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                  <text>Ohio
Valley
Business
BUSINESS s 3

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

27°

39°

38°

Chilly today with a little snow. Partly cloudy
tonight. High 43° / Low 24°

Today’s
Weather
Forecast

Marauders
fall to
Warren

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 195, Volume 72

Thursday, December 6, 2018 s 50¢

Throwback Thursday: December 1938

Appeals
Court
affirms
sentence
Staff Report

Photo from the collection of Bob Graham

This photo from the collection of Bob Graham shows Main Street in Pomeroy decorated for Christmas in 1938. Lights hang along the right side of the photo as cars
are parked in front of the downtown businesses, while the street car tracks can be seen on the left side of the photo. Among the buildings pictured is the Hotel Martin.

Four-alarm fire injures one

POMEROY — The
Fourth District Court
of Appeals has afﬁrmed
the sentence of a Meigs
County man on charges of
felonious assault, kidnapping and illegal cultivation of marijuana.
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney James
K. Stanley announces
that on Nov. 21, the Ohio
Fourth District Court of
Appeals issued an opinion
in State v. Dewayne Fisher. The court overruled
each of Fisher’s three
assignments of error and
afﬁrmed the judgment of
the trial court.
On March 2, 2016,
Fisher, formerly of Middleport, was convicted
of felonious assault,
kidnapping, and illegal
cultivation of marijuana.
The trial court sentenced
Fisher to eight years in
prison for the felonious
assault conviction, which
was the maximum sentence. The trial court also
sentenced Fisher to community control for ﬁve
years for the kidnapping
and illegal cultivation of
See SENTENCE | 2

By Mindy Kearns

fought the blaze for approxiSpecial to OVP
mately two hours. Faulk said
the ﬁremen were told by the
MASON — A four-alarm ﬁre residents that the ﬁre began
in a deep fryer in the kitchen.
on Adamsville Road in Mason
He added the ﬁre burned so
left one of the home’s occuhot, and so quick, that it colpants injured, according to a
lapsed the metal
spokesman from
overhang on the
the Mason Volun- Red Cross
porch.
teer Fire Departrepresentatives
Soon after the
ment.
were also on the
ﬁre began, people
The ﬁre
on social media
occurred Tuesday scene, Faulk said,
were reporting
evening. Firemen and had found the
were called to the occupants a place to seeing the blaze
and posting phoscene at around 7 stay before the fire
tos from as far
p.m., and arrived
to ﬁnd the house departments had left away as Powell’s
the scene.
Foodfair grocery
fully engulfed,
store in Pomeroy,
according to
as well as the Bridge of Honor
spokesman R.C. Faulk. The
(Pomeroy-Mason bridge).
house is located next to the
Red Cross representatives
Stewart-Johnson V.F.W. post.
were also on the scene, Faulk
While the residents of the
said, and had found the occuhouse were outside when the
pants a place to stay before the
ﬁremen arrived, the Mason
ﬁre departments had left the
County EMS transported one
scene.
resident who had burn injuries
The ﬁre marked the third
to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
major blaze in Mason in three
The unknown victim was later
weeks. The ﬁrst was Nov. 15
transferred to a Huntington
when a mobile home, belonghospital, Faulk said.
A total of 25 ﬁreﬁghters from ing to Brenda McCarty, was
destroyed on William Lane.
Mason, New Haven, Pomeroy
That ﬁre remains under invesand Middleport departments

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
Business: 3
Editorial: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 7
Comics: 8
TV listings: 9

Stuart’s
hosts ‘A
Legendary
Christmas’
concert
Courtesy of the Mason Volunteer Fire Department

A house on Adamsville Road in Mason was destroyed by fire Tuesday evening,
with the cause reportedly being from a deep fryer in the kitchen. One of the
home’s occupants received burn injuries and was taken to the hospital by the
Mason County EMS, according to a spokesman from the Mason Volunteer Fire
Department.

tigation as possible arson. The
second occurred on Nov. 18
on Third Street, when a twostory house occupied by Ashley
Smith caught ﬁre. That ﬁre is
believed to have started on the
second story due to an electrical issue.
Faulk reminded residents to
be extra cautious at this time

Light; Saturday, Dec.
22, Mercerville Church.
In addition, to the
Christmas lights and
live nativity, Santa will
be residing in his “Santa
house,” taking the
wish lists of good little
girls and boys. Santa’s
schedule is as follows:
Thursday, Dec. 6-Friday,
Dec. 7, 6-9 p.m.; Saturday, Dec. 8, immediately
following the Christmas
Parade; Dec. 9-Dec. 14,
6-9 p.m.; Dec. 15, 1-4
p.m. and 6-9 p.m.; Dec.
16, 1-5 p.m.; Dec. 17-18,
See LIGHT | 5

See CONCERT | 5

Mindy Kearns is a freelance writer for
Ohio Valley Publishing, email her at
mindykearns1@hotmail.com.

The true light of Christmas
Staff Report

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

GALLIPOLIS — The
true meaning of Christmas can be found in
City Park with a season
of live nativity scenes
happening as a part of
Gallipolis in Lights.
The live nativity
events are held on the
Court Street side of
the park and take place
from 6-7:30 p.m., with
various local churches
rotating and recreating
the Greatest Story Ever
Told.

The latest schedule is
as follows: Friday, Dec.
7, Saint Louis Catholic Church; Saturday,
Dec. 8, First Baptist
Church; Sunday, Dec.
9, Grace UM Church;
Wednesday, Dec. 12,
Paint Creek Church;
Friday, Dec. 14, River
City Fellowship; Saturday, Dec. 15, Elizabeth
Chapel Church; Sunday,
Dec. 16, River of Life
Church; Wednesday,
Dec. 19, First Church
of God; Friday, Dec.
21, Rodney Church of

Staff Report

NELSONVILLE —
Stuart’s Opera House in
Nelsonville, Ohio, presents an evening of great
holiday music with A
Legendary Christmas on
Friday, Dec. 7, at 7 p.m.
A fundraiser for Stuart’s Opera House featuring Christmas music performed by your favorite
local performers from A
Night with the Legends!
A silent auction will also
take place throughout the
evening in the Stuart’s
Grand Lobby. The whole
evening will be hosted
by our emcee Giles Lee.
Tickets are on sale now at
(740) 753-1924 or www.
stuartsoperahouse.org.
Performers for A Legendary Christmas Concert include people from
all around Athens and
Meigs Counties, with a
ensemble of your favorite
performers from Stuart’s
regular A Night with the
Legends event. Performers include Alex Couladis,
Joann Wolfe, Sharell
Arocho, Melissa Brobeck,
Angela Blair, Stephanie
Tikkanen, J.W. Smith, Bill
L’Heureux, Andy Stone,

of year, when using space heaters and burning holiday lights.
He emphasized the heaters, as
well as Christmas tree lights
and lighted decorations, should
never be left unattended.

Live nativity returns to Gallipolis in Lights

Fundraiser to feature
local performers

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Thursday, December 6, 2018

Daily Sentinel

OBITUARIES

AS THE OLD OHIO FLOWS….

Full steam ahead!
Meigs County’s
most famous
steamboats
By Jordan Pickens
Special to the Sentinel

“Here’s to you all, our
sentiments are real, may
your days be as bright
and your hearts be as
light as the spray from
an ol’ paddlewheel.” —
Unknown.
Something amazing
happened earlier this
week: it was announced
DELTA QUEEN will once
again sail on America’s
inland waterways in 2020,
after a 12 year absence.
This is exciting news for
steamboat lovers and has
given me the inspiration
to share some history on
some of Meigs County’s
most famous steamboats,
as well as to shed some
light on the beloved
DELTA QUEEN. Full
steam ahead!
From Edgar Ervin’s
Pioneer History of Meigs
County, “In 1819 about
the time of the organization of Meigs County,
the steamboat age was
ushered into the Ohio
Valley which was without
public roads. By 1830,
more than 200 steamboats were churning the
Ohio and Mississippi….
The second generation
brought many famous
Ohio River steamboats.”I
was talking to a friend of
mine, former captain of
P.A. DENNY and DELTA
QUEEN, Captain Don
Sanders who said, “A lot
of good river men came
out of [Meigs County].”
One of the most historic local steamboats WALL
CITY was owned by
various Pomeroy parties.
According to Capt. Fred
Way’s Packet Directory,
WALL CITY was built at
Ironton, Ohio, in 1874.
She ran daily from Ravenswood to Middleport on
the Ohio River. Captain
Edwards owned a large
Newfoundland dog which
regularly rode the boat
and was trained in various deck duties such as
pulling the lines ashore.
After WALL CITY was
cut down by ice in 1883,
her engines went to
the towboat MARLEN
RIGGS, and VALLEY
BELLE succeeded WALL
CITY in the trade. Ofﬁcers included Captain Alf.
Day; W.T. Cox (clerk);
H.W. Resener (clerk); J.F.
Cromley (clerk); Captain
J.C. Edwards (master,
1880s); C.H. Crow (clerk,
1880s); J.E. Wilkinson
(clerk, 1880s.)
Another famous steamboat which held a long-

Photos courtesy of Jordan Pickens

Str. TELEGRAPH heading upriver to Syracuse to load with salt. Pomeroy’s CHAMPION No. 2 in the
foreground.

