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                  <text>Artisan
Shoppe
expands

Partly
sunny. High
76, low of 62

South Gallia,
RV prepare
for playoffs

BUSINESS s 3

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 178, Volume 69

Thursday, November 5, 2015 s 50¢

Meigs County election results
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

Courtesy photo

Wyatt Barber

Meigs County
boy dies during
football practice
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

REEDSVILLE — A heart abnormality has been
determined to be the cause of death Nov. 2 for an
Eastern Elementary School boy who collapsed
during football practice earlier this week.
Nine-year-old Wyatt Barber’s death was a result
of an abnormal left main coronary artery in his
heart, according to Montgomery County Coroner’s Ofﬁce, who performed the autopsy and later
informed Meigs County Coroner Dr. Douglas
Hunter and the Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce of
the results. No injuries to his body were reported,
and the completed ﬁnal autopsy will not be available for four to six weeks.
Barber was participating in a youth football
practice and players had taken a break from
running sprints when a coach discovered him
unconscious on the ground, according to the sheriff’s ofﬁce. The practice at the time was a walkthrough, not a contact practice, they said.
After discovering Barber’s condition, coaches immediately contacted EMS at 7:19 p.m. and performed
CPR before he was transported to the Meigs Emergency Department, where he passed away. Hunter was
contacted and met ofﬁcers at the emergency room.
Eastern Local Schools Superintendent Scot
Gheen lamented Barber’s passing.
“The staff, students and community of Eastern
Local would like to express our sincere condolences to the family of Wyatt Barber during this
unfortunate time,” he said. “The school has put
in place grief counseling services to assist the
students and staff in need. Please know that our
thoughts and prayers are with the family during
this difﬁcult time.”
For anyone who wishes to help the family, a
GoFundMe page has been created in Barber’s
honor at www.gofundme.com/c58anjf9. Locally,
an account has been set up at Farmers Bank, created by a friend of the family. All six Farmers Bank
locations in Meigs, Gallia and Mason counties are
accepting deposits. All proceeds go to beneﬁt the
family. Ask to contribute to the Wyatt Barber fund,
or mail any amount to Farmers Bank, 211 W. Second St., Pomeroy, OH 45769.
There will be a candlelight vigil on Eastern
Local School’s football ﬁeld at 7 p.m. Thursday.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Monday, Nov. 9
at First Southern Baptist Church in Pomeroy with
pastors David Brainard and Lamar O’Bryant ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at Sandhill Cemetery. Visiting hours will be 3-8 p.m. Sunday at the church.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Football: 6
Schedule: 6
— FEATURES
Classified: 7
Television: 8
Comics: 9

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POMEROY — Meigs
County election results were
held yesterday evening due
to an injunction, requested
by ResponsibleOhio, to
extend voting hours in
Hamilton County due to
problems with eballots when
the polls opened.
Ohio Secretary of State
John Husted contacted all
88 counties in Ohio and
instructed them to withhold
election results until after 9
p.m. when the polls closed
in Hamilton County.
Becky Johnson, director
of the Meigs County Board
of Elections, received the
message shortly after 7 p.m.
and held the county’s results
until she received a go ahead
from the Secretary of State’s
ofﬁce to release the results.
Unofﬁcial results were
posted around 9:20 p.m. as
a result. With 100 percent
of the 27 precincts counted,
there were 14,507 registered
voters and 6,137 ballots
cast, placing voter turn
out in the county at 42.30
percent.
With three state issues
on the ballot, State Issue
1, Redistricting, passed in
Meigs County by a vote
of 3,312 to 2,208. State
Issue 2, Prohibit Marijuana
Monopoly, received 3,013
votes in favor of passage
and 2,712 opposing votes.
Controversial State Issue
3, Marijuana Legalization,
was soundly defeated, with
4,172 no votes and 1,866
yes votes.
The Meigs County General Health District Levy
was defeated with a vote of
in favor of the levy 2,727
and 3,161 against the levy’s
passage.
Former Middleport Village Mayor Sandy Iannarelli
pulled off a successful writein campaign against incumbent Mayor Mike Gerlach.

Photos by Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

Voters across the county saw many issues on the ballot. Pictured are Middleport voters marking their
ballot.

When the votes were tallied,
Iannarelli had 341 to Gerlach’s 236.
With two positions open
on the Middleport Village
Council, results showed
George A. Hoffman with
317, Shawn A. Rice with
275, Roger L. Manley, Sr
with. 236 and James R. Buskirk with 235, making Hoffman and Rice the winners of
the council positions.
Pomeroy Village will have
a new mayor, as current
Mayor Jackie Welker did not
run in this elections, leaving the race between Bryan
Shank and Victor Young III.
Shank was the declared the
winner with a vote of 260
to 123.
Pomeroy Village Council
will continue to see Ruth
Spaun and Maureen Hennessy as council members,,
with results showing Ruth
Spaun with 210, Maureen
Hennessy with 178, Brenda
Barnhart with 156 and Donald A. May with 84 votes.
Current Racine Village
Mayor Julian Scott Hill, who

ran uncontested, received
194 votes. Chad Hubbard
will be the new Racine Village Council member, receiving 168 votes to opponent
Jeffrey R. Morris’ 73. A levy
for Racine Village Current
Expenses passed with 149
for and 56 opposed.
An unnamed write-in
candidate for Rutland Village
Mayor received 32 votes
and Tyler M. Eblin, who
ran unopposed for Rutland
Village Council, received 96.
Also on the ballot was a levy
for Rutland Village Current
Expenses, which passed by a
vote of 92 to 42 and for Rutland Village Police, also passing with a vote of 91 to 47.
Eric D. Cunningham, current Syracuse Village mayor,
ran unopposed and received
196 votes. Rhonda R. Rathburn received 138 votes to
Wendy Egan’s 127 votes for
Syracuse Village Council.
Syracuse Village Fire levy
passed with votes of 143 in
favor and 101 against.
In races for local school
board positions, one posi-

tion for Alexander Local
School District Board of
Education member saw
John Hutchison as the winner with 197 votes, followed
by Patrick L. Lawson with
172 and Ralph Harvey, Sr.
with 61.
Eastern Local School District Board of Education had
one member position, with
Brandon M. Buckley with
793 votes, Floyd D. Ridenour with 791 and Michael
Adam Will with 698.
Results for Meigs Local
School District Board of
Education member position
to be ﬁlled saw the following
results; Roger A. Abbott,
1,434 votes, Larry D. Tucker, 1,433, Todd Snowden,
1,329, Darin Logan, 1,227,
and write-in votes, 298.
Southern Local School
District Board of Education
results for member positions showed the winner as
Richard L. Wamsley II with
704 votes. Gary D. Evans
received 645 votes, followed
by Mony Wood with 591.
See RESULTS | 5

Rejection of legal pot leaves questions
By Julie Carr Smyth

The marijuana question failed
after an expensive campaign, a
legal ﬁght over its ballot wording
COLUMBUS — The future of
and an investigation launched into
marijuana in Ohio was uncertain
the proposal’s petition signatures.
after the resounding defeat of an
Campaign director Ian James
effort to legalize cannabis for both assured supporters at a downtown
medical and recreational use in a
Columbus gathering that the ﬁght
single vote.
was not over, calling Tuesday’s
The proposal rejected by voters on defeat “a bump in the road.”
Tuesday could be followed in 2016
“We need to not only address
by a more conventional legalization
compassionate care for the chroniplan, one that doesn’t give exclusive cally ill, we need to also remain
growing rights to private investors.
vigilant in protecting direct democConcerns about possibly creating racy,” he said. “Because when the
marijuana monopolies appeared to Statehouse refuses to deal with the
be a major factor in its defeat.
voters, the voters have to make
State voters also easily approved them deal to make sure that their
a new system for drawing state
voices are heard.”
legislative districts that’s intended
Some who voted “no” on legalto reduce partisan gerrymandering. ization didn’t like that a small
The Issue 1 vote marked a signiﬁgroup of investors would have
cant victory of bipartisanship in
exclusive rights to grow pot comthe closely divided political state,
mercially.
even amid the year’s contentious
“I can’t believe I voted ‘no’ when
marijuana debate.
it was ﬁnally on the ballot,” said
Gov. John Kasich, a Republican
Marty Dvorchak, 62, of the northpresidential candidate, praised vot- ern Cincinnati suburb of Fairﬁeld.
ers for their decision on marijuana. “I think it’s ridiculous that mari“At a time when too many famijuana is illegal.”
lies are being torn apart by drug
University of Cincinnati stuabuse, Ohioans said no to easy
dent Natalie McClorey, 22, said
access to drugs and instead chose
she also didn’t like the exclusive
a path that helps strengthen our
arrangement — but voted yes
families and communities,” he said because it’s progress. She said she
in a statement.
thought most students would vote

Associated Press

the same — if they vote.
In a last-minute legal scufﬂe, a
judge ordered polls in Cincinnati
and surrounding Hamilton County
to remain open for an extra 90
minutes — leading to a delay in
reported results statewide.
A few precincts in southwest
Ohio’s Hamilton County reported
problems getting voters their
ballots because of poll workers’
unfamiliarity with a new electronic
check-in system being used for the
ﬁrst time. The marijuana legalization campaign, ResponsibleOhio,
sought the extension citing those
problems.
Cheryl Davis, 46, who voted in
Cleveland, said she uses marijuana
to help alleviate chronic pain in
her back and voted in favor of
legalization. Marijuana “helps me
be comfortable in my daily living,”
she said.
Timothy Shearer, 47, said he
voted “yes” on legalization and
“no” on the anti-monopoly measure. He said he didn’t believe
opponents’ arguments that legalization would increase risks to drug
addiction, saying he believes harder drugs cause more problems.
“I’ll be honest, I’ve never been a
user. I’m a military guy,” he said.
“But I think you should have a
right to choose.”

