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                  <text>On this
day in
history

Rain.
High of 55,
low of 40

Buffalo
charges past
White Falcons

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 180, Volume 69

Operation
Christmas
Child begins
on Nov. 16

Minford
native
heads
campaign

By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — From Nov.
16 to Nov. 23 locations across
Gallia and Meigs counties will
serve as local drop-off spots for
Operation Christmas Child.
According to their website,
Operation Christmas Child was
first founded in 1993 and is a
project of Samaritan’s Purse,
which was founded in 1970.
Volunteers will collect nonperishable goods, toys, clothes
and other items for a child of a
certain age and place these items
in a shoe box.
Shoe boxes ship out to various locations around the world
as Christmas gifts to children
in underprivileged areas. Specific requested items are toys,
school supplies, hygiene items
and notes of encouragement
from those who donate. This
year, project coordinators for
Gallia and Meigs are Mark Williams, Bronwyn Williams, Kailyn
Browning and Lyn Richard, who
hope to collect 2,300 shoe box
gifts to deliver.
Bronwyn Williams said that
any donation can change the life
of a child.
“Through the simple act of
filling a shoebox, someone in
Middleport can make a tangible
difference in the life of a child
halfway around the world,” Williams said. “Anyone can participate and bring joy to a child facing difficult circumstances.”
Hope Baptist Church, 570
Grant St., Middleport, will
receive donations 1-4 p.m. every
day between Nov. 16-Nov. 23.
Reach them at 740-992-5334.
French City Baptist, 3554 State
Route 160, Gallipolis, will
receive donations from noon to
4 p.m. every day between Nov.
16-22, and 10 a.m. to noon Nov.
23. Reach them at 740-446-3331.
Christ Community Wesleyan
Church, 6275 Kenney Memorial
Lane, Albany, will receive donations between 9 a.m. to noon and
1:30-4 p.m. Nov. 16-17; 1:30-4
p.m. and 6-8 p.m. Nov. 18; 9 a.m.
to noon and 1:30-4 p.m. Nov. 19;
9 a.m. to noon and 1:30-3 p.m.
Nov. 20; 1-4 p.m. Nov. 21; and 9
a.m. to noon Nov. 22-23. Reach
them at 740-698-2292.
Coolville United Methodist Church, 26460 Main St.,
Coolville, will receive donations
between 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Nov.
16; 6-8 p.m. Nov. 17; 11 a.m. to
1 p.m. Nov. 18-19; 3-5 p.m. Nov.
20; 10 a.m. to noon Nov. 21; and
1-3 p.m. Nov. 22-23. Reach them
at 740-667-6672.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.

By Frank Lewis
flewis@civitasmedia.com

Courtesy photos

The seized contraband: 24.8 grams of heroin, $1,780 in cash and scales used to weigh drugs.

Two arrested in
Pomeroy drug bust
By Lindsay Kriz

equipment violation. McDaniel
was then detained as well.
Back at McDaniel’s residence,
POMEROY — Two people
ofﬁcials seized approximately 24.8
were arrested Friday after a drug
grams of suspected heroin, $1,780
bust at 42994 Lot 2, State Route
in cash and scales used to weigh
124 in Pomeroy.
drugs.
McDaniel
Both McDaniel and Alexander
The Ohio Organized Crime
have been charged with secondInvestigations Commission Major
degree felony possession of heroin
Crimes Task Force of Galliaand are both currently awaiting
Meigs, with assistance from the
court appearance dates in Meigs
Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce,
County. McDaniel is currently
served a warrant at the home of
being held at the Middleport Jail,
Paul McDaniel III. According
with Alexander being held at the
to Meigs County Sheriff Keith
Washington County Jail.
Wood, the Task Force was able
Alexander
The Ohio Organized Crime
to get a warrant through intelInvestigations
Commission Major
ligence and investigations.
Crime
Task
Force
of
Gallia-Meigs
was
Once the task force and sheriff’s ofﬁce
formed
in
September
2013
and
consists
made entry into the home, they detained
of the Meigs and Gallia County Sheriff’s
Jordan Lekei Alexander, 24, of Detroit,
Ofﬁce and the Middleport and Gallipolis
after checking for warrants. Alexander
Police Departments. The Ohio Orgawas then placed under arrest for an outnized Crime Commission is part of the
standing warrant from Charleston for
Ohio Attorney General’s Ofﬁce.
dangerous drugs.
“I’m very proud of all the agencies
According to Wood, while the task
involved in the task force and they will
force was continuing their search of
continue to push forward and combat the
McDaniel’s home in Syracuse, Meigs
drug issues that our communities are facCounty Deputy Curtis Jones noticed
ing,” Wood said.
McDaniel’s vehicle on a road in
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.
Syracuse and stopped it for an initial

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

MINFORD, Ohio — When your
campaign is at the top of the heap,
you are probably doing something
right and right now Dr. Ben Carson sits atop the Republican primary competition and sitting right
there with him is Minford native
Barry Bennett who is the national
campaign
chairman
for the 2016
“If we do
Ben Carson
have an
for President
inauguration,
campaign.
I promise that
“A mutual
friend introhalf of Minford
duced us and
will be there.”
I went down
to see him
— Barry Bennett,
and Candy,
Chairman of
his wife, in
the Ben Carson
Florida in
2016 presidential
January and
campaign
spent a day
with them
and I just fell
in love with him,” Bennett said.
“I’ve been working with him ever
since.”
Bennett attended Minford
schools before moving to Mansﬁeld where he graduated from
Lexington High School. The
move was precipitated when the
steel mill in New Boston closed
and his father, Jerry Bennett,
was transferred to Mansﬁeld.
Ask him where we went to college and he responds with a
resounding - “THE Ohio State
University.”
“I asked him one day, Barry, did
you ever think you would do this
well?” Jerry Bennett said. “And
he said, ‘I was naive enough that I
thought I could do it.”
During an election period
recently, Barry Bennett had 23
candidates he was working for and
19 of them won.
“He has done real well,” Jerry
Bennett said. “He’s just as good a
man as there is.”
According to CNN, a new
national poll shows Ben Carson
is ahead of Donald Trump in the
Republican presidential race.
“We’re up in two polls where
we are leading outside the margin
of error,” Bennett said. “We are
by far raising the most money.
We raised $10 million in October,
whereas Marco Rubio raised $7
million for the entire quarter. So
we are doing very well. We’ve
got the most active social media
followers. Ahead in the polls and
more money, it all looks pretty
good right now.”
See CAMPAIGN | 5

Event to raise awareness of lung cancer

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5

By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

— SPORTS
Football: 6
NASCAR: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 7
Classified: 8
Comics: 9

Tuesday, November 10, 2015 s 50¢

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

OHIO VALLEY — According
to the Lung Cancer Alliance, lung
cancer is an urgent priority among
veterans.
Not only is the incidence higher,
but the survival rate is lower than
in civilian populations. The reasons
are numerous, but smoking is cited
as one cause, with 32 percent of
active duty military personnel who
smoke versus 20 percent of the
civilian population. The prevalence
of smoking is 50 percent higher in

COMMUNITY EVENT
“Shine a Light” at Holzer Cancer Center 6 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 12, to raise
awareness of lung cancer.
The public is invited and Holzer is extending a special invitation to active
duty personnel and veterans.

those who have been deployed.
The 2010 President’s Cancer
Advisory Panel linked 20 agents to
lung cancer. Active duty personnel
and veterans have been exposed
to Agent Orange, radon, asbestos,
chromium, diesel exhaust, pesti-

cides, pollutants and particulate
matter from oil well ﬁres and
destruction of chemical weapons.
Studies in 2010 which were
updated in 2014 show a higher rate
of lung cancer in Gulf War veterans
See EVENT | 5

�LOCAL

2 Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Daily Sentinel

OBITUARIES

DEATH NOTICES

JOHN WILLIAM (BILL) BROWN
MIDDLEPORT —
With his daughters at
his bedside, and under
the escort of a legion of
Angels, John William
(Bill) Brown peacefully
broke the chains of Earth
and passed through Heaven’s Gates to his eternal
reward on Friday, Nov. 6,
2015 at Overbrook Rehabilitation Center.
Born on June 17, 1932
in Rutland, Ohio, Bill
was the son of the late
Pauline Brown Markins
and Roe Brown. Bill
graduated from Rutland
High School in 1950.
Some of his favorite stories to tell were of the
days he played football
under Coach Venari. Bill
excelled at both football
and basketball and left
behind for his daughters to treasure many
scrapbooks ﬁlled with
his accomplishments in
both sports. During high
school Bill also worked
with his mother at their
restaurant in Rutland,
The Hut, and helped her
run the family grocery
store.
After high school, Bill
attended Ohio University
for one year where he
did very well as a chemistry major. Financial
circumstances wouldn’t
allow him to continue
there, so on Jan. 8, 1952
he enlisted in the United
States Navy. He was veteran of the Korean War.
Bill served four years
active duty and four years
reserve with the Navy
and was a Fire Control
Specialist 2 — or he
liked to say — he aimed
guns. During his time
in the Navy he visited
34 countries, crossed
the equator and traveled
around Cape Horn and
the Arctic Circle. After
the Navy Bill returned
to Rutland to operate
the family grocery store
for a few years and later
became employed at the
then Kaiser Aluminum
in Ravenswood, West
Virginia. He retired from
there in 1994. Bill also
owned a ﬁre extinguisher
sales and service company for many years. He
also served for 30 years
on the Rutland Volunteer
Fire Department, many of
those years as chief.
Despite all of that, Bill
would tell you that what
he was most proud of in
life was his relationship
with his Savior and his
family. Bill was a life-long
member of the Church of
Christ, serving in various
capacities from church
elder to Sunday school

teacher to chairman of
the board at the Rutland
Church of Christ and the
Middleport Church of
Christ. Bill’s faithful service to the Lord allowed
him to bring many people
to know Christ and
accept Him as their Savior. He was humble about
that accomplishment, but
his reward will be great
for it.
After meeting his
Savior, the second most
exciting thing for Bill
about entering Heaven
was the reunion he would
have with the love of his
life, his wife, Myrville
Stewart Brown, whom he
married on Feb. 23, 1958,
and who preceded him
in death in 2012. Besides
Myrville and his parents,
Bill was also preceded in
death by his stepfather,
Ray Markins, his sister,
Kathleen Wildermuth,
and three brothers-inlaw, Millard Wildermuth,
Colonel Keith Kincaid,
and Clarence (Sonny)
Stewart, as well as his
beloved mother-in-law, Iva
Stewart.
Bill is survived by three
loving daughters, Teresa
Brown and Kelly (Steve)
Lambert of Rutland and
Karla Brown of Middleport; a sister, Marjorie
Kincaid of Carmichael,
California and nieces and
nephews Bill and Tom
Kincaid and Jim Wildermuth and Judy Wildermuth Allensworth. Bill is
also survived by a brother-in-law and sister-in-law
who he thought of as his
own children, Jim and
Kathy Stewart and Marcia and Herb Elliot, along
with “borrowed” grandchildren Angee Arnold,
Amie Fields, Beckie
Cook, Brandie Saber,
Jim Stewart and Beverly
Smith and their families.
Bill also has a very special place in his heart for
Adam Lambert as well
as Brittany Cundiff and
their children, Logan and
Aubree, and his best new
friend of three years, his
dog, Buddy.
Funeral services will be
held on Thursday, Nov.
12, 2015 at 11 a.m. at
the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Pastor Randy
Smith ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow at Wells Cemetery, where military
honors will be presented
by Drew-Webster Post 39
of the American Legion.
Calling hours will be on
Wednesday from 5-8 p.m.
at the funeral home in
Pomeroy.