Racine-Graham Station ferry LYDIA CROSS.

time speed record was a
sidewheeler called TELEGRAPH.
On December 9, 1891,
Dave Scatterday registered Miss Lucretia
Brewer, the ﬁrst female
passenger, at Proctorville,
Ohio. The TELEGRAPH
made a “fast run” from
Cincinnati to Syracuse,
Ohio in April 1892. She
arrived at Pomeroy,
Ohio in 19 hours and 7
minutes and at Syracuse
in 20 hours, 17 minutes.
She made only one landing along the way, at
Huntington, and didn’t
put out a line there but
let a man hop off. In 1894
the City of Madison was
wrecked and her roof bell,
which was originally on
the TELEGRAPH NO.
3, was transferred to the
TELEGRAPH. On the
night of November 22,
1897 the TELEGRAPH
was upbound above
12-Mile Island when
pilots Charles Williams
and Charles Dufour
changed watches. They
weren’t speaking to each
other at the time for
unknown reasons. When
Williams relieved Dufour,
Dufour immediately left
the pilot house before
Williams had his “night
sight”. The boat was
headed into a rocky cliff
on the Indiana shore but
before Williams could
see the situation, she had
run into the rocks and
was wrecked. Both pilots
had their licenses revoked

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

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

as a result. (Way’s Packet
Directory)
Before the construction of bridges, ferries
were used to cross the
Ohio River. The ﬁrst
ferry in Meigs County
appeared in 1854 and ran
between Pomeroy, Ohio,
and Mason, Virginia,
now West Virginia. The
name of the ferry was
unknown, but it was
noted that it was powered
by horse. Middleport
and West Columbia also
received a ferry that year
named LARK, powered
by steam. Pomeroy’s ﬁrst
steam powered ferry
KATE HOWARD went
into service in 1857.
LITTLE BEN, named
after Ben Redmond of
Middleport, Ohio, ran
Middleport, Ohio, to
Clifton, West Virginia.
On April 14, 1913, she
sank at the wharf grade
at Middleport; she was
pumped out by the
towboat VALIANT. She
was later owned by H.C.
(Clate) Pickens and ran
Racine, Ohio, to Graham
Station, West Virginia.
Another of Racine’s ferryboats was LYDIA CROSS.
Little is known about this
boat, other than it went
into operation around
1876 and transported
between Racine, Ohio,
and Graham Station,
West Virginia.
After KATE HOWARD
went out of service, residents of Pomeroy, Ohio,
and Mason, West Virginia, were ferried back and
forth across the river by
three different ferryboats,
each named CHAMPION.
CHAMPION served
until 1882, when it was
replaced by CHAMPION
NO. 2. This vessel served
for a 20-year period in
Pomeroy, and in 1902 she

was sold and operated at
Gallipolis for a time. She
was sold again in October
1904. In 1910 she was
completely rebuilt at the
Gardner Docks at Pt.
Pleasant, West Virginia,
and renamed RELIEF.
The third and ﬁnal
ferry to cross the Ohio
River at Pomeroy was
CHAMPION NO. 3, built
in Mason, West Virginia,
in 1901 and began operation in 1902. According
to Captain Fred Way’s
Packet Directory, “She
ran the Pomeroy, OhioMason City, West Virginia
trade until the bridge was
built in 1928. She then
ran at Proctorville, Ohio
and was dismantled in
spring of 1935.”
Finally and arguably
the most well known
steamboat to pass Meigs
County would be none
other than that of DELTA
QUEEN.
From Way’s Packet Directory,
Fabricated at Glasgow,
Scotland along with her
sister ship, the DELTA
KING. All steel work was
done on the River Clyde
at the Isherwood Yard,
Glasgow. Both boats were
knocked down and the
sections sent by steamship to San Francisco
and then barged to Stockton where the boats were
completed. The building
operations extended
from 1924 through part
of 1927. Her machinery
was built at Denny’s
Shop in Dumbarton; the
paddlewheel shafts and
cranks were forged at the
Krupp Works, Germany.
The upper cabins were
built by U.S. shipwrights,
four decks high, largely of
oak, teak, mahogany, and
Oregon cedar. When completed the two boats were
the most expensive river
sternwheelers [existing],
costing $875,000 each.
In the beginning of her
career she ran in the San
Francisco-Sacramento
trade on a regular yearround schedule. Frequent
excursions were made to
Stockton. She frequently
carried 800 tons of
freight. The staterooms
slept 200. Rooms and
passenger areas were
air-conditioned, hot air
See STEAM | 5

JOHN DOUGLAS
PARKERSBURG
— John Douglas, 64,
of Parkersburg, W.Va.,
went to be with his
Lord on Monday, Dec.
3, 2018, at Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown, W.Va.
He was born Oct.
23, 1954, in Gallipolis,
Ohio, son of the late
Glen and Nancy Webb
Douglas.
John is survived by
his wife of 44 years, on
Nov. 27, Sue Gibson
Douglas; one son, Jonathan (Christina) Douglas; three grandchildren,
who were the light of
his life, Tori, Karli and
Natalie; one brother,
Mike (Helen) Douglas; one sister, Sandra
(Tawny) Douglas; two
nephews, Braeden
and Connor DouglasPeer; two cousins, Joe
(Barbara) Douglas and
Anita (Jim) Deem.
Funeral services will
be held at the Broadway Church of the
Nazarene, 901 Broadway Ave., Parkersburg,
WV 26101, at 11 a.m.,

Saturday, Dec. 8, 2018,
with Rev. Kevin Dennis, WVN District
Superintendent and
Pastor Toby Dukich
ofﬁciating. Immediately
following the service,
a celebration of life
meal will be served at
the church. Burial will
follow in the Reedsville
Cemetery, Reedsville,
Ohio.
Visitation will be held
at the Broadway Church
of the Nazarene on Friday, from 2-8 p.m.
In lieu of ﬂowers,
donations can be made
to: One Church, 1412
27th Street, Vienna,
WV 26105 (www.the1.
church) or to the Rosenbaum Family House,
300 Family House
Drive, Morgantown,
WV 26506.
Arrangements have
been entrusted to
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville,
Ohio.
You are invited to
sign the online guestbook at www.whiteschwarzelfh.com.

NORTHUP
GALLIPOLIS FERRY — Ruth E. Northup, age
85, formerly of Gallipolis Ferry, died at her residence on Tuesday, Dec. 4 at Holzer Senior Care in
Gallipolis, Ohio.
Visitation will be at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home
on Friday, Dec. 7 from 6-8 p.m. Funeral services
will be Saturday, Dec. 8 at the funeral home beginning at 11:30 a.m., burial will follow at Beale Cemetery.
HOPE
GALAX, Va. — Robert Eugene Hope, 87, of
Galax, Virginia, died Monday, Dec. 3, at Grayson
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, in Independence, Va.
A funeral service will be 1 p.m., Friday, Dec.
7, at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Burial will follow in theAustin-HopeMcLeod Cemetery in Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. The
family will receive friends one hour prior to the
funeral service, Friday at the funeral home.
DABNEY
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Russell Wayne
Dabney, 71, of Point Pleasant, W.Va. died Tuesday,
Dec. 4, at Cabell Huntington Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
A funeral service will be 11 a.m., Saturday, Dec.
8, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant,
with Ronnie Cremeans ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at Beale Cemetery in Apple Grove, W.Va. The
family will receive friends one hour prior to the
funeral service, Saturday at the funeral home.
COLEMAN
KENNA, W.Va. — Roberta Rebecca (Bauer)
McDade Coleman, 75, of Kenna, W.Va. died Dec.
3, in the Hubbard Hospice House, Charleston,
W.Va., following an extended illness.
A service will be at 11 a.m., Friday, Dec. 7 at
Casto Funeral Home, Evans, W.Va., with Pastor
Leroy Conner ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in the
Pine Grove Cemetery, Leon, W.Va. Visitation will
be one hour prior to time of service.
RUSSELL
BIDWELL — John Kenneth Russell, 97,
Bidwell, Ohio, died Tuesday, Dec. 4, 2018, at his
residence.
Funeral services will be conducted 11 a.m.,
Monday, Dec. 10, 2018, in the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton Chapel, with Rev. Heath
Jenkins ofﬁciating. Full Military Graveside Rites
will be performed in the Vinton Memorial Park,
Vinton, Ohio by the Vinton American Legion Post
#161. Friends and family may call at the funeral
home Sunday, Dec. 9, 2018, 3-5 p.m.
ROACH
CROWN CITY — Sandra L. Roach, 74, Crown
City, Ohio, died at her home Wednesday, Dec. 5,
2018, after a lengthy illness.
Funeral services will be held Saturday, Dec. 8,
2018, at noon in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Vinton Chapel. Burial will follow in the Vinton
Memorial Park. Friends and family may call at the
funeral home Friday 6-8 p.m.