�LOCAL

2 Thursday, November 5, 2015

Daily Sentinel

OBITUARIES
WYATT JOSEPH BARBER
REEDSVILLE
— Wyatt Joseph
Barber, 9, of
Reedsville, passed
away on Monday,
Nov. 2, 2015.
He was born
May 26, 2006, son
of William Ray and Sarah
Jo Barber.
Wyatt was a great kid
who loved the outdoors,
especially football with
his friends and hunting
with his dad. He was
loved and still is loved
and he will be missed
very much by his family,
school friends and his
teammates.
He is survived by his
parents, Billy and Sarah
Barber; his sister, Haliegh
Barber; brother Levi
Barber; grandparents
Jeff and Amy Hill, Becky
Stine and William Barber;
great-grandfather Carl
Bennett; aunts and uncles
Heidi and Jamie Ander-

STEPHEN “STEVIE” BOBO

CAROL M. OSBORNE

son, Jason Barber,
Tim and Alissa
Hill and Hannah Hill; cousins
Peyton Anderson,
Allyson Anderson,
Trenton Hill and
Emma Hill; and
many friends.
Wyatt was preceded
in death by his greatgrandparents, Larry and
Nancy Hill, Thor and
Norma Nelson, Jim and
Evelyn Barber and Vicky
Bennett.
Funeral services will be
11 a.m. Monday, Nov. 9,
2015, at First Southern
Baptist Church in Pomeroy with pastors David
Brainard and Lamar
O’Bryant ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at Sandhill
Cemetery. Visiting hours
will be 3-8 p.m. Sunday at
the church.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

LANCASTER, Ohio —
Carol M. Osborne, 83, of
Lancaster, passed away
Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015.
Carol was a member
of Pleasant Hill United
Methodist Church, where
she enjoyed playing
the piano and teaching
Sunday School for many
years. She also loved
searching yard sales,
garage sales and ﬂea markets for great items to sell
at her antiques booth.
Carol is survived by her
husband of 57 years, Paul
Osborne; children Phillip (Haiwen) Osborne,
Polly (Bill) Stringer and
Sherrie (Jax) Gresham;
grandchildren Paul
(Amy) Osborne, Amanda
Osborne, Ross Osborne,
Billy Stringer, Sammy
Stringer, Josh Romanowski and Seth Romanowski;
seven great-grandchildren; sister Mary Cundiff;

and many friends.
Carol was preceded
in death by her siblings,
Betty Martin, Floyd
Diddle, Steve Diddle and
David Diddle.
Funeral service for
Carol will be 2 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 6, 2015, at
Frank E. Smith Funeral
Home, 405 N Columbus
St., Lancaster. Burial will
follow in Pleasant Hill
Cemetery, Lancaster.
Friends may visit the
funeral home between 5-8
p.m. Thursday, and again
one hour prior to the service Friday.
Donations can be made
in memory of Carol to
Pleasant Hill United
Methodist Church, 1596
George Rd. NE, Lancaster, OH 43130.
Online condolences can
be made at www.funeralhome.com.

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Community Calendar will
only list event information that is open to the public.

Civitas Media, LLC

SATURDAY NOV. 7

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155

RACINE — Come out and have fun at 5:30 p.m. with
Mount Moriah Church of God, Mount Hill Road in Racine,
for a white elephant auction, free soup and sandwiches.
POMEROY — Dr. Michael Pangio will conduct a
seminar 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.on the topic “Biblical Model of
a Leader”at Hysell Run Community Church, Hysell Run
Road, Pomeroy. Seminar is free and lunch is provided free.
Call 740-742-3171 to register.

Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

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

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Ed Litteral, Ext. 1925
elitteral@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
Michael Johnson, Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

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

SUNDAY NOV. 8

POMEROY — Dr. Michael Pango, Apostle of
Hysell Run Community Church, Hysell Run Road,
Pomeroy, will be ministering at the church at 10:30
a.m. and 7 p.m. Everyone is invited for fellowship.

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Julia Schultz, Ext. 2104
jschultz@civitasmedia.com

- Over 600 vacation homes in all price ranges!
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PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Art Colburn, of ProcSouthern Shores to Corolla
torville, died Monday, Nov. 2, 2015, at St. Mary’s
- Fall Weeks... Still feels like summer - Discounts!!! Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va. Funeral service

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
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HOPKINS
RIPLEY, W.Va. — Sybil (Sayre) Hopkins, 94, of Ripley, and Winter Haven Fla., passed away Sunday, Nov.
1, 2015, in Winter Haven Hospital. Service will be
11 a.m. Friday, Nov. 6, 2015, at Casto Funeral Home
Chapel, Evans, W.Va. Committal service will be 2 p.m.
Friday at Tyler Mountain Memory Gardens, Cross
Lanes, W.Va. Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Thursday at
the funeral home.
RODGERS
BIDWELL, Ohio — Joyce A. Rodgers, 78, of
Bidwell, passed away Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015, at her
residence. Arrangements will be announced by
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt chapel, Gallipolis.

60620060

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will be 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 7, 2015 at Hall Funeral
Home and Crematory, Proctorville. Burial will follow
in Rome Cemetery, Proctorville. Visitation will be 6-8
p.m. Friday at the funeral home.
FASONE
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Sharon Rose (Sanders)
Fasone, 74, died Nov. 2, 2015. Friends may call Evans
Funeral Home, 4171 E. Livingston Ave., Columbus,
between 5-7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 6, 2015. A memorial
service will be 7 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.

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his special green glass.
He loved Nutty Bars and
Cheerios.
Stevie’s mother Ruth
passed away in February.
Stevie’s heart was broken
and he missed her a lot.
He just lost his will and
strength to go on. Stevie
will always hold a special
place in our hearts and
our hearts are broken. We
will miss him for the rest
of our lives.
Stevie is survived by
his father, Bob; a sister,
Jane (Tim) Ihle; a nephew, Aaron (Megan) Ihle;
a niece, Sara (Josh) Will;
and two great-nephews,
Noah and Jack Will. Stevie is also survived by
his special uncle, Arnold
Green; and cousin, Arnie
(Kim) Green, of Belpre.
Graveside services will
be 11 a.m. Saturday, Nov.
7, 2015, at Meigs Memory Gardens. The Rev.
Robert Musser will ofﬁciate, with Arnie Green providing the eulogy. Funeral
arrangements are being
conducted by Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. There will be
no calling hours.
In lieu of ﬂowers,
please make contributions to the Rutland Fire
Department.
In closing, the family would like to express
their gratitude to the
staff at Gallipolis Developmental Center and Dr.
Kramer. They loved Stevie and sat with him the
last days and hours of his
life in the hospital. They
became members of our
family forever. We love
them all.

DEATH NOTICES

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

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GALLIPOLIS — Stephen “Stevie” Bobo, 62,
of Rutland, passed away
Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015, at
Holzer Medical Center.
Stevie was born May
31, 1953, the son of Robert Bobo of Rutland and
the late Ruthalene Bobo.
We would like to share
with you a little about
Stevie’s life. Stevie had
a very simple life. When
Stevie was born he was
diagnosed with cerebral
palsy and autism later in
life. He was not supposed
to live past the age of 5,
but due to the never-ending care and love of his
parents he lived to be 62.
Stevie never had speech
but communicated in his
own way. He liked to hum
songs and listen to country music. He spent his
life on the family farm.
He liked to take walks on
the farm and ride around
in the truck with his dad.
Stevie had a back porch
swing, which he would
swing in from daylight
until dark. Stevie did not
like to share his swing, so
if you got to sit and swing
with Stevie, you rated
really high on Stevie’s list.
He loved car rides, and
loved picking up sticks
and holding clothespins.
He like playing Legos
and Matchbox cars. He
had 2,000 cars because
everyone who visited Stevie would bring him one.
When company came to
visit, Stevie wanted them
to take off their shoes —
that way he thought you
would have to stay longer.
Stevie loved drinking tea.
He would only drink from

TUCKER
LEXINGTON, N.C. — Dale “Tom” Tucker Sr., 78,
of Lexington, died Tuesday, Oct. 27, 2015. A celebration of life service was conducted at 11 a.m. Thursday,
Oct. 29, 2015, at Lighthouse Baptist Church. Davidson Funeral Home, Winston-Salem, N.C., is assisting
the family.

