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                  <text>The most
important
decision

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OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 179, Volume 73

Tuesday, November 12, 2019 s 50¢

Ohio’s deer
hunters
preparing
for annual
gun season
Youth-only weekend
is Nov. 23-24

Photos by Lorna Hart | Courtesy

Southern 1st graders preformed several patriotic somgs including “America the Beautiful”.

Southern honors veterans
By Lorna Hart

Special to the Sentinel

RACINE — Southern Local
School District held their 14th
annual Veterans Day Program
on Monday, an event that
includes the participation of students, faculty, and the Racine
American Legion Post #602.
According to Supt. Tony
Deem, himself a Gulf War veteran, he began the program when
he ﬁrst came to Southern.
“I believe the students learn
more about Veteran’s Day by
being in school and participating in this program than they
would if they were off today. It
is a way to honor our veterans
and teach the students what the
day means,” said Deem.
The morning began with a
program for students in prekindergarten through 3rd grade
lead by Elementary Principal
Trisha McNickle. First graders
sang patriotic songs and the
Southern Band performed the
National Anthem. First graders Libby Yonker and Kyndal
Ohlinger led the Pledge of Allegiance.
Southern guidance counselor
retired Major Russ Fields was
the guest speaker, describing
to the students what it was like
to be in the military and some
of the things the military did.
Fields involved the students by
asking questions.
The second program for 4th
through 12th grades took on a
more serious tone, recognizing
fallen veterans and their sacri-

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
Weather: 10

Southern administrators are pictured with Southern’s honored veteran Allen Graham following the program on Monday.
Pictured (from left) are Daniel Otto, Allen Graham, Trisha McNickle, Tony Deem

ﬁces.
Racine American Legion Post
#602 began both ceremonies
with the Posting of Colors.
Ciera Whitesell opened the
program with “Letter to a Veteran.” High school Principal
Daniel Otto then welcomed the
Racine American Legion and all
Veterans.
Southern High School Band,
directed by Audra Wilkinson

played the National Anthem
and Student Council President
Parker Corbitt led the Pledge of
Allegiance.
“The 11th Hour”, a video
tribute to Veterans, was followed by guest speaker Fields.
Fields served three deployments
in Iraq before retiring, and
shared a personal story of his
reluctance to wear his uniform
to church.

“When I came home to visit,
I would go to church, and I
didn’t want the attention that
wearing my uniform invoked.
I later came to realize it wasn’t
about me, it was about what
the uniform meant when I wore
it, it was about honoring the
military. People wanted to reach
out, and I was the face, the
See VETERANS | 5

Rail museum installs
structural necessities
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
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thoughts.

COLUMBUS — Ohio’s
deer-gun week is fast
approaching. White-tailed
deer hunters have the
chance to pursue Ohio’s
favorite big-game animal
with approved ﬁrearms
during the 2019 weeklong gun season, Dec. 2-8,
2019, and the additional
weekend, Dec. 21-22,
according to the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources (ODNR) Division of Wildlife.
“Ohio’s deer hunting
seasons provide the perfect chance to get outdoors and experience the
Buckeye State’s bountiful
deer hunting opportunities,” said Division of
Wildlife Chief Kendra
Wecker. “Deer hunting is
a fun way to enjoy nature
while making memories.
Hunters put healthy freerange food on the table,
and venison is a highlyvalued and sustainable
food option for thousands
of Ohioans.”
Ohio’s deer-gun season
has spanned generations
of sportsmen and women
and is a time when many
friends and families
gather to celebrate the
hunt. In 2018, Ohio hunters harvested 60,557 deer
during the week-long
deer-gun season, plus
9,625 deer during the following gun weekend.
Check the 2019-2020
Ohio Hunting and Trapping Regulations for
county-speciﬁc bag limits,
updates on permits, and
hunting on public lands.
The statewide bag limit
is six deer. Only one may
be a buck, regardless of
method of take or location. Legal hunting equipment includes speciﬁc
shotguns, muzzleloaders,
handguns, straight-walled
cartridge riﬂes, and
archery equipment. More
information is available at
wildohio.gov.
Wildlife Hotline
Hunters can contact the
Division of Wildlife tollfree hotline at 800-WILDLIFE (945-3543) with
questions about hunting.
In addition to normal
business hours, special
call center hours for deergun seasons include:
Noon-8 p.m., Saturday,
Nov. 23, for youth deergun season;
8 a.m.-8 p.m., Monday,
Dec. 2 to Friday, Dec. 6,
for deer-gun season.

Photo courtesy Jerry Davis

Youth Season Details
Ohio’s youth-only
weekend is Saturday and
Sunday, Nov. 23-24. This
season is open to hunters
with a valid youth hunting license and deer permit. All legal deer hunting equipment for the gun
season applies during the
youth season. Deer taken
by young hunters during the youth deer gun
season count toward the

Workers run electrical line through the
See RAIL | 5 Gallipolis Freight Station Museum office.

See DEER | 5

By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.com

GALLIPOLIS — The Gallipolis
Railroad Freight Station Museum has
been busy making strides towards
rehabilitating the interior of the museum’s structure on Third Avenue.
According to Museum Board VicePresident Jerry Davis, the museum
has been adding permanent electrical
access and wiring into the old freight
station depot as well as constructing restroom facilities, getting plans

�DEATH NOTICES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, November 12, 2019

DEATH NOTICES
RUSSELL
GALLIPOLIS — John William “Bill” Russell, 84 of
Gallipolis, Ohio died Saturday, November 9, 2019 at
his residence.
In accordance with his wishes there will be no services at this time. Private graveside services will be
conducted at the convenience of the family. McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis,
is assisting the Russell family with arrangements.
MCKEAN
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Charles William McKean
age 73, of Gallipolis, Ohio, died Saturday November
9, 2019 at Holzer Medical Center.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m., Thursday November
14, 2019 at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home
with Denny Coburn ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in
Mound Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
home on Thursday from 11 a.m. – 1 p.m.
GARNES
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Harold Leroy Garnes, age
101, Columbus, Ohio and formerly of Gallia County,
Ohio, died November 7, 2019.
Celebration of Life 7 p.m. Thursday, November 14,
2019 at the Resurrection Missionary Baptist Church,
258 Hosack St., Columbus, where family will receive
friends from 5 p.m. until time of service. Dr. John S.
Little, Eulogist. Harold will be laid to rest 10 a.m.
Friday, November 15 the in Evergreen Cemetery.
Arrangements entrusted to Diehl-Whittaker Funeral
Service, 720 E. Long St., Columbus.
PHILLIPS
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Nadine Jane Phillips
died Thursday, November 8, 2019 at Holzer Assisted
Living in Gallipolis, Ohio.
Visitation will take place at Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home, Point Pleasant, W.Va., Wednesday, November
13, 2019 from 6-8 p.m., with the funeral service conducted by Pastor Jeff Anderson and Senior Pastor Jeff
Black on Thursday, November 14, 2019 at 11 a.m.
Burial will be at Mound Hill Cemetery in Gallipolis.
STONE
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Judith Ann Stone,
75, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Friday, November 8,
2019, at the Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House in
Huntington, W.Va.
A funeral service will be 2 p.m. Tuesday, November
12, 2019, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, with Kevin Jackson II ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at Kirkland Memorial Gardens in Point Pleasant.
The family will receive friends one hour prior to the
funeral service Tuesday at the funeral home.

MEIGS BRIEFS

Straw available
The Meigs County Humane Society will be providing straw for animal bedding during the months of
November, December, January, and February. Vouchers may be picked up at the Humane Society Thrift
Shop, 253 North Second Street, Middleport, Ohio, for
a fee of $2 per bail. Vouchers are to be redeemed at
Dettwiller Lumber in Pomeroy. For more information
call 992-6064.

Road closures
MEIGS COUNTY — State Route 124 will close on
Monday, Sept. 9 to allow crews to replace a culvert
that carries the route over Forked Run.The closure
will be between the entrance to Forked Run State
Park and Curtis Hollow Road. During the work, trafﬁc
will be detoured via SR-248, SR-7, and SR-681. The
project is scheduled for completion in mid-November,
weather permitting.
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport Hill” is
closed due to a slip until further notice. Tickets will
be issued to those who drive through the closed portion of the road.
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs County Road 3, New
Lima Road, will be closed beginning Monday, Oct.
28, to allow county forces to repair a slip just north
of T-369A, McMurray Road. This closing will be in
effect for approximately three weeks.

Daily Sentinel

Maynard inducted into Lambda Pi Eta

CEDARVILLE — Marlee Maynard of Racine,
Ohio, was recently
induced into Cedarville
University’s Lambda Pi
Eta chapter, an honors
organization for the
communications department.
The Cedarville communication department
reinstated the chapter
of Lambda Pi Eta two
years ago in order to
give students the opportunity to showcase their
academic skills to future

employers and network
with other successful
communication graduates.
This fall, the communication department
hosted the third induction ceremony of communication students
who met the requirements of the Lambda Pi
Eta Honors Society.
“Our involvement in
Lambda Pi Eta is valuable because it gives our
students the opportunity
to show employers that

they have achieved high
levels of academic scholarship,” said Dr. Chuck
Elliot, professor of communication and adviser
of Cedarville’s Lambda
Pi Eta chapter “We have
amazing communication
students, which makes
this opportunity important.”
Located in southwest Ohio, Cedarville
University is an accredited, Christ-centered,
Baptist institution with
an enrollment of 4,380

undergraduate, graduate
and online students in
more than 150 areas of
study. Founded in 1887,
Cedarville is recognized
nationally for its authentic Christian community,
rigorous academic programs, strong graduation and retention rates,
accredited professional
and health science offerings and high student
engagement ranking. For
more information about
the University, visit
www.cedarville.edu.

Many youths say high school diploma is enough
By Collin Binkley
and Hannah Fingerhut
Associated Press

Although most young
Americans believe in the
value of higher education, many still consider
a high school diploma
alone to be enough for
success, according to
a survey of teens and
young adults by The
Associated Press-NORC
Center for Public Affairs
Research.
The ﬁndings alarm
some experts who say
young Americans don’t
seem to be getting the
message that college
pays off. Federal labor
data shows a wide earnings gap between Americans who do and do not
have a college degree,
and unemployment rates
are far lower for those
with a bachelor’s or master’s degree.
More than half of
Americans ages 13
through 29 do see college as a path to economic success, but about 4
in 10 believe a bachelor’s
degree prepares people
only somewhat well, or
even poorly, for today’s
economy.
Meanwhile, about half
said their high school
education has provided
the skills they need to
get a good job right
after they graduate. And
45% say a high school
diploma is good preparation for future successful
workers.
Researchers disputed
that notion, saying it
has been decades since a
high school diploma was
enough to earn a good
living.
“With a high school
diploma alone, it’s very
hard to earn the kinds of
wages one would need
to support a family,” said
Thomas Brock, director
of the Community College Research Center
at Columbia University. “There’s just such
a strong association
between employment
rates, as well as earnings,
and education.”

