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                  <text>Today
in
history

Local
sports
action

Storms
high near
69, low 51

EDITORIAL • 4

SPORTS • 6

LOCAL • 5

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 160, Volume 64

Tuesday, October 7, 2014 • 50¢

Mammograms encouraged

National Breast Cancer Awareness Month and every month
Staff Report

TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — This October, Wirt
County Health Services Association Inc. is proud to participate in
National Breast Cancer Awareness
Month. National Breast Cancer
Awareness Month is a chance to
raise awareness about the importance of screening and the early
detection of breast cancer.
In 2014, it is estimated that
232,670 females and 2,360 males
will be diagnosed as a new breast

cancer case; 40,000 women and 430
men will die due to breast cancer in
the U.S. Cancer remains the secondmost common cause of death in
the U.S., accounting for nearly 1 of
every 4 deaths.
There are ways to detect breast
cancer early. Self-exams are something that should be done regularly.
To properly exam yourself, take
your clothing off and stand in the
mirror with your hands on your
hips, look for any changes in size
or shape on your breasts. Look for
redness, or flaky skin. Hold your

Unemployment
rises in Mason Co.
Beth Sergent

bsergent@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT — Unemployment in
Mason County has inched upwards, according
to the latest statistics from WorkForce West
Virginia.
The most recent county numbers for August
show Mason County had an unemployment
rate of 9.6 percent, up from July’s 9.5 percent
and June’s 8.7 percent. This is still an improvement from where the county was a year ago,
with an unemployment rate of 9.8 percent in
August 2013.
Also in August, Mason County had a civilian
labor force of 9,780, down from July’s 9,870
and June’s 9,950. Total employment in Mason
County in August was 8,840, down from July’s
8,930 and June’s 9,090.
Mason County wasn’t alone when it came
to unemployment rate increases in August
with those increases in 52 of the 55 counties.
Unemployment decreased in only three counties and those were Ohio, Wirt and Tucker
counties. Mingo County had the highest
unemployment rate at 12 percent, just ahead of
McDowell County at 11 percent.
Counties with the lowest unemployment
rate included both Monongalia and Pendelton
counties, both with 4.8 percent unemployment.
Unemployment rates in counties surrounding Mason County included, Jackson with 7.3
percent, Putnam with 5.4 percent and Cabell
with 5.8 percent.
In Ohio, Meigs County had the second highest unemployment rate in Ohio in August at
8.1 percent with Gallia County having 6.7 percent unemployment. This placed Gallia County
in 11th place out of 88 counties in terms of
unemployment with the higher the county falling on the list, the lower the unemployment.
For example, in Ohio, Mercer County had 3
percent unemployment, placing it at number
88 on the list in terms of unemployment rates.
West Virginia’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate increased five-tenths of a
percentage point to 6.6 percent in August
with Ohio’s unemployment rate resting at
5.7 percent. The national unemployment rate
declined in August to 6.1 percent.
Information for this article provided by WorkForce West Virginia and
the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services.

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Nation: 3
— SPORTS
Local and
national: 6, 7, 10
— FEATURES
Classified: 8
Television:3
Comics: 9

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
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hands above your head, and check
for any changes. You must also
lie down and use the pads of your
three middle fingers to press down
on your breasts, if you feel a lump
under the skin at any time, see your
doctor right away.
A mammogram is another way to
check for breast cancer. Mammography is the process of using X-ray
technology to exam the breast; it
is used to detect the masses in the
breast. Radiologist analyze the
images for any abnormal findings. If
something occurs and the reading is

abnormal, you will then be sent for
an ultrasound for further evaluation.
About 80 percent to 90 percent of
breast cancers in women without
symptoms in the U.S. will be detected by mammography.
Southern Local Schools Wellness
Center encourages all women ages
20-39 to get a clinical breast exam
once every three years. About 1 in
8 women born in the United States
will get breast cancer at some point
during her life.
See Awareness | 5

Fran DeWine makes Meigs County her
83rd Ohio stop

Lindsay Kriz | photos

Front row, from left, Judy Sisson, treasurer of the Republican Party; Fran DeWine, wife of Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine; Diane
Lynch, Meigs County Clerk of Courts; Sandy Iannarelli, chairperson of the Meigs County Republican Party; Bill Spaun, vice chair of
the Meigs County Republican Party; and Colleen S. Williams, Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney. Back row, from left, Tim Ihle, Meigs
County commissioner; Wilma Davidson, secretary of the Republican Party; Kay Hill, recorder for Meigs County; and Mary T. Byer-Hill,
Meigs County auditor.

kIDs Safe Fundraiser

kicks off with Friday event at Farmers Bank
By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The
kIDs Safe Fundraiser
conducted its kickoff
event Friday at Farmers Bank in order to
help raise money for the
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Department.
Sheriff’s department
staff, Farmers Bank staff,
K-92 representatives and
residents came together
on the Farmers Bank
parking lot to help raise
money, rain or shine.
The group is hoping
to use the money toward
the purchase of Identity
Safe equipment that will
allow the department to
fingerprint, photograph
and retain a mouth-swab
into one laminated card
for any area youth. The
equipment is $8,000.
The group is also hoping to raise money for

a new costume for the
department’s mascot K-9,
Bax, who helps educate
area kids about what
services the sheriff’s
department provides in a
friendly and fun way. The
cost of the new mascot
uniform is $1,200.
In total, members hope
to show their appreciation for all the sheriff’s
department has done by
raising at least $10,000
for the office.
During the kickoff
event the group sold
food, including pulled
pork sandwiches, T-shirts
and raffle tickets for a
chance to win a Remington 12-gauge shotgun.
Because of the rain, Bax
did not make an appearance, but may make an
appearance at the Farmers Bank corporate office
this week.
This coming week,
Farmers Bank will pass

Lindsay Kriz | Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

From left: Brian Howard, special services manager at Farmers
Bank, Tina Wood-Richards Loan Review Analyst at Farmers Bank,
Meigs County Sheriff Keith Wood, Zackery “Z Man” Kick from
K92, Lori Miller, commercial lender at Farmers Bank and Megan
Teachout, Roller Derby girl with K92.

along the thermometer
that measures how much
money has been donated
to the fundraiser to the
Pomeroy Merchants
Association, which will
help raise money for the
event with an auction for
a basket filled with gifts
from local merchants,
including donated gift

cards. Tickets for the
auction can be purchased
at banks and stores along
Main Street.
Next, the thermometer
will travel to Fruth Pharmacy Inc. The pharmacy
will hold a fundraiser for
the sheriff’s department on
their parking lot Oct. 24.
See Fundraiser | 5

�news

2 Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Daily Sentinel

obituary

Meigs County Community Calendar
Proceeds go to the
Church Building Fund.
Donations accepted.
Light lunch items available. For more information call 740-949-2229.
Saturday, Oct. 11
NELSONVILLE —
The Connect Appalachia
Broadband Initiative
Fund is having their
concert starting at 6 p.m.
at the historic Stuarts
Opera House. Artists
include Grassinine,
McGuffey Lane and Jonathan Edwards.
MIDDLEPORT — The
Middleport Ministerial
Association is sponsoring
a special service at Ash
Street Church on Oct. 11
at 6:30 p.m. with Jewish
minister The Rev. Dennis Karp from Maryland.
Karp is a representative
and regional director of
Chosen People Ministries; an international
Jewish ministry. Chosen
People Ministries is
comprised of Jewish
ministers like Karp, who
have come to know Jesus
as the messiah. Their
mission is to spread the
good news of the gospel
to other Jews here and
abroad. Karp is traveling
through the area and will
also be preaching at Ash
Street Church on at 10:30
a.m. Oct. 12.
POMEROY — The

Tuesday, Oct. 7
POMEROY — Calvary
Pilgrim Chapel will have
Evangelist guest speaker
Darrell Miller starting
Tuesday, Oct. 7 through
Sunday, Oct. 12. Services
will be at 7 p.m. Sunday
school is at 10 a.m., Sunday morning worship is
at 11 a.m. and Sunday
evening service is at 6:30
p.m.
POMEROY — Calvary
Pilgrim Chapel will have
their revival Oct. 7-12
at 7 p.m. nightly except
for Sunday, when revival
will be at 6:30 p.m. The
evangelist speaker will
be Darrell Miller. The
pastor is the Rev. Charles
McKenzie, who can be
reached at 992-2952.
Wednesday, Oct. 8
MIDDLEPORT — Ash
Street Church is holding
their revival Oct. 8-12.
The revival service will
be at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday. On
Sunday, the homecoming
service wil be at 10:30
a.m.
Thursday, Oct. 9
RACINE — CarmelSutton United Methodist Church is having an
indoor yard sale in the
Fellowship Hall from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. Oct. 9 and
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oct. 10.
The address is 48540
Carmel Road in Racine.