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�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 5, 2015 3

Oil and natural gas: The rise of West Virginia
By George Hohmann

stories about people who worked
in the industry and maybe their
grandfathers who worked in the
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — “The industry. We think it’s important
history of the oil and natural gas
to try to capture that.”
industry worldwide is closely
WVONGA hopes to combine
linked to the industry’s birth,
the records of the association and
growth and expansion in West
the industry with the stories of
Virginia. … In fact, the world’s
the workers and residents to get a
petroleum industry had its roots
more complete history. The book
in West Virginia.”
already includes many personal
That statement, from the
accounts.
foreword of “A Century of
“George Washington and
Service,” a history of the West
Thomas Jefferson both observed
Virginia Oil and Natural Gas
natural gas vents located along
Association, starts the insight for the Kanawha River. Jefferson’s
readers of the new book dedicated account … described the brilliant
to development of WVONGA
ﬂame produced by thrusting a
and the state’s oil and natural gas lit candle into the gas emanating
industry.
from the mouth of a spring.” —
A hard-back book chocked full
“A Century of Service.”
of stories and photos about the
Benjamin Hardesty, a member
industry’s ﬁrst 100 years in the
of the association’s Board of
Mountain State, “A Century of
Directors for 30 years, served
Service” — unveiled last month
as an editor and wrote several
— is the start of a year-long
portions of the book, which was
celebration. The trade association published by WVONGA.
also will launch a social media
Hardesty wrote in the preface
campaign seeking stories and
that it was decided to publish
photos of West Virginians who
the book “to tell our members,
worked in the industry down
friends, West Virginia citizens,
through the years.
elected ofﬁcials, and regulators
“The centennial is a year-long
about where we have been and
celebration,” Robert Orndorff
what we have done to make our
of Dominion Resources, the
state a better place in which to
live, work and contribute to the
immediate past president of
economic and social well-being of
the association, said. “We think
all West Virginians.
there are a lot of human interest
For Ohio Valley Publishing

“Further, we wanted to share
stories and photos of our dynamic
industry, which has contributed
to our country’s industrial and
manufacturing growth and energy
security.”
“We had a lot of assistance from
Dominion Resources, NiSource
Inc., EQT and Cabot Oil &amp; Gas
Corp.,” said Hardesty. Those
companies and their predecessors
“have been involved in the history
of the association since the
beginning.”
The stories and photos are
divided into quarter-century
segments. There’s also a
timeline that chronicles major
developments in the United States
and in West Virginia’s oil and gas
industry from 1915 to 2015.
The book notes that West
Virginia led the nation in oil
production in 1900 and was the
leader in natural gas production
from 1906 to 1917.
It also highlights the fact that
the world’s deepest wells were
drilled in Harrison County in
1918 and in Marion County in
1919.
Hardesty said there was a
theory at the time — since
proved — that the Earth is
warmer at its core. The deep
West Virginia wells drew queries
from Scientiﬁc American
magazine and from researchers

in Germany, Russia and China.
“They wanted to know what
the temperature was down there,”
Hardesty said. “West Virginia
made a contribution to the body
of science as well as having had
the deepest wells in the world.”
The book contains separate
stories about the West Virginia
Geological Survey; David
McKain, who co-wrote a history
of the industry in West Virginia;
the West Virginia University
School of Engineering; and the
West Virginia Manufacturers
Association, which also is
marking its 100th anniversary.
In addition, there are features
about Michael Benedum, known
as “The Great Wildcatter”; stories
about the Cabot Oil &amp; Gas Corp.
and EQT; and the emergence of
civil engineering design in the
state’s shale gas industry.
The Hastings Extraction and
Fractionation Plant, which traces
its history to 1902, is the subject
of a story and several photos.
Maps showing the location
of major pipelines and shale
formations are among the many
illustrations in the book.
The association printed 1,000
copies of the 96-page book, which
is available for $69.95. For more
information contact Rebekah
Hogue at the association by email,
rhogue@wvonga.com or by

phone, 304-343-1609.
Orndorff said as extra copies
become available the association
will, upon request, provide books
to city and county ofﬁcials, citizen
organizations and public libraries.
With the social media
campaign, WVONGA plans a
year-long effort to encourage West
Virginians to share the family and
community histories of people
who worked in the industry down
through the years. WVONGA
has more than 200 members
companies. The trade group
represents a cross-section of the
industry from the wellhead to the
burner tip.
If a reader identiﬁes a relative
in a photo in the book, the
association hopes the reader
will supply that information. “If
someone has a complementary
picture, they could take a photo of
it and make that available to us as
well,” Orndorff said.
Material may be submitted via
the association’s website (www.
wvonga.com) and Facebook page.
The idea is to make that history
available on the webpage and on
Facebook, he said.
This story was made available via the West
Virginia Press Association and its statewide
story-sharing service.

Artisan Shoppe expands in Gallipolis
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — The Artisan
Shoppe in downtown Gallipolis
ofﬁcially expanded last Friday
when they cut the ribbon on their
new studio space. The Artisan
Studio is located across the hall
from The Artisan Shoppe in the
Lafayette Square.
“We just want to give artisans, visitors and locals the
space and opportunity to create
and learn about arts and culture,” said co-manager Kelsey
Kerr. “We love being located
in our beautiful and historic
downtown area and we want to
promote shopping and opportu-

nities here in Gallia County.”
Currently, The Artisan Studio
and Shoppe will be open on Thursdays and Fridays from noon to 6
p.m. and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. There are plans to add additional hours in the near future.
The studio is open to both practicing artisans and the general public. Some art supplies, like easels,
brushes, canvases and water color
paper, will be available to purchase
for those who do not have their
own supplies. Those artisans with
their own supplies can use the
space for a small fee. Opportunities
to rent the space for art and music
classes are also available.
“We are so grateful for the help

Peoples Bancorp
announces program
MARIETTA, Ohio — Peoples Bancorp Inc. ofﬁcials
announced that its board of directors approved and adopted
a share repurchase program authorizing Peoples to purchase,
from time to time, up to an aggregate of $20 million of its outstanding common shares.
“We believe this share repurchase program is an important
part of our capital allocation strategy, and demonstrates our
conﬁdence in the strength of our business and our commitment to delivering shareholder value,” said Chuck Sulerzyski,
Peoples’ president and chief executive ofﬁcer.
Repurchases under the program may be made through
open market or privately negotiated transactions at times and
in such amounts as Peoples deems appropriate, subject to
market conditions, regulatory requirements and other factors.
The program does not obligate Peoples to repurchase any
particular amount of common shares, and may be suspended
or discontinued at any time without notice.
Repurchases of common shares under the program will be
made using Peoples’ own cash resources and any common
shares repurchased are expected to be held as treasury shares.
The repurchase program has no time limit. Peoples
has approximately 18,407,914 common shares outstanding as of Nov. 2.

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and support of community members and groups such as Terry
Lane, Lane Capital, The Downtown Revitalization Project (DRP),
all of our participating artisans and
all of our amazing customers,” said
co-manager Valerie Thomas.
The Artisan Shoppe and Studio
is part of the Gallia County Artisan
Market, a 501 (c) (3) non-proﬁt
organization whose mission is to
promote arts and culture in the
area. All funds generated through
the Artisan Studio will be used to
further the group’s mission.
Stop by The Artisan Shoppe and
Studio, located at 300 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis or follow them on Facebook to learn more.

Courtesy photo

The Artisan Shoppe and Studio is located at 300 2nd Ave., Gallipolis. It
officially expanded last Friday when they cut the ribbon on their new studio
space.