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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
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JOYCE ANN MORRIS
MIDDLEPORT
— Joyce Ann Morris, 59, of Bradbury Road, died
Saturday, Nov. 7,
2015 at her residence.
She was born
March 30, 1956 in Toledo
to the late Paul Perrit and
Irene (Milner) Roper. She
was a former nurse’s aide.
For many years, Joyce
and her husband attended
the Rutland Free Will
Baptist Church.
She was a beautiful
person with a beautiful
soul. She was a great
woman who devoted her
life to her husband, children, and grandchildren.
She had a big heart and
would do anything for a
friend. She will be deeply
missed.
She is survived by
her best friend, her husband, and her soul mate,
Charles R. Morris, Jr. of
Middleport, whom she
married on Feb. 14, 1969.
She also leaves behind
her children; Charles
R. (Lisa) Morris, III of
Moon Lake, Fla., Pamela
Ruth (Keith) Wilburn
of Northwood, Ohio,

Eric Ray Morris
of Middleport,
Shawn Morris
(Brandy Smith)
of Toledo, and
Myrtle Candy
Parker of Dayton;
thirteen grandchildren, nine greatgrandchildren, two brothers; Mark (Helen) Roper
of Toledo, and Scott
(Sonya) Roper of Alpena,
Mich., four sisters; Jan
Roper of Perrysburg,
Ohio and Karen Oliger,
Barbara Gonzalez, &amp;
Judy Roper, all of Toledo,
as well as several nieces
and nephews.
In addition to her parents, she is preceded in
death by a great-granddaughter, Lucy Morris,
a brother, Paul Eugene
Roper, and a sister, Shirley Metcalf.
Funeral services will
be held at 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 14, 2015 at the
Fischer Funeral Home
in Danville, with Victor
Slutz ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow in Millwood
Cemetery. Calling hours
are from 4-7 p.m. Friday
at the funeral home. www.
ﬁscherfuneralhome.com.

JOSEPH WILLIAM WHITE JR.
MIDDLEPORT —
Joseph William White Jr.,
79, died unexpectedly on
Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2015 at
the Overbrook Rehab Center, Middleport.
Junior was born March
12, 1936 at Minerville,
Ohio to Joseph William
and Alice Leona Hendricks
White.
He was a veteran of the
US Marine Corps and he
was a gifted professional
musician, having developed
a unique style of playing
the stand up bass, and a
talented vocalist, entertaining in many parts of the
country for many years.
After working at many jobs
throughout the country
he returned to Ohio in the
early 70s where he hired on
with the US Army Corps of
Engineers, Huntington District, working ﬁrst with the
repair ﬂeet all up and down
the Ohio and Kanawha
Rivers then transferring
to the Gallipolis Locks
and Dam as a lockman,
then to Racine Lock and
Dam, where he retired in
1987. On July 30, 1973 he
married Rita Joan Spires.
Together they founded a
band called The Classics,
consisting of himself on
the string bass, Rita on
the keyboard, Al Windon
on the drums and Billy
Ray Ward on the saxophone, where they were
in demand to entertain at
numerous said functions,
private parties and other
venues throughout the
entire tri-state area.
He was active in the
Feeney Bennet Post 128
of the American Legion in
Middleport, Ohio where

he was a life member. He
owned and operated a very
successful piano tuning
and repair service for many
years until his health began
to fail several years ago.
Junior had a kind, tender
and generous heart, even
willing to help anyone in
need.
Preceding him in death
besides his parents were
his wife Rita of 37 years,
who died Oct. 15, 2010,
sisters Mary Lou Paulins,
Verna Mae Salser and a
son Stephen of Minnesota.
Surviving him are his
wife, Irma Bales White
whom he married June 13,
2014; a beloved sister, Ruth
Ann Robinson of Orlando,
Florida; a son Joseph and
a daughter Laura, both of
Minnesota; an aunt Verna
Paulina Gibbs Martin of
Gallipolis; a special stepson
Ralph (Connie) Bales of
Rutland and a very special
friend, Dennis McKinney
of Middleport; numerous
nieces, nephews, cousins
and many friends.
Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy
has been entrusted with his
funeral arrangements. Military services will be conducted at the funeral home;
visitation will be on Nov.
10 at 11 a.m. with services
following at noon. In accordance with his wishes he
will then be cremated and
his ashes will be interred at
the Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire, Ohio. His family
wishes to thank Overbrook
Rehab Center for their
excellent care of their loved
one.

Thank you to the voters for
your conﬁdence in electing
me to the governing board
of Athens-Meigs ESC

Scott Walton
Paid for by the candidate
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CARPER
HENDERSON, W.Va. — Michael A. Carper, 51,
of Henderson, W.Va., died Saturday, Nov. 7, 2015.
Funeral service is noon Thursday, Nov. 12, 2015,
at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home. Burial will follow
in Henderson Cemetery. Visitation is one hour
prior to the service at the funeral home.
ELLIS
CROWN CITY, Ohio — Ronald Eugene Ellis,
72, of Crown City, died Saturday, Nov. 7, 2015, at
home. Funeral service will be 2 p.m. Wednesday,
Nov. 11, 2015. Visitation will be 1-2 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 11, 2015, at the funeral home.
FRANKLIN
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Robert A. “Bobby”
Franklin, 60, of Gallipolis, died Monday, Nov. 9,
2015. Services will be 11 a.m. Friday, Nov. 13,
2015, at Elizabeth Chapel Church. Burial will follow in Providence Cemetery. Friends may call the
church between 5-8 p.m. Thursday. Willis Funeral
Home is assisting the Franklin family.
MCCOY
MASON COUNTY, W.Va. — Barbara McCoy,
81, of Mason County, died Saturday, Nov. 7, 2015.
Funeral is 1 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2015, at Deal
Funeral Home. Visitation will precede the service
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. A graveside service will
be immediately following the funeral at Kirkland
Memorial Gardens. Deal Funeral Home is handling arrangements.
MEADS
LAURINBURG, N.C. — Billy Joe Meads, 82,
died Friday, Nov. 6, 2015. A memorial service
will be 6 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2015, at St. John
United Methodist Church. Burial will be 3 p.m
Thursday, Nov. 11, 2015, at Sunrise Memorial
Gardens in New Haven, W.Va. Visitation will follow the memorial service at the church.
RODGERS
BIDWELL, Ohio — Joyce A. Rodgers, 78, of
Bidwell, died Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2015, at her residence. Graveside services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov.r 11, 2015, in Bethel Cemetery, Gallipolis.
STEBBINS
CROWN CITY, Ohio — Kathleen Jo “Kathy”
Stebbins, 58, of Crown City, died Sunday, Nov.
8, 2015. Funeral services will be 1 pm. Thursday,
Nov. 12, 2015, at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home. Burial will follow in Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens. Friends may call the funeral home
between 6-9 p.m. Wednesday.
TRIPLETT
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Lawrence “Pa” Triplett,
80, of Pomeroy, died Sunday, Nov. 8, 2015, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis. Funeral services
will be 2 p.m. Friday, Nov. 13 2015, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Burial will
follow at Rocksprings Cemetery. Calling hours will
be 5-8 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home.
WEBB
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Gary R. Webb, 51, of
Huntington, passed away Sunday, Nov. 8, 2015,
at St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington. Hall
Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio,
is in charge of arrangements.

FOR THE RECORD
Probate Court
Marriage licenses were
recently issued in Meigs
County Probate Court
to Terry Ray Little and
Brenda Sue Arms, both
of Pomeroy; Timothy
Scott Pridemore and
Elaine Sue Harris, both
of Pomeroy; Jeff R.
Thompson and Staci M.
White, both of Albany;
Joshua Lee Corn and
Rachele Dawn Young,
both of Langsville; Todd
Allen Doczi and Kelly
Dawn Grinstead, both of
Middleport; Christopher
Matthew Schoolcraft and
Vickie Lynn Pﬂueger,
both of Racine; Jonathan
Lee Black and Natane
Floyd Adams, both of
Pomeroy; Charles Ryan
Young, of Pomeroy and
Caitlyn Elizabeth Thomas, of Syracuse; Nicholas
Ryan Buck and Laura
Elizabeth Hysell, both of
Pomeroy; David Allen
McMillan and Brook
Nichole Lynn Watson,
both of Long Bottom;
Brandon Lee Fitch and
Alyssa Lynn Newland,
both of Long Bottom;
Steven Dale Cotterill
and Barbara Carol Cotterill, both of Albany;
Andrew Edward Davis,
of Pomeroy and Ashley
Dawn Garvin, of Parkersburg, W.Va.; John Clifton
Sparks and Jennifer Lynn
Roth, both of Syracuse;
Michael Todd Satterﬁeld,
of Pomeroy, and Kasie

Michelle Sellers, of
Portland; Michael Steve
Johnson and Marandia
Eileen Johnson, both of
Reedsville; and Cory Lee
Johnson and Cherise
Rene Romine, both of
Langsville.
Domestic
An action of dissolution
of marriage with children
was ﬁled by Matthew
McGrath and Melissa
McGrath.
An action of divorce
with children was ﬁled by
Charles Davis and Jennifer Davis.
An action of dissolution
of marriage was ﬁled by
William Russell Capehart
and Nena N. Capehart.
An action of divorce
with children was ﬁled by
April Stitt and Deangelo
Thompson.
An action of dissolution
with children was ﬁled by
Brian C. Young and Jennifer R. Young.
An action of dissolution
of marriage was ﬁled by
Keith A. Barnhart and
Virginia A. Barnhart.
An action of dissolution
of marriage was ﬁled by
Rachel L. Lawrence and
Bryan L. Lawrence .
Land Transfers
To view speciﬁc land
transfer records, visit
the Recorder’s Ofﬁce
at the Meigs County
Courthouse during
regular hours.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 10, 2015 3

Seeing the signs of gallbladder disease
Dr. Arthur Fine

Pleasant Valley Hospital

POINT PLEASANT — The
symptoms are clear. Pain in
the right side of your abdomen
(speciﬁcally under your right
rib cage) — possibly all the
way up to your right shoulder
or into your back, nausea,
vomiting and high fever. All of
these signs point to gallbladder
disease.
What exactly is gallbladder
disease? For starters, the

gallbladder is where
bile is stored. During
the natural process
of digestion, bile is
one of the ﬂuids that
helps your body break
down the food that you
eat. At times, stones
may block the gallbladder’s
tubes, or tumors and other
types of blockages may occur.
And those blockages lead
to inﬂammation within the
gallbladder.