Gillian Flaccus | AP file

Instructors from Raphael House lead a classroom discussion about consent and healthy
relationships with a class of sophomores April 15 at Central Catholic High School in Portland, Ore.
Most young Americans believe in the value of higher education, but many also believe that a high
school diploma alone is enough for success, and they view job training as better preparation than
any type of college degree, according to a poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public
Affairs Research.

In 2018, the median
earnings for workers
with only a high school
diploma was $730 a
week, according to the
U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics. For those with
a bachelor’s degree, it
was $1,200, while those
with a master’s degree
typically made $1,400 a
week.
Teens are especially
likely to think high
school is a good path
to success in today’s
economy, while young
adults were less likely to
say so, 51% versus 42%.
And there were stark differences by race: At least
half young black and
Hispanic Americans said
high school is a good
path to success, compared with 41% of young
white Americans.
More than any type
of degree, 73% of young
Americans said they
think job experience is
good preparation for
success. Their esteem
for practical experience
is shared by the Trump
administration, which
has pushed to expand
apprenticeship programs, and experts say it
reﬂects today’s economy,
in which more employers
require internships or
other work experience.

While 6 in 10 said
a bachelor’s degree is
a route to success, an
equal number said they
see vocational school
as good preparation,
and about half see the
same value in an associate degree. The ﬁnding
was a surprise to some
researchers who say
students — and their
parents — often think of
college only as a bachelor’s degree.
“That’s not what I
would expect to see,”
said Heather McKay,
director of the Education and Employment
Research Center at
Rutgers University. “It’s
really great that young
people are thinking
of these alternatives,
because there are some
really good non-degree
credential options out
there.”
The survey also found
disparities in the types
of colleges young Americans choose. Overall,
3 in 4 said they plan
to attend some type of
college or have already
done so. For about half,
their plans included
a four-year university,
while about a quarter
opted for community college or vocational school.
Another quarter had no

college plans.
Wealthier Americans
were more likely to pursue four-year universities, while those from
poorer families leaned
toward other options or
no college at all. Those
from wealthier families
were also more likely to
say their parents were
helping pay for tuition
and many forms of college preparation.
McKay said the ﬁndings suggest students are
steering toward education
choices they think they
can afford. “It’s a little bit
saddening,” she said. “We
need to do a better job of
educating students and
parents on that life-long
learning pathway, and the
value of different kinds of
education.”
A common thread
among many young
Americans is a concern
over the cost of education. Nearly 8 in 10
said they think college
affordability is a very
or extremely serious
problem, and a majority
said they were at least
somewhat concerned
about debt. Of those
with college plans, a
majority said they were
borrowing or planning to
borrow loans to pay for
tuition.

lamp post with a snowman. All materials are
furnished by Michele.
For more information
and to reserve a spot call
Michele at 740-416-o879
or Donna at 740-9925123.

Pomeroy Library.
Members are encouraged to bring items for
the Chapter Service
to America projects:
items for the Military
boxes and school supplies. A $5 table will
be utilized to provide
postage for the Military
boxes. Program will be
related to Veterans Day
and ancestor William
Bierce. All members are
encouraged to attend.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
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(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
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Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
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Editor’s Note: The
Daily Sentinel appreciates your input to the
community calendar.
To make sure items can
receive proper attention, all information
should be received by
the newspaper at least
ﬁve business days prior
to an event. All coming
events print on a spaceavailable basis and in
chronological order.
Events can be emailed
to: TDSnews@aimmediamidwest.com.

Tuesday,
Nov. 12
SUTTON TWP. —
The regular monthly
meeting of the Board
of Trustees of Sutton
Township will be held in
the Racine Village Hall

Council Chambers beginning at 6 p.m.
SYRACUSE — Syracuse Community Center
Board of Directors will
meet at 7 p.m.

Wednesday,
Nov. 13.
HARRISONVILLE —
Scipio Township Trustees regular monthly
meeting, 7 p.m., Harrisonville Fire House.

Thursday,
Nov. 15
MIDDLEPORT —
Snack &amp; canvas with
Michele Musser will
be held at 6 p.m. at the
Riverbend Art Council 290 North Second
Ave., Middleport. This
months project will be a

Saturday,
Nov. 16
ROCKSPRINGS —
Meigs County Trade
Days Craft Bazaar will
be held from 9 a.m. to
3 p.m. in the Rutland
Bottle Gas Building
at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds. For more
information contact
Wendi at 740-416-4015
or Tara at 740-4165506.
POMEROY — The
Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter NSDAR will
meet at 1 p.m. at the

Sunday,
Nov. 17
MIDDLEPORT —
Rev. Dennis Karp will be
speaking at Ash Street
Church, Middleport,
Ohio, in the 10:30 a.m.
and 6:30 p.m. services.
‘Anchor Holds’ will be
singing in the 6:30 p.m.
service.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

National security
officials objected to
stopping Ukraine aid
By Lisa Mascaro
and Mary Clare Jalonick
Associated Press

WASHINGTON —
The view among the
national security ofﬁcials was unanimous:
Military aid to Ukraine
should not be stopped.
But the White House’s
acting chief of staff
thought otherwise.
That was the testimony of Laura Cooper,
a Defense Department
ofﬁcial, whose deposition was released
Monday in the House
impeachment inquiry
of President Donald
Trump.
“My sense is that all
of the senior leaders of
the U.S. national security departments and
agencies were all uniﬁed in their — in their
view that this assistance
was essential,” she said.
“And they were trying
to ﬁnd ways to engage
the President on this.”
Cooper’s testimony
was among several
hundred pages of transcripts released Monday, along with those
of State Department
ofﬁcials Catherine Croft
and Christopher Anderson.
Cooper told investigators that, in a series
of July meetings at the
White House, she came
to understand that
Trump’s acting chief of
staff, Mick Mulvaney,
was holding up the military aid for the U.S. ally.
“There was just this
issue of the White
House chief of staff has
conveyed that the president has concerns about
Ukraine,” she testiﬁed.
When she and others
tried to get an explanation, they found none.
“We did not get clariﬁcation,” she said.
She said it was
“unusual” to have congressional funds suddenly halted that way,
and aides raised concerns about the legality
of it. The Pentagon
was “concerned” about
the hold-up of funds
and “any signal that we
would send to Ukraine

about a wavering in our
commitment,” she said.
Cooper told investigators that she was visited in August by Kurt
Volker, the U.S. special
envoy to Ukraine, who
explained there was a
“statement” that the
Ukraine government
could make to get the
security money ﬂowing.
It was the ﬁrst she
had heard of the quid
pro quo that is now the
central question of the
impeachment inquiry
— the administration’s
push for the Ukraine
government to investigate Trump’s political
rivals.
“Somehow an effort
that he was engaged
in to see if there was
a statement that the
government of Ukraine
would make,” said Cooper, an assistant defense
secretary, “that would
somehow disavow any
interference in U.S.
elections and would
commit to the prosecution of any individuals
involved in election
interference.”
The House is investigating whether Trump
violated his oath of
ofﬁce by pushing
Ukraine’s president to
investigate Democrats,
including Joe Biden,
while the administration was withholding
military funds for the
East European ally.
Cooper described the
Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative, saying
it involved a range of
items such as night
vision goggles, vehicles,
sniper riﬂes and medical equipment.
“Security assistance
is vital to helping the
Ukrainians be able to
defend themselves,”
Cooper said.
Because Ukraine
and Georgia are two
“front-line states” facing
Russian aggression, the
U.S. needed to “shore
up these countries’
abilities to defend themselves.”
“It’s in our interest to
deter Russian aggression elsewhere around
the world,” she said.

IN BRIEF

McConnell:
Bevin lost
GHENT, Ky. (AP) —
Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell says
Kentucky Gov. Matt
Bevin “had a good four
years,” but he says a
review of Bevin’s narrow reelection defeat is
unlikely to change the
outcome.
Bevin trailed Democrat Andy Beshear by
about 5,000 votes in
the Nov. 5 election. A
re-canvass of votes is
scheduled Thursday.
McConnell was in Carroll County on Monday
to tout a US-Spain treaty
he helped pass that cut
the taxes for the North
American Stainless plant
there. McConnell said
the treaty helped the
company avoid a $35
million tax payment.
While there, McConnell said he’s “sorry Matt
came up short.” He said
the re-canvass is unlikely
to change the election
results, and that “barring
some dramatic reversal
on the re-canvass, we’ll
have a different governor
in three weeks.”
Bevin has refused to
concede and cited voting irregularities in the
governor’s race but has
not provided evidence.

Some Republican leaders
have said Bevin should
accept the results of the
re-canvass if Beshear’s
lead holds.

Troops keep
pressure on IS
A BASE IN EASTERN SYRIA (AP) — At
a base in eastern Syria,
a senior U.S. coalition commander said
Monday that American
troops who remain in
Syria are redeploying
to bases, including in
some new locations,
and working with the
Kurdish-led forces to
keep up the pressure on
the Islamic State militants and prevent the
extremists from resurging or breaking out of
prisons.
The commander, Air
Force Maj. Gen. Eric T.
Hill, said even though
Bradley armored
vehicles have arrived
in eastern Syria, the
mission’s focus has not
changed. He said the
“force mix,” including the mechanized
armored vehicles
deployed in Syria for
the ﬁrst time since the
war against IS, has an
array of capabilities to
deny IS the chance to
regroup.