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109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
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Sentence

Fisher alleged that the
trial court abused its
discretion by failing to
void punishment for allied
From page 1
offenses of similar import,
that the trial court abused
marijuana convictions,
its discretion by failing to
which was ordered to be
served consecutive to the void and vacate the community control sanction
prison term, meaning
for kidnapping and illegal
after Fisher is released
cultivation of marijuana,
from prison.
and that the trial court
Over two years later,
in June 2018, Fisher ﬁled violated Fisher’s right
against double jeopardy.
a motion to vacate void
Stanley drafted the
judgment with the trial
court, which was denied, State’s brief and argued
and Fisher appealed there- that the trial court did
not abuse its discretion
after.
because under the facts
In his merit brief,

of this case, felonious
assault and kidnapping
were not allied offenses of
similar import and therefore Fisher’s right against
double jeopardy was not
violated as he was not
sentenced twice for one
criminal act. Stanley also
argued that the trial court
did not abuse its discretion by imposing and
declining to vacate the
community control sanction for the kidnapping
and illegal cultivation of
marijuana convictions
because in the Fourth
District, trial courts are

permitted to sentence a
defendant to community
control consecutive to a
prison sentence.
The Fourth District
Court of Appeals agreed
with the State, and in a
12-page opinion, the court
overruled each of Fisher’s
assignments of error.
The judgment of the trial
court was afﬁrmed, and
Fisher will remain in prison, where he will serve
the remainder of his sentence, which will expire
on Jan. 27, 2024.
Information provided by the Meigs
County Prosecutor’s Office.

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 6, 2018 3

Jackson joins Wiseman Agency

TrueBeam Radiation
Machine at Holzer

Submitted

spring for the Gallia County
“It is a great honor to
Longbeards Youth Hunt
be a part of perpetuat(National Wild Turkey Feding the family legacy into
GALLIPOLIS – During their
eration), along with volun90th year of service to the Gallipo- the future,” said Jackson.
teering at his church, River
lis and tri-state area, The Wiseman “Growing up in Gallia
City Fellowship, and at the
Agency announces the addition of County, The Wiseman
French Art Colony where
Agency was such a familiar
Rick Jackson, CLCS, to its Comhis wife, Maggie Jackson, is
name at community events. Jackson
mercial Lines department.
the executive director. JackJackson is serving as an Account I am proud to have the
opportunity to both serve our cli- soon also has a beautiful, two-yearExecutive, specializing in indusold daughter named Stella.
trial markets and commercial sales, ents and support this community
“Rick is a great addition to our
that I love so much.”
where he brings with him nearly
Wiseman team,” said Gary Roach,
Jackson is a Marshall Univera decade of business-to-business
president of The Wiseman Agency.
sales experience. He has held posi- sity graduate with a bachelor’s
“Having grown up here locally, he
degree in Environmental Science
tions starting as an outside sales
has a vested interest in seeing our
representative for a national indus- and a minor in Business. He has
community thrive. Furthermore,
also acquired his Lean Six Sigma
trial supply company, progressing
his past work experience is an
into management, and then onto a Black Belt certiﬁcation and the
asset to other business owners
leading sales role for a West Virgin- Commercial Lines Coverage Spelooking for advice and counsel.”
cialist (CLCS) designation. He is
ia based, global plastics company.
For more details and to stay up
the newest member of the Gallia
Established in 1928, The Wiseto date with the agency, visit www.
man Agency, is a fourth generation, County Convention and Visitors
Bureau’s Advisory Council. In addi- wisemanagency.com or call 740family owned and operated, indetion, he volunteers with youth each 446-3643.
pendent insurance agency.

GALLIPOLIS — The future of cancer care is
now close to home.
Recently installed at the Holzer Center for
Cancer Care, the TrueBeam™ system is the latest
in non-invasive radiation from Varian Medical Systems. TrueBeam is a powerful cancer treatment
that will kill cancer cells with increased precision
and accuracy while sparing healthy tissue.
TrueBeam introduces new possibilities for the
treatment of cancers in the lung, breast, prostate,
brain, head and neck, and more. With enhanced
delivery of radiation, TrueBeam can personalize
each patient’s cancer treatment.
Treatments that once took 10 to 30 minutes may
now be completed in less than 2 minutes. Less
time means a more comfortable experience for
patients as well reduced chances of patient motion
during the treatment, allowing less radiation exposure to normal tissues.
Best of all, this machine offers state-of-theart Stereotactic Body Radiation (SBRT) and
Radiosurgery (SRS) treatments. Just like the
Cyberknife, this delivers pinpoint radiation in 1 to
5 outpatient treatments rather than the traditional
30-40 treatments. These treatments are similar to
surgery but without cutting or hospital recovery
time. Patients can now receive the best and fastest
cancer treatment close to home.

WV Living’s
2018 ‘Best of
West Virginia’
list released

WIN
up to
$100

PVH | Courtesy

Pictured is PVH Employee of the Month Christina Leadman with Jenny Jenkins, radiology
coordinator and lead mammography tech, and Glen Washington, FACHE, PVH CEO.

Leadman named PVH
Employee of the Month
pital. Christina was
nominated because as
she was leaving to go
home, she came across
an elderly woman
wandering in the back
parking lot. Christina
realized the woman was
confused and unsure of
where she was. Christina took the lady into
the hospital where and
ensured that she was
taken care of. Christina
is an excellent example
of the PVH Employee of
the Month, and we are
very grateful to have her
on our team.”
In this recognition,
she received a $100
check and a VIP parking
space. She will also be

eligible for the Customer
Service Employee of the
Year award with a chance
for $500.
Submitted by PVH.

log onto
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailyregister.com
OH-70093443

POINT PLEASANT
— Pleasant Valley Hospital (PVH) announces
the Customer Service
Employee of the Month
for November 2018 is
Christina Leadman in
the Radiology Department.
She has been
employed since December 2002 as a Nuclear
Medicine Tech.
According to a press
release from PVH: “The
Employee of the Month
at Pleasant Valley Hospital is nominated for taking extra steps to provide excellent customer
service to our patients
and family members at
Pleasant Valley Hos-

OH-70093326

POINT PLEASANT
— WV Living has recognized the Mothman
Museum in the magazine’s annual “Best of
West Virginia” list.
In addition to statewide
categories, the 2018 list
also includes regional
winners. For the MidOhio Valley region, the
Mothman statue and
museum was named “best
unique attraction.”
“I love that our 10th
anniversary issue contains our annual Best of
West Virginia winners,
because WV Living is
all about showcasing the
people and the places that
make our state unique,”
founder and publisher
Nikki Bowman said. “It’s
more than just a magazine—we’re a community
builder. We tell the story
of who we are, and who
we are becoming.”
This is the magazine’s
sixth-annual “Best of
West Virginia” list. Each
year, WV Living asks
its readers to nominate
their favorite restaurants,
shops, towns, destinations, people, and more.
Those nominations—
which numbered in the
thousands for 2018—are
tallied to determine each
year’s list.
For more information
about WV Living or Best
of West Virginia, visit
wvliving.com.

Submitted by Holzer Health System.

and submit your photos

Baum Lumber
46384 SR #248 Chester, Ohio
740-985-3301
1-877-360-0026
www.baumlumber.com

TAG YOUR DEER HERE!

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OVP STOCK REPORT
Wendy’s Company(NASDAQ)
Walmart Inc(NYSE)
Big Lots, Inc(NYSE)
Harley-Davidson Inc(NYSE)
PepsiCo, Inc.(NASDAQ)
Peoples Bancorp Inc.(NASDAQ)
Kroger Co(NYSE)
BB&amp;T Corporation(NYSE)
City Holding Company(NASDAQ)
American Electric Power(NYSE)

$17.45
$95.81
$41.91
$41.86
$117.80
$32.28
$28.64
$48.37
$71.63
$78.42

Ohio Valley Bank Corp(NASDAQ)
$35.43
Century Aluminum(NASDAQ)
$9.00
Rocky Brands Inc(NASDAQ)
$24.78
Apple(NASDAQ)
$176.69
The Coca-Cola Co(NYSE)
$49.58
Post Holdings
$93.34
Far Eastern New Century Corp (TPE) $28.40
McDonald’s(NYSE)
$185.04
Stock reports are the closing quotes of
transactions on Dec. 4.