Next, those speciﬁc
symptoms — the pain and
nausea — may set in. This is
a sign of gallbladder disease
and it may be time to consider
surgery.
As one of Pleasant Valley

Hospital’s Marshall
surgeons, I promise
you’re in good hands.
Cholecystectomy, or
gallbladder removal, is a
fairly common surgery.
Rest assured, you don’t
need a gallbladder to
have good health. And once it’s
removed, bile will ﬂow directly
from the liver into the small
intestine to help restore your
natural digestion again.
Keep in mind that, like

anything, a healthy diet and
regular exercise can help
prevent gallbladder issues.
But when the signs are there,
it’s important to act quickly
to restore you back to good
health.
At PVH, we strive to put
your health and happiness
ﬁrst so we can truly make
a difference within the
community we love.
Dr. Arthur Fine is a Marshall surgeon at
Pleasant Valley Hospital

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

Retired teachers talk hours, ghosts

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

By Janice Weber

Meigs County Election Board
to hold official count
POMEROY — The ofﬁcial count for the Nov. 3
General Election for the Meigs County Board of
Elections will be 9 a.m. Nov. 16 at the Meigs County
Annex on Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy.

Alpha Omicron Chapter of
Delta Kappa Gamma Meeting
POMEROY —The Alpha Omicron Chapter of
Delta Kappa Gamma will meet Nov. 14 at Trinity Church in Pomeroy at 10:30 a.m. Delta Kappa
Gamma is a national teacher’s honorary society.
The program will be a bake-less bake sale. Bring
a dish for the pot luck lunch and ten copies of the
recipe to share. Donations will be collected to raise
money for teaching scholarships. The society will
hold Papered Chef show to raise funds for the chapter. Paper products will be collected for Serenity
and Shepherds House women shelters and members
are asked to bring Christmas gifts for the shelter
residents to be collected in November and December. Hostesses for this event are Gay Perrin and Jo
Ann Hays. For further information please call Jo
Ann Hays or Gay Perrin.

Card Shower for Ann Taylor’s
89 birthday
RACINE — There will be a card shower for Ann
Taylor’s 89 birthday on Nov. 13. Mail your cards to
Ann Taylor, 48394 Karr Rd., Racine, OH 45771.

Meigs County Humane
Society Thrift Store relocating
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Humane
Society Thrift Shop in Middleport will have a moving sale Nov. 9 through Nov. 12. The shop will be
closed Nov. 13 and Nov. 14 and reopen Nov. 16 at its
new location, 235 N. Second St. Middleport. A grand
opening is planned for Nov. 17.

Give a helping hand during
the holidays food donation
POMEROY —Reed and Baur Insurance Agency are
sponsoring a food drive to help families in need now
through Dec. 16. All non-perishable items are accepted and can be dropped off at there ofﬁce located at
220 E. Main St. in Pomeroy.

Ohio Woodland Interest
Group Program
ATHENS — “From Rocks to Tree Tops, Geological Inﬂuences on Southeastern Ohio’s Topography
and Thoughts on Modern Local Floras” will be
David Kidder, associate professor of geological sciences at Ohio University, will talk about how the
local rocks came into being. Come hear the story of
changes in ancient climate and sea level from when
southeast Ohio was a tropical setting and how that
inﬂuences today’s woodlands. The program will
be 7 p.m. Nov. 16 in the ODNR building, 360 E.
State St, Athens. Light refreshments will be served.
Sponsored by the Southeast Ohio Woodland Interest Group, this event is free and open to all. For
more information call Perry at 740 589-9915 or
visit our web site at http://seowig.weebly.com/.

Give a helping hand during
the holidays food donation
POMEROY —Reed and Baur Insurance Agency are
sponsoring a food drive to help families in need now
through Dec. 16. All non-perishable items are accepted and can be dropped off at there ofﬁce located at
220 E. Main St. in Pomeroy.

Natural Resources Assistance
Council meeting notice
MARIETTA — There will be a meeting of the
Natural Resources Assistance Council at Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District,
1400 Pike Street, Marietta, at 10 a.m. Nov. 10 to rate
and rank Round 10 grant applications for funding.
Questions regarding this meeting should be directed
to Michelle Hyer at Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District at (740) 376-1025 or
mhyer@buckeyehills.org.

deadline is Nov. 16.
The president reminded the
group about keeping track of
POMEROY — The Meigs
volunteer hours to be turned in
County Retired Teachers recently at the end of the year. She also
met at the Senior Citizen’s Center talked about the insurance of
for a luncheon meeting.
STRS and said the premiums have
Becky Triplett, president,
gone up and to check their letters.
opened the meeting with a welShe said she had gotten a card of
come to all and the Pledge of
thanks for the school supplies.
Allegiance.
The Spring Conference for
Becky Zurcher read “Amazing
2016
will be in Athens. The
Find in the National Archives”
speaker
for the meeting was Mike
and “The Pumpkin Prayer” for
Gerlach,
local historian. He spoke
devotions before the meal proabout ghost stories and mysteries
vided by the Center.
of Meigs County. He said most
The minutes were read
towns that you visit have ghost
and approved and the treastories about the places in their
surer gave his report and was
approved. A card for Ira Mead- surroundings. He said a good
ows was signed by all. Charlene place for ghost stories is Edinburgh, Scotland, where they have
Rutherford and Becky Zurcher
gave a report on the scholarship a number of castles.
Another place to visit is Lexingto be given in December. The

For the Sentinel

ton, Va., where Stonewall Jackson
is buried. There is a statue of him
facing one way, and his wife is
buried on his opposite side. Once
in a while he supposedly turns
his head to look at her. The group
told of some of the things they
had experienced. Gerlach also
told about the mystery of where
Elizabeth Pomeroy was buried
and how she was found. He also
told about the house he bought
in Middleport and some of the
happenings that his family has
experienced.
Door prizes were won by Marlene Donovan and Becky Zurcher.
The next meeting will be Dec.
3 at the Trinity Church, and the
group is to bring in books or art
supplies for children and young
adults to be used as Christmas
gifts at the Cooperative Parish.

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
speaker on the topic of “The Constitution: Where
did our laws come from.” The public to invited to the
program. For more information call 740-992-5628.
BURLINGHAM — There will be a public meeting
TUESDAY, NOV. 10
of the Burlingham Cemetery Association at 1 p.m. at
BEDFORD — The Bedford Township Trustees
the Burlingham Church.
will meet at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
REEDSVILLE — The 28th Annual Eastern Music
POMEROY — “Fit Together Fitness” exercise
Boosters Craft Show will be 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Eastclasses will begin tonight at 6:30-7:30 p.m. at the
ern Elementary School. Crafters may call Angie at
Mulberry Community Center located at 260 Mul740-985-3690 or Jenny at 740-985-3479 for an appliberry Ave. and continue for the next six consecutive cation. The craft show will feature performances by
weeks. The cost of a class is a donation of non-perthe Eastern Choir, Handbells, Marching Band and
ishable food items. For more information, contact
Concert Band.
Paulette at 740-992-6097.
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Community Calendar
will only list event information that is open to the
public.

SUNDAY, NOV. 15

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11

POMEROY — A Veteran’s Day ceremony will
be held at 11 a.m. by the levy in Pomeroy. The
program will include Ron Eastman, guest speaker,
Dennis Moore, chaplain. Porter Midkiff , pledge of
allegiance, Gladys Cumings, Flanders Fields, Dale
Thoene, speaking about the American Flag and
Southern Local High School marching band will
preform. The public is invited to attend.
RACINE — Southern Local School District will
celebrate Veterans Day at 9 a.m. with a tribute to
all area veterans. Opening ceremonies will begin
outside at the ﬂagpole, where the Southern Local
marching band will play the National Anthem. After
a welcoming ceremony, the tribute will move inside
where a local veteran will be honored. All veterans
and the public is invited to attend and refreshments
will be on hand for veterans following the ceremony.

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.

TUESDAY, NOV. 17

SYRACUSE — A snowman painting class will be
taught by Michelle Musser at 6:00 p.m.at the Syracuse Community Center. Bring masking tape, brushes, a 16” X 18” canvas, slate or board and crackle
paint. Prepare your surface by painting it black,
dark brown or burgundy in preparation for the class.
For further information, call 740-992-2365.

Call Now: 800-595-3120

THURSDAY, NOV. 12

SYRACUSE — The Wildwood Garden Club
will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Syracuse Community
Center. Prospective new members are welcome.

SATURDAY, NOV. 14

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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. For more information contact Angie at 740-985-3690 or Jenny at
740-985-3479.
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

