach Art Lanham, President Michelle Johnston and Athletic
See AWARD | 3 Director Jeff Lanham.

Local restaurants and grocers dedicated to food safety
Courtesy photo

The museum’s newest display is a tribute to veterans titled “I’ll
be home for Christmas.”

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
News: 3
Editorial: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

By Dawn Keller, SIT
Special to the Times-Sentinel

MEIGS COUNTY — Restaurants
and grocery stores in Meigs County
are ahead of the curve when it
comes to food safety. As of October
2016, a full ﬁve months ahead of
schedule, 39 local food service owners and managers have successfully
taken the Ohio Level Two Food Protection Course. A majority of those
in the county that are going to be
required to take the 15 hour course,
have already done so, passed, and
received their Ohio Certiﬁcation as
well as the ServSafe Manager Certiﬁcation.
Ohio has a new law, which goes
into effect March 1, 2017, requiring
all Food Service Operations (FSO/
Restaurants) and Retail Food Establishments (RFE/Grocers) licensed
at risk level 3 or higher, to have at
least one manager certiﬁed at Level
Two Food Protection by the State
of Ohio. The Meigs County Health
Department facilitated the speedy

compliance by becoming one of
only a few certiﬁed providers in
Southeastern Ohio, and by charging
a reduced rate for businesses with
food licenses in Meigs County.
The curriculum used by the
Health Department is the ServSafe
Manager Course designed by the
National Restaurant Association.
The health department food sanitarian, who teaches the class, had to
ﬁrst become certiﬁed by ServSafe to
be an instructor and proctor the test
for ServSafe, and then apply to Ohio
Department of Health for the course
and curriculum to be approved as
Ohio Level Two Food Protection.
Besides the 43 locals who have taken
the class, there have been three others drive from surrounding counties.
In addition to offering the Level
Two Food Protection/ServSafe
Manager Course, the Health
Department is also offering the
Level One/ServSafe Food Handler
Course. To date, 40 individuals have
received this certiﬁcation. Level

One/ServSafe Food Handler is an
approximately two hour course that
covers the basics of food safety. Ohio
already requires that at least one
person per shift in any RFE or FSO
have this certiﬁcation, so the majority of businesses have employees
that already have it.
To continue this positive trend
in food safety, the Meigs County
Health Department will continue
to offer these courses to the public,
to businesses, and to anyone with
a desire to safely prepare and serve
food. Going forward, the Level One
class will be offered quarterly and
Level Two class will be offered twice
per year. The next planned Level
Two class is to be offered in January,
as is the next Level One class. Registration information will be available
on the Meigs-Health.com website
as soon as class dates and times are
ﬁnalized.
Dawn Keller is employed with the Environmental
Health division of the Meigs County Health
Department

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, November 8, 2016

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS COUNTY BRIEFS

ELSIE KING
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio
— Elsie M. King, 87,
of Middleport, Ohio,
passed away on Saturday, Nov. 5, 2016, at
Overbrook Rehabilitation Center, Middleport.
She was born July 27,
1929, in Gallia County,
Ohio, daughter of the
late James C. and Minnie Catherine Jackson
Forth. She was a 1947
graduate of Gallia Academy High School. Elsie
was a bookkeeper for
local businesses and a
foster grandparent at
Hartford Elementary
and New Haven Elementary. She attended
Middleport Church of
Christ and enjoyed traveling.
Surviving are her
sister, Bonnie I. Smith
of Middleport; and
several nieces and nephews, Jim Forth, Sandy
(Larry) Queen, Sheila
(Ray) Slone, Dale Ray
(Carol) Smith, Carol

(Ryan) Mahr, Kathy
Baker, Angelia (Mark)
Gilkey.
A special thank you
to her caregivers and
staff at Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center.
In addition to her
parents, Elsie was
preceded in death by
her former husband,
Clifford King; sisters,
Dorothy Baker, Delcie
Forth, Emma Forth;
and a brother, Byrdell J.
Forth Sr.
Services will be 11
a.m., Thursday, Nov.
10, 2016, at the Willis
Funeral Home with Pastor Ralph Workman and
David Hopkins ofﬁciating. Burial will follow
in Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens. Friends may
call at the funeral home
on Wednesday, Nov. 9,
2016, from 5-7 p.m.
Please visit www.
willisfuneralhome.com
to send e-mail condolences.

POTTS
WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE, Ohio —
Alma L. Potts, 62, of Washington Court House,
passed away November 6, 2016 in Signature
Health Care.
A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. on
Thursday, November 10, 2016 at the Porter-Tidd
Funeral Home, Mt. Sterling, Ohio. Bill Warner
ofﬁciating with the interment following in Pleasant Cemetery. Family will receive friends on
Wednesday from 4 - 7 p.m.

DILLON
CROWN CITY, Ohio — Sheila Kay Dillon,
64, of Crown City, Ohio passed away Saturday
November 5, 2016 at St. Mary’s Medical Center,
Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral service will be held 2 p.m., Wednesday
November 9, 2016 at Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, by Pastor Jamie
Klaiber. Burial will follow in Mt. Zion Cemetery,
Crown City. Visitation will be held from 6 to 8
p.m. Tuesday November 8, 2016 at the funeral
home.

Editor’s Note: The Meigs Briefs
will only list event information
that is open to the public and will
be printed on a space-available
basis.

Newspaper delivery
may be delayed
OHIO VALLEY — Regular
newspaper delivery may be slightly
delayed on Wednesday as staff
from the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
Point Pleasant Register and The
Daily Sentinel work to bring readers the results from Tuesday’s general election. Results will be posted
online as soon as they become
available at www.mydailytribune.
com, www.mydailyregister.com,
www.mydailysentinel.com.

Road
Closures
PORTLAND — Beginning Nov.
2, State Route 124 in Meigs County will be closed from Bald Knob
Stiversville Road to Long Run for
a tree trimming project. The estimated completion date is Nov. 30,
2016.

Veterans Day
assembly
RACINE — The Southern Local
School District will hold its annual
Veterans Day Assembly at the
ﬂagpole area beginning at 9 a.m.
Friday, Nov. 11. All veterans and
current military members, family
and friends are urged to attend this
special event. Opening ceremonies
will begin outside and then move
to a more solemn ceremony in the
high school gymnasium. The public
is invited. Music will be provided
by the Southern Marching Band.

Meeting
Change
ROCKSPRINGS — The Meigs
Local Board of Education is mov-

EDWARDS
LETART, W.Va.— Burdell Edwards, 87, of
Letart, W.Va., passed away Sunday, Nov. 6, 2016.
Service will be 11 a.m., Wednesday, Nov. 9,
2016, at Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va.,
with Don Roach ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in
the Zerkle Cemetery, Letart. Visitation will be
Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2016, from 6-8 p.m. at the funeral
home.

DEAN
LEON, W.Va. — Gerald K. “Jerry” Dean, 71, of
Leon, W.Va., died November 7, 2016.
Funeral services will be held at the Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va., Thursday, November 10, 2016, at 11 a.m., with Rev. Matthew Dotson ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in the Morgan
Cemetery in Leon. Friends may visit the family at
the funeral home on Wednesday evening, November 9, from 6-8 p.m.

LYTLE
MARION — Frances D. Lytle, age 93, of Marion, formerly of Point Pleasant, W.Va., passed away
Friday, November 4, 2016 at Riverside Methodist
Hospital.
Visitation will be held Thursday, November 10,
2016 from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m., at the Boyd-Born
Funeral Home in Marion. Funeral services will follow at 11 a.m. Burial will take place at a later date.

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POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department will conduct
an Immunization Clinic from 9-11
a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays at
112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/legal guardian.
A $15 donation is appreciated for
immunization administration; however, no one will be denied services
because of an inability to pay an
administration fee for state-funded
childhood vaccines. Please bring
medical cards and/or commercial
insurance cards, if applicable. Zostavax (shingles); pneumonia ; inﬂuenza vaccines are also available.
Call for eligibility determination
and availability or visit our website
at www.meigs-health.com to see a
list of accepted commercial insurances and Medicaid for adults.

Election Day
Dinner
SYRACUSE — The Syracuse
Community Center will have an
Election Day Dinner on Nov. 8,
starting at 10 a.m. On the menu
will be soups, chicken noodles,
pulled pork, hot dogs, pies and
cake. Eat in or take out.

Benefit
Dinner
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Church of Christ is holding a
Beneﬁt Dinner for the Evan Hayman family on Election Day, Nov.
8, beginning at 11 a.m. This will
be held in the church building of
the Middleport Church of Christ.
Vegetable soup, hot dogs, dessert,
and drink will be served. All donations will go to the Hayman family
to help with expenses in caring for
Evan. Evan was diagnosed with
ALD (Adrenoleukodystrophy) earlier this year. His health has rapidly
deteriorated. ALD, is a progressive
neurological disease that is found
in roughly one in 20,000 newborn
boys. Without care, those afﬂicted
with the disease can quickly die

Spreading Christmas
Cheer program
POMEROY — The Meigs County Extension Ofﬁce will be holding
the 9th annual Holiday Program,
“Spreading Christmas Cheer”
on Thursday, Dec. 1. Make and
take craft, indoor pine tree, food
samplings and door prizes. One
class at 11 a.m. and the second
class at 6 p.m. at the Meigs County
Extension Ofﬁce located at 113 E
Memorial Drive, Suite E, Pomeroy.
Preregistration is required and the
cost is $25 per person. For more
information call 740-992-6696.

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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

Immunization
Clinic

POMEROY — The Meigs Tea
Party will hold only one meeting
on Nov. 15 at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center, Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy. Doors open at 7 p.m.
Agenda is to be determined.
Refreshments will be served.
Everyone welcome.

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111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH

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Telephone: 740-992-2155

TUPPERS PLAINS — The Eastern Music Boosters will have their
29th annual craft show Saturday,
Nov. 12 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at
Eastern Elementary. We are currently looking for crafters. If interested contact Jenny Ridenour at
jenny.ridenour@yahoo.com to get
an application.

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Eastern Music
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Civitas Media, LLC

after complications are identiﬁed.

ing their next regularly scheduled
board meeting from Tuesday, Nov.
8 at 7 p.m. to Tuesday, Nov. 15 at
3 p.m. The Nov. 15 meeting will be
held in the Hyatt Regency — second ﬂoor, Columbus, Ohio at the
annual OSBA Capital Conference.
The reason for the change is that
the Meigs Administration Building is a polling place for the Nov. 8
general election.