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ould win

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�Opinion
4 Thursday, December 6, 2018

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

The dish
on missing
dish tops
Thanksgiving is but a faint taste of pumpkin
pie. The cooking is ﬁnished, the dishes are
washed, the pants are tight…three signs of
culinary accomplishments. One of
the best things about Thanksgiving is the aging, if you will, of the
meal. If turkey and dressing and
mashed potatoes are good on day
one, they approach perfect fooddom on day two. One of the other
good things about Thanksgiving
Marla
is that we all make too much of
Boone
everything except perhaps gravy.
Contributing
There can never be enough gravy.
columnist
This means there are plenty of leftovers on which to dine on Friday.
The serpent in this Eden is what to do with the
food overnight. On Thursday, we’re all in a food
coma. The lethargy level is such that we can
barely stir ourselves to go into the next room
and watch football until we fall victim to a carbohydrate overdose and drift off to sleep. The
specter of a disaster-zone kitchen, though, is
usually enough impetus to get us off our rapidly
expanding rear ends to address the mess.
Most of us have refrigerators. Most of us have
refrigerator dishes. What many of us are lacking
are matching lids for those stacks of plastic containers. Where, precisely, do the lids go? I was
reared in a, shall we say, very frugal household.
No sheet of writing paper with one clean side
was ever thrown out. Hand-me-downs were the
norm. I even inherited my older sister’s bike for
one summer. I don’t think recycling had been
formally invented but we did it. My father, who
doesn’t have the ﬁrst dime he ever made but
certainly knows where it is, even insisted we
gather the toilet tissue that intermittently festooned our trees, dry the dew from it, and use
it. Other houses had nice neat paper wound on a
shiny spindle. We had a grocery bag containing
an alarmingly pre-dampened product with the
occasional, not to mention painful, small stick
in it. I am not making this up.
It’s only logical to assume a home that
believed in reusing aerated toilet paper would
reuse just about anything. Once margarine
began arriving in plastic tubs, the problem of
what to store leftovers in was solved. Unfortunately, and this became a larger issue than
I ever believed possible, there appeared to be
an endless variety of sizes of tubs. Some were
within millimeters of being the same. Some
weren’t nearly that close. But the end result was
that not all tub lids ﬁt all tubs. This is Lid Problem Number One. My mom took to making little
matching marks on lids and tubs to indicate
which went with which. This worked great. If
anyone paid attention to it. We kids, of course,
did not. We’d just yell for our mom to come
and ﬁnd the right lid. This is not as restful as it
sounds.
Because we live in America, it did not take
long for some entrepreneur to see opportunity
knocking in the form of refrigerator dishes that
were intended to be, you know, refrigerator
dishes. No marked-up tubs for the emerging
middle class. People who had a house in the
suburbs and two cars had the afﬂuence to buy
real honest-to-goodness refrigerator dishes. And
they did. But they still lost the lids. This is Lid
Problem Number Two. Go into almost any kitchen today and you will ﬁnd a messy, cluttered
drawer somewhere into which all manner of
plastic containers are thrown. I myself keep my
plastic containers in a drawer between the oven
and the microwave. It’s a wonder there hasn’t
been some sort of nuclear melt down, a kitchen
Chernobyl if you will, resulting from this. And I
am a very organized person. The term OCD has
been used, along with other, less kind, labels.
But even I cannot seem to avoid having an
orphan dish at the bottom of the pile whose lid
has mysteriously disappeared. Losing the container itself makes much more sense. A container could be used under a leaking pipe or could
hold the family stash of safety pins and rubber
bands or could be on a high shelf holding, as it
does for a friend of mine, pureed hedgeapple
which he swears cures skin lesions. I am not
making that up, either. A container could be
used to catch an oil leak or store marbles or collect the coins you discover when you clean out
your car. A lid cannot be comfortably employed
for any of these purposes yet it is always the
lid that is missing. A reasonably bright person
will ﬁgure out it’s time to go buy more plastic
containers. A reasonably bright person with
experience knows the style of containers will
have changed just enough for the new ones to
be slightly different than the old ones. And my
mom is not within yelling distance.
Marla Boone resides in Covington and writes for the Troy Daily News
and Piqua Daily Call.

THEIR VIEW

Reality meets perception
It seems to me that
every so often we are
reminded of a fairy tale
by something that occurs
in real life. For example,
we sometimes hear of a
“Cinderella” sports team
or an “Ugly Duckling” of
an individual who somehow is transformed from
a plain or even homely
person into a beauty.
Well, some recent events
have made me think of
the familiar tale, “The
Emperor’s New Clothes”
by Danish author Hans
Christian Andersen.
Here’s a quick recap.
This story is about two
weavers who convince
an emperor that they
can provide him with a
new suit of clothes - one
they say is invisible to
those who are unﬁt for
their positions, stupid, or
incompetent. In reality,
the weavers are con-men
who explain they are
creating a very expensive
ﬁne fabric and go through
the motions of cutting
and sewing but are actually making no clothes
at all. Thus, no one, not
even the emperor nor
his ministers, can see
the alleged “clothes”,
but everyone pretends
that they can for fear of
appearing unﬁt for their
positions.
Finally, the weavers
report that the suit is
ﬁnished; they pretend to
dress him; and the emperor marches in procession before his subjects.
Although the townsfolk
are ill at ease with the
pretense they go along

some ﬁnancial
because no one
institutions or
wants to appear
countries. Buying
unﬁt for their posireal-world goods
tions or are stupid.
with any virtual
Finally, a child cries
currency is reportout, “But he isn’t
edly illegal in
wearing anything
China and some
at all!” and the cry Bill
banks have prois taken up by oth- Taylor
ers. Although the
Contributing hibited purchase
of bitcoins with
emperor realizes
columnist
their credit cards.
the reality of the
Of primary intersituation, he and
his followers continue the est here is that the value
procession because to do of a bitcoin is determined
otherwise would be disas- by the users - by their
perception of a bitcoin’s
trous. Keep that story in
worth - and thus can
mind while we switch
ﬂuctuate widely. Here
gears.
are some examples. The
About ten years ago
ﬁrst purchase by bitcoin
something known as
reportedly was for two
“bitcoin” ﬁrst appeared
as a kind of digital or vir- pizzas for 10,000 bitcoin
in 2010.
tual currency - a form of
In 2011, the price
electronic-only monetary
reportedly started at
entity without a central
bank or single administra- $0.30 per bitcoin, rose
to $31.50 by June, fell
tor. Bitcoins, invented
to $11 in July, further
by some unknown
individual(s) and created to fell to $7.80 the next
month, and in a subseby an intricate digital
quent month to $4.77.
process known as mining, can be exchanged for In 2013, bitcoin’s price
rose to $755 on Nov. 19
non-digital currencies,
and crashed by 50 perproducts, and services.
Bitcoins can be sent from cent to $378 the same
user-to-user on a dedicat- day. By Nov. 30, 2013
the price reached $1,163
ed bitcoin network without the need for interme- before starting a longdiaries such as a bank or term crash, declining by
87 percent to $152 in
currency exchange usually associated with other January 2015. See what I
mean? All right, so what?
currencies.
Well, late last year the
Bitcoins have no
value of a bitcoin had
“backing” as do “stanskyrocketed to almost
dard” currencies such
$20,000, but as of this
as dollars or pounds,
exist only in cyberspace writing has dropped to
about $3,500. According
repositories, and are
to reports, small time
essentially unregulated
owners are dumping their
although restrictions
bitcoins as quickly as poshave been imposed by

sible to recoup whatever
remains of their value
while large account holders are struggling with
huge ﬁnancial losses.
(Total world-wide value
of virtual currencies has
dropped from over $800
billion to about $180 billion in less than a year.)
You know, this sure
looks like another situation where reality meets
perception. Sure, bitcoin
and similar virtual currencies are extremely
complex strings of 1’s
and 0’s that have been
synthesized by very
clever folks and have
evolved into a world-wide
system of repositories
and exchanges, but they
have no inherent value
of their own. Nope, The
worth of bitcoin and
other virtual currencies is
totally dependent on and
determined by the system
of these unregulated digital creations - a system
which, according to some
analysts, is facing possible collapse similar to
the dot.com bubble some
years ago. How about
them apples.
Well, I’m not suggesting the virtual currency
phenomenon is a scam
such as that perpetrated
on the emperor, but it
sure makes a body wonder if these digital entities might turn out to be
as real as the emperor’s
new clothes. At least
that’s how it seems to me.
Bill Taylor, a regular Greene County
Daily columnist and local area
resident, may be contacted at
solie1@junocom.