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CONTACT US
EDITOR:
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740-446-2342 Ext. 2102
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Leonard “Lennie” Jewell

library is partnering
with the Chester Shade
Historical Association to
host a program on Mary
Draper Ingles. It will
be at 1 p.m. Saturday,
Oct. 11 at the Pomeroy
Library.
RACINE — The first
annual Chase Roush “Forever 11” 5K run/walk will
be Saturday, Oct. 11.
Registration is at 9
a.m. and the 5K begins
at 10 a.m. at the Star
Mill Park in Racine. The
entry free is $20, T-shirt
included (the shirt is
only guaranteed if preordered). All proceeds
go to the Chase Roush
Foundation, which helps
kids in need.
Sunday, Oct. 12
POMEROY —The
Carleton Church homecoming will be Oct. 12.
Dinner will be at noon
with a program at 1:30
p.m. Special singing will
be performed by “The
Forgiven.” Everyone is
welcome.
TUPPERS PLAINS
— The Tuppers Plains
VFW Ladies Auxiliary
is having a baked steak
dinner at the T.P. VFW
Post 9053 Hall Sunday,
Oct. 12 from 11 a.m. to 1
p.m. There will be baked
steak, mashed potatoes,
green beans, cole slaw,
roll, dessert and drink.

Habitat’s “Taste of
Southeast Ohio” Nov. 15
NELSONVILLE —
Carpenter and Associates and People’s Bank
present “Taste of Southeast Ohio,” a benefit gala
for Habitat for Humanity
of Southeast Ohio.
“Taste of Southeast
Ohio” slated for Nov. 15
is the fourth benefit gala
for Habitat for Humanity
of Southeast Ohio. Every
home Habitat builds is
completely funded by
local donations, sponsorships and grants. The
proceeds from Taste
of SEO go directly to
building affordable,
energy-efficient homes
for low-income families
in southeast Ohio. This
fundraiser is necessary
for Habitat to continue
to do its mission.
Restaurants and chefs
from southeast Ohio will
supply samples for the
300-plus attendees who
will then vote on who
has the “Best Food of
Southeast Ohio.” There
will also be a live and
silent auction, provided
by Shamrock Auction
Services.
The event will start at
6:30pm at the Hocking
College Student Center
in Nelsonville. Tickets

monitorin

g starting

around

per week

*with $99 cu
sto
purchase of alamer installation charge
and
rm monitoring
services.

• A home without a security system is

a break-in or home invasion.2

are $35 each and can be
purchase online at www.
habtiatseo.org or through
the office.
Last year, Kiser’s Barbecue took first place
against eight other chefs
from in and around
Athens. This year, the
pool of restaurant participants will be from all
over southeast Ohio. The
lineup includes but is
not limited to: 9 Tables
Express, Casa Nueva,
Fluff Bakery and Rickshaw Thai, Holy Guacamole, The Inn at Cedar
Falls, Kiser’s Barbecue,
Maya Burrito, Restaurant Salaam, Rocky Boot
Grille, Sol Restaurant,
The Stockport Mill, The
Grouse Nest and the
Ridge Inn.
“Remember Then,” a
local oldies band, will be
providing the entertainment between food tastings and auction calls.
Last year, the event
brought $18,000 to
Habitat’s mission with
more than 200 people in
attendance. Habitat for
Humanity of Southeast
Ohio hopes to bring in
$25,000 this year with
the event to help end
substandard housing in
southeast Ohio.
If you would like to
contribute via sponsorship or auction item
donation, volunteer at
the event, or to purchase your tickets, call
Amber Mendenhall at
740-592-0032 ext.102.

POMEROY — Leonard “Lennie” Jewell, 93,
of West Main Street in
Pomeory, passed away
Saturday, Oct. 4, 2014, at
Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center in Middleport.
Lennie was born Dec. 5,
1920, in Pagetown, Ohio.
He graduated from Harrisonville High School. Lennie served with the U.S.
Marine Corps in World
War II. He was in the
Battle of Okinawa. Lennie
retired from Kroger after
many years of sevice in
the produce department at
the Gallipolis and Pomeroy locations. Lennie was
also an avid golfer and
loved to fish in Canada.
He was a member of
the Trinity Congregational Church in Pomeroy
for 60 years. Lennie
was an active member
of the American Legion
Drew-Webster Post 39
in Pomeroy for over 60
years. He was a member
of the Disabled American
Veterans. Lennie was also
a member of the 40 and 8
in Athens.
Lennie is survived
by his wife of 64 years,
Norma Louise Wetzel

Jewell; son Stephen
Jewell, of Middleport;
sisters Anestine Frazier,
of Columbus, and Irene
Burritt, of McArthur; and
several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in
death by his parents; and
brothers Pearlie, Raymond, George, Richard,
Cecil and Paul.
Funeral services will
be 1 p.m. Thursday, Oct.
9, 2014, at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with Randy
Smith officiating. Burial
will follow in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Visitation for
family and friends will be
5-8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct.
8, 2014, at the funeral
home.
Military graveside rites
will be conducted by
Drew-Webster Post 39 of
Pomeroy.
In lieu of flowers,
donations may be made
in Lennie’s name to the
Trinity Congregational
Church.
An online registry is
available at Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Homes
— Pomeroy and Middleport.

death notices
Saunders
GALLIPOLIS — James W. “Jim” Saunders, 84, of
Gallipolis, died at 6:35 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 4, 2014, in
Elliott’s Medical Foster Home in Guysville, Ohio.
A memorial service will be 11 a.m. Friday, Oct. 10,
2014, at First Baptist Church of Gallipolis. With Pastor Bob Hood officiating. Full military honors will be
conducted by the Gallia County Veterans Services
Funeral Detail Team. Interment will be at the convenience of the family. Friends may call one hour prior
to the service at the church. Expressions of sympathy
may be sent to the family by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

Moore
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — Thomas J. “Tom”
Moore, 60, of Gallipolis Ferry, died Friday, Oct. 3,
2014.
A Celebration of Life is planned for Friday, Oct. 10,
2014, at Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant. Visitation will begin at 11 a.m. until 1 p.m., at which time a
service will follow with the Rev. Ted Nance officiating.

Thompson
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Rebecca Joan Thompson,
55, of Huntington, died Sunday, Oct. 5, 2014, at St.
Mary’s Medical Center in Huntington.
Funeral service will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 8,
2014, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. Burial will follow in Susie Chapel, Huntington. Visitation will be 10 to 11 a.m. Wednesday,
Oct. 8, 2014, at the funeral home.

Rainey
AKRON — Dallas Charles Rainey, 33, of Akron,
died Thursday, Oct. 2, 2014.
Visitation will be from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wednesday,
Oct. 8, 2014. Service will start at 1 p.m. following to
the Evergreen Cemetery in Letart. Charles Kearns
will be officiating. In leiu of flowers, make a donation
to Foglesong-Roush Funeral Home to help with the
funeral expenses.

Henry
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — Vickie Henry, 47, of
Gallipolis Ferry, passed away Sunday, Oct. 5, 2014, at
Holzer Medical Center.
Funeral services will be held at Deal Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant, W.Va. on Thursday, Oct. 9, 2014,
at 1 p.m. with David Johnson and Joey Birchfield
officiating. Burial will follow in Creston Cemetery in
Leon, W.Va. Friends may visit the family at the funeral
home on Thursday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. prior to the
service.

Local Stocks

• A burglary occurs every 14.6 seconds. 3 times more likely to be burglarized.
• 1 out of every 5 homes will experience • 85% of Police Officials surveyed believe
1

A donation of $10 is
requested. Carryouts
available.
RACINE — The
Racine Volunteer Fire
Department will have
a chicken barbecue on
Sunday, Oct. 12. Serving
begins at 11 a.m. at the
fire station.
Monday, Oct. 13
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health
Department wil be
closed Monday, Oct. 13
for Columbus Day. Normal business hours will
resume Tuesday, Oct. 14
at 8 a.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 14
TUPPERS PLAINS
— The Tuppers Plains
Regional Sewer will have
their regular meeting
at 7 p.m. at the TPRSD
office.
BEDFORD TWP —
Bedford Township Trustees will hold their regular
monthly meeting at 7
p.m. at the town hall.
CHESTER TWP —
The Chester Township
Trustees will have their
regular meeting at 7 p.m.
at the town hall.
Sunday, Oct. 18
RACINE — Morning
Star United Methodist
Church will have their
homecoming. Lunch will
be served at 12:30 p.m.,
with service of singing at
1:30 p.m.

