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                  <text>Can women of
science survive
a garish shirt?

Partly sunny.
High around
35. Low near 21.

South Gallia
to host
TVC girls.

EDITORIAL s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 185, Volume 64

Thursday, November 20, 2014 s 50¢

Meeting united against HB 515
By Donald Lambert

elambert@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The Meigs
County Commission opened the
floor to public discussion on the
hotly debated House Bill 515 on
Tuesday.
Introduced by Rep. Ross
McGregor earlier this year, HB
515 addresses the issue of timber
theft and allows officials to better
prosecute timber theft cases. Commissioners Randy Smith and Tim
Ihle said that there have been laws
in place in regards to timber theft.
Reactions from the Meigs Coun-

ty community have been very negative due to the restrictions and
additional requirements needed
for timber removal, downplaying
local official and law enforcement
involvement, and the wording of
the bill being vague. The section
of the bill that has come under fire
the most are the requirements for
landowners to cut down and sell
timber.
According to the bill, the landowner who would provide the timber would need to have a contract
written up with the timber buyer
that would include several documents, including two property

surveys, a plat map of the land, an
aerial photograph of the land, and
a topographical map of the land.
After all that is taken care of, the
harvesting can begin.
“It turns the landowner into the
middle-man and that’s not how it
should be,” Smith said.
On the flip side, the timber
buyer would have to employ best
management practices, including
minimizing property damage, and
must keep records of the work
done for up to six years among
other requirements. The downplaying of local powers has also
come under much scrutiny. Sever-

al Meigs County citizens in attendance expressed concern with the
Division of Forestry and the Ohio
attorney general being involved in
matters that have been handled by
local authorities in the past. Under
the bill, the Division of Forestry
and the attorney general can get
involved in timber theft cases if
requested. The citizens in attendance also wished the bills’ wording was clearer on such things like
the requirements for landowners/
timber buyers. There was also
concern that the bill would hurt
timber businesses in the area.
Due to audience demand, the

commission announced they will
write a resolution showing the
concern of the people of Meigs
County and send it to Rep. Debbie
Phillips, who was asked to attend
the meeting but was not present. Smith said he hoped to send
a copy of the resolution to the
House Committee overseeing HB
515, who will be holding another
session on Dec. 2 to discuss the
bill. Commission members urged
members of the community to
attend.
Reach Donald Lambert at 740-992-2155,
Ext. 2555. or on Twitter @Donaldlambert22

Williams
hired
as boys
coach
By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — After about
an hour of deliberation during
a special meeting, the Meigs
Local School District Board of
Education made the decision to
hire Scott Williams as the boy’s
seventh-grade basketball coach,
beginning immediately.
Rusty Bookman, superintendent, said that while Williams
will still work as the boys’ assistant varsity basketball coach for
the 2014-15 school year, his main
focus will now be working with
the seventh-grade basketball
team.
At a recent board meeting
earlier this month, a motion was
made to hire Darin Logan as the
boys’ seventh-grade basketball
coach, for the 2014-15 school
year, but the motion died due to
a lack of a second.
Present were Larry Tucker,
board president, Mark Rhonemus, treasurer/CFO, members
Ryan Mahr, Heather Hawley, Roger Abbott and Todd
Snowden.
The next regular board of education meeting will be Tuesday,
Nov. 25 at 7 p.m.

Submitted photos

Southern Local students work with Dell’Amore to safely prepare food during his presentation.

Southern students get a taste of healthy living
Staff report

RACINE — Southern Local Schools
hosted “Inspiring Kids
through the POWER
of FOOD!,” led by Dr.
Robert Dell’Amore on
Monday, Nov. 17.
“Inspiring Kids
through The POWER
of FOOD!,” an innovative, award-winning
performance workshop, helps teach
students the essential
life skills necessary to
make healthy lifestyle
and dietary choices.
Through a hands-on,

interactive approach,
students were instructed on healthy meal
preparation, including
recipe development and
execution.
Studies in the past
have shown that when
youth are taught the
skills for healthy meal
purchasing and preparation, they learn life-long
lessons that improve
the overall quality of
their diet and increase
healthy food purchasing
decisions.
Sponsored by the
National Physical
Education Program

(PEP) Award, this
residency featured, Dr.
Dell’Amore and Ms.
Elaine Medin, who
shared their passion for
food and experience
working with youth,
preschool through college level. They taught
easy-to-replicate culinary techniques/recipes
incorporatingnew fruit/
vegetable combinations, salt, butter and
sugar free cooking techniques, safe food preparation as well as basic
knife skills to gain confidence in the kitchen.
These skills culminated

Dr. Robert Dell’Amore demonstrates healthy cooking at an
assembly at Southern Local.

in the preparation of
three vegetarian recipes
that were served.
Dr. Dell’Amore has
dedicated more than
10 years of research
and development to
help more than 60,000

parents, educators, children and teens develop
better eating habits
through demonstration
and execution ofsafe
and efficient culinary
skills and delicious,
nutritious meals.

New Haven continues 40-year Christmas tradition
By Mindy Kearns

will continue when the
Town of New Haven
holds its annual ChristNEW HAVEN — A
nearly 40-year tradition mas celebration on Sat-

Special to The Register

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Football: 6
Basketball: 6
— FEATURES
Classified: 7
Comics: 9
Television: 10

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CONVERSATION
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thoughts.

urday, Dec. 6.
The New Haven Fire
Department Ladies
Auxiliary Christmas
Craft Show has been
a staple in the town
for the past 37 years,
according to Shelby
Duncan, organizer.
The show has been an
annual event, with the
exception of one year,
when the Wahama football team advanced in
postseason play.
This year, the craft
show will be held at
the fire station from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. Along
with the craft show,
a parade will be held
at 11 a.m., and there
will be a gospel sing at
12:30 p.m.
Duncan said spaces

are still available at
the craft show, which
traditionally has about
50 vendors. She stated
candles, ceramics, hair
bows and jewelry will
be among the offerings, as well as the
auxiliary’s famous dish
cloths. The dish cloths
are made in Ohio, and
have been sold by the
auxiliary for the past
46 years. Auxiliary
members bought 100
dozen in their most
recent order because
many people buy them
by the dozen, Duncan
said.
The kitchen will
also be open during
the show. Hot dogs,
barbecues and tacos in
a bag, as well as other

food and drinks, will be
sold.
Duncan said proceeds
from the show are used
for the fire department.
She stated the auxiliary
sometimes helps buy
equipment, and they
always host an annual
Christmas dinner for
the firefighters.
The parade, which is
sponsored by the town,
will begin at 11 a.m.,
with the line-up at
10:30 a.m. It will end at
the fire station, where
Santa will be visiting
with the children and
hearing their wish lists.
New this year will be
a gospel sing, under
the direction of Evelyn
Roush. Set to begin at
12:30 p.m., the sing

will be inside the fire
station, but those
attending might wish
to bring chairs. Scheduled to sing are “Heaven’s Call Trio” from
Kenna, WV; Evelyn and
Adam Roush from New
Haven; and the “Gospel Bluegrass Country
Gentlemen” from Meigs
County, Ohio.
Anyone wanting to
enter the parade should
contact Recorder
Roberta Hysell at town
hall, 304-882-3050
or 304-882-3203. For
more information, or
to reserve a space at
the craft show, contact
Duncan at 304-8822814.

�LOCAL

2 Thursday, November 20, 2014

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

MEIGS COUNTY COMMUNITY CALENDAR

FETTY
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Daniel Stephen Fetty,
27, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., passed away November
18, 2014. Funeral services will be held at the Deal
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, Saturday, November
22, 2014, at 1 p.m. Burial will follow in the Union
Cemetery in New Haven, W.Va. Friends may visit the
family from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. prior to the service at
the funeral home. In lieu of flowers, donations can
be made to Deal Funeral Home, PO Box 468, Point
Pleasant, WV, 25550.

THURSDAY, NOV. 20

PEERY
APPLE GROVE, W.Va. — Charles William Peery,
65, of Apple Grove, W.Va., died Tuesday, November
18, 2014, at St. Mary’s Medical Center in Huntington,
W.Va.
A funeral service will be at 1 p.m., Friday, November 21, 2014, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant, with Rev. Don Reynolds officiating. Burial
will follow at Barton Chapel Cemetery in Apple
Grove. Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m., Thursday, at
the funeral home.
WARD
CROWN CITY — Rachel Ward, 76, of Crown City,
died Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2014, at Arbors of Gallipolis.
There will be no services per her request. Hall
Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, is in
charge of arrangements.