WOUND CARE
at Pleasant Valley Hospital

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The WOUND CARE CENTER at Pleasant Valley Hospital provides patients
in the Point Pleasant area with quicker and more direct access to the
most comprehensive wound and Lymphedema treatments in Mason,
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�E ditorial
4 Thursday, November 5, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Who’s really
dying? Odom
or Pitino?
Lamar Odom’s drug overdose and weekend frolic
in a Las Vegas house of prostitution made national
headlines.
News reports indicate that he is better and that
his divorce to Khloe Kardashian has been called off.
They are going to give it a second chance.
If I were a betting man, I would wager there is
some sort of weird new reality show in the mix for
both persons that will rake in several million dollars.
Huh? How is that even possible?
In the crazy mixed-up world of Hollywood and
reality television, it seems that there are no scruples
when it comes to sanity. Is there really a chance that
Lamar Odom will live happily ever after? If an average person went through Odom’s near-death scenario
with a national media frenzy attached
to it, he would probably have rather
just died than face all of the public
scrutiny.
It’s a different world, though, in
Hollywood. The Kardashians have no
shame and will cash in on anything
even if it means releasing a sex tape in
Glenn
order to jump-start a career. In reality,
Mollette
Odom can once again ﬂy high.
Contributing
I don’t see this happening for Rick
Columnist
Pitino of the University of Louisville
Cardinals basketball team. Andre
McGee, a graduate assistant basketball
coach for Louisville who has moved on to another
team, is accused of arranging prostitutes for incoming basketball recruits. Crazy stuff has been written
about McGee by one of the prostitutes, whose name
I will not mention in a book I will not mention.
The prostitute alleges that she did stripper parties
arranged by McGee for incoming freshman player
recruits and that she and her daughters were allegedly paid money by McGee to engage in sexual acts
with some of the players.
I’ve seen Pitino on television and he does not look
good. Pitino and most of the people associated with
the Cardinals team swear they know nothing of the
allegations. Pitino has demanded that McGee come
forward, come clean and set the record straight. He
is the only one who knows the real story, according
to Pitino.
Sports commentators and radio DJs have been
calling for Pitino’s resignation. Personally, I don’t
see how a coach can know everything that is going
on with all of his staff and players. I certainly do
not believe that Pitino had anything to do with the
arrangement of such shenanigans nor did he know
anything about them. The prostitute has stated that
she never saw Pitino at any of the events.
Things are different in Louisville than they are in
Las Vegas or Hollywood. If coach Pitino is beheaded
because of Andre McGee’s horrendously bad judgment, then this will probably be the end of his Hall
of Fame basketball career. And while Odom allegedly
blew $75,000 in a hotel brothel, he will probably
come back with several million. McGee allegedly
spent $10,000 on the Louisville prostitutes. It could
put U of L on probation, cost Pitino his multi-million
basketball contract and sour the entire season — or
even several seasons — for the Louisville Cardinals
basketball team.
I hope Odom truly recovers and that maybe his
life will start a positive upward direction. I can only
hope that Louisville’s nightmare will eventually end
and that Pitino and the basketball program can once
again regain normalcy.
However, when looking at these two different
basketball personalities, it’s uncertain today who is
dying.
Glenn Mollette is an American syndicated columnist and author. He
is the author of 11 books. Like his Facebook page at https://www.
facebook.com/GlennMollette

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.

THEIR VIEW

Sad fate of America’s whistleblowers
being charged with 10 feloHistory may smile on
nies, including ﬁve counts
these guardians of the pubof espionage. The governlic trust, but during their
ment eventually dropped
lifetimes they remain outthe charges, but not before
casts.
Drake had suffered terrible
What is it about whistleﬁnancial, professional, and
blowers that the powers that
personal distress.
be can’t stand?
John
This is an ongoing theme,
When I blew the whistle
Kiriakou
on the CIA’s illegal torture
Contributing especially in government.
Chelsea Manning is
program, I was derided in
Columnist
serving 35 years in prison
many quarters as a traitor.
for her disclosure of State
My detractors in the government attacked me for violating my Department and military cable
trafﬁc showing American milisecrecy agreement, even as they
tary crimes in Iraq and beyond.
ignored the oath we’d all taken to
And Edward Snowden, who told
protect and defend the ConstituAmericans about the extent to
tion.
which our government is spying
All of this happened despite
on us, faces life in prison if he ever
the fact that the torture I helped
returns to the country.
expose is illegal in the United
The list goes on and on.
States. Torture also violates a
Baltimore Police Department
number of international laws and
whistleblower Joe Crystal knew
treaties to which our country is
what he was getting into when
signatory — some of which the
he reported an incident of police
United States itself was the drivbrutality to his superiors after
ing force in drafting.
I was charged with three counts
witnessing two colleagues brutally
of espionage, all of which were
beat a suspect. Crystal immedieventually dropped when I took
ately became known as a “rat cop”
a plea to a lesser count. I had to
and a “snitch.”
choose between spending up to 30
He ﬁnally resigned from the
department after receiving credmonths in prison and rolling the
dice to risk a 45-year sentence.
ible death threats.
With ﬁve kids, and three of them
It’s not just government employunder the age of 10, I took the
ees either. Whistleblowers ﬁrst
plea.
brought attention to wrongdoTom Drake — the NSA whistleing at Enron, Lehman Brothers,
blower who went through the
Stanford International Bank, and
elsewhere.
agency’s chain of command to
report its illegal program to spy on
And what’s their reward? Across
American citizens — was thanked the board, whistleblowers are
for his honesty and hard work by
investigated, harassed, ﬁred, and

in some cases prosecuted.
That’s the conclusion of author
Eyal Press, whose book Beautiful
Souls: The Courage and Conscience of Ordinary People in
Extraordinary Times documents
the struggles of whistleblowers
throughout history. Press’s whistleblowers never recover ﬁnancially or professionally from their
actions. History seems to smile on
them, but during their lifetimes
they remain outcasts.
This is a tragedy. Blowing the
whistle on wrongdoing should be
the norm, not the exception.
I recently visited Greece to
help the government there draft a
whistleblower protection law. The
Greek word for “whistleblower”
translates as “guardian of the public trust.” I wish our own government’s treatment of whistleblowers
could reﬂect that understanding.
Yet even legal guarantees of
protection from prosecution and
persecution aren’t enough — especially if, as in the case of existing
law, national security employees
are exempt from these safeguards.
Instead, society must start seeing things differently. Like the
Greeks, all of us need to start
treating whistleblowers as guardians, not traitors.
And if we value what freedoms
we have left, we should demand
that our government do the same.
OtherWords columnist John Kiriakou is an
associate fellow at the Institute for Policy
Studies. He’s a former CIA counterterrorism
officer and senior investigator for the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Thursday,
Nov. 5, the 309th day of
2015. There are 56 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Nov. 5, 1940,
President Franklin D.
Roosevelt won an unprecedented third term in
ofﬁce as he defeated
Republican challenger
Wendell L. Willkie.
On this date:
In 1605, the “Gunpowder Plot” failed as Guy
Fawkes was seized before
he could blow up the
English Parliament.
In 1781, the Continental Congress elected John
Hanson of Maryland its
chairman, giving him the
title of “President of the
United States in Congress Assembled.”
In 1872, suffragist
Susan B. Anthony deﬁed
the law by attempting
to cast a vote for President Ulysses S. Grant.
(Anthony was convicted
by a judge and ﬁned
$100, but she never paid

the penalty.)
In 1912, Democrat
Woodrow Wilson was
elected president, defeating Progressive Party
candidate Theodore Roosevelt, incumbent Republican William Howard
Taft and Socialist Eugene
V. Debs.
In 1935, Parker Brothers began marketing the
board game “Monopoly.”
In 1942, American
showman George M.
Cohan died in New York
at age 64.
In 1968, Republican
Richard M. Nixon won
the presidency, defeating Democratic Vice
President Hubert H.
Humphrey and American
Independent candidate
George C. Wallace.
In 1974, Democrat Ella
T. Grasso was elected
governor of Connecticut, becoming the ﬁrst
woman to win a gubernatorial ofﬁce without succeeding her husband.
In 1985, Spencer W.
Kimball, president of The

Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, died at
age 90; he was succeeded
by Ezra Taft Benson.
In 1990, Rabbi Meir
Kahane, the Brooklynborn Israeli extremist,
was shot to death at a
New York hotel. (Egyptian native El Sayyed
Nosair was convicted
of the slaying in federal
court.)
In 1994, former President Ronald Reagan disclosed he had Alzheimer’s disease.
In 2009, a shooting
rampage at the Fort
Hood Army post in
Texas left 13 people
dead; Maj. Nidal Hasan,
an Army psychiatrist,
was later convicted of
murder and sentenced to
death.
Today’s Birthdays:
Actor Chris Robinson
is 77. Actress Elke
Sommer is 75. Singer
Art Garfunkel is 74.
Actor-playwright Sam
Shepard is 72. Singer
Peter Noone is 68. TV

personality Kris Jenner is
60. Actor Nestor Serrano
is 60. Actress-comedian
Mo Gaffney is 57. Actor
Robert Patrick is 57.
Singer Bryan Adams is
56. Actress Tilda Swinton is 55. Actor Michael
Gaston is 53. Actress
Tatum O’Neal is 52.
Actress Andrea McArdle
is 52. Rock singer Angelo
Moore (Fishbone) is 50.
Actress Judy Reyes is
48. Actor Seth Gilliam
is 47. Rock musician
Mark Hunter (James) is
47. Actor Sam Rockwell
is 47. Country singers
Heather and Jennifer
Kinley (The Kinleys) are
45. Actor Corin Nemec
is 44. Rock musician
Jonny (cq) Greenwood
(Radiohead) is 44. Country singer-musician Ryan
Adams is 41. Actor Sam
Page is 39. Actor Jeremy
Lelliott is 33. Actress
Annet Mahendru is 30.
Rock musician Kevin
Jonas (The Jonas Brothers) is 28. Actor Landon
Gimenez is 12.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 5, 2015 5

Rutland Church gets new name
By Lelia Haggy

share with him those thoughts.
August of 2014 pastor Shrefﬂer attended our denomination’s
RUTLAND — Anyone who has international business council in
been to Rutland lately may have
Orlando, Florida. During a time
noticed that the Rutland Church of of worship and seeking, the Lord
God has a new name. It is now the began to speak into his spirit some
River of Life Church. We are still a
ideas about what would speak to
Church of God congregation, but
the future of this wonderful conwould like to share with you why
gregation of caring people. The
we have change our name.
thought of what would be appealPastor Larry Schrefﬂer would
ing to folks looking for a Church
like to share the reasoning for
where they would be accepted no
the recent name change. In July
matter what their past or present
of 2014, the board of Elders in
seeking a vision for a way forward background, denominational afﬁliation, race or economic status was
asked Pastor Shrefﬂer for some
direction as to the future for their what stood out in His mind while
praying and meditating on the
Church. Pastor said they needed
to be involved in determining their vision for the future.
The ﬁrst thing the Lord
future and would be happy to help
put their ideas into effect and they impressed him with was a new
should pray about it and return to image, via a name change, which

would emphasize not the fact
that a person should be of our
denominational background to
be welcome to our fellowship,
but that any and all will ﬁnd a
caring, loving and warm reception within our church family.
In the late night, while trying to
sleep, the Lord stirred his spirit
and directed pastor Shrefﬂer to
the book of Revelations, the 22nd
chapter in part, “and He showed
me a pure river of water of life”.
Pastor Shrefﬂer knew immediately this was what he was to
take back to his Elders Board
and congregation to share with
them along with the development of a church website to keep
the church visible to the community. They embraced the concept
as having been God’s direction.