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60621967

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Making VW pay
up, in state court
Dr. Ira Morris cares for about 5,000 families in
Boone County, W.Va., where he is the only primary
care provider in the Wharton, Van and Whitesville
areas.
Dr. Morris loves his work, but he must commute
125 miles every day, which is why the Volkswagen
scandal affected him personally.
In 2012, Dr. Morris bought a Volkswagen diesel Passat that turned out
not to have the longevity he expected; by September 2015, the car was
costing $500 a month in repairs, so
Dr. Morris decided to trade it. When
Dr. Morris approached Stohlman
Subaru/Volkswagen in Vienna, Va.,
he was told that even a Volkswagen
Richard
dealer would not take his diesel PasNeely
Contributing sat in trade. Later, a Beckley Subaru
dealer took the car in trade, but
Columnist
credited Dr. Morris with substantially less than its pre-scandal Blue
Book value.
Ingenious Volkswagen engineers rigged both
Volkswagen and Audi diesel engines to defraud
government regulators and consumers: The emission control devices turn on only during testing.
Thus on the open road, Volkswagen and Audi diesels belch 40 times the allowable limit of nitrogen
oxide into the atmosphere.
Given that Dr. Morris’s loss was caused by Volkswagen’s fraud, one would think that Volkswagen
would want to make amends. But that isn’t what
happened: When Dr. Morris contacted Volkswagen, Volkswagen blew him off, and when I contacted Volkswagen, their ofﬁcers didn’t even give
me the courtesy of a reply.
Most of the press reports about making Volkswagen pay up have discussed various “class
actions” by which hundreds or thousands of consumers are aggregated as plaintiffs in one massive
lawsuit. Well, in my younger days I used to do
class actions, and class actions are almost always
in federal court, are long, procedurally difﬁcult,
and ultimately unsatisfying to most members of
the class because they take so long.
The famous Exxon Valdez case is an example.
Brieﬂy, in 1989, an Exxon oil tanker dumped 11
million to 38 million gallons of crude oil in Alaska
ﬁshing waters. In the resulting class action tried
in 1994, an Anchorage jury awarded $287 million
for actual damages and $5 billion for punitive
damages. Finally, in 2008, the U.S. Supreme Court
reduced the punitive damages to $507.5 million
based on maritime law. How many years was that?
Nearly 20 you say?
The reason, however, that class actions exist is
that individual plaintiffs can’t afford the costs to
litigate and lawyers won’t take small individual
cases on contingency. With a class action, however, Volkswagen will horse everyone around for
a decade with all kinds of procedural shenanigans
— something that can’t be avoided when a class
action is the only way people can afford to litigate.
But happily the Volkswagen case is the mirror
image of a proper class action. Hardly anyone
who owns an offending Volkswagen or Audi has
suffered more than $20,000 in damages, and most
have suffered less. But unlike cases that require
expensive experts to establish liability, in the Volkswagen case, every proof that one would need to
recover compensatory and punitive damages has
already been admitted by Volkswagen. Therefore,
why not bring individual actions in state court
and ask for only $75,000 in total damages, thereby
avoiding defendant-friendly federal court?
The patience of our state judges will be quickly
worn thin by efforts to avoid fair payment.
My complaint against Volkswagen is available in
the Boone County Circuit Clerk’s ofﬁce. Happily,
summary judgment on liability can be awarded by
the court upon the ﬁling of the defendant’s answer.
That leaves just an inquiry of damages where the
plaintiff proves what his car was worth before the
scandal and what the car is worth after the scandal. Then, however, the plaintiff can ask for and
receive damages for annoyance, inconvenience and
anxiety plus punitive damages based on Volkswagen’s fraud and deceit.
After all, Volkswagen has admitted that it rigged
the engines, and those engines are shown to emit
10 to 40 times the allowable nitrogen oxide, which
noxious chemical causes emphysema, bronchitis
and other respiratory diseases.
Richard Neely is a former chief justice of the West Virginia Supreme
Court of Appeals and general counsel of The Charleston GazetteMail. This editorial was made available via the West Virginia Press
Association and its statewide story-sharing service.

Visit us at

www.mydailysentinel.com

THEIR VIEW

The lost art of front-porch sitting

Early September, I moved
ing. I imagine the digniﬁed
from my old-fashioned
owners of such a mansion
house with a wrap-around
nestled into the camping
porch to an upscale suburb.
chairs by the trash cans,
Jogging past the crepe
discussing their recent trip
myrtles gracing my neighto Ireland and absorbing the
bor’s drive, I notice the
shade not available on their
eloquent stone houses in
Michele Z. missing front porch.
my new neighborhood lack Marcum
I jog on remembering
a certain charm — a charm Contributing grandma perched on her
even my grandmother’s
banister, her hands swiping
Columnist
ordinary two-story oozed. I
sweaty curls that were stuck
glance along the tree-lined
to my sister’s head like the
street toward the stoic houses and Popsicle drops running off my chin
realize the porches are missing —
and splashing orange onto the conamputated from their prominent
crete step. The news lady would
place — and how much I miss the
honk by and grandma would say,
front porch on my old house.
“Don’t wave, we’ll be in the next
A stoop barely wide enough for
edition of the paper!”
one chair graces the front entrancA breeze rustled the pages of the
es of most of the houses here.
newspaper draped over Grandpa’s
Garages protrude where the once
plaid polyester pants. Above the
revered front porch would have
clinking wind chimes, Bobby’s
stood, proudly providing a respite
mom could be heard yelling for
from the sun for the cantankerous
him as he clacked past over the
old man who just ﬁnished mowsidewalk. Ma Happer’s chickens
ing the lawn or for the ponytailed
were loose and clucking through
chick with the sweaty toddler on
our yard again. Across the street,
her hip.
old man Baker revved the engine
Two folding chairs sit empty
on his car that needed repaired
inside the open garage I’m passevery week.

The block was our world, the
porch our connection to it — in
real time. No cables or modems
needed.
My run through memories today
ends at my house where my own
tiny porch wishes for a swing and
a dollop of ice cream to spatter
over the bare concrete. If it were
a work day, I could excuse the
emptiness, but the somber Sunday
scene beckons reﬂection. I plop
onto the step, my hands to my
head knowing that more than just
architecture has changed when
I hear the whimsy of a distant
melody. I know that sound. The
ice cream truck! The one that I’d
run to so hard I’d fall and skin my
knee, but never let go of the dime
clenched in my hand.
The music is closer now and I
watch for a glimpse of that magical
cold machine, but it never makes it
to my street. Maybe it’s still stuck
on that street in my childhood.
And just maybe I am too.
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native of Meigs
County and an author. Her column will appear
each Tuesday in Ohio Valley Publishing.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Tuesday, Nov.
10, the 314th day of 2015.
There are 51 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlights in
History:
On Nov. 10, 1975, the
U.N. General Assembly
approved a resolution
equating Zionism with
racism (the world body
repealed the resolution
in Dec. 1991). The orehauling ship SS Edmund
Fitzgerald mysteriously
sank during a storm in
Lake Superior with the loss
of all 29 crew members.
On this date:
In 1775, the U.S.
Marines were organized
under authority of the Continental Congress.
In 1871, journalistexplorer Henry M. Stanley
found Scottish missionary
David Livingstone, who
had not been heard from
for years, near Lake Tanganyika in central Africa.
In 1919, the American
Legion opened its ﬁrst
national convention in Minneapolis.
In 1925, actor Richard
Burton was born Richard
Walter Jenkins in Pontrhydyfen, Wales.
In 1938, Kate Smith ﬁrst
sang Irving Berlin’s “God
Bless America” on her CBS
radio program. Turkish
statesman Mustafa Kemal
Ataturk died in Istanbul at
age 57.
In 1942, Winston

Churchill delivered a
speech in London in which
he said, “I have not become
the King’s First Minister to
preside over the liquidation
of the British Empire.”
In 1951, customer-dialed
long-distance telephone
service began as Mayor M.
Leslie Denning of Englewood, New Jersey, called
Alameda, California, Mayor
Frank Osborne without
operator assistance.
In 1954, the U.S. Marine
Corps Memorial, depicting
the raising of the American
ﬂag on Iwo Jima in 1945,
was dedicated by President
Dwight D. Eisenhower in
Arlington, Virginia.
In 1969, the children’s
educational program “Sesame Street” made its debut
on National Educational
Television (later PBS).
In 1982, the newly ﬁnished Vietnam Veterans
Memorial was opened to its
ﬁrst visitors in Washington,
D.C., three days before its
dedication. Soviet leader
Leonid I. Brezhnev died at
age 75.
In 1990, the movie
comedy “Home Alone,”
starring Macaulay Culkin,
premiered in Chicago.
In 2004, word reached
the United States of the
death of Palestinian leader
Yasser Arafat at age 75
(because of the time difference, it was the early hours
of Nov. 11 in Paris, where
Arafat died).

Ten years ago: A suicide
bomber killed some three
dozen people at a Baghdad
restaurant frequented by
police. Ellen JohnsonSirleaf, a former ﬁnance
minister of Liberia, claimed
victory in the country’s
presidential election. Chris
Carpenter of the St. Louis
Cardinals won the National
League Cy Young Award.
Five years ago: President Barack Obama cut
short his visit to his boyhood home in Indonesia
because of an ash cloud
from Mount Merapi, and
ﬂew to South Korea for
an economic summit.
French President Nicolas
Sarkozy’s reform raising
the retirement age from
60 to 62 became law, a victory for the conservative
government and a defeat
for unions that had waged
massive strikes and street
protests. Miranda Lambert
received three Country
Music Association Awards
on her 27th birthday,
including album of the year;
Brad Paisley was named
entertainer of the year.
Movie producer Dino De
Laurentiis, 91, died in Beverly Hills, California.
Today’s Birthdays: Film
composer Ennio Morricone
is 87. Blues singer Bobby
Rush is 81. Actor Albert
Hall is 78. Country singer
Donna Fargo is 74. Former
Sen. Saxby Chambliss,
R-Ga., is 72. Lyricist Tim

Rice is 71. Rock singermusician Greg Lake (Emerson, Lake and Palmer) is
68. Actress-dancer Ann
Reinking is 66. Actor Jack
Scalia is 65. Movie director
Roland Emmerich is 60.
Actor Matt Craven is 59.
Actor-comedian Sinbad
is 59. Actress Mackenzie
Phillips is 56. Author Neil
Gaiman is 55. Actress
Vanessa Angel is 52.
Actor Hugh Bonneville
(TV: “Downton Abbey”)
is 52. Actor-comedian
Tommy Davidson is 52.
Actor Michael Jai White
is 51. Country singer
Chris Cagle is 47. Actorcomedian Tracy Morgan is
47. Actress Ellen Pompeo
(TV: “Grey’s Anatomy”)
is 46. Actor-comedian
Orny Adams is 45. Rapperproducer Warren G is 45.
Actor Walton Goggins is
44. Comedian-actor Chris
Lilley is 41. Contemporary
Chrisian singer Matt Maher
is 41. Rock singer-musician
Jim Adkins (Jimmy Eat
World) is 40. Rapper Eve
is 37. Rock musician Chris
Joannou (Silverchair) is
36. Actor Bryan Neal is
35. Actress Heather Matarazzo is 33. Country singer
Miranda Lambert is 32.
Actor Josh Peck is 29. Pop
singer Vinz Dery (Nico &amp;
Vinz) is 25. Actress Zoey
Deutch is 21. Actress Kiernan Shipka is 16. Actress
Mackenzie Foy (Film: the
“Twilight” ﬁlms) is 15.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Campaign
From Page 1

According to an NBC News/
Wall Street Journal survey
Carson has 29 percent support
compared to Trump’s 23 percent. A CBS/New York Times
poll last week also showed Carson leading Trump.
“He is just a very different
kind of candidate and it’s a time
where people are looking for
something different,” Carson
said. “He is not like a politician.
I think we’ve all been disappointed with Washington that
overpromises and underdelivers
and I think people are ready
for someone from outside the
political realm who perhaps if
not burn the city down at least
shake it up.”
The primary season is the

From Page 1

than other veterans, and
lung cancer has been
deemed service-connected in Vietnam veterans.
Since November is
Lung Cancer Awareness
Month and Nov. 11 is
Veterans Day, Holzer
Health Systems decided it
would be a good time to
a “Shine a Light on Lung
Cancer,” with an event
at 6 p.m. Nov. 12. The
public is invited and Holzer is extending a special
invitation to active duty
personnel and veteran.
Shine a Light was
founded by a lung cancer
survivor and caregiver
and is the largest coordinated awareness event for
lung cancer in the U.S.
This is Holzer Health System’s ﬁrst time participating and ofﬁcials hope the
event will raise awareness
in the community.
Sandy Thomas has
been a respiratory therapist at Holzer for many

years and knows ﬁrsthand the struggles of lung
cancer patients and their
families. Her experience
and connection to those
diagnosed with lung cancer led her to become a
program coordinator with
Holzer Health Systems.
“We hope this event will
provide hope, inspiration,
and support for all of those
touched by lung cancer,”
said Thomas.“We now
have Low Dose CT scan
services and are excited to
team with Shine a Light
to offer this community
event. We want people
to be aware of the causes
of lung cancer, new early
diagnosis techniques and
treatment options. We also
want them to know this is
a place they can come for
help with questions and
diagnosis.”
According to Ken
Moore, executive director, Holzer Center for
Cancer Care, while lung
cancer is the leading
cause of cancer deaths in
the U.S., it is probably the
least publicized form of
cancer and receives less

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

50°

53°

49°

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

Trace
0.13
0.98
41.52
36.82

Today
7:05 a.m.
5:19 p.m.
5:53 a.m.
5:02 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Wed.
7:06 a.m.
5:18 p.m.
6:49 a.m.
5:38 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
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.