22. Serving starts at 5 p.m. Tickets are only $7 and can be purPOMEROY — Ohio State
chased at the Rutland Dept. Store,
University Extension at Meigs
Quality Print, Pomeroy Flower
County will be hosting their
Shop and Connies Corner, or call
annual Holiday program titled
Danny Davis at 740-508-0688.
“Keep Calm and Jingle On” on
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Thursday, November 20. The
“Night of Thanksgiving” will be
program will have two time slot
Saturday, Nov. 22 at 6 p.m. and the
SATURDAY, NOV. 22
to choose from: 11:00 am – 1:00
Mulberry Community Center. Music
SYRACUSE —The Meigs
pm and 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm. For
County Garden Clubs will be host- will be provided by the Thanksgivmore information about the event,
ing their annual Christmas Flower ing Community Choir. A traditional
contact the OSU Meigs County
Thanksgiving Meal will be served.
Show from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and
Extension office or email Debbie
The event is being hosted by the
Sunday, Nov. 23 from 1-4 p.m.at
Watson at watson.551@osu.edu.
the Syracuse Community Center. Meigs County and Middleport
SYRACUSE — The Ladies of
Open judging will take place at 1 Ministerial Associations and Meigs
the Meigs County Republican
p.m. Saturday. Do you have a spe- County churches and is free.
Party will hold their regular
MIDDLEPORT — Middleport
cial houseplant you would like to
monthly meeting Thursday,
share? If so, the group would love Church of Christ will hold a regisNov. 20 at 6:30 p.m. at Carleton
to see your green thumb at work. tration/evaluation day for Upward
School. Refreshments served. All If you have a knack for arrangBasketball &amp; Cheerleading signwomen are welcome.
ups on Saturday, Nov. 22 from 9
ing flowers the group is there to
a.m. to 1 p.m. in the church’s Famgive you a chance to show your
FRIDAY, NOV. 21
talents. Support your community. ily Life Center, corner of 5th &amp;
POMEROY — The Pomeroy
For more information contact
Main Streets. This is open to all
High School Class of 1959 will be Pam Schatz at 740-667-9712.
Kindergarten (or age 5) through
having their Third Friday lunch at
RUTLAND — The Rutland Vol. 6th graders. For more information
Fox Pizza at noon.
Fire Department will host their
call 992-2914 or see the Facebook
MIDDLEPORT — The Free
annual turkey dinner at Meigs
page at Middleport Church of
Community Dinner at the Middle- Elementary School Saturday, Nov. Christ Upward Sports.
port Church of Christ will be held
this Friday, Nov. 21 at 5 p.m. this
is a week earlier due to Thanksgiving. The community will be
serving turkey, noodles, green
beans, roll and pie. Everyone is
welcome. Doors open at 4:30 p.m.

MEIGS COUNTY LOCAL BRIEFS

4-H Committee
Plat Book sales
POMEROY — Meigs County 4-H Committee has
reduced the price of the current plat book to $10.
Funds support the 4-H program in the county by providing funds for supplies, camp and college scholarships, learning opportunities and more. To purchase
a plat book, you can stop by the Extension Office on
Monday-Thursday from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m (closed
12-12:30 for lunch) mail $15 (for book, shipping &amp;
handling) to Meigs County 4-H Committee, PO Box
32, Pomeroy, OH 45769 or visit the Meigs County
Recorder’s Office in the Court House.

District 18 public works
commission meeting
MARIETTA — A meeting of the District 18 Executive Committee will be 10 a.m. Dec. 11 at the Best
Western, 701 Pike Street, Marietta (formerly known
as the Holiday Inn). The purpose of this meeting

is for the Executive Committee to select projects
for Round 29 funding under the Ohio Public Works
Commission State Capital Improvement and Local
Transportation Improvement Programs (SCIP/LTIP).
If you have questions regarding this meeting, contact
Michelle Hyer at (740) 376-1025.

p.m., a service by the Middleport Ministerial Association, Christmas carols, and a parade with Santa and
Mrs. Claus as the Grand Marshals. There will be time
for the kids to visit with Santa and his Mrs. after
the parade. They will be in the same building as the
Christmas Market.

MCA Christmas
celebration schedule

Christmas Along
The River

MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Community
Association is having their fourth annual Christmas
Market on Dec. 6 at the Masonic Lodge/Riverbend
Arts Council building on the corner of N. Second Ave.
and Walnut St. The Market will be open from 10 to
6. Concessions will be sold. We do have some empty
spaces and would like to invite local crafters to join
us. Each 8 ft. space is $20. Let us know if you need
electricity for your display. Please contact us as soon
as possible if you are interested (Deb - 992-5877/Texanna - 992-1121.) This is the day of the Middleport
Christmas celebration which includes carriage rides,
the Big Bend Community Band playing from 4-4:30

POMEROY — Pomeroy’s Christmas Along the
River event will be Nov. 30. The lineup for the parade
will be at the old Football field behind McClure’s, with
the parade starting at 2 p.m. Before the start of the
parade, the Big Bend Community Band, sponsored by
the Riverbend Arts Council, will play on Main Street
from 1:30 to 2 p.m. After the parade, Meigs Marauder
Marching Band will play on Court Street, and JoAnne
Newsome, with the Ladies Auxiliary of the American Legion Drew Webster Post 39, will be choosing
the winner of the raffle, of which the prize is a quilt.
Santa will also be making an appearance at Peoples
Bank, and local businesses will be open from 2-4 p.m.

Softball tournament raises money
Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes Tuesday through Saturday.
Please call for more information on local pricing.

CONTACT US
EDITOR:
Michael Johnson
740-446-2342 Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER:
Ed Litteral
740-353-3101 Ext. 1925
elitteral@civitasmedia.com
NEWSROOM:
Lindsay Kriz
740-992-2155 Ext. 2555
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

ADVERTISING:
Sarah Thompson
740-992-2155 Ext. 2554
sthompson@civitasmedia.com
Brenda Davis
740-992-2155 Ext. 2553
bdavis@civitasmedia.com
SPORTS:
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@civitasmedia.com
Alex Hawley, Ext. 2100
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

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

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truck driverS!
Experienced drivers and new Class A
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A softball tournament as held to raise money to send three Meigs High School football players to Florida for the Blue/Grey All-American
game. Pictured are the teams that placed first and second in the tournament, seven teams participated. Each team consisted of six boys
and four girls. The round-robin portion took place Nov. 14, while the single-elimination portion took place Nov. 15.

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�LOCAL/NATION

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 20, 2014 3

Robert Dafford to Sonshine Circle working on projects
hold book signing
in Point Pleasant
By Lindsay Kriz

donation of $25 to the MCCOA.
Other projects of interest
include making “Necessity BasRACINE — The Sonshine Cirkets” for six female veterans who
cle recently met with the program are patients at the VA Hospital in
by Evelyn Foreman and Betty
Chillicothe, the donation of $200
Proffitt.
to the Silver Run Food Pantry,
After devotions, the group had
(which will purchase 800 pounds
their regular business meeting
of food for those in need), donatwith Kathryn Hart presiding.
ing $200 to the missions trip of
Mary Ball gave the secretary’s
two Southern Charge ladies who
report and Ann Zirkle gave the
are going to Honduras next year
treasurer’s report. Speakers
and a donation of $200 to the
announced that the group has col- Racine Fire Dept members for a
lected more than 35 new t-shirts
Christmas meal and RACO treats.
to be sent to the veterans at the
The Dollar General Store in
Chillicothe VA Hospital. Kathryn
Racine has asked if they could
thanked the group for the t-shirts
put up a “Necessity Tree” so that
collection, for Kathy McDaniel
area people could donate to the
and Jackie White conducting
“Necessity Bags.”s The Sonshine
the games at the recent group’s
Circle will pack the bags/baskets
Thanksgiving dinner, to everyone with their donated items and
who made refreshments for the
Kathy McDaniel and Jackie White
Racine Fire Dept’s Halloween
will start delivering on Dec 15.
Party and to those who donated
Necessity Bags/Baskets are filled
greeting cards for the Sonshine
with much-needed items including
Circle to send to folks. Seven
toilet tissue, paper towels, sham‘thank you’ notes were read from
poo, household cleaners and other
people in the community.
items, then they are given to those
The group discussed recent
in need in the area with the focus
projects, including donation of
being on the senior population.
money to the Serenity House
Like last year’s bags, each bag
for two different emergency
will contain a pair of handmade
needs, the purchase of a Large
house slippers made and donated
Print NIV Bible for a person who by Mara Roush from Ravenswood,
needs one, donated $50 to the
W.Va. This is the fourth year for
Meigs Humane Society for purthe Necessity Bag project. In
chasing straw and the monthly
2010 the group voted to start the

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

By Donald Lambert

elambert@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT — The Public Art of Robert
Dafford will be launched in Point Pleasant on Saturday with a book signing from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at
the Point Pleasant River Museum.
Both Dafford and author and photographer Philip
Gould will be available to sign copies of the book.
The Public Art of Robert Dafford provides a vivid
depiction of the renowned artist’s work through text
and images by Philip Gould.
Dafford is one the most prolific and successful
American muralists working today, with more than
350 large-scale public works in the United States
and overseas. His work has garnered him numerous
awards, including the Bronze Medaille d’Honneur
de la Suresnes, France, and an honorary Doctorate of
Humane Letters from Shawnee State University and
has been featured in Smithsonian, National Geographic, Southern Living, The New York Times, Seattle
Times, Los Angeles Times, Ottawa Sun, and Le Droit.
The Public Art of Robert Dafford focuses on
murals painted along the Ohio and Mississippi river
valleys and puts his work into the context of the
towns surrounding the murals.
“Dafford’s murals do not exist in a vacuum. They
are vital parts of their respective communities,”
Gould said.
Reach Donald Lambert at 740-992-2155, Ext. 2555. or on Twitter @
Donaldlambert22

project in lieu of a gift exchange
between members at Christmas
time. It has proven to been such a
popular project that the necessity
bags have been increased to more
than 40 and some other churches
in the area have adopted the idea.
Over 90 cards were individually
signed by each member during the
meeting.
The group voted to purchase
two fans for the noodle-making
crew. As many know,Sonshine Circle is largely funded by the making
and sale of homemade noodles.
Noodles are routinely made every
other month, but sometimes more
during the holiday season. They
are then sold for $2.50 a bag and
most are sold before they are even
made.
Toward the closing of the business meeting an offering was
taken ($41) and Happy Birthday
was sung to Louise Frank. Evelyn
Foreman and Betty Proffitt did
some inspirational readings and
then served refreshments to those
aforementioned as well as Mabel
Brace, Ruth Frank, Mildred Hard,
Wilma Smith, Denise Holman, Jan
McKee, Edie Hubbard, Blondena
Rainer, Marilyn Cooper and Hazel
McKelvey.
The next meeting will be Dec.
11 and all are invited. It is open to
all denominations.