Tuesday, November 12, 2019 3

Hong Kong police shoot protester
By Alice Fung
Associated Press

HONG KONG — Following a day of violence
in which one person
was shot by police and
another set on ﬁre, Hong
Kong’s leader pledged
Monday to “spare no
effort” to halt anti-government protests that have
wracked the city for more
than ﬁve months.
The comments by Carrie Lam are likely to fuel
speculation that harsher
legal and police measures
may be in the works.
“I do not want to go
into details, but I just
want to make it very clear
that we will spare no
effort in ﬁnding ways and
means that could end the
violence in Hong Kong
as soon as possible,” Lam
told reporters.
Lam also refused to
accept the protesters’
demands for political concessions.
“If there is still any
wishful thinking that,
by escalating violence,
the Hong Kong SAR
government will yield to
pressure to satisfy the socalled political demands,
I am making this statement clear and loud here:
That will not happen,”
Lam said, using the initials for Special Administrative Region, which
describes the city’s status
as a semi-autonomous
Chinese territory.
“These rioters’ actions
have far exceeded their
demands, and they are
enemies of the people,”
she said.
Following Lam’s comments, confrontations
between protesters and
police continued into the
night, with black-clad
demonstrators torching
at least one vehicle and
blocking an intersection
in the Mongkok district

Vincent Yu | AP

A protester is detained Monday in the central district of Hong Kong. A Hong Kong protester was shot
by police Monday in a dramatic scene caught on video as demonstrators blocked train lines and roads
during the morning commute.

that has been the scene
of many clashes. A taxi
driver was taken away
by ambulance with head
wounds, although it
wasn’t immediately clear
how he had been injured.
The violence is likely
to further inﬂame passions in Hong Kong after
a university student who
fell from a parking garage
during an earlier protest
succumbed Friday to his
injuries and police arrested six pro-democracy lawmakers over the weekend
on charges of obstructing
the local assembly during
a raucous May 11 meeting. All were freed on
bail.
China’s ruling Communist Party has also
indicated it may try to
ﬁnd a way to enact antisubversion laws in the
territory. Such measures
were shelved previously
due to public opposition.
While Beijing has dismissed reports it may
replace Lam next year,
the party last week issued
a statement saying it
would “perfect” the system to appoint and dis-

miss Hong Kong’s leader
and top ofﬁcials.
In a widely distributed
video, a police ofﬁcer
is shown shooing away
a group of protesters at
an intersection Monday
morning, then drawing
his gun on a masked protester in a white hooded
sweatshirt who approaches him.
As the two struggle,
another protester in black
approaches, at whom the
ofﬁcer points his gun. He
then ﬁres at the stomach area of the second
protester, who falls to
the ground. The ofﬁcer
appeared to ﬁre again as
a third protester in black
joined the tussle.
The protester in white
ﬂees up a nearby stairway, and the ofﬁcer and a
colleague pin the two in
black to the ground.
Police said only one
protester was hit and
that he was undergoing
surgery. The Hong Kong
hospital authority said
the person was initially in
critical condition but was
stable after surgery.
It was the second

protester shot since the
demonstrations began
in early June, although
police have repeatedly
drawn their ﬁrearms to
ward off attacks. Police
said they arrested more
than 260 people on Monday, adding to the more
than 3,300 arrests since
the movement erupted in
June.
Few details were available about the burning
incident in the Ma On
Shan neighborhood.
Video posted online
shows the victim arguing
with a group of young
people before someone
douses him with a liquid
and strikes a lighter. The
man was reported in critical condition.
Police ﬁred tear gas
and deployed a water
cannon in parts of the
city and charged onto
the campus of Chinese
University, where students were protesting.
Online video also showed
a policeman on a motorcycle riding through a
group of protesters in an
apparent attempt to disperse them.

Buttigieg backs female as VA secy
By Hope Yen
Associated Press

WASHINGTON —
Democratic presidential
candidate Pete Buttigieg
says if elected he’d like
to name a woman to
lead the Department of
Veterans Affairs for the
ﬁrst time as 2020 hopefuls take aim at President
Donald Trump’s record
on stemming military suicide and helping female
vets.
On Veterans Day, several candidates rolled out
proposals to meet the
needs of America’s 20
million former service
members.
Trump, speaking in
New York City’s Veterans
Day Parade, praised
the strength of the U.S.
military and the death of
Islamic State leader Abu
Bakr al-Baghdadi, saying the nation’s veterans
“risked everything for
us. Now it is our duty to
serve and protect them
every single day of our
lives.” More than 100
protesters booed and
held black balloons that
read “support our troops,
impeach.”
Buttigieg, the 37-yearold mayor of South
Bend, Indiana, said
female veterans and service members have been
neglected, including on
concerns about sexual
harassment and women’s
health. Women are the
military’s fastest-growing
subgroup.
“I think leadership
plays a huge role so absolutely I’d seek to name
a woman to lead VA,”
Buttigieg, a former Navy
intelligence ofﬁcer, said
in an interview with The

Elise Amendola | AP

Democratic presidential candidate and South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg shakes hands after a
Veterans Day address during a campaign event Monday in Rochester, N.H.

Associated Press. His
comments went a step
beyond his 21-page wideranging plan released on
Monday.
“The president has let
veterans down,” Buttigieg said.
Of the Cabinet and
Cabinet-level roles, four
have never been held
by a woman: Veterans
Affairs, Defense, Treasury and White House
chief of staff. Buttigieg
says he’d take a close
look at appointing a
female defense secretary
as well.
Former Vice President
Joe Biden said he would
seek to build on substantial gains for vets that
were started under the
Obama-Biden administration, such as stemming homelessness and
improving mental health
care.
Biden said he would
“restore trust” in the VA
after failed leadership,
putting in place at least

one full-time women’s
primary care physician at
each VA medical center
to boost women’s health
care and provide $300
million to better understand the impact of traumatic brain injury.
He said as president
he would publish a comprehensive strategy to
address veterans’ suicide
within his ﬁrst 200 days
in ofﬁce and hire additional staff to ensure that
in his ﬁrst year of ofﬁce
wait times for vets at risk
of suicide are reduce to
zero.

“Our veterans deserve
leaders who will ﬁght for
them as ardently and as
forcefully as they have
fought for us,” Biden
wrote in a Veterans Day
statement with his wife
Jill.
In a dig at Trump,
Vermont Sen. Bernie
Sanders released a video
on Monday highlighting
his role in working with
the late Republican Sen.
John McCain, a decorated war hero, to pass
legislation that included
the Veterans Choice program in 2014.

TO THE PEOPLE OF LETART TOWNSHIP
Thank you for your continued support
during the recent election
Zachary B. Manuel
paid for by the candidate

OH-70158128

�Opinion
4 Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

The most
important
decision

It was a blessing to be able to travel to Israel in
June of 2001.
Four of us had worked hard to organize the trip
– three ministers and me. At one
time we had over 200 people making
plans to travel with us.
That changed dramatically when
the Palestinian/Israeli conﬂict
escalated with more car bombs, suicide bombings and routine gunﬁre
throughout the region.
Randy
The political climate in Israel
Riley
at the time was growing increasContributing ingly dangerous. Our own U.S. State
columnist
Department was strongly advising
against tourist travel to the region.
Many of our friends started canceling their travel
plans.
However, several of us were committed to the
trip and, despite the warnings, we ﬂew to Israel.
By the time our ﬂight lifted off, we had only 55
people making the trip with us.
Luckily, during the 10 days we were in the Holy
Lands, there was no violence. Also, because of the
warnings, there were very few other tourists at
the places we visited. It was almost like we were
the only ones there.
One of the highlights of the trip was our day in
Bethlehem. Every year, as the Christmas holidays
approach, I remember many special moments
from that trip.
Bethlehem is a little over six miles south of
Jerusalem in the central West Bank region. The
city is under the control of the Palestinians. We
had to park our bus, which was registered in
Israel, and walk quite a distance to the Palestinian
checkpoint.
At both sides of the checkpoint were young
soldiers in black combat gear carrying large weapons. It was an imposing entrance into the city
known as the birthplace of the Prince of Peace.
We walked across a wide no-man’s-land and
boarded a Palestinian bus for the ﬁnal part of our
drive. The bus stopped near the entrance to the
courtyard of the Church of the Nativity. We were
the only ones there.
The entryway into the Church of the Nativity
used to be fairly large, but the Ottomans didn’t
want horses to be ridden into the holy church, so
they made the entrance so small that people have
to enter one at a time and even average-sized
people have to bend over to clear the doorway.
Sometime before Christmas, I’ll devote an
entire column to the wonders of that amazing
church and our visit to the very site where Christ
was born.
After our visit, we returned to the bus. It was
parked in front of a gift shop that specialized in
nativity scenes that were carved out of local olive
wood. Some of the nativity scenes were huge —
priced at thousands of dollars.
The one I bought was much smaller, but I was
determined not to leave Bethlehem without a
nativity scene that honored the Baby Jesus, Mary,
Joseph, the Wise Men and all the humble animals
that gathered around the manger.
Debbie and I still cherish that little nativity
scene.
The ﬁrst few years we had it, we would place
it on the ﬁreplace hearth just a few weeks before
Christmas. At ﬁrst we wouldn’t let the grandchildren play with it, but as time went by, and seeing
how much they enjoyed playing with “The Jesus
People,” we decided to leave it up year-round.
Over the past 18 years, all eight grandchildren
have heard the story of Mary and Joseph and have
played with the little statues.
Several years later, I noticed that our little Jack
Russell, Puchi, also was enjoying a few of the little
carvings. For some reason, she seemed to be particularly drawn to little Baby Jesus in his manger.
I worked on her training and thought I had broken her habit of chewing on olive wood, but a few
years later we realized that Baby Jesus was gone,
missing — he had completely disappeared.
I searched the back yard and found nothing –
not a trace, not a sliver. I looked on the internet
for a replacement Baby Jesus and found several,
but none them would have ﬁt in with the other
carved olive-wood ﬁgures.
After much thought, I decided not to try to
replace the Christ Child. Even one of our little
grandchildren remarked, “Baby Jesus just isn’t
here anymore.”
The more I thought about it, the more I realized — that’s right. Jesus isn’t here anymore.
Although his spirit is still with us, people have
been waiting for the return of Jesus for over 2,000
years.
He’ll be back, but until then, I think it would be
useless to try and to replace him.
We’ll just wait.
Randy Riley is former Mayor of Wilmington, Ohio and former Clinton
County Commissioner.