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Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 8, 2016 3

MU to honor veterans through ‘Greenlight a Vet’ Diabetes event
Staff Report

“I think it’s great that Marshall
chooses to honor our service men
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. – For
and women in this way,” Crislip
the second year, Marshall Unisaid. “Veterans deserve to be honversity is showing its support of
ored year-round – a lot of what
U.S. veterans by participating in
they do for our country is behind
the Greenlight a Vet campaign.
the scenes and goes unspoken, but
Beginning Monday, Nov. 7, the
they have fought to protect our
spotlights on the university’s brick rights. We will continue to recogsign outside of Old Main will
nize them in this way every year.”
turn green. These lights will stay
Marshall University encourages
green throughout the remainder
members of the community to join
of November.
it by changing one light to green
Participating in the Greenlight
at their ofﬁces or homes in honor
campaign is a point of pride for
of the men and women who have
the Marshall community, said
served our country. Share support
Tony Crislip, associate director of by taking a picture of your green
the university’s Physical Plant.
light and posting it using the

hashtag #greenlightavet.
About Greenlight a Vet: Greenlight A Vet is a campaign created
by Wal-Mart to establish visible
national support for our veterans
by changing one light to green.
Green is the color of hope, renewal and well-being. “Greenlight”
is also a term commonly used to
activate forward movement. The
simple action of changing one
light to green is intended to spark
a national conversation regarding the recognition of veterans,
and “greenlight” them forward as
valued members of our communities. Learn more by visiting www.
greenlightavet.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Abraham Lincoln won
re-election as he defeated Democratic challenger George B. McClellan.
In 1889, Montana
became the 41st state.
In 1923, Adolf HitToday’s Highlights in
ler launched his ﬁrst
History:
attempt at seizing power
On Nov. 8, 1966,
in Germany with a failed
Edward W. Brooke,
coup in Munich that
R-Mass., became the
came to be known as the
ﬁrst black candidate to
“Beer-Hall Putsch.”
be elected to the U.S.
In 1932, New York
Senate by popular vote.
Democratic Gov. FrankRepublican Ronald
lin D. Roosevelt defeated
Reagan was elected
incumbent Republican
governor of California,
Herbert Hoover for the
defeating Democratic
presidency.
incumbent Pat Brown.
In 1942, Operation
President Lyndon B.
Torch, resulting in an
Johnson signed a measure allowing the merger Allied victory, began
of the American Football during World War II as
League and the National U.S. and British forces
landed in French North
Football League.
Africa.
In 1950, during the
On this date:
Korean War, the ﬁrst jetIn 1793, the Louvre
plane battle took place
began admitting the
as U.S. Air Force Lt.
public, even though the
Russell J. Brown shot
French museum had
been ofﬁcially open since down a North Korean
MiG-15.
August.
In 1960, MassachuIn 1864, President
Today is Tuesday, Nov.
8, the 313th day of 2016.
There are 53 days left in
the year. This is Election
Day.

setts Sen. John F. Kennedy defeated Vice President Richard M. Nixon
for the presidency.
In 1974, a federal
judge in Cleveland dismissed charges against
eight Ohio National
Guardsmen accused of
violating the civil rights
of students who were
killed or wounded in the
1970 Kent State shootings.
In 1986, former Soviet
ofﬁcial Vyacheslav M.
Molotov, whose name
became attached to the
incendiary bottle bomb
known as a “Molotov
cocktail,” died at age 96.
In 1988, Vice President George H.W. Bush
won the presidential
election, defeating the
Democratic nominee,
Massachusetts Gov.
Michael Dukakis.
In 1994, midterm elections resulted in Republicans winning a majority
in the Senate while at
the same time gaining
control of the House for

the ﬁrst time in 40 years.
Ten years ago: President George W. Bush
announced Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld’s
resignation; Bush chose
former CIA Director
Robert Gates to succeed
him. Israeli shells killed
18 Palestinian civilians
in the northern Gaza
town of Beit Hanoun
(bayt ha-NOON’) during an attack targeting
militants.
Five years ago: An
asteroid as big as an
aircraft carrier zipped
by Earth in the closest
encounter by such a massive space rock in more
than three decades. Voters re-elected Kentucky’s
Democratic governor,
Steve Beshear, and
picked a new governor
in Mississippi, Republican Lt. Gov. Phil Bryant.
Bil Keane, 89, creator of
the comic strip “Family
Circus,” died in Paradise
Valley, Arizona. Rapper
Heavy D, 44, died in Los
Angeles.

Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — Did you know that 1 in 11
American has diabetes today?
Nov. 1 marked the beginning of American Diabetes Month, the American Diabetes Association’s
annual awareness campaign. This year’s theme,
This Is Diabetes, will show what diabetes is really
like, from the perspective of people who live with
it each day.
In addition, Holzer is hosting a Diabetes Awareness Event at the Holzer Therapy and Wellness
Center in downtown Gallipolis, Ohio, on Saturday, Nov. 12 from 9 a.m. to noon. A variety of
educational materials/booths will be available, in
addition to an Awareness Walk, and door prizes.
Door prizes to include a Fitbit, YETI Cooler, and
more (must be present to win).
Holzer also offers Diabetes Self-Management
Classes in Gallipolis, Jackson, and Pomeroy, Ohio
and a Diabetes Support Group, which meets
monthly. “Educating our communities on how to
properly manage and prevent diabetes is crucial,”
stated Beverly Jarrell, RN, Diabetic Educator, Holzer Health System.
“As a diabetic, I am excited to offer this type of
event for our communities, as well as bring more
awareness of the classes and assistance Holzer
offers for diabetics. I encourage individuals who
want to check out the wellness center, ask questions about diabetes, or who are looking for a support as they deal with a diagnosis of diabetes to
visit us on Saturday.”
“This Is Diabetes” — sponsored by Colgate
Total and Medtronic Diabetes — encourages individuals from all walks of life to share snapshots on
social media of what it’s like to live with diabetes.
Family, friends and caregivers are also invited to
share their stories using the ofﬁcial campaign
hashtag #ThisIsDiabetes. These real-life challenges and triumphs will be featured on diabetes.
org/adm and shared across the Association’s Facebook, Instagram and Twitter feeds.
For more information, call Beverly Jarrell at
740-446-5971 or email bjarrell@holzer.org.

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

Award

who penned a purple
heart to his pillow,” Lanham said. “It is my ﬁrm
belief that the greatest
From page 1
casualty is to be forgotof Rio’s efforts to be a
ten. This award ensures
veteran-friendly campus. Jim and his family will
“Rio is dedicated to
never be forgotten here
making sure all veterans
at Rio.”
receive the recognition
Marshall’s teammate
and respect they deserve and longtime friend,
when they are visiting
Frank Bullock helped
our campus,” Lanham
recruit Jim for the 1964
said. “This award is one
basketball season. He said
small way we can give
Marshall was a true teamback to our veterans and mate and leader.
thank them for their ser“I’ve known Jim since
vice. We are proud of Jim sixth grade when we were
and his dedication to his
both the leading scorers
country and community.” at our respective schools,
The inaugural award
so we were competitors
was presented to Jim
back then. Once we were
Marshall this past Friday. on the same team in
Marshall was a valued
middle school, we became
member of the Rio
good friends,” Bullock
Grande Men’s Basketball said. “Jim was always
Team where his character, a dynamic basketball
attitude, performance,
player. This is a man who
and leadership served to
could jump three feet into
create lifelong relationthe air. He had a huge
ships with and inspire his impact on this school
teammates. He left Rio to because people would
serve his country in the
come from all over the
US Military during the
tristate to watch him play.
Vietnam War as 1st SerThis is a great way to
geant, Kilo-Battery—4th honor him, and I’m happy
Battalion—13th Marines. to have been on the comHe was injured in combat mittee for this award.
and awarded the Purple
I would like to see this
Heart. He joined the
continue to grow and be
684th Army National
an even bigger event next
Guard in 1974. Former
year.”
Rio Athletic Director and
Bob Leith had the
Men’s Basketball Coach
unique experience to be
Art Lanham said Marboth a teammate and
shall’s determination to
professor to Marshall. He
return to the court after
said Marshall has and still
an injury overseas is only is very inspiring to those
a small part of why he is
around him.
deserving of this award.
“He was a great ball
“We were all saddened player and people from
when Jim was drafted
all over the area knew
into the Marines, and
his name. While he was
prayed for his safe return overseas, I graduated and
to Rio Grande. That
became a history profesprayer was answered
sor. When he returned, he
but a shell that exploded
was one of my students.
very close to Jim during
He worked very hard
a combat mission in Viet- to overcome his hearnam caused a complete
ing complications in my
loss of hearing in one ear class. He’s always been
and other injuries. After
the person who works to
many months of rehab,
earn his way, and I have a
Jim returned to Rio.
lot of respect for his academic efforts,” Leith said.
During Jim’s rehab he
“Jim went to work before
received a special guest,
he became at Rio, so he
General Westmoreland,

planned at
Wellness Center

Card Shower
Ann Taylor will be celebrating her 90th birthday
on Nov. 12. Cards may be sent to her at 48394
Karr Road, Racine, Ohio, 45771.
Tuesday, Nov. 8
POMEROY — The Meigs County Board of
Health will meet at 5 p.m. in the conference room
of the Meigs County Health Department.
POMEROY — The Meigs County TB Clinic will
close at noon.
Wednesday, Nov. 9
OLIVE TWP. — The Olive Township Trustees
will hold their regular meeting at 7 p.m. at the
township garage on Joppa Road.
SCIPIO TWP. — The Scipio Township Trustees
will hold their monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the
Harrisonville Fire House.

Courtesy URG

Jim Marshall visits with fellow teammates at a reception before the
ceremony, pictured from left, first row, Don Trainer, Mike Burcham
and Phil Collins; second row, Paul Dillon, Jim Marshall, and Coach
Art Lanham. (Third Row) Jim Wells, Bob Leith, Rudy Shively and
S.W. Gregory.

was older than the rest of
us when he started. He
was someone we could
look up to and count on
for advice. He never held
how great of a player he
was over anyone. He was
just one of the guys and
always tried to help everyone better themselves.”
Marshall is known for
a legacy of excellence,
diligence, vigilance and
insistence on excellence,
and currently resides in
Lancaster with his wife,
Joan. He said he is honored by this award and
proud to know it will continue to recognize men
and women in the armed
services for many years to
come.
“This means the world
to me. It’s an ongoing
award and will become
a legacy award for all
the veterans Rio Grande
honors. It’s a great honor
to have this named after

me,” Marshall said. “I
appreciate Coach [Art]
Lanham, President Johnston and all my teammates for their efforts to
make this award possible.
I’m overwhelmed by how
nice the ceremony was
and the turnout of the
people I served with.
We came in here as Rio
Grande College Redmen
and we’re leaving tonight
as University of Rio
Grande RedStorm.”
Another way Rio continues to honor veterans
in the area is to offer
free admission to all free
entrance to all athletic
events at Rio’s campus
during the 2016-2017
year. Rio will present the
second annual “Jim Marshall Veteran of the Year
Award,” during its 201718 season.
Jessica Patterson is a
communications specialist for the
University of Rio Grande.