Special to the Sentinel

Results

TODAY
8 AM

60°

72°

66°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

79°
54°
62°
40°
82° in 2003
19° in 1991
(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
0.45
41.46
36.29

Today
7:00 a.m.
5:24 p.m.
1:16 a.m.
2:28 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Fri.
7:01 a.m.
5:23 p.m.
2:12 a.m.
2:58 p.m.

MOON PHASES
New

First

Full

Nov 11 Nov 19 Nov 25

Dec 3

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

Today
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.

Major
6:51a
7:30a
8:07a
8:44a
9:23a
10:04a
10:48a

Minor
12:40a
1:19a
1:57a
2:34a
3:12a
3:52a
4:36a

0

Chillicothe
74/64

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
75/63

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Major
7:12p
7:51p
8:28p
9:06p
9:45p
10:26p
11:11p

Minor
1:02p
1:40p
2:18p
2:55p
3:34p
4:15p
4:59p

WEATHER HISTORY
Cooperstown, N.Y., home of
baseball’s Hall of Fame, entered the
“weather hall of fame” on Nov. 5,
1971, with its third-latest ﬁrst frost
on record. The cold made only a
short stop.

Portsmouth
76/62

SUNDAY

MONDAY

56°
35°

AIR QUALITY
42
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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.34 -0.71
Marietta
34 15.74 -0.87
Parkersburg
36 21.31 -0.03
Belleville
35 12.57 -0.03
Racine
41 13.29 +0.17
Point Pleasant
40 25.43 +0.86
Gallipolis
50 13.10 +0.72
Huntington
50 26.05 +0.03
Ashland
52 34.53 -0.04
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.87 +0.07
Portsmouth
50 17.80 +0.30
Maysville
50 34.40 +0.20
Meldahl Dam
51 15.90 -0.70
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Ashland
75/63
Grayson
76/63

TUESDAY

Partly sunny; rain at
night

Murray City
75/62
Belpre
76/61

St. Marys
76/60

Parkersburg
76/60

Elizabeth
76/61

Spencer
75/60

Buffalo
75/61
Milton
76/61
Huntington
76/61

NATIONAL FORECAST

67°
44°
Partly sunny

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
75/60

Coolville
75/61

Ironton
75/61

WEDNESDAY

60°
39°

Sunny

Wilkesville
75/61
POMEROY
Jackson
75/61
75/62
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
76/62
76/63
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
73/66
GALLIPOLIS
76/62
76/61
75/63

South Shore Greenup
75/61
74/61

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9922155 Ext. 2551.

59°
37°

Plenty of sunshine

Athens
75/61

McArthur
75/61

Waverly
75/64

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

0 50 100 150 200

Last

Logan
75/62

Adelphi
75/64

Q: What is the record low temperature
for the lower 48 states in November?

SUN &amp; MOON

58°
37°

Mostly cloudy and Cooler with a blend of
warm with a t-storm
sun and clouds

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

incumbent Larry Ebersbach
for Sutton Township Trustee,
with voting showing Mugrage
with 476, Ebersbach with 294
and Shane S. Circle with 140
votes. Jo Ann Crisp received
753 votes for Sutton Township Fiscal Ofﬁcer.

BBT (NYSE) —37.82
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.33
Pepsico (NYSE) — 100.65
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.50
Rockwell (NYSE) — 109.63
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 12.44
Royal Dutch Shell — 54.42
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 23.90
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 58.39
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.85
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.07
Worthington (NYSE) — 31.97
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Nov. 4, 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.

A: -53(F) Lincoln, Mont.; Nov. 16, 1959.

Precipitation

SATURDAY

74°
47°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

AEP (NYSE) — 56.71
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.30
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 110.89
Big Lots (NYSE) — 47.24
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 42.98
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 42.50
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 4.23
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.210
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 48.60
Collins (NYSE) —88.10
DuPont (NYSE) — 64.28
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.62
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 29.56
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 48.87
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 65.85
Kroger (NYSE) — 37.01
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 100.22
Norfolk So (NYSE) —80.35
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 24.30

FRIDAY

Very warm today with intervals of clouds and
sun. Rain late tonight. High 76° / Low 62°

received 1,037. Salisbury
Township Cemetery levy,
had 868 for and 463 against.
Randy Butcher received
201 votes for Scipio Township Trustee and Tammy
Andrus 181. Tina E. Cotterill, running unopposed,
received 199 votes for Scipio
Township Fiscal Ofﬁcer
Chuck Mugrage won over

LOCAL STOCKS

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

welcome to become a part of
our loving and caring congregation. We still remain afﬁliated
with the International Church
of God in Cleveland, Tenn. and
remain true to our long time
Pentecostal heritage.

St. Albans
77/62

Clendenin
76/59
Charleston
77/61

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

110s
Winnipeg
Seattle
41/29
100s
52/45
90s
Montreal
61/50
80s
70s
Billings
60s
45/28
Minneapolis
Toronto
50s
66/39
69/57
40s
30s
Detroit
New York
Chicago
72/62
70/63
20s
70/51
Washington
Denver
10s
San Francisco
73/62
Kansas City
46/27
0s
65/49
72/41
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
71/51
T-storms
Atlanta
Rain
El Paso
74/67
63/39
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Chihuahua
Houston
Ice
79/38
82/67
Cold Front
Miami
Warm Front
Monterrey
87/77
88/66
Stationary Front

GOALS

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

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
52/31/c
36/32/r
74/67/sh
70/63/c
72/58/sh
45/28/pc
49/33/c
70/59/pc
77/61/pc
74/62/c
43/26/sn
70/51/c
75/65/pc
74/63/pc
74/63/pc
75/51/t
46/27/sn
70/41/t
72/62/pc
88/76/pc
82/67/c
73/60/pc
72/41/c
61/44/s
76/62/t
71/51/s
76/67/pc
87/77/pc
66/39/r
77/67/pc
82/72/c
70/63/c
74/46/r
87/71/pc
74/63/c
68/49/s
74/61/pc
62/48/c
76/63/c
75/60/c
73/51/t
47/35/c
65/49/pc
52/45/sh
73/62/sh

Hi/Lo/W
55/33/pc
37/29/sh
79/63/c
73/61/pc
78/58/t
42/30/s
50/32/pc
72/54/pc
76/49/c
76/66/pc
40/20/pc
56/38/pc
71/42/t
70/44/r
71/42/t
72/51/pc
47/22/pc
56/37/pc
66/42/r
88/76/pc
78/66/c
64/38/pc
59/39/pc
66/45/s
72/51/c
77/53/s
75/46/t
86/77/pc
47/33/pc
74/52/c
82/70/t
75/58/pc
65/41/s
88/70/pc
79/58/pc
74/51/s
72/44/sh
66/50/pc
79/66/pc
80/64/pc
61/42/s
47/30/pc
66/50/s
55/48/c
79/62/t

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

92° in Fort Myers, FL
9° in Burns, OR

Global
High
108° in Matam, Senegal
Low -62° in Summit Station, Greenland
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589

WEATHER

2 PM

We believe we are ready for what
God has in store for the River of
Life, Church of God in Rutland.
We simply wish to convey
to those who desire a place of
acceptance and relationship
with Jesus Christ that they are

