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                  <text>Today is
Election
Day

Mostly sunny.
High of 74,
low of 55

Lady
Eagles win
district title

WEATHER s 6A

SPORTS s 1B

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 176, Volume 69

Tuesday, November 3, 2015 s 50¢

White
Falcons
soar in 5K
By Mindy Kearns
For OVP News

Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

Runners arrive in Athens County as they run against traffic Monday afternoon. The runners are part of the Old Glory Run Relay, which a charity event that
carries a single American flag from San Francisco to Washington, D.C., in less than two months. The group was headed to Parkersburg, W.Va., where they
would eventually dine with the local Veterans of Foreign Wars group.

Old Glory Run sweeps Ohio
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Anyone
traveling on State Route 7
on Monday might have been
privy to a sight they usually
don’t see: runners carrying
the American ﬂag.
These participants are part
of a nationwide event called
the Old Glory Run Relay,
being held by Team RWB
(Red White and Blue).
According to their website,
teamrwb.org, the relay team
consists of 59 runners who
will be charged with moving
a single American ﬂag along
a 3,540-mile journey from
San Francisco to Washington,
D.C., in two months. Accord-

ing to Mike McNett, chapter captain for Team RWB
Columbus, the journey began
Sept. 11 with plans to reach
D.C. by sunset Nov. 8, where
the ﬂag will remain through
Veterans Day.
The group began their
run in the morning along
State Route 7, with their
ﬁnal destination for the day
being Parkersburg, W.V.a.,
which they planned to reach
between 3-4 p.m. Around 1
p.m., the group had crossed
the Meigs County line into
Athens, their pace steady and
their ﬂag high. Once they
arrived, they had dinner with
the local Veterans of Foreign
Wars chapter.
According to the Team

the holiday weekend.
After Parkersburg, the ﬂag
will travel through northern
West Virginia near southern
Pennsylvania, through parts
of Maryland and ﬁnally into
D.C. McNett said this year
there were portions of the
journey that would be biked
as well as run.
So far, the relay has raised
about 75 percent of its
$100,000 goal. According to
McNett, 87 cents of every
dollar donated goes directly
to programs that help the
nation’s veterans.
For more information visit
oldgloryrelay.org.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT.
2555.

Issue 2 meeting
talks county projects

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Opinion: 4A
Weather: 6A
— SPORTS
Football: 1B
Schedule: 1B
— FEATURES
Television: 5A
Classified: 4B
Comics: 5B

RWB’s Twitter page, as of
Monday the race had been
going for 52 days, with 3,103
miles completed, and seven
days and 436 miles to go. Any
participants in the area who
wanted to help carry the ﬂag
to Parkersburg were invited
to join the jog as well.
According to a map provided on the team’s website,
so far the journey has taken
the ﬂag from California
through Nevada, Utah,
Colorado, reaching Colorado
Springs on Oct. 8; Kansas
reaching Overland Park,
Kan., on Oct. 16; Missouri,
reaching St. Louis by Oct.
23; Kentucky, reaching Lexington, Ky., by Oct. 30; and
ﬁnally Ohio beginning over

By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

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

POMEROY — The Meigs
County Sub-Committee meeting
round 30 for the State Capital
Improvement Program/Local
Transportation Improvement
Program (SCIP/LTIP) met last
Thursday to assign points to projects around Meigs County.
Those projects with higher

point values have a higher chance
of being funded projects by the
state.
The project with the most
amount of points, and has the
highest chance of being funded,
is the Village of Pomeroy/Main
Street Improvements project,
with 75 points. The project in second place, with 65 points, is the
See ISSUE | 6A

NEW HAVEN — One of the
largest Wahama 5K Walk/Run for
Education events in its history
took place Saturday in the Town of
New Haven, with more than 170
people participating.
While proceeds from the run
beneﬁt the Wahama High School
scholarship fund for graduating
seniors, it was a WHS junior
classman that came out on top of the
event. School track team member
Mason Hildreth was the overall run
winner, with a time of 20.40.
Individual age division winners
included:
Ages 0-13 years – Abbie
Lieving, ﬁrst; Ian Orale, second;
Josiah Lloyd, third.
Ages 14-21 years – Mason
Hildreth, ﬁrst; Jimmy McCormick,
second; Jared Nutter, third.
Ages 22-31 years – Kyle Curry,
ﬁrst; Hannah Curry, second; Beth
Ferguson, third.
Ages 32-41 years – Joel Lloyd,
ﬁrst; Michael Brewer, second;
Brandy Hudnall, third.
Ages 42-51 years – Neil Cadle,
ﬁrst; Danny Chapman, second;
Jerry Spradling, third.
Ages 52-61 years – Scott
Brewer, ﬁrst; Richard Walker,
second; Medina Tucker, third.
Ages 62 years and over – Paul
Chadwell, ﬁrst; Gale Shrimplin,
second; John Ohlinger, third.
A total of 14 senior Wahama
students participated, including
Ricky Kearns, Jaelyn Plants,
Kristin Devault, Rachel Roque,
Olivia Hill, Alexis Board, Ryan
Thomas, Mason Hicks, Jared
Nutter, Nathan Redman, Nolan
Pierce, Molly Fisher, Randi Shirley
and Austin Juelfs.
Two seniors will receive
scholarships as a direct result
of the run, in addition to the
other seniors that will beneﬁt.
The ﬁrst senior to cross the
ﬁnish line, as well as the senior
with the most sponsorships, will
receive scholarships that will be
announced in May.
The event is coordinated annually
by Dr. Wes and Amanda Lieving,
Mike and Holly Lieving, and the
school scholarship committee. Prior
to the race, Rachel Roque sang the
National Anthem. Following the
event, a free pancake breakfast was
served, prepared by Karen Hindel,
Carol Staats and Sonya Roush. Also
providing assistance for the run were
the New Haven Fire Department,
New Haven Police Department, and
Town of New Haven.
Helping make the event happen
were New Haven Road Angels,
Francis and Cliff Coleman,
Game Day, Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Bob’s Market and
Greenhouses, AB Contracting,
American Legion Post 140,
Angell Tax &amp; Accounting, Bend
Area Chiropractic, Carson
Farms, Clark’s Jewelry Store,
Dr. Kayanna M. Sayre, DDS, Dr.
Wes and Amanda Lieving, E&amp;R
Excavating, Farmers Bank,
Foglesong Funeral Home, Foxy
Locks, Health Aid Pharmacy,
James Alarm Service, Judge
David Nibert and Harriett Nibert,
Ken Bass Insurance, John Greer,
Marathon Food Mart, Mark
Groves, Lois Bosley, Zack Bosley,
Mary Roush Memorial, Mike and
Holly Lieving, Raven Aviation,
Sassafras Tire, Soul Harvest
Church, St. Paul Lutheran Church,
Thompson Hardware, Town of
Mason and Town of New Haven.
Mindy Kearns is a freelance writer for Ohio
Valley Publishing who lives in Mason County.

�LOCAL/STATE

2A Tuesday, November 3, 2015

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

SHERIDAN THOMAS RUSSELL III
RUTLAND — Sheridan Thomas “Short”
Russell III, 63, of Rutland,
passed away Friday, Oct.
30, 2015.
He was born April 30,
1952, the son of Evelyn
Louise “Bunny” Russell
of Rutland and the late
Sheridan Thomas “June”
Russell Jr.
He was a U.S. Army
veteran. He was a coal
miner for over 27 years
and formerly served on
the Rutland EMS and
Rutland Fire Department.
He also was a member of
the Gold Wing Club.
Mr. Russell is survived
by his wife of 44 years,
Vicky Lynn Russell; children Angie Russell and
Sheridan “Ray” Russell;
grandchildren Kyle A.
Russell, Morgan G. Russell, Shana M. Roush and
Carmella E. Russell; his
mother, Evelyn “Bunny”
Russell; mother-in-law

Ancill VanMatre; brother
and sisters Karen Meadows, Mike and Joyce
Brewer and Paula and
Carl Carmichael; brotherin-law Rick and Kathy
VanMatre; several nieces
and nephews; and his
friends of the No Gotta
Hunt Club.
He was preceded in
death by his father, Sheridan Thomas “June” Russell Jr.; and his father-inlaw Norman VanMatre.
Funeral services will
be 11 a.m. Wednesday,
Nov. 4, 2015, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Middleport. Burial
will follow at Gravel Hill
Cemetery with military
honors. Visiting hours
will be 6-8 p.m. Tuesday
at the funeral home in
Middleport.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

RALPH E. STEWART
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
— Ralph E. Stewart, 75,
of Mason, passed away
Saturday, Oct. 31, 2015,
at Camden Clark Medical
Center in Parkersburg,
W.Va.
He was born Jan. 27,
1940, in Graham Station,
W.Va., a son to the late
Raymond “Bud” Stewart and Helen (Francis)
Stewart.
He was a 1957 graduate
of Wahama High School
and served with the U.S.
Army during the Vietnam
War. He was a member
of the American Legion
Headquarters, Post 200,
of Charleston, W.Va.
Ralph worked as an
accountant/ofﬁce manager at the former Mason
County Motor Co. in
Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
for a number of years.
He retired in 1994 from
Kanawha River Towing
Inc., where he served as
senior accountant.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded
in death by a half-sister,
Dorothy Russell Dawson;

brothers-in-laws Phillip
“Flip” Werry and Burdell
Dawson; special cousin
Margie Hoffman Nesbitt; and special friends
Armand Turley, Lillian
Turley Moore and Captain Robert “Bob” Bosworth.
Survivors include his
brother James “Jim”
Stewart, of Chester, Ohio;
sister Karen Stewart
Werry, of Chester; special
nephews Jeffrey Russell,
of Jane Lew, W.Va., and
Phillip “Ray” Werry and
Edward “Ed” Werry, of
Chester; niece Janet Life,
and several great-nieces
and great-nephews.
Funeral services will be
1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov.
4, 2015, at Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., with the Rev. Mike
Finnicum ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow in New
Lone Oak Cemetery in
Point Pleasant.
Friends may visit the
family at the funeral home
between noon and 1 p.m.
Wednesday prior to the
service.

Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)

CAPEHART
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. — Kevin Dean Capehart,
59, of New Haven, died Saturday, Oct. 31, 2015. A
funeral service will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 4,
2015, at First Baptist Church of Mason, W.Va. Burial
will follow at Leon Cemetery in Leon, W.Va. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Tuesday at Wilcoxen Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
COLBURN
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Arthur Colburn, of
Proctorville, passed away Monday, Nov. 2, 2015, at
St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va. Hall
Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is in
charge of arrangements.
CORMIER
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Doris Cormier, 90, of Gallipolis, died Friday, Oct. 30, 2015. Funeral will be at
11 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015, at St. Louis Catholic Church, Gallipolis. Following her services, she
will be entombed in Chapel of Hope at Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens. There will not be calling hours.
Willis Funeral Home is assisting the family.
CORNWELL
CENTERVILLE, Ohio — Ernest “Ernie” William
Cornwell, 63, of Centerville, died Friday, Oct. 30,
2015. No calling hours will be observed, however, a
Celebration of Life will be held at a later date.
DRAWDY
WILLOW WOOD, Ohio — Yvonne Drawdy, 69, of
Willow Wood, passed away Monday, Nov. 2, 2015, at
Community Hospice Care Center, Ashland, Ky. Hall
Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, is
in charge of arrangements which are incomplete.
HURLOW
LEON, W.Va. — James Roy Hurlow Jr., 67, of
Leon, died Friday, Oct. 30, 2015.
Service will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2015, at
Grace Baptist Church, Ohio River Road. Burial will
follow at Forest Hills Cemetery. Visitation will be at
the church one hour prior to the service Wednesday.
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.
KRUHMIN
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — John N. Kruhmin, 90,
of Proctorville, passed away Monday, Nov. 2, 2015,
at Heartland of Riverview, South Point, Ohio. Hall
Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is in
charge of arrangements, which are incomplete.
NICELY
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — Tracy W. Nicely, 46, of
Chesapeake, passed away Saturday, Oct. 31, 2015,

at home. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, is in charge of arrangements.
OILER
NEWARK, Ohio — Jeffrey Eugene Oiler Jr., 40
of Newark, and formerly of Vinton, Ohio, died Saturday, Oct. 31, 2015. Funeral services will be 1 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2015, at McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton. Burial will follow in Vinton Memorial Park. Friends may call the funeral home between
11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Wednesday.
RANDOLPH
BEAVERDAM, Va. — Wade N. Randolph, 70, of
Beaverdam, passed away Sunday, Nov. 1, 2015. The
family will visit with friends between 3:30-4:30 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015, at Montpelier Center for
Arts and Education, 17205 Mountain Rd, Montpelier, Va. A celebration of life service will follow at
4:30 p.m.
REES
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — David (Dave) Lincoln
Rees, 87 of Gallipolis, and formerly of Rio Grande,
Ohio, died Saturday, Oct. 31, 2015. Funeral services
will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2015, at McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis. Burial will follow in Calvary Cemetery, Rio
Grande. Friends may call the funeral home between
4-7 p.m. Tuesday.
RULEN
SOUTH POINT, Ohio — Jon Dale Rulen, 67, of
South Point, passed away Saturday, Oct. 31, 2015,
at King’s Daughters Medical Center, Ashland, Ky.
Funeral service will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 4,
2015, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. Burial will follow at Highland Memorial
Gardens, South Point. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m.
Tuesday at the funeral home.
SWAIN
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Bobby Joe “Bob”
Swain, 88, of Point Pleasant, died Friday, Oct. 30,
2015. A funeral service will be 1 p.m. Thursday,
Nov. 5, 2015 at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant. Burial will follow at Kirkland Memorial
Gardens in Point Pleasant. Visitation will be 6-8
p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home.
WILLIS
SOUTH POINT, Ohio — Mark Alan Willis, 47,
of South Point, passed away Sunday, Nov. 1, 2015.
Funeral service will be conducted 2 p.m. Thursday,
November 5, 2014 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. Burial will follow in Rome
Cemetery, Proctorville. Visitation will be 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday at the funeral home.