Thursday, Nov. 10
MIDDLEPORT — Get Healthy Meigs! will
meet at 11 a.m. in the third ﬂoor conference room
of the Meigs Co. Dept. of Jobs and Family Services to continue work on the Community Health
Improvement Plan. Community input is appreciated. RSVP to Michelle Willard by calling 740-9926626 by or before 4PM on Nov. 8th. Lunch will be
provided by Rio Grande Community College.
CHESTER — Shade River Lodge 453 will hold
its monthly stated meeting at 7:30 p.m. This is
election night and all Master Masons are encouraged to attend. Oyster stew will be served after.
Saturday, Nov. 12
MIDDLEPORT — Rick Werner and Jessica
Wolfe will present a cooking demonstration on
“Traditional Holiday Desserts and Treats” at 1
p.m. at Riverbend Arts Council, 290 N. 2nd Ave.,
Middleport. Refreshments served. Public invited.

MEIGS COUNTY
CHURCH CALENDAR
Revival
POMEROY — A revival will be held at Calvary
Pilgrim Chapel, 39589 State Route 143, Nov. 8-13.
Services will be held at 7 p.m. nightly, except for Sunday which will be 6:30 p.m. Speaker will be Evangelist
Rev. Dan Kaufman of Salem, Ohio. For more information call Rev. Mark Nix at 740-992-2952.
Ongoing Events
MIDDLEPORT — Pastor Billy Zuspan of the First
Baptist Church of Middleport has begun an in-depth
Bible study of The Revelation during the Sunday and
Wednesday evening services at 7 p.m. at 211 S. 6th
Ave., Middleport, Ohio. If you have questions, please
call 740-992-2755 and leave a message.

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Go to Mars?
Let’s not
By John M. Crisp
Contributing Columnist

In an op-ed published last month,
President Barack
Obama proposed a
partnership between
the government and
the private sector in
pursuit of this goal:
“sending humans to
Mars by the 2030s
and returning them
safely to earth, with
the ultimate ambition
to one day remain
there for an extended
time.”
Obama says that the
space program “represents a central part
of our character —
curiosity and exploration, innovation and
ingenuity, pushing the
boundaries of what’s
possible and doing it
before anybody else.”
Ordinarily, I’m a
sucker for this sort of
aspirational rhetoric.
My childhood coincided with the early days
of the “space race,” a
time when the original seven Mercury
astronauts — Glenn,
Grissom, Shepard,
Schirra, Carpenter,
Cooper, Slayton —
were national heroes.
And I remember
distinctly the night of
July 20, 1969, when
a signiﬁcant portion
of the world watched
a grainy black-andwhite broadcast of
Neil Armstrong taking his ﬁrst steps on
the surface of the
moon: “That’s one
small step for man,
one giant leap for
mankind.”
Is it time to begin
working toward the
next logical, longdeferred step, Mars?
The prospect of
going to Mars is
exciting, but the question of whether we
should commit the
energy and resources
necessary to put
humans on the Red
Planet and bring
them back is as much
philosophical as it is
technical and scientiﬁc.
Obama suggests
that space exploration
is an expression of
“a central part of our
character,” but that’s
only a fancy way
of saying that one
of the fundamental
paradigms of civilization is the possession, overpopulation,
resource exhaustion
and abandonment
of territory and the
subsequent conquest
of new territory. This
is a very human process, and throughout
history we’ve done it
repeatedly.
Ordinarily it
involves considerable damage to the
environment and
considerable suffering
if native populations
happen to be in the
way. And ordinarily
it’s driven by a strain
of nationalism. Thus,
during the so-called
Age of Discovery,
the English, French,
Spanish and Portuguese battled each
other viciously to

stake out the choicest parts of the New
World for themselves.
And thus President
Obama can’t resist
couching America’s
proposed push toward
Mars in competitive terms: “doing it
before anybody else.”
Don’t get me
wrong: it would be
cool to go to Mars,
and I would follow
the effort with considerable interest.
But I wonder if the
paradigm — occupy,
exploit, abandon, conquer new territory —
is a purely terrestrial
concept that doesn’t
transfer well to the
vast reaches of outer
space.
Humankind evolved
in a speciﬁc ecological niche called Planet
Earth. An outpost
on Mars may be as
implausible as a Siberian tiger transplanted into Manhattan.
Of course, if we’d
always thought like
this there would be
no United States and,
maybe, no progress.
But just as the earth’s
resources have inevitable limits, so may
the realm of humankind.
At the least, the
fantasy of going to
Mars has the dangerous potential to
distract us from problems closer to home.
We have befouled our
nest here on earth.
The climate is changing, the sea levels are
rising, populations
are being displaced
and the stresses of
resource depletion
are already causing
conﬂict.
Of course, I’m talking about Mars during a week when it’s
hard to think about
much else besides
the election. And, in
fact, by the time you
read this we may have
chosen a new president. Everyone agrees
that whoever wins
will have a tough
challenge to bring
our badly fractured
country back together
again.
But nothing brings
people together like
a common goal. We
could develop a unifying national project
of going to Mars, just
as President John F.
Kennedy set a national goal to reach the
moon before 1970.
Or we could decide
to save the planet by
devoting our “curiosity and exploration,
innovation and ingenuity” to ﬁnding ways
to live within our ecological means.
I like the second
goal better. In fact,
maybe we need to
devote our energies
to ﬁguring out how to
live on earth before
we think about moving on to Mars.
John M. Crisp, an op-ed
columnist for Tribune News
Service, teaches in the
English Department at Del
Mar College in Corpus Christi,
Texas.

THEIR VIEW

Only thing worse than this election may be the next one
By Mitch Albom
Contributing columnist

There is nothing more
to say.
This week, we will elect
a president. Barring the
release of some astonishing new information
— and given the bombshells that the FBI, Julian
Assange and “Access
Hollywood” have already
dropped, it would really
have to be astonishing —
people have heard all they
need to hear.
What more could I
add? Newspaper columns
have already urged you,
harangued you, belittled
you. Depending on your
source of media, you’ve
already been told why
Donald Trump is the
worst candidate in the
history of candidates, why
he’s a liar, a tax evader,
a hothead, an abuser of
women and a bad businessman.
You’ve already been
told why Hillary Clinton
can never be trusted,
enriches herself through a
questionable foundation,
has ink on her hands from
traitorous emails and
blood on her hands from
Benghazi.
Every pundit, blogger,
radio host or TV commentator has weighed
in. So have former politicians, pro athletes, church
pastors. There is only one
common thread, thin as
dental ﬂoss, that a majority of the country agrees
on:
These candidates are
awful. And how can they
be the best our nation of
300 million people has to
offer?
Which leaves me worried about the elections
to come. And something
almost impossible to
imagine:

That the candidates
won’t get any better.
Think about it. What
sane, accomplished, moral
individual would want to
run for president of this
country? No matter who
you are, by the time you
reach the second Tuesday
in November, your every
wart will be meteor-sized.
Your every offhanded
comment will have been
national conversation.
Your ﬁnances will be the
world’s business. Any
cause you supported,
from high school on, will
be used to deﬁne you —
negatively if possible.
Anyone with a grudge
from 40 years ago will get
a TV crew. Anyone you
served with or worked
with will have primetime access. If there’s an
ex-wife or ex-husband,
they — and the reason
they are exes — will be
fair game. So will your
children.
Anything you ever
typed into a computer can
be used to destroy you.
So can any conversation,
even secretly recorded
ones.
Our political process
has devolved into a public
ﬂogging. Your clothes
are ripped off, you hang
in the town square, and
every person with a keypad takes a spit at you
from Oregon to Florida.
Sound enticing?
Consider the recently
hacked email (and those
words alone will send
most decent candidates
running) in which the
head of Hillary Clinton’s
campaign and one of her
longtime advisers discussed how to “stick the
knife in” to Bernie Sanders, saying “crush him as
hard as you can.”
And this was a member
of their own party!

Now, consider accomplished, respected
businesspeople. They
have advanced degrees,
know how to negotiate
and lead, know ﬁnances,
trade. Such people might
make great presidents.
Why on earth would
they run? By the end,
their company would be
like a feather pillow that’s
been ripped and searched,
all of its ﬁnances would
be under scrutiny, something they might have
said at a banquet 10 years
ago could be international
news. If they lose, they
might have nothing to
come back to.
Forget it. Check them
off the list.
How about strong and
humble philanthropists?
Thoughtful artists? Pillars
of faith-based communities? Why would they
ever run for major ofﬁce?
A life of humility and
civility is terrible training
for a campaign. Being
savaged at debates? Harpooned for not ﬁghting
back? Would you take that
chance?
There is nothing in the
Constitution that says a
presidential candidate
must reveal every single
fact about his or her
private life. Or that he
or she must always have
taken the perfect stance.
In today’s Twitter world,
Abraham Lincoln would
have never survived his
pre-election comments
about blacks and whites
not being able to live
together, and John F.
Kennedy’s lovers would
all have their own talk
shows.
It’s not that America
doesn’t produce the best
and brightest. It’s that
those people are also
human, and if they’re
smart — which is what

you want — they don’t
want their heretofore
good lives redeﬁned by
opponents who want to
“stick the knife in.”
Which leaves you an
awfully narrow pool of
candidates. Either career
politicians with machinery behind them who have
taken these kind of darts
so often, they don’t care;
they can lie and falsepromise without ﬂinching. Or independently
rich, bloated egotists who
like the ﬁght and somehow believe money and
fame make them unsinkable.
Which come to think of
it, is a fairly accurate summary of the two we are
choosing from Tuesday.
And that’s what scares
me. Hate is rampant in
America. Media has lost
all sense of perspective.
You need billions — not
millions — to run for the
presidency, and the only
way a pure, well-meaning
leader will get that is
political promises that
will chew off his or her
soul.
Voters are scared. But
think how scared potential decent candidates
must be. It’s no accident
that if Clinton wins and
wins again, two families
(Bush, Clinton) will have
controlled the American
presidency for 28 of 36
years.
Sounds more like a
kingdom to me.
But what can we
expect when running for
president is like a torture
chamber inside an echo
chamber? Tuesday, I fear,
may only be the secondscariest election to think
about.
And that’s really scary.
Mitch Albom is a columnist for the
Detroit Free Press.