3

home alarms deter burglary attempts. 4

1. Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2008 National Crime Report http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2009/june/ucr_stats060109 2. http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/contentpub/press/vdhbpr.cfm
3. FBI, 2008 National Crime Report http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2009/june/ucr_stats060109 4. http://www.beyondidentitytheft.com/home-security-statistics.html

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87AEP (NYSE) — 52.80
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 21.61
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 101.59
Big Lots (NYSE) — 43.92
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 46.71
BorgWarner (NYSE) —54.06
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 24.57
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.337
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 42.37
Collins (NYSE) — 77.29
DuPont (NYSE) — 70.16
US Bank (NYSE) — 41.54
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 25.22
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 59.85
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 60.18
Kroger (NYSE) — 53.02
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 67.08
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 111.11
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.71

BBT (NYSE) — 37.69
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.82
Pepsico (NYSE) — 93.37
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.53
Rockwell (NYSE) — 108.82
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.72
Royal Dutch Shell — 73.73
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 29.12
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 77.35
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.13
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.37
Worthington (NYSE) — 36.17
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Oct. 6, 2014, 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.

�news

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 7, 2014 3

Bill Johnson gets ready
to work for re-election

Ohio Democrats look to
grab seats in Legislature
By Ann Sanner

helped pass for small businesses along
with a reduction in the statewide
income tax rate.
COLUMBUS — Minority Demo“By and large, people see that the
crats in the state Legislature hope to
state is getting better, and they are
keep the seats they have this fall as
giving Kasich the credit for that,”
they face potential down-ticket fallout said Mike Dittoe, a spokesman for the
from their party’s faltering gubernato- House GOP’s campaign committee.
rial candidate.
Some races to watch:Republican
Ohioans will elect all 99 House
Sen. Gayle Manning of North Ridmembers, along with 17 of 33 state
geville faces a strong challenge from
senators, on Nov. 4.
Democrat Marcus Madison, an Elyria
Republicans have held their grip on councilman. Manning, a retired
the Senate since 1985 and are poised teacher, holds a seat in a northern
to keep it. The GOP holds a 60-39
Ohio Senate district that Obama won
advantage in the House, where Demo- in 2012.
crats are aiming to pick up several
Manning’s son, Nathan, also of
seats. Just one more would prevent
North Ridgeville, is running against
Republicans from having enough
Democrat Brendan Mackin of Avon
members to place issues on the balLake for an open House seat in northlot and more easily pull off legislative ern Ohio. Both have similar backmaneuvers.
grounds. Mackin is city prosecutor
Gaining seats won’t be easy for
and assistant law director for Stow.
Democrats, who have trailed their
Manning, a Republican, is city prosRepublican counterparts in campaign ecutor for North Ridgeville.
cash.
Democratic Rep. Nick Barborak
Turnout also could have an impact
of Lisbon won his eastern Ohio seat
on their contests since they lack a
by a couple hundred votes in 2012.
strong top-of-the-ticket race to genBut Republicans hope Tim Ginter, a
erate buzz among loyal Democratic
pastor and conference speaker from
voters.
Salem, will reclaim the Columbiana
Ed FitzGerald, the Democratic can- County district for their party.
didate for governor, suffered a series
Democrat Micah Kamrass, a former
of political blows this summer. They
student body president at Ohio State,
include dismal fundraising, the depar- is competing against Cincinnati-area
ture of two top staffers and revelaattorney Jonathan Dever to represent
tions that he lacked a permanent driv- a southwestern Ohio district left open
er’s license for more than a decade.
as state Rep. Connie Pillich runs for
Democrats have expressed confistate treasurer.
dence in their candidates, citing previSummit County Councilwoman
ous victories in districts where Presi- Paula Prentice is vying to unseat
dent Barack Obama was unpopular.
Republican Rep. Anthony DeVitis
“Our House races have been won
of Green in his Democrat-leaning
on their merits,” said Aaron Fisher,
district. Prentice, a Democrat from
executive director of the Ohio House Green, also is a former teacher. DeViDemocratic Caucus.
tis is a small business owner.
Fisher said candidates are highlightRepublican Rep. Andy Thompson of
ing their support for local governMarietta will face Democrat Charlie
ments, contending policies favored
Daniels of St. Clairsville in a rematch
Republican Gov. John Kasich and the of a 2012 race. Thompson topped
GOP-dominated Legislature have not Daniels, but his opponent has the
helped average Ohioans.
same moniker as a country star and
Meanwhile, House Republican can- could draw voters in this Appalachian
didates are touting tax breaks they
district.

Associated Press

Lindsay Kriz/photo

From left: Tim Ihle, candidate for Commissioner, running for re-election, Bill Johnson, U.S.
Representative, running for re-election, Sandy Iannarelli, chair of the Republican Party in Meigs
County and Bill Spaun, vice chairman of the Republican Party in Meigs County met Friday morning
inside the Meigs County Republican Party headquarters on Main Street. “Bill is in town and we
graciously opened (our office) to him,” Ihle said. “It’s open and ready for business,” Johnson said.

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Issue stances in West
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CHARLESTON —
Here is a look at where
U.S. Senate hopefuls
Democrat Natalie Tennant and Republican Shelley Moore Capito stand
on key issues.
Energy/Coal: Both
oppose a proposal to limit
carbon emissions from
coal-fired power plants.
Both vaguely say they
want an “all of the above”
domestic energy policy
that weans America off
international energy
dependence, but uses all
types of energy production.
Capito sponsored the
MINER Act of 2006,
which became law. It
requires mines to prepare
better preparation and
reporting for accidents.
Tennant criticizes
Capito for voting against
a failed mine safety bill in
2010, which was largely
a partisan vote. The bill
made it easier to shut
down problem mines,
increased penalties for
serious safety violations
and offered more protection for whistle-blowers.
At the time, Capito said
the bill was rushed, did
little for mine safety,
penalized businesses,
added regulation and promoted lawsuits.
Affordable Care Act:
Capito has voted with her
caucus dozens of times
to repeal the Affordable
Care Act. She says she
wants to replace part of
the law allowing Medicaid expansion in states,
a push that has insured
about 150,000 West Virginians.
Tennant supports
changing the Affordable
Care Act, but also sup-

ports Medicaid expansion. She favors a provision that patients cannot
be denied insurance
because of pre-existing
conditions. She also supports delaying penalties
on people for not having
insurance and wants
more insurance providers
involved in West Virginia.
Gun rights: Both
candidates have been outspoken gun rights advocates. Tennant believes
decisions about criminal
background checks should
be made at the state level.
She says the waiting
period after a background
check should drop from
three business days to
48 hours, and after the
background check system
is in place for four years,
the wait should only be
24 hours. Both oppose a
federal firearms registry.
Both say they oppose a
failed bill sponsored by
Sen. Joe Manchin, D-West
Virginia, to expand background checks.
Budget: Capito has
cast votes for several budgets by Rep. Paul Ryan,
R-Wisconsin. The latest
version, which passed
the House in April and
won’t advance any further, would cut more than
$5 trillion over the next
decade to balance the
budget by 2024. It relies
on domestic program
cuts, like education and
food stamps, and shifts
money to the Pentagon
and veterans’ health
care. Future retirees
would be shifted from
traditional Medicare and
toward a subsidy-based
health insurance option
on the open market.
Social Security would be

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�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, October 7, 2014�

Daily Sentinel

our view

Calm down
about
climate change
Climate change activists recently marched in the
hundreds of thousands in Manhattan and around
the world, and a smaller group of more hard-core
protesters took their message to Wall Street. That
message, the official slogan of the protest: “Stop
Capitalism. End the Climate Crisis.”
But collapsing the economy, or turning away
from free-market capitalism, is an overreaction
that would cause not only incredible damage to the
nation, but to the planet, as well.
Capitalism allows citizens the most influence
over the economy and puts the most pressure on
companies to act responsibly. Putting the state in
charge of resources has historically resulted only
in disaster for both the population and the environment.
Yes, pollution is a problem. We absolutely should
be concerned about the despoiling of the natural
world and species irretrievably driven to extinction.
But the scale of the rhetoric has clearly gotten out
of hand and grossly politicized what should be a
rational, reasoned debate, and that’s very dangerous.
In the early days of the movement, activists realized that to get anyone’s attention they needed to
ramp up the hyperbole, but increasingly apocalyptic
rhetoric in ensuing years has turned to class warfare, political opportunism, and, sadly, seems to
have tapped into mental illness.
The disturbed man who jumped the White House
fence and raced inside the executive mansion while
carrying a knife last month reportedly thought he
needed to warn the president that the “atmosphere
was collapsing.”
Genuinely panicked people do not make rational
decisions, and obviously overblown rhetoric must
eventually backfire as predicted calamities fail to
occur.
For instance, James Hansen, then-director of
NASA’s Goddard Institute, famously declared there
were “only four years left to save the Earth,” in a
letter to the president sent in 2009, well over four
years ago.
In fact, at the First Earth Day celebration, in 1970,
a new ice age, with millions of deaths from starvation, was called imminent.
Throughout our recorded history — from the epic
of Gilgamesh to the present day — there seems to
be a deep-seated human desire to expect the apocalypse. These expectations have usually been predicated on religion, or new interpretations of religious
texts but, in the modern era, they’ve grown a little
more eclectic; fear of nuclear annihilation was omnipresent during the Cold War, and you may remember Y2K, or the Mayan calendar brouhaha in 2012.
Valid fears or not, we human beings are excellent
at solving problems. We’ve survived, and flourished,
in a constantly changing climate through the millennia. Declaring the end of the Earth is not only foolish and transparently political, but also dangerous.
Famed activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. told reporters at the New York climate march that he wishes
there was a law to prosecute those who disagree
with him about climate change. Google was recently
forced by climate activists to cut ties with a conservative group that does not accept environmental
orthodoxy.
This is unconscionable. America does not silence
debate; we embrace it. Blacklisting anyone who
expresses doubt or counsels moderation based on
a long human history of alarmism is not a way to
solve the actual problems we face.
But we’re going to figure it out; without panic,
without throwing out the free-market foundations of
our economy, and without surrendering our personal freedoms. Those who are wrong will be proven so
in the fullness of time.
Honestly, it’s really not the end of the world.
Reprinted from the Orange County (Calif.) Register.