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
Staff Report

Adams, Elaina Bissell,
R. Madison Bissell,
REEDSVILLE — The Sophia Carleton, Taylor
following is Eastern
Carleton, Sidney Cook,
High School Honor Roll Kaitlyn Hawk, Madison
for the ﬁrst nine weeks
Kuhn. 9th grade, Hannah
of the 2015-16 school
Damewood, Ally Durst,
year:
Mollie Maxon, Jessica
All “A” Honor Roll
Parker.
– 12th grade, Megan
All “A and B” Honor
Douglas, Dylan Haynes, Roll – 12th grade,
Elisha Martindale, Emily Morgan Barringer,
Sinclair, Kayla Tripp.
Rachel Brooks, Kath11th grade , Laura Pullyne Buchanan, Jamie
lins. 10th grade, Jessica Card, Abby Causey, Trey

Coates, D. Chase Curtis,
Kaylee Goff, Brittney
Leach, Tanner Palmer,
Dillon Swatzel, Makya
Trussell. 11th grade,
Hannah Barringer,
Brooke Bearhs, Annalisa
Boano, Danielle Burrelli,
Katelyn Edwards, Jett
Facemyer, Taylor Parker,
Clayton Ritchie. 10th
grade, Morgan Baer,
Austin Coleman, Mattison Finlaw, Naomi Hoffman, Abby Litchﬁeld,

Morgain Little, Courtney
Lyons, Allyson Miller,
Issac Tackett, Hannah
White. 9th grade, Ciara
Browning, Kelsey Casto,
Emmalea Durst, Nathan
Durst, Blaise Facemyer,
Sharp Facemyer, Katlin
Fick, Ryan Harbour,
Hannah Hill, Alexus
Metheney, Rhiannon
Morris, Ryan Parsons,
Anna Pierce, Rebecca
Pullins, Garrett Rees,
Katie Ridenour.

Telephone: 740-992-2155
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CONTACT US
PUBLISHER
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bhunt@civitasmedia.com

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michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

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bwalters@civitasmedia.com

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jschultz@civitasmedia.com

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I encourage everyone to
exercise their constitutional
right to vote November 3rd.

CandidatePaidforfor byMayor
of Pomeroy
the candidate

www.mydailysentinel.com

Investors demand answers from hunter
By Andrew Welsh-Huggins
Associated Press

COLUMBUS — An ex-deepsea treasure hunter is violating
his plea agreement by giving
evasive answers about the fate
of 500 missing gold coins pulled
from an historic shipwreck, say
a group of investors who helped
fund the hunt for the ship.
Defendant Tommy Thompson
went missing three years ago
amid demands that he appear
in court. He and his longtime
female companion were apprehended in January at a hotel
where he was living near Boca
Raton, Florida.
Thompson has faced accusations of cheating investors since
he discovered the S.S. America,
known as the Ship of Gold, in
1988. The gold-rush era ship
sank in a hurricane off South
Carolina in 1857 with thousands
of pounds of gold aboard, contributing to an economic panic.
The 161 investors who paid
Thompson $12.7 million to find

the ship never saw any proceeds.
Two sued — a now-deceased
investment firm president and
the company that once published
The Columbus Dispatch newspaper.
Thompson pleaded guilty in
April to contempt of court for
failing to appear before a federal
judge in 2012. Part of his plea
deal requires him to answer questions in closed-door sessions
about the whereabouts of the
gold coins.
The first of those hearings was
Oct. 19. A federal prosecutor
chastised Thompson afterward,
calling his answers evasive and
concerning, and scheduled another hearing for Oct. 26.
But Thompson’s former attorney canceled the hearing two
days beforehand, saying he told
Thompson not to answer further
questions at the risk of incriminating himself. That attorney,
Steve Nolder, no longer represents Thompson, and declined
to comment. A message was left
with Thompson’s new attorney.

Thompson was criticized by
investors for “feigned ignorance,
convenient lack of recollection,
and then outright refusal to
answer any more questions,”
according to a court filing last
week.
Thompson can’t say whether
the coins are on the island of
Nevis, in Belize or elsewhere,
and who he gave them to for
moving them out of the country,
the filing said. The coins are
worth between $2 million and $4
million.
“In short, Thompson would
have us believe that he gave
millions of dollars of gold coins
to a complete stranger, to be
transported to Belize, Nevis or
some other foreign location, but
he does not know where in the
world the coins were taken, how
they got there, where they are
now, who is charged with protecting them, or how to access
them,” the investors said.
Thompson faces two years in
prison and a maximum ﬁne of
$250,000 at his Nov. 24 sentencing.

Do you have story ideas or suggestions?
Let us know! Call 740.992.2155

�Daily Sentinel

LOCAL/STATE

Tuesday, November 3, 2015 3A

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Editor’s Note: The Meigs Briefs will only list
event information that is open to the public.

TUPPERS PLAINS — Breast
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Community Calendar will only list event and cervical cancer screenings
information that is open to the public. and education will be provided
by the Ohio University Heritage
College of Osteopathic Medicine’s
TUESDAY, NOV. 3
(OU-HCOM) Community Health
SALEM TOWNSHIP — There
Programs, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
will be an election day lunch from
clinic will be held on the Ohio
11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Salem
University College of Osteopathic
Township Volunteer Fire DepartMedicine Community Health Proment on St. Rt. 124 at Salem
Center. The menu includes soups, grams’ Mobile Health Van parked
sloppy joes, hot dogs and desserts. at the St. Paul United Methodist
Church on Route 7 in TuppersPlease bring containers for takeout soup. For more information call Plains Free Pap tests, pelvic and
breast examinations, breast health
Linda at 740-669-4245.
EAST LETART — There will be education, and appointments for
an election day lunch from 11 a.m. mammograms will be provided
to uninsured and underinsured
to 3 p.m. at East Letart United
women. Appointments are required
Methodist Church. The menu
and interested persons should call
includes vegetable soup, chili, hot
1-800-844-2654 or 740-593-2432 to
dogs and desserts. Please bring
schedule.
containers for take-out soup.
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP — The
RACINE — There will be an
Scipio Township Trustees will
Election Day dinner at Racine
United Methodist Church from 11 meet at 7 p.m. at the Harrisonville
Firehouse.
a.m. to 4 p.m. Soup, sandwiches
and desserts will be served. Carryout available. Bring your own
SATURDAY NOV. 7
containers for soup.
RACINE — Come out and have
SYRACUSE — Syracuse Comfun at 5:30p.m with Mount Moriah
munity Center will be serving and Church of God, Mount Hill Road
Election Day dinner consisiting of in Racine, for a white elephant aucsoup, chili, pulled pork, hot dogs
tion, free soup and sandwiches.
and sauce, chicken and noodles,
POMEROY — Dr. Michael
sloppy joes and desserts. People
Pangio will conduct a seminar 10
can eat in or take home. Soups are a.m. to 2 p.m.on the topic “Biblical
sold by the bowl or by the quart.
Model of a Leader”at Hysell Run
Lunch begins at 10:30 a.m.
Community Church, Hysell Run
POMEROY — There will be an
Road, Pomeroy. Seminar is free
opportunity to donate blood from
and lunch is provided free. Call
8 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Nov. 3 at the
740-742-3171 to register.
Meigs Local High School gymnasium. Sponsored by the Meigs
SUNDAY NOV. 8
County American Red Cross.
POMEROY — Dr. Michael
Pango, Apostle of Hysell Run Community Church, Hysell Run Road,
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 4
Pomeroy, will be ministering at the
OLIVE TOWNSHIP — Olive
church at 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Township Trustees will meet at
Everyone is invited for fellowship.
6:30 p.m. at the township garage
TUPPERS PLAINS — VFW
on Joppa Road.

Board of Elections meeting
POMEROY — The regular meeting of the
Meigs County Board of Elections will be 6 a.m.
Nov. 3. The board’s meeting will reconvene at 7
p.m. the same day to continue Election Day business.

George Washington’s Historic
Marker Redidication
HOCKINGPORT — The Athens County Historical Society and Museum, the Daughters of the
American Revolution and the Sons of the American Revolution are partnering to rededicate the
Historic Marker commemorating George Washington’s visit to the conﬂuence of the Hocking and
Ohio rivers in November of 1774. Set and dedicated by the Daughters of the American Revolution
in 1932, on the bicentennial of Washington’s birth,
the marker was run over and damaged several
years ago. Recently restored at SEWAH Studios
in Marietta, the marker will be rededicated on
Sunday, November 8th at noon at the Hockingport
United Methodist Church at the intersection of
Grand and Pavilion Streets in Hockingport. A
reception will follow in the Fellowship Hall next to
the church. All are welcome to attend.

Southern Ohio Council of
Governments Meetings
The Southern Ohio Council of Governments
(SOCOG) will hold its next board meeting on
Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015 at 10 a.m. in Room A of
the Ross County Service Center at 475 Western
Avenue, Chillicothe, Ohio, 45601. Board meetings
usually are held the ﬁrst Thursday of the month.
For more information, call 740-775-5030, ext.
103. SOCOG provides administrative support for
the County Boards of Developmental Disabilities in Adams, Athens, Brown, Clinton, Fayette,
Gallia, Highland, Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs,
Pickaway, Pike, Ross, Scioto and Vinton counties.
It’s primary focus is quality assurance, provider
compliance, investigative services and residential
administration of waivers and supportive living in
order to provide individualized, personal support
to people with developmental disabilities. SOCOG
is a government entity created under Chapter 167
of the Ohio Revised Code, representing 15 county
boards of development disabilities.

Upward Basketball
and Cheerleading
Middleport Church of Christ is getting ready
to start their 11th season of Upward basketball
and cheerleading. This is open to all children age
5 years through 6th grade. The Upward experience consists of: 1 practice and 1 game per week,
unique substitution system ensures every young
athlete plays and quality game day uniform. Evaluations and uniform ﬁtting will take place in the
Middleport Church of Christ’s Family Life Center
at the corner of 5th &amp; Main Streets on Saturday,
Nov. 7 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and on Tuesday, Nov.
10 from 6-8 p.m. All children wanting to play need
to attend one of these dates. You may stop in anytime during those times. The cost is $75 which
covers their complete uniform. The church does
have some partial scholarships available for those
who need assistance. One hour games are played
on Saturdays beginning Jan. 16, 2016. If you have
any questions you may contact the church at 740992-2914 Monday-Friday 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. or
check out their Facebook page: Middleport Church
of Christ Upward Sports.

‘Fit Together Fitness’
exercise class dates
POMEROY — “Fit Together Fitness” exercise
classes will be 6:30-7:30 p.m. at the Mulberry
Community Center located at 260 Mulberry Ave.
Runs on Tuesdays for six consecutive weeks beginning Nov. 10. The cost of a class is a donation of
non-perishable food items. For more information,
contact Paulette at 740-992-6097.

Frank card shower
RACINE — Louise Frank will celebrate her 80th
birthday with an open house Nov. 7 from 2-4 p.m.
at the Carmel Sutton Fellowship Hall. No gifts
please, but cards may be sent to Louise Frank at
49074 Mckenzie Ridge Road, Racine, 45771.