THEIR VIEW

Here’s what I’m going to do Wednesday morning
By Ralph Strangis

about you.”
“I’m giving you a clean slate.”
Yep — I’m putting away the
The dumpster ﬁre that is this
matches and clearing my browser
campaign cycle, infused by daily or and wiping my mind as best I can,
hourly bursts of fresh oxygen and
and I’m moving on.
seemingly unending scores of willThe evidence has been entered,
ing combatants armed with drums
nothing has been stricken, the
of kerosene and cords of fresh kinissues have been litigated, and the
dling, will ﬁnally be extinguished
jury has reached a verdict. The
Tuesday night.
people have spoken. And I’m cool
There may be more surprises to
with that.
be sure, but now it appears a more
I look at this way: Each side has
competitive race than a week ago.
accused the other of improprieties,
So it’s a good time for me to tell you legal wrongdoings and moral transwhat I’m going to do ﬁrst thing on
gressions, errors in judgment, quesWednesday.
tionable associates, sloppiness, bad
I’m going to go to the Internet
form and plain outright lying. And
and call up the most ﬂattering
on and on and on.
photo I can ﬁnd of our new presiAnd we can go look at all of it,
dent-elect. I’m going to look deeply interpret it, and give each piece of
at the image and I’m going to say
it our own measure of appropriate
aloud:
weight. And then we reach our own
“Congratulations Mr. or Madame verdicts.
President. You’re my president and
This election is a trial of two, the
I’m going to support you. I’m not
country is the jury room, and the
going to bad mouth you on what
people are the largest, most diverse
you’ve said and done already. I’m
jury ever assembled. Like members
not going to ﬁght with my friends
of any jury, some made up their
Contributing columnist

minds before opening statements,
some were swayed along the way,
and some still don’t know. But with
virtually unlimited assets on either
side it’s unlikely that there exists
even a tiny pebble in a remote forest not unturned for our examination. Everything has been asked and
answered and asked and answered.
We have all we need and then
some to reach a verdict, and for me
that’s the end of it. No need to have
another trial or assemble another
jury. I can’t see that 12 people in a
box would get it more right or more
wrong than we will.
Nope, these two get us as their
jury — all of us. They deserve it.
They’ve sequestered us for months
and now they’re going to abide by
our verdict.
And so will I.
But fear not dear friends, scraps
of paper and dry brush are right
over the next hill, and we’ve got no
shortage of matches.
Ralph Strangis is a writer, actor and motivational
speaker in Dallas. He wrote this for the Dallas
Morning News.

�LOCAL/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 8, 2016 5

Scenes from Monday’s open house

While it may be too warm for a The Grinch tree can be seen
real snowman, this one could be inside The Treasure Chest on
found on Court Street.
Main Street.

Cookies from Close to Home catering were available for those
stopping by The Daily Sentinel office on Monday.

The Meigs County Historical Society took part in Monday’s open
house, setting up at the Sentinel office, to sell chances on a fourwheeler which is being raffled off, as well as the latest Cat’s Meow
statues.

Monday’s nice weather brought shopping outside at Clark’s
Jewelry.

Sentinel photos

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

47°

62°

58°

Mild today; afternoon showers. A shower this
evening. High 67° / Low 45°

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.

73°
39°
61°
39°
86° in 1938
16° in 1967
(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
0.32
0.77
40.53
36.72

Today
7:04 a.m.
5:20 p.m.
1:52 p.m.
12:04 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Wed.
7:05 a.m.
5:19 p.m.
2:29 p.m.
1:06 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Full

Last

New

Nov 14 Nov 21 Nov 29

First

Dec 7

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

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

Major
5:59a
6:47a
7:34a
8:20a
9:08a
9:59a
10:54a

Minor
12:12p
12:34a
1:21a
2:07a
2:54a
3:44a
4:40a

Major
6:24p
7:12p
8:00p
8:46p
9:35p
10:27p
11:24p

Minor
---1:00p
1:47p
2:33p
3:21p
4:13p
5:09p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Nov. 8, 1972, a powerful storm hit
the Northeast with heavy rain, ﬂooding and high winds. In New York City,
the ﬁerce coastal gale drenched the
city with a record 5.1 inches of rain.

Breezy with partial
sunshine

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

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Logan
66/42

Lucasville
66/44
Portsmouth
67/45

Some sun

AIR QUALITY

51°
30°

0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER

Belpre
65/46

Athens
65/43

St. Marys
66/45

Parkersburg
67/45

Coolville
65/44

Elizabeth
66/46

Spencer
65/47

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.43 -0.03
Marietta
34 16.06 -0.20
Parkersburg
36 21.30 +0.06
Belleville
35 12.68 +0.12
Racine
41 13.35 -0.26
Point Pleasant
40 24.90 -0.17
Gallipolis
50 12.92 -0.30
Huntington
50 26.03 -0.07
Ashland
52 34.75 -0.07
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.15 -0.06
Portsmouth
50 16.00 -0.20
Maysville
50 34.30 +0.20
Meldahl Dam
51 14.90 -0.10
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Buffalo
68/46
Milton
68/46

St. Albans
70/46

Huntington
69/45

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
65/54
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
72/56
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
87/64
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Plenty of sunshine

Marietta
66/45

Murray City
66/41

Ironton
68/46

Ashland
69/46
Grayson
69/46

MONDAY

56°
37°

Cool with sunshine

Wilkesville
69/42
POMEROY
Jackson
67/45
68/43
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
66/47
68/44
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
62/42
GALLIPOLIS
67/45
66/47
67/46

South Shore Greenup
67/46
66/44

57

SUNDAY

59°
40°
Times of clouds and
sun

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
67/41

Waverly
64/46

SATURDAY

59°
36°

Abundant sunshine

Adelphi
65/42
Chillicothe
63/46

FRIDAY

60°
39°

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

0

Q: According to an old saying, ice in
November brings what in December?

SUN &amp; MOON

THURSDAY

A: Mud.

Precipitation

WEDNESDAY

54°
36°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Clendenin
71/40
Charleston
69/45

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
50/39
Montreal
57/44

Billings
67/44

Toronto
61/43

Minneapolis
58/37
Chicago
58/39

Denver
65/36

Detroit
59/42

New York
66/50
Washington
68/52

Kansas City
63/36

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

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
64/39/s
37/31/pc
70/50/pc
68/48/s
68/47/s
67/44/s
70/45/s
59/43/s
69/45/pc
69/45/s
62/33/s
58/39/c
63/44/sh
65/46/sh
66/44/sh
70/59/c
65/36/s
62/36/pc
59/42/c
84/70/pc
76/61/c
61/44/sh
63/36/c
81/59/s
65/52/c
87/64/s
68/46/c
82/68/pc
58/37/pc
69/48/pc
77/65/t
66/50/s
61/48/c
81/60/pc
67/51/s
89/63/s
65/45/pc
57/37/s
69/47/s
68/47/s
64/43/sh
64/43/s
72/56/s
65/54/pc
68/52/s

Hi/Lo/W
60/37/s
40/35/c
71/45/pc
61/37/sh
59/37/sh
74/42/s
67/41/s
58/39/sh
54/36/c
67/39/pc
71/42/s
55/38/s
54/36/pc
51/38/c
51/35/pc
67/53/pc
72/38/s
62/40/s
52/36/pc
84/71/sh
74/56/pc
55/36/s
61/39/s
80/58/s
66/38/pc
92/63/s
59/40/s
82/67/pc
60/42/s
65/38/s
74/60/pc
57/38/sh
63/39/s
79/59/pc
58/40/sh
84/61/s
51/34/sh
52/32/sh
65/40/pc
60/39/sh
60/40/s
66/41/s
70/55/s
63/48/pc
60/42/sh

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

El Paso
70/44
Chihuahua
69/44

High
Low

Atlanta
70/50

Global

Houston
76/61

Monterrey
74/60

91° in McAllen, TX
14° in Antero Reservoir, CO

High
113° in Marble Bar, Australia
Low -46° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
82/68

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

60647073

TODAY

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

$?/=.+CM��9@/7,/&lt;��M� �� �s�

Cook competes in 3rd state CC meet
By Paul Boggs

pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Eastern junior Jessica Cook competes in the Division III girls state cross country
race on Saturday at National Trail Raceway.

HEBRON, Ohio — With the
weather being favorable for
runners, but the ﬁeld being
challenging regardless, Eastern
junior Jessica Cook competed
on Saturday in her third state
cross country race.
That’s correct.
It was indeed her third state
appearance in as many years
of high school for the standout
distance runner, as Cook completed the 5K course at National Trail Raceway in 20 minutes
and 34 seconds.
Cook, once again competing
in the Division III girls race,
placed 98th overall out of 179
runners — as she qualiﬁed for

the state race as an individual
for the second consecutive
season.
After the opening mile, Cook
was in 61st, having gone out in
ﬁve minutes and 59 seconds —
but she dropped 24 spots in the
second mile, completing two
miles in 12:49.
She then fell back 13 more
spots over the course of the
ﬁnal mile, and crossed the ﬁnish line in 98th in 20:34.
“Today felt better than last
year, because I started out way
too fast so I started out slower
this year,” said Cook.
Two years ago, Cook qualiﬁed along with the entire Eastern girls team — as it placed
ninth as a squad with Cook
capturing 21st place in 19:35.