THEIR VIEW

Young trees need your attention
If you have a home
orchard, this is the time
of year to start protecting
young fruit trees from
deer damage. Landscape
trees like crabapple,
weeping cherry or ornamental pear need similar
attention in fall. An ounce
of prevention right now
could insure that your
young trees live to a ripe
old age; they are very
vulnerable right now and
protecting them is easy.
Rubbing or uprooting
by bucks in the fall is
a common problem. A
simple way to prevent
buck rub damage is to
wrap a short piece of wire
fencing loosely around
the trunk (see photo).
We’ve had great success
with this method, which
doesn’t trap moisture
around the bark, or invite
insect infestations, the
way corrugated tile can.
Deer like to nibble the
new growth during the
winter, which destroys
next season’s fruit buds.
This can be prevented
by spraying trees with
a good deer repellent
like “Liquid Fence”
once a month starting in September and
continuing through the
winter. Always spray deer
repellent on trees when
planting, since deer are

orchard. Dormant
attracted to newly
oil spray, like
turned soil and will
Bonide “All Seainvestigate right
sons Spray Oil”, is
away.
liquid parafﬁn in a
Rabbits like to
ready-to-use spray
nibble the tender
bottle or a concenbark of fruit trees
trate you can mix
during winter,
Steve
up in your own
which can kill them Boehme
by stripping the
Contributing sprayer. It smothers insect eggs on
vital inner bark
columnist
the bark, breaking
trees need to carry
their life cycle.
food and water. We
When planting young
use plastic tree guards to
trees, mix a sustained
protect young bark from
rabbits. This method also release multi-mineral, low
nitrogen fertilizer with
protects from herbicide
the soil around the tree.
spray drift, which can
Espoma Tree Tone, a
scar the smooth bark of
specialized fertilizer conyoung trees and stunt
taining trace minerals like
them.
Boron and Zinc, is perfect
We see many orchards
for this. Trace minerals
with crooked trees. We
help prevent problems
recommend hardwood
like blossom end rot and
tree stakes for the ﬁrst
few years to prevent this. premature fruit drop. Fertilizers with high nitrogen
Sturdy stakes will also
content are not good for
support wire fencing,
fruit trees.
the ultimate deer deterMixing the fertilizer
rent. We also recommend
with the soil when you
killing weeds and grass
plant is the best way to
in the root zone with
feed young trees. Later,
Roundup to eliminate
competition for water and annual feeding is best
done by scattering Tree
nutrients. Roundup will
not poison the soil, but be Tone in the root zone
before mulching. You can
careful not to spray any
fertilize now, anytime
on the bark or foliage.
during winter, or in early
Soaking your trees
with “dormant oil” helps spring. Sustained release
fertilizers will remain in
control certain insects
and diseases from getting the root zone until the
soil temperature warms,
started in your young

allowing trees to uptake
the nutrients.
Right now is the best
time of year to expand
your home orchard. Fall
planting gets you one
year closer to bearing
fruit than if you wait until
spring. Fall weather is
ideal for low-stress planting. The soil is still warm
enough for root development, while the tree itself
is going dormant and
doesn’t need much watering. Cooler temperatures
and increased rainfall
help as well.
The most common
mistake when planting
young trees is digging the
hole too deep and smothering the roots. The
container soil should be
level with the area around
the tree, and should be
left exposed so the roots
can breathe. If you add
soil over the root zone, it
prevents air from reaching the roots and smothers the tree. Remember:
plants breathe through
their roots!
Steve Boehme is a landscape
designer/installer specializing
in landscape “makeovers.” “Let’s
Grow” is published weekly; column
archives are on the “Garden Advice”
page at www.goodseedfarm.com.
For more information is available
at www.goodseedfarm.com or call
GoodSeed Farm Landscapes at
(937) 587-7021.

TODAY IN HISTORY
as Leon Trotsky was
expelled from the ComToday is Tuesday, Nov. munist Party.
In 1936, the San Fran12, the 316th day of
cisco-Oakland Bay Bridge
2019. There are 49 days
opened as President
left in the year.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Today’s Highlight in History pressed a telegraph key in
Washington, D.C., giving
On Nov. 12, 2001,
American Airlines Flight the green light to trafﬁc.
In 1942, the World War
587, an Airbus A300
headed to the Dominican II naval Battle of Guadalcanal began. (The Allies
Republic, crashed after
ended up winning a major
takeoff from New York’s
victory over Japanese
John F. Kennedy Interforces.)
national Airport, killing
In 1948, former Japaall 260 people on board
nese premier Hideki Tojo
and ﬁve people on the
and several other World
ground.
War II Japanese leaders
were sentenced to death
On this date
by a war crimes tribunal.
In 1815, pioneering
In 1977, the city of
American suffragist ElizaNew Orleans elected its
beth Cady Stanton was
born in Johnstown, New ﬁrst black mayor, Ernest
“Dutch” Morial (MAW’York.
ree-al), the winner of a
In 1920, baseball got
runoff.
its ﬁrst “czar” as Judge
In 1982, Yuri V.
Kenesaw Mountain LanAndropov (ahn-DROH’dis was elected commispawf) was elected to
sioner of the American
succeed the late Leonid I.
and National Leagues.
Brezhnev as general secIn 1927, Josef Stalin
retary of the Soviet Combecame the undisputed
ruler of the Soviet Union munist Party’s Central
The Associated Press

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“I would have girls regard themselves not as
adjectives but as nouns.”
— Elizabeth Cady Stanton

Committee.
In 1987, the American
Medical Association
issued a policy statement
saying it was unethical
for a doctor to refuse
to treat someone solely
because that person had
AIDS or was HIV-positive.
In 1990, Japanese
Emperor Akihito (ahkee-hee-toh) formally
assumed the Chrysanthemum Throne. Actress Eve
Arden died in Beverly
Hills, California, at age
82.
In 1996, a Saudi Boeing 747 jetliner collided
shortly after takeoff from
New Delhi, India, with a
Kazak Ilyushin (il-YOO’shin)-76 cargo plane, killing 349 people.
In 1998, Chicago
Mayor Richard M. Daley

ﬁled a $433 milliondollar lawsuit against
the ﬁrearms industry,
declaring that it had created a public nuisance by
ﬂooding the streets with
weapons deliberately
marketed to criminals.
(A judge dismissed
the lawsuit in 2000; an
appeals court ruled in
2002 that the city of
Chicago could proceed;
but the Illinois Supreme
Court dismissed the lawsuit in 2004.)
Ten years ago: Army
psychiatrist Maj. Nidal
Malik Hasan (nih-DAHL’
mah-LEEK’ hah-SAHN’)
was charged with 13
counts of premeditated
murder in the Fort Hood,
Texas, shooting rampage.
(Hasan was later convicted and sentenced to
death.)

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 12, 2019 5

STATE BRIEFS

Man allegedly stabs son
NORTH COLLEGE HILL, Ohio (AP) — Police
in Ohio say a man accused of stabbing his 6-yearold son in the chest with a large kitchen knife
has been arrested on charges including felonious
assault.
North College Hill police say Herb Price allegedly stabbed his son Saturday night at an apartment in the Cincinnati suburb. Police said the boy
was seriously injured but was expected to recover.
Hamilton County Municipal Court records
show the North College Hill man was arrested
Sunday on charges of felonious assault, domestic
violence and endangering children. Price’s attorney, Rhett Baker, declined to comment Monday.
A complaint ﬁled in court said authorities were
seeking a temporary protection order for the
child.
Police didn’t provide a potential motive.

Ohio Senate pledges action

Photos courtesy Jerry Davis

Pictured, Jerry Davis of the Gallipolis Railroad Freight Station Museum, Dallas Love, Ronnie Keenan, Rose Stoney, Amanda Pearce of
Gallipolis Farmers Bank. The museum received a donation from Farmers Bank in early October.

Rail

ways in a couple years,”
said Board President Jim
Love previously. “We’d
like to turn the car into a
From page 1
meeting place and modify
it for educational pursquared away for heating installation as well as poses.”
Efforts are ongoing to
insulation. Davis in the
determine how to rehapast has said the board
bilitate the car.
is focusing on completThe museum also
ing the ofﬁce area of the
museum in order to begin received a caboose from
Porter Township around
having operations active
Wheelersburg in 2017. In
in the building.
2018, the museum loaded
The station is also
a 1945 Porter steam
awaiting the addition of
engine onto its outside
a Baltimore and Ohio
caboose and boxcar from rails. According to Davis,
the engine originally
the West Virginia State
operated without a ﬁre
Farm Museum, said
box and was ﬁlled with
Davis.
steam. This allowed it to
The museum board
has received $125,000 in operate in areas where
an open ﬂame may be
state funding to be put
towards maintenance and too dangerous for other
steam engines.
restoration efforts from
Love ﬁrst approached
the Ohio capital fund.
Gallipolis City ComOver the summer, the
station installed a former mission about turning
circus passenger car that the aging station into a
was once part of the Ring- museum in April 2016.
ling Brothers and Barnum According to him, the
and Bailey circus on rails station had served as an
old freight house and was
behind the station.
built in 1901 by Hocking
“We’ve come a long

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The leader of the
Ohio Senate is pledging to take action by year’s
end on a bill designed to reduce low-level drug
possessions to misdemeanors and increase penalties for drug dealers.
The legislation is part of a long-running attempt
by lawmakers to reduce Ohio’s prison population.
Gongwer News Service reports that GOP Senate President Larry Obhof, a Medina Republican,
wants the bill made a priority as hearings continue
this fall.
The bipartisan bill would also allow people convicted of low-level drug possession charges to have
their records sealed on completion of drug court
requirements.
The legislation also creates harsher penalties
for trafﬁcking, deeming it aggravated trafﬁcking,
major trafﬁcking or trafﬁcking, depending on the
drug amounts involved.

Sentencing set for cop killer

The Gallipolis Railroad Freight Station Museum gets its interior
insulated.

It closed in the early
Valley, a rail company of
the time. The building is 1980s.
roughly 118 years-old and
Dean Wright can be reached at
Love had once served as
740-446-2342.
the building’s telegrapher.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A judge has set
a sentencing date later this month for an Ohio
man convicted of killing two suburban police
ofﬁcers responding to a 911 hang-up call.
Quentin Smith was found guilty Nov. 1 of two
counts of aggravated murder for fatally shooting
Westerville ofﬁcers Eric Joering and Anthony
Morelli in February 2018.
A divided jury on Nov. 6 recommended life
with no parole over a death sentence. Judge
Richard Frye will formally pass sentence Smith
on Nov. 21. He can’t override the jury.
Franklin County prosecutors said Smith killed
the ofﬁcers in an exchange of gunﬁre after opening his apartment door. Smith was shot ﬁve
times.
Defense attorney Frederick Benton didn’t dispute that Smith shot the ofﬁcers, but said it happened in “a moment of chaos, panic and crisis.”

Pulitzer stolen from paper

Deer

enced hunters are encouraged to
pass along their hunting knowledge and expertise to someone
new this season. Special hunting
From page 1
opportunities for mentors and
those new to hunting are availcounty and statewide bag limits.
able at the Wild Ohio Harvest
Young hunters harvested 6,563
deer during the 2018 youth season. Community Page.
Hunters’ Challenge
Ask a new hunter to join you
this season. Your next outdoors
adventure with family and friends
is right here in Ohio. Hunting
provides an excellent opportunity to appreciate wildlife, and
remains the best way to manage
Ohio’s deer population. Experi-

Poacher Hotline
Help protect Ohio’s wildlife
resources. Report any violations
to the division’s Turn-In-a-Poacher
(TIP) hotline by calling or texting
800-POACHER (762-2437). All
reports remain anonymous and
tipsters may be eligible for a cash
reward.

Chronic Wasting Disease Monitoring
Hunters are reminded that portions of Holmes and Tuscarawas
counties have been declared a Disease Surveillance Area (DSA) as
part of the state’s ongoing efforts
to monitor Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD). Speciﬁc regulations
apply to hunters, including mandatory sampling. Samples are also
accepted from adult deer in Lucas,
Fulton and Williams counties on
a voluntary basis. More information can be found in the 2019-2020
Ohio Hunting and Trapping Regulations.
Information provided by ODNR.