Meigs County Retired
Teachers scholarship
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs County Retired
Teachers Association is looking for candidates
for a scholarship. Applicants must be a college
junior or senior education major whose home
residence is Meigs County. A GPA of 2.5 or higher
is also required. Questions or applications can be
obtained by calling Becky 740-992-7096 or Charlene at 740-444-5498.

Eastern Music Boosters
Craft Show
REEDSVILLE — The 28th Annual Eastern
Music Boosters Craft Show will be held Saturday,
Nov. 14 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Eastern Elementary School. The Craft show will feature performances by the Eastern Choir, Handbells, Marching Band and Concert Band. Crafters may call
Angie at 740-985-3690 or Jenny at 740-985-3479
for an application.

Post 9053 Ladies Auxiliary will
host a turkey dinner from 11 a.m.
to 1:30 p.m. Menu includes turkey,
mashed potatoes, green beans, cole
slaw, dessert and drink. A suggested donation of $10 is appreciated.
Carry out dinners available.
TUPPERS PLAINS — Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer will have
their regular meeting at 7 p.m. at
the district ofﬁce.

SATURDAY, NOV. 14

BURLINGHAM — Modern
Woodman Chapter 7230 will have
their Thanksgiving dinner and
meeting at First Southern Baptist
Church, Pomeroy. Doors open at
3:30 p.m., dinner at 4 p.m. and program at 5 p.m. Randy Sheets will
be the guest speaker on the topic
of “The Constitution: Where did
our laws come from.” The public
to invited to the program.Members
should RSVP for dinner by Nov. 9
by calling 740-992-5628.
REEDSVILLE — The 28th
Annual Eastern Music Boosters
Craft Show will be 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
at Eastern Elementary School.
Crafters may call Angie at 740-9853690 or Jenny at 740-985-3479 for
an application. The craft show will
feature performances by the Eastern Choir, Handbells, Marching
Band and Concert Band.

SUNDAY, NOV. 15

HEMLOCK GROVE — The
Hemlock Grove Christian Church
will host a Day of Thanksgiving on
beginning at 10 a.m. This special
worship service will feature recording artist Andrea Kimble, grateful
testimonies and a brief message by
Pastor Diana Kinder. A traditional
Thanksgiving meal will follow.
Contact Pastor Diana Kinder at
7405915960 for more information.

Proposed Medicaid cuts worry families
COLUMBUS (AP) —
An Ohio Department of
Medicaid proposal to
reduce or eliminate funding for its nursing services in the coming months
is causing concern for
some families.
A total of 2,591 Ohio
residents received private
nursing care through
Medicaid during the state
ﬁscal year that ended on
June 30, The Columbus
Dispatch reported.
Ofﬁcials said that, as
of now, only the rates
paid for nursing services
have been changed. State
Medicaid spokesman Sam
Rossi said in a statement
that no other changes
have been made to the
private-duty nursing
policy. On a case-by-case
basis, an individual’s service authorization could
change depending upon
their level-of-care needs,
Rossi said.
Ohio Medicaid said
individuals and families
have ﬁled 11 appeals of
changes in their privateduty nursing services in
the third quarter of this
year, compared to nine in
the second quarter and
seven in the ﬁrst.
Of the 19 appeals
heard, Ohio Medicaid’s
initial decision was
upheld 16 times.
Gary Tonks, executive
director of an advocacy
group for the developmentally disabled, said
Ohio Medicaid ofﬁcials
might have some legitimate reasons for switch-

Do your part!
Recycle this
newspaper!

ing enrollees from nursing services to alternative
care.
Tonks said many families have been told that
their loved ones need
skilled nursing care and

are now “understandably
skeptical.”
“You’re going to see a
lot of parents potentially
have to give up their
full-time jobs or parttime jobs to take care

of their kids,” said Rep.
Andrew Brenner, a Powell
Republican. “We can’t
add an economic hardship on somebody on top
of everything else that
they’re dealing with.”

at Pleasant Valley Hospital

WELCOMES
MOHAMED ALSHAREDI, MD
ONCOLOGY/HEMATOLOGIC ONCOLOGY/GENERAL HEMATOLOGY

The Edwards Comprehensive
Cancer Center on-site at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
provides cancer patients in
the Point Pleasant area with
quicker and more direct access
to the most comprehensive
medical, surgical and radiation
oncologists in the region. Highly
specialized care, state-of-theart therapies and leading-edge
clinical trials are all available at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Pleasant Valley Hospital’s
partnership with Cabell
Huntington Hospital and
Marshall Health is proving
that advanced oncology and
hematology care is better,
faster, and right here in the
community we love.

Introducing…
Mohamed
Alsharedi, MD
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital is
pleased to
welcome
Mohamed
Alsharedi,
MD, fellowship-trained
medical oncologist from the
Edwards Comprehensive
Cancer Center at Cabell
Huntington Hospital.
Dr. Alsharedi also provides
hematologic oncology and
general hematology care,
and treats patients with all
types of cancers at Pleasant
Valley Hospital every Monday
through Friday.

Because health happens here.

For more information or to schedule an appointment,
call 304.857.3510.
60620931

�E ditorial
4A Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Message in
a spider web
I woke up and there they were just staring at me
again — the glowing red digits of my alarm clock.
Its 1:19 a.m. and a song’s running through my
head I haven’t heard in years … “Bridge Over
Troubled Waters” by Simon and Garfunkel. I ﬂip
on the lamp and choose a random page in my book
of daily meditations, wishing the song could have
at least been one I liked if I’m going to lose sleep
over it when, suddenly, I see something black
wiggle across my pillowcase.
The sheets cling to me as I scramble to escape the uninvited bug. My
legs get tangled around the sheets
and my head hits the ﬂoor, barely
missing the nightstand. After peeling back the quilt and pillows and
ﬁnding nothing, I convince myself it
Michele Z. must have been my derelict hair that
I saw out of the corner of my eye. It
Marcum
Contributing is late, but I am accustomed to being
Columnist
awakened occasionally with a message from the spirit realm and I’ve
never hallucinated.
The messages haven’t revealed the winning
lottery numbers — yet, but I have avoided a
potential wreck by taking an inspired alternative
route and intercepted a phone call that resulted in
a couple bidding on my house. I enjoy the divine
tips, but I’d prefer an earlier session of this midnight ministry.
Settling back in bed, the words, “I will ease your
mind, like a bridge …” still playing strong, I pull
up the lyrics to the song on my phone. One verse
I don’t recognize jumps out at me. “Sail on silver
girl. Your dreams are coming true.”
I ‘m thinking how much I want to believe they
are when I spot a black shape crawling toward my
face.
This time, I’m quick to hop up. A spider’s sitting
on my pillow. I observe it ascend a shiny strand,
resisting the urge to squash it. I cant’ kill it. It’s
only doing what it knows to do — to weave, to
create.
My eyes trail the spider’s ascent until I’m staring overhead at a giant silver web. I’ve never seen
one glisten so. Then it hits me — silver. Galena is
an ore of silver.
I recently got engaged and plan on moving to a
town named Galena. Before bed, I was praying to
know if the marriage and the move are the right
choices for me. Now I know I am the silver girl in
the song who indeed will ﬂourish when I “sail on,”
as the verse declares.
I whisper a thank you to whichever angel serenaded me out of my sleep and a thank you to
the spider that spun one of the clues that provide
another breadcrumb on my journey. I ﬂip off the
light feeling secure as the spider spins above me
and grateful that I didn’t kill it.
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native of Meigs County and an author. Her
column will appear each Tuesday in Ohio Valley Publishing.

THEIR VIEW

Don’t pave our potholes with tax cuts

If drivers won’t pay 21st
and less reliable public trancentury prices for 21st censit. We’re nearly $1 trillion
tury roads, our once worldbehind on transportation
class infrastructure will go
investments, according to
the way of dial-up Internet.
the American Society of
Life was different in the
Civil Engineers.
1990s. Back in ‘93, a lucky
The Highway Trust Fund
few used dial-up Internet to Scott
was established in 1956,
access one of 800 websites
Klinger
funded by a 3 cent-per-galavailable worldwide. Smart Contributing lon tax on gasoline, to build
Columnist
phones were a distant
our Interstate Highway Sysdream. The TV dinosaur
tem. The tax was increased
Barney had just started
a little each year to keep
“edutaining” America’s children.
up with inﬂation and ensure
And gas cost about $1.30 a
our roads were well tended. But
gallon — including 18.4 cents in
since it got stuck at 18.4 cents in
federal taxes to build and maintain 1993 — about 30 cents in today’s
our roads, bridges, and transit
dollars — this revenue no longer
systems.
covers the tab for even the most
Now, 22 years later, the Internet critical repairs and investments.
is all-encompassing, smartphones
A sustainable solution would
are ubiquitous, and Barney’s been
permanently align expenditures
dormant for years. Gas for $1.30 is with revenue. Instead, some mema distant dream, even in these oil
bers of Congress and the Obama
boom days.
administration are pursuing more
Yet for some reason majorities
temporary ﬁxes.
in both houses of Congress expect
One of the leading proposals
good roads for the same 18 penwould ask a small number of very
nies per gallon we paid in 1993.
large corporations — including
Rather than agreeing on a longMicrosoft, Google, and Citigroup
term ﬁx for the gas tax, Congress
— to pay a small portion of the
has kicked the can down the road.
taxes they owe on $2 trillion of
It’s passed 33 short-term ﬁxes in
untaxed proﬁts they’ve stashed
the last six years.
offshore. A lot of that money
Each time, the Highway Trust
was earned doing business in the
Fund’s solvency becomes even
United States, but the companies
more perilous.
shifted their proﬁts offshore using
Decades of deferred maintelegal accounting tricks for the
nance on our nation’s infrastrucexpress purpose of avoiding taxes.
ture have resulted in needless
Under plans proposed by Presicongestion, dangerous bridges,
dent Barack Obama and two sena-

tors — New York Democrat Chuck
Schumer and Ohio Republican
Rob Portman — corporations
would pay about $150 billion of
the more than $500 billion in taxes
they owe. The remaining $350 billion would simply be forgiven.
That $150 billion could fund six
years of highway repairs. But this
money — just a fraction of what
those companies actually owe —
would be a one-time windfall.
By 2021, we’d be back in the
same ﬁx, having squandered a big
pot of funds we could have otherwise used for investments in wornout schools, dams, and levees
— while rewarding corporate tax
dodging, too. And by then we
could still be stuck with a gas tax
set nearly three decades before.
There are much simpler solutions.
Closing the funding gap would
only require drivers to pay a dime
more per gallon in gas taxes today.
Other options include stopping
companies from shifting U.S. profits to offshore tax havens in the
ﬁrst place, and using the $90 billion
a year in revenue that would result
to make a down payment on roads
and other infrastructure needs.
If Congress refuses to ask drivers to pay 21st century prices
for 21st century roads, our once
world-class infrastructure will go
the way of dial-up Internet.
Scott Klinger is the director of revenue and
spending policies at the Center for Effective
Government.

TODAY IN HISTORY...

The Daily Sentinel
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor
should be limited to 300
words. All letters are subject
to editing, must be signed and
include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be
in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities.
“Thank You” letters will not be
accepted for publication.