193 votes. Carol A. Taylor,
who also ran unopposed,
received 175 votes for Salem
Township Fiscal Ofﬁcer.
Salisbury Township
Trustee position had John
Hood running unopposed
and receiving 1,136 votes.
Marilyn R. Anderson, who
also ran unopposed for Salisbury Township Fiscal Ofﬁcer,

with 68 and Charles Wolfe Jr.
with 49.
Incumbent Letart Township Fiscal Ofﬁcer Jenny L.
Manuel received 136 votes
with Nathan W. Roush
receiving 127.
Olive Township Trustee
position showed Randy Boston receiving 330 votes and
Kaleen Hayman with 291
votes over Tara Barton with
84 for Olive Township Fiscal
Ofﬁcer.
Rodney A. Tripp received
257 votes for Orange Township Trustee. Deborah Watson received 159 votes and
Alice L. Hawthorne received
143 votes for Orange Township Fiscal Ofﬁcer. Orange
Township Fire levy passed
with 192 for and 123 against.
Rutland Township Trustee
results show Joe M. Bolin
with 422 votes over Brynn
K. Sutphin with 136. Opal L.
Dyer ran unopposed for Rutland Township Fiscal Ofﬁcer
and received 474 votes.
Rutland Township Fire levy
passed with 393 for and 164
opposed.
Salem Township Trustee
candidate Cecil E. Johnston,
running unopposed, received

cal Ofﬁcer, Kathy J. Romine
with 183 votes over Barbara
J. Grueser with 158. Also on
From Page 1
the ballot for Bedford Township, Electric Agg. yes 113,
Scott Walton, running
no 229 and Gas Agg. yes
unopposed, received 4,034
106, no 231.
votes for the position on the
Chester Township Trustee
Governing Board of ESC-At results showed Elmer C.
Large Athens Meigs ESC.
Newell with 473 votes to
Gary Dicken, also running
James B. Hawthorne’s 200.
unopposed, received 207
In the Chester Township
for Governing Board of
Fiscal Ofﬁce race,Philip RayESC Athens-Meigs ESC mond Werry ran unopposed
Alexander. Also running
and received 567 votes.
unopposed for the position
Columbia Township Truston the Governing Board of
ee Rexie Cheadle ran unopAthens-Meigs ESC- Meigs
posed and received 258 votes
Local was Ron Logan, who
and Mary Wingo received
received 1,848 votes. J. Greg 224 votes for Columbia TownBailey received 961 votes to ship Fiscal Ofﬁcer, also unopJeff Vogt’s 243, making him
posed. Columbia Cemetery,
the winner of the Governing 191 for and 117 against.
Board of ESC Athens-Meigs
Lebanon Township TrustESC- Eastern position. There ee position will be ﬁlled by
was no candidate ﬁled for
James R. Foreman, with 129
the position of Governing
to opponent Gerrad Parry
Board of Athens-Meigs ESC- with 97. Annette R. Vance
Southern Local.
ran unopposed for Lebanon
Several township posiTownship Fiscal Ofﬁcer and
tions were on the ballot,
received 106 votes. Lebanon
and results are as follows:
Cemetery levy had 152 yes
Bedford Township Trustee,
votes and 74 no votes.
one position, John W. Dean
Letart Township Trustee
over Michael A. York, 197 to voting shows Zachary Manuel with 124 votes, Justin Hill
144, Bedford Township Fis-

Courtesy photo

The name of the church that was once the Rutland Church of God is now the
River of Life Church

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 5, 2015 s Page 6

Top-ranked Danville awaits Rebels
By Bryan Walters

2011 season, SGHS even
gets a shot at some revenge.
The eighth-seeded Rebels
MERCERVILLE, Ohio — (6-4) will travel north to
It wasn’t exactly the route
Knox County for the second
they wanted to go, but the
time in their postseason
Rebels reached their ultimate history Friday night as
destination nonetheless.
top-seeded Danville (10-0)
Just one month ago, the
awaits them in a Division
South Gallia football team
VII, Region 25 quarterﬁnal
owned a 2-4 record and was
at Danville Municipal Park
coming off a 44-0 loss at
Belpre — its largest setback Stadium.
The Rebels dropped a
of the 2015 campaign. Four
weeks, four wins, 183 points 51-20 decision to the Blue
Devils during the opening
and a little bit of good fortune later, the Red and Gold round of the 2006 playoffs,
which proved to be the only
are headed back to their
time in South Gallia’s previfourth postseason appearous three postseasons that
ance
in
the
program’s
20
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
the Red and Gold scored.
years
of
existence.
South Gallia defender Johnny Sheets (7) tries to deflect a Miller pass as teammate
SGHS lost 38-0 at River in
And, in making their ﬁrst
Chayce Pearson (78) is pulled down during a Week 10 football contest at Walter Harrop
Field in Hemlock, Ohio.
playoff appearance since the 2005 and fell 46-0 at Buckeye
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Central four years ago.
That, however, is South
Gallia’s postseason past,
and the near-future for this
31-man roster will be something new. The 11 seniors,
like the 20 underclassmen,
will be participating in their
ﬁrst-ever playoff game.
It will be the second Week
11 gridiron contest for ﬁfthyear SGHS coach Jason
Peck, who started as head
coach in the fall of the 2011
campaign. Peck was also an
assistant on the 2005 and
2006 squads.
After knocking on the
Region 25 door over the last
few falls, Peck admits that it
sure feels good to be able to

See DANVILLE | 8

Reds promote
Williams to GM
CINCINNATI (AP)
— The Reds promoted
Dick Williams to general
manager on Wednesday
as part of a succession
plan for 64-year-old Walt
Jocketty, who will stay
on as director of baseball
operations for one more
year before moving into
an advisory role.
Williams is 44 and has
been in the Reds’ front
ofﬁce for the last 10 years,
most recently as assistant
general manager. Williams
is a Cincinnati native who
worked in investment banking in New York and Atlanta and started a venture
capital fund before getting
involved with the Reds.
After 21 years as a
general manager with
St. Louis and Cincinnati,
Jocketty wanted a less
demanding role.
“I still want to be
involved quite a bit, but
don’t want to be involved
in day-to-day operations,”
Jocketty said during a
conference call. “Too
many headaches.
“I felt this was the last
year I wanted to do it and
have full responsibility.”
Jocketty is talking to
the team about staying on
as an adviser from 201718. He’ll retain his role
in running the team this
season.
“For this year, it
shouldn’t change a lot,”
he said. “I’ll be working
closely with Dick and try
to give him the education and development to
become GM when he’ll be
able to do this on his own
after this year.”
Jocketty has been the
Reds’ general manager
for the past eight seasons.
He and former manager
Dusty Baker led the Reds
to the playoffs three times
before Baker was ﬁred following a wild-card playoff
loss in 2013. Baker was
hired as Washington’s
manager this week.
With Baker gone, the

Reds collapsed. They lost
86 games in 2014 and ﬁnished last in the NL Central and second-worst in
the major leagues with 98
losses last season, their
poorest ﬁnish since 1982.
The Reds have announced
that manager Bryan Price
will return for the third
year on his contract.
The Reds play in the
majors’ toughest division
— St. Louis, Pittsburgh
and the Cubs made the
playoffs this season —
and traded their remaining veteran pitchers in
July, forcing them to go
with an all-rookie rotation the rest of the way.
They’re handcuffed by
several big contracts that
prevented them from
holding onto their veteran
pitchers and will limit
what Williams can do
going forward.
“I’ll have a lot of his
inﬂuence in me, but I had
a long career in the business world before that and
I have my own opinions
on things, so it’s a blend
of Walt’s inﬂuence and
bringing my own perspective,” said Williams, who
got a three-year deal.
Jocketty was hired as a
special adviser to owner
Bob Castellini in January 2008. Three months
later, he became general
manager and president
of baseball operations.
The Reds won the NL
Central in 2010 and 2012
and made the playoffs as
a wild card team in 2013,
but failed to get past the
opening round each time.
It was Cincinnati’s best
stretch of playoff appearances since the Big Red
Machine in the 1970s.
Before joining the Reds,
Jocketty was general
manager of the St. Louis
Cardinals for 13 years,
leading the Cardinals to
six division titles, two NL
championships and the
World Series title in 2006
over Detroit.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
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

River Valley football coach Jerrod Sparling takes the field alongside his players moments before a Week 2 football contest against Gallia
Academy in Bidwell, Ohio. The Raiders will be making their postseason debut Friday night when they travel to Kinnikinnick for a Region
17 quarterfinal against unbeaten Zane Trace.