Daily Tribune
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

Legislative leaders speaking on caol
By Chris Hamilton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

I am troubled by the
response from some of
our legislative leaders
and others who seem
to passively accept that
coal is an industry in
decline and further
espouse a defeatist
attitude and contempt
towards one of the
state’s leading industries
and the thousands of
men and woman who
comprise it.
This was the message
delivered in an Associated Press story that
made the rounds recently, entitled, “Legislative
leaders say coal rhetoric
not helping.”
This attitude that
additional gains in our
economy must carry
trade-offs or losses in
other aspects of our
economy is emblematic
of the zero-sum mentality that has plagued
West Virginia’s economic
development efforts for
decades.
For instance, we have
heard for two decades
now that the “greening
of America” or increase
in renewable energy
sources will provide
ample job opportunities
to coal miners who have
been laid off. Those jobs
never materialized, but
we are hearing similar
refrains today as it
relates to our growing
gas industry and the
potential of providing
job opportunities for our
state’s 5,000 furloughed
miners. Jobs in West Virginia’s oil/gas industry
are an incredible boon to
our state, but that industry’s workforce never
will be able to accommodate the thousands of
miners’ whose jobs are
in limbo.
Why do our leaders
assume we can trade one
coal mining job for one
in another industry? And
why does West Virginia
only worry about the
security of miners’ jobs
when WARN notices
are issued? Our miners
are taken for granted
every day by those who
assume the lights will
turn on when they flip
the switch and don’t

realize that coal is the
reason they can afford
their electric bills.
If green jobs are available let’s have them, and
as natural gas continues
its path toward becoming a major economic
force for our state, we
applaud this progression. Let me be clear
— the coal industry fully
embraces this development, but progress
in one sector of our
economy should not
mean a coal miner’s job
shouldn’t be saved.
West Virginia is the
“Energy State.” We are
a major energy exporter
domestically and internationally. We should
be able to sustain our
current level of coal production and expand our
natural gas industries
and renewable output.
We should not be working to expand growth in
one energy source and
write off the other as a
“shadow of what it once
was.”
Yes, West Virginia’s
coal output has fallen
from record highs just a
few years ago. However,
we are still the secondhighest coal-producing
state in the nation. The
U.S. Energy Information
Administration confirms
that coal is also the
second-largest energy
source worldwide, and
global consumption is
expected to grow for at
least another 25 years.
Regardless of what some
in our state may think
about coal’s future, global projections remain
bullish on this inexpensive fossil fuel.
While we expect coal
adversaries to try to
accelerate our industry’s
demise at the sound of
any cyclical industry
downturn, we do not
expect our legislative
leaders to join in that
chorus. We expect them
to be more innovative
and eager to seek solutions to the obstacles
that inhibit broad-spectrum development of our
state energy resources.
The premise is simple:
West Virginia has more
coal reserves than most
other states, and world
usage is growing. Typi-

cally, this would sound
all the marketing bells
and whistles — “What
a great scenario and
opportunity for the Energy State.”
The United States will
continue to use coal.
Nothing can replace 40
percent of U.S. electric
generating capacity. The
primary question before
us is not whether coal
will be used throughout
our country and the
world, but where it will
come from and who will
benefit from its production.
Several major coalproducing regions such
as the Powder River and
Illinois basins are on the
increase, and foreignsourced coal from
countries like Indonesia, Columbia and even
Russia is finding its way
into the United States.
West Virginia should
do far more than it has
in the past to explore
ways to foster and
encourage greater coal
production and combustion. It is not acceptable
to simply dismiss West
Virginia’s coal industry
by wondering “whether
coal is ever coming
back.”
News flash: Coal never
left West Virginia. It may
not be booming right
now, but it’s still making
a dramatic contribution
to our state coffers. It’s
here, ready and waiting
for leaders to step forward and make the most
of it, not relegate it to
second-class status.
We have a hard enough
time battling with a
federal government that
wants to regulate us out
of existence, as though
promises and dreams
will power America and
produce steel. For any
state political leader to
write off the industry’s
future is extremely
short-sighted.
We have so many
options and opportunities at the state level to
boost the coal industry
and help it maintain its
viability in domestic
and world markets. Let’s
begin with a realistic
evaluation of our coal
reserves, markets and
future opportunities and

not merely opinion from
unqualified voices.
West Virginia has a
renewable energy portfolio, but no energy
plan. Let’s develop an
all-points, ambitious
energy plan that focuses
on extraction, transportation, environmental
stewardship, research
and consumption.
And what about those
coal-to-liquids projects
in southern West Virginia? Isn’t it time for
bricks and mortar? Even
if one of these projects
were to come to fruition,
it would create needed
jobs and another market
for West Virginia coal.
The state agencies and
body of energy law that
affect every ton of coal
mined or unit of energy
produced is in dire need
of analysis to identify
new pathways for growth
and the expansion of
state energy output.
Laws that serve only
to add to the cost of
doing business without
adding to human protections, safety or environmental quality should
be updated and revised.
Additionally, leaders
should dedicate the
appropriate level of funding for these programs
and provide support for
an ongoing research program for all aspects of
the plan.
It will take more than
an occasional meeting or
rally to move our energy
agenda forward and for
the “Energy State” to
realize its full potential.
But if anyone needs a
source of inspiration,
just look in the face of
any coal miner. We’ve
been through tough
times before, and we
remain committed to
doing what it takes to
power and build America.
We’re confident in the
future of the West Virginia coal industry and
we welcome the opportunity to collaborate with
our legislative leaders
to map out a functional,
sensible energy plan for
West Virginia.
Chris Hamilton is senior vice
president of the West Virginia Coal
Association. Contact him at (304)
342-4153.

�news/weather

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 7, 2014 5

Ohio leaders scramble over hints it may lose Jeep
By John Seewer
Associated Press

TOLEDO, Ohio — Ohio’s
governor and the mayor of
the state’s fourth-largest
city talked with the head
of Chrysler over the weekend about the future of the
Toledo-built Jeep Wrangler,
just days after the automaker
indicated production could
be moved when a new model
comes out.
Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne said last week that
reconfiguring and keeping
the Wrangler assembly line
in Toledo may be too costly
if the new design includes an
aluminum body.
The suggestion that the

Jeep could be made somewhere else within three years
is causing anxiety in the city
where the vehicles first began
rolling off the assembly line
during World War II.
The Chrysler assembly
plant that produces the Wrangler along with the Cherokee
has one of the largest workforces in northwest Ohio,
employing more than 4,000.
Marchionne told Automotive News last week at the
Paris Car Show that a different vehicle could be built in
Toledo if Wrangler production is moved. The automaker still has a commitment
to the city and the state, he
said.
“I don’t have a doubt that

there will be zero impact on
head count and employment
levels and anything else,”
Marchionne said, who made
a pledge last January that the
Wrangler would not be built
outside of Toledo as long as
he was the CEO.
Ohio Gov. John Kasich and
Toledo Mayor D. Michael
Collins spoke with Marchionne during a conference
call Sunday.
A statement from the
mayor’s office said no commitments were made, but
both sides have agreed to
keep talking. Collins and
Kasich are hoping to arrange
a sit-down meeting soon with
Marchionne.
“The purpose of this meet-

ing will be for the city and its
partners to better understand
the specific challenges facing
Chrysler and develop resolutions to overcome those
obstacles,” said Stacy Weber,
the mayor’s spokeswoman.
Kasich spokesman Rob
Nichols said the governor
agrees with the mayor on the
importance of keeping Jeep
in Toledo.
“One of the biggest reasons
for their success to date is
because of the world class
workforce in Toledo, and that
would be an asset that would
be very difficult to give up,”
Nichols said.
Chrysler is considering
building the Wrangler with a
lightweight aluminum body

to meet the federal government’s goal of nearly doubling average fuel economy
to 45 mpg by 2025.
The assembly plant in
Toledo is one of the busiest
in North America.
Union leaders have said
they felt betrayed by talk that
Wrangler production could be
moved because of how much
the workers and city have
given to the plant.
Former owner DaimlerChrysler AG received nearly $300 million in tax breaks
to construct the new $1.2 billion plant in 2001. Four years
later, union leaders agreed to
allow auto parts suppliers to
take over work once done by
union workers.