Major
10:04a
10:48a
11:07a
11:58a
12:56a
1:52a
2:49a

Minor
3:52a
4:36a
5:23a
6:14a
7:08a
8:05a
9:03a

Major
10:26p
11:11p
------1:21p
2:18p
3:16p

Minor
4:15p
4:59p
5:47p
6:39p
7:34p
8:31p
9:29p

WEATHER HISTORY
A powerful storm produced a state
record low barometer reading of
28.54 inches in Spencer, Iowa, on
Nov. 10, 1998. Albert Lea, Minn., had
a record low reading of 28.43 inches.

Partly sunny; rain at
night

Chillicothe
55/36

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.

1

Rather cloudy and
breezy

Logan
53/34

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

Lucasville
56/36

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Portsmouth
56/37

AIR QUALITY
52
300

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

SATURDAY

53°
33°

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

Plenty of sun

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.59 +0.05
Marietta
34 16.12 none
Parkersburg
36 21.32 -0.01
Belleville
35 12.85 -0.02
Racine
41 13.18 -0.44
Point Pleasant
40 25.10 -0.11
Gallipolis
50 13.22 -0.02
Huntington
50 25.88 -0.03
Ashland
52 34.61 +0.10
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.90 -0.08
Portsmouth
50 16.50 +0.20
Maysville
50 34.10 +0.20
Meldahl Dam
51 15.30 +0.20
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

MONDAY

53°
36°

Chilly with more
clouds than sunshine

Sunny

Marietta
54/40
Belpre
54/39

Athens
54/37

St. Marys
55/42

Parkersburg
54/38

Coolville
54/38

Elizabeth
55/42

Spencer
55/43

Buffalo
55/40
Milton
56/42

Clendenin
56/40

St. Albans
56/42

Huntington
56/37

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
50/44
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
San Francisco
0s
61/46
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
66/45
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SUNDAY

48°
30°

Murray City
53/35

Ironton
57/38

Ashland
57/38
Grayson
56/40

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9922155 Ext. 2551

BBT (NYSE) —38.65
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.47
Pepsico (NYSE) — 98.88
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.52
Rockwell (NYSE) — 107.79
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 111.68
Royal Dutch Shell — 51.92
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 24.79
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 58.51
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.41
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.72
Worthington (NYSE) — 30.10
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Nov.9 , 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.

Wilkesville
54/36
POMEROY
Jackson
55/39
55/36
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
55/41
55/38
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
55/34
GALLIPOLIS
55/40
55/40
55/40

South Shore Greenup
57/40
56/37

attend the Shine a Light
event on Thursday at 6
p.m. at the Holzer Center
for Cancer Care to learn
more about lung cancer
and Holzer’s low dose CT
services. Light refreshments will be served.

60°
40°
Abundant sunshine

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
54/35

Waverly
55/35

FRIDAY

62°
43°

Adelphi
53/34

0

0 50 100 150 200

Last

THURSDAY

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

Q: What is the precipitation that evaporates on the way down from the clouds?

SUN &amp; MOON

AEP (NYSE) — 54.43
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.27
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 111.81
Big Lots (NYSE) — 47.08
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 42.38
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 42.27
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 4.04
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.210
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 50.48
Collins (NYSE) —86.75
DuPont (NYSE) — 66.77
US Bank (NYSE) — 43.34
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 29.79
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 49.03
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 67.42
Kroger (NYSE) — 37.20
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 93.67
Norfolk So (NYSE) —88.68
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 24.40

A: Virga

Precipitation

WEDNESDAY

Dr. Nelson specializes in
cardiac and thoracic surgery, esophageal surgery
and vascular surgery.
Stephanie Harbour,
whose mother, Kay
Mayo, was diagnosed and
passed away from lung
cancer, will also speak.
The public is invited to

LOCAL STOCKS

EXTENDED FORECAST

On-and-off rain and drizzle this morning. Partly
cloudy tonight. High 55° / Low 40°

HEALTH TODAY

Courtesy photo

Minford native Barry Bennett, campaign chairman for the 2016 Ben Carson for
President campaign (right) helps Carson (center) prepare for a TV debate as a
network technician looks on.

good health, who have at
least a 30-pack per year
smoking history and are
either still smoking or
have quit smoking within
the last 15 years.
The Shine a Light
event will feature guest
speaker Dr. Karen Nelson
of Holzer Health System.

60°
49°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

54°
32°
60°
39°
79° in 1975
19° in 1995

Reach Frank Lewis at 740-353-3101, ext.
1928, or on Twitter @franklewis.

funding for research than
other cancers.
He and others at Holzer
want to emphasis that
screening techniques
have come a long way,
and that chest X-rays are
not a good diagnostic tool
in early cancer detection.
“Chest X-rays are not
good for early detection,
only a CT scan can detect
lung cancer before symptoms become apparent. It
is the only proven method
to detect lung cancer
early, when it is most
treatable,” Moore said.
If left undiagnosed,
malignant tumors grow
uncontrollably in the
body and can block airways. Another danger of
lung cancer cells is their
ability to break away and
spread to other parts of
the body through the
blood system or the natural ﬂuid around the lung
tissue.
The American Cancer
Society recommends
annual lung cancer
screening with low-dose
CT scans for patients 55
to 74 years old, in fairly

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

went from being a poor student
to receiving honors and he eventually attended medical school.
As a doctor, he became the
Director of Pediatric Neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital
at age 33, and became famous
for his ground-breaking work
separating conjoined twins.
“A lot of people think the
American dream has died,”
Bennett said. “And here is a
great example that it is still out
there.”
Bennett, whose parents,
Jerry and Annette Bennett,
still reside in Muleton, said he
expects a large local turnout
should the big day come.
“If we do have an inauguration, I promise that half of
Minford will be there,” Bennett
said.

Charleston
57/38

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
44/33

Billings
41/28

Minneapolis
56/44
Chicago
55/37

Denver
57/30

Montreal
52/38

Toronto
48/41

New York
61/51
Detroit
52/33

Kansas City
65/55

Washington
63/51

KATE

High
Low

91° in Orlando, FL
8° in Alamosa, CO

Global
High
109° in McArthur, Australia
Low -61° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
76/66

GOALS

Wed.
Hi/Lo/W
52/28/s
30/20/sf
70/57/pc
62/49/pc
63/43/pc
45/30/c
46/27/pc
50/41/r
62/47/pc
66/51/s
38/25/sn
62/44/r
63/48/pc
59/47/pc
60/47/pc
76/46/t
43/21/sn
60/38/t
58/46/pc
87/76/sh
83/54/t
64/45/pc
66/39/t
60/41/s
74/48/t
73/45/s
67/51/pc
87/75/pc
51/38/r
70/52/pc
81/68/pc
61/50/pc
66/38/s
85/60/pc
65/49/pc
68/45/s
56/43/pc
48/33/r
66/48/pc
64/45/pc
68/46/t
46/30/pc
62/47/s
51/41/c
64/49/pc

National for the 48 contiguous states

El Paso
75/45

Monterrey
81/62

Today
Hi/Lo/W
63/33/s
33/23/sf
66/46/pc
63/53/r
63/47/r
41/28/sn
47/29/pc
58/46/r
57/38/sh
69/42/c
56/26/pc
55/37/pc
57/36/pc
54/38/r
54/34/r
75/66/c
57/30/pc
58/49/c
52/33/r
87/76/pc
76/66/pc
58/37/pc
65/55/pc
60/40/pc
69/56/pc
66/45/pc
60/41/pc
88/73/c
56/44/pc
63/43/pc
74/62/pc
61/51/r
72/60/pc
87/63/pc
63/53/r
69/45/pc
55/41/r
56/39/pc
66/46/r
64/46/r
64/48/s
44/33/sn
61/46/s
50/44/c
63/51/r

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

Atlanta
66/46

Chihuahua
85/51

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

Miami
88/73

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

Event

ﬁrst hurdle, and should he
remain on top and win the
party’s nomination, there is a
second hurdle on the horizon.
“A Quinnipiac Poll out this
(Wednesday) morning has him
beating Hillary (Clinton) by
10 points nationally, 50 to 40,”
Bennett said.
But Bennett says sometimes
candidates with early leads start
planning their inauguration, and
that is not his strategy.
“We’re not going to do that,
but he has everything that Hillary doesn’t have,” Bennett said.
“That’s honesty and integrity.
And I think that’s a great contrast and we would welcome the
fall campaign.
According to bio, Carson
was born in Detroit, Michigan,
on Sept. 18, 1951. His mother,
though undereducated herself,
pushed her sons to read and to
believe in themselves. Carson