Unbeaten Pioneers host River Valley
By Bryan Walters

zero nights of allowing 30 points.
In fact, no opponent has managed
more than 26 points (Meigs) in
BIDWELL, Ohio — It hasn’t
any one game against the Silver
been ﬂashy or even dominant, but and Black this fall.
it does follow one of the oldest
The Raiders have three shutouts
monikers associated with Raider
this season, which includes a 26-0
football.
win over fellow playoff qualiﬁer
Just win, baby.
Rock Hill in Week 1. You’d have to
As it ventures into its ﬁrst-ever
go back to the 2002 ﬁnale to ﬁnd
OHSAA playoff game Friday night River Valley’s previous three shutat Zane Trace, the River Valley
outs before this year.
football program has practically reNeedless to say, a lot has suddenwritten every record in the school’s ly changed — and for the better.
24 years of existence.
“Getting River Valley into the
RVHS (7-3) had never won more playoffs is honestly the greatest
than six games in any season since accomplishment I have ever had
opening its doors in the fall of
in my football career, either as a
1992, nor had it posted a winning
player or as a coach. To be where
record on the gridiron since the
we are right now is truly amazing
2003 campaign.
considering where we were when I
A lot, however, has changed for
started here ﬁve years ago,” Sparthe Silver and Black during the
ling said. “We have endured some
2015 season, and most of it can be really hard times in trying to get
attributed to a long-term plan com- this place ﬁrst stable, then coming to fruition.
petitive, and then into a winner. It
When Jerrod Sparling — who
really is a testament to all of our
played football at Ohio University
people here at River Valley, because
under current Bobcats coach Frank you win with good people.”
Solich — accepted the RVHS job in
Thirty members of the 41-man
2011, he inherited a program that
preseason roster were on the team
had only 10 wins in its previous
in 2014, and there were also 15
seven campaigns.
seniors with multiple seasons of
And during those seven prior
playing experience leading the way.
seasons, the Raiders surrendered
There was also the familiarity in
at least 300 points in six of them
playing in the same system, under
— as well as allowing at least 30
the same coaches, during the last
points defensively in 48 of those 70 ﬁve seasons.
contests.
In other words, a good portion
Sparling’s ﬁrst three years didn’t of the RVHS squad already had
fare much better as RVHS musknowledge of what it took to be
tered just ﬁve wins and gave up
collectively successful on Friday
30-or-more points in 21 of those
nights. This weekend will honestly
30 contests. The ﬁrst big breakbe no different, except for maybe
through, however, came last fall
the new environment.
when the Raiders went 5-5 while
“I’ve been lucky enough to have
surrendering only 276 points on
been a part of teams that have been
the season — their lowest total in
in the playoffs in the past, so I’ve
a decade.
been relying on those experiences
This year’s historical breakand I’ve contacted other close peothrough can easily be attributed to ple for advice. The thing I’m telling
a defense that has surrendered only my guys is that when the ball gets
12 points per game and includes
kicked off, it’s just like any other

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

big football game … and we have
played in a lot of big football games
this year,” Sparling said. “But the
other side, and this is a slippery
slope, is that playoff football is different. There are so many more
emotions involved throughout the
week and on game day, especially
in the ﬁrst playoff game. You have
to be able to handle those emotions
properly or you will come out ﬂat,
and ﬂat football teams lose in the
ﬁrst round.”
The Raiders are averaging 25.3
points per game and posted a
season-high 57 points in a Week 3
shutout at Eastern. RVHS is plus-1
in turnover differential, has 100
more total yards of offense (2,6312,531) than its opponents, and also
has a slim 144-139 advantage in
ﬁrst downs this fall.
River Valley is averaging 122
yards on the ground per game
while putting up close to 142 yards
through the air offensively. Conversely, the RVHS defense is surrendering 158 yards per game on
the ground and 95 yards in the air.
The Silver and Black faced three
playoff qualiﬁers during the regular
season, going 1-2 in those contests
after losses to Alexander (22-12) and
Shadyside (14-7). The Raiders are
also 4-1 in road games this season.
Zane Trace, on the other hand, is
a perfect 5-0 at home this year and
has won its last nine home contests
— as well as 15 straight decisions
overall. The second-seeded Pioneers (10-0) will be aiming for the
program’s ﬁrst-ever postseason victory in six appearances, as ZTHS
previously made the playoffs in
2001, 2004, 2005, 2009 and 2013.
The Red and Blue are averaging
39.7 points per game offensively
and have allowed just 13.9 points
defensively this fall en route to
winning the Scioto Valley Conference championship outright. ZTHS
See PIONEERS | 10

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

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Sat. Nov. 7
8am- 3pm
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11-4-15 thru 11-7-15
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NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
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home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
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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.
Full-time Positions Available.
Days/Evenings. Must pass
background check and drug
test. 304-768-6309.
Medical / Health
Ravenswood Care Center
1113 Washington St
Ravenswood WV 26164
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304-273-9482
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Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
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740-418-7504 or 740-9886130

60583312

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

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Yard Sale
Garage Sale Nov 4 &amp; 5 8:30 to
4:30 - 6 miles below Gallipolis
on St. Rt. 7 S.
Moving Sale
EVERYTHING MUST GO!!
dining room table, dishes,
clothes, blankets, pots and
pans, microwave and much
much more.
You do not want to miss this
SALE!
location: 1014 2nd ave.
Gallipolis
time 8am to 4pm
Friday and Saturday
and Sunday if needed.

114 Klicher Road
2 bedroom 1 bath
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$600 month/ $600 deposit
1 mile from Green School
call 740-446-6565
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Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Want To Buy
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�SPORTS

8 Thursday, November 5, 2015

Manziel to start for injured McCown

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Wahama hosting co-ed
Volleyball Tournament

CLEVELAND (AP) —
Welcome to The Jungle,
Johnny.
With starting quarterback
Josh McCown unable to
play because of a painful
rib injury, Johnny Manziel
will start Thursday night’s
game against the Cincinnati
Bengals, who treated him
so rudely as a rookie on the
road last year and now get
him on their home turf.
In his ﬁrst NFL start last
season, Manziel was chased,
sacked, intercepted and
taunted by the Bengals in a
30-0 embarrassment.
Now, Manziel’s facing one
of the league’s four remain-

MASON, W.Va. — Wahama High
School will be hosting a co-ed volleyball
tournament on Nov. 14 at 10 a.m in the
WHS gym. For each team, there must
be a maximum of eight players, four
men and four women. Three men and
three women will be on the court at a
time. The tournament will be the double
elimination format. Matches will be best
two-out-of-three with games going to
25. There will be no sharing of players
between teams and all players must sign
a release form. It will be $120 per team
to enter. For more information, contact
Ron Bradley at 304-377-9295 or email at
rbradley@k12.wv.us

Danville

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ing unbeaten teams on short
notice.
McCown was unable
to practice Tuesday night
because of his ribs — and sore
shoulder — and Browns coach
Mike Pettine announced the
decision to start Manziel on
Wednesday before the team
left for Cincinnati.
“On the short week we
realized that Josh just
wasn’t going to be able to
get to the point where he
could go,” Pettine said.
“Johnny has worked hard
to prepare himself. He is
excited about his opportunity and we are all looking
forward to the challenge we

in their last three outings.
There has been adversity,
including some in-season
suspensions, but the Rebels
have become a better team
because of what they have
endured. It’s that growth,
according to Peck, that’s
truly made the difference.
“This was a much different feeling than the ﬁrst
time I had a team make the
playoffs. We took a different route for sure, but that
is probably what makes it
even more special,” Peck
said. “These kids had to
be woken up in the middle
of the season at 2-4, and
they did wake up. We won
a huge road game at Waterford in dramatic fashion,
then followed up by scoring
54, 48 and 61 points in our
ﬁnal three games.
“These kids have shown
a lot of ﬁght and grown a
great a deal this season,
and I’m very proud of them
for that. We also know that
we deserve this opportunity because we earned it.”
What the Rebels have
also earned is something
just a challenging as being
2-4 and chasing the playoffs, as Danville enters the
postseason as this year’s
Ohio Associated Press
Division VII poll champion.
The Blue Devils are
making the program’s ﬁfth
straight playoff appearance
and 16th overall, as DHS
owns an all-time mark of

one even more special. It’s
just another step in the
right direction for our proFrom Page 6
gram.”
The Rebels are averaging
ﬁnally get back into the
33.6 points per game and
party.
409 total yards offensively,
“Anytime you can meet
which includes a ground
you primary goal from the attack that produces nearly
beginning of the season,
324 yards per outing.
it’s a big thing. The playoffs Defensively, SGHS is surare always ﬁrst on our list,” rendering 26.2 points and
Peck said. “We’re trying
293 total yards per game.
to build a program where
During their major
playoffs are expected every surge over the last four
year, and we’ve been close weeks, the Red and Gold
to that the last few years. It have been even better
has been rough coming so — averaging 45.8 points
close the last few seasons,
while producing at least
578 yards of total offense
so that’s what makes this

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face in a good Bengals football team.”
McCown played through
severe pain in the second
half of Sunday’s 34-20 loss
to Arizona. The 36-year-old
QB said Tuesday he was
having difﬁculty breathing
and sleeping because his
ribs were so sore. If he’s
not able to play at all, the
Browns will have thirdstring QB Austin Davis
active to back up Manziel
against the Bengals.
This will be the second
start this season for Manziel,
who won against Tennessee
in Week 2 when McCown was
sidelined with a concussion

16-15 in postseason games.
The Blue and White also
have a pair of state semiﬁnal appearances in 1999
and 2004.
Danville last loss came
in the opening round of the
2014 playoffs a year ago
after dropping a 27-24 decision to Shadyside. DHS
last hosted a playoff game
in 2013 and has won its
last two postseason games
at home.
The Blue Devils allowed
points in their ﬁrst two
games and have since
posted seven shutouts this
fall, and it would have been
eight straight shutouts
entering the postseason
had it not been for a late
score in a 49-6 win over
Loudonville in Week 8.
Danville is averaging
54.2 points per game
offensively and is allowing a mere 3.2 points as
a defense. DHS is 5-0 at
home, 2-0 against playoff
qualiﬁers and has scored
60 or more points in half of
its contests.
The Blue Devils are averaging close to 462 yards
of total offense per outing,
which includes an aerial
assault that produces nearly 311 yards and a ground
game that has three rushers
with over 175 yards apiece.
Quarterback Ridge
Durbin (6-2, 197, SR)
has completed 177-of-237
passes for 2,805 yards, 41