AKRON, Ohio (AP) — Authorities are searching for a Pulitzer Prize Gold Medal that was
reportedly stolen from an Ohio newspaper’s former ofﬁce.
The theft was discovered Thursday morning
after the Akron Beacon Journal’s staff moved from
the paper’s former building.
The Akron Beacon Journal reports the thief
took the medal from a protective display case
where it was stored in the former newsroom lobby.
The medal was scheduled to be moved to the next
ofﬁce.
Police say the medal was stolen sometime
between Tuesday and late Thursday morning.
Akron Beacon Journal Publisher Bill Albrecht
says the paper is cooperating with the investigation.
The medal was awarded for the paper’s 1994 “A
Question of Color” series.

Veterans
From page 1

representative, so I put
on my uniform and went
to church,” said Fields.
Fields said, “We were
treated like gold,” referring to how soldiers
returning from current engagements are
received, “but it hasn’t
always been so.” He said
he was glad to see people
had a change of heart
in how they welcome
soldiers home, unlike the
negative reception some
soldiers received during
the Vietnam Conﬂict.
One of Fields’ duties
when he was stateside
was working in the Casualty Assistance Ofﬁce,
the group that works with
the family and chaplain
to organize memorial
ceremonies for fallen soldiers. He described it as a
difﬁcult task, and gave an
example of recovering the
car of a serviceman killed
in action in Iraq.
‘There was a parking
garage where deployed

Photos by Lorna Hart | Courtesy

Supt. Tony Deem recognized retired Sgt. Allen Graham as the
Special Honoree at Monday’s ceremony.

soldiers could leave their
cars. This soldier wasn’t
coming home, so I had to
get the car ready to give
to his family. In the glove
compartment were family
photos, one of his three
year old son. In the back
seat was a Toys R Us bag
with Spiderman pajamas
that he planned to give
his son.”
Fields said serving
teaches you how to serve,
and “we are always serving, always giving back.”
Veterans Day quotes

were read by National
Honor Society ofﬁcers
Addie Matson, Mickenzie Ferrell, Avery King,
Coltin Parker, Raeven
Reedy, and Baylee Wolfe,
and a second video, “In
the Arms of an Angel”,
was played in tribute to
American soldiers.
Each year a Veteran is
selected as a special honoree — this year’s recipient was Retired Sergeant
Allen Floyd Graham. Graham was born in Apple
Grove, Ohio, and a 1962

The Retiring of the Colors was completed by the Racine American Legion.

graduate of Racine/Southern High School where he
participated in basketball,
baseball and track.
After high school, he
enlisted in the United
States Marine Corp. His
ﬁrst assignment was
Pearl Harbor. Later he
was assigned to Headquarters Battery, 2nd
Field Artillery at Camp
Lejeune. Graham earned
the Good Conduct Medal
two times, Expert Riﬂe

Badge and the National
Defense Service Medal
and obtained the rank of
Sergeant E-5 while serving. Since leaving the
service in 1966, Graham
has been a member of the
Racine American Legion
and is currently the Commander of the DAV, as
well as being actively
involved.
The program concluded
with the roll call in memory of those that “made

the ultimate sacriﬁce.”
Deem and Ed Baker read
the names as Student
Council members tolled
the bells and extinguished
the candles, one for each
fallen soldier.
Taps with Echo were
played by Silas Nero and
Claire Bradbury then
sounded through a silent
auditorium.
A reception followed
for veterans and their
families.

�Sports
6 Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Newark Catholic fends off Eagles, 35-7
By Alex Hawley

covered the 92 yards in eight
plays, with a nine-yard touchdown pass from Matt Carlisle
to Brandon Buchanan and Ryan
NEWARK, Ohio — Not the
Auer’s ﬁrst of ﬁve point-after
result the wanted, but a great
makes giving the hosts a 7-0
experience either way.
edge with 3:12 left in the ﬁrst.
The Eastern football team
The game’s next three poshad its 2019 season come to a
sessions were three-and-outs,
close in the opening round of
but the Green Wave took a 14-0
the Region 27 playoffs, with
the seventh-seeded Eagles fall- lead on their ﬁrst offensive
ing to second-seeded host New- snap of the second quarter,
ark Catholic by a 35-7 count on with Derek Hawk scoring on
a 14-yard run with 9:28 left in
Saturday night at White Field
the half.
in Licking County.
Newark Catholic got the ball
The Eagles (8-3) — playing
back on the Eagle 28 after Slatin Week 11 for the ﬁrst time
since 2001 — went 56 yards in er Evans intercepted a tipped
11 plays on the game’s opening pass on the second play of the
drive, but fell a yard short of a ensuing EHS drive. Five plays
later, Evans caught an 11-yard
ﬁrst down at the hosts’ eighttouchdown pass from Carlisle,
yard line.
making the margin 21-0 with
Newark Catholic (8-3)

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern senior Mason Dishong (24) is dragged down after an interception, in
front of teammate Jayden Evans (22), during the Eagles’ 35-7 loss to the Green
Wave on Saturday at White Field in Newark, Ohio.

6:35 left in the half.
The Green Wave forced
EHS into a three-and-out once
more time, and two plays later
went up 28-0, as Hawk caught
a 55-yard scoring pass from
Carlisle at the 4:01 mark of the
second.
Chance Brooks picked off an
Eagle pass three plays into the
next drive, but Mason Dishong
got the ball back for the guests
with an interception behind the
line of scrimmage.
Eastern made it to the NCHS
side of the ﬁeld, but was picked
off again, as Brendan Sheehan
got the ball back for the hosts.
Newark Catholic couldn’t add
to its lead on either side of the
break, running out of time and
See EAGLES | 7

Hamlin races way into
championship field
with Phoenix win
AVONDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Denny Hamlin
adamantly insisted ‘it’s not over” after a critical
mistake last week put the Daytona 500 winner on
the verge of elimination from NASCAR’s championship race.
He remained undeterred, conﬁdent in his
chances to win Sunday at ISM Raceway and save
his season with a victory that would give him an
automatic berth into the ﬁnal four.
He called his shot and delivered.
Hamlin snagged his ﬁrst spot in the championship ﬁeld since 2014 with his win, a victory that
eliminated NASCAR champion Joey Logano from
the playoffs and gave Joe Gibbs Racing and Toyota
three of the slots in next week’s decider at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
“I try not to put too much into it,” Hamlin said.
“There’s still work to be done. Doesn’t guarantee
a championship. Gives us a chance. Live to ﬁght
another day. That’s all you can ask for.”
Hamlin, one of the favorites to win the title,
faced elimination after spinning last week at Texas
but took control and had the win essentially in the
bag until a caution with nine laps remaining set up
a ﬁnal restart.
Hamlin, who had been terrible on restarts the
entire race, punched his steering wheel in anger
when the yellow ﬂag waved. His Joe Gibbs Racing
team made an unusual call to take just two tires
— the same strategy as contender Ryan Blaney
— and the two lined up next to each other for the
restart with three laps to go.
Hamlin ﬁnally got a decent restart, pulled into
the lead, and Gibbs teammate Kyle Busch passed
Blaney to put a buffer between the two.
Hamlin then cruised to his sixth win of the
season and punched the air with his ﬁst in his car
as he crossed the ﬁnish line. He jumped into the
arms of his waiting crew, which he had promised
earlier Sunday to give his all in an effort to make
the championship ﬁeld at Homestead-Miami
Speedway.
“This race team worked so hard this whole year.
They deserve to be there,” Hamlin said of his No.
11 crew. “I put them in a bad hole last week. I told
them today in the meeting, I said, ‘I’m going to
give everything I’ve got to make up for the mistake
I made last week.’ That’s all I got.”
Hamlin will race Gibbs teammates Busch and
Martin Truex Jr., as well as Kevin Harvick of
Stewart-Haas Racing, for the championship.
Gibbs, winner of 18 races this season, and Toyota
have three of the slots in the ﬁnal four.
“I feel like we are all here because we worked
together,” said Truex.
Chevrolet will not be represented for the third
consecutive season and Harvick races a Ford.
Hamlin’s win sealed the manufacturer championship for Toyota.
Truex won the 2018 title, Busch won in 2015
and Harvick in 2014. All three raced for the championship last season against Logano, who won
See HAMLIN | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Nov. 12
College Football
Western Michigan at Ohio,
7:30

PPHS-BHS winner vs.
Oak Glen-Independence
winner at Charleston,
6:30 p.m.

Friday, Nov. 15
College Football
La. Tech at Marshall, 7
p.m.
WVSSAC Volleyball
(5) Point Pleasant vs. (4)
Bridgeport at Charleston,
8:30 a.m.

Saturday, Nov. 16
WVSSAC Volleyball
Class AAA final at
Charleston, 9:30 a.m.
Class AA final at
Charleston, 11 a.m.
Class A final at
Charleston, 12:30 p.m.

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy junior Michael Beasy (20) is swarmed by a trio of Waverly defenders during a first half carry Saturday night in a Division
IV, Region 15 quarterfinal playoff contest at Raidiger Field in Waverly, Ohio.

Tigers tame Gallia Academy, 40-0
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

WAVERLY, Ohio —
The seniors ﬁnished their
careers in a playoff game.
Everyone else on
the Blue Devil sideline
learned a valuable lesson
about the postseason
moving forward.
The Gallia Academy
football team had another
remarkable gridiron campaign come to an emphatic halt on Saturday night
following a 40-0 setback
to host Waverly in a Division IV, Region 15 quarterﬁnal held at Raidiger
Field in Pike County.
The sixth seeded Blue
Devils (9-2) had just
about everything go
wrong in their 12th opening-round postseason
appearance, as the guests
committed ﬁve turnovers
and were penalized a
dozen times for 85 yards
en route to the program’s
second shutout loss in
playoff history.
The third seeded Tigers
(9-2), on the other hand,
notched their ﬁrst playoff
win since 2007 while
also picking up their ﬁrst
victory over GAHS since
1982 — when the two
competed as members of
the defunct Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League.
The Blue and White
still lead the all-time
series by a 10-4 margin.
With the exception
of point-after tries, very
little went wrong for the
Orange and Black as they
racked up 348 yards of
total offense while ﬁnishing the night plus-4 in

Gallia Academy junior Cameron Webb (4) forces a fumble as
teammate Zac Canaday (73) looks on during the second half of
Saturday night’s Division IV, Region 15 quarterfinal playoff contest
against Waverly at Raidiger Field in Waverly, Ohio.

turnover differential —
which included a pick-6
late in the second period.
WHS senior tailback
Payton Shoemaker —
who had the 50-yard
interception return for a
score — also chipped in
146 rushing yards and
three ﬁrst half touchdowns on 18 carries,
allowing the hosts to
storm out to a sizable
33-0 halftime advantage.
Hunter Ward completed the host scoring
with a 3-yard run at the
5:57 mark of the third
period. Greyson Diener
converted the PAT kick
to wrap up the 40-point
outcome.