A look at West Virginia’s W.Va. announces 16 new
gay marriage ban
home rule municipalities
By John Raby
Associated Press

CHARLESTON — A
lawsuit challenging
West Virginia’s ban
on same-sex marriage
remained on hold
Monday following the
U.S. Supreme Court’s
turning away of
appeals from five other
states seeking to prohibit gay and lesbian
unions. No same-sex
marriage licenses were
being issued in the
state as of Monday,
and no officials suggested any would be
soon.
THE LAW
In 2000, the Legislature passed a
law, at the request of
then-Gov. Cecil Underwood, specifying that
the only legal marriage
in West Virginia is one
between a man and a
woman.
West Virginia
does not recognize
same-sex marriages
performed in other
states. The law says
any “public act, record
or judicial proceeding
of any other state”
regarding a same-sex
marriage, “or a right
or claim arising from
such relationship, shall

Awareness
From page 1

Recent studies suggest that many women
are getting their first
mammogram later than
recommended; not
having mammograms
at recommended intervals or not receiving

not be given effect by
this state.”
Since 2000, several attempts have
been made in the
Legislature to put an
amendment on the
ballot adding the law’s
definition of marriage
to the West Virginia
Constitution. None
has succeeded.
THE LEGAL
CHALLENGE
On Sept. 16, U.S.
District Judge Robert
Chambers in Huntington said he would
delay a ruling on the
lawsuit. Chambers
cited the “overlap of
issues” presented in
the West Virginia case
and a similar one in
Virginia for putting
the case on hold pending a decision by the
Supreme Court.
The West Virginia
lawsuit was filed in
2013 by Lambda Legal
on behalf of three
same-sex couples
and the child of one
couple. The lawsuit
says the Kanawha and
Cabell county clerks
denied the six adults
marriage licenses
under the state law
and that it effectively
denies them many benefits.

appropriate and timely
follow-up of positive screening results
may lead to a more
advanced tumor size
and stage at diagnosis.
Women who are uninsured or underinsured,
ages 25-64, may qualify
for programs such as
the West Virginia
Breast and Cervical
Cancer Screening Pro-

Fundraiser
From page 1

The thermometer will then go to
Home National Bank in Racine. In
order to raise funds, the bank will
be holding a 5K race Nov. 8. Lastly,
the thermometer will return home
to Farmers National Bank, where
the amounts will be collected and
counted.
“I just like the idea of the community involvement,” Sheriff Keith
Wood said. “It kind of builds a foun-

On Monday the
same-sex couples
asked Chambers in a
court filing to rule in
their favor and deny
the county clerks’
motions to dismiss the
case.
Chambers’ office
said no ruling on the
motion was expected
Monday.
WHAT’S NEXT
West Virginia Attorney General Patrick
Morrisey, a Republican, said Monday that
he was still figuring
out how the state’s
case will be affected.
“In light of the U.S.
Supreme Court’s surprising decision to
not review this matter,
we are analyzing the
implications for the
West Virginia case,”
Morrisey’s spokeswoman, Beth Gorczyca
Ryan, said via email.
Kanawha County
Clerk Vera McCormick said Monday her
stance remains the
same.
“Nothing’s changed
yet in West Virginia,”
McCormick said. “We
continue to recognize
the ban on same-sex
marriage. If they rule,
of course, we’ll be prepared.”

gram for FREE clinical breast exams,
pelvic exams, and
mammograms.
For more information on breast cancer
visit www.cancer.
org or to schedule a
Well Women exam
at Southern Local
Schools Wellness
Center, call 740-9492348.

dation for something positive,
and that’s the thing that’s really
unique to this, is (that) people
want to see changes for the good.
And it’s not something about
individualism, this is something
about everybody wants to see
something good in the community for our kids, and (see) a better
place to live. And it’s got to start
someplace, and things like this is
what initiates those types of attitudes. It’s good direction for us.”
T-shirts are still available for
sale at the Farmers Bank corporate office. They are $20.

Associated Press

CHARLESTON — A state board has
picked 16 cities to participate in West Virginia’s Home Rule Pilot Program.
The West Virginia Municipal Home
Rule Board announced Monday which of
22 applicants will be in the program. The
board released a list of accepted municipalities at a meeting Monday in Bridgeport. The program gives municipalities a
larger say in how they govern by shifting
power from the state to the local level.
The accepted municipalities are Bluefield, Buckhannon, Charles Town, Clarksburg, Dunbar, Fairmont, Martinsburg,
Milton, Morgantown, Nitro, Parkersburg,
Ranson, Shinnston, South Charleston,
Vienna and Weirton.
The Legislature created the Municipal Home Rule Pilot program in 2007.
Bridgeport, Charleston, Huntington and
Wheeling constituted the initial five-year
pilot group.
Last year, state lawmakers called on the
Municipal Home Rule Board to add 16
cities to the program. They also extended

the program until July 1, 2019.
The board accepted applications and
held regional meetings over the last three
months to consider which entities to
add. Meetings took place in Charleston,
Beckley, Martinsburg, Bridgeport and
Wheeling.
The municipalities that were denied
were Bath — also called Berkeley Springs
— Lewisburg, Moundsville, Princeton,
Spencer and Oak Hill.
Board members said they did not consider Dunbar’s application because the
city submitted its paperwork late. The
deadline was June 1.
The cities that submitted applications
range in population from Spencer, at
about 2,300, to Parkersburg, with a population of more than 31,000.
Municipalities included a variety of
requests in their application materials.
Weirton, for example, cited traffic
issues, such as increasing flexibility with
signs, lights and speed limits on state
roads in the city without needing the state
Department of Transportation’s approval,
according to The Weirton Daily Times.

For the best local weather coverage, visit www.mydailysentinel.com

�Sports
Daily Sentinel�

Tuesday, October 7, 2014 6

Lady Eagles win Unioto
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

submitted photo

The Eastern girls cross country team took first place at Saturday’s Unioto
Invitational. Standing from left to right are Taylor Palmer, Taylor Parker, Laura
Pullins, Asia Michael, head coach Josh Fogle, Kaitlyn Hawk, Jessica Cook and
Brittany Long.

Ohio deer
hunting changes
for 2014-2015
Jim Freeman
In The Open

Ohio’s deer season officially got underway
with deer archery season on Sept. 27 and I have
had numerous questions about changes in regulations and permits for this year.
Gallia and Meigs counties are both three-deer
counties, which means hunters in these two
counties can kill up to three deer, which is one
antlered buck and two antlerless deer, or three
antlerless deer, using either-sex deer permits
which cost $24 apiece.
Most of the confusion lies in the difference
between either-sex permits and antlerless permits. Antlerless permits, which cost $15 and
are only good for antlerless deer, are not valid
in Gallia or Meigs counties. That is because
biologists have determined that deer populations are about where they need to be in these
two counties. The cheaper permits are still
valid in counties where they want to see fewer
deer.
In any event, hunters can only tag one antlered buck.
With that being said, what constitutes an ideal
population level is largely a matter of individual
preference; for instance the deer hunter who
wants a deer hiding behind every tree (large
bucks only please), has a different viewpoint than
the farmer who is sick and tired of his alfalfa and
soybean fields being used as giant food plots.
See hunting | 7

OVP Sports Schedule
Tuesday, October 7
Volleyball
River Valley at Alexander, 6 p.m.
Waterford at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Southern at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Athens, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Belpre at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Golf
WVSSAC state championships at Oglebay
Resort Jones Course, 9 a.m.
Wednesday, October 8
Volleyball
South Gallia at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Jackson at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Fairland at Gallia Academy, 5:30
Meigs at Trimble, 6 p.m.