Today is Tuesday, Nov.
3, the 307th day of 2015.
There are 58 days left in
the year. This is Election
Day.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Nov. 3, 1900, the
ﬁrst major U.S. automobile show opened at New
York’s Madison Square
Garden under the auspices
of the Automobile Club of
America.
On this date:
In 1839, the ﬁrst Opium
War between China and
Britain broke out.
In 1903, Panama proclaimed its independence
from Colombia.
In 1911, the Chevrolet
Motor Car Co. was founded in Detroit by Louis
Chevrolet and William C.
Durant. (The company
was acquired by General
Motors in 1918.)
In 1936, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt
won a landslide election
victory over Republican
challenger Alfred M. “Alf”
Landon.
In 1954, the Japanese

monster movie “Godzilla”
was released by Toho Co.
In 1957, the Soviet
Union launched Sputnik 2,
the second manmade satellite, into orbit; on board
was a dog named Laika
(LY’-kah) who was sacriﬁced in the experiment.
In 1960, the Meredith
Willson musical “The
Unsinkable Molly Brown”
opened on Broadway with
Tammy Grimes in the title
role.
In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson soundly
defeated Republican Barry
Goldwater to win a White
House term in his own
right.
In 1970, Salvador Allende (ah-YEN’-day) was
inaugurated as president
of Chile.
In 1979, ﬁve Communist Workers Party members were killed in a clash
with heavily armed Ku
Klux Klansmen and neoNazis during an anti-Klan
protest in Greensboro,
North Carolina.
In 1986, the Iran-Contra
affair began to come to

light as Ash-Shiraa, a proSyrian Lebanese magazine, ﬁrst broke the story
of U.S. arms sales to Iran.
In 1994, Susan Smith
of Union, South Carolina,
was arrested for drowning her two young sons,
Michael and Alex, nine
days after claiming the
children had been abducted by a black carjacker.
Ten years ago: Vice
President Dick Cheney’s
former chief of staff, I.
Lewis “Scooter” Libby,
pleaded not guilty to a
ﬁve-count felony indictment in the CIA leak case.
(Libby was later convicted, but had his 30-month
prison sentence commuted by President George
W. Bush.) Merck and Co.
won its ﬁrst court battle
over its Vioxx painkiller
when a New Jersey state
jury found the drugmaker
had properly warned consumers about the risks of
the medication.
Five years ago:
President Barack Obama
acknowledged that Democrats had taken “a shel-

lacking” in midterm elections. The Federal Reserve
announced a plan to buy
$600 billion in Treasury
bonds over the next eight
months in an attempt to
boost lending and stimulate the economy. Former
Russian Prime Minister
Viktor Chernomyrdin died
in Moscow at age 72.
Today’s Birthdays:
Actress Peggy McCay is
88. Actress Lois Smith is
85. Actress Monica Vitti is
84. Former Massachusetts
Gov. Michael S. Dukakis
is 82. Actor-dancer Ken
Berry is 82. Actor Shadoe
Stevens is 69. Singer Lulu
is 67. Comedian-actress
Roseanne Barr is 63.
Actress Kate Capshaw
is 62. Comedian Dennis
Miller is 62. Actress Kathy
Kinney is 62. Singer
Adam Ant is 61. Actor
Dolph Lundgren is 58.
Rock musician C.J. Pierce
(Drowning Pool) is 43.
Olympic gold medal ﬁgure
skater Evgeni Plushenko is
33. Actress Julie Berman
(TV: “General Hospital”)
is 32.

�NATION/WORLD

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 3, 2015 5A

Judge orders
Cosby deposition
in Dickinson lawsuit
By Anthony McCartney
AP Entertainment Writer

LOS ANGELES — Bill Cosby and his former attorney can be deposed by lawyers for Janice Dickinson in
the model’s defamation lawsuit against the embattled
comedian, a judge ruled Monday.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Debre Katz
Weintraub ruled Cosby and his former lawyer Martin
Singer must give their sworn testimony before Nov.
25.
Dickinson, who is among dozens of women alleging
that Cosby molested them, is suing Cosby for defamation over statements last year denying the comedian
drugged and raped Dickinson in 1982.
The ruling states Dickinson’s lawyers can only seek
answers as to whether the denials were made maliciously, and Cosby and Singer can assert attorneyclient privilege and refuse to answer some questions.
Dickinson never reported the rape to authorities
and has said she was afraid if she did that her career
would be damaged and Cosby would retaliate.
She sued Cosby in May, claiming she has been revictimized and her reputation has suffered because of
pointed denials by Cosby’s attorney that the comedian
drugged and raped her in a Lake Tahoe, California,
hotel room more than 30 years ago.
The suit detailed Dickinson’s allegations that Cosby
raped her after giving her wine and a pill in the hotel
room, and how she wanted to go public with her story
in a 2002 autobiography but was prevented from
doing so by the book’s publisher.
Dickinson’s ghostwriter, Pablo Fenjves, supported
her account and said he and the book’s editor talked
Dickinson out of including the rape allegations.
“She was visibly shaken by the memory, full of
anger,” Fenjves said. “I basically said, ‘Listen, we can’t
include that in the book. It’s a he-said, she-said situation and he’s a very powerful man.’”
Fenjves said he has already given a sworn statement
in the case.
Cosby’s lawyers are attempting to throw out the
case and Dickinson’s lawyers argued they needed
sworn testimony from the comedian and Singer to
properly oppose their efforts.
Cosby’s lawyer Christopher Tayback declined comment after the hearing. Cosby ﬁred Singer, his longtime attorney, last month. Dickinson’s attorney Lisa
Bloom said she was pleased by the ruling.
Neither Cosby, 78, nor Dickinson, 60, attended
Monday’s hearing.
The lawsuit is one of several ﬁled against Cosby.
Singer has denied Cosby raped Dickinson. Cosby has
never been charged in connection with any of the allegations.
Singer represented Cosby for more than a decade,
and he was sued for defamation in 2006 by Andrea
Constand, a Temple University worker who accused
Cosby of abusing her and reached a settlement before
trial. Constand’s lawsuit focused on statements made
by Singer denying Cosby drugged and abused her.
The lawsuit revealed Singer had been involved in
a deal with the National Enquirer that granted the
magazine an exclusive interview with the comedian
in exchange for killing a story about another woman
accusing Cosby of abuse.
Singer also issued numerous denials that Cosby
had drugged and raped women, including Dickinson’s
claims last year.
The judge cited the denial and said ultimately it
may be able to prove that Cosby’s denials, or Dickinson’s claims that she was raped, are true.
“In other words, either the rape did occur or it did
not occur,” Weintraub said.

Jury to settle bitter
sweetener battle
By Brian Melley

That didn’t go over well
with the Western Sugar
Cooperative and other
LOS ANGELES — Big
sugar processors, who
Sugar and Big Corn face off sued the corn reﬁners and
in court this week in a bitArcher Daniels Midland
ter, multibillion-dollar batCo. and Cargill Inc. for
tle of sweeteners that boils false advertising. They are
down to a mix of science,
seeking as much as $2 bilsemantics and marketing.
lion.
Jurors in the case
Corn reﬁners and the
between sugar processors
two agribusiness giants
and corn manufacturers
countersued, charging the
will take up one of nutrisugar industry with maktion’s most vexing debates ing false and misleading
and confront a choice com- statements that included a
mon among some consum- comment that high fructose
ers: sugar or high fructose corn syrup is as addictive
corn syrup?
as crack cocaine. They are
The trial starting Tuesseeking $530 million.
day in federal court grew
Jurors will hear from
out of efforts by the Corn
experts on both sides of
Reﬁners Association to
the debate, getting a mix of
rebrand its high fructose
science and spin. They will
corn syrup as “corn sugar” also see damning internal
to reverse damaging public- documents that show what
ity that associated it with
was happening behind
diabetes and obesity.
closed doors.
Its ad campaign featured
Corn reﬁners will presa TV commercial with a
ent evidence that the sugar
father walking with his
industry was behind the
daughter across a cornﬁeld pounding that high fructose
and saying that he’s reascorn syrup took in public
sured by experts that high
opinion as sugar tried
fructose corn syrup is the
to regain market share it
same as cane sugar.
lost when food producers
“Your body can’t tell the switched to the cheaper
difference,” he says. “Sugar corn product that came on
is sugar.”
the market in the 1970s.
Associated Press

Ivan Sekretarev | AP

People react as they look at a picture of plane crash victims at Dvortsovaya (Palace) Square in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Monday. In a
massive outpouring of grief, thousands of people flocked to St. Petersburg’s airport, laying flowers, soft toys and paper planes next to
the pictures of the victims of the crash of a passenger jet in Egypt that killed all 224 on board in Russia’s deadliest air crash to date.

Mystery, confusion surround crash
By Dmitry Lovetsky
and Vladimir Isachenkov

The Metrojet was ﬂying at
31,000 feet over the Sinai when it
Associated Press
crashed Saturday only 23 minutes
after taking off from the Egyptian
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia —
Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh
Mystery and confusion surround- for St. Petersburg with mostly
ed the ﬁnal moments of a Russian Russian passengers.
jetliner that plummeted suddenly
Metrojet ﬁrmly denied that the
from high altitude to the Egypcrash could have been caused by
tian desert, killing all 224 people
either equipment failure or crew
aboard. The airline Monday ruled
error.
out pilot error or a technical fault,
“The only possible explanation
but Russian aviation ofﬁcials
could
be an external impact on
dismissed those comments as
the
airplane,”
Metrojet’s deputy
premature.
director
Alexander
Smirnov told
Some aviation experts raised
a
news
conference
in
Moscow.
the possibility that a bomb on
When
pressed
for
more
details,
board the Metrojet Airbus A321Smirnov
said
he
was
not
at liberty
200 brought it down, while others
to
discuss
them
because
the
invescited an incident in 2001 when
tigation
was
ongoing.
the aircraft grazed the runway
Asked if the plane could have
with its tail while landing.
been brought down by a terrorist
James Clapper, the U.S. direcattack, he said only that “anything
tor of national intelligence, said
was possible.”
that while there is no direct
But Russia’s top aviation
evidence of any terrorist involveofﬁcial,
Alexander Neradko, disment yet, it couldn’t be excluded
missed
the
company’s statement
that the plane was brought down
as
premature
and unfounded.
by Islamic State extremists in the
In
televised
comments from
Sinai Peninsula.
Egypt,
Neradko
said it would
“It’s unlikely, but I wouldn’t rule
it out,” he told reporters in Wash- be possible to draw conclusions
about the crash only after experts
ington.
Asked if a terrorist attack could examined the plane’s ﬂight data
and cockpit voice recorders and
be ruled out, President Vladimir
studied the wreckage.
Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry PesHe said the large area where
kov, said: “No versions could be
debris were scattered indicated
excluded.”

the jet had broken up at high altitude, but he refrained from citing
a reason for the crash pending the
investigation.
Viktor Yung, another deputy
director general of Metrojet, said
the crew did not send a distress
call and did not contact trafﬁc
controllers before the crash.
Egyptian ofﬁcials have offered
conﬂicting accounts on whether
or not the plane issued any distress calls.
Experts say planes break up in
ﬂight usually due to one of three
factors: a catastrophic weather
event, a midair collision or an
external threat, such as a bomb or
a missile.
A local afﬁliate of the extremist
Islamic State group has claimed it
brought down the aircraft, which
crashed in the northern Sinai
where the Egyptian military and
security forces have battled militants for years. Both Egyptian and
Russian ofﬁcials have dismissed
that claim as not credible.
Still, the U.S., Germany and
Britain all had overﬂight warnings in place for the Sinai. They
advised airlines to avoid ﬂying
over the peninsula below 26,000
feet and to avoid the Sharm elSheik airport due to extremist
violence and, notably, the use of
anti-aircraft weapons.

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6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Best Time Ever With Neil
The Voice "The Road to the Chicago Fire "Your Day Is
Patrick Harris (SF) (N)
Live Shows" (N)
Coming" (N)
The Voice "The Road to the Chicago Fire "Your Day Is
Best Time Ever With Neil
Patrick Harris (SF) (N)
Live Shows" (N)
Coming" (N)
The Muppets Fresh Off the Agents of SHIELD "Among Wicked City "Running With
(N)
Boat (N)
Us Hide" (N)
the Devil" (N)
Secrets of the Dead "Ultimate Tut" Fresh insights into
Frontline "Terror in Little
how Tutankhamun was buried; the enduring enigma
Saigon" (N)
around how he died.
The Muppets Fresh Off the Agents of SHIELD "Among Wicked City "Running With
(N)
Boat (N)
Us Hide" (N)
the Devil" (N)
NCIS: New Orleans "Broken Limitless "Brian Finch's
NCIS "16 Years" (N)
Hearted" (N)
Black Op" (N)
MLB Baseball World Series New York Mets at Kansas City Royals Game 6 Site: Kauffman
Stadium -- Kansas City, Mo. (if necessary) (L)
Secrets of the Dead "Ultimate Tut" Fresh insights into
Frontline "Terror in Little
how Tutankhamun was buried; the enduring enigma
Saigon" (N)
around how he died.
NCIS: New Orleans "Broken Limitless "Brian Finch's
NCIS "16 Years" (N)
Hearted" (N)
Black Op" (N)

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Walking Tall Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson. TV14
Manhattan "Overlord" (N) Manhattan "Overlord"
18 (WGN) BlueB. "Critical Condition"
UFC 174 Johnson takes on Bagautinov in mixed martial arts.
UFC "Bad Blood"
24 (ROOT) DayLife (N) Insider (N)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
FballPlayoff E:60 (N)
30 for 30 "The Gospel According to MAC" (N)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption Baseball Tonight (L)
NCAA Football Northern Illinois at Toledo Site: Glass Bowl -- Toledo, Ohio (L)
27 (LIFE)
29

(FAM)