The Blue Devils did
knock on the scoreboard’s
door as James Armstrong
plunged in from six yards
out early in the fourth
quarter, but a holding
penalty negated the score
while pushing the ball
back to the WHS 16.
After an incomplete
pass and a sack moved
the ball back to the 24,
Zeke Brown picked off a
Noah Vanco pass that ultimately ended the threat.
The Blue Devils were
never closer than the
Waverly 20-yard line the
rest of the way.
The Blue Devils were
error-free in falling
behind 12-0 at the end of

the ﬁrst quarter, but the
Blue Devils followed with
a pair of second quarter
interceptions and three
more turnovers after halftime.
Third year GAHS coach
Alex Penrod was disappointed with the way
the evening ultimately
turned out, but one bad
night doesn’t deter from
anything that his troops
accomplished this year.
As he noted afterward,
Waverly was simply the
better team on this frigid
night … but his kids also
came away with some
motivational knowledge.
“Obviously it is not the
outcome that we wanted,
but it doesn’t take anything away from a 9-1 regular season that saw our
kids go through a lot of
growth and development
to earn a spot in the playoffs,” Penrod said. “Our
kids came a long way
this year and our seniors
have really come a long
way since going 1-9 their
freshmen year. They’ve all
played a big part in getting this program back to
where it is and I couldn’t
be prouder of these young
men for that.
“Give a lot of credit to
Waverly though. That’s
a very well-coached
team and they looked
like a squad that has
four straight years in the
playoffs. They had that
chip to get over the hump
and they did it … and we
learned what we need to
work on in the offseason
to take that next step too.”
See TIGERS | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tigers

tacked on the PAT kick,
making it 33-0 entering
the intermission.
Waverly outgained
From page 6
the guests by a 348-264
margin in total yards of
After a pair of Gallia
Academy punts and three offense, including a 182scoreless drives, Waverly 67 edge in rushing yards.
WHS claimed a 16-14
put its initial points on
the board as quarterback lead in ﬁrst downs and
was also ﬂagged three
Hayd’n Shanks found
times for 20 yards.
Will Futhey on a 23-yard
Junior Cameron Webb
touchdown strike for a
6-0 edge with 6:25 left in forced and recovered a
fumble early in the fourth
the ﬁrst period.
quarter for Gallia AcadAnother Blue Devil
emy’s lone takeaway of
punt turned into a drive
capped with a Shoemaker the night.
Armstrong — who
3-yard run with 2:11 left
hadn’t played since getin the opening frame,
making it a 12-0 contest. ting hurt in Week 7
against Coal Grove — led
The Blue and White
entered the game without the Blue Devils with 73
rushing yards on 13 carstarting defensive lineman Zack Hemby because ries, followed by Michael
Beasy with 20 yards on
of an injury, then lost
10 attempts. Briar Willineman Brayden Easton
liams also had ﬁve yards
on the opening Waverly
drive to a shoulder injury. on three totes.
Vanco — who was
Losing two of his biggest contributors up front sacked three times for
minus-31 yards — com— especially the second
pleted 14-of-27 passes
one early on — proved
for 197 yards, including a
to be a bit too much for
quartet of interceptions.
Penrod and his staff to
Williams hauled in a
overcome.
“Physically, we’ve taken team-best seven catches
a bit of a beating the last for 106 yards, while Cade
Roberts had ﬁve catches
couple of weeks … and
for 34 yards. Beasy and
the ﬂood gates seemed
to open up there again in Ryan Donovsky had one
grab apiece for 23 and 34
losing Brayden early on.
yards, respectively.
Our defensive line was
Shanks completed
kind of depleted already,
12-of-18 passes for 166
and that’s the one place
yards and a score for
we don’t really have the
Waverly. Futhey led the
depth to replace those
host wideouts with four
injuries,” Penrod said.
“You start throwing two- catches for 89 yards,
way guys into it and mix- while Penn Morrison
hauled in three passes for
ing up rotations, and it
just starts becoming frus- 48 yards.
Penrod spoke very
trating because you don’t
highly of his departhave your normal guys
out there. That’s football ing upperclassmen, but
he also had more than
though … and the cards
enough reason to pass
just weren’t in our favor
along such accolades
tonight.”
for the likes of Ben Cox,
Shoemaker produced
his second rushing touch- Ryan Donovsky, Evan
Rodgers, Cade Roberts,
down of the night after
Andrew Toler, Cole Rose,
breaking free and coverTrent Meadows, Mason
ing 72 yards to paydirt
Angel and Zac Canaday.
with 6:07 left in the secAfter all, these nine
ond canto, making it an
seniors are leaving with
18-0 advantage.
a 24-18 overall mark durTrailing by three
ing their four-year high
scores, the Blue Devils
were forced to look down- school careers — the ﬁrst
ﬁeld a bit more offensive- senior class at GAHS to
ly — which ultimately led have an overall winning
record in ﬁve years.
to trouble.
“It’s a special group
Facing a ﬁrst-and-10,
because these guys have
Vanco had a pass picked
off by Shoemaker at mid- gone from one win as
freshmen to contributing
ﬁeld and returned to the
house with 4:24 left in the to an OVC championship
and a pair of playoff runs.
half. Shoemaker also ran
in the 2-point conversion That’s probably more
for a 26-point advantage. than they expected four
years ago, and they’ve
Gallia Academy’s next
played a big part in getdrive also ended with
ting this thing turned
an interception, but the
guests made a successful around,” Penrod said.
“They’ve earned absogoalline stand to get the
lutely everything that
ball back after facing a
they have received dursecond-and-goal at the
ing their careers as Blue
two.
Devils, so they should
The Blue Devils ultideﬁnitely hold their
mately punted the ball
away, but the Tigers hit a heads high in leaving here
43-yard pass from Shanks tonight.”
The Blue Devils are
to Futhey — putting the
now 6-12 all-time in playball at the GAHS one
off games. Gallia Acadwith one second left.
emy was also 6-1 in OVC
Shoemaker plunged
play this past fall, good
in on the ﬁnal play of
enough for second place.
the ﬁrst half and Diener

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

CENTENARY, Ohio — Reserve seats
for the 2019-20 Gallia Academy varsity
basketball season will go on sale on Tuesday, Nov. 12 for Gallia Academy Athletic
Super Boosters.
Parents of varsity and junior varsity
basketball players and varsity cheerleaders will be able to purchase reserve seats
on Wednesday, Nov. 13.
Reserve seats for the general public will
be available on Thursday, Nov. 14.
The price will be $70 per ticket. Tickets may be purchased in the Athletic
Director’s ofﬁce at Gallia Academy High
School between the hours of 8 a.m. and
3 p.m.
Gallia Academy Athletic Super Boosters will be limited to six tickets purchased on the ﬁrst day of sales. After
the ﬁrst day, there will be no limit on the
number of tickets that may be purchased.

the ﬁnale to snag the title away from the three drivers
who dominated the season. This year the ﬁnal four
is equally deserving of their spots in the ﬁnale — the
champion has had to win the race at Homestead to
claim the title every year since the elimination format
debuted in 2014.
Hamlin has never won a championship, but had
chances in 2010 and 2014 but had disappointing races
— a decision not to take tires after a late caution took
Hamlin from the lead to out of contention in the 2014
race.
“Denny has not won a championship, so you can
imagine how hard he’s going to go for it,” said Gibbs.
Chase Elliott, Kyle Larson, Blaney and Logano were
eliminated. Logano was seeking a chance to make it
back-to-back titles but had a mechanical problem early
in the ﬁnal stage that dropped him deep into the ﬁeld.
“No clue. An air pressure adjustment made it go
from a winning car to not able to stay on the lead lap.
That sounds ridiculous,” said Logano. “We’ll live.
Everything is going to be OK. We’re still fortunate to
be here and grateful to do what we love.”
Sunday’s championship-deciding ﬁnale at Homestead-Miami Speedway, the last time the track will
host the ﬁnale. Logano is the defending race winner.

PITTSBURGH (AP) —
The ball ﬂuttered into the
air and hung there for a split
second. When it came back
down to earth, it landed
where it always seems to
these days for the Pittsburgh
Steelers: the seemingly
omnipresent arms of safety
Minkah Fitzpatrick.
Pittsburgh’s decision to
send a 2020 ﬁrst-round
draft pick to Miami in midSeptember in exchange
for Fitzpatrick just hours
after losing quarterback
Ben Roethlisberger for the
season in mid-September
seemed gutsy at best and
borderline reckless at worst.
What if the Steelers struggled without their franchise

Eagles

done that all-year, they’re just a
great group of young men.
“It was a great experience just
to
be in the playoffs. It wasn’t
From page 6
what we wanted, but I’m just so
happy for these seniors (Mason
then missing a 38-yard ﬁeld goal
Dishong, Michael Letson and
on its ﬁrst drive of the second
Nick Little), that they got a
half.
chance to experience the playEastern’s ﬁrst possession after
the break took over nine minutes offs.”
Newark Catholic earned a
off the clock, and consisted of
16-to-12 advantage in ﬁrst downs
17 straight run plays — each of
for the game, after having a
which gained positive yardage.
9-to-5 edge in the category at
EHS junior Steve Fitzgerald put
halftime. The Eagles gained 181
the Eagles on the board with a
of their 216 total yards on the
one-yard touchdown run at the
11:24 mark of the fourth quarter. ground, with 90 rushing yards
in the ﬁrst half and 91 after the
Dishong followed with an extrapoint kick and trimmed the mar- break. NCHS had 417 total yards,
gaining just 123 after halftime.
gin to 28-7.
Both teams were penalized for
The Green Wave, however,
answered with a 10-play, 68-yard 15 yards, EHS on three ﬂags and
Newark Catholic on one.
drive, capped off by a 10-yard
Coach Newland talked about
touchdown run by Carlisle.
the Eagles’ slow start, as well
The Eagles converted on
as the changes they made in the
fourth down once on their ﬁnal
second half.
drive, but couldn’t repeat the
“When you play a team like
feat, and Newark Catholic sealed
Newark Catholic, they’re so fast
the spot in Week 12 with a 35-7
at every position, you don’t want
win.
to admit it, but we were a little
Following the Eagles’ thirdshell-shocked at ﬁrst,” Coach
ever postseason contest, sixthyear EHS head coach praised his Newland said. “We made a few
mistakes, some blown coverage,
team’s effort against the Green
Wave, and talked about the play- just some things you can’t do and
win these games. We went into
off experience.
halftime and regrouped. It’s like,
“I told them, that’s the most
let’s settle down, let’s just play
proud I’ve ever been of a team,”
football the way we know how
said Coach Newland. “You have
to play football, and you know,
a hard-hitting team like Newark
we came back out and did pretty
Catholic, and I’m just so proud
that they came out and we played well.”
Leading the Eagle offense,
the second half. This team has

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Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12
7 PM

7:30

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6 PM

6:30

cornerstone? What if the
bottom fell out and the draft
capital they needed to ﬁnd
Roethlisberger’s successor
belonged to the Dolphins
instead?
They’re not asking those
questions anymore. Not with
the Steelers suddenly rolling
and their do-everything free
safety in the middle of it all.
Fitzpatrick returned a
fumble 43 yards for a touchdown in the second quarter
and added a game-sealing
pick in the ﬁnal seconds to
close out a brutish 17-12 victory over the Los Angeles
Rams on Sunday, spoiling
Rams defensive tackle Aaron
Donald’s homecoming in the
process.