Gun sales surge ahead decision
FERGUSON, Mo.
(AP) — Some suburban
St. Louis gun dealers
have been doing brisk
business, particularly
among first-time buyers,
as fearful residents await
a grand jury's decision
on whether to indict the
police officer who fatally
shot Michael Brown.
Metro Shooting
Supplies, in an area near
the city's main airport,
reports selling two to
three times more weapons than usual in recent
weeks — an average of
30 to 50 guns each day
— while the jury prepares
to conclude its threemonth review of the case
that sparked looting and
weeks of sometimes-violent protests in August.
"We're selling everything that's not nailed
down," owner Steven
King said. "Police aren't
going to be able to protect
every single individual. If
you don't prepare yourself and get ready for the
worst, you have no one
to blame but yourself."
The store's waiting list
for private lessons and
concealed-carry training
classes extends into 2015.
Protest leaders say they
are preparing for non-violent demonstrations after
the grand jury's decision
is announced, but they
also acknowledge the
risk of more unrest if the
panel decides not to issue
criminal charges against
Darren Wilson, the white
officer who shot Brown,

who was black and
unarmed.
Other gun dealers say
their sales spikes are comparable to the increases
seen soon after Brown's
death on Aug. 9.
"I've probably sold
more guns this past
month than all of last
year," said County Guns
owner Adam Weinstein,
who fended off looters
last summer at his storefront on West Florissant
Avenue, the roadway
that was the scene of
many nightly protests.
Weinstein stood guard
over his business with an
assault rifle and pistol.
The store has since
moved out of Ferguson
— in part because of
concerns about potential
further violence.
First-time gun owners
account for about 60 percent
of his recent customers, King
said. Among them is Dave
Benne, who on Saturday
purchased a Smith &amp;
Wesson handgun as shoppers
swarmed the 8,600-squarefoot showroom.
Benne said he's considered buying a gun for
some time, but the events
in Ferguson, a town that
borders his community
of Florissant and shares
a school district with its
neighbor, were the decisive factor.
"Everyone else has
one," he said. "I figured
I?d better too."
The St. Louis County
Police Department
reports a sharp increase

in the number of concealed-carry permits
issued since Brown's
death compared with a
year ago.
From May through July,
the county issued fewer
permits compared with
2013, records show. But
from Aug. 1 through Nov.
12, officials issued 600
more permits, including
more than twice as many
in October as a year earlier. Fifty-three more permits were issued in the
first eight business days
of November than in all of
November 2013.
Police spokesman
Brian Schellman said "it
would be naive" to say
the increase has not been
driven by concern over
the grand jury decision.
The purchases are not
limited to residents. The
owner of an online business that sells tactical
gear to law-enforcement
agencies said his warehouse in the suburb of
Chesterfield has been
visited by Missouri state
troopers and officers
from the Department
of Homeland Security
assigned to help state and
local police.
"None of us has ever
seen anything quite
like this before," said
Chad Weinman of Cat5
Commerce, which
operates the website
TacticalGear.com. "There
is an uncertainty in the air
that has my entire staff on
edge. To say that St. Louis
residents are concerned

about what will transpire
in the coming days is an
understatement."
At the Ferguson WalMart, one of more than a
dozen stores attacked the
night after Brown's death,
managers have removed
ammunition from shelves
as a precaution.
The move to make the
ammo less visible apparently did not deter customers. A manager said
Monday that the store
had sold most of its supply of bullets.

Jeff Roberson | AP

Steven King, left, fills out paperwork recently before selling a
handgun to first-time gun owner Dave Benne at Metro Shooting
Supplies, in Bridgeton, Mo. King says he’s sold two to three times
more weapons in recent weeks than normal as a grand jury decides
whether to indict Ferguson police Officer Darren Wilson in the
shooting death of Michael Brown.

Holzer is proud to
announce that
Melva Pinn-Bingham,
MD, Radiation
Oncologist,
has joined our team
of highly skilled
professionals at
Holzer Center for
Cancer Care.

NBC scraps television project
By David Bauder

wine and a pill when they were together
in a Lake Tahoe, California, hotel room in
1982. When she woke up the next mornNEW YORK — NBC has scrapped
ing, “I wasn’t wearing my pajamas and
a Bill Cosby comedy that was under
I remembered before I passed out I had
development, the second outlet within a been sexually assaulted by this man.”
day to put off or abandon a Cosby projCosby’s lawyer, Martin Singer, said
ect after another sexual assault allegain a letter to The Associated Press that
tion against the comic emerged.
Dickinson’s charges were “false and outNBC spokeswoman Rebecca Marks
landish” and were contradicted by Dicksaid Wednesday the project “is no loninson herself in a published autobiograger under development,” and had no
phy. Cosby’s spokesman, David Brokaw,
further comment.
has not returned calls for comment.
Netflix announced late Tuesday that it
The spiraling scandal — which
was postponing the Nov. 27 premiere of a involves allegations that were widely
new Cosby standup comedy special, givreported on a decade ago as well as
ing no hint about whether it will ever be
new accusations — has threatened the
aired. Hours earlier in an interview with
77-year-old comedian’s reputation as
“Entertainment Tonight,” actress Janice
America’s TV dad at a time when he
Dickinson became the third woman in
was launching a comeback. A year ago
recent weeks to allege she’d been assault- a standup special — his first in 30 years
ed by Cosby — charges strongly denied
— aired on Comedy Central and drew a
by the comedian’s lawyer.
hefty audience of 2 million viewers. His
Dickinson told “Entertainment
prospective new series was announced
Tonight” that Cosby had given her red
by NBC in January.

AP Television Writer

Dr. Pinn-Bingham received her Doctor of Medicine at East Carolina University in
Greenville, North Carolina. She completed her Residency in Radiation Oncology at
the University of California in Irvine, California, where she was Chief Resident.
Dr. Pinn-Bingham also completed an Internal Medicine Internship at Pitt County
Memorial Hospital in Greenville, North Carolina.
Dr. Pinn-Bingham is Board Certified by the American Board of Radiology, Radiation
Oncology Board Certified and is a member of the American College of Radiation
Oncology and the American Society for Radiation Oncology.
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170 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH.

To learn more about Holzer providers or to Find a Doctor,
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�E ditorial
4 Thursday, November 20, 2014

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Dealings on
nuke program
are worrisome
When dealing with the Soviets and their nuclear
aggression, President Ronald Reagan famously
cited an old Russian proverb: “Trust, but verify.”
In his current dealings with Iran and its nuclear
ambitions, President Barack Obama seems to be
forgetting about that second part. He is asking
Americans to trust a negotiating adversary who
keeps trying to remind the world that it remains
the same bad actor it was during the 1979 hostage
crisis.
Nearly a year into the Obama administration’s
nuclear negotiations with Iran, it becomes more
and more apparent that the American people are
watching a bad deal unfold as it gets hatched in
their name. Several new and alarming hints have
emerged in just the past few days that should
make everyone suspicious.
One of them was the incredible and extremely
provocative decision by Iranian officials to tweet
out — as negotiations proceeded — a nine-point
plan for annihilating Israel and making all of its
Jews “return to their home countries.” In the
world of international relations, this sort of plan is
typically referred to as “ethnic cleansing.”
Meanwhile, Reuters reported Saturday that Iran
stepped up its nuclear enrichment activities while
supposedly under an interim agreement not to do
so. A leaked report from the International Atomic
Energy Agency said that Iran has “been feeding
natural uranium gas into a single so-called IR-5
centrifuge at a research facility” this year. This
act does not signify an ebb in that nation’s nuclear
ambitions — quite the contrary — and is almost
certainly a violation of Iran’s interim agreement
with Washington. Even so, the Obama administration has brushed it off, pointing out that the Iranians stopped doing it right after they were caught
at it.
“We raised that issue with Iran as soon as the
[International Atomic Energy Agency] reported
it,” State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki
said. “The Iranians have confirmed that they will
not continue that activity as cited in the IAEA
report, so it’s been resolved.” This is reminiscent
of the husband who ends his affair right after his
wife discovers it.
Meanwhile, Olli Heinonen, a Finnish former
deputy chief of the IAEA, has charged that Iran
might have as many as 5,000 modern IR-2 centrifuges for enriching uranium — five times what
Iranian leaders have admitted they have.
Despite having promised cooperation with
international nuclear monitors, Iran has repeatedly dragged its feet on giving inspectors access
to important sites and has refused to admit one of
the IAEA’s inspectors, believed to be an American
national. The IAEA, as Heinonen said in a conference call Tuesday, “is the only authority that can
verify compliance.”
In short, Iran’s behavior is not that of a regime
that cares much whether it is cooperating or
keeping its word. Obama seems hell-bent on hammering out a deal with Iran — even if it means
bypassing Congress to implement. Iran’s leaders,
meanwhile, continue to remind the U.S. and the
entire world that there is no reason to trust them.
Reprinted from the Colorado Springs (Colo.) Gazette.