60620059

THURSDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

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touchdowns and four interceptions, and he also has
120 rushes for 771 yards
and 14 scores.
Chris Greenawalt and
Colt Lyon also have 190
and 180 rushing yards,
respectively, on the season,
as well as three touchdowns apiece.
The Blue Devils also
have seven different receivers with at least 10 catches,
led by Kenton Mickley
with 55 grabs for 934 yards
and 12 touchdowns. Cal
Honabarger is next with 51
catches for 865 yards and
17 scores.
Linebacker Hunter
Hawkins (5-11, 205, SR)
leads the defense with
122 total tackles, which
includes four tackles for
loss, two sacks and four
forced fumbles. Defensive
tackle Gunor Doretich (5-8,
205, SR) leads the team
with eight sacks.
Peck acknowledges the
uphill battle that looms,
and he also notes the
amount of respect that
he has for the Danville
program. In fact, he’d like
to see his Rebels become
somewhat of a reﬂection of
the Blue Devils.
“Danville is an example
of what we want to
become. They are a classact program and a hardnosed football team that
people all over the state
know about,” Peck said.
“They are solid across the
board on both sides of
the ball, and that defense
might be the best in the
state at any level. To me,
it’s an amazing feat that

they’ve given up only ﬁve
touchdowns for the entire
season.
“We know that we have
our hands full, but it’s still
better than not playing at
all. Besides, it will be fun
to attack arguably the best
team in the state and see
how we measure up.”
The Rebels are 2-3 in
road games this fall, which
includes an 0-3 mark
against playoff qualiﬁers.
SGHS lost 28-27 in the
season-opener at Sciotoville East, then dropped a
44-12 decision at Trimble
in Week 3 and fell 44-0 at
Belpre in Week 6.
Peck is hoping for a
supporting sea of Red and
Gold on Friday night. Early
on, it appears that he might
just get that wish too.
“My phone didn’t stop
ringing until two in the
morning Saturday night.
Obviously, people are still
excited about another
playoff game — even if it
is the fourth one in school
history,” Peck said. “I must
say that I still feel truly
blessed to be part of this
community, having heard
how excited the current
players, former players,
parents, business owners
and fans are for this week.
“Every great program
needs an even better supporting cast within the
community it serves. Honestly, I’d like to think that
we have one of the best for
that.”
Friday night’s kickoff is
scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

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Thursday, November 5, 2015 9

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�SPORTS

10 Thursday, November 5, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Lady Knights end season at Winfield

Pioneers

By Alex Hawley

From Page 6

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

year coach so didn’t really
know what to expect,” Lady
Knights head coach Marla
Cottrill said. “I was proud of
them, the girls moved good
and they played good. We
swept Nitro in three, so we
were excited about that.”
PPHS sophomore Gracie Cottrill lead the Lady
Knights with 11 service
points including four aces,
followed by Mackenzie Freeman with eight points and
two aces. Leah Cochran and
Cierra Porter both posted
seven points, including three
aces by Cochran and one by
Porter. Michaela Cottrill had
four points in the win, while
Charli Leach added three
points and one ace.
At the net, Point Pleasant
was led by freshman Lanea
Cochran with seven kills and

60576582

WINFIELD, W.Va. — You
win some, you lose some.
The Point Pleasant
volleyball team did both
in Tuesday’s Class AAA
Region 4, Section 1 tournament hosted by Winﬁeld
High School. First the Lady
Knights defeated Nitro in
straight games, but then the
host Lady Generals claimed
straight games over PPHS to
end Point Pleasant’s season.
Point Pleasant (8-19) —
which earned the program’s
ﬁrst-ever postseason win last
year — charged out to a 13-7
lead over Nitro in the opening game of the evening. The
Lady Wildcats rallied back
to take the lead at 18-13, but
the Lady Knights regained

the advantage at 23-22. NHS
tied the game at 23, but
PPHS claimed back-to-back
points to take the ﬁrst game
by a 25-23 count.
Nitro claimed a 2-1 lead
in the second, and held the
advantage for most of the
game. The Lady Knights battled back to take the lead at
20-17 and never looked back,
cruising to a 25-21 victory.
NHS scored the ﬁrst four
points of the third game and
expanded the advantage to
8-2. Point Pleasant took its
ﬁrst lead of the third game at
21-20, but Nitro immediately
tied the game at 21. The
Lady Knights scored four of
the next six points to take
the game by a 25-23 ﬁnal,
and the match by a 3-0 tally.
“We hadn’t played Nitro
yet this year, and I’m a ﬁrst-

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GOALS

is also 1-0 this season against playoff qualiﬁers after
defeating Paint Valley 15-8 in Week 6.
Like RVHS, the Pioneers also have three shutouts
on the season — including a season-best 55-0 blanking of Unioto in Week 4. Zane Trace’s opponents
combined for a 42-58 overall record, which was just
slightly off of the Raiders’ 42-57 strength of schedule.
The Pioneers are averaging roughly 370 yards of
total offense per night, which includes a heavy rushing attack that produces nearly 259 yards per contest. ZTHS has ﬁve different players with at least 250
rushing yards on the season, with seniors Trey Davis
(5-9, 170) and Joel Dunkle (5-8, 165) leading that
charge with 645 yards and 623 yards respectively.
Dunkle and junior Austin Harris (5-10, 170) also
give the Pioneers a dual-option at the quarterback
position. Dunkle is 31-of-60 passing for 600 yards, six
TDs and three interceptions, while Harris is 30-of-48
passing for 504 yards, seven scores and one pick.
Senior Pierce Mowery (6-2, 180) leads the wideouts with 26 catches for 473 yards and seven scores,
while senior Timothy Gibson (6-1, 190) also has 19
grabs for 310 yards and three touchdowns.
Senior Truman Love (6-1, 225) leads the defense
with 58 tackles and 6.5 sacks, while junior Alden
Place (6-3, 210) has a team-best 13 sacks to go along
with 58 tackles.
“Zane Trace is obviously well-deserving of its ranking and has earned the right to have a home game,”
Sparling said of his upcoming opponent. “They are
extremely well-coached and have some really explosive football players at the skill positions to go along
with great football players on the ﬁrst level of both
their offense and defense. From a personnel standpoint, we have got our work cut out for us.”
The Pioneers may have the home-ﬁeld advantage
this weekend, but the seventh-seeded Raiders will
likely have a majority of the sentimental support in
southeastern Ohio as each program chases its ﬁrstever Week 11 victory.
Sparling is hoping that a sea of Silver and Black
is waiting for his troops when they leave the locker
room Friday night. As he noted, it’ll just add that
much more to this historic moment.
“Having the support of your school and community is such a powerful thing, and we feel so honored
that we have the chance to represent our school,
community, and Gallia County in general,” Sparling
said. “I know as a player, there was no greater feeling than running out of the tunnel and seeing your
community behind you, cheering you along the way.
I am so excited for my boys because they will get to
experience that Friday night. On Friday night, we are
all Raiders … and what a great time it will be to be a
Raider.”
The Raiders and Pioneers will kick off their Division V, Region 17 quarterﬁnal at 7:30 p.m. Friday
night at Zane Trace High School in Kinnikinnick, just
northeast of Chillicothe in Ross County.

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

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one block, followed by Porter
with six kills and one block.
Becca Musgrave had four
kills and one block, Brenna
Dotson posted three kills
and three blocks, while Gracie Cottrill added two kills.
Freeman, Leah Cochran and
Michaela Cottrill each had
one kill against Nitro, with
Cottrill adding a block.
In the ﬁrst game of the
second match, Winﬁeld (425-3) — which was a state
quaterﬁnalist last season
— rolled to a 25-3 victory
after trailing 2-1. The Lady
Knights led 2-0 in the second
game, but eventually fell by
a 25-11 count. WHS never
trailed in the ﬁnale, taking
the third by a 25-7 count and
the match by a 3-0 mark.
“We know what Winﬁeld
is,” coach Cottrill said. “We
know that they’re a powerhouse, but we just wanted to
play. There’s always a miracle
that can be done, but we
knew what to expect when
we beat Nitro.”
Leach led PPHS against
the Lady Generals, posting
two service points, while
Freeman and Leah Cochran
both marked one point and
an ace in the setback. Musgrave charged the net attack
for Point Pleasant with two
kills, while Porter, Leah
Cochran, Gracie Cottrill and
Lanea Cochran each had
one kill.
This marks the ﬁnal match
for Point Pleasant seniors
Becca Musgrave, Charli
Leach, Alexis Runion and
Kaitlyn Henry. Coach Cottrill noted that the seniors
will be missed, but the future
of PPHS volleyball is something to look forward to.
“I’m excited about building a program at Point, not
just coming in coaching for
a year-or-two and leaving,”
coach Cottrill added. “I want
to build a program, so we’re
excited about the future.”

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