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio —
That trophy case sure is getting
full.
The Eastern girls cross country team claimed its sixth championship of the season Saturday
at the Unioto Invitational, in
Ross County.
The Lady Eagles finished
with a team score of 68, topping second place Unioto by
eight. Zane Trace was third
with a 106, while Gallia Academy was eighth of the 16 team
field with a 190. Jackson senior
Elyse Black paced the field of
151 with a time of 19:29.5,
while Alexander senior Allyson
Malone (18:35.9) took second.
Eastern was led by sophomore Laura Pullins, who

finished eighth with a time of
19:22.8, followed by ninth place
finisher Asia Michael with a
19:25.8 and 10th place finisher
Jessica Cook with a time of
19:27.5. Taylor Palmer finished
19th (20:11.9) and Kaitlyn
Hawk (21:16.8) finished 28th
to round out the EHS scoring.
Taylor Parker (23:06.3) and
Brittany Long (23:07.0) also
competed for the Lady Eagles,
finishing 57th and 58th respectively.
Gallia Academy was paced
by 12th place Mary Watts with
a time of 19:31.9 and 16th
place Mesa Polcyn with a time
of 19:53.8. Cassidy Starnes
(22:42.7) finished 50th, Hayley
Petrie (22:55.7) finished 55th
and Akeisha Saunders (24:03.5)
finished 79th to round of the
Blue Angel total. Also compet-

ing for GAHS were 84th Nacoma Smith (24:19.4) and 110th
Elizabeth Evans (25:38.3).
River Valley, which was
unable to post a team total,
was led by 21st place finisher
Kenzie Baker with a time of
20:31.7. Ramsey Warren was
118th with a time of 26:04.8,
and Hannah Nutter was 127th
with a time f 27:02 for the
Lady Raiders, while Natosha
Rankin took 143rd with a time
29:42.40.
The boys team competition
was won by Piketon with a total
of 51, followed by Unioto with
a total of 63 and Logan with
a total of 79. River Valley was
eighth with a total of 215, while
Gallia Academy finished ninth
with a 216.
See Eagles | 7

OVP teams fare well
district
volleyball draw
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

JACKSON, Ohio —
The postseason road is
now set for six Ohio volleyball teams in the Ohio
Valley Publishing area,
and four of those local
squads earned home
games following the
2014 district tournament
drawings held Sunday for
divisions II, III and IV.
Gallia Academy,
Southern, South Gallia
and Meigs will open the
second season at home,
while Eastern and River
Valley will begin postseason play on the road.
Four of those clubs
— Eastern, Southern,
River Valley and Meigs
— will also have to win
only one match to make
it to districts, while Gallia Academy and South
Gallia must win twice to
advance to district play.
Starting in D-3, Meigs
(12-7) came away with
the area’s highest seeding with a No. 2 and will
host the winner of the
7-10 matchup between
Crooksville and Belpre in
a sectional final at Larry
R. Morrison Gymnasium
on Saturday, Oct. 18, at
4 p.m.
Sixth-seeded River
Valley (9-9) will also play
at 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct.
18, in a D-3 sectional
final when it travels to
Londonderry for a battle
with third-seeded Southeastern. The D-3 district
tournaments will be held
at Waverly High School
the following week.
Southern (11-5)
earned the top D-4
seeding in the area with
a No. 4 and will host

Alex Hawley/photo

Meigs senior Brook Andrus receives a serve during the Lady Marauders’ season opening victory over
South Gallia at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium in Rocksprings.

fifth-seeded Eastern
(7-11) in a sectional
final on Thursday, Oct.
16, at 6 p.m. The winner
advances to the district
tournament at Jackson
the following week.
South Gallia (4-12)
earned a seventh-seed
and will host 10thseeded Miller (1-14) on
Monday, Oct. 13, in a

D-4 sectional semifinal
at 6 p.m. The winner
will travel to secondseeded Waterford for a
6 p.m. sectional final on
Thursday, Oct. 16.
Gallia Academy (144) — the lone Division
II school in the area
— earned a three-seed
and will host sixthseeded Warren (7-10)

on Wednesday, Oct. 15,
for a sectional semifinal
match at 6 p.m. The
winner will advance to
the Saturday D-2 final
at 4 p.m. and travel to
either Athens or Zane
Trace.
Complete brackets of
the 2014 volleyball postseason are available on
the web at seodab.org

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 7, 2014 7

NATIONAL Sports Briefs
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Rawls leads Central Michigan past
Ohio, 28-10
MOUNT PLEASANT, Mich. (AP)
— Thomas Rawls ran
for a career-high 229
yards and two touchdowns, Titus Davis
had 181 yards receiving and two scores
and Central Michigan
beat Ohio 28-10 Saturday.
The Ohio offense
went three-and-out on
its first two possessions while Central
Michigan (3-3, 1-1
Mid-American) used
drives of 77 and 68
yards, both of which
were capped by touchdown passes from
Cooper Rush to Davis,
to take a 14-0 lead.
With 33 seconds
left in the half,
Ohio’s Kylan Nelson
recovered a fumble
— forced by Tarell
Basham’s strip sack
of Rush — and gave
Ohio (3-3, 1-1) firstand-goal at the five.
The Bobcats settled
for a Josiah Yazdani
24-yard field goal.
Rawls scored on a
15-yard run, capping
15-play, 75-yard drive
to open the second
half and Ohio never
threatened again.
Davis moved into
4th on Central Michigan’s career receiving
yards list with 3,040.
Johnson carries
Marshall past Old
Dominion, 56-14
NORFOLK, Va.
(AP) — Devon Johnson rushed for a
career-high 198 yards
with three touchdowns, Remi Watson
added 102 yards and
two more scores as
Marshall defeated Old
Dominion 56-14 on
Saturday.
Johnson, a junior
who was converted
from tight end, had
two touchdowns in
the first quarter as
the Thundering Herd
(5-0, 1-0 Conference
USA) bolted to a 28-0
lead. The Monarchs
(3-3, 1-2) scored with
36 seconds left in
the first quarter on
a 21-yard pass from
Taylor Heinicke to
Zach Pascal. It was
the first points Mar-

Eagles
From page 6

The Raiders were led
by 28th place finisher
Jacob Kemper with a
time of 17:39.1 and
30th place finisher
Ethan Hersman with
a time of 17:39.1. Kyle
Randolph (17:53.8)
was 35th, George Rickett (18:40.3) finished
68th, while Nathaniel
Abbott (18:43.7) finished 70th to round out

Hunting

shall allowed in the
first quarter all year,
making the Herds’
advantage 73-7.
In the second quarter Rakeem Cato, who
completed 18 of 23
passes for 198 yards,
had a pair of scoring
tosses, 42 yards to
Tommy Shuler and
6 yards to Deon-Tay
McManus.
Marshall finished
with 591 yards.
Ray Lawry, who
had 131 yards on 16
carries, had a fourthquarter 27-yard TD
for the Monarchs.
HGH testing finally begins in NFL
NEW YORK (AP)
— The NFL has
begun testing for
human growth hormone for the first
time, three years after
the league and players’ union tentatively
agreed to do so.
HGH testing was
part of the 2011
labor agreement but
was delayed because
the NFL Players
Association was not
comfortable with the
procedures or science
involved. Both sides
agreed last month on
the new policy, which
took effect Monday.
A total of 950 tests
will be performed
during the regular
season, postseason
and preseason. In the
offseason, about 385
tests will be done.
Less than one tablespoon of blood will
be taken from each
player.
Each week during
the season, five players on eight teams
will be chosen randomly for testing as
part of the normal
testing procedures
under the NFL’s performance enhancing
drug policy. No tests
will occur on game
days. Players subject
to the blood testing
must be on the active
roster, practice squad
or on injured reserve,
and not already subject to reasonablecause testing.
In the offseason,
every player under
contract not already
undergoing reasonable-cause testing will
be tested to a maximum of 90 per team.

the RVHS total. Also
competing for River
Valley were 107th Ben
Moody (19:52.4) and
114th Garrett Young
(20:10.2).
The Blue Devils were
led by 34th place Kyle
Greenlee (17:51.2)
and 39th place Michael
Edelmann (17:56.7),
followed by 40th
place Caleb Greenlee
(17:58.0), 41st place
Kaleb Crisenberry
(17:58.9) and 78th
place Cade Mason

One stumbling
block in the agreement was the appeals
process. Any appeal
now will be heard
by a neutral person,
not by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell
or someone he designated.
“For the first time
in the history of the
NFL, our new collectively bargained policies usher in a neutral
arbitration process
for appeals of positive
drug tests,” NFLPA
President Eric Winston said in a letter to
union members.
The league and
union also agreed to
a minimum two-game
suspension for a first
driving-under-theinfluence conviction.
Longtime suspensions
would be imposed for
cases with extenuating circumstances
such as personal
injury or property
damage, or in cases of
repeat offenders.
Jets’ Smith missed
meeting night before
31-0 loss
NEW YORK (AP)
— Struggling New
York Jets quarterback
Geno Smith missed
a team meeting the
night before a 31-0
loss to the San Diego
Chargers in which he
was benched.
A team spokesman
says Monday that
Smith’s absence was
an “honest mistake”
after the second-year
quarterback got the
times for the meeting
Saturday night confused. Smith arrived
about 5-10 minutes
after the meeting
ended, and reviewed
the information discussed with offensive
coordinator Marty
Mornhinweg and
quarterbacks coach
David Lee.
It was the first time
Smith had missed a
meeting, according to
the team.
The New York Daily
News first reported
Smith’s absence early
Monday morning.
Smith was benched
in favor of Michael
Vick on Sunday after
a miserable first half
in which he was 4 of
12 for 27 yards with
an interception.