TODAY IN HISTORY
state to endorse it.
In 1884, Army engineers completed construction of the Washington Monument by setting
Today’s Highlights in History: an aluminum capstone
atop the obelisk.
On Dec. 6, 1907, the
In 1917, some 2,000
worst mining disaster in
people were killed when
U.S. history occurred as
362 men and boys died in an explosives-laden
French cargo ship, the
a coal mine explosion in
Monongah, West Virginia. Mont Blanc, collided with
the Norwegian vessel Imo
at the harbor in Halifax,
On this date:
Nova Scotia, setting off a
In 1790, Congress
blast that devastated the
moved to Philadelphia
Canadian city. Finland
from New York.
declared its independence
In 1865, the 13th
from Russia.
Amendment to the U.S.
In 1923, a presidential
Constitution, abolishing
address was broadcast on
slavery, was ratiﬁed as
Georgia became the 27th radio for the ﬁrst time as
Today is Thursday,
Dec. 6, the 340th day of
2018. There are 25 days
left in the year.

THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
“Disconnecting from
change does not
recapture the past. It
loses the future.”
— Kathleen Norris,
American author
(1880-1960).

President Coolidge spoke
to a joint session of Congress.
In 1947, Everglades
National Park in Florida
was dedicated by President Harry S. Truman.
In 1957, America’s
ﬁrst attempt at putting a
satellite into orbit failed

as Vanguard TV3 rose
about four feet off a Cape
Canaveral launch pad
before crashing down and
exploding.
In 1973, House minority leader Gerald R. Ford
was sworn in as vice president, succeeding Spiro T.
Agnew.
In 1982, 11 soldiers and
six civilians were killed
when an Irish National
Liberation Army bomb
exploded at a pub in Ballykelly, Northern Ireland.
In 1989, 14 women
were shot to death at the
University of Montreal’s
school of engineering by
a man who then took his
own life.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 6, 2018 5

Light

Concert

From page 1

From page 1

6-9 p.m.; Dec. 20-21, 6-9
p.m.; Dec. 22, noon - 3
p.m.; Dec. 23, 1-4 p.m.,
6-9 p.m. Santa returns to
the North Pole on Dec. 24.
The Santa House is located
on the Second Avenue side
of Gallipolis City Park.
Admission is free to Gallipolis in Lights though
donations are appreciated
and can be made at the
donation station which
is the small gingerbread
house near the bandstand
on the river side of City
Park. The light display is
on every night from dusk
to dawn until Jan. 1.

Tanyah Stone, Roger Gilmore, Mary Gilmore, Michael Weiser, Bernie Nau Trio, and
Dancers from Factory Street Studio. The
evening’s music will be played by our Night
with the Legends band featuring Bill Rawlins
on drums, John Lohse on bass, Adam Graham on guitar, Jennifer Sheets on keyboard,
and Roger Gilmore on acoustic guitar. Joining the band will be Doug Carter (tenor sax,
ﬂute), Kyle Slemmer (baritone sax), Janice
Paris (trombone), Adam Perry (trumpet),
and Brandon Wolf (alto sax). The whole evening will be hosted by our emcee Giles Lee.
Stuart’s Opera House hosts A Legendary
Christmas Concert on Friday, December 7th
at 7:00pm, doors open at 6:00pm. Tickets are
available right now! We still have some seats
in rows F-I on the ﬂoor for $60, and Balcony
Seats are $35. For more information call
(740) 753-1924 or visit our website at www.
stuartsoperahouse.org.

Gallipolis in Lights | Courtesy
For more information and scheduling
updates, follow Gallipolis in Light on
Facebook.

Members of the First Church of the Nazarene in Gallipolis recreate the nativity earlier this week in Gallipolis
City Park. Many local churches will be hosting their own live nativity events throughout the season as a
part of Gallipolis in Lights.

Submitted by Stuart’s Opera House.

Steam

ill, on November 21,
1969, Greene Line was
transferred to Overseas
National Airways with
From page 2
operations based at
Kennedy International
heat. The cabins were
Airport. The DELTA
ﬁnished in solid oak with
QUEEN ran head-on
natural mahogany and
into Public Law 89-777
walnut trim. Plate glass
prohibiting the operation
windows surmounted by
of wooden superstruccolored, leaded, stained
ture overnight passenger
glass transoms survessels. In 1971, Presirounded copious forward
dent Richard M. Nixon
lounging areas. Seven
Photos courtesy of Jordan Pickens This photo shows Str. DELTA QUEEN downbound towards Pomeroy.
watertight compartments Str. TELEGRAPH heading upriver to Syracuse to load with salt. This National Historic Landmark will return to cruising America’s exempted the DELTA
QUEEN from the terms
divided the hulls [and]all Pomeroy’s CHAMPION No. 2 in the foreground.
inland waterways in 2020.
of the law for three years.
hull space [was] usable.
ditioning was completely ing stage, etc. Since then [Subsequent presidential
designated “Yard Ferry
June 1. They did handThe kitchen was in the
sanction has kept the boat
she has been in tourist
renovated; paddlewheel
Boats”. At war’s concluhold, pantries and dining somely, weathered the
operative until 2008, and
service on the Ohio,
covering was removed;
sion, they were turned
Great Depression, but a
room on the boiler deck,
on December 4, 2018 was
fuel capacity augmented; Mississippi, Tennessee
modern highway linking over to the U.S. Mariwith dumbwaiters to
re-exempted from sancmany new luxury cabins and Cumberland rivers.
time Commission. The
convey food and utensils. San Francisco and Sactions and will return to
Following the untimely
DELTA QUEEN was sold added where the dining
The main deck was built ramento was too much.
room had originally been; death of Captain Tom R. cruising in 2020.] The
at public sale to Greene
entirely of ironwood from The DELTA QUEEN’s
Greene on July 10, 1950, DELTA QUEEN was
new pantries, bar and
last trip came on the clos- Line Steamers. She was
Thailand. Many rooms
the DELTA QUEEN was brought 5,380 statute
toilet facilities appended
then transferred to New
ing day of the Golden
had connecting shower
miles by sea, the lengthiGate International Expo- Orleans, ﬁrst undergoing to numerous staterooms. managed by his widow,
or bath, white tiled, and
Letha Cavendish Greene est salt water transit of
The DELTA QUEEN
repairs and a complete
twin beds. All hardware sition, Sunday, Septemuntil advertised for sale. record for a ﬂat-bottom
renovation. Changes were left the Dravo Corporaber 29, 1940. Both boats
was solid brass. The
sternwheeler.
Richard C. Simonton
extensive. Her two cabin tion yard at Neville
DELTA QUEEN and her were sold. After Pearl
As the old Ohio
reorganized Greene Line
Island, Pennsylvania on
decks were extended
sister ship were dedicated Harbor on December 7,
Steamers in 1950 and the ﬂows….
February 28, 1948 and
1941, the Navy took both forward, dining room
at the Banner Island
DELTA QUEEN became
arrived at Cincinnati
placed on the main deck
boats and used them in
shipyard, Stockton, on
Jordan Pickens is a local historian
a proﬁtable venture.
March 1 to receive her
which was formerly the
the San Francisco Bay
Friday, May 20, 1927
and educator.
After Simonton became
freight area. The air-con- new furniture, a swingand entered service about area, painted drab gray,

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

27°

39°

38°

Chilly today with a little snow. Partly cloudy
tonight. High 43° / Low 24°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

34°
31°
48°
31°
76° in 2001
14° in 2008
(in inches)

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

0.07
0.46
0.55
55.90
39.83

Today
7:32 a.m.
5:06 p.m.
6:39 a.m.
5:00 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Fri.
7:33 a.m.
5:06 p.m.
7:39 a.m.
5:42 p.m.

MOON PHASES
New

Dec 7

First

Full

Last

Dec 15 Dec 22 Dec 29

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

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

Major
10:23a
11:12a
11:34a
12:32a
1:27a
2:21a
3:13a

Minor
4:10a
4:59a
5:51a
6:45a
7:39a
8:33a
9:25a

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

1

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Major
10:47p
11:37p
---12:57p
1:51p
2:45p
3:36p

Minor
4:35p
5:24p
6:16p
7:10p
8:04p
8:57p
9:48p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Dec. 6, 1964, almost 15 inches of
rain fell on Little Port Walter, Ark., in
24 hours. This is the greatest 24-hour
rainfall event in the state’s history.