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THEIR VIEW

Can women of science survive a garish shirt?

a speeding bullet. It is, in
When Giovanni da Vershort, a thrilling triumph
razzano returned from his
for human ingenuity.
famous 16th-century voyage
But let’s not get carried
exploring North America,
away and lose sight of trivithe king of France rebuked
alities.
him for lack of gender incluIn discussing the mission
sivity aboard La Dauphine.
on
camera after the landing,
When William Clark and
Rich
Taylor
wore a HawaiianMeriwether Lewis made
Lowry
it to the Pacific Ocean and
King Features style shirt depicting
cartoonish, scantily clad,
back, President Thomas Jef- columnist
buxom women brandishing
ferson quizzed them about
firearms. And just like that
any microaggressions they
Taylor stood for the subjugation of
may have committed against their
women and their exclusion from
Indian interpreter Sacagawea durthe world of science. Taylor was
ing the arduous trip.
mercilessly condemned on Twitter
When Neil Armstrong walked
and the Internet until the next day
on the moon and said his memohe apologized in tears for having
rable line about “one small step
for man,” President Richard Nixon committed the sartorial equivalent
of a thought crime.
called to register his regret that
Let’s stipulate that Taylor’s
Armstrong had strongly implied
shirt — custom-made for him by
that only men could walk on the
a female friend who was delighted
moon.
he wore it — was tasteless. It was
None of this actually happened,
more appropriate for a stroll on
of course, but only because all of
the Atlantic City boardwalk or for
these epic human achievements
a day at Comic Con than for any
occurred before the advent of
professional setting, let alone for
Twitter and the modern feminist
perpetual outrage machine. Other- highly public interviews about an
wise, Verrazzano would have been event generating interest around
the world. Taylor could have done
browbeaten and forced into ritual
worse than make a trip to Brooks
apologies long before any of the
Brothers prior to his star turn.
natives got a chance to eat him.
Although he is not exactly the
Matt Taylor lives in a different
buttoned-up type. Involved in
time. He is the British project
authoring 70 scientific papers
scientist for the Rosetta mis— focusing, in the words of the
sion that succeeded last week in
NASA website, “on energetic parlanding a module on Comet 67P/
ticle dynamics in near-Earth space
Churyumov-Gerasimenko, some
and in the interaction of the sun’s
300 million miles from Earth. The
solar wind with the Earth’s magmission included a journey of 4
netic field” — the bearded Taylor
billion miles and is a feat that has
has enough tattoos to compete
been compared to landing a fly on

with the average rock star. He
added one on his leg earlier this
year depicting Rosetta’s module
reaching the comet as a sign of his
confidence in success.
This is not your father’s Mission
Control.
It’s one thing to say that Taylor
would have been better served
wearing a tie, even a clip-on, on
his big day; it’s another to accuse
him of a dastardly betrayal of
women in science. Any young
woman interested in science who
will be deterred from pursuing
her dream because of one garish
shirt worn by one scientist who
was practically unknown the day
before yesterday needs bucking
up. Thank heavens Marie Curie
wasn’t so delicate, or she never
would have won one Nobel Prize,
let alone two.
The overreaction to Taylor’s
shirt doesn’t just implicitly send
the message that women are helplessly vulnerable to the smallest of
unintended slights; it makes feminists look witlessly censorious and
absurdly humorless, not that they
ever seem to care.
The atrocity of Taylor’s shirt will
be forgotten soon enough, and it
will be on to the next thing. In the
past few days, we have learned
that mankind can chase down a
comet speeding through space
at 34,000 mph, but resisting the
outrage machine, kicked into high
gear over a trifle, is completely
beyond its powers.
Rich Lowry can be reached via e-mail:
comments.lowry@nationalreview.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Thursday,
Nov. 20, the 324th day of
2014. There are 41 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Nov. 20, 1789, New
Jersey became the first
state to ratify the Bill of
Rights.
On this date:
In 1620, Peregrine
White was born aboard
the Mayflower in Massachusetts Bay; he was the
first child born of English
parents in present-day
New England.
In 1910, the Mexican
Revolution of 1910 had
its beginnings under the
Plan of San Luis Potosi
issued by Francisco I.
Madero.
In 1929, the radio program “The Rise of the
Goldbergs” debuted on
the NBC Blue Network.
In 1947, Britain’s
future queen, Princess

Elizabeth, married Philip
Mountbatten, Duke of
Edinburgh, at Westminster Abbey.
In 1959, the United
Nations issued its Declaration of the Rights of
the Child.
In 1962, President
John F. Kennedy held
a news conference in
which he announced the
end of the naval quarantine of Cuba imposed
during the missile crisis,
and the signing of an
executive order prohibiting discrimination in federal housing facilities.
In 1967, the U.S. Census Bureau’s Population
Clock at the Commerce
Department ticked past
200 million.
In 1969, the Nixon
administration
announced a halt to
residential use of the
pesticide DDT as part of
a total phaseout. A group

of American Indian activists began a 19-month
occupation of Alcatraz
Island in San Francisco
Bay.
Today’s Birthdays:
Actress-comedian Kaye
Ballard is 89. Actress
Estelle Parsons is 87.
Comedian Dick Smothers is 76. Singer Norman
Greenbaum is 72. Vice
President Joe Biden is
72. Actress Veronica
Hamel is 71. Broadcast
journalist Judy Woodruff
is 68. Actor Samuel E.
Wright is 68. Singer Joe
Walsh is 67. Actor Richard Masur is 66. Opera
singer Barbara Hendricks
is 66. Actress Bo Derek
is 58. Former NFL player
Mark Gastineau is 58.
Reggae musician Jim
Brown (UB40) is 57.
Actress Sean Young is
55. Pianist Jim Brickman
is 53. Rock musician
Todd Nance (Widespread

Panic) is 52. Actress
Ming-Na is 51. Actor
Ned Vaughn is 50. Rapper Mike D (The Beastie
Boys) is 49. Rapper Sen
Dog (Cypress Hill) is 49.
Actress Callie Thorne
is 45. Actress Sabrina
Lloyd is 44. Actor Joel
McHale is 43. Actress
Marisa Ryan is 40. Country singer Dierks Bentley is 39. Actor Joshua
Gomez is 39. Actress
Laura Harris is 38. Olympic gold medal gymnast
Dominique Dawes is
38. Country singer Josh
Turner is 37. Actress
Nadine Velazquez is 36.
Actress Andrea Riseborough is 33. Actor Dan
Byrd is 29. Actress Ashley Fink (TV: “Glee”) is
28. Rock musician Jared
Followill (Kings of Leon)
is 28. Actor Cody Linley is 25. Pop musician
Michael Clifford (5 Seconds to Summer) is 19.

�LOCAL/INTERNATIONAL

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 20, 2014 5

From Islamic State militant to Iraq informant
By Vivian Salama
Associated Press

BAGHDAD — The former Islamic State group
commander walked into
the visitors’ room of his
Baghdad prison, without
the usual yellow jumpsuit
and shackles his fellow
inmates wear. In slippers and a track suit, he
greeted guards with a big
smile, kissing them on
the cheeks.
The scene testifies to
the strange path of Abu
Shakr, a 36-year-old who
joined al-Qaida out of
anger over treatment of
Iraq’s Sunnis and rose
in the group as it transformed into the extremist
juggernaut now called
the Islamic State. Finally,
he became an informant
against the group after
his capture.
Arrested in late 2013,
he was presented a choice
by Iraqi security officials:
Help them against the
extremists and in return
he would get jailhouse
perks. Now with relatively
free rein inside the confines of a maximum security prison complex, Abu
Shakr can play with his
five children, enjoy supervised visits and buddy up
with the guards.
Security officials say he
has given them guidance
on the extremists’ tactics
and helped them find,
capture and interrogate
suspected militants. In
Salahuddin province, a
key front line north of
Baghdad, he helped the
military win back key
areas this week, including
the town of Beiji, where
troops secured Iraq’s largest oil refinery.
He clearly has been
willing to act against his
former group in return
for access to his family —
and perhaps, implicitly, to
prevent any government
action against them. But

his personal sentiment
toward the militants is
hard to gauge. Speaking
to The Associated Press,
he didn’t express any
remorse for his involvement in the group or
directly denounce its
actions or talk of any
ideological conversion.
He only said he never
liked the group’s ferocious
targeting of Shiites and
Christians. “It was not
supposed to be this way,”
he said.
“We can’t stop this
thing, but we can limit
it,” he said of the Sunni
militant group. “Daesh
has nothing to lose,” he
added, using its Arabic
acronym.
He spoke to the AP
with various prison
guards coming in and
out of the room and with
an intelligence official
— with whom he works
closely — present for part
of the time. He spoke on
condition he be identified
only by his nom de guerre
to protect his family. IS
militants have issued
numerous death threats
against him.
Abu Shakr’s drive to
wage jihad was twofold:
He said he was enraged
by the U.S.-led occupation
in Iraq that overthrew
Saddam Hussein in 2003
and bitter toward the new
Shiite-led government
that Sunnis feel discriminates against them.
A graduate of Baghdad
University, he joined alQaida’s branch in Iraq
in 2007. His reasoning,
he said: “If we invaded
America, what would
be the reaction? The
American people ... would
resist, of course.”
He said he climbed
al-Qaida’s ranks, starting
as a foot soldier, moving
from his native Diyala
province to Baghdad,
then to Salahuddin and
finally stationed in the

western city of Fallujah.
“When you get a new
assignment with your
company, sometimes you
have to move,” he said.
“This was no different.”
During that time, alQaida in Iraq’s leaders —
Abu Ayyub al-Masri and
Abu Omar al-Baghdadi
— were killed by a 2010
U.S. airstrike. They were
replaced by the ambitious
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi,
who would transform the
group. In 2012, he began
sending fighters into
Syria, barging into that
country’s civil war. There,
the group garnered battlefield prowess, resources
and more fighters.
Abu Shakr was assigned
to Fallujah in 2012. His
task was to oversee security for al-Qaida’s operations there. That meant in
part organizing safehouses
and movement between
Iraq and Syria, but security officials said he was
also responsible for Iraqi
deaths from ordering
militants in fighting with
troops.
Fallujah fell completely
to the militants in January this year, two months
after Abu Shakr’s arrest.
But even at the time he
deployed there, he said,
much of the city was
under the group’s sway.
Their weapons were
primitive at that time, he
said. They could easily
build explosives, he said,
“but we had very few
weapons. We had to rely
on primitive car bombs,
IEDs, as well as street
fights with the army.”
But they gradually drew
support from Sunni tribes
across Anbar province,
resentful of the government. “The tribes feel the
issue of oppression. For
example, they didn’t get a
percentage of contracts ...
or someone to represent
them in the government,”
he said.