Tuesday, November 10, 2015 5

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 10, 2015 s Page 6

Buffalo charges past White Falcons, 66-27
By Gary Clark

nine scoring drives taking
just four plays or less.
Buffalo concluded the regBUFFALO, W.Va. — The
ular season with its second
Wahama White Falcon
straight victory over the
football team failed in its
Bend Area eleven and will
effort to avoid its ﬁrst losing enter the postseason with
season in 10 years after fall- an undefeated 10-0 record.
ing to ﬁfth rated Buffalo by Wahama, for the ﬁrst time
a 66-27 margin Friday night since 2005, suffered through
in the 2015 regular season
a losing grid campaign in
ﬁnale.
ﬁnishing the year with a 4-6
The White Falcons stayed mark.
in contention throughout
Dylan Lucas and Ethan
the midway point of the
Burgess led a punishing Bufthird quarter before Buffalo falo offensive attack with
put the contest away with
the Putnam County team
26 unanswered points over
piling up nearly 600 yards in
the ﬁnal 18 minutes of the
total offense. Lucas scored
contest. The win ultimately six touchdowns while rushing for 212 yards in only 12
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports came down to the big play
carries and catching two
Wahama senior Jared Nutter (5) is tackled by Buffalo junior Dylan Lucas, during the Bison’s capabilities of the Bison
offense, with eight of their
victory in Putnam County, on Friday.
passes for 88 yards with
For Ohio Valley Publishing

Burgess piling up 135 yards
on the ground in addition
to scoring once and tossing
three touchdown passes
after completing six of 10
aerials for 156 yards .
The White Falcons,
despite falling behind by
21 points in the opening
quarter, rallied behind the
play of senior running back/
receiver Jared Nutter. Nutter
scored all four of the Falcons
touchdowns on the evening
in addition to adding a twopoint conversion run.
The returning All-State
defensive back dented the
end zone on a ﬁrst period
one yard run, a pair of second quarter touchdown pass
See BUFFALO | 10

Johnson passes
Keselowski late
for Texas fall win
FORT WORTH,
Texas (AP) — Brad
Keselowski was dominating at Texas, leading lap after lap and
getting oh so close to
a victory that would
have given him one of
the four championshipcontending spots in the
Chase for the Sprint
Cup ﬁnale.
Until Texas fall favorite Jimmie Johnson
came charging after the
ﬁnal restart.
Keselowski led a
track-record 312 of 334
laps Sunday after starting from the pole, but
couldn’t keep Johnson
from winning the Texas
fall race for the fourth
straight year.
“Just one step short
of having the awesome
day we needed to have,”
Keselowski said. “I’m
not sure exactly how
to feel about it at the
moment. The 48 car
had so much speed
those last 10 laps.”
With the already-eliminated Johnson getting
his 75th career victory,
three spots are still up
for grabs at Phoenix,
the last race before the
Nov. 22 ﬁnale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
The only championship
contender set is retiring
four-time champion Jeff
Gordon, the Martinsville winner last week
and Johnson’s teammate
at Hendrick Motorsports.
Kyle Busch leads the
points race for at least

two of the spots, ahead
of defending Chase
champion Kevin Harvick and Martin Truex
Jr. Carl Edwards is
next, followed by Keselowski, Kurt Busch and
Joey Logano.
“It’s not a must-win
situation for us like it is
for some other guys,”
said Kyle Busch, who
ﬁnished fourth Sunday.
“Couldn’t be more
pleased with the position we got right now.”
After the ﬁnal restart
with 18 laps left, Keselowski and Truex were
side-by-side, and even
made contact at one
point before Truex went
in front very brieﬂy.
Keselowski almost
as quickly got back in
front, and Johnson also
went charging past
Truex into second place
and right on the leader’s
tail. Truex lost his
power steering in those
closing laps, and slipped
to ﬁnish eighth.
Johnson kept pushing
and on the backstretch
on lap 331, he ﬁnally
got past when Keselowski got really loose
out of the second turn.
Johnson went on to win
by more than a second.
“That was the ﬁrst
I had seen him that
vulnerable all day. I just
kept the pressure on
him, kept searching for
line,” Johnson said.
“I did everything I
could to hold him off
See JOHNSON | 10

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Nov. 10
College Basketball
Wilberforce at URG women, 6 p.m.
URG men at Shawnee State, 7 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 12
College Soccer
Asbury at URG men, 7 p.m.
URG women at Point Park, 7 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 13
Football
Musselman at Point Pleasant, 7:30
College Volleyball
Point Park at Rio Grande, 7 p.m.
College Basketball
URG men vs Marian at MVNU, 3 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 14
College Basketball
URG women at St. Catharine, 2 p.m.
URG men at Mt. Vernon Nazarene, 5 p.m.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant running back Grant Safford (37) scores a touchdown behind the blocking of Seth Stewart (50), Alec Stanley (54) and
Tannor Hill (88) during the first quarter of a Week 7 football contest against Oak Hill at OVB Field in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Unbeaten Big Blacks moving on
By Bryan Walters

carry. PPHS has also allowed just 751
rushing yards and three TDs on 353
attempts, an average of 2.1 yards per
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The
tote.
road to Wheeling always starts in a
Point Pleasant’s top six rushers this
variety of locations. This year, however, season are averaging at least 6.9 yards
Point Pleasant’s path goes no farther
per carry, with senior Cody Mitchell
than its own backyard.
leading the charge with 1,737 yards
The Big Blacks are headed to the
and 30 scores on 112 carries. Junior
football playoffs for the eighth consecu- Grant Safford is currently the secondtive season after earning the two seed
leading rusher out of the backﬁeld with
throughout the Class AAA playoffs,
105 attempts for 1,301 yards and 18
and Point Pleasant’s journey into the
scores.
2015 postseason begins at 7:30 p.m.
Freshman quarterback Cason Payne
Friday night.
is 30-of-43 passing this season for 430
Point Pleasant (10-0) was one of
yards, including 12 TDs and zero interonly two unbeaten Class AAA proceptions. Mitchell is also 14-of-38 passgrams in the state this fall, with unbeat- ing for 150 yards, throwing three picks
en Cabell Midland coming away with
and one TD.
the top overall seed in the big-school
Mitchell leads the receiving corps
division. PPHS will host 15th-seeded
with 12 grabs for 185 yards and four
Musselman (6-4) on Friday night at
scores. Safford and senior Garrett
Ohio Valley Bank Track and Field in
Litchﬁeld both have 76 receiving yards
Mason County.
apiece on four and ﬁve catches, respecThe Big Blacks will be appearing in
tively, while junior Jason Wamsley has
their school’s 13th gridiron postseason, snagged six passes for 45 yards.
as well as the program’s eighth straight
The Big Blacks have also outscored
year in the playoffs — a program
opponents by a sizable 405-62 margin
best. Point just completed the school’s in the ﬁrst half, including a 203-18
ﬁrst-ever back-to-back-back unbeaten
overall edge in the ﬁrst quarter of
seasons and takes a state-best 33-game games. PPHS also own a 177-99 advanregular season win streak into the post- tage in total ﬁrst downs this season,
season.
and nine of its 22 takeaways are on
PPHS — fresh off its only shutout of interceptions.
the season, a 66-0 trouncing of PrincOther opening round playoff games
eton — has been thoroughly dominant in Class AAA include: Princeton at
during the regular season, as the Big
Cabell Midland, Greenbrier East at
Blacks are outscoring opponents by a
Martinsburg, George Washington at
sizable 613-104 overall margin. In fact, Huntington, Brooke at Morgantown,
Point Pleasant has already scored more Spring Mills at Capital, South Charlespoints this season than it did all of
ton at Jefferson, and Spring Valley at
last fall during the program’s best-ever Wheeling Park.
offensive campaign.
Wahama will be missing from the
Point Pleasant’s efﬁciency has come Class A playoffs for the ﬁrst time in
in all three phases of the game as the
seven postseasons after ﬁnishing the
Red, White and Black have outgained
year rated 25th overall with a 4-6 mark.
opponents by a whopping 4,600-2,007 Hannan (0-8) was the only Class A
advantage in total yards of offense.
program out of 36 teams to not win a
Point has also received a combined 109 gridiron contest this fall.
of its 613 points from its kicking game
Here’s a complete breakdown of the
and its defense — which includes a
opening round contests for the 2015
plus-11 in turnover differential this fall. WVSSAC football playoffs. Friday night
games will start at 7:30 p.m. and SatThe Big Blacks have rushed 325
urday games begin at 1:30 p.m., unless
times for 3,950 yards and 65 touchotherwise noted.
downs, an average of 12.2 yards per
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

CLASS AAA
Friday
No. 16 Princeton (5-5) at No. 1 Cabell
Midland (10-0)
No. 15 Musselman (6-4) at No. 2 Point
Pleasant (10-0)
No. 12 Greenbrier East (7-3) at No. 5
Martinsburg (7-2)
No. 10 George Washington (7-3) at No.
7 Huntington (8-2)
No. 9 Brooke (7-3) at No. 8
Morgantown (8-2)
Saturday
No. 13 Spring Mills (7-3) vs. No.
4 Capital (7-2), at Laidley Field,
Charleston.
No. 11 South Charleston (7-3) at No. 6
Jefferson (8-2)
No. 14 Spring Valley (6-4) at No. 3
Wheeling Park (8-1-1), 7:30 p.m.
CLASS AA
Friday
No. 16 Independence (7-3) at No. 1
Bridgeport (9-0-1)
No. 14 Liberty Raleigh (7-3) at No. 3
Tolsia (9-1)
No. 13 Lincoln (7-3) at No. 4 Fairmont
Senior (8-2)
No. 11 Herbert Hoover (7-3) at No. 6
James Monroe (8-2)
Saturday
No. 15 Weir (7-3) vs. No. 2 Bluefield
(8-1), at Princeton
No. 12 Westside (7-3) at No. 5 Keyser
(8-2)
No. 10 Summers County (7-3) at No. 7
Mingo Central (8-2)
No. 9 Robert C. Byrd (7-3) at No. 8
Chapmanville (7-3)
CLASS A
Friday
No. 14 Valley Wetzel (7-3) at No. 3
South Harrison (9-1)
No. 13 Meadow Bridge (7-3) at No. 4
Moorefield (9-1)
No. 12 Tug Valley (7-3) at No. 5 Man
(8-2)
No. 11 St. Marys (8-2) at No. 6 Buffalo
(10-0)
Saturday
No. 15 Bishop Donahue (7-3) at No. 2
East Hardy (9-1)
No. 16 Van (7-3) at No. 1 Magnolia (100), 7:30 p.m.
No. 10 Pendleton County (7-3) at No. 7
Wheeling Central (9-1), 7:30 p.m.
No. 9 Pocahontas County (8-2) at No.
8 Williamstown (8-2), 7:30 p.m.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 10, 2015 7

A guide to 2015-16 college hoops
Roethlisberger
hurt, Brown shines
as Steelers win
By John Marshall
Associated Press