30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Celebrity Wife Swap "Rick Celeb Wife "Angie Everhart/ Celeb Wife "Kellie Williams/ Celebrity Wife Swap
Celebrity Wife Swap
Flair/ 'Rowdy' Roddy Piper" Pat and Gina Neely"
CeCe Peniston" (N)
"Charo/ Jill Whelan" (N)
"Plaxico Burress/ DJ Paul"
Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fabulous An FBI agent defies orders
(:45)
Paul Blart: Mall Cop ('09, Com) Kevin James. A mall cop, trying
and returns to the pageant scene after Miss USA is kidnapped. TV14
to become a police officer, helps protect his mall against criminals. TV14
Bar Rescue "Back to the
Bar Rescue "Sour Lemons Sweat Inc. "Low-Impact
Sweat Inc. "Interval
Sweat Inc. "Fan-Based
Bar: Delusional Owners"
and Bitter Business"
Workouts"
Training"
Workouts" (N)
Nicky
H.Danger
Thunder
Thunder
iCarly
iCarly
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Recall" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Uncle" Law&amp;O: SVU "Philadelphia" Law &amp; Order: S.V.U. "Sin" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Florida"
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
Castle
Castle
Castle "47 Seconds"
Castle "The Limey"
Castle "Headhunters"
(5:30) Kill Bill Vol. 1 After being attacked on her wedding
Kill Bill Vol. 2 ('04, Act) David Carradine, Daryl Hannah, Uma Thurman. An assassin
day, an assassin seeks revenge on former associates. TV14 continues her quest for vengeance against her former boss and his associates. TVM
Alaska: The Last Frontier Yukon "Life on the Line"
Yukon Men
Yukon Men "All In" (N)
Rush "Moving the Monster"
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars (N)
Wars (N)
Wars: Ba (N) Wars (N)
RivMon "Russian Killer"
RivMon "Bone Crusher"
River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters: Jurassic-Sized Prehistoric Terror
Bad Girls Club "Bye With a Bad Girls Club "Reunion" Bad Girls Club "Reunion" Fix My Mom "Knot Without Pretty. Strong. (N)
Bang"
1/2
2/2
My Daughter" (N)
Law &amp; Order "Girlfriends" Law &amp; Order "Pro Se"
Law &amp; Order "Homesick"
Law &amp; Order "Aftershock" Law&amp;Order "Causa Mortis"
Botched "Boner Free Zone" E! News (N)
Botched "Breast Greedy"
Botched (N)
Christina "Like Me" (SP) (N)
(:25) The Facts of Life
Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Jim Gaffigan Jim Gaffigan
Live Free or Die "The
Dirty Rotten Survival
Live Free or Die "The
Live Free or Die "The
Dirty Rotten Survival "Hog
Reaping"
"Timber!"
Reaping"
Tipping Point" (N)
Wild" (N)
Pro FB Talk Football
NHL Top 10 NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Los Angeles Kings at St. Louis Blues Site: Scottrade Center (L)
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
Pre-game
NFL Films (N) UFC 187 Anthony Johnson and Daniel Cormier face off.
Curse of Oak Island "The Curse of Oak Island "Seven Curse of Oak Island "The Curse of Oak Island "X
Curse of Oak Island "A
Ninety-foot Stone"
Must Dye"
Trail of the Templars"
Marks the Spot"
Dangerous Dive"
Below Deck "Fire!"
Below Deck
The Real Housewives
Below Deck (N)
The People's Couch (N)
(:05) Martin (:35) Martin (:05) Martin (:35)
Madea's Family Reunion ('06, Com) Tyler Perry. TVPG
Being "Being Kara" (N)
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
Underworld: Rise of the Lycans A young lycan leads
Skyfall (2012, Action) Helen McCrory, Ralph Fiennes, Daniel Craig. James Bond
a rebellion against the vampires after losing his lover. TV14 is faced with another mission involving his fateful connection to M. TVPG

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

Draft Day ('14, The Leftovers
400 (HBO) Sport) Jennifer Garner, Tom
Welling, Kevin Costner. TV14
(4:50) The
(:25)
Wonder Boys During a holiday
450 (MAX) Boy Next
with a student, a professor comes to terms
Door TVMA with many aspects of his life. TVMA
(4:45)
Out of Sight
Homeland "Better Caul
500 (SHOW) ('98, Cri) Jennifer Lopez,
Saul"
George Clooney. TVPG
(5:00)

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

Horrible Bosses 2 ('14, Comedy) Charlie Day, Jason
Sudeikis, Jason Bateman. Three working stiffs plan to
kidnap and ransom the adult son of a slick investor. TVMA
(:20)
Connie and Carla ('04, Com) Toni Collette,
Nia Vardalos. Two lounge singers witness a mob hit and
flee to L.A., where they pose as drag queens. TV14
60 Minutes Sports (N)
Inside the NFL "2015 Week
8" (N)

10

PM

10:30

Kareem: Minority of One
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar had an
impact on basketball.
The Knick "The Best With
the Best, to Get the Best"
Notre Dame Notre Dame
Football (N) Football

�LOCAL

6A Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Gallia, Meigs Emergency HEAP program begins
scheduled utility shut-off,
Edwards said.
Emergency HEAP provides assistance to households that have had utilities disconnected, face
the threat of disconnection, or have 25 percent
or less supply of bulk fuel,
or less than 10 day supply
of wood or coal. The program allows a one-time
payment per heating season to restore or retain
home heating. The potential dollar amount will be
up to $175 for regulated

CHESHIRE — Gallia
Meigs C.A.A.’s Emergency HEAP Program
began Nov. 2 and will
continue through March
31, according to Sandra
Edwards, emergency services director. Appointments can now be made.
People may call the
Cheshire ofﬁce at 740367-7341 or walk-in to
book an appointment.
However, an appointment may not extend a

utilities, up to $550 for
un- regulated utilities, up
to $450 for wood, coal or
pellets and up to 200 gallons for propane, bottled
gas, or propane, and up
to 8 cylinders of propane,
depending of the cost.
The income guidelines for Regular HEAP
and Emergency HEAP
are the same. However,
Regular HEAP requires
the previous 12 months
income while the past
three months income is
acceptable for Emergency

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 56.89
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.85
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 110.95
Big Lots (NYSE) — 46.77
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 43.66
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 42.80
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 3.70
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.290
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 48.47
Collins (NYSE) —88.18
DuPont (NYSE) — 63.94
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.59
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 29.40
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 49.10
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 65.54
Kroger (NYSE) — 38.20
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 96.45
Norfolk So (NYSE) —80.38
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.93

BBT (NYSE) —37.80
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 19.38
Pepsico (NYSE) — 101.40
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.99
Rockwell (NYSE) — 110.56
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 12.99
Royal Dutch Shell — 53.68
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 23.53
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 57.60
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.73
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.07
Worthington (NYSE) — 32.14
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Nov. 2, 2015, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

HEAP. The 12-month
period or three-month
period for the test is
determined from date
of application making it
possible for some with
decreased income during
these periods to qualify
later in the program.
Examples of these type
situations could occur
from layoff, strike, retirement, disability or death
of a spouse or household
member. Documentation
verifying all household
income must be provided
when applying for HEAP.
Also a copy of the applicant’s recent electric
bill is required. It is also
required that you provide
a birth certiﬁcate for
the primary applicant,

social security cards for
all household members
and proof of Student ID
or Report Card if over
18 and living in your
household. You will also
be asked for proof of
home ownership or proof
of landlord, including
address and phone number. If the client has custody of the children in the
home, they will need the
custody papers also.
The following income
levels by household size
should be used to determine eligibility. These
income guidelines represent the 175% calculation
and are revised annually.
Allowable annual income
for a one person household
is $20,597.50, two persons

$27,877.50, three persons
$35,157.50, four persons
$42,437.50, ﬁve persons
$49,717.50, and six persons $56,997.50, seven
persons $64,277.50 and
eight persons $71,557.50.
Households with more
than eight members should
add an additional $7,280
per member to the yearly
income.
Both Emergency HEAP
and Regular HEAP applications can be completed
at both ofﬁces: Central
Ofﬁce, Gallia County at
8010 N. SR 7, Cheshire or
the Meigs County Ofﬁce
at 369 Powell Street, Middleport. Applications will
be taken by appointment
from 8:30-10:30 a.m. and
from 1-3:30 p.m.

Issue

All of those in attendance at the meeting
were Randy Butcher,
Michelle Hyer, Fred
Hoffman, Gene Triplett,
Jackie Welker, Bill Spaun,
Mike Bartrum, Tim
Ihle, Randy Smith, Sara
Walpole, Mike Gerlach,
Joe Woodall and Mary T.
Byer-Hill.
Middleport Mayor
Michael Gerlach and
Pomeroy Mayor Jackie
Welker were the only two
mayors in attendance.
Gerlach nominated Welker
as the mayors’ representative, with the motion
approved. All three commissioners were also in
attendance, with Tim
Ihle nominating Randy
Smith as the commis-

sioners’ representative.
The County SubCommittee members were
Welker, mayor’s representative; Smith, commissioner’s representative; Randy
Butcher, township trustee’s
representative; and Gene
Triplett, self-appointed
county engineer’s representative. Butcher nominated Bill Spaun as a ﬁfth
member. Smith was also
nominated as the chair for
the meeting.
Lastly, discussion over
the merits of each project
was heard and Triplett
made a motion to recommend the point values to
each project.

From Page 1A

Meigs County Cooperative Paving Project R30
project. In third place is
the Village of Syracuse/
Street Improvement
project. Lastly, with 45
points, is the Village of
Middleport/Combined
Sewer Overﬂows-Sanity
Sewer Overﬂows project.

Reed &amp; Baur

SERVING YOU FOR OVER 60 YEARS
www.rutkandbottlegas.com

Insurance Agency

FLOOD
INSURANCE

Get a jump on being ready for the cold weather…
During the winter months, demand is high for service…
Contact us today &amp; you’ll be ready for old man winter!

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

51°

69°

62°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

(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
0.07
0.23
41.46
36.07

Today
6:57 a.m.
5:26 p.m.
none
1:21 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Wed.
6:58 a.m.
5:25 p.m.
12:20 a.m.
1:56 p.m.

MOON PHASES
Last

New

Nov 3

First

Nov 11 Nov 19 Nov 25

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

Major
Today 5:23a
Wed. 6:09a
Thu. 6:51a
Fri.
7:30a
Sat.
8:07a
Sun. 8:44a
Mon. 9:23a

Minor
11:35a
12:20p
12:40a
1:19a
1:57a
2:34a
3:12a

Major
5:46p
6:31p
7:12p
7:51p
8:28p
9:06p
9:45p

Minor
11:58p
---1:02p
1:40p
2:18p
2:55p
3:34p

WEATHER HISTORY
A hurricane reached New York City on
Nov. 3, 1861. Flooding from torrential
rain lasting for 20 hours brought out
thousands of rats. Residents of the
city chased the rodents with their
hunting dogs.

73°
60°

Fog in the morning;
mostly sunny, warm

Partly sunny, nice and
warm

Logan
73/49

Adelphi
73/51

0

Chillicothe
73/53

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™
The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local
weather with a number of demographic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.

0

Lucasville
74/54

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Portsmouth
75/54

www.mydailysentinel.com

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

72°
50°

AIR QUALITY

59°
35°

Couple of
thunderstorms

45
300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
12.61
16.21
21.48
12.88
13.06
24.53
12.55
26.17
34.58
12.80
18.50
34.50
17.50

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.26
-0.87
+0.30
+0.49
-0.14
-0.34
-0.07
-0.31
+0.04
+0.20
-1.20
-0.10
-1.60

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Ashland
75/55
Grayson
75/58

Plenty of sunshine

Marietta
73/50

Murray City
73/48
Belpre
74/50

Athens
73/50

St. Marys
74/51

Parkersburg
74/50

Coolville
73/50

Elizabeth
75/54

Spencer
74/55

Buffalo
74/54

Ironton
75/54

Milton
75/57

Clendenin
75/55

St. Albans
76/58

Huntington
74/54

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
90s
Seattle
50/39
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
65/51
20s
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
69/51
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

54°
35°

Sun through high
clouds and cooler

Wilkesville
73/52
POMEROY
Jackson
74/53
74/52
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
74/53
74/54
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
73/53
GALLIPOLIS
74/55
75/54
74/55

South Shore Greenup
75/55
74/53

SUNDAY

60°
41°
Clouds to start, then
sunshine returns

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
73/50

Waverly
74/53

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

0 50 100 150 200

Full

75°
57°

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

Q: Which continent gets more snow
each year: North America or Antarctica?

SUN &amp; MOON

THURSDAY

Visit us at

A: North America by far.