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By the end of 2013,
al-Qaida formally ejected
al-Baghdadi’s group. AlBaghdadi burst forth only
more powerful, first overrunning Fallujah and parts
of Anbar. Then his fighters captured Iraq’s secondlargest city Mosul in the
north in June. The group
now controls around a
third of Iraq and Syria.
By that point, however, Abu Shakr had been
caught.
Iraqi intelligence
forces had learned of
his high-level role and
began inquiring about
him through informants
around town. Haitham,
an intelligence officer,
said an intelligence team
staked out his Fallujah
home for 11 days, watching him and his family
come and go. Haitham
said he would even sneak
into the house to listen
to Abu Shakr’s conversations. He spoke on condition he be identified only
by his first name because
he still works undercover.

Finally in late 2013, they
arrested Abu Shakr. Intelligence officials worked to
flip him. “Everyone has a
weakness,” Haitham said.
“His biggest weakness
is his family. ... We knew
that if we were going to
get him to cooperate with
us, we needed to get his
family too.”
An Interior Ministry
spokesman said Abu
Shakr has not yet been
sentenced for his collaboration with the radical group and the case is
ongoing.
During the interview,
Abu Shakr’s 2-year-old
daughter entered the
visitor’s room, her hair
styled in a short bob. She
greeted the guards with a
bashful kiss on the cheek.
Abu Shakr says he considers the government his
family’s protector now.
“I may be in prison for
the rest of my life, and
I’m sorry for that,” he
continued. “But I see now
that it was my arrest that
saved my family.”

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 57.24
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.60
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 112.84
Big Lots (NYSE) — 48.59
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 51.57
BorgWarner (NYSE) —57.09
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 26.69
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.250
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.85
Collins (NYSE) — 84.34
DuPont (NYSE) — 71.25
US Bank (NYSE) — 43.89
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.92
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 69.20
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 60.60
Kroger (NYSE) — 58.49
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 77.68
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 115.17
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.82

BBT (NYSE) — 37.58
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 24.47
Pepsico (NYSE) — 98.41
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.69
Rockwell (NYSE) — 110.19
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.65
Royal Dutch Shell — 69.93
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 35.20
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 84.99
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.48
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.47
Worthington (NYSE) — 36.92
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Nov. 19, 2014, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
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With resources from
Syria, the group could provide fighters with a comfortable salary. Abu Shakr
said he was getting the
equivalent of $65 a month,
plus an extra $45 for his
wife and $20 per child.
Al-Baghdadi accelerated the group’s transformation. In early 2013,
the group renamed itself
the Islamic State of Iraq
and the Levant. It began
seizing territory in Syria,
leading to bloody frictions with Syrian rebels.
Al-Qaida’s central leader
Ayman al-Zawahri began
to criticize the network’s
Iraqi branch.
Under al-Baghdadi,
“the operation changed,”
Abu Shakr said. Policies
became “random,” he
said. Frictions with alQaida Central deepened.
For example, “al-Zawahri
objected to the policy of
beheading. He told them,
‘Don’t get carried away
with this publicity, it is
not acceptable’,” Abu
Shakr said.

(unless otherwise noted)

(unless otherwise noted)

(unless otherwise noted)

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�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 20, 2014 s Page 6

Browns’ Josh Gordon: ‘I’m very ready’
BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Josh
Gordon paid his price. He’s getting another chance, likely his
last one.
The Browns’ supremely
talented wide receiver who
easily outruns defensive backs
but can’t seem to steer clear
of trouble, Gordon returned to
practice Wednesday for the first
time since his 10-game suspension ended. The league’s leader
in yards receiving last season,
Gordon has returned just in
time to give the Browns (6-4) a
much needed offensive jolt.
The Browns plan to bring
him back slowly this week, but
No. 12 is expected to be on the
field Sunday when Cleveland
visits Atlanta.

“I can tell he’s very excited
to be out there,” said Browns
coach Mike Pettine, who met
with Gordon before practice.
“He’s ready to go.”
Following the indoor workout,
Gordon said he’s “very ready”
to play this week and hopes
to make an impact to keep the
Browns in the playoff race.
Surrounded by cameras and
reporters, Gordon was a bit
nervous as he described the
challenges of his layoff. He said
he learned from the experience.
“As a person, it gives you
more patience, everything takes
time,” he said.
Gordon knows there are
some who believe he’ll have
another slip-up and won’t be

able to stay on the field.
“Most people do doubt me,”
he said. “As far as football,
that’s the easy part for me. Life?
Life is great for me right now. I
can’t complain about anything.
I’m not mad either way.”
Gordon showed some rustiness by dropping two passes
during the portion of practice
open to media members.
But the sight of the 6-foot-3,
225-pounder, with his smooth
stride and rare explosiveness
off the line, had to be warming
to quarterback Brian Hoyer
and offensive coordinator Kyle
Shanahan, who hasn’t been able
to include him in a game plan
this season.
Pettine is downplaying how

much Gordon will be used in
his first game back, but Falcons
coach Mike Smith expects the
Pro Bowler to have an immediate impact.
“We’re anticipating seeing
Josh Gordon out there on the
very first play and seeing him
out there for the majority of the
plays in the ball game,” Smith
said on a conference call.
Pettine cautioned that Gordon may not be ready — mentally or physically. The Browns
intend to keep Gordon on a
“pitch count” in practice and
build up his reps as the week
moves on.
“There needs to be a progression,” Pettine said. “”The
trap to fall into is, ‘Hey, he’s

back and let’s just go ahead
and throw him out there for
a bunch of plays.’ There’s
certainly danger inherent in
doing that and we have to
be smart with how we do it
and have a plan to progress
through the week.”
Gordon hadn’t spoken to
local reporters since April,
shortly before he failed another
drug test for marijuana and was
banned for a year for being a
repeat offender. Gordon was
suspended for the first two
games last season but still
amassed 1,646 yards receiving,
scored nine touchdowns and
emerged as one of the game’s
most dazzling players.
See GORDON | 10

Yellow Jackets
sting Rio women
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

INSTITUTE, W.Va —
The University of Rio
Grande went without a
field goal for nearly the
first 11 minutes of the second half, as West Virginia
State University rallied
from a two-point halftime deficit to defeat the
RedStorm 61-53 Tuesday
night in non-conference
women’s basketball action
at the Walker Convocation
Center.
The Yellow Jackets
improved to 2-1 with the
win. Rio Grande suffered
its first loss in five outings.
The RedStorm survived
a rough-and-ragged first
half to lead 25-23 at the
intermission, but managed
just one point in the first
10:52 of the second stanza.
By the time that freshman center Kendra Walker
(St. Marys, WV) canned a
jumper in the lane and was
fouled with 9:08 remaining in the contest, West
Virginia State had built a
15-point advatange of its
own, 41-26.
Rio twice closed the gap
to eight points - 55-47 after
a jumper by junior guard
Sarah Bonar (Hartford,
OH) with 3:13 left to play
and 59-51 after a conventional three-point play by
Bonar with 23.6 seconds
remaining - but got no
closer the rest of the way.
The Yellow Jackets
maintained their lead by
going 22-for-33 at the free
throw line in the second
half.
Deyahnna Styles scored
20 of her game-high 24
points for State in the
second half, connecting
on 16 of her 20 free throw
attempts after the intermission.

Ashley Current, who
was making her season
debut for the Jackets,
added 11 points and 12
rebounds, while Shealyn
Shafer also had 11 points
and Alexus Hobbs had 14
rebounds in the winning
effort. Hobbs and Current
also blocked four shots
apiece.
WV State shot just 27.1
percent for the game (16for-59) and committed 25
turnovers, but outrebounded Rio, 53-51, and blocked
12 shots.
Rio Grande shot just
20.6 percent in the second
half (7-for-34) and 27.7
percent for the game (18for-65), while equaling
a season-high with 27
turnovers of their own and
shooting just 55.6 percent
from the free throw line
(15-for-27).
Senior guard Brianna
Thomas (Newark, N.J.)
had a team-high 13 points
before fouling out with
just under four minutes
remaining, while Bonar
netted 11 points - all in the
second half - and sophomore forward Brooke
Marcum (Vinton, OH)
pulled down a game-high
16 rebounds in a losing
cause.
The RedStorm also
tallied 11 blocked shots
as a team - all, incredibly,
in the opening half - with
junior center Harley Adler
(Burton, OH) recording
four and Walker finishing
with three.
Rio Grande will return
to the Mountain State for
its next game as well when
it visits WVU-Tech for a 5
p.m. tipoff on Saturday as
part of the Baisi Classic.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Friday, Nov. 21
Boys Basketball
Ohio Valley Christian at Kingsway, TBA
Men’s college basketball
Rio Grande vs. Washington Adventist at WVU
Tech, 2 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 22
Football
Point Pleasant at Martinsburg, 1:30
Boys Basketball
Ohio Valley Christian at Kingsway, TBA
Men’s college basketball
Rio Grande vs. Barber-Scotia at WVU Tech, 3
p.m.
Women’s college basketball
Rio Grande at WVU Tech, 5 p.m.

Alex Hawley | file photos

South Gallia’s Sara Bailey jukes past Southern’s Ali Deem during the Lady Tornadoes victory over SGHS last season in Mercerville.

SGHS to host TVC girls basketball
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

MERCERVILLE, Ohio —
When the cold weather comes,
it’s time to head indoors.
The first tuneup for the
upcoming hoops campaign will
be held this Saturday during the
2014-15 Tri-Valley Conference
varsity girls basketball preview
at South Gallia High School.
A dozen of the 16 TVC
programs — both Ohio Division and Hocking Division
combined — will be on hand to
battle through one half of play,
or a pair of eight-minute quarters. There will be a total of six
contests pitting Ohio and Hocking division schools against one
another, with the first game
coming at 4 p.m.
Southern and NelsonvilleYork square off in the opening
contest, with Belpre and River
Valley following at 4:45 p.m.
Athens and Federal Hocking
battled one another at 5:30
p.m., while Miller and Meigs
are scheduled to tip-off at 6:15
p.m.
Eastern — the defending D-4
state champions — will take
on Alexander at 7 p.m., with
the host Lady Rebels battling
Wellston in the finale at 7:45
p.m. Vinton County, Waterford,
Wahama and Trimble will not
be participating in this year’s
TVC preview.
Each team will be permitted two timeouts — one full
and one 30-second — during
their contest and each player is
allowed three fouls. There will
also be a 10 minute warmup
period between games.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

EHS head coach John Burdette instructs Lady Eagles guard Laura Pullins (11) during Eastern’s
49-38 victory in the 2014 Division IV State Championship game.