(18:56.5). 91st place
finisher Mitchell
Bolin (19:29.4) and
92nd Kobe Cochran
(19:30.3) also ran for
Gallia Academy.
Eastern seniors
Tyson Long (18:33.0)
and Brock Smith
(19:55.2) finished
61st and 108th for the
Eagles.
Complete results of
the 2014 Unioto Invitational can be found on
the web at www.baumspage.com

consider changing trends
in hunting methods and the
amount of effort and time
that hunters are expending to
From page 6
harvest a deer. Hunting methUndoubtedly the insurance
ods have changed and there
company executive who cuts
is a chance that hunters don’t
the checks for deer-vehicle
put as much effort into findcollisions views the populaing deer like they did even 20
tion differently from the auto
years ago.
body shop owner who relies
Driving a four-wheeler out
on the repair work from the
to a heated, enclosed blind
collisions. Furthermore there
overlooking a corn feeder
may be variations in deer
that has had a trail camera
populations between adjoinwatching over it the past
ing townships, or farms
six months (that you can
even – one person may be
check from your phone), and
complaining about not having
expecting the deer to come
enough deer, while another
out on cue, is a far cry from
person two parcels over says
the days when you had to perthere are too many deer.
sonally scout the woods prior
In determining the approto deer season, and just hope
priate limit, biologists even
that it was a big buck making

Alex Hawley/photo

Gallia Academy senior Jacob Click kicks the ball downfield during the Blue Devils loss to Warren in
Centenary.

Blue Devils host
Fairland in sectionals
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

JACKSON, Ohio — The postseason
is set for the Gallia Academy soccer
team following the Division II boys soccer tournament draw held Sunday.
The Blue Devils (4-10-1) earned an
eight-seed and will host ninth-seeded
Fairland (2-5-3) in a D-2 sectional quarterfinal contest at 6 p.m. on Monday,

Oct. 13.
The winner of that contest will
advance to the D-2 sectional semifinal
at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 14, and face topseeded Warren (10-1-2) in Vincent. The
sectional final will be held on Thursday,
Oct. 18, at 4 p.m. against either South
Point or Marietta.
Complete brackets of the 2014 boys
soccer postseason are available on the
web at www.seodab.org

West Virginia hands Kansas
26th straight road loss
Kansas lost its 26th
straight road game.
MORGANTOWN,
The busiest player
W.Va. — Clint Trickett for the Jayhawks was
threw for 302 yards
Trevor Pardula, who
and a touchdown,
punted 14 times.
Mario Alford returned
Kansas quarterback
a kickoff 94 yards for a Montell Cozart, who
score and West Virgin- had four interceptions
ia beat Kansas 33-14
in a 23-0 loss to Texas
on Saturday.
last week, couldn’t
Rushel Shell ran for a move the offense again
season-high 113 yards and played only the
and a score while Josh first half. Two other
Lambert kicked four
quarterbacks had no
field goals for the
better luck in the secMountaineers (3-2, 1-1 ond half.
Big 12).
West Virginia
The Mountaineers’
amassed 557 yards of
Kevin White finished
offense but its special
with six catches for
teams had an up and
132 yards and matched down day.
Stedman Bailey’s
After the Mountainschool record of five
eers’ Jordan Thompson
straight games with
fumbled a punt on his
100 receiving yards.
18 that led to a short
West Virginia
touchdown run by
jumped ahead 26-0 at
the Jayhawks’ Corey
halftime and cruised
Avery, Alford took the
from there.
ensuing kickoff down
Kansas (2-3, 0-2)
the right sideline for a
managed little offense score to put West Virin the debut for interginia ahead 33-7 late in
im head coach Clint
the third quarter.
Bowen, who took over
Late in the game, the
after Charlie Weis was Jayhawks’ Nick Harfired on Sunday. The
well returned a punt
Jayhawks were held to 76 yards for a TD, the
176 totals yards and
third straight game
nine first downs.
that West Virginia’s

Associated Press

the rubs and scrapes that you
found.
Who is right? Possibly
everybody, or nobody, but no
matter what the final decision
is, you can rest assured that
there are going to be unhappy
people.
Another change in store
for this year is that Ohio
deer hunters will be allowed
to use pistol-cartridge rifles
(essentially rifles chambered
in certain straight-walled
cartridges that were already
legal for handgun hunting)
during the gun seasons. A lot
of people I talk to say they
aren’t interested in using
them, but these certain rifles
and carbines seem to be in
short supply indicating that
at least enough people are

considering them to affect
availability.
Although deer hunters are
not allowed to have more than
three shots in their guns (one
in the chamber and two in the
magazine), magazine plugs
are no longer required. This
could be because certain magazine types (box, rotary, etc.)
do not lend themselves well
to being plugged, but in any
event hunters will be bound
by the honor system and
those found afield with more
than three rounds or shells in
their guns will be cited.
Coming up, the early antlerless-only muzzleloader season
is Saturday and Sunday, Oct.
11 and 12 (only antlerless
deer may be taken that weekend, regardless of the harvest

special teams allowed
a score.
The margin of victory could have been
much greater. West
Virginia had another
field goal attempt
blocked and Dustin
Garrison fumbled
the ball away at the
Kansas 5 following a
28-yard run.
Trickett completed
20 of 35 passes with
an interception. Several of his incompletions
were long throws.
White and Alford both
let passes go off their
hands in the end zone,
resulting in two of
Lambert’s three firstquarter field goals.
White got loose in
single coverage late in
the quarter and Trickett found him in stride
for a 63-yard TD for a
16-0 lead.
Alford turned a
screen pass into a
39-yard gain late in
the second quarter,
leading to Shell’s short
TD run. Lambert, who
earlier had field goals
of 42, 25 and 43 yards,
capped the first-half
scoring with a 53-yarder as time expired.

method). Youth gun season
is Nov. 22-24 and the weeklong deer-gun season will be
Dec. 1-7, the Monday after
Thanksgiving, the way it has
been as long as I can recall.
Muzzleloader season is Jan.
2-5, 2015, and archery season
ends Feb. 1, 2015.
Like last year, hunters will
need to make and their own
deer tags to attach to the
deer. For more information
consult the Ohio Hunting
and Trapping Regulations
handbook for 2014-2015, call
1-800-WILDLIFE or check
out www.wildohio.com
Jim Freeman is the wildlife specialist for the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District.
He can be contacted weekdays at (740)
992-4282 or at jim.freeman@oh.nacdnet.
net

�classifieds

8 Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Daily Sentinel

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(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

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Houses For Sale
3BR, 2BA
READY TO MOVE IN
740-446-3570
Lot for sale on Deenie Dr.
Sunkist Subdivision.
Acreage .73, $14,900
Call 740-446-3481
Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom apartments for
rent, all utilities paid, HUD accepted, Near downtown Pt.
Pleasant, 304-360-0163
1 BR. garage apt. Pt. Pleasant,
electric heat, some utilities
paid. NO pets. $450 month
call 304-593-6542

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Help Wanted General
Help Wanted at a boys' residential treatment center in Patriot, Ohio: physical training, high
school diploma required &amp; and
must be 21; call to apply 740379-9083
Industrial Cleaners Needed in
Buffalo, WV. Full-time Positions Available. Days/Evenings. Must pass background
check and drug test. 304-7686309
Lebanon Township is taking
resumes from October 1st-October 30th for a part-time temporary position. Must have
class B CDL. 32 hours weekly
(Monday-Thursday). $9.00 per
hour. Mail resumes to Lebanon township, 30752 Trouble
Creek Rd Unit B, Portland, OH
45770 or may drop off at township garage.

1BR, Upstairs, Util. Pd, AC,
Wash/Dryer Avail, No
Smoking, No Pets, $450/Mo,
$450/Dep. 258 State St. 740446-3667
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Apartments/Townhouses
Clean 1-Bedroom efficiency
apartment. Conveniently located. Reference, deposit and
no pets. Call 304-675-5162.
Immaculate 2 BR apt. in country, new carpet and cabinets.
Freshly painted, appliances,
W/D hook-ups, water/trash
paid. Beautiful country setting,
only 10 minutes from town.
Must see to appreciate
$425/mo 614-595-7773
or740-645-5953
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
3 - Bdrm / 2 bath Home with
Great Rm, Dining Rm,Heat
pump, located Patriot,OH Rent $550/mth + 1 mth deposit. NO PETS - Water &amp;
Garbage included. Call 740645-8005 Background Check
Req. Show by Appointment
Oct 13 thru 17th, 2014
3 Bdrm - Ranch Style Home Kitchen,Living Rm,Dining Rm,
Back porch,Carport,New appliances,Carpeting and floor tiles.
$750/mo. Open House Fri. Oct
3rd, Sat Oct 4th, Call 5914826.
Rentals
2- Bdrm -2 bath mobile home
in country plus 2 Bdrm 1 bath
Apt. in Gallipolis $500/mo +
Deposit 339-9984.
2BR, Mobile Home for Rent,
$350 month, $300 Deposit
740-853-0173
Mobile Homes For Rent.
Spring Valley Area. $400$480/mo plus deposit. More
Info Call 740-446-4400

Apartment available Now. Riverbend Apts. New Haven
Wva. Now accepting applications for HUD -subsidized, One
bedroom Apts. Utilities included. Based on 30% of adjusted income. Call 304-8823121. Available for Senior and
Disabled people.