Last season, she ﬁnished
43rd in 20 seconds slower
(19:55).
She maintained her initial
appearance has been her best
of the three trips.
“I still think the ﬁrst one
was my best one because I
really didn’t know what I was
doing and I went out better,”
said Cook. “And I still had my
whole team that ﬁrst year, so I
had people to pace off of that I
always run with every day.”
Cook’s personal best cross
country time is actually 19 minutes and ﬁve seconds.
On Saturday, it was sunny
with temperatures topping out
in the low 60s — a stark contrast from Cook’s freshman run.
See COOK | 7

Old Dominion
dominates Herd
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

NORFOLK, Va. — There will be no bowl game
for Marshall this season.
With a 38-14 loss in Saturday’s Conference USA
tilt at Old Dominion, the Thundering Herd fell to
2-7 on the season and, with just three games left,
MU will not reach the six-win mark required for
bowl eligibility.
The Monarchs (6-3, 4-1 CUSA) — who have
now won back-to-back games and ﬁve out of their
last six — scored on the game’s opening drive as
Jonathan Duhart scored on a nine-yard pass from
David Washington.
After forcing Marshall (2-7, 1-4) into a threeand-out, ODU drove 79 yards for its second touchdown of the game, which came on a 33-yard Ray
Lawry run. Old Dominion place kicker Brad Davis
was 2-for-2 on ﬁrst quarter extra-point kicks, making the hosts’ lead 14-0 with 7:05 remaining in the
opening period.
With just 35 seconds left in the opening period,
Marshall cut the deﬁcit in half, as Chase Litton
found Ryan Yurachek for a ﬁve-yard scoring pass
and Amoreto Curraj made the point-after kick.
ODU extended its lead back to 14, as it scored
on its ﬁrst drive of the second period, when Zach
Pascal hauled in a 23-yard touchdown pass from
Washington, and Davis made the point-after kick.
Neither team could score again before the half,
leaving the Herd behind 21-7. In the ﬁrst half,
ODU held a 15-to-5 advantage in ﬁrst downs and a
281-to-122 edge in total offense.
The Thundering Herd went three-and-out to
start the second half, which led to a 68-yard ODU
scoring drive. Old Dominion’s 5-play, 1:59 drive
was capped off by a three-yard pass from Washington to Travis Fulgham and an extra-point by Davis.
After ﬁve consecutive three and outs — three by
MU and two by ODU — the Monarchs were back
on the scoreboard, as Davis made a 20-yard ﬁeld
goal, with 36 seconds left in the third.
After forcing the Herd to punt for the seventh
time in the game with 12:53 left in the game, the
Monarchs went 63 yards in 9:45, increasing the
lead to 38-7. The 17th play of the drive was a oneyard scoring run by Blake Larussa, which was followed by a successful extra-point kick by Davis.
Marshall scored on its ﬁnal drive of the game, as
— with two second left in regulation — Emmanuel Byrd caught a 22-yard touchdown by from Garet
Morrell. Curraj made the extra-point kick, putting
the ﬁnal touches on the 38-14 setback.
For the game, Marshall was outgained 461-to214, including 262-to-76 on the ground. ODU also
held a 26-to-10 advantage in ﬁrst downs. Neither
team committed a turnover in the game.
Litton was 17-of-26 passing for 87 yards with
one touchdown for the Herd, while Morrell was
See HERD | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, November 8
College Volleyball
Kentucky Christian at Rio Grande, 7 p.m.
Friday, November 11
Football
(14) North Marion at (3) Point Pleasant, 7:30
College Volleyball
Rio Grande at KIAC Tournament at WVU-Tech,
TBA
Saturday, November 12
College Football
Middle Tennessee at Marshall, 7 p.m.
Ohio State at Maryland, TBA
West Virginia at Texas, TBA

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Southern senior Crenson Rogers (18) attempts to break a Trimble tackle during Saturday night’s Division VII, Region 27 football playoff
game at Glouster Memorial Stadium.

Tomcats pull away from Tornadoes
By Paul Boggs

Southern struck —
ﬁnally — with 6:50
remaining, on a 60-yard
touchdown strike from
GLOUSTER, Ohio
quarterback Blake John— It only took a single
minute for the Tornadoes son to tight end Crenson
Rogers.
to make things seem
The Tornadoes then
interesting.
Unfortunately for visit- recovered an onside kick
ing Southern, it was way — and Johnson found
Rogers open again on
too little — and way too
the very next play for
late.
And with that, the Tor- 29 yards to the Tomcat
10-yard-line.
nadoes’ terriﬁc football
Unfortunately for the
season came to an end
Purple and Gold, the
on Saturday night — as
comeback bid and march
Southern fell to the
forward ended there.
Trimble Tomcats 21-6 in
Jaylen Blanks was
a Division VII, Region
tackled for a seven-yard
27 quarterﬁnal inside
loss on 1st-and-goal,
Glouster Memorial StaJohnson was sacked for a
dium.
10-yard loss on the next
“I am very proud of
our kids and their effort, snap — and Max Hooper
intercepted Johnson on
especially these 11
seniors. They fought and the Tornadoes’ ﬁnal play
of the season at the ﬁveplayed a good football
minute mark.
team,” said Southern
With the loss, the Torcoach Mike Chancey.
“But give credit to Trim- nadoes’ campaign conble, they made plays and cluded at 8-3, as Southern
did a lot of good things.” was making only its
second all-time playoff
Trailing 7-0 for the
appearance.
majority of the contest,
The other was also
but engaged in a hardfought battle against their following an 8-2 regular
season — in 2013 that
Tri-Valley Conference
ended in the regional
Hocking Division rivals,
the Tornadoes hung right quarterﬁnals.
In addition, Southwith the Tomcats — until
ern’s infamous struggles
the bottom dropped out
against Trimble continin a matter of two minued, as the Tornadoes
utes and 12 seconds.
lost their 26th straight
That’s because the
meeting against the Tomfourth-seeded Tomcats
(9-2) scored twice in that cats.
The ﬁrst 25, including
span to make it 21-0,
seriously putting the ﬁfth- this year’s 42-14 defeat,
seeded Tornadoes behind are all in the regular
season dating back to
the eight-ball with only
the series resumption
nine-and-a-half minutes
in 1992, as 1973 —
left to play.

pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Trimble’s ﬁrst year of
existence — remains the
Tornadoes’ only triumph.
Although, it appeared
for a while that the Tornadoes might ﬁnd a way to
pull off a playoff win.
However, their possessions were limited, as
they only had three in the
ﬁrst half and four in the
second.
While their three ﬁrsthalf possessions featured
drives of 12, seven and
11 plays, the Tornadoes
went three-and-out on
the opening two in the
second half — followed
by their three-play, oneminute scoring drive and
ﬁnal four-play series.
But those ﬁrst-half
drives not resulting in a
single point loomed large
for Southern.
The Tornadoes took
the opening kickoff, held
the ball for ﬁve minutes
and 33 seconds, and
promptly picked up ﬁve
ﬁrst downs in driving
from their own 31 to the
Trimble 8.
However, they fumbled
on 1st-and-goal — and
the Tomcats recovered at
the 6:22 mark of the ﬁrst
quarter.
Trimble answered with
an eight-play scoring
drive, which also featured
ﬁve ﬁrst downs in moving
all the way from its own 9
to the Tornado 27.
Finally, facing 4thand-3, Tomcat quarterback Gary Brooks called
his own number on a
quick inside sneak.
But Brooks, believe it
or not, went untouched

right up the middle —
and shockingly was in
the end zone with 2:53
remaining in the period.
Hooper, who made all
three of his extra-point
kicks, hit his ﬁrst for the
7-0 lead — which held
up until only 10 minutes
remained.
On Southern’s second
drive, it quickly moved
from its own 40 to twice
inside the red zone, highlighted by Riley Roush’s
run for 32 yards.
But the seven-play, twoand-a-half minute drive
ended at the Tomcat 18
— when the Tornadoes
turned the ball over on
downs.
Trimble then went
three-and-out at the outset of the second quarter,
as the Tornadoes then
marched 11 plays in ﬁve
minutes and 10 seconds
from their own 48 to as
far as the 1-yard-line.
Johnson’s 33-yard
completion to Rogers
set up Southern at the
Trimble 4.
On 3rd-and-goal from
the 1, Johnson snuck in
for an apparent touchdown — but it was negated by a ﬁve-yard illegal
shift penalty.
The next play resulted
in a two-yard loss, before
a second straight turnover on downs on an
incomplete pass.
Chancey talked about
the missed opportunities
for his club.
Especially since Southern ran just 13 plays in
See TOMCATS | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Herd

nandez combined for
another sack. Rodney
Allen forced a fumble,
his fourth of the season,
From page 6
an broke up two passes
3-for-3 for 51 yards and in the setback.
one score.
For the hosts, WashTony Pittman led the ington completed
guests on the ground
16-of-27 pass attempts
with 52 yards on nine
for 199 yards and three
carries, followed by
scores.
Hyleck Foster with 28
Lawry posted a gameyards on four tries.
best 209 yards with
Josh Knight led the
one score on 27 carMU receiving corp with ries. Duhart paced Old
34 yards on six catches, Dominion’s receivers
while Foster added 12
with ﬁve catches for 68
yards on four recepyards and one score.
Oshane Ximines had
tions. Byrd Yurachek
a pair of sacks to lead
both had 26 yards and
the ODU defense, while
one touchdown on
Brandon Addison had
three and two catches
ﬁve pass break-ups.
respectively.
The Herd returns to
Defensively, MarHuntington on Saturshall was led by Corey
day, where it will host
Neely with 11 tackles,
6-3 Middle Tennessee
followed by Chase
State. ODU will play
Hancock and Nyquan
Harris with eight each. host to 5-4 Southern
Ty Tyler came up with a Miss on Saturday.
sack for the Herd, while Alex Hawley can be reached at
Harris and Frankie Her- 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Tomcats

10 seconds — ended
with Pickett reaching
paydirt with 10 minutes
remaining.
From page 6
Perhaps the play of
the entire second half,
the game occurred in
including the back-tothat drive, when Brooks
back three-and-outs
— on 4th-and-21 from
on its ﬁrst two possesthe Southern 35 —
sions.
completed a pass to
“When you have
Hooper for 29 yards.
opportunities to score,
Brooks’ only other
you can’t stop yourself,”
completion on four
he said. “What hapattempts was a hookpened in week seven,
and-lateral connection
we did not play well,
with Jacob Hardy for
but we played a lot
six yards.
better and executed
Following Southern’s
a lot better tonight.
second three-and-out,
But when you have an
Pickett picked up 40
opportunity to score,
yards off tackle to the
you have to get points.
3-yard line — then
We made some misscored again three plays
takes tonight that hurt
later to make it 21-0
ourselves.When you
with eight minutes left.
play a good football
Johnson completed
team like Trimble, small
8-of-19 passes for 162
things like turnovers or
yards, with Rogers
penalties become magrecording ﬁve recepniﬁed.”
tions for 141, including
The Tomcats, conthe 60-yard touchdown.
versely, relied heavily
Roush rushed for 48
on their two-tight end
yards on nine carries,
wishbone running
as Southern only had
attack — just as they
76 rushing yards on 24
did in the regular-seaattempts as a team.
son matchup.
Saturday’s game was
After rushing for 370
the ﬁnal for 11 Southyards on 47 carries and
ern seniors — Johnson,
only attempting three
Rogers, Blanks, Clayton
passes in week seven,
Wood, Ike Akers, Kody
Trimble rushed for 262
Greene, Colton Holyards on 52 totes on
brook, Trey Pickens,
Saturday night.
Brody Richards, JorKamron Curry cardan Fisher and Curtis
ried 23 times for 92
Counts.
yards, as Brooks — pri“These seniors have
marily on short-yardage
done everything we’ve
sneaks — added 49
asked them to do. They
yards on 13 attempts.
are a bunch of good
Dominic Pickett,
kids and they’ve been
though, led all rusha pleasure to coach,”
ers with 117 yards on
said Chancey. “It hurts
13 carries, and scored
from four and two yards a lot right now for all
of us and I hate it for
out early in the fourth
these kids, but at the
quarter.
end of the day, we came
The Tomcats’ ﬁrst
up and played with a
11-play drive of at
great effort. I love these
least ﬁve-and-a half
kids and I’m very proud
minutes in the second
half resulted in a Dylan of them for what they
accomplished this seaSmith interception,
son.”
but the second — a
40-yard march that con- Paul Boggs can be reached at
sumed six minutes and 740-446-2342, ext. 2106