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Miscellaneous

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60542651

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60543521

LEGALS
PUBLIC NOTICE
JD Drilling Co, P.O. Box 369,
Racine,_Ohio 45771, (740)
949-2512 is applying to permit
a well for the injection of brine
water produced in association
with oil and natural gas.
The location of the proposed
injection well is the Showalter
#1,Sec. 18, Chester Township,
Meigs County, Ohio. The proposed well will inject into the _
Ohio Shale Formation at a
depth of 2958 to 3314 feet.
The average injection is estimated to be 1000 barrels per
day. The maximum injection
pressure is estimated to be
680 psi. Further information
can be obtained by contacting
JD Drilling Co or the Division of
Oil and Gas Resources Management. The address of the
Division is: Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Division of
Oil and Gas Resources
Management, 2045 Morse
Road, Building F-2, Columbus,
Ohio 43229-6693, (614) 2656922. For full consideration, all
comments and objections must
be-received. by the Division, in
writing, within fifteen calendar
days of the last date of this
published legal notice.
Notices

GUN SHOW

MARIETTA
Washington Co Fairgrounds
922 Front St
November 22nd &amp; 23rd
Adm $5
6' TBLS $35
740-667-0412
Longenberger Sale - Sat. Nov.
22. 2014 - 10am to 5pm @
Krodel Park clubhouse (Pt.
Pleasant WV)
Baskets,Pottery,Etc plus Heritage Village Electric miniature
shops, Cranberry double globe
fenton lamp &amp; other fenton
pieces + Boyd Bears.
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.

Miscellaneous
Need help with your rent?
the Housing Authority of the
County of Jackson is accepting applications for rental assistance in the Jackson,
Roane, Gilmer and Calhoun
County areas. You can go to
your local DHHR office or stop
by one of our offices to fill out
an application. Should you
have any questions, please
contact us at 304-372-2343.
We will pick up old Stove, Dryer, &amp; Washers, and scrap metal, We Pay old Cars 50/50
scrap payment Call 740-6694240 or 614-989-7341
Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee. Local References. Established in 1975. Call 24HRS
740-446-0870. Rogers Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com
Other Services
Will do House cleaning, Painting, Babysitting, Mowing,
Weedeating, Housecleaning.
Sitting with elderly. 1-740-5914597 or 1-740-612-5013
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

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
Applicator
Operate fertilizer or crop protectant application equipment.
CDL required. Includes warehouse duties. Agricultural
background helpful Forklift
Certification preferred but not
required. Able to pass background check, drug screen and
MVR check. To apply please
visit our website at www.southernstates.com and apply to requisition #2517. EOE M/F/D/V
Engineering/Drafting Position: qualification MUST have
degree in engineering/drafting
at least 3 years experience
with Auto Cad. Position is a 40
hour plus overtime. Pay rate is
based on level of degree and
experience. After 90 days
health insurance and life insurance is offered. One week
paid vacation after 1 year of
employment and 4 paid holidays. Please send resume to
70764 State Route 124 Vinton
OH 45686 SERIOUS APPLICANTS ONLY.

Thursday, November 20, 2014 7

The Village of Middleport is
looking for a team-oriented individual for water
treatment/distribution,
wastewater treatment/collections and other duties as assigned. CDL preferred. Duties Help
include
testing General
&amp; sampling
Wanted
water &amp; wastewater, reading
water meters, installation &amp; repairing of water meters, operation of some heavy equipment.
Full benefits available, applications will be accepted until 4:00
pm on 11/28/14. 659 Pearl St,
Middleport, OH 45760. EEO
Employer, Drug Free Work
Place.
Tig welder needed with 2
years' experience. Must be
able to interpret diagrams and
assembly of prints, use various small hand tools and
power tools. Works well with
others and under supervision.
have basic mechanical ability.
Traveling required. Health Insurance available after 90
days. Send resume and copy
of certificates to:
Steelial construction and Metal Fabrication
70764 St. Rt. 124
Vinton, OH 45686
740-669-5300
Business &amp; Trade School

Apartments/Townhouses
2 Bdrm newly remodeled W/D Hook-up $350/mo plus
deposit 304-638-4163

Apartments/Townhouses
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130

Help Wanted General

Pleasant Valley Hospital currently has
an opening for a full-time Surgical
First Assistant in the Operating
Room. One year surgery
experience required.
Apply at Pleasant Valley Hospital, 2520 Valley Dr.,
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550, or fax to (304) 675-6975
or apply on-line at www.pvalley.org.

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

EOE: M/F/D/V

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Miscellaneous

60549233

Commercial
Commercial Building for Sale
or Lease located on State
Route 7 north phone 740-6450559

Position for detailer/light mechanic work. Ask for Dave. 740Houses For Sale
446-4400
The Village of Middleport is
3BR, 2BA
looking for a team-oriented inREADY TO MOVE IN
dividual for water
740-446-3570
treatment/distribution,
wastewater treatment/collecBrick House, 3BR, 2BA, 1500
tions and other duties as assq ft, 0.6 acre lot. Gallipolis
signed. CDL preferred. DuFerry area. Asking $85K , No
ties include testing &amp; sampling
Land Contracts, 304-675-8019
water &amp; wastewater, reading
water meters, installation &amp; repairing of water meters, operaHelp Wanted General
tion of some heavy equipment.
Full benefits available, applications will be accepted until 4:00
pm on 11/28/14. 659 Pearl St,
Middleport, OH 45760. EEO
Employer,
Drug Free Work
EMPLOYMENT
Place.OPPORTUNITY
Have you been looking for a position in sales that really rewards you for your efforts? Could any or several of the following words be used to describe you or your personality? Fast
paced, competitive, decisive, persistent, eager, bold, forceful,
and inquisitive. How about assertive? Do you like to meet new
people? Are you good at multi-tasking? Do you work well with
others and with the public? If you answered yes to many of
these questions, you may be the person we are seeking. Civitas Media is looking for Business Development Representative to sell online and print advertising for our Newspapers.
These are full time salary positions with a generous commission program. Benefits include Health insurance, 401K, vacation, etc. If interested-send resume to Julia Schultz @
jschultz@civitasmedia.com.
Civitas Media LLC is a growing company offering excellent
compensation and opportunities for advancement to motivated
individuals. Civitas Media has publications in NC, SC, TN, KY,
VA, WV, OH, IL, MO, GA, OK, IN and PA.
EOE

Automobiles AUTOMOTIVE PARTS SWAP MEET &amp; CAR SALE. All Make &amp; Model - All
Indoor - 700 Spaces. NOVEMBER 29TH. Indiana State Fairgrounds. Indianapolis, IN. 8am3pm. Info: 708-563-4300 www.SuperSundayIndy.com
Automobiles Corvettes Wanted: 1953-1972, Any condition, Competitive buyer. 1-800-8503656 vinceconncorvette.com
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REACH 2 MILLION NEWSPAPER READERS with one ad
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be an award-winning Class A CDL driver. We help you achieve Diamond Driver status with the
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HELP WANTED:

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The Athens Meigs Educational Service Center is
searching for a qualified candidate to become
part of its team as a Full-Time Payroll Clerk. This
is a full-time position with a full benefit package.
Interested applicants should submit a resume
detailing background and experience to bryan
Swann at 39105 Bradbury Rd., Middleport, OH
45760. Deadline for applicants is December 1,
2014 at 12:00 p.m. This position currently reports
to the Megis County Office at the above address. A
detailed job description can be viewed at
www.athensmeigs.com/Employment.aspx.

60549033

Help Wanted Drivers: Need CDL A or B, to relocate vehicles from area body plants to various
locations throughout U.S. - No forced dispatch - We specialize in continuation trips to reduce
deadhead!!! 1-800-501-3783 or www.mamotransportation.com under Careers.
Help Wanted AVERITT EXPRESS New Pay Increase For Regional Drivers! 40 to 46 CPM

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1-866-203-8445
60548485

�SPORTS

8 Thursday, November 20, 2014

Daily Sentinel

Rookie gives Bengals boost

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Playoff tickets
on sale at PPJSHS
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Presale tickets for
Saturday’s Class AAA playoff game between Point
Pleasant and Martinsburg will be on sale at the high
school Wednesday and Thursday during school hours,
as well as until noon Friday. Tickets are $5 for students and $7 for adults. All tickets at the gate will be
$7. The only passes accepted are WVSSAC coaches
passes. No county passes will be accepted. Also, no
pass outs will be permitted. If you leave, you must pay
to re-enter. Also, there will be a fan bus for the first
50 fans to sign up for the ride to Martinsburg. The
bus will leave at 6 a.m. Saturday and the cost is $50
apiece, which will include your individual game ticket.
The fan bus is first come, first serve.

GAHS Foundation
Game at Oak Hill
OAK HILL, Ohio — The Foundation basketball
game between Gallia Academy and Oak Hill has been
moved to Tuesday, Nov. 25, at OHHS. The girls contest will be played at 6 p.m. and the boys will tipoff
at 7:30 p.m. All tickets are $5 and no passes will be
honored. All proceeds will be donated.