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Garden &amp; Produce
We buy Black Walnuts, starting price $13 per 100lbs. after
hulling. Bring your Walnuts to:
Patriot Produce, 62 Village St.
Patriot OH . Open Mon-WedsFri From Oct 1 to Nov 3 Closed
on Wed. Oct. 8th.&amp; 15th.
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Help Wanted General
Paper Carrier Needed!
Areas Covered: Rio Grande,
Patriot, Oak Hill, Thurman, Vinton, Bidwell
Training: 3 Days Schedule:
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Civitas Media is looking for a general
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BLONDIE

Tuesday, October 7, 2014 9

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�sports

10 Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Daily Sentinel

WVU honors Bobby Bowden at homecoming
parade Friday.
“It means a whole lot
MORGANTOWN,
to me,” Bowden, wearW.Va. — Four decades ing a gold blazer, blue
after West Virginia
tie and yellow rose on
fans nearly ran him
his lapel, told reportout of town, Bobby
ers afterward.
Bowden was welcomed
It was Bowden’s
back Saturday.
first trip to Milan
The 84-year-old
Puskar Stadium,
coaching great was
which opened in 1980.
honored at halftime of Bowden said he used
West Virginia’s game
to play golf on the
with Kansas, receiving course where the staloud applause when
dium now stands.
he was introduced.
Bowden was with the
He and wife Ann also
Mountaineers for 10
were marshals of the
seasons, including six
school’s homecoming
as head coach. He left

Associated Press

after the 1975 season
for a long career at
Florida State.
He went 42-26 at
West Virginia and took
the Mountaineers to
two bowl games — a
feat no previous coach
at the school had
accomplished.
The loud applause
from the crowd on
Saturday contrasted
with a time that fans
weren’t so nice.
His decisions were
questioned in his first
season, when the Mountaineers finished 8-3.

In a homecoming loss
to Duke, West Virginia
punted from the Duke
31 and the ball went
into the stands. The
following week, West
Virginia led archrival
Pittsburgh 35-8 at halftime but lost 36-35.
The Pitt loss was
“the darkest day of my
coaching profession,”
Bowden said. “I never
sat on the ball again
after that.”
In 1974, Bowden
endured almost daily
criticism during a 4-7
season.

Some students put a
sheet outside a dormitory window across
the street from his
office that read “ByeBye Bobby.” A “For
Sale” sign was planted
on the front lawn of
his Morgantown home.
His effigy was hung
from a tree on campus.
Bowden called it his
worst season in coaching.
“They tried to fire
me and probably
should have,” Bowden
said, adding that the
university president

and athletic director
stood behind him. “I’ve
learned to live with
that. That’s the nature
of the darn game.”
Bowden stuck
around another season.
After a Peach Bowl
win in 1975, he was
hired away by Florida
State, but four of his
six children stayed
behind and graduated
from West Virginia.
He spent the next 34
seasons with the Seminoles, winning national
championships in 1993
and 1999.

No. 20 Ohio State URG women blast Brescia, 7-1
tops newcomer
Maryland 52-24
By Randy Payton

URG Sports Information

Associated Press

COLLLEGE PARK, Md. — Ohio State marched
up and down a field it had never seen before as if it
owned the place, scoring on one quick drive after
another as the No. 20 Buckeyes piled up 533 yards
Saturday and spoiled Maryland’s Big Ten home debut
with a 52-24 win.
J.T. Barrett completed 18 of 23 passes for 267 yards
and four touchdowns and also ran 16 times for 71
yards and a score. Ezekiel Elliott rushed for 139 yards
on 24 carries, and the defense had four interceptions
to hush the first sellout crowd at College Park in
nearly six years.
The 51,802 fans, at least those rooting for the home
team, must’ve wondered what their great conference
shift had wrought. Ohio State scored on drives lasting
3:01, 3:27, 1:18, 1:46 and 0:05 to take a 31-10 halftime
lead. The Buckeyes (4-1, 1-0) have scored 168 points
in three wins since losing to Virginia Tech. They won
their 17th straight Big Ten regular-season game — as
well as their 17th consecutive Big Ten opener.
The Terrapins (4-2, 1-1) had an impressive Big Ten
debut win on the road the previous week at Indiana,
but their major highlight in their first-ever meeting
with the Buckeyes was a school-record 57-yard field
goal by Brad Craddock.
C.J. Brown started for Maryland despite leaving the
Indiana victory with a sprained left wrist. He played
the first half and was ineffective and often under pressure, completing 11 of 18 passes for 71 yards with
three sacks. He also threw an interception deep in
Maryland territory late in the half.
Caleb Rowe replaced Brown in the second half
and led a promising drive until his unwise heave was
picked off by Eli Apple in the end zone.
The Buckeyes then went back to work making the
Terrapins look like, well, terrapins. An 80-yard drive
needed only four plays and 1:27 before Barrett hit
Devin Smith was a 30-yard down-the-middle strike to
make it a four-touchdown lead. Barrett later added a
9-yard scoring run to cap a 60-yard drive that sapped
an entire 4:02 off the clock.
Rowe finished 13 for 22 for 173 yards with one
touchdown and three interceptions, including one
returned 19 yards by Raekwon McMillan for a Buckeyes score.
Ohio State coach Urban Meyer was concerned about
the big plays allowed by his defense — three touchdowns of 60-plus yards — in a 50-28 win over Cincinnati the previous week. The problem isn’t fully solved:
Rowe hit Jacquille Veii for a 60-yard pass to set up a
fourth-quarter score.

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
- Kasey Crow scored the
first of her two goals
just under two minutes into the game and
the University of Rio
Grande never looked
back, rolling to a 7-1 win
over Brescia University,
Thursday night, in Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference
women’s soccer at Evan
E. Davis Field.
Senior forward Karla
Garn (Morrow, OH)
also scored a pair of
goals in the win for Rio
Grande, which improved
to 6-3 overall and 3-0 in
the KIAC with the win.
Crow, a junior forward
from Chillicothe, scored
off of a feed from sophomore defender Brooke
Keipper (Cincinnati,
OH) just 1:45 into the
contest to give the RedStorm the early lead.
Brescia (0-11, 0-2) did
manage to tie the game
on a breakaway goal by
Eva Burelos at 19:15,
but it was all Rio Grande
from that point on.
Junior midfielder Taylor Ahrens (Ross, OH)
broke the tie and gave
the RedStorm the lead
for good with an unassisted marker exactly 18
minutes later and junior
forward Courtney Young
(Okeana, OH) added an
unassisted score of her
own with 1:45 left in
the half to give Rio a 3-1
lead at the break.
For Ahrens, who
missed her entire sophomore season with a knee
injury, the goal was her
first since scoring twice
in a win over West Virginia Tech on October

submitted photo

Rio Grande senior Karla Garn scored a pair of goals to help the RedStorm past Brescia University,
7-1, in KIAC women’s soccer action at Evan E. Davis Field. The win was Rio’s fifth in a row.

3, 2012.
Garn, who had just
three goals in her career
entering the contest,
pushed the lead to 5-1
with markers at the
65:47 and 77:29 marks.
Sophomore midfielder
Laurel Amstutz (Yellow
Springs, OH) assisted
on the first score.
Rio closed out the
scoring on an unassisted
goal by Crow at 78:35
and an unassisted score
by junior midfielder
Rachel Hoffman (Franklin, OH) with 2:49 left in
the match.

“We started off fantastic and then, for whatever reason, we took
our foot off the gas for a
while,” said Rio Grande
head coach Callum Morris. “Laziness cost us the
goal that we conceded.
And to be honest, when
you get off 30 shots, you
probably ought to have
more than seven goals.
We did the same thing
against West Virginia
Tech. I’m happy that we
got the win because it
puts us in a good position, but we have to
make sure that we’re

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ready for every game we
go into and play a full 90
minutes.”
Rio outshot the
Bearcats 30-3 overall and
22-2 in shots on goal.
Senior keeper Allison
Keeney (Cincinnati,
OH) went the distance
in net and collected one
save.
tRio Grande returns
to action next Wednesday, traveling to rival
Shawnee State for a
non-conference match.
Kickoff is set for 2 p.m.
at Shawnee Turf.

A
D
V
E
R
T
I
S
E
!

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