SUNDAY

36°
27°

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

Logan
40/20

Adelphi
40/20
Chillicothe
41/21

Lucasville
43/23
Portsmouth
43/24

Cold with snow

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER

Marietta
40/24
Belpre
41/24

Athens
40/22

St. Marys
41/25

Parkersburg
40/24

Coolville
40/22

Elizabeth
42/25

Spencer
42/26

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.49 -0.08
Marietta
34 21.27 -0.66
Parkersburg
36 24.12 -0.63
Belleville
35 12.71 -0.18
Racine
41 12.90 -0.10
Point Pleasant
40 26.59 -0.61
Gallipolis
50 12.35 +0.37
Huntington
50 32.26 -1.40
Ashland
52 37.96 -0.77
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.03 +0.25
Portsmouth
50 33.20 -2.20
Maysville
50 38.10 -1.10
Meldahl Dam
51 35.40 -1.20
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

Buffalo
43/26
Milton
43/27

St. Albans
44/29

Huntington
42/25

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
44/28
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
59/46
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
60/50
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Mostly sunny and
chilly

Clendenin
41/27
Charleston
42/29

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
4/0

Billings
29/13

Minneapolis
18/4

Montreal
34/20

Toronto
36/22
Detroit
37/23

New York
40/32

Chicago
29/16
Denver
31/19

Washington
44/33

Kansas City
31/16

Partly sunny

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

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
51/34/pc
35/32/sn
50/36/pc
44/36/pc
42/29/pc
29/13/s
30/13/pc
41/30/pc
42/29/c
49/31/pc
23/12/c
29/16/c
41/22/sn
36/26/sn
39/21/sn
53/41/sh
31/19/pc
24/9/pc
37/23/sf
82/71/s
68/60/c
37/18/sn
31/16/c
50/45/sh
44/34/c
60/50/r
45/26/c
74/65/s
18/4/pc
47/33/pc
63/54/pc
40/32/pc
44/27/c
69/49/s
40/31/pc
60/53/sh
36/23/sn
38/23/pc
48/32/pc
45/31/pc
38/18/sn
35/24/c
59/46/s
44/28/s
44/33/pc

Hi/Lo/W
49/34/r
41/35/i
53/38/pc
43/27/s
40/23/s
36/22/s
32/18/pc
39/20/s
36/20/pc
53/31/pc
33/15/s
25/18/s
34/20/pc
31/22/pc
33/20/pc
48/39/r
39/20/pc
24/13/s
32/22/c
80/71/sh
71/61/r
30/19/s
32/22/pc
58/41/pc
40/32/r
67/49/s
38/25/pc
77/70/pc
20/6/s
43/31/c
68/58/c
38/26/s
35/30/i
74/58/pc
39/25/s
65/50/r
30/18/c
35/11/pc
51/28/pc
46/24/s
31/22/pc
36/25/pc
58/44/pc
45/36/s
42/27/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
50/36

High
Low

El Paso
68/47

Chihuahua
71/51

45°
34°

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
44/27

Ashland
44/28
Grayson
44/27

WEDNESDAY

41°
25°

Cloudy with snow or
ﬂurries possible

Wilkesville
41/22
POMEROY
Jackson
42/24
42/22
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
43/25
43/23
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
39/21
GALLIPOLIS
43/24
43/26
43/24

South Shore Greenup
44/26
42/23

30

TUESDAY

41°
22°

Murray City
39/20

McArthur
40/21

Waverly
42/22

MONDAY

39°
28°

Partly sunny and cold Cold with intervals of
clouds and sun

0

Q: Which of the 50 states is the
stormiest?

SUN &amp; MOON

SATURDAY

A: Alaska

Precipitation

FRIDAY

37°
19°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

80° in Key West, FL
-30° in Daniel, WY

Global
High
114° in Skukuza, South Africa
Low -61° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
68/60
Monterrey
73/60

Miami
74/65

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

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�S ports
6 Thursday, December 6, 2018

Buckeyes
basketball nips
Southern, 40-37

Daily Sentinel

Wahama drops opener
Wirt County fends off White Falcons, 52-45

By Alex Hawley

By Bryan Walters

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE, Ohio — One of those nights where
the ball doesn’t bounce your way.
The Southern boys basketball team won the
turnover battle by seven, were within three in the
rebounding battle, and put
The hosts were
up eight more ﬁeld goal
attempts than Nelsonvilleled by Brayden
York on Tuesday, but that
Cunningham,
didn’t stop Buckeyes from
who marked
escaping Meigs County
with a 40-37 victory in non- team-highs of
13 points, seven
league play.
The Tornadoes (0-2)
rebounds and six
doubled up the Buckeyes
blocked shots.
in the opening quarter, as
Southern stormed out to
a 14-7 advantage. The Purple and Gold went cold
in the second quarter, however, with the Buckeyes
going on a 14-3 run for a 21-17 halftime advantage.
The teams evenly split eight points in a slowpaced third quarter, and Nelsonville-York clung to
a 25-21 edge. Southern’s offense came alive with
seven ﬁeld goals and a pair of free throws in the
last eight minutes, but the Buckeyes poured in 15
points and went 6-of-8 from the line to seal the
40-37 victory.
In the game, Southern shot 16-of-57 (28.1 percent) from the ﬁeld, including just 2-of-18 (11.1
percent) from three-point range, while NYHS shot
15-of-59 (25.4 percent), including 4-of-14 (28.6
percent) from deep. At the free throw line, SHS
was 3-of-9 (33.3 percent), while the Buckeyes shot
9-of-13 (69.2 percent).
Nelsonville-York outrebounded Southern by a
37-34 clip, with the three-board edge coming by
a 7-to-4 margin on the offensive end. Collectively,
the Tornadoes had nine assists, nine steals, seven
rejections and 11 turnovers, while NYHS marked
seven assists, four steals, one rejection and 18
turnovers.
The hosts were led by Brayden Cunningham,
who marked team-highs of 13 points, seven
rebounds and six blocked shots. Jensen Anderson
was responsible for both of Southern’s threepointers and ﬁnished with 10 points, while Trey
McNickle added six markers.
Weston Thorla and Austin Baker scored four
points apiece, with Thorla dishing out a team-best
ﬁve assists, and Barker picking up a game-high
four steals.
Justin Perry led the Orange and Brown with 11
points, seven of which came in the fourth quarter.
Ethan Bohyer tallied 10 points, Keegan Wilburn
added six, while Mikey Seel and Reece Robson
had ﬁve apiece. Ethan Gail and Bryce Richards
rounded out the winning total with two points and
one point respectively.
Southern begins Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division play at home on Friday against Eastern.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, Dec. 6
Girls Basketball
Southern at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Ironton, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Wellston, 6 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 7
Boys Basketball
Eastern at Southern, 6 p.m.
Athens at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Miller at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Wellston at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Buffalo at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Hannan, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Ohio Valley Christian at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
River Valley, Wahama at Point Pleasant Jason
Eades, 6 p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 8
Boys Basketball
Meigs vs. Oak Hill at Rio Grande, 8 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Carter Christian, 6 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Gallia Academy at Meigs, 1 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Capital, 2 p.m.
South Gallia at North Adams, TBA
Ohio Valley Christian at Carter Christian, 4:30
Wrestling
River Valley, Wahama at Point Pleasant Jason
Eades, 9 a.m.
Eastern at Warren Hickory Grove, 10 a.m.
Gallia Academy at Logan Duals, 10 a.m.
South Gallia at Ashland, 10 a.m.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Wahama senior Jacob Warth (50)
is fouled during a shot attempt in
the first quarter of Tuesday night’s
season-opening boys basketball
contest against Wirt County at
Gary Clark Court in Mason, W.Va.

MASON, W.Va. — On the wrong
end of this tale of two halves.
Wirt County nearly let a 15-point
ﬁrst half lead slip away, but the
guests held the Wahama boys basketball scoreless over the ﬁnal 2:47 of
regulation en route to a 52-45 decision in a season-opening contest for
both teams at Gary Clark Court in
Mason County.
The host White Falcons (0-1)
showed some signs of life early on
after jumping out to a 9-3 advantage,
but the Tigers (1-0) rallied with a
dozen consecutive points over the

ﬁnal 2:18 for a 15-9 ﬁrst quarter
advantage.
The Red and White — who had four
turnovers in each of the ﬁrst two periods — cut the gap down to 17-12 following a Dakota Belcher basket at the
6:45 mark, but were ultimately never
closer before halftime.
WCHS — which did not commit a
single turnover in the second canto
— answered with a 14-4 surge over
the next 3:46 while building its largest
lead of the night at 31-16 with 2:59
left. Wahama closed the half with a
small 3-2 spurt to enter intermission
trailing 33-19.
See WAHAMA | 9

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Meigs freshman Coulter Cleland (10) drives past Warren’s Kurt Taylor (00), during the Warriors’ 63-48 victory on Tuesday in Rocksprings,
Ohio.