Cook

cheering you on. So
it’s boring. But the ﬁrst
mile and third mile,
there’s people everyFrom page 6
where around,” said
That day, it was 34
Cook.
degrees, but the wind
Speaking of spectawas especially brutal
tors, Cook thanked
upon the runners.
her family and support
Conditions were also group — which hopes
improved last season.
to see her run one ﬁnal
As for the course
time at the state meet
setup, the ﬁrst and
next year.
“It’s exciting because
third miles are mainly
you see everybody from
contested near the full
your home supporting
grandstands, whereas
the second mile is not. you. I think that’s cool,”
“The second mile you she said. “Hopefully I
do better.”
have a lot of turns and
you’re in a ﬁeld where
Paul Boggs can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2106
there’s no one there

Tuesday, November 8, 2016 7

Lady Knights fall to Chapmanville in Region IV semi
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

WINFIELD, W.Va. —
So much for beginners
luck.
The Point Pleasant
volleyball team’s ﬁrstever trip to the regional
tournament didn’t exactly
go the Lady Knights way,
as Chapmanville claimed
a straight games victory
over PPHS, in a Class AA
Region IV semiﬁnal on
Saturday at Winﬁeld High
School.
The Lady Knights (1712) initially led in the
opening game, but the
Lady Tigers (31-9) took
the a 7-4 lead with a 5-0
run. Point Pleasant never
regained the advantage in
the ﬁrst game, falling by a
25-20 ﬁnal.
Chapmanville scored
the ﬁrst ﬁve points and
led wire-to-wire in the
second, taking the game
by a 25-16 margin.
In the third game, Point
Pleasant battled back
from an early deﬁcit to
take the lead at 5-3. CHS
regained the advantage at
15-10, thanks to a 7-0 run.
The Lady Knights fought
back to take the lead at
21-19, but surrendered
four straight points to
Chapmanville. PPHS cut
the deﬁcit to one-point
at 23-22, but the Lady
Tigers scored the next
two points and won the
third by a 25-22 ﬁnal, capping off the 3-0 sweep.
“There’s always those
jitters when you’re in a
place that you’ve never
been before,” said secondyear PPHS head coach
Marla Cottrill. “(Chapmanville) capitalized on
a lot of things that we
weren’t doing. Unfortunately, we didn’t work out
those bugs until the third
set.”
The Point Pleasant
service attack was led

Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

Point Pleasant junior Brenna Dotson (3) goes for a spike in front of teammates Olivia Dotson (8) and
Lanea Cochran (11), during the Class AA Region IV semifinal, on Saturday at Winfield High School.

by senior Michaela Cottrill with 14 points and
two aces. Olivia Dotson
and Lanea Cochran each
posted ﬁve points, including four aces by Dotson.
Brenna Dotson marked
four points in the setback,
while Gracie Cottrill
added two.
At the net, PPHS was
led by senior Luiza Da
Costa with six kills and
two blocks. Cochran
was next with ﬁve kills
and ﬁve blocks, followed
by Brenna Dotson with
four kills and six blocks.
Michaela Cottrill ﬁnished
with four kills and one
block, Olivia Dotson
chipped in with three
kills, two blocks and
seven assists, while Gracie Cottrill contributed
two kills and a team-best
10 assists.
“We didn’t have our
libero Peyton Jordan

and yes, that hurt us a
little bit,” Coach Cottrill
said. “Madison Hatﬁeld
stepped up and did what
she had to do. She’s still a
little inexperienced playing back row, kudos to
her for playing the back
row, working hard and
doing what she could do.”
Chapmanville — which
swept its ﬁrst four
postseason opponents
— had its perfect tournament streak come to an
end later on Saturday,
as Winﬁeld claimed a
straight games victory
over the Lady Tigers,
in the Region IV ﬁnal.
Both CHS and WHS will
compete in the state tournament on Friday, facing
James Monroe and PikeView respectively.
This marks the ﬁnal
game in the careers of
Point Pleasant seniors
Michaela Cottrill, Luiza

Da Costa and Karlee
Edmonds.
“We have three seniors
and they’re all going to
be missed in their own
way,” said Coach Cottrill.
“Michaela is our speaking
captain, she’s an athlete,
she hustles and she’s
encouraging to the girls.
(Michaela) is one of those
girls that sees things on
the court and can tell
they other girls what to
do. Karlee Edmonds is
one of those players that
will do whatever I ask
her to and she’ll give
everything she has. Luiza
is a front row attacker
from Brazil and she’s ﬁt
in since day one. It’s like
she’s been with these girls
since sixth grade and
she’s an encouragement
to the girls.”
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Buckeyes bury Nebraska, 62-3
By Jim Naveau
jnaveau@civitasmedia.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio
– The uniforms were a
throwback to 1916 but
the game looked more
like a replay of the ﬁrst
four games of this season
when Ohio State’s offense
seemed almost unstoppable and its defense looked
close to unbreakable.
No. 6 Ohio State (8-1,
5-1 Big Ten) routed No.
10 Nebraska (7-2, 4-2 Big
Ten) 62-3 on Saturday
night in Ohio Stadium
in the kind of dominating performance that
has been missing since
OSU rolled over Bowling
Green, Tulsa, Oklahoma
and Rutgers by an average of 47 points a game
to open the season.
The suspicion going
into the game was that
Nebraska was probably
over-rated, maybe a paper
tiger.
If the Cornhuskers were
a paper tiger, Ohio State
was a high-powered paper
shredder.
Any doubts Ohio State
was a changed team, at
least for one night, were
dispelled when it turned
a big 31-3 halftime lead
into an even bigger lead
in the second half.
“Wow, I didn’t see that
one coming,” Ohio State
coach Urban Meyer said.
“Their only loss was a
hard-fought overtime
game last week. A to Z,
it was a very good performance by our guys.”
OSU’s offense rolled up
590 total yards. Quarterback J.T. Barrett threw
for 290 yards and four
touchdowns, including a
75-yard hook-up with Curtis Samuel, who rushed
for 41 yards and caught 8

passes for 137 yards and
two touchdowns.
“J.T. played fantastic
and was very sharp. We
ﬁnally hit some downtown shots to Curtis
(Samuel) and Curtis was
outstanding. He’s a piece
of the puzzle and a giant
piece of the puzzle. Now
we’re starting to put it all
together,” Meyer said.
Meyer liked what he
saw from Ohio State’s
receivers, something he
hasn’t been able to say
recently.
“It is a little relief to
know that I saw some
explosiveness that we
have kind of been lacking
in some positions. We’ve
all been waiting for that
to happen and no better
time than the month of
November to get that
thing going,” he said.
“We have not been
explosive at receiver this
year. Our receivers were
running very sharp, very
crisp routes against a
good secondary. And J.T.
was delivering the ball.
I thought our receivers
played outstanding.”
Two of the Buckeyes’
touchdowns belonged
to a defense that held
Nebraska to 204 yards
and nine ﬁrst downs.
Cornerback Damon
Webb’s 36-yard interception return on the third
play of the game produced OSU’s ﬁrst touchdown of the game and
Malik Hooker’s second
pick six of the season was
the Buckeyes’ next-to-last
touchdown.
Ohio State scored on
its ﬁrst play in the third
quarter when Barrett hit
Samuel around Nebraska’s 45-yard line, he broke
a tackle and was gone for

75 yards.
Barrett found Noah
Brown for a 6-yard touchdown pass on OSU’s next
possession for a 45-3
lead. Tyler Durbin’s second ﬁeld goal of the night
and Hooker’s 48-yard
interception return for a
touchdown made it 55-3
going into the fourth
quarter.
Back-up quarterback
Joe Burrow’s 12-yard
touchdown run pushed
the lead to 62-3 with 7:19
to play.
Ohio State’s big early
lead was temporarily overshadowed by a
scary injury to Nebraska
quarterback Tommy Armstrong Jr., who landed on
his head as he scrambled
for a ﬁrst down six minutes before halftime.
Armstrong was
immobilized on a back
board and taken from
the stadium in an ambulance. Nebraska team
medical personnel later
reported he had brieﬂy
been knocked out, but
was moving all extremities. Then, ﬁve minutes
into the second half, he
walked into the stadium
and watched the rest of
the game from Nebraska’s
sideline.
Nebraska’s 59-point loss
was the second-biggest
margin of defeat in the
program’s history after a
70-10 loss to Texas Tech
in 2004.
“That was real bad and
we’re all responsible for
it. And Ohio State played
real well,” Nebraska coach
Mike Riley said. “We
were beaten thoroughly
in all the phases and it
didn’t really remind me of
our team.
“I thought we were

tight early and the fact of
the matter is we couldn’t
get them off the ﬁeld
defensively. This game
came out of the blue,” he
said.
Ohio State jumped out
to a 7-0 lead when Webb
intercepted Armstrong
and returned it 36 yards
for a touchdown with
13:26 left in the ﬁrst
quarter. Linebacker Raekwon McMillan tipped
the pass and Marshon
Lattimore helped jar
the ball loose from the
intended receiver.
Nebraska’s only score
of the ﬁrst half came on
a 20-yard ﬁeld goal by
Drew Brown on its next
possession. But from
there until the end of
the game, it was all OSU
when the Buckeyes ran
off 55 unanswered points.
Barrett’s 7-yard touchdown pass to Terry
McLaurin made it 14-3
after one quarter.
The lead grew to 21-3
ﬁve plays into the second quarter when Mike
Weber ran through a huge
hole the left side of the
offensive line had created
to score on a 23-yard
touchdown run.
After a 24-yard ﬁeld
goal by Durbin made it
24-3 with 8:22 left in the
ﬁrst half, Barrett’s 1-yard
jump pass to Samuel for
a touchdown with three
seconds left in the ﬁrst
half put OSU up 31-3.
Ohio State will continue its pursuit of a Big
Ten East Division championship next Saturday
at Maryland (5-4, 2-4 Big
Ten). Kickoff time for
that game will be 3:30
p.m.
Reach Jim Naveau at 567-242-0414
or on Twitter at @Lima_Naveau.