PITTSBURGH (AP) — The Pittsburgh Steelers injury list has grown so long this season, guard
Ramon Foster joked the football gods must be ticked
at his team.
Doesn’t seem quite so funny anymore, not with the
franchise quarterback hurt again and his immediate
status uncertain.
Ben Roethlisberger hopped to the sideline with a
busted left foot midway through the fourth quarter of
Sunday’s 38-35 victory over the Oakland Raiders, his
face a mix of frustration and pain after all 265 pounds
of Oakland defensive end Aldon Smith landed on
Roethlisberger’s leg during a sack.
By the time backup Landry Jones engineered a late
drive to set up Chris Boswell’s 18-yard game-winner,
Roethlisberger was already out of the stadium to get his
foot examined. The extent of the damage wasn’t immediately known, but it seems unlikely he’ll be available next
Sunday against Cleveland, putting the offense and Pittsburgh’s playoff hopes again in the hands of Jones.
The former Oklahoma star was passable last month
while ﬁlling in as Roethlisberger dealt with a sprained
left knee. Jones rallied Pittsburgh past Arizona on
Oct. 18 but was largely ineffective in a loss to Kansas
City a week later. He appeared just ﬁne during his
brief appearance against the Raiders, completing 4 of
6 passes for 79 yards, including a 57-yard hookup with
Antonio Brown that put Boswell in position to snap
Pittsburgh’s two-game losing streak.
“It gives you conﬁdence,” Jones said. “The more
you can play, the more you can get in, the more conﬁdence you get.”
Having Brown around certainly helps. All the AllPro wide receiver did was set franchise marks for
receptions (17) and yards receiving (284) while adding 22 yards rushing.
“It just makes life easy,” Jones said. “If you get manto-man and he gets matched up outside, there’s not a
lot of reading going on. You’re going to try and ﬁt the
ball in there.”
Some other takeaways as the Steelers (5-4) moved
back over .500 while the Raiders (4-4) saw their bid
to have a winning record at the midway point for the
ﬁrst time since 2001 come up short despite a late rally
from a 14-point deﬁcit.
UNSTOPPABLE BROWN: The Steelers went right
at the NFL’s 31st-ranked pass defense by coming up
with various ways to get the ball to Brown, using a
wide variety of sets to provide favorable matchups.
Brown got off to a hot start, catching 10 passes for
180 yards in the ﬁrst half alone, and simply didn’t
stop. He turned a slant pattern into the splash play
needed to set up Boswell, hauling in the pass in the
middle of the ﬁeld then taking off down the sideline.
“I really don’t know what to say but ‘Wow,’” Oakland safety Charles Woodson said.
CARR CAN DRIVE: Oakland quarterback Derek
Carr basically matched Roethlisberger throw for
throw. The rising second-year star passed for 301
yards and four scores, including a pretty 38-yard rainbow to Michael Crabtree that tied the game with 1:15
to go. Yet the pass Carr will remember is the interception in the end zone on Oakland’s penultimate drive,
only the fourth pick he’s thrown all year.
“We could have done so much more,” Carr said.
“That’s the thing that hurts me. When we lose close
games like this, I’m hard on myself.”
WILLING WILLIAMS: Steelers backup running
back DeAngelo Williams’ legs didn’t exactly look 32
while starting in place of All-Pro Le’Veon Bell, who
is out for the season with a right knee injury. Williams ran for 170 yards and two scores and added 55
yards receiving. Heady territory for a player Carolina
appeared eager to part with last spring.
“It doesn’t matter to me,” Williams said. “It’s all
about production. I go in and try not to let people out
work me.”
TOUGH LUCK: Oakland running back Latavius
Murray piled up 96 yards on 17 carries before leaving
in the third quarter to undergo the concussion protocol after he fumbled while absorbing a big hit from
Pittsburgh safety Mike Mitchell. The fumble was one
of three turnovers by the Raiders, with two of them
coming deep in Pittsburgh territory and the other setting up a short Steelers’ touchdown.

The blue bloods have
reloaded. New contenders are rising. More
talented freshmen are
ready to shine.
The college basketball season is upon
us and this one, as
always seems to be
the case, is loaded
with intrigue.
To get you ready,
we’ve got a rundown
of the top teams and
players, best games
and a whole lot more:

TOP TEAMS
Maryland. Melo
Trimble and the loaded
Terps are eyeing Maryland’s ﬁrst NCAA title
since 2002.
Kentucky. Another
year, another loaded
freshman class.
North Carolina. The
Tar Heels were the preseason No. 1 in the AP
poll for a record ninth
time. They might have
a hard time staying
there with senior guard
Marcus Paige out three
to four weeks with a
broken hand, but watch
out once he’s healthy.
Kansas. Mix of
experienced players,
talented freshmen has
the Jayhawks thinking
big.
Duke. The defending
national champions
have reloaded and are
ready for another deep
run.
Virginia. Never count
out a team that plays D
like the Cavaliers.
TOP PLAYERS
Ben Simmons, F,
LSU. Top recruit
coming out of high
school could be the
top player in college
basketball by season’s
end.
Paige, G, North
Carolina. At his best
in the clutch, will be
looking to make up
for lost time.
Kris Dunn, PG,
Providence. Decision

to the basket — he can
do it all.
Ron Baker, Wichita
State. Don’t be surprised
if he and Free VanVleet
get the Shockers back to

to hold off on the NBA
makes the Friars a whole
lot better.
Kyle Wiltjer, F, Gonzaga. Back to the basket,
out on the wing, driving

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the Final Four.
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nightmare until then.

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

Voice "The Live Playoffs" The remaining artists perform in
front of the coaches for a spot in the live shows. (N)
Voice "The Live Playoffs" The remaining artists perform in
front of the coaches for a spot in the live shows. (N)
The Muppets Fresh Off the Agents of SHIELD "Chaos
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Debt of Honor Examine how
Iwo Jima:From Combat
Survivors of perhaps the
disabled veterans have been
fiercest battle of WWII. (N) regarded. (N)
The Muppets Fresh Off the Agents of SHIELD "Chaos
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Theory" (N)
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8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Chicago Fire "Regarding
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Frontline "Gunned Down:
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10:30

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18 (WGN) BlueB. "Collateral Damage"
UFC 160 Velasquez takes on Bigfoot in martial arts action.
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24 (ROOT) DayLife (N) Pirates (N)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
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30 for 30 "Chasing Tyson" (N)
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26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption Gold Glove Awards (L)
NCAA Football (L)
27 (LIFE)
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(FAM)

30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
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42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
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Dredd Cops team up to take down a group
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Chrisley
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Seinf. 1/2
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The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
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OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Special Report
CNN Tonight
Castle "Reality Star Struck" Castle "Target"
Castle "Hunt"
Castle "Scared to Death"
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(5:00)
The Matrix A computer hacker learns that his
The Matrix Reloaded (‘03, Sci-Fi) Carrie-Anne Moss, Keanu Reeves. Neo and rebel
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Storage
S. Wars "The S. Wars "The Storage
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Shrining"
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(5:30) Bad
Madea's Witness Protection (‘12, Com) Tyler Perry. A banker is set up in Fix My Mom "Mother of a Pretty. Strong. (N)
Girls Club
Meltdown" (N)
a scheme and puts his family in the witness protection program. TV14
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Curse of Oak Island "A
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(:05) Martin (:35) Martin (:10) Martin (:35) Martin (:05) Martin (:35) Martin (:05) Martin Martin
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the consequences of his past sins seal his fate. TVMA
(:20)

8 PM
The Leftovers

8:30

9 PM

9:30

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owner goes to great lengths to show a
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8 Tuesday, November 10, 2015

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Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
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Medical / Health
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Ravenswood WV 26164
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Daily Sentinel

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Tuesday, November 10, 2015 9

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10 Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Daily Sentinel

WVU breaks Elliott leads OSU over Minnesota
4-game
losing streak
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The
quarterback switch? Not so smooth.
Everything else? Just good enough
to keep Ohio State unbeaten.
And now, coach Urban Meyer has
to decide whether to switch passers
again.
Ezekiel Elliott weaved 15 yards for
a touchdown on Ohio State’s only
lengthy drive, and the top-ranked
Buckeyes weathered Minnesota’s
two fourth-quarter touchdowns for a
28-14 victory Saturday night.
Elliott ran for 114 yards — his
14th straight 100-yard game — and
Vonn Bell returned an interception
16 yards for his ﬁrst career touchdown for a 21-0 lead that held up
despite the Gophers’ late surge.
The Buckeyes (9-0, 5-0 Big Ten)
struggled to move the ball most of
the game with Cardale Jones back at
quarterback for one game because
J.T. Barrett was suspended. Meyer
said after the game that Barrett will
return to practice next week and
could get the job back.
“Offensively we were sloppy and
not executing at a high level,” Meyer
said. “It’s not what we expect. We
expect to play better.”
Jones knows it. Asked for his
assessment of the offense, he said:
“Below average.”
Up next for the Buckeyes: A game
at Illinois followed by the two teams
from the state up north — No. 6
Michigan State and No. 16 Michigan.
Minnesota (4-5, 1-4) managed

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) — West Virginia
running backs Wendell Smallwood and Rushel
Shell responded to a challenge from their coaches
to take control against Texas Tech.
Smallwood rushed for 163 yards and a touchdown, Shell had 111 yards and two scores, and
West Virginia beat Texas Tech 31-26 on Saturday.
West Virginia (4-4, 1-4 Big 12) broke a fourgame losing streak while Texas Tech (5-5, 2-5)
lost its third straight in trying to become bowl
eligible.
“It’s been a long month and a half,” West Virginia coach Dana Holgorsen said. “Just to get
that victory is obviously pretty good.”
The Mountaineers compiled 300 yards on the
ground against one of the nation’s worst rush
defenses. Shell and Smallwood surpassed 100
yards against the Red Raiders for the second
straight year.
Shell, who had averaged 33 rushing yards in his
three previous games, earned his ﬁrst 100-yard
effort of the season.
During the week leading up to the game, Shell
said running backs coach Ja’Juan Seider and Holgorsen “just told us that this game could really
come down to me and Wendell, that we could
take control, that we could win it.
“We felt like we wanted that task and felt that
we handled it perfectly.”
Holgorsen improved to 2-2 as West Virginia’s
coach against Texas Tech coach Kliff Kingsbury.
Kingsbury was the Red Raiders’ starting quarterback from 2000-02, when Holgorsen was the
team’s wide receivers coach. Holgorsen was the
offensive coordinator at Houston in 2008 when
he helped Kingsbury join Kevin Sumlin’s staff.
Texas Tech, which had exceeded 50 points ﬁve
times this season, was held to a season low for
points and yards (378).
West Virginia’s defense “exceeded what my
expectations were defensively just because how
potent these guys are,” Holgorsen said.
Texas Tech’s Patrick Mahomes was held to a
season-low 196 passing yards but took advantage
of West Virginia’s 3-3-5 defensive scheme by running for a season-high 73.
Mahomes threw a 17-yard scoring pass to
DeAndre Washington that pulled the Red Raiders
within 31-26 with 6:47 left in the game.
But Texas Tech never got the ball back.
Smallwood had a pair of big runs on third
down to keep the ensuing drive going. And when
Texas Tech’s Micah Awe was ﬂagged for ripping
West Virginia quarterback Skyler Howard’s helmet off following a run, the Mountaineers got a
ﬁrst down at the Red Raiders 1 and subsequently
ran out the clock.
Howard threw two interceptions and didn’t
have a touchdown pass for the ﬁrst time this season. But it didn’t matter considering how Smallwood and Shell were running against a defense
that had allowed an average of 271 yards on the
ground.
“It’s been a rough season for the rush defense,”
Kingsbury said. “We’re just not getting it done
up front against the run for the most part. They
exploited us in that area and held the ball a lot.”
Washington ﬁnished with 102 rushing yards to
become the ﬁrst Texas Tech running back to go
over 1,000 yards in back-to-back seasons since
Byron Hanspard in 1995 and 1996.
Texas Tech’s Jakeem Grant, who had 178
receiving yards and a kickoff return for a score a
week earlier against Oklahoma State, was limited
to ﬁve catches for 8 yards. He averaged 26 yards
on ﬁve kickoff returns.
Mahomes had two ﬁrst-half scoring passes,
but the Red Raiders got no points on two other
trips inside the West Virginia 25 in the second
quarter and had to settle for a pair of second-half
ﬁeld goals after getting interceptions and driving
inside West Virginia’s 20.
“We were just bad in the red zone,” Kingsbury
said. “I’ll take that on me. We’ve got to make
plays and limit mistakes.”