Marauders fall to Warren, 63-48
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
— Not the home opener
the Marauders were hoping for.
The Meigs boys basketball team never led and
fell to non-conference
guest Warren by a 63-48
ﬁnal on Tuesday inside
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
Warren (1-1) scored
the ﬁrst ﬁve points of
the night, holding the
Marauders (1-1) scoreless for the opening four
minutes. The Warriors
led 15-8 at the end of the
ﬁrst quarter, and then
started the second with a
6-1 run.
Meigs fought back
with a 17-8 spurt over
the ﬁnal ﬁve minutes of
the ﬁrst half, cutting the
Warrior advantage to
29-26 at halftime.
MHS senior Nick Lilly
hit a three-pointer 18
seconds into the second
half, tying the game at
29, but Warren reestablished the lead with a
two-pointer a minute
later. Lilly then made a
two-pointer to tie the
game at 31, but the Warriors answered with a
trifecta and never lost
the advantage.
Warren led by a 45-38
clip at the end of the
third, but Meigs cut its
deﬁcit to ﬁve points in
the opening 1:30 of the
ﬁnale. However, Warren
hit back-to-back buckets
within 15 seconds to
stretch the lead to double

Meigs senior Cole Betzing lines up a three-pointer, during the
Marauders’ 63-48 setback on Tuesday in Rocksprings, Ohio.

digits. The Warriors
went on to sink 11-of-21
free throws in the ﬁnal
six minutes — in which
the Marauders had four
players foul out — and
WHS sealed the 63-48
victory.
Following the ﬁrst setback of the season, ﬁrstyear MHS head coach
Jeremy Hill admitted his
team didn’t do what it
took to win the game.
“We got outplayed,”
Hill said. “We didn’t
rebound particularly
well, we didn’t shoot free
throws particularly well,
we didn’t shoot the ball
particularly well and we
got ourselves in foul trou-

ble. All of those things
add up to a loss.”
In the setback, the
Marauders shot 15-of-42
(35.7 percent) from the
ﬁeld, including 4-of-15
(26.7 percent) from
beyond the arc. Meanwhile, Warren was 18-of46 (39.1 percent) from
the ﬁeld, including 4-of13 (30.8 percent) from
three-point range.
The teams combined
to shoot 70 free throws,
with the guests going
23-of-45 (51.1 percent)
from the line, and Meigs
shooting 14-of-25 (56
percent) from the stripe.
The Warriors claimed a
narrow 30-to-29 rebound-

ing advantage, despite
Meigs’ 14-to-11 edge on
the offensive glass. Collectively, the Marauders
had a dozen assists, ﬁve
steals, one blocked shot
and 19 turnovers. WHS
ﬁnished with team totals
of 11 assists, 12 steals,
one rejection and 13
turnovers.
Weston Baer led the
Marauder offense with
13 points, featuring two
three-pointers, a trio of
two-pointers and a free
throw. Next was Zach
Bartrum with 11 points,
to go with six rebounds
and a trio of assists.
Nick Lilly recorded
seven points in the setback, while Cooper Darst
and Coulter Cleland had
ﬁve points apiece, with
Darst earning a teambest ﬁve assists, and Cleland pulling in a teamhigh seven rebounds.
Cole Betzing and
Wyatt Hoover had three
points apiece for the
hosts, while Bobby Musser chipped in with one.
Zach Bartrum led the
MHS defense with three
steals and a block.
Austin Barta and Brandon Simoniette led the
Warren offense with 13
points apiece, followed
by Seth Dennis with 10
points and three assists.
Makiah Merritt scored
nine points, Clay Miller
added ﬁve, with both
players grabbing seven
rebounds.
Kurt Taylor, Joel Chevalier and Gabe Venham
See FALL | 10

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 6, 2018 7

Blue Devils down RVHS, 91-39

Wildcats fall
to Calvary in
opener, 80-39

By Scott Jones
sjones@aimmediamidwest.com

BIDWELL, Ohio — For
now, the bragging rights
belong to the Blue Devils.
The Gallia Academy boys
basketball team led Tuesday
night’s non-conference contest against host River Valley,
as the Blue Devils earned a
decisive 91-39 victory in a
battle of Gallia County rivals.
GAHS (2-0) jumped to
an early 10-3 lead with 4:58
remaining in the ﬁrst quarter, before closing out the
period on a 17-8 scoring run
to take a 27-11 advantage
into the second quarter.
The Blue Devils furthered
their lead in second quarter,
as the utilized a 12-0 run to
widen the margin to 39-11
with 2:05 remaining until
halftime. River Valley (0-2),
however, closed the half on
a 7-4 scoring run to cut the
deﬁcit to 43-18 at the intermission.
Gallia Academy outscored
the hosts 30-11 in the third
quarter to increase its lead to
73-29 entering the ﬁnale.
GAHS utilized a 6-of-12
performance form the ﬁeld,
including 3-of-6 from beyond
the arc, as River Valley made
4-of-7 attempts in the period,
to close out the 52-point victory.
Following the game, sixthyeah GAHS head coach Gary
Harrison was pleased with
his team’s effort — particularly their play in transition.
“It was a good performance,” Harrison said. “One
thin we wanted to work on
was our transition offense
and did a great job of getting
the ball out and running.
I also feel we did a great
job defensively. They made
some tough shots against us.
Coach Bostic is doing a great
job with the River Valley
program.”
Gallia Academy ﬁnished
with a 38-of-65 (58.4 percent) shooting performance
from the ﬁeld, including
8-of-17 (47 percent) from
three-point range. In con-

By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Photos by Scott Jones | OVP Sports

GAHS junior Ben Cox (23) attempts a shot during the first half of the Blue Devils 91-39 victory over River Valley
on Tuesday night in Bidwell, Ohio.

RVHS senior Layne Fitch (2)
attempts a shot during the second
half of the Raiders 91-39 setback to
Gallia Academy on Tuesday night in
Bidwell, Ohio.

trast, the River Valley shot
15-of-41 (36.5 percent) overall, including 3-of-11 (27.2
percent) from long distance.
From the free throw line,
GAHS was 7-of-11 (63.6 percent), while the hosts were
2-of-11 (18.1 percent).
GAHS won the rebounding
battle by a 32-18 margin. The
Silver and Black committed
18 turnovers in the setback,
while the Gallia Academy
had three giveaways.
Zach Loveday ﬁnished
with 25 points to lead the
Blue Devils in scoring,

IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Bruner Land Company, Inc.,
Plaintiff,
vs.
Case No. 18CV063
Derak L. Harold, et. al.,
Defendants.
LEGAL NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION
In the Meigs County Common Pleas Court, Meigs County,
Ohio, Bruner Land Company, Inc., Plaintiff, -vs-Derak L. Harold, et. al., Case No. 18CV063.
John Doe, Unknown Spouse of Sondra S. Harold, whose last
known address was 2916 Venice Road, Sandusky, Ohio 44870,
the current address of same which is unknown, and cannot with
reasonable diligence be found or ascertained, shall take notice
that on the 20th day of September, 2018, Bruner Land Company, Inc., Byesville, Ohio 43723, filed its complaint against
said party praying for judgment quieting title in the Plaintiff
relative to the foreclosure of a promissory note and mortgage
executed by Derak L. Harold and Sondra S. Harold regarding
the following described real estate, to-wit:

including two trifectas.
Caleb Henry was next with
12 markers, while Cory Call,
Justin McClelland and Logan
Blouir each ﬁnished with 10
points apiece, respectively.
Brenden Carter added
eight markers, while Cole
Davis chipped in four points,
including a perfect 2-of-2
from the charity stripe.
Justin Wilcoxon and Ben
Cox each had three points,
as Blaine Carter added two
markers. Reece Thomas
concluded the scoring totals
for Gallia Academy with one
point.
Despite the setback, ﬁrstyear RVHS head coach Brett
Bostic saw many positives in
this squads performance.
“We faced one of the
toughest teams on our
schedule,” Bostic said. “This
is only the second game of
the season. We have a good
group of kids, some that
didn’t even play last season
that are getting a lot of minutes. We are on a learning
curve. We are a young team
that is seeking consistency.
We had some ﬂashes during
the game where we did some
things well, such as making

MeigsCounty Common Pleas Court
MeigsCounty, Ohio
12/6/18, 12/13/18, 12/20/8

Scott Jones can be reached at 740446-2342, ext 2106.

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

ANNOUNCEMENTS

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

AUCTIONS

Notices

Apartments/Townhouses

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Being Parcel No. 09-00670.014
aka Township Road 274, Coolville, Ohio 45723.
A complete legal description of the parcel may be obtained
from the Meigs County Auditor.
Said party or parties are required to answer on or before the
28th day following the last publication of the within notice or
default judgment or other judgment may be had against them.
Said publication shall be made in this newspaper at least once
a week for three (3) consecutive weeks.

a back cut or coming around
and catching the ball ready
to shoot. There are things
we need to work on, but we
also understand there’s a
lack of experience. We also
understand this season is not
a sprint, but a marathon.”
Layne Fitch paced the
Raiders with 16 points, as
Myles Morrison followed
with six markers.
Rory Twyman was next
with ﬁve points, while Jordan Lambert and Cole Young
followed with four points and
three markers apiece, respectively.
Brandon Call and Chase
Caldwell each provided two
markers, as Matt Mollohan
provided one point to close
out the scoring totals for
River Valley.
The Raiders will look to
avenge the setback, when the
travel to face the Blue Devils
on Feb. 2 in Centenary.
Up next for River Valley,
a home date with TVC Ohio
foe Athens, while the Blue
Devils host Ohio Valley Conference opponent Rock Hill
on Tuesday.