Precipitation

WEDNESDAY

Mild today with sunshine and patchy clouds.
Areas of fog late tonight. High 74° / Low 55°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

67°
49°
63°
41°
83° in 2004
23° in 1898

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

IS NOT PART OF YOUR
HOMEOWNERS INSURANCE
Call 740-992-3600
www.reedbaur.com

60613762

282 Main Street, Rutland, Ohio
740-742-2511 1-800-837-8217
www.rutlandbottlegas.com

60619263

1-800-837-8217

Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-9922155 EXT. 2555.

Charleston
76/54

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
45/39

Montreal
59/38

Billings
44/32

Denver
74/44

Toronto
67/45
Minneapolis
66/55
Chicago
70/50
Kansas City
73/56

New York
71/56

Detroit
71/46
Washington
72/52

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
68/45/s
35/25/r
69/59/c
69/50/s
71/45/s
44/32/r
50/33/c
66/48/s
76/54/pc
65/56/sh
68/35/pc
70/50/s
73/55/pc
71/51/s
73/52/s
77/58/s
74/44/pc
70/57/s
71/46/s
89/76/s
78/59/pc
73/53/s
73/56/pc
65/48/c
75/57/pc
69/51/pc
77/59/pc
87/77/pc
66/55/pc
77/59/pc
78/63/pc
71/56/s
76/57/pc
90/71/pc
72/51/s
73/56/sh
71/47/s
63/41/s
65/58/c
72/49/c
73/57/pc
61/39/sh
65/51/s
50/39/pc
72/52/s

Hi/Lo/W
60/38/t
33/26/pc
70/61/c
70/55/s
72/52/s
43/28/sf
48/29/pc
61/49/s
75/55/s
65/55/r
55/30/sh
71/56/s
75/57/pc
73/57/s
74/56/s
77/63/pc
63/34/pc
71/60/s
70/56/s
89/76/s
77/65/pc
75/58/s
74/58/s
61/44/pc
77/59/pc
69/50/s
76/60/pc
87/78/sh
70/56/s
75/58/pc
79/66/pc
71/56/s
76/60/pc
87/71/pc
74/55/s
69/50/pc
73/56/s
60/41/s
68/60/r
71/59/sh
77/59/s
46/33/sn
66/49/s
50/44/pc
72/58/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

El Paso
77/53
Chihuahua
81/47

High
Low

Atlanta
69/59

91° in Way Cross, GA
18° in Angel Fire, NM

Global
High 110° in Punda Maria, South Africa
Low -37° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
78/59
Monterrey
83/62

GOALS

Miami
87/77

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589

Staff Report

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 3, 2015 s Section B

Southern football stymies Eastern Eagles, 47-7
By Alex Hawley

attempt of the game and
three plays later were set up
with a ﬁrst-and-goal. The
RACINE, Ohio — Some
Eagle defense stopped the
of the most valuable
Purple and Gold on fourthmoments in a football game and-goal, but Southern’s
happen between the second defense forced the guests
and third quarters.
into a three-and-out.
The Southern football
Southern failed to convert
team turned a seven-point
on fourth down in EHS
halftime lead into a 40-point territory for the second
victory Saturday night, as
straight drive, and the
the Tornadoes defeated Tri- Green and Gold took over
Valley Conference Hocking
on their own 27. Eastern
Division archrival Eastern
gained a quick ﬁrst down
by a 47-7 count, in the
and advance the ball near
season ﬁnale at Roger Lee
midﬁeld before being forced
Adams Memorial Football
to punt.
Field.
EHS forced the Tornadoes
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
The
Tornadoes
(4-6,
3-5
into
a three-and-out on the
Southern senior Tommy Ramthun pulls in an interception, while SHS sophomore Dylan
ensuing possession, and the
Smith (7) blocks Eastern junior Jeremiah Martindale, during the Tornadoes 47-7 victory on TVC Hocking) intercepted
Eastern’s (2-8, 2-6) ﬁrst pass Eagles setup their offense
Saturday in Racine.
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

at their own 44. Holding
penalties pushed the Eagles
back to their own 10-yard
line and the Tornado
defense forced another punt.
However, the punt was mishandled by Southern, and
Eastern recovered at its own
23. The Eagles were forced
to punt just six plays later,
and Southern began its next
possession on the Eastern
24-yard line.
The Purple and Gold
faced a third-and-10 after
back-to-back incompletions,
but junior quarterback Blake
Johnson, who was ﬂushed
out of the pocket, found
junior tight end Crenson
See SOUTHERN | 3B

URG men’s
hoops receives
votes in poll
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

KANSAS CITY Mo.
— The University of Rio
Grande was among the
schools receiving votes in
the 2015 NAIA Division II
Men’s Basketball Coaches’
Preseason Top 25 Poll
released late Tuesday.
The RedStorm received
13 points in the balloting
of a panel of head coaches
representing each of the
conferences and the Association of Independent
Institutions for the equivalent of 34th place.
Head coach Ken French’s
club, which ﬁnished 19-12
overall and 6-7 in the
Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference last
year, returns four starters including seniors D.D. Joiner (18.1 ppg) and Dwayne
Bazemore (17.8 ppg, 10.0
rpg), both of whom were
All-KIAC selections last
season.
The RedStorm were
picked second in the KIAC
Colonial Division and third
in the league overall in the
KIAC’s preseason coaches’
poll.
Rio Grande opens its
regular season schedule
at home on November 6
against Miami UniversityMiddletown as part of the
Saunders Insurance Tip-off
Classic.
Defending national
champion Cornerstone
(Mich.) was the top-ranked
team in the poll, receiving
all 12 ﬁrst-place votes and
312 points. This marks the
23rd-straight poll that the

Golden Eagles ﬁnd themselves in the Top 25, 19 of
which have been Top 10
rankings.
Indiana Wesleyan was
second in the voting with
300 points, while davenport, Mich.. (292 pts.),
Saint Francis, Ind. (280
pts.) and Olivet Nazarene,
Ill. (264 pts.) round out the
top ﬁve.
Indiana Wesleyan is
in the Top 25 for the
45th-straight week, dating back to Jan. 30, 2012.
Davenport (Mich.) holds
the active streak of being
consecutively ranked with
77-straight mentions.
Bethel (Ind.) has the
most No. 1 mentions with
35. Former-member Embry
Riddle (Fla.) is second
with 21.
Eleven of the 12 conferences are represented
in the Top 25 poll. The
Crossroads League leads
all leagues with four teams
represented. The Wolverine-Hoosier Athletic Conference, Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic Conference,
Cascade Collegiate Conference, Great Plains Athletic
Conference and The Sun
Conference each has three
teams represented.
The KIAC is also represented by No. 10 Indiana University-East and
Brescia University, which
received 39 points for the
equivalent of 27th place.
The ﬁrst regular-season
installment will be released
on Tuesday, Dec. 1.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, November 3
Volleyball
Point Pleasant at Winﬁeld, 5 p.m.
Wednesday, November 4
Volleyball
Huntington St. Joe, Hannan, Charleston Catholic, Buffalo at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Eastern vs Waterford at Lancaster HS, 6 p.m.
Friday, November 6
Football
Point Pleasant at Princeton, 7:30
Wahama at Buffalo, 7:30
River Valley at Zane Trace, 7:30
South Gallia at Danville, 7:30
Saturday, November 7
Cross Country
OHSAA State Championships at National Trail
Raceway, 10 a.m.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Members of the Eastern volleyball team pose for a picture after winning the 2015 Division IV district championship over top-seeded
Trimble Saturday afternoon at Jackson High School in Jackson, Ohio.

Lady Eagles win district title
By Bryan Walters

the opening match, while Berne Union
and Fisher Catholic are in the roll
match later that night.
JACKSON, Ohio — After all, it was
After trailing by as many as 11
Halloween.
points in Game 1 and battling through
The Eastern volleyball team pulled
10 ties and 11 lead changes in Game 2
off one heck of a trick and received an just to come up short, EHS third-year
even bigger treat Saturday afternoon
coach Katie Williams noted that few
after rallying back from a 2-0 deﬁcit to in-game modiﬁcations made a big difclaim a shocking 17-25, 23-25, 25-22,
ference in the ﬁnal outcome.
25-15, 15-5 victory over top-seeded
She was also quick to point out that
Trimble in a Division IV district
her troops’ continued focus and resilchampionship match at Jackson High
iency made an even bigger difference.
School.
“We were very ﬂat early on and we
The sixth-seeded Lady Eagles (15just didn’t play with much conﬁdence.
10) secured the program’s ninth Sweet It could have been nerves, but Trimble
16 appearance in school history and, in also came out on ﬁre,” Williams said.
doing so, also exorcised somewhat of a “We made a few adjustments in the
demon in the process.
second and third games, and the girls
Eastern hadn’t won a district cham- could see what we asked them to do
pionship in volleyball since the 2012
was working. We started playing with
campaign, which ended up being the
conﬁdence, and great things happened
ﬁnal season under now Trimble coach
from there.
Howie Caldwell. Caldwell was respon“The girls could have quit down 2-0,
sible for — among many other accombut they didn’t. In fact, they worked
plishments — each of the previous
harder — which is what a good team
eight district titles in Eastern’s storied
does when it is facing adversity. I’m
history.
ecstatic right now for the girls, mainly
The Lady Tomcats (18-7) had
because they’ve learned that it takes a
defeated EHS in both regular season
contests and were within one game of different kind of monster to win in the
securing the school’s ﬁrst-ever district tournament.”
The victory allowed Williams to join
championship. And that was when
Caldwell
as the only coaches in EastEastern found its former postseason
ern
volleyball
history with a district
spirit.
championship. Williams was also a
Trailing 8-3 in Game 3, the Lady
part of three district championships as
Eagles countered with a 10-3 run to
a player from 2005-07 under Caldwell,
take 13-11 advantage. EHS led by as
many as six points (22-16) before hold- who amassed a 17-3 all-time mark at
EHS in the district tournament.
ing on for a three-point decision.
The Lady Eagles previously won
Trimble jumped out to a 3-0 edge
district
championships in 2002, 2003,
in Game 4, but the Lady Eagles coun2005,
2006,
2007, 2009, 2011 and
tered with ﬁve straight points and
2012.
never trailed the rest of the match.
When asked about beating her
The Green and Gold led by as many
as a dozen points (24-12) en route to a former coach for the ﬁrst time, Williams was nothing but respectful in her
10-point victory.
There were two ties in the all-impor- response — even the part she persontant race to 15 in Game 5, but Eastern ally enjoyed.
“You know, I really look up to him.
broke away at 2-all with a 5-1 charge
I
teach
English and coach volleyball,
that forced Trimble to take a timeout
trailing 7-3. EHS followed with 7-1 run which is what he did at Eastern when
for a 14-4 advantage, then both teams I was a student,” Williams said. “He’s
been a good role model and a friend,
traded points to wrap up the thrilling
and I’ve learned a lot from him. I’ve
ﬁve-game triumph.
joined a pretty good coach on that list
Eastern — which won its only
at Eastern.
regional championship in 2011 —
“At the same time, it does feel good
advances to the D-4 regional semiﬁnals
to get this win at this level. This is my
at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Lancaster
High School. EHS faces Waterford in
ﬁrst win over my mentor. Most people

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

don’t even get that ﬁrst one, especially
in the district tournament.”
Morgan Baer led the EHS service
attack with 14 points, followed by
Kelsey Johnson with 13 points and
Annalisa Boano with 10 points and a
team-best four aces.
Morgain Little and Katlyn Barber
were next with eight points apiece,
while Elayna Bissell chipped in ﬁve
points to the winning cause.
Boano led the Green and Gold with
26 kills, followed by Makenzie Brooks
with 20 kills and Barber with 19 kills.
Johnson was next with 17 kills and
Baer added four kills to go along with
a team-high 34 assists.
Barber led the defense with 15 digs,
while Boano and Johnson respectively
added 14 and 10 digs.
Trimble — which shared the TVC
Hocking crown with Waterford and
Southern — received 18 service points
from Taya Lackey, followed by Lauren
Riley with 12 points and Morgan Murphy with 11 points. Nikki Kish chipped
in three points, while Morgan Azbell
and Alexa Shust each contributed one
point.
Eastern has now avenged both
Trimble and Federal Hocking in the
postseason, a pair of squads that the
Lady Eagles were swept by in the regular season. Waterford also won both
regular season contests against EHS
this fall.
The Lady Eagles are 2-7 all-time in
the regional tournament, with the only
two victories coming during the program’s state appearance in 2011.
Having a chance to improve on that
mark is something that Williams, and
her players, will be looking forward to
on Wednesday night.
“Tonight, at least during those last
four games, that was the best volleyball
that we’ve played all season. It’s nice
for everyone involved to be able to
say that we are back to our tradition
here at Eastern,” Williams said. “The
girls are still hungry, especially after
not even getting out of a sectionals
last year and with the way our regular
season went. We know we still have a
lot to prove to people, but we also have
another chance to do that.”
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2101.