Pomeroy/Middleport
holiday hoops tourney
RUTLAND, Ohio — The Middleport and Pomeroy
youth leagues will be holding their annual basketball
tournament from Thursday, Dec. 18, through, Tuesday, Dec. 23, and resume play on Friday, Dec. 26,
through Tuesday, Dec. 30. The tourney will be held
at the Rutland Civic Center and is for both boys and
girls in grades 4-6, all in separate divisions. For more
information, contact Dave at (740) 590-0438 or Ken
at (740) 416-8901.

Wahama co-ed
Volleyball Tournament
MASON, W.Va. — The Wahama boys basketball
team is hosting a co-ed volleyball tournament on
Saturday, November 22 at the WHS gym. The cost
for a team is $120 with a maximum of eight players,
four men and four women, on a team. The doubleelimination tournament will feature games to 25, win
by two, and matches will be best two-of-three. Players
cannot play on multiple teams and all players must
sign a release form. To register, or for more information contact coach Ron Bradley by email at rbradley@
k12.wv.us or by phone at (304)-377-9295.

CINCINNATI (AP) — Jeremy
Hill didn’t expect to get much
of a chance as a rookie because
the Cincinnati Bengals had
Giovani Bernard entrenched as
the starter. With six games left,
he’s leading all NFL rookies in
rushing.
The second-round pick ran for
152 yards during a 27-10 win
at New Orleans on Sunday, his
second big game in the last three.
He also ran for 154 yards against
Jacksonville on Nov. 2.
Hill leads all NFL rookies with
556 yards rushing and five touchdowns. He has two of the top 10
games overall in the NFL this
season. He joined Paul Robinson
as the only Bengals rookies with a
pair of 150-yard games — Robinson did it in 1968, the franchise’s
inaugural season.
It’s far more than he expected.
“Being in the situation I’m in,
not being the every-down guy, I
really didn’t think I would have
a chance to get that,” Hill said
on Wednesday. “I’ve just been
focused on doing what I can
to help the team. I never really
thought I’d be it the conversation
for that type of stuff.”

He is now. But the future is
uncertain.
Bernard has missed the last
three games with shoulder and
hip injuries, giving Hill a chance
to emerge. Hill has carried 63
times for 361 yards and two
touchdowns in his absence, helping the Bengals (6-3-1) win two of
the three games.
Bernard returned to practice
on a limited basis Wednesday. It’s
unclear whether he’ll be back for a
game on Sunday at Houston (5-5).
“He had a tremendous practice
today and we’ll see where this
thing goes because you never
know what will happen tomorrow morning when you wake up,”
offensive coordinator Hue Jackson
said after practice.
Jackson sidestepped a question
about whether Bernard would
be the starter again when he’s
healthy. He said Hill will continue
with an increased role in the
offense when Bernard returns.
“I think he deserves it,” Jackson
said.
The Bengals drafted Hill to
give them a power back who can
also catch passes. The offense has
been wildly inconsistent — Cin-

cinnati ranks 17th overall in the
league — but the running game
has provided some of its best
moments.
And Hill has provided its two
biggest games.
“What I’ve been saying since
day one is run the football,” Hill
said. “Everyone knows I can do
that. It’s just the other little things
I’ve been trying to focus on and
get better at — play fakes, helping
Andy (Dalton) in the play-action
game, things of that nature.”
Left tackle Andrew Whitworth
hopes the Bengals keep stressing the run as they go through
a tough closing stretch of their
schedule — five of the last seven
games on the road. In their most
lopsided losses, the Bengals have
given up a lot of yards rushing
and gotten very few.
“When you’re throwing the
ball, you can’t be as physical,”
Whitworth said. “It’s a mentality
of going into a game and saying,
‘Hey, this is the first thing we’re
going to do.’
“As a team, it seems the games
that we go in (determined) to run
the ball and stop the run we play
better.”

Race is heading for fantastic finish
By Eric Olson

young men with these
games they get to play
late in the year. It brings
There’s high drama in
tremendous attention
the Big Ten West.
to the Big Ten, which is
Four of the seven
great for all of us.”
teams are still alive in
Ohio State (9-1, 6-0)
the division race with
would wrap up the East
two weeks to go and, by
on Saturday with a win
chance, the November
over Indiana or a Michischedule set up as a
gan State (8-2, 5-1) loss
round-robin for the conto Rutgers at home.
tenders.
Wisconsin (8-2, 5-1)
“As a league you
would
clinch the West if
couldn’t ask for a better
it
wins
at Iowa (7-3, 4-2)
position to be in as far as
and
Nebraska
(8-2, 4-2)
everybody playing everybeats
visiting
Minnesota
body that has a chance
to win it right now,” Wis- (7-3, 4-2).
The division winners
consin coach Gary Andermeet in the Big Ten
sen said Tuesday. “It’s a
great spot to be in for the championship game Dec.

Associated Press

6 in Indianapolis.
The West race, with
so many teams still alive
in mid-November, is the
closest in the Big Ten
since the conference split
into divisions in 2011.
Minnesota is the only
West team besides Wisconsin that controls its
fate. If the Gophers win
out at Nebraska and at
Wisconsin, they would
own tie-breakers over
those teams and Iowa.
“We’re in a situation
where we’re playing for
something in November,
which is good for us as we
build our program,” Minnesota coach Jerry Kill said.

The Gophers are trying for their first above.500 conference record
since 2003 and their first
league championship
since 1967.
Kill said he laid out
Minnesota’s path to the
division title right after
last week’s 31-24 loss to
Ohio State.
“It’s better to be in
control of your own destiny than to have to see
somebody else win or lose
and so forth,” Kill said.
“We’re excited about the
opportunity of being in
the situation we’re in. At
the same time you have to
go take advantage of it.”

Earnhardt wants more success in ’15 with new chief
By Dan Gelston

series of poolside interviews in
the hours before the Nationwide
banquet, Earnhardt should have
Dale Earnhardt Jr. imagined
been basking in the glow of his
his Nationwide Series trophy was greatest all-around season since
a chalice, tipped it back and acted jumping to Hendrick Motorslike he was taking a big swig of
ports in 2008.
champagne or beer — the beverBut the season-ending parties
ages of choice for NASCAR win- were also a bleak reminder that
ners and champions.
Wednesday marked 93 days until
Earnhardt had plenty of practhe Daytona 500.
tice chugging this season.
“The offseason always kind of
He left Homestead-Miami
throws me into a funk,” EarnSpeedway with one more keephardt said. “You want to go to the
sake for the home office — he’s
track the next weekend.”
running out of room with a corEarnhardt can take solace in
ner of his North Carolina home
all the success of ‘14, even as he
occupied with a Martinsville
looks ahead to a bit of an uncergrandfather clock — and validatain 2015. Earnhardt and crew
tion that his foray into team own- chief Steve Letarte clicked on and
ership was the right call nearly a off the track this season, talking
decade ago.
about championship contenEarnhardt’s career renaissance tion from the moment they took
in 2014 was capped with the
the checkered flag at Daytona.
Nationwide championship he
Letarte, though, will be making
won with JR Motorsports driver his calls next season for NBC
Chase Elliott and crew chief Greg Sports instead of atop the pit
Ives. He opened the season with box, and Ives will take over after
a Daytona 500 victory, swept at
one season as Elliott’s crew chief.
Pocono and won for the first time
Letarte posted an Instagram
in 30 career races at Martinsville photo of a checkered flag sticker
Speedway.
on a computer keyboard in his
All he missed was a spot in the old office.
“Cleaned out my office today.
final four and a shot at the Sprint
Left this sticker for the new guy.
Cup championship.
I expect a lot of these next year
With his sunglasses on for a
AP Sports Writer

Greg &amp; @DaleJr #winners,”
Letarte tweeted.
Ives, who has paid his dues at
Hendrick, gets his turn to try and
guide Earnhardt to his first Cup
championship.
Ives has been successful at
JRM, winning two races last
year with Regan Smith and leading the 18-year-old Elliott to the
Nationwide crown his rookie
season. Ives also was race engineer for Jimmie Johnson’s record
run of five consecutive championships, and worked under
Johnson crew chief Chad Knaus
and alongside Earnhardt’s No. 88
team on the Cup side.
While Ives has leaned on
Letarte for advice, he planned on
calling races and building a relationship with Junior his own way.
“I can’t treat Dale any different
than I have Regan or Chase the
last two years,” Ives said. “I have
to adapt to their sense of style,
their lingo, what makes them go.
I’m not going to try and be any
different than I have been the last
couple of years. I’ll adapt to what
Dale wants me to do or be, but
also bring my own sense of style.”
Ives, from Bark River, Michigan, joined Hendrick Motorsports as a mechanic in 2004. He
moved into an engineering role

Ross D. Franklin | AP

Dale Earnhardt Jr. won the Nationwide Series trophy during his best season in
years despite missing out on the final four and a shot at the Sprint Cup.

on the No. 48 team in 2006. In
seven years working with Knaus,
he contributed to 42 wins, 113
top-five finishes and 21 pole positions in the Sprint Cup Series.
That kind of resume has Earnhardt excited about the future.
“Greg can step in and bring in
a lot of things that Steve didn’t
offer,” he said. “Steve’s not an
engineer. He’s more of a people
manager. He’s great at it. He did
an awesome job. But Greg’s got
other attributes that are strong

and I think he can bring a lot of
new ideas to the team.”
Earnhardt had no idea how
long it might take to match
the winning formula he found
this season. But once they do,
Earnhardt and crew might have
enough juice to wrest the championship away from Kevin Harvick.
“As the season goes on, we’ll
be as strong as we were this year,
if not stronger,” Earnhardt said.
“I think we can expect to get better than we were this year.”