Blake Newland posted 83 yards
on 23 carries and 14 yards on
two receptions, while Fitzgerald
recorded 81 yards and a touchdown on 21 totes.
Conner Ridenour — who was
3-of-12 passing for 35 yards —
ran twice for a total of 13 yards.
Dishong caught one 21-yard pass,
while Brayden Smith ran once for
three yards.
Will Oldaker led the Eagle
defense with seven tackles,
including two tackles for a loss
and one sack.
Hawk led the hosts with 203
total yards and two touchdowns,
rushing 15 times for 148 and
catching a 55-yard pass. Carlisle
— who ran six times for a total
of 39 yards and one touchdown
— was 6-of-15 passing for 140
yards and three scores.
Drew Hess picked up 69 yards
on six carries for Newark Catholic, Sam Muetzel had one rush
for eight yards, while Tristan
Gorious ﬁnished with four yards
over three carries.
Evans led all-receivers with
three grabs for 62 yards and a
score. Tanner Elwell caught a
14-yard pass, while Buchanan
had a nine-yard touchdown
reception in the win.
The loss ends Eastern’s sixgame win-streak, its longest since
2000 when the the Eagles won
eight in a row before falling to
the Green Wave in the playoffs.

TUESDAY EVENING
Wheel of
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Wheel of
Fortune (N)
Columbus

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

The Voice "Live Top 20
Eliminations" (N)
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Eliminations" (N)
The Conners Bless "The
(N)
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Finding Your Roots
"Grandparents and Other
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The Conners Bless "The
Visit" (N)
(N)
NCIS "No Vacancy" (N)

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

This Is Us "Sorry" (N)

New Amsterdam "What the
Heart Wants" (N)
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Mixed-ish
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American Experience "The Frontline "Kids Caught in
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Mixed-ish
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(N)
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Finding Your Roots
American Experience "The Frontline "Kids Caught in
Race Underground"
the Crackdown" (N)
"Grandparents and Other
Strangers"
NCIS "No Vacancy" (N)
FBI "Undisclosed" (N)
NCIS: New Orleans "BoomBoom-Boom-Boom" (N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) BlueB. "Unwritten Rules"
24 (ROOT) The Dan Patrick Show (N)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Daily Wager (L)
27 (LIFE)

30 (PARMT)

From page 6

Steelers defense leads way
in 17-12 win over Rams

GAHS basketball
reserved seats

29 (FREE)

Hamlin

Tuesday, November 12, 2019 7

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

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40 (DISC)
42

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52 (ANPL)
57

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58
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Full Metal Jacket (‘87, War) Matthew Modine. TVMA
Full Metal Jacket TVMA
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A Very Nutty Christmas (2018, Romance) Barry Watson, Dear Santa (2011, Drama) Gina Holden, Emma Duke, Amy (:05) My Christmas Prince
Marissa Jaret Winokur, Melissa Joan Hart. TVPG
Acker. TVPG
Alexis Knapp. TVPG
(5:50)
Home Alone (1990, Comedy) Joe Pesci,
(:20)
Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (‘92, Com) Macaulay Culkin. A boy finds
Daniel Stern, Macaulay Culkin. TVPG
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Two and a
Two and a
Two and a
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Friday (1995, Comedy) Chris Tucker, Nia Long, Ice Ink Master: Grudge Match
Cube. TV14
Half Men
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"Tattoo Yourself"
Loud House Loud House SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Friends
Friends
Friends
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SVU "Glasgowman's Wrath" SVU "The Good Girl"
Law&amp;O: SVU "Exchange"
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The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey TVPG
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The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (‘13,
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Chrisley
Chrisley
Divas "I Will Prevail" (N)
(:25) Andy Griffith Show
A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Ray
(:45) Ray
(:20) Everybody Loves Ray (:55) 2½ Men Two 1/2 Men
Life Below Zero "Go Fish" Life Below Zero "Hard
Life Below Zero "Promised Life Below Zero "Ahead of Running Wild "Joel McHale
Knocks"
Land" (N)
the Game" (N)
in Arizona Slot Canyons" (N)
NHL Top 10 NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Pittsburgh Penguins at New York Rangers (L)
(:15) NHL Overtime (L)
Race Hub
NCAA Basketball Creighton at Michigan (L)
NCAA Basketball Minnesota at Butler (L)
Hoops Extra
Drilling Down "Finding
The Curse of Oak Island: Digging Deeper "The Torch Is The Curse of Oak Island
(:05) Kings of Pain
"Core Values" (N)
"Nightmare in a Box" (N)
Answers"
Passed" The Oak Island team continues the search. (N)
The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives (N)
The Real Housewives (N)
Real Wives Dallas
(5:25) All Eyez on Me (‘17, Bio) Danai Gurira, Kat. Graham, Demetrius Shipp Jr.. TVMA
Madea's Family Reunion Tyler Perry. TVPG
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer to Fabulous (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:00) Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets (‘17,
Mad Max: Fury Road Tom Hardy. Still haunted by his past, Max Futurama
Act) Cara Delevingne, Dane DeHaan. TVPG
takes up with a group on the run from an enraged warlord. TVMA

6 PM
(5:50) His

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

The Town (2010, Action) Rebecca Hall, Jon Hamm, Ben
(:50) Mrs.
Very Ralph 'Very Ralph' is the first
Dark
Affleck. A career criminal juggles his feelings for a bank manager from a documentary portrait of fashion icon Ralph Fletcher
Lauren. (N)
Materials
previous robbery. TVMA
(:15)
The Hot Chick (‘02, Com) Anna Faris, Rob
Clerks Brian O'Halloran. Take a
(:35)
Bad Parents Janeane Garofalo. A
Schneider. An attractive but mean-spirited teenager gets
day in the life of two eccentric store clerks mother doesn't realize what she's getting
herself trapped in the body of an older man. TV14
and their strange customers. TVMA
into when her daughter plays soccer. TV14
(5:45)
Julie and Julia (‘09, Bio) Amy Adams, Stanley Shameless "We Few, We
Inside the NFL "2019: Week Desus &amp;
Desus &amp;
Lucky Few, We Band of
10" (N)
Mero Chris Mero Kenan
Tucci, Meryl Streep. The lives of two women living in
different times become intertwined through cooking. TV14 Gallaghers!"
Hayes
Thompson
(:50)

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Daily Sentinel

LSU landslide No. 1; Minnesota jumps into top 10
By Ralph D. Russo

other matchup of unbeaten
teams, defeating Penn State
at home. The Nittany Lions
LSU is an overwhelming No. slipped four spots to No. 9.
No. 24 Indiana is ranked for
1 in The Associated Press colthe ﬁrst time since 1994, snaplege football poll after beating
Alabama in a 1-2 matchup, and ping the longest poll drought
Minnesota moved into the top among Power Five conference
10 for the ﬁrst time in 57 years. schools.
After two weeks of historically close voting at the top of
Poll points
poll, LSU received 54 ﬁrstIt wasn’t a great week for
place votes in the AP Top 25
Alabama, but the Crimson Tide
presented by Regions Bank.
did extend their record for conOhio State was No. 2 with ﬁve secutive weeks in the top ﬁve
ﬁrst-place votes and Clemson
of the AP poll. Alabama has
was third with three ﬁrst-place been among the ﬁve highestvotes. Alabama fell two spots
ranked teams for 66 weeks, a
to No. 4.
streak that started on Nov. 8,
Georgia was ﬁfth, followed by 2015.
The second-longest streak of
Oregon and Minnesota at No.
7. The Gophers won Saturday’s top-ﬁve appearances is Miami,
Associated Press

(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008

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MOTOR ROUTE
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newspapers as an
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In-n-out
Indiana had a great off week
with the help of another Power
Five school that had not been
ranked in years. Wake Forest
slipped out of the ranking after
a loss at Virginia Tech. The
Demon Deacons earlier in the
year earned a ranking for the
ﬁrst time since the 2008.
The Hoosiers (7-2) already
have their ﬁrst seven-victory
season in 12 years and will
head to Penn State next week
trying to win as a ranked team
for the ﬁrst time since late in

(740) 992-2155 or fax to (740) 992-2157

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which had 55 from Oct. 8,
2000-Oct. 26, 2003.
— Minnesota has its best
ranking since it reached No. 5
in 1962 and ﬁnished 10th.

AUCTIONS
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2006 Chevy HHR

the 1993 season. The previous time Indiana was ranked,
it moved into the rankings on
Sept. 18, 1994, after beating
Kentucky to get to 3-0. Ranked
No. 25, the Hoosiers visited
No. 16 Wisconsin, lost 62-13,
and have not been ranked since.
Now that Indiana has
snapped its drought, the Hoosiers’ in-state rivals have the
longest run of being unranked
among Power Five schools.
Purdue hasn’t been ranked
since 2007. The next-longest
droughts are Kansas (since
2009), Illinois (2011) and Rutgers (2012).
— No. 22 Texas moved back
into the rankings after beating
Kansas State and knocking the
Wildcats out of the Top 25.

— No. 25 Oklahoma State
moved back into the Top 25 for
the second time this season.
— San Diego State fell out
after losing to Nevada.

Conference call
For the sixth time this season, three of the top ﬁve teams
are from the SEC.
Big Ten — 7 (Nos. 2, 7, 9, 14,
15, 23, 24).
SEC — 5 (Nos. 1, 4, 5, 11,
13).
American — 4 (Nos. 17, 18,
20, 21).
Big 12 — 4 (Nos. 10, 12, 22,
25).
Pac-12 — 2 (Nos. 6, 8).
ACC — 1 (No. 3).
Mountain West — 1 (No. 19).
Independent — 1 (No. 16).