�SPORTS

2B Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Rio women
get votes
in NAIA poll
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

KANSAS CITY Mo. — The University of Rio
Grande was among the schools receiving votes in the
2015 NAIA Division II Women’s Basketball Coaches’
Preseason Top 25 Poll released late Tuesday.
The RedStorm received 23 points in the balloting of
a panel of head coaches representing each of the conferences and the Association of Independent Institutions,
tying Kansas Wesleyan for the equivalent of 30th place.
Head coach David Smalley’s squad won 25 games
last season and captured the Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference regular season title to earn a spot
in the NAIA Division II national tournament.
A number of players from last year’s team return for
the 2015-16 season, prompting KIAC coaches to tab the
RedStorm as the No. 2 pick in both the Colonial Division and overall. The returnees include senior guard/
forward Sarah Bonar (11.6 ppg) and junior forward
Brooke Marcum (8.6 ppg, 10.0 rpg).
Junior forward Alexis Payne (14.5 ppg) is also among
the returnees, but miss the entire after suffering an
injury in pre-season workouts.
Rio Grande opens its regular season schedule at
home on November 10 against Wilberforce University.
Defending national champion Morningside (Iowa)
was the top-ranked team in the poll, receiving all 11
ﬁrst-place votes and 281 points.
Davenport (Mich.) was second with 264 points. Saint
Xavier, Ill. (262 pts.), Concordia, Neb. (259 pts.) and
Indiana Wesleyan (243 pts.) round out the top ﬁve.
Morningside has the most active Top 25 appearances
with 114. College of the Ozarks (Mo.) is just seven
behind with 107.
Indiana Wesleyan has the most No. 1 rankings in
NAIA history with 33. Morningside is right behind with
22.
Eleven of the 12 conferences are represented in the
Top 25 poll. The Chicago Collegiate Athletic Conference, Crossroads League and Great Plains Athletic Conference each have four teams represented.
The KIAC is also represented by No. 22 Asbury
(Ky.), which made its way into the Top 25 poll after
being out since Jan. 13 of last season.
The ﬁrst regular-season installment will be released
on Tuesday, Dec. 1.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the University of
Rio Grande.

Late TD, Bengals
over Steelers
PITTSBURGH (AP)
— Down to a last chance,
Andy Dalton showed why
these Bengals are the best
ever through seven games.
Dalton passed for Cincinnati’s only touchdown
with 2:57 to go, and the
Bengals picked off Ben
Roethlisberger twice in
the fourth quarter while
rallying for a 16-10 victory over the Steelers on
Sunday that gave them
the best start in franchise
history.
They’re 7-0 and in command of the AFC North
heading into the midpoint
of the season.
“We’re playing for
something greater than
being 7-0,” said A.J.
Green, whose TD catch
was part of another big
game against Pittsburgh.
“We’re trying to win a

championship. We feel
a game like this helps us
build resiliency going into
the postseason.”
With this team, it will
always come down to the
postseason. Cincinnati
hasn’t won a playoff game
since the 1990 season,
the sixth-longest streak of
postseason futility in NFL
history. The Bengals have
lost in the ﬁrst round each
of the past four years.
The playoffs are still
far away, but this Bengals
team is doing things like
no other.
“I don’t even know how
to explain it,” said Shawn
Williams, whose interception set up the winning
touchdown. “When there’s
a special moment in the
game and a play has to
be made, they made the
play.”

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60554222

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy sophomore Grace Martin (7) attempts a spike in front of GAHS senior Hanna Johnson (17), during the Blue Angels’
sectional final victory over Chillicothe, in Centenary on October 24. Martin was named Southeastern Ohio Athletic League Player of the
Year.

Five Blue Angels earn SEOAL honors
By Alex Hawley

posting 156 points, 34 aces, 168
kills, 13 blocks and 519 digs from
the Blue and White this season.
To the victors go the spoils.
Meadows, a junior, also earned
The Gallia Academy volleyball
ﬁrst team honors as a sophomore.
team won their sixth Southeastern
The Blue Angels’ ﬁnal ﬁrst team
Ohio Athletic League title on the
spot went to junior setter Carly
court this season, which earned
Shriver, who had 242 service
the Blue Angels ﬁve spots on the
points, 56 aces, 12 kills, 196 digs
all-league team.
and 456 assists for the league
GAHS, which ﬁnished 22-3 over- champs.
all and 5-1 in league, earned three
Second year GAHS head coach
ﬁrst-team selections, one honorJanice Rosier was named league
able mention spot and both Player Coach of the Year for the Blue
of the Year and Coach of the Year
Angels, who ﬁnished ranked 18th
honors.
in the ﬁnal OHSVCA Division II
Gallia Academy sophomore
Poll. Rosier was co-Coach of the
Grace Martin, who had 153 service Year last season.
points including 34 aces, 202 kills,
Representing Logan on ﬁrst
94 blocks, 348 digs and 102 assists team were senior Cassidy Bosch
for the season, was named Player
and freshman Rachel Pierce, who
of the Year and earned a spot on
led the Lady Chieftains to a 3-3
ﬁrst team. Martin was an honorleague record. LHS was the lone
able mention selection last season. SEOAL team to defeat Gallia AcadGAHS junior Jenna Meadows
emy this season.
earned a spot on ﬁrst team, after
Warren senior Katlyn Coffman

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

and Jackson senior Katie Hemsley
each were selected to ﬁrst team
after both teams ﬁnished 2-4 in the
league. This is the third year on
the All-SEOAL team for Hemsley,
who is committed to the University
of Rio Grande.
Gallia Academy freshman Ashton Webb was selected as an honorable mention after posting 242
service points, 76 aces, 208 kills,
37 blocks and 125 digs for the Blue
and White this fall.
Other honorable mention selections were JHS senior Celeste Stiltner, WHS junior Katie Knowlton
and LHS freshman Grace McKee.
The 2015 All-SEOAL volleyball
team was chosen by league coaches
and was based on ﬁnal league
standing. The Player of the year
was selected by a panel of SEOAL
media.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.

Browns not sure if McCown can play
CLEVELAND (AP) —
The Browns have little
time to ice their ample
bumps and bruises this
week.
The unbeaten, unforgiving Bengals are looming.
With a Thursday night
matchup against Cincinnati, Cleveland’s banged-

up players — most notably starting quarterback
Josh McCown — don’t
have the luxury of taking
an extra day or two to
heal up.
McCown, who has
taken a pounding in
recent weeks, injured his
ribs in the second half of

Sunday’s loss to Arizona
and it’s not yet known if
he’ll be able to face the
AFC North’s top team.
Browns coach Mike
Pettine would not divulge
results of X-rays taken on
McCown, who pushed
through pain during a
34-20 loss to the Cardinals.
Pettine expects
McCown to participate in
Tuesday’s walk-through,
but said it’s too early to
know if the 36-year-old
will start Thursday.
“We’ll see how he is in
the next couple days,”
Pettine said.
It was the same scenario last week, when
McCown was limited during the week and backup
Johnny Manziel was prepared to possibly start.
But McCown answered
the bell again, and stuck
it out in the third and
fourth quarters despite
having difﬁculty catching
his breath after absorbing
hard hits.
McCown was doubled
over in pain several
times, and at one point
motioned for Manziel to
leave the ﬁeld when the
second-year QB began
heading out to replace
him.
Pettine said he didn’t

consider putting in Manziel, who came in for an
injured McCown in the
season opener and won
his only start in Week 2.
While he’s being criticized for not benching
a quarterback now 2-15
as a starter the past two
seasons, Pettine has
remained unshaken in his
belief that McCown gives
the Browns their best
chance to win.
“I don’t really get too
wrapped up in what the
outside perception is of
our quarterback room,
but I just know Josh
McCown has done a great
job for us.” Pettine said.
“Somebody told me
yesterday we’ve had more
passing yards in the ﬁrst
half of the year than any
other team in Browns
history. So he’s doing a
good job playing the position. We feel good about
where Johnny is and the
direction he’s headed.
Those are just our circumstances.”
Pettine, too, said that
despite his team’s struggles, he has no immediate
plans to sit veterans in
order to play Manziel or
other younger players.
“We’re just not ready
to say we’re at that point
yet,” he said.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 3, 2015 3B

Bishop Donahue tames Wildcats, 62-13
By Donald Lambert
elambert@civitasmedia.com

ASHTON, W.Va. — The Wildcats’ ﬁnal game of the season was a
true uphill battle.
The Bishop Donahue football
team defeated host Hannan 62-13
on Saturday afternoon at Wildcat
Stadium in Mason County. The
Wildcats (0-8) found themselves
in a hole early against the Bishops,
but the Blue and White didn’t give
in when the chips were down.
Cole Berlerch put the Bishops
on the board ﬁrst after running
the ball in for a touchdown with
9:44 left in the ﬁrst quarter. After a
Hannan fumble, Anthony Robbins
scooped up the ball and ran it back
for a 63-yard touchdown with 5:43
left in the ﬁrst period to give the
Bishops a 14-0 lead.
The Wildcats fumbled again on
their next possession to give the
visitors great ﬁeld position. J.C.
Custer proceeded to run the ball
into the endzone to give the Bishops a 20-0 edge with 4:27 left in the
ﬁrst quarter. BDHS quarterback
Jimmy Hull found Trey Miller in
the endzone for a 12-yard touchdown to put the visitors up 26-0
after one quarter of play.
The Bishops started the second
quarter with the ball, until Hull
threw an interception to set the
Wildcats up deep in Bishop Donahue territory. Williams kept the ball
and ran it in for a one-yard touchdown to get the Blue and White
on the board with 10:15 left in the
ﬁrst half.
Bishop Donahue responded
with a nine-yard touchdown run
from Hall to put the Bishops up
34-6. Hull connected with Custer

Southern
From Page 1B

Rogers for a 24-yard
touchdown pass. Tommy
Ramthun knocked home
the point after kick and
Southern led 7-0 with
9:15 remaining in the ﬁrst
half.
The Eastern offense
found its way into Tornado territory for the
ﬁrst time on the ensuing
possession, but a third
down sack by SHS senior
Theron Johnson stymied
the EHS drive and forced
the Eagles to punt.
Southern picked up two
quick ﬁrst downs on their
next drive, but a bad snap
was recovered by Eastern
junior Mac Browning
on the SHS 19-yard line.
On the second play of
Eastern’s possession
junior quarterback Jett
Facemyer connected with
fellow junior Jeremiah
Martindale for a 19-yard
touchdown pass. Facemyer added the point after
to tie the game at seven
with 1:07 remaining in
the second quarter.
The Tornadoes completed four passes on the
ensuing drive, the last
of which was a 25-yard
scoring toss from Blake
Johnson to Ramthun with
just 10 seconds left in the
half. Ramthun added the
point after and Southern
led 14-7 at the break.
On the ﬁrst drive of
the second half Southern
marched 47 yards on
seven straight running
plays, but fumbled on the
EHS ﬁve-yard line, giving
the ball to the Eagles.
Eastern never escaped
the shadow of its own
goal posts and the Eagles
were forced to punt after
just three plays. Southern
blocked the punt and
took possession on the
EHS four-yard line. SHS
sophomore Dylan Smith
found paydirt from three
yards out on second down
and, with Ramthun’s kick,
Southern pushed its lead
to 21-7.
The Southern defense
forced another three-andout on the next Eastern
possession, and the Tornadoes took possession
at midﬁeld. On the fourth
play of the Tornado drive
Blake Johnson found

Donald Lambert | OVP Sports

Hannan freshman Logan Williams (15) shakes off a tackle from Bishop Donahue’s Jacob Beyser (23) during the Wildcats’ 60-12 loss to the Bishops on Saturday in
Ashton, W.Va.

for a 28-yard touchdown pass with
less than four minutes to go in
the second quarter. After a failed
fourth down conversion from Hannan, Jacob Beyser caught a 58-yard
touchdown pass from Hull to give
the Bishops a 50-6 lead at halftime.
The Wildcats received the ball to
start the second half. After driving
the ball down to the two-yard line
of Bishop Donahue, Ryan Gerlach
threw an interception to Clinton
Whitelatch to stall the the Hannan
drive. The Wildcats defense recovered a fumble with 2:30 minutes
left in the third quarter.