Johnson
From Page 6

but he was way faster
that last run,” Keselowski said. “As I sit

Jones’ 44-yard completion set up
a weaving, 15-yard touchdown run
by Elliott with 54 seconds left in the
half for a 14-0 lead. Ohio State had
more yards in that drive (77) than
the rest of the half (55).
Braxton Miller — the other quarterback on the Buckeye roster —
took ﬁve snaps and ran each time.
He also caught a 45-yard pass. His
head hit the ground hard as he was
tackled after the catch, and he had to
be helped off the ﬁeld.
Bell got Ohio State’s ﬁrst score on
a 16-yard interception return that
initially was nulliﬁed by a targeting
penalty. A review indicated there
was no targeting and the score
stood.
The Gophers played their second
game since coach Jerry Kill retired
Oct. 28 because of health issues. In
the closing seconds against Michigan last week, Claeys decided to go
for it instead of taking a tying ﬁeld
goal, and Leidner was stopped at the
1 to preserve the Wolverines’ 29-26
win.
Leidner made this one tight at the
end, too.
He led a 77-yard touchdown drive
that culminated in his 4-yard pass
to K.J. Maye with 10:25 left, cutting
it to 21-7. He then hit Maye with a
57-yard pass that set up his 4-yard
touchdown to Rashad Still that gave
the Gophers a chance until their
onside kick dribbled out of bounds.
He ﬁnished 27 of 44 for 281 yards
with the one interception.

Clemson replaces OSU as AP poll No. 1
By Ralph D. Russo

national champions have
been ﬁrst since the preseason, when they became
Clemson is the new No. the ﬁrst team to be a
1 team in The Associated unanimous preseason No.
Press college football poll, 1 in the 79-year history of
knocking Ohio State from the AP rankings.
the top spot for the ﬁrst
No. 3 Alabama (8-1)
time this season.
climbed four spot and got
The Tigers are toptwo ﬁrst place votes. No.
ranked in the AP media
4 Baylor also received
poll for the ﬁrst time
two ﬁrst-place votes.
since the ﬁnal poll of
the 1981 season, when
POLL POINTS
Clemson won its only AP
— A team dropping
national title.
from the top spot in the
The Tigers (9-0)
AP Top 25 after winning,
received 31 ﬁrst-place
as Ohio State did Sunday,
votes and 1,489 points
is not uncommon. Last
after beating Florida
year, Florida State slipped
State 23-13 on Saturday.
twice after wins, once
Ohio State (9-0) had 26
in October and again in
ﬁrst-place votes and 1,460 November.
— This is Clemson’s
points. The defending

Associated Press

Buffalo

third time overall as the
conferences with six
No. 1 team in the AP
ranked teams.
poll. The Tigers were topThe conference standranked in the ﬁnal regular ings
season poll of the 1981
Big Ten — 6.
season, as well as in the
American — 4.
ﬁnal post-bowl poll.
SEC — 4.
Big 12 — 4.
CONFERENCE CALL
ACC — 3.
The American Athletic
Pac-12 — 3.
Conference has someIndependent — 1.
thing in common with the
MOVING UP
Southeastern Conference
Oklahoma State made
and Big 12 this week. All the biggest jump in the
have four teams ranked in rankings, moving up
the Top 25.
seven spot to No. 5 after
The last time the SEC
beating TCU 49-29. The
had only four ranked
Cowboys had been the
teams was the ﬁnal poll
lowest ranked unbeaten
of the 2009 season. After team from a Power Five
the ﬁrst week of the seaconference.
son, there were 10 SEC
TCU, which began the
teams ranked.
season No. 2, dropped
The Big Ten leads all
eight spots to No. 13.

28-8 early in the second on a Jacob
Hanshaw 20 yard run but again
the White Falcons battled back on
From Page 6
a pair of Hoffman to Nutter touchdown throws. The Bison negated
receptions from Philip Hoffman
the Bend Area teams late scores in
covering 11 and 28 yards in addithe half’s ﬁnal minute when Burtion to an 82 yard kickoff return for gess connected with Lucas on a 49
a score in the third canto.
yard TD pass to stake Buffalo to a
Buffalo leaped out to a 21-0 ﬁrst 34-21 halftime lead.
quarter advantage with all three of
The second half proved to be
the touchdowns coming in just six all Bison but not before Wahama
offensive plays. Lucas owned two
stayed within striking distance for
of those scores with runs of 17 and the ﬁrst half of the third stanza.
52 yards while Burgess added the
Lucas opened the second half
other with a 26 yard run. Wahama scoring with a 51 yard run before
closed the deﬁcit to 21-8 in the
Nutter ran the ensuing kickoff back
ﬁnal minute of the initial quarter
82 yards to keep the White Falcons
when Nutter capped an 11 play 70 within two scores. That would be
yard drive with a one yard run.
the extent of the Bend Area team’s
battle as Buffalo scored 26 unanBuffalo increased its edge to

right now, and maybe I’ll
change my mind, I don’t
know what I would have
done differently, or could
have done differently.”
Minutes after the race,
suspended driver Matt

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only 110 yards through three quarters before ﬁnally getting Mitch
Leidner’s two TD passes, the last
with 2:10 to go. The onside kick
went out of bounds, and Jones ran
38 yards untouched off a fake handoff for a clinching touchdown, catching the Gophers off-guard.
“It was a grind,” Buckeyes linebacker Joshua Perry said. “Tough
game. We thought they were going
to run the ball on us, and they did
some other things.”
The Gophers have dropped their
last two under interim coach Tracy
Claeys, hanging in there until the
end against Michigan and Ohio
State.
The Buckeyes’ latest quarterback
switch ran into problems right away.
Jones completed Ohio State’s
surge to the national title last season after Barrett got hurt against
Michigan, and he kept the job for
the ﬁrst seven games this season.
With the offense inconsistent, Meyer
switched back to Barrett, who had
three touchdown passes and two
scoring runs in a 49-7 victory at
Rutgers.
Barrett was cited for impaired
driving during the Buckeyes’ off
week, drawing a one-game suspension from the school. So Jones was
back at quarterback Saturday, but he
wasn’t effective throwing it. He went
12 of 22 for 187 yards with a touchdown, four sacks and a fumble at the
Minnesota 21. He also ran 12 times
for 65 yards.

Kenseth tweeted, “Good
work JimmieJohnson!
Textbook pass for the
win at the end of the race
when someone is trying
to take your lane. #quintessential”
After Logano chalked
up contact with Kenseth
at Kansas last month as
aggressive racing for a
win, NASCAR chairman
Brian France referred
to the move as “quintessential.”
Logano got knocked
from ﬁrst to last among
the eight championship
contenders after being
intentionally wrecked by
Kenseth at Martinsville
a week ago as payback.
NASCAR then suspended Kenseth for two races,
and his appeals were
denied.
“Clearly he was watching and bored at home,”

Johnson said, when
asked about Kenseth’s
tweet. “That’s a nice
buzz word. … Thank
you, buddy. I don’t know
how to even answer
that.”
Logano’s title shot
took another huge hit
when he had a blown
tire after only 10 laps at
Texas, where he ﬁnished
66 laps back in 40th
place.
Johnson led only six
laps to get his ﬁfth win
of the season, his ﬁrst in
20 starts and one within
Dale Earnhardt for the
seventh-most in NASCAR history. The No. 48
Chevrolet also won the
spring race at Texas and
is the ﬁrst driver to win
three consecutive Cup
races at the high-banked,
1 1/2-mile track.
Harvick ﬁnished third,

swered points to bring the ﬁnal
tally 66-27.
Wahama totaled 226 yards in
total offense on the night with 85
yards on the ground and another
141 through the airways. Nutter
picked up 46 yards and Hoffman
24 on the ground for the White
Falcons with Hoffman topping
the 1,000 mark in passing on the
season with 141 yards on 13 of 20
completions and two touchdown
tosses. Nutter led the receiving
corp with six catches for 56 yards
a two scores while Ricky Kearns
grabbed four passes for 50 yards
and Ryan Thomas three catches for
35 yards.
Gary Clark is a sports correspondent for Ohio
Valley Publishing.

even after he twice had
to come in to replace
punctured tires after running over something on
the track, and having to
drive one-handed for a
long stretch when he was
having to hold on to the
shifter to keep his car
from popping out of gear.
“We just kept gouging
away and everything
worked out in the end,”
Harvick said.
Logano kept the No.
22 off the wall after spinning on the backstretch,
but there was still signiﬁcant damage to the rear
fender and the inside of
the car. He was 64 laps
back when he returned
to the track.
“The left rear tire
came apart and shredded everything inside
the car,” Logano said. “It
did a lot more damage

than just the tire blowing
apart.”
The only one of the
title contenders who ﬁnished outside of the top
nine at Texas, Logano
will have to win next
week to get to the ﬁnale
with a championship
shot for the second year
in a row.
Kenseth’s streak of 571
consecutive starts, which
was the second-longest
active streak behind the
Gordon’s 795 in a row.
Jimmie Johnson and
Ryan Newman have each
started 502 consecutive
races since the 2002
Daytona 500.
Camping World Truck
Series points leader Erik
Jones took over in Kenseth’s No. 22 Toyota for
Joe Gibbs Racing, and
the 19-year-old driver
ﬁnished 12th.

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