�SPORTS

8 Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Daily Sentinel

URG men win RSC title in CC
By Randy Payton

and Carpenter in 26:49.
Senior Kyle Sanborn
(Dover, OH) was ﬁfth
BECKLEY, W.Va. - The after crossing in 27:10,
University of Rio Grande senior Dustin Moritz
captured the men’s team (Ironton, OH) placed
championship at the 2016 seventh in 27:36 and
sophomore Mike Norris
River States Conference
(Dayton, OH) ended up
Cross Country Championship, which was hosted ninth in 27:57.
Freshman River Spicer
by West Virginia Univer(West Milton, OH) comsity-Tech on Saturday
afternoon at The Summit pleted Rio’s lineup by
ﬁnishing 20th in 28:55.
Bechtel Reserve.
Other individual
As a result of the win,
national qualiﬁers includthe RedStorm earned a
ed Douglas Negrete
trip to the NAIA Cross
Country National Cham- (WVU Tech), Salvador
Campos (IU East), Caleb
pionship on Saturday,
Woodard (Asbury) and
Nov. 19 in Elshah, Ill.
Blake Brooks (IU East).
Head coach Bob WilThe top 14 ﬁnishers
ley’s squad had six of the
top nine - and each of the were declared All-River
States Conference, with
ﬁrst three - ﬁnishers in
the ﬁrst seven ﬁnishers
the race. The top three
named to the First Team
ﬁnishers were separated
and the next seven ﬁnishby just two seconds.
ers to the Second Team.
Senior Dallas Guy
The conference also
(Buffalo, OH) took
named a Champions of
top honors with a ﬁnCharacter Team, with
ish of 26:47, just ahead
one individual from each
of senior Blake Freed
team chosen as the one
(Uhrichsville, OH) and
sophomore Kameron Car- who best exhibits the ﬁve
core character values of
penter (Newark, OH).
the NAIA’s Champions
Freed crossed in 26:48
For Ohio Valley Publishing

URG courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Lucy Williams ran to a fourth place finish
individually and helped lead the RedStorm to a team title and
national championship meet berth at Saturday’s River States
Conference championship at Beckley, W.Va.

Rio women win
RSC CC title

URG courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Dallas Guy (left) leads a trio of RedStorm runners
during Saturday’s River States Conference championship in
Beckley, W.Va. Guy won the individual title and the RedStorm took
the team title to qualify for the NAIA national championship meet.

of Character program of
respect, responsibility,
integrity, servant leadership and sportsmanship.
Rio Grande’s honoree

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

By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

BECKLEY, W.Va. — The University of Rio
Grande captured the women’s team championship
at the 2016 River States Conference Cross Country Championship, which was hosted by West Virginia University-Tech on Saturday morning at The
Summit Bechtel Reserve.
By virtue of the victory, the RedStorm earned a
trip to the NAIA Cross Country National Championship on Saturday, Nov. 19 in Elshah, Ill.
Head coach Bob Willey’s squad had four of the
top 12 ﬁnishers in the race, with sophomore Lucy
Williams (Athens, OH) posting the top showing
by ﬁnishing fourth in 19:46.
Sophomore Maggie Dellinger (Washington
Court House, OH), junior Rachel Ball (Chillicothe, OH) and junior Aubrey Dunfee (Baltimore,
OH) ﬁnished 10th, 11th and 12th, respectively.
Dellinger crossed in 21:19, Ball ﬁnished in 21:27
and Dunfee posted a time of 21:33.
Also for the RedStorm, junior Keri Lawrence
(Pomeroy, OH) was 16th in a time of 21:58, junior
Emili Sannes (Carlisle, OH) placed 24th with a
ﬁnish of 22:39 and senior Alex Ellis (Ona, WV)
was 27th in 22:48.
Asbury (Ky.) University senior Katy Falkenberg
was the individual champion for the second time
in her career, winning the 5K race with a time of
19:16.
Other individual national qualiﬁers included
Katie Guarnaccia (Point Park), Anna Shields
(Point Park) and Brittany Sloan (IU Kokomo).
The top 14 ﬁnishers were declared All-River
States Conference, with the ﬁrst seven ﬁnishers
named to the First Team and the next seven ﬁnishers to the Second Team.
The conference also named a Champions of
Character Team, with one individual from each
team chosen as the one who best exhibits the ﬁve
core character values of the NAIA’s Champions
of Character program of respect, responsibility,
integrity, servant leadership and sportsmanship.
Rio Grande’s honoree was freshman Kelsey
Miller (Georgetown, OH).
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the University of
Rio Grande.

Ravens frustrate
Steelers in 21-14 win
BALTIMORE (AP) — The Baltimore Ravens
frustrated longtime nemesis Ben Roethlisberger
long enough to build a three-touchdown lead.
By the time Roethlisberger ﬁnally found his
groove, it was too late.
Joe Flacco threw a 95-yard touchdown pass
to former Steeler Mike Wallace, and the Ravens
beat Pittsburgh 21-14 on Sunday to snap a fourgame losing streak.
Baltimore (4-4) moved into a tie atop the
AFC North with the Steelers (4-4), who have
dropped three in a row.
Three weeks after undergoing surgery on his
right knee, Roethlisberger returned well ahead
of schedule. Playing for the ﬁrst time since Oct.
16, the 13-year veteran looked out of sync until
the fourth quarter, when he directed a 75-yard
drive that got the Steelers to 21-7 with 8:38
remaining.
Before that, Pittsburgh’s offense produced
only two ﬁrst downs and was limited to 69
yards. The Steelers totaled 36 yards rushing, 32
by Le’Veon Bell.
Roethlisberger ran for a 4-yard score with
48 seconds left, but Chris Boswell botched the
onside kick — barely knocking it off the tee —
and Baltimore closed out its fourth straight win
over Pittsburgh (including playoffs).
“The bottom line is we put ourselves in a big
hole with some adversity, some of which was
created by us,” Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said.

Cowboys beat Browns, 35-10
CLEVELAND (AP) —
Tony Romo will get more
work at practice this
week, moving the Dallas
quarterback closer to his
long-awaited comeback.
That day looks as far
off as ever.
Until further notice,
the Cowboys are Dak
Prescott’s team. End of
discussion.
Prescott threw three
touchdown passes ,
maybe three of the easiest scores the rookie will
have in his career, and
Ezekiel Elliott ran for
two TDs as Dallas won
its seventh straight,
35-10 on Sunday over
the hapless Cleveland
Browns.
Prescott improved to
7-1 as a starter, and his
latest performance has
pushed Romo deeper
into the background of
what is developing into
a special season for the
Cowboys.
Following the game,
Dallas owner Jerry Jones
was peppered with the
usual questions about
a quarterback situation
that may never reach
controversial levels.

Prescott has the Cowboys rolling, and despite
his love and loyalty
toward the 36-year-old
Romo, Jones, who has
made rash decisions in
the past, doesn’t appear
ready to make any
moves.
“We’ve got a great
luxury and wonderful
problem to have,” Jones
said. “We’ve got some
real talent at our quarterback position. I think
Tony Romo is one of the
best quarterbacks that
has played this game.
“My real regret would
be to have had him here
and not win a Super
Bowl with him. He’s that
talented. And then I look
at Dak and how he’s playing, his future.
“I just don’t have a
problem with this situation.”
Romo returned to
practice last week, and
while his exact progress
remains something of
a mystery, Prescott has
only strengthened his
grip on the starting job.
The fourth-round
draft pick completed
21 of 27 passes for 247

yards against the woeful Browns (0-9), who
offered little resistance
and are more than halfway to a winless season.
Prescott and the Cowboys built a 25-point lead
after three quarters and
coasted to their most
lopsided win this season
in front of thousands of
Dallas fans, who invaded
FirstEnergy Stadium and
made the guys in blue
and white feel as if they
were home.
“It’s America’s Team,”
Prescott said of the
support. “I expect that
everywhere we go.”
And it’s getting to the
point where the expectations for Prescott are
soaring as well. He broke
a few more of Troy Aikman’s rookie passing
records and showed
uncanny poise for a player with only eight games
under his belt.
“He doesn’t act like
a rookie,” said tight
end Jason Witten, who
caught a 26-yard pass
from Prescott . “He’s
critical of himself when
he makes mistakes. He
takes ownership in it.

Through eight weeks you
look at what he’s done,
it speaks volumes about
him, his preparation and
his ability to trust the
people around him. He’s
done a great job.”
Prescott looks as if
he’s going to keep it for
a while.
BAD, BAD BROWNS:
Cleveland is hoping to
avoid joining the 2008
Detroit Lions as the only
teams in league history
to go 0-16.
First-year coach
Hue Jackson, who has
endured several seasons
worth of injuries, said his
team’s problems are too
numerous to single out
one.
“It is not just about
the defense,” he said.
“It is me. It starts with
the coaching. It is a topdown deal. We are not
playing well right now
anyplace. It is not just
defense. It is offensively
and special teams. I am
not just going to dump
on one group. We have
to play better as a team.
We are not playing good
enough, and that is what
it is.”