junior Clayton Wood for a
16-yard touchdown that,
with Ramthun’s extra
point, gave Southern a
28-7 lead.
The Eagles were intercepted again on their
next possession and
Southern setup its offense
on the EHS 38. On Southern’s second offensive
play of the drive, Blake
Johnson connected with
Ramthun for a 38-yard
scoring pass, giving the
Purple and Gold a 34-7
lead with 52 seconds left
in the third quarter.
Eastern gave the ball
away again on its next
drive, as SHS senior
Joe Beegle recovered a
fumble on the EHS 33.
SHS junior Kody Greene
broke a 29-yard run followed by a four-yard run,
which found the endzone.
Ramthun kicked home
the point after and Southern led 41-7 with 36 seconds to play in the third
quarter.
SHS forced yet another
three-and-out on the next
Eastern possession, and
Southern took over on its
own 37. A 26-yard run by
Beegle, teamed with two
EHS personal fouls, gave
Southern a ﬁrst-and-goal
at the Eagle 10. Blake
Johnson completed a
10-yard touchdown pass
to Wood at the 7:35 mark
of the fourth quarter, and
SHS led 47-7. That play
turned out to be the ﬁnal
play of the game, however, as a sideline-clearing
brawl forced the game to
be stopped.
“Hopefully this springboards us for next year,”
Southern head coach Kyle
Wickline said. “We’ve
talked about playing with
a lot more emotion, and
we knew Eastern would
bring that out in us. I hate
to see the way it ended,
but our kids played hard
all the way through. It
was a great effort from
our guys.”
The Tornadoes held
a 16-to-4 advantage in
ﬁrst downs and a 392to-55 advantage in total
offense, including a 158to-18 edge on the ground.
Eastern, which was
picked off twice, fumbled
twice and lost possession
on one. The Tornadoes
weren’t intercepted in the
game, but lost posses-

for the Wildcats. Michael Lowe
led Hannan with 13 carries for
46 yards rushing. Stephan Berry
had six carries for 28 yards, while
Christian Holland had two carries
for 21 yards.
Aaron Taylor had three catches
for 44 yards, while Holland had
one catch for 21 yards for the Blue
and White.
“We put up double digits against
one of the best teams in the state,”
Hannan coach Brian Scott said.
“I thought the guys came out and
played their guts out. In my opinion, they played one of their best

Gerlach kicked off the fourth
quarter by running the ball in for a
touchdown to make it 50-13. During the ensuing Bishop Donahue
possession, Matt Wesoloski ran for
a one-yard touchdown with 4:36
left in the game to give the visitors
a 56-12 advantage. Hannan looked
to add more points to their score,
until Williams fumbled the ball.
Vinny Mangino picked the ball up
and ran it for a 56-yard touchdown
with 3:11 left in the contest.
Gerlach was 4-of-9 passing for
68 yards with one interception and
Williams was 2-of-8 for 17 yards

sion on 3-of-4 fumbles.
EHS was penalized seven
times for a total of 60
yards, while Southern
was ﬂagged ﬁve times for
a total of 30 yards.
“That ﬁrst long drive
of the second half kind of
wore us out a bit,” Eastern head coach Pat Newland said. “After that they
caught us on a couple of
long passes and you can’t
give that up.”
Blake Johnson threw
for 234 yards and ﬁve
touchdowns for the
Purple and Gold, completing 15-of-22 passes
including 11 of his last
12. Greene led SHS on
the ground with 84 yards
and a touchdown on
19 carries, followed by
Smith with 49 yards and
a touchdown on three
carries. Beegle had one
26-yard run, while Riley
Roush had 13 yards on
three carries.
Ramthun led all receivers with 96 yards and
two touchdowns on four
receptions, while Smith
hauled in four passes
for a total of 20 yards.
Rogers had 64 yards and
one touchdown on three
receptions, Wood added
44 yards and two touchdowns on three grabs,
while Greene caught one
pass for 10 yards.
Southern’s defense was
led by Theron Johnson
with six tackles and a
sack, while Ramthun and
Smith both intercepted a
pass.
Facemyer posted 37
yards and a score on 2-of11 passing for the Eagles,
with both completions
going to Martindale.
Reagan Rucker led EHS
on the ground with nine
yards on four carries, followed by Facemyer and
Josh Brewer with ﬁve
yards apiece, and Trenton
Delacruz with three.
Eastern’s defense
was led by Rucker with
eight tackles and a sack,
while Delacruz added six
tackles and a sack in the
setback.
This is Southern’s ﬁrst
win since October 2,
while Eastern ﬁnishes
the campaign with ﬁve
straight setbacks.
This marks the ﬁnal
game in the careers of
Southern seniors Tommy
Ramthun, Joe Beegle,

Theron Johnson, Jeremy
Dutton, Kris Shortridge
and Dalton Patterson.
SHS honored it’s and
Eastern’s seniors prior to
the game.
“It’s sad to see them
leave,” Wickline said of
his seniors. “I’m happy
for them to go out with a
victory, its been a tough
year for them, so this is

games of the season.”
Hull was 8-of-12 passing for
185 yards, four touchdowns and
one interception for the Bishops.
Custer had eight carries for 69
yards, followed by Mangino with
six carries for 35 yards. Miller had
two catches for 45 yards for Bishop
Donahue.
This was the ﬁnal game for
seniors Tristen McReynolds, Isaiah
Burgess, Chad Withers, Calyon
Turner, Aaron Coon and William
Holmes.
Donald Lambert can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

something we’re going to
hold on to for a while.”
This marks the ﬁnal
game for Eastern seniors
Cameron Richmond, Reagan Rucker, Jesse Morris,
Chase Williams, Austin
Life, Ross Keller and
Chase Curtis.
“They’ve done a great
job this year,” Newland
said of his seniors. “I

know we haven’t won very
many games, but they’ve
played their hearts out.
They’ve done a great job
and I can’t say enough
good things about them.
We have a lot of young
guys that played tonight,
we just have to stay with
it and keep faith.”
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

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�CLASSIFIEDS

4B Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Help Wanted General

Professional Services

Apartments/Townhouses

SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Twin Rivers
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list for HUD
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elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

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NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
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payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
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Help Wanted General
Industrial Cleaners
Needed in Buffalo, WV.
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$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130

For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
twolfe@civitasmedia.com or
apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
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Daily Sentinel

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

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Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
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Happy Family Banquet

Help Wanted General

60583312

Notices
Mollohan Carpet
Remnants Sales
Carpet &amp; Vinyl
up to 30% off
317 State Route 7 South
Gallipolis, Oh 45632
740-446-7444

The Children's Center of Ohio, LLC. is looking to add a cook to
our busy, yet energetic team of employees.
We are looking for someone with knowledge of food ordering,
organization, food preparation and presentation. We are a busy
facility and feed an average of 50 people per day, including
breakfast, lunch, dinner and a snack. We need someone who is
enthusiastic and motivated. You will not work alone and will
have an assistant cook to help.
Applicants must possess:
 Food preparation and cooking
 Kitchen maintenance and cleaning
 Maintaining and ordering stocks and supplies
 Menu planning
 Following food safety requirements
If you would like to join our team, please send your resume to
The Children's Center of Ohio, LLC., 55 Allison Road, Patriot,
OH 45658. You may also apply in person or call 740-379-9083.
We are looking to hire immediately.

49

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Pictures that have been
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Help Wanted General

Administrative Assistant position in Kitts Hill, OH, but will be
relocating to Patriot, OH in 6-12 months.
As an Administrative Assistant you will be responsible for
providing administrative support to ensure efficient operation of
the office. You will support managers/supervisors and
employees through a variety of tasks related to organization and
communication. You will communicate via phone and email
ensuring that all administration tasks are completed accurately
and delivered with high quality and in a timely manner.
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 Maintain contact lists
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memos, letters, faxes and forms
 Assist in the preparation of regularly scheduled
reports
 Maintain a filing system
 Provide general support to visitors
Requirements
 Proven secretarial or administrative
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 Excellent time management skills and ability to
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 High school diploma or equivalent, pass
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 Proficiency in MS Word
If you would like to join our team, please send your resume to
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, November 3, 2015 5B

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

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

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�SPORTS

6B Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Daily Sentinel

60613464

Gordon earns spot in finale
MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP) — As the
adoring crowd lingered in the darkness
at Martinsville Speedway, Jeff Gordon
took a moment to soak it in.
In a 23-year career that is one long
highlight reel, his victory Sunday overwhelmed the NASCAR great. He had
just earned a spot in the championship
race, a chance to race for an elusive ﬁfth
title. It was, in his mind, “one of my ﬁnest moments I’ve ever had.”
So Gordon, who at 44 years old celebrated his ninth Martinsville win by
jumping along the track like a little boy
on Christmas morning, climbed into the
grandstands to share the emotion of the
victory with the fans.
“I don’t know what it feels like to be
a rock star, but that’s as close as it can
get,” Gordon said. “That’s a rock star
moment right there.”
He has Matt Kenseth to thank for this
storybook ending to his career.
Kenseth intentionally wrecked Joey
Logano — payback from an incident
three races ago — to take the race leader
out with 47 laps remaining. Logano had
the dominant car, and Kenseth, who was
in an earlier wreck with Brad Keselowski, came back on the track 10 laps down
and drove Logano into the wall.
Logano had led 207 of the 500 laps
and was furious. His father, Tom, had to
be pushed into the team hauler by the
crew chief as the crowd cheered wildly
in support of Kenseth.
Although NASCAR chairman Brian
France has championed on-track incidents, Kenseth could be sanctioned
because he was not racing for the win.
“I think what was disappointing … a
driver that’s not competing for a win, in
fact, was many laps down when that happened, in our minds, that’s a little bit different than two drivers really going after
it coming out of turn four for a win,” said
Steve O’Donnell, head of NASCAR’s racing operations.
Denny Hamlin, who last week accused
Kevin Harvick of deliberately causing
an accident to preserve his spot in the
Chase for the Sprint Cup championship
ﬁeld, said the level of aggression is out
of hand. He’s teammates with Kenseth,
and both were eliminated from title contention last week.
“It’s a no-holds-barred, Wild, Wild

West,” Hamlin said. “The structure in
which we have around us is not very
strong as far as an authority ﬁgure saying, ‘No, you cannot do that anymore.’
“I love Brian France, but when he says
that drivers are ‘doing what they have
to do,’ it seems like he’s promoting this
type of racing. That’s tough to crown a
true champion when things go like this.”
Kenseth downplayed the incident,
deadpanning it was a result of an earlier
incident with Keselowski, who had led
143 laps as the two Team Penske teammates were the class of the ﬁeld. Instead
of celebrating a win and a spot in the
Nov. 22 ﬁnale at Homestead-Miami
Speedway, Logano is last in the eightdriver ﬁeld and Keselowski is sixth.
There are two races remaining for
the rest of the ﬁnal four to be set, and
Logano has a lot of work to do to make
it back to the championship ﬁnale for
the second year.
He was racing for his fourth consecutive victory, but there was a looming suspicion that Kenseth would get in the way.
Kenseth had been leading in the closing laps three weeks ago at Kansas when
Logano spun him out of the way for the
win. Kenseth has been furious since.
Logano felt Kenseth’s move was dirty.
“I think what happened at Kansas is a
completely different deal. We were racing for the win and he blocks you a few
times and then we raced hard and he
blocked me the last time and we spun
out,” Logano said. “Here it was just a
complete coward move, especially for a
championship race car driver and race
team. Just a complete coward. I don’t
have anything else to say. It’s a chickenyou-know-what move to completely take
out the leader when your race is over.”
The two drivers have not talked since
Kansas, and even though they were in
the care center together after the accident, there was no conversation.
“They won’t let me get to him,” Logano said about NASCAR.
Kenseth tried hard to dismiss the
incident Sunday as a byproduct of earlier contact with Keselowski — a wreck
that sent both Kenseth and Keselowski
to the garage. But he was summoned to
the NASCAR hauler after the race for
a meeting that his crew chief and car
owner Joe Gibbs attended.

The Gallipolis Tribune, The Pomeroy Sentinel &amp; Point Pleasant Register
Present

John Sang Ford

Vote for your favorite entry in each of
the four categories at:
mydailytribune.com
mydailysentinel.com
mydailyregister.com

OVERALL WINNER
WITH THE MOST VOTES
$100
Submission Begins:
Saturday, October 17th Saturday, October 31st
Voting Begins:
Sunday, November 1st Tuesday, November 10th

JS

195 Upper River Road,
Gallipolis

1-800-272-5179
www.johnsang.com

60615707

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