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, November 12, 2019 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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�SPORTS/WEATHER

10 Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Texas Tech roughs up West Virginia, 38-17
MORGANTOWN,
W.Va. (AP) — Texas Tech
quarterback Jett Duffey
continues to give West
Virginia ﬁts.
The junior moved the
offense at will in the ﬁrst
half and the Red Raiders
used a fast start to beat
West Virginia 38-17 on
Saturday, handing the
Mountaineers their ﬁfth
straight loss.
Duffey threw for one
touchdown to boost his
total to 10 scores with
two interceptions in his
last ﬁve games after taking over in mid-September for the injured Alan
Bowman.
“We came out with a
great focus. We have to
continue it,” Jett said. “I
always believe in myself,
I always believe that if I
work hard and do what
I need to do, then I will
achieve what I want to
achieve, no matter what’s
in my way.”
Ta’Zhawn Henry and
SaRodorick Thompson
each had two ﬁrst-half
short scoring runs for
Texas Tech (4-5, 2-4 Big
12), which broke a three-

game losing streak and
now has a bowl bid to
ﬁght for with three games
left.
“A lot of people are
counting us out,” said
Texas Tech coach Matt
Wells. “(We have) a little
underdog mentality right
now.”
West Virginia (3-6, 1-5)
fell into a last-place tie
with idle Kansas.
Texas Tech scored
touchdowns on its
ﬁrst ﬁve drives and led
35-10 at halftime. Duffey accounted for 281 of
Texas Tech’s 337 ﬁrst-half
yards. He took advantage
of a decimated secondary
with four ﬁrst-half passes
of 20 yards or longer,
including an 81-yard scoring toss to a wide-open
Dalton Rigdon.
“He’s really done a nice
job of protecting the ball
in the pocket better,”
Wells said.
Duffey ﬁnished 24 of 34
for 354 yards.
“A frustrating day all
the way around,” said
West Virginia coach Neal
Brown. “We got off to
an extremely poor start

being replaced late in the
third quarter by Bowling Green transfer Jarret
Doege, who made his
season debut. Kendall
and Doege each threw a
touchdown pass.
West Virginia wide
receiver Sam James
caught 14 passes for 223
yards.
West Virginia’s losing
streak is its worst since
losing ﬁve straight in
2012.
West Virginia plays at
Kansas State on Saturday.
Targeting ejection
Texas Tech tight end
Travis Koontz was ejected
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports from the game for targetWVU freshman Jordan Jefferson (95) contests a pass at the line of scrimmage, during the
ing for a third-quarter hit
Mountaineers’ 44-27 victory over NC State on Sept. 14 in Morgantown, W.Va.
on safety Kerry Martin.
West Virginia’s Austin
defensively. We didn’t get Raiders managed just a
Kendall was intercepted
ﬁeld goal after halftime
pressure on the quarterTrouble at home
twice, one of them into
and didn’t allow West
back all day. He made a
West Virginia has lost
bunch of plays on us. He’s Virginia to mount a come- triple coverage that Texas three home games for the
Tech’s DeMarcus Fields
active. He got the ball out back. The Mountaineers
ﬁrst time since the 2014
caught in the end zone in season, when it ﬁnished
outgained Texas Tech
of his hand fast.”
the third quarter. KendA year ago, Duffey ran 549-481 but squandered
7-6. The home ﬁnale is
all also fumbled the ball
several scoring chances.
for 86 yards in a 42-34
Nov. 23 against Oklaaway on fourth down as
West Virginia turned
loss to the Mountaineers
homa State. The last time
he was hit attempting a
the ball over on downs
in a game that West Virthe Mountaineers lost
four times after incomple- ﬁrst-quarter pass.
ginia led by as many as
four times at home was
Kendall ﬁnished 26 of
tions deep in Texas Tech
25 points.
in 1990, when it ﬁnished
43 for 355 yards before
territory.
On Saturday, the Red
with ﬁve home losses.

Buckeyes tear up Terrapins, 73-14
By Jim Naveau

any adversity.
No. 1 Ohio State (9-0,
6-0 Big Ten) wasn’t
distracted at all by the
COLUMBUS, Ohio
absence of Chase Young
– Ohio State football
and his loan problems.
coach Ryan Day and
OSU was up 21-0
his players spent a lot
after the first quarter
of time talking about
and it was 42-0 at halfovercoming adversity
time, which allowed
in their 73-14 win over
Day to rest key players
Maryland on Saturday,
But the game was only like quarterback Justin
a few minutes old when Fields, running back J.K.
Dobbins and others the
it became apparent
Maryland was a cure for entire second half.

jnaveau@limanews.com

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

28°

29°

22°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Mon.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.00
0.00
1.20
40.49
37.04

Today
7:07 a.m.
5:17 p.m.
5:43 p.m.
6:58 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Wed.
7:08 a.m.
5:17 p.m.
6:19 p.m.
8:00 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Full

Last

New

Nov 12 Nov 19 Nov 26

First

Dec 4

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

Today
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.

Major
10:55a
11:44a
12:14a
1:09a
2:09a
3:12a
4:13a

Minor
4:43a
5:31a
6:25a
7:22a
8:24a
9:26a
10:27a

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

3

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: What is wind chill?

SUN &amp; MOON

Major
11:18p
---12:38p
1:36p
2:38p
3:40p
4:41p

Minor
5:06p
5:56p
6:51p
7:50p
8:52p
9:54p
10:55p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Nov. 12, 1906, the temperature
reached 105 degrees at Craftonville,
Calif. -- the hottest reading ever
recorded for the United States in
November.

THURSDAY

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
12.49
16.76
22.00
13.17
12.96
25.50
12.69
25.87
34.51
12.71
16.90
34.10
16.40

Waverly
29/12
Lucasville
30/15
Portsmouth
30/14

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.50
-0.38
+0.26
+0.51
+0.41
+0.70
+0.26
-0.33
-0.36
-0.18
-0.70
+0.10
-0.80

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Logan
28/11

SATURDAY

48°
24°
Mostly sunny and
chilly

56°
36°

Mostly cloudy

Mostly cloudy

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
32/14
Belpre
32/14

Athens
30/12

St. Marys
32/15

Parkersburg
32/13

Coolville
30/13

Elizabeth
32/14

Spencer
31/14

Buffalo
30/14

Ironton
30/16

Milton
31/14

St. Albans
32/16

Huntington
30/14

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
53/46
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
68/52
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
82/58
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

53°
37°

Plenty of sunshine,
but chilly

Wilkesville
30/12
POMEROY
Jackson
32/14
30/13
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
32/14
31/13
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
27/12
GALLIPOLIS
32/14
31/14
31/14

Ashland
30/16
Grayson
31/15

example of Ohio State
being aggressive early
was pulling off an
unusual on-side kick
after its second touchdown.
Blake Haubeil kicked
the ball in the air down
the right sideline and
Olave caught it in midair at Maryland’s 42-yard
line.
Maryland has lost
seven of its last eight
games.

SUNDAY

47°
29°

Murray City
29/11

McArthur
29/12

South Shore Greenup
30/15
29/13

59

Chilly with periods
of sun

Adelphi
28/11
Chillicothe
28/12

FRIDAY

48°
24°

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

0

A: The cooling power of the wind on
bare skin.

Precipitation

Partly sunny and cold

Clouds and sun today with ﬂurries; very cold.
Very cold tonight. High 32° / Low 14°

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

66°
47°
59°
38°
78° in 1949
15° in 1957

WEDNESDAY

35°
22°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

had seven sacks, led by
Davon Hamilton and
Tyreke Smith with two
each.
“I think when this
team faces a little bit
of adversity we have an
edge and want to come
after you and be aggressive,” Day said. “I think
the guys really embraced
that this week.”
“Our guys did not
flinch,” he said.
Maybe the biggest

for OSU. He also ran for
a touchdown.
Master Teague was
Ohio State’s leading
rusher with 111 yards
on 18 carries and Dobbins gained 90 yards on
12 carries and scored
two touchdowns. Chris
Olave had five catches
for 43 yards and a touchdown. Garrett Wilson
had four catches for 82
yards and a touchdown.
Defensively, OSU

The Buckeyes rolled
up 705 yards in a total
domination of Maryland
(3-7, 1-6 Big Ten).
Even if OSU’s entire
roster had come down
with food poisoning Friday night, that wouldn’t
have been enough adversity to give Maryland a
chance.
Quarterback Justin
Fields completed 16 of
25 passes for 200 yards
and three touchdowns

Clendenin
33/11
Charleston
32/15

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
19/7

Montreal
27/13

Billings
49/33

Toronto
23/9
Detroit
27/8
New York
49/22

Minneapolis
21/15

Denver
60/38

Kansas City
30/19

Chicago
21/10
Washington
49/28

City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
51/29/s
38/32/c
43/24/r
58/27/r
48/24/r
49/33/pc
57/34/pc
51/19/r
32/15/sn
53/20/r
55/40/pc
21/10/s
28/13/pc
30/17/sf
28/12/sf
44/23/pc
60/38/s
24/16/s
27/8/sf
87/72/pc
47/27/r
24/9/s
30/19/s
74/49/s
37/16/s
82/58/s
30/17/s
86/67/pc
21/15/s
32/16/s
47/30/sh
49/22/r
39/21/s
86/58/pc
49/23/r
81/57/s
29/14/sf
40/15/sn
54/23/r
52/24/r
27/15/s
58/34/pc
68/52/pc
53/46/r
49/28/r

Hi/Lo/W
62/33/s
36/31/r
44/29/s
38/27/s
38/24/s
45/29/sf
58/35/pc
35/18/s
36/25/s
45/24/s
49/25/pc
29/20/c
37/28/pc
32/27/c
33/26/pc
54/33/pc
58/29/pc
35/21/c
28/22/pc
87/73/s
53/41/pc
33/24/pc
44/27/pc
74/53/pc
46/25/s
77/57/pc
40/29/pc
83/73/pc
32/16/sn
45/28/s
51/43/pc
34/26/s
54/28/s
70/63/pc
36/24/s
81/57/pc
32/24/pc
31/15/sf
43/23/s
40/22/s
39/28/pc
60/36/pc
65/52/c
56/43/pc
40/28/s

EXTREMES MONDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
43/24

High
Low

El Paso
52/35
Chihuahua
42/39

91° in Palm Springs, CA
-24° in Malta, MT

Global
High
Low

Houston
47/27
Monterrey
48/40

Miami
86/67

113° in Marble Bar, Australia
-49° in Khabyardino, Russia

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

OH-70107872

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
promise to make you feel right at home.

w w w. h o m e n a t l b a n k . c o m
Racine,
Syracuse,
Middleport

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