6 drivers have 1 race for final 2 spots
FORT WORTH,
Texas (AP) — After the
rain, Carl Edwards will
be racing for a championship in NASCAR’s
season finale.
Jimmie Johnson was
already locked into one
of the title-contending
spots at Homestead.
So that leaves two
spots for the final four
in the deciding Sprint
Cup race Nov. 20. And
there are six drivers —
half of them Edwards’
teammates with Joe
Gibbs Racing —with
one more chance to
claim them next Sunday
at Phoenix.
Edwards got the victory he so desperately
needed to advance when
he won a rain-shortened
race at Texas. It was
cut by 41 laps because
of rain late Sunday
night after the start
was delayed nearly six
hours.
“I feel like this is what
we needed to do. We
were able to do that.
There’s a lot of pride
in that,” Edwards said.
“To be able to run like
we did tonight, for the

pit crew to perform
the way they did, it’s
really great. I think it’s
a testament to the team
that Coach Gibbs put
together.”
Gibbs drivers Kyle
Busch, Matt Kenseth
and Denny Hamlin
are still in contention
for the final spots.
They go to Phoenix
third through fifth in
the points standings,
though separated by
only two points.
“Next week will be
super competitive,”
Gibbs said. “For us
and our guys, I know
all three of them want
this. They really want it
bad.”
Team Penske driver
Joey Logano, who led
a race-high 178 laps at
Texas before finishing
second, is listed second
in the points with a tiebreaker over Kyle Bush.
Kenseth is only one
point back, with Hamlin
one behind him.
Kevin Harvick is sixth
in points, 18 back, but
goes to Phoenix where
he won his track-record
eighth race in March

and has won six of the
last eight.
“We will just go there
and do what we always
do and race as hard as
we can,” Harvick said.
If one of the remaining six contenders
doesn’t win at Phoenix,
the final two spots
will be determined by
points.
Harvick and Kurt
Busch, his Stewart-Haas
teammate who is 34
points back in eighth,
are both likely in the
position of needing a
victory at Phoenix for a
title chance.
That is pretty much
the situation Edwards
faced when he got to
Texas eighth in points
among the drivers still
eligible for the championship, a week after
a cut tire and crash led
to a 36th-place finish at
Martinsville.
Winning a rainshortened race provided
a bit of vindication for
Edwards.
Last year’s race at
Phoenix was delayed
nearly seven hours as a
series of storms passed

through the area, and
then once it started at
night, it was called after
218 laps. Edwards finished fifth, leaving him
five points out of the
final spot for the Chase
finale.
“This rain was a lot
more welcome than that
rain,” Edwards said.
“That was frustrating.”
Edwards took the lead
on lap 258 after beating
Martin Truex Jr. off pit
road, and led the rest of
the way.
Light rain was already
falling and plenty more
was on the radar around
the track, when the caution came out with 45
laps remaining of the
originally scheduled
334-lap race.
All cars were brought
to pit road four laps
later, and it was only
a few more minutes
before NASCAR
declared the race over
and official after 293
laps. It could have
taken two hours or
more to dry to track,
even though it ended
up being only a brief
shower.

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, November 8, 2016 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

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

by Dave Green

By Dave Green

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

9

3 4

8

By Hilary Price

5

8

7
1

8
9
3

5
6

2

7

9

1

9 6

4

7
2

2

4

1 3
Difficulty Level

Hank Ketcham’s

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Today’s Solution

By Bil and Jeff Keane

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3 7

�CLASSIFIEDS

10 Tuesday, November 8, 2016

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see to appreciate
must be moved.
$10,500.00 OBO
call 740-441-1236 if no
answer leave message
Houses For Sale
Mobile Home For Sale 2010
Redman 2 Bed, Electric, 1
Owner, in Mobile Home Park.
Leave a Message at (304)
812-5328
Apartments/Townhouses

60583312

Daily Sentinel

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

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

Land (Acreage)
5 acres of bottom land and
40-100 acres in prime deer
hunting location $1400 a acres
call 740-256-6444
Want to Rent

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
2 bedroom apartments
$550/$600 and deposit
located in Bidwell some
utilities paid call 740-446-4175
2 HOMES FOR RENT:
3BR, 1 bath house,
recently remodeled.
No pets. $800/mo
2BR, 1 bath home
w/garage $500/mo.
Call 740-446-3644
for application.

Recently Renovated Clean
2 Bdr. Conveniently located
Reference and Deposit,
No Pets, No Smoking
304-675-5162
Rentals
Immaculate 2 BR apt.
Appliances, W/D hook-ups,
water/trash paid. 10 minutes
from town. $425/mo
614-595-7773 or
740-645-5953
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528
Make
a

&amp; sell it in

Classifieds

Help Wanted General
Nursing Assistant Class
Earn your certification as a nursing assistant at no cost to you!
Lakin Hospital, located between Point Pleasant and Mason, WV
is accepting applications for students in upcoming nursing
assistant classes. The completion of this six week class qualifies
you to take the WV certification exam for nursing assistants,
with Lakin Hospital paying for both the class and cost of the
certification exam! We are currently planning successive classes
over the next six months, which will allow you a better opportunity to attend a class that best fits your schedule. Please contact
Andrea Murphy, RN, at (304 )675-0860 for more information
and to complete an application for one of our classes.

Notices

Notices

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

Sealed proposals for a slip repair on Lincoln Pike will be
received by the Gallia County Engineer at the office of the
Gallia County Commissioners, 18 Locust Street, Room 1292,
Gallipolis, Ohio, until 11:00 AM Thursday, December 8, 2016,
and then at 11:00 AM at said office opened and read aloud.

Sealed proposals for a slip repair on Kemper Hollow Road will
be received by the Gallia County Engineer at the office of the
Gallia County Commissioners, 18 Locust Street, Room 1292,
Gallipolis, Ohio, until 11:00 AM Thursday, December 8, 2016,
and then at 11:00 AM at said office opened and read aloud.

Plans, Specifications, and Bid/Contract Forms may be secured
at the office of the Gallia County Engineer, 1167 State Route
160, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. All bidders must furnish, as a part of
their bid, all materials, tools, labor, and equipment.

Plans, Specifications, and Bid/Contract Forms may be secured
at the office of the Gallia County Engineer, 1167 State Route
160, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. All bidders must furnish, as a part of
their bid, all materials, tools, labor, and equipment.

Only ODOT prequalified contractors will be eligible to submit
bids. The contractor must be prequalified for all work types involved with the project. Each bid must be accompanied by either
a bid bond in an amount of 100% of the bid amount with a surety
satisfactory to the aforesaid Gallia County or by certified check,
cashiers check or letter of credit upon a solvent bank in an
amount of not less than 10% of the bid amount in favor of the
aforesaid Gallia County. Bid Bonds shall be accompanied by
Proof of Authority of the official or agent signing the bond.

Only ODOT prequalified contractors will be eligible to submit
bids. The contractor must be prequalified for all work types
involved with the project. Each bid must be accompanied by
either a bid bond in an amount of 100% of the bid amount with a
surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Gallia County or by certified
check, cashiers check or letter of credit upon a solvent bank in
an amount of not less than 10% of the bid amount in favor of the
aforesaid Gallia County. Bid Bonds shall be accompanied by
Proof of Authority of the official or agent signing the bond.

“DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN
SECTION 153.011 OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS
PROJECT. COPIES OF SECTION 153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF
THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES.”

“DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN
SECTION 153.011 OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS
PROJECT. COPIES OF SECTION 153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF
THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES.”

Bids shall be sealed and marked as "BID FOR LINCOLN PIKE
SLIP REPAIR" and mailed or delivered to: Gallia County
Commissioners Office, 18 Locust Street, Room 1292, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631.

Bids shall be sealed and marked as "BID FOR KEMPER
HOLLOW SLIP REPAIR" and mailed or delivered to: Gallia
County Commissioners Office, 18 Locust Street, Room 1292,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Attention of bidders is called to all of the requirements
contained in the bid packet, various insurance requirements,
federal prevailing wage requirements, various equal opportunity
provisions, and the requirement for a payment bond and
performance bond of 100% of the contract price.

Attention of bidders is called to all of the requirements
contained in the bid packet, various insurance requirements,
federal prevailing wage requirements, various equal opportunity
provisions, and the requirement for a payment bond and
performance bond of 100% of the contract price.

No bidder may withdraw his bid within thirty (30) days after the
actual date of the opening thereof. Gallia County reserves the
right to waive any informalities or reject any or all bids.

No bidder may withdraw his bid within thirty (30) days after the
actual date of the opening thereof. Gallia County reserves the
right to waive any informalities or reject any or all bids.

Gallia County adheres to all state policies pertaining to
Handicapped Accessibility and Equal Employment
Opportunities.
11/8/16,11/15/16,11/22/16,

Gallia County adheres to all state policies pertaining to
Handicapped Accessibility and Equal Employment
Opportunities.

Help Wanted General

Help Wanted General

Now Hiring Pharmacy Tech
Medical Office Manager
Busy physician’s office is seeking a motivated and
knowledgeable. Office Manager with strong billing background.
This position is responsible for directing and coordinating all day
to day operations and billing functions.
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Looking for a Pharmacy Tech
High School Diploma, Must be able
work days, evenings, weekends.

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and Commercial Insurances.
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Pick up application at

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law etc.
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Minimal Qualification Requirements:
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$PNQFUJUJWF�TBMBSZ�BOE�CFOFöUT��&amp;&amp;0$�%SVH�GSFF�XPSLQMBDF�
1MFBTF�FNBJM�SFTVNF�UP��KPWFSDBTI!QWBMMFZ�PSH

Swisher and Lohse.
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

60689754

Farmers Bank and Savings Company, located at 211 West 2nd
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, has filed notice/application of a
proposed banking office with the Ohio Division of Financial
Institutions, 77 South High Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215-6120
and with Mr. Anthony Lowe, Regional Director, Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, 300 South Riverside Drive, Suite 1700,
Chicago, Illinois 60606. The proposed office will be a temporary
banking office located at 65 Chase Park, Hurricane, WV 25526
and will be utilized while an approved permanent location is
being constructed at 3582 Teays Valley Road. Any person who
wishes to comment on the proposed banking office must do so
in writing to the Division within fourteen days after the date of
this publication and in writing to the FDIC within fifteen days
after the date of this publication. The non-confidential portions of
the FDIC application are on file in the appropriate FDIC office
and are available for public inspection during regular business
hours; photocopies of the non-confidential portion of the FDIC
application file will be made available upon request.
11/8/16

Dental Business Staff - Insurance billing,
Accounting, Scheduling - Full Time
Would you like to work in a positive atmosphere with great
employees? We have a beautiful, modern office and a highly
skilled, enthusiastic team. Excellent written and verbal skills
required. Commitment to excellence expected. Previous
dental/medical experience helpful, and a great attitude and
work ethic are top priorities. Please send resume, references
and paragraph about yourself to kygerdds@sbcglobal.net.
We look forward to meeting you!

Lakin Hospital
Owned and operated by the State of West Virginia
Equal Opportunity Employer

that work

LEGALS
NOTICE TO ESTABLISH A NEW BRANCH
(for Ohio Division of Financial Institutions and Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation)

Help Wanted General

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60689504

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