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, November 20, 2014 9

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�SPORTS

10 Thursday, November 20, 2014

Daily Sentinel

No. 12 K-State looks to rebound vs West Virginia
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP) — Kansas State coach
Bill Snyder prefers to find
incentive from the disappointment of the Wildcats’ first Big
12 loss.
Tossed out of the conference
lead after a 41-20 drubbing by
No. 5 TCU two weeks ago, No.
12 Kansas State still has plenty
to play for.
The Wildcats (7-2, 5-1 Big
12, No. 12 CFP) are tied for
second place with Baylor and
can move into a first-place tie
with the idle Horned Frogs
when they play at West Virginia
on Thursday night.
Rather than his players
dwelling on the past, “I’d like
to think that it’s evolved into a
determination and excitement”
for West Virginia, Snyder said.
“They tell me that’s where they
are, but everybody’s a little bit
different. It appears that they’re
focused on what they’re doing,

so I trust them for that.”
Kansas State is one of the
nation’s better rush defenses at
127 yards per game yet allowed
TCU to amass 334 yards on the
ground.
Defensive back Morgan
Burns said the Wildcats aren’t
about to let that happen again.
“We will bounce back and
show resiliency,” Burns said.
West Virginia (6-4, 4-3) has
seen its own disappointment
of late.
The Mountaineers became
bowl eligible after eight games,
a solid improvement for a team
that went 4-8 a year ago. But a
four-game winning streak was
followed by losses to TCU and
Texas that sent West Virginia
tumbling to the middle of the
Big 12 pack.
The Mountaineers will use
the final home game for 19
seniors as motivation to try to
improve their bowl standing.

“The mindset is to show the
nation that we still have a lot to
prove and that this season isn’t
over,” said West Virginia wide
receiver Jordan Thompson.
Kansas State will finish the
regular season at home against
Kansas on Nov. 29 and at No.
6 Baylor on Dec. 6, while West
Virginia plays at Iowa State on
Nov. 29.
Here are a few other things
to watch for when Kansas State
and West Virginia meet on a
frigid night in Morgantown:
LOCKETT VS. WHITE: Two
of the nation’s top receivers are
getting another chance to perform on a national stage. Kansas State’s Tyler Lockett broke
his father Kevin’s school record
for career receiving yards two
weeks ago. The younger Lockett needs 16 catches and three
TDs to break two other career
records held by his dad from
1993-96. West Virginia’s Kevin

White is third nationally with
1,207 receiving yards and set
a school record with 16 receptions against Texas.
STIFLED TRICKETT: West
Virginia quarterback Clint
Trickett has been held below
300 passing yards in his last
three games after surpassing
300 in eight straight games
before that. He’s thrown one
touchdown pass and three
interceptions in the last two
games. He also fumbled the ball
away and was tackled in the
end zone for a safety against
Texas.
MINUS THE RUN: Both
teams will try to get their running backs going after recent
struggles. West Virginia managed just 42 rushing yards in
the first half against Texas and
didn’t start piling up yards until
the fourth quarter when the
Longhorns had a 16-point lead.
Kansas State was limited to

34 yards on 19 carries against
TCU.
WALK-ON SUCCESS: Kansas State linebacker Jonathan
Truman is a semifinalist for the
Burlsworth Award, a national
honor given to a player who
began his career as a walk-on.
The senior leads the Wildcats
with 85 tackles and has a fumble recovery this season.
BACKUP SPARK: Another
former Kansas State walkon, backup quarterback Joe
Hubener, has performed well
in change-of-pace roles this
month. The sophomore threw
a 74-yard pass to Curry Sexton and had a 6-yard TD run
against TCU. Hubener also had
a 64-yard completion to Sexton
and a short scoring run against
Oklahoma State. “We’re prepared to do that, to have Joe on
the field,” Snyder said. “All the
coaches feel comfortable with
him.”

Williams leads OSU past Marquette Bama rolls to
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — In a
measure of how well No. 20 Ohio
State is executing, all three players who came into the postgame
interview room Tuesday night
mentioned the word “easy.”
Kam Williams scored 15 points
and Shannon Scott added a careerbest 14 assists to lead the Buckeyes past Marquette 74-63.
Amir Williams had 12 points,
and Marc Loving and Sam
Thompson each added 10 for the
Buckeyes (2-0), who shot 65 percent from the field (32 of 49) —
including 8 of 15 on 3-pointers.
“I just have so many weapons
around me it makes the game a
lot easier,” Scott said of his assist
total, one off Aaron Craft’s school
record. “Kam came into the game
and played great, Amir played well
(and so did) Sam, Marc, D’Angelo,
Jae’Sean, Anthony, Keita, Trey …”
Asked if he missed anyone,
Scott chuckled and said, “Coach
Matta, I guess.”
For his part, Thad Matta was
pleased with the effort but not
so much with his team’s 18 turnovers.
“In the first half we had our
chances to open it up and just had
some careless, sloppy play,” he

said. “We’re a different basketball
team and we’re playing a different
way. I liked the pace we played at
tonight — if we just can clean up
those mistakes.”
Steve Taylor Jr. had 20 points
for the Golden Eagles (1-1), who
trailed by as many as 20 late.
“They present a number of difficulties to defend because they
have guys who have the ability to
score from all five positions,” said
first-year Marquette coach Steve
Wojciechowski. “The way that
they shoot the ball is outstanding.
But our transition defense was not
near what it needed to be.”
Kam Williams, who missed last
season after contracting mononucleosis, came off the bench to hit
six of eight shots from the field,
making his first three 3-pointers.
“When I get in the gym I just
take game shots because if I take
all my game shots in practice,
when it’s time for the game, it’s
easy,” he said. “Everything slows
down.”
The Buckeyes used a 12-2 run
early to take the lead for good,
then put together a series of
spurts to pull away. In a 6-0 surge,
Scott drove through the middle of
the lane for two layups and Kam

Williams added a 10-foot floater
for a 56-42 lead with 10 minutes
left.
———
QUOTE OF THE NIGHT
Wojciechowski on Ohio State’s
10-man rotation: “Look, in order
to beat a team like Ohio State,
you have to have max effort for 40
minutes. Right now, because of
where we are, we don’t have the
ability to play 10 guys.”
ON THE MARK
A year ago, the Buckeyes struggled to make 3-pointers. They had
someone on the team who could
have helped them in Williams, but
they would have had to exhaust
his redshirt to play him.
Through two games, he’s 11
of 15 from the field (73 percent)
and 5 of 8 behind the arc (62.5
percent).
INSIDE PLAY
Ohio State had just 10 points
in the paint in the opening half,
choosing instead to put up 12
3-pointers. In the second half, they
scored 32 points in the paint, with
6-foot-11 Amir Williams making
all six shots from the field.
“I felt everybody who came into
the game gave us a boost, a push,
a burst of energy,” Matta said.

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No. 1, race for
No. 4 heats up
By Ralph D. Russo

victory. They could use it
because their best wins
from early in the season
With just three weeks (LSU, Texas A&amp;M and
until the College FootAuburn) have been tarball Playoff committee
nished a bit lately.
releases its final rankOhio State is in posiings, Alabama, Oregon
tion to play in the Big
and Florida State seem
Ten championship if it
to be in control of their
wins out.
championship chances.
The Big 12 has no
Keeping winning and
conference championship
the Crimson Tide, Ducks game. TCU and Baylor
and Seminoles should
would be co-champs if
be in.
each finishes 11-1, but
The race for the fourth
Baylor beat the Horned
and final spot in the playFrogs in Waco, Texas last
off is shaping up to be a
month.
tussle between four teams.
The selection protocol
Alabama jumped
calls for the committee
from fifth to first after
to use championships
handing previously unde- won as a tiebreaker
feated and top-ranked
if teams have similar
Mississippi State its first resumes.
loss on Saturday. The
Selection Committee
Bulldogs slid to fourth.
chairman Jeff Long said
Oregon remained in
“the differences between
second place and Florida teams four through seven
State in third. The Semi- are narrow, very narrow.”
noles are the only undeWhether it’s narrow
feated team left in a Big enough to allow TCU,
Five conference.
Ohio State or Baylor
Florida State fans
to jump past Missismight not be happy
sippi State if one of those
about how their team is
teams wins its conferbeing treated, but the
ence and Mississippi
Seminoles appear to
State doesn’t remains to
be safe if they can keep
be seen.
winning right through
“I don’t think there is
the Atlantic Coast Conany way to project that,”
ference championship
said Long, the athletic
game. Same goes with
director at Arkansas. “It
Alabama in the Southwill certainly be weighed
eastern Conference and
into the equation on Dec.
Oregon in the Pac-12.
6 and 7.”
After that, things get
The committee
complicated.
releases its final rankings
Mississippi State is
on Dec. 7, the day after
followed by TCU, which most of the conference
slipped to No. 5 after a
championship games are
closer-than-expected win played.
against Kansas on SaturLong said Alabama
day. Ohio State moved
controlled the game in
up two spots to No. 6,
its 25-20 victory against
ahead of TCU’s Big 12
Mississippi State enough
rival Baylor.
to earn the big promoThe Bulldogs play
tion this week. Alabama
Vanderbilt on Saturday
led by two scores in the
but finish the regular
fourth quarter and Misseason at Ole Miss, givsissippi State cut the lead
ing them a chance for
to five with a touchdown
another resume-boosting with 15 seconds left.
Associated Press

Gordon
From Page 6

He was on the cusp of superstardom, but couldn’t
stay clean and wound up being punished by the league.
Gordon said he considered suing the league, but
believes the penalty against him was fair.
Gordon was not permitted to work out with his
teammates during his suspension, but the 23-year-old
was allowed to be in team meetings and that interaction helped him stay connected and driven.
“He’s worked his butt off,” said wide receiver Andrew
Hawkins. “I know it’s not documented what he’s been
doing the last 10 weeks. He’s done everything he’s been
asked to do. Some of the things are actually a little bit
even more than what we’re doing. He’s here early in
the morning. He’s meeting with the people he needs to
meet with. He’s working out. He’s staying in shape.
“I think his mindset is right where it needs to be.”

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