ASHTON, W.Va. — The Wildcats
were left with a ‘cluttered’ feeling.
Robert Clutter scored a game-high 29
points in three quarters of play, helping
visiting Calvary Baptist Academy spoil
the season opener for the Hannan boys
basketball team on Tuesday night during an 80-39 decision in a non-conference matchup in Mason County.
The host Wildcats (0-1) struggled to
ﬁnd an answer for the Patriots (4-1)
early on as Clutter poured in 16 ﬁrst
quarter points, allowing the Red and
Blue to secure a 25-13 advantage eight
minutes in.
The Blue and White were never
closer the rest of the way as CBA got
another eight points from Clutter in
the second canto during an 18-6 surge,
giving the guests a commanding 43-19
cushion at the break.
The Patriots hit ﬁve trifectas and
had seven different players score in the
third quarter, all part of a 26-10 charge
that led to a sizable 69-29 lead headed
into the ﬁnale.
HHS managed to keep things a bit
more close down the stretch, but the
guests closed regulation with an 11-10
run to wrap up the 41-point outcome.
The Wildcats made 14 total ﬁeld
goals — including two trifectas — and
also netted nine free throws in the setback.
Dalton Coleman paced Hannan with
16 points, seven of which came in the
ﬁrst period. Chandler Starkey was next
with six points, while Chase Nelson
and Andrew Gillispie were next with
four markers apiece.
Matthew Kensler chipped in three
points, with Casey Lowery, Caleb
Gussler and Issac Colecchia completing things with two points each.
The guests had 10 players reach the
scoring column and made 31 total ﬁeld
goals — including 11 trifectas — while
also sinking seven charity tosses.
Issac Massie followed Clutter with
12 points, with Luke Pauley and Scotty
Parsons respectively adding nine and
eight markers.
The Wildcats return to action Friday
when they host Ohio Valley Christian
at approximately 7:30 p.m.

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2006 Hyundai Sonata
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2005 Chrysler 300

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�COMICS

8 Thursday, December 6, 2018

BLONDIE

Daily Sentinel

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

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By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

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THE LOCKHORNS

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Daily Sentinel

with ﬁve unanswered
points en route to wrapping up the seven-point
outcome.
From page 6
Wirt County committed a dozen turnovers in
Both teams shot 33
the second half — six in
percent from the ﬁeld
each period — and ended
in the opening half, but
the game with three more
Wirt County beneﬁted
giveaways than the Red
from a dozen extra shot
and White. Wahama had
attempts. The guests
only four miscues in the
were 11-of-33 overall —
second half and a total
including 6-of-15 from
of 12 turnovers in the
3-point range — and
setback.
claimed a 9-2 edge on
Afterwards, WHS
the offensive glass while
coach Ron Bradley felt
committing ﬁve fewer
that his troops gave a
turnovers.
much more spirited effort
The White Falcons,
after halftime — but that
conversely, were 7-of-21
from the ﬂoor in the ﬁrst performance was also
somewhat discouraging
half, including a 2-of-10
after digging such an
effort from behind the
early hole.
arc. Wahama was also
As Bradley noted, the
outrebounded 17-12
overall in the opening 16 White Falcons simply
cannot afford to take a
minutes.
quarter or two off.
The hosts missed all
“We were ﬂat the ﬁrst
but one of their ﬁrst
two quarters and didn’t
seven shot attempts in
do a very good job of takthe third stanza, but
then hit 4-of-6 tries over ing care of the basketball,
but our effort and intenthe ﬁnal 3:38 to close to
sity was so much better
within 38-31 following a
Jacob Lloyd basket at the in the second half,” Bradley said. “Somehow, we
1:06 mark.
managed to ﬂip a switch
Seth Suslik, however,
and make a game of it
tacked on a basket with
late. But that’s the thing,
13 seconds remaining,
it takes four quarters of
allowing the Tigers to
take a 40-31 edge into the that kind of energy level
that we had in the second
ﬁnale.
half. That was the differWirt County made
ence for us in the outa quick 5-3 run in the
come tonight because we
opening 90 seconds to
didn’t play four quarters
push the lead back out
to double digits at 45-34, of good basketball.”
Wirt County claimed a
but the White Falcons
retaliated with eight con- 37-26 advantage on the
boards, including a 16-7
secutive points to close
edge on the offensive
to within 45-42 at the
glass. The guests were
4:19 mark.
12-of-24 at the free throw
Kyler Carper ended a
three-plus minute scoring line for 50 percent, while
Wahama netted 5-of-11
drought with a basket
charity tosses for 45 perat the 3:01 mark, but
cent.
a Brayden Davenport
The White Falcons
trifecta with 2:48 left
made 17-of-50 ﬁeld goal
allowed the hosts to
attempts for 34 percent,
whittle the deﬁcit down
including a 6-of-22 effort
to 47-45.
from behind the arc for
Wahama was never
27 percent.
closer and missed its
Belcher paced WHS
ﬁnal ﬁeld goal attempts,
and the Tigers ended the with 12 points and seven
rebounds, followed by
ﬁnal 1:15 of regulation

Lloyd with 10 points
and Abrahm Pauley with
eight markers. Davenport
was next with six points
and Jonathan Frye added
four markers.
Jacob Warth and Brady
Bumgarner completed
the scoring with a point

apiece. Pauley also
grabbed six rebounds,
while Warth and Lloyd
each hauled in four caroms.
The Orange and Black
netted 16-of-51 ﬁeld goal
attempts for 31 percent,
including an 8-of-24

effort from 3-point territory for 33 percent.
Suslik paced the guests
with a game-high 19
points, followed by Carper and Justin Windland
with eight points apiece.
Carper also hauled
in a game-high dozen

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rebounds for the victors.
Wahama looks to
rebound Friday night
when it hosts Buffalo in a
non-conference matchup
at 7 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6
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Family Guy Family Guy Seinfeld
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Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
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Bones
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NBA Basket.
Elf (2003, Comedy) James Caan, Bob Newhart, Will
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation (‘89,
(:15) National Lampoon's
Ferrell. TVPG
Com) Beverly D'Angelo, Randy Quaid, Chevy Chase. TVPG Christmas Vacation TVPG
Expedition Unknown
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To Be Announced
Live PD:
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The First 48 "A Man's
Live PD:
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The Zoo
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Chicago P.D. "The Price We Chicago P.D. "Different
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Pay"
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Law &amp; Order: C.I. "Ill-Bred" Growing Up "Broken Heart" Growing Up Hip Hop
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Botched "Silicone Slip-Ups" E! News (N)
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(4:30) Mecum Auto Auctions: Muscle Cars &amp; More "Monterey"
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American Pickers "Catch- American Pickers "Junkyard American Pickers "Pickers American Pickers "Pickin' (:05) CurseOak (N) /(:10)
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Top Chef "Island Fever"
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Movie
Menace II Society (‘93, Dra) Larenz Tate, Tyrin Turner. TV14
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Wahama

Thursday, December 6, 2018 9

�SPORTS

10 Thursday, December 6, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Florida outlasts WVU in
Jimmy V Classic, 66-56
NEW YORK (AP) —
After earning what coach
Mike White called the
“biggest win thus far
in a very early season,”
Florida is reveling.
The Gators knocked off
West Virginia, 66-56, in
the second game of the
Jimmy V Classic Tuesday
night at Madison Square
Garden.
KeVaughn Allen scored
a game-high 19 points to
lead Florida, and while
he was the only Gator
to reach double-ﬁgure
scoring, it was enough.
Florida won its third
game in its last ﬁve starts
and improved to 5-3.
West Virginia coach
Bob Huggins, meanwhile,
spoke quietly.
The message behind
his words could not have
been louder. Or clearer.
“We have some guys
who need to grow up, and
if they don’t do it then I
can’t have them around,”
he said. And while he
did not mention players
by name, he said he has
“three or four guys who
continually do things
they’re not capable of
doing.” And, he added,

Fall
From page 6

OH-70094192

each scored three points
for the victors, while
Bryce Knost and Isaac
Colegrove added two
apiece. Dennis, Merritt,
and Simoniette had two
steals each for the WHS
defense, while Colegrove
rejected a shot.
Hill noted that the

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they “pout” when they are
criticized.
Asked if he was concerned his team could
be upset by disillusioned
players, Huggins said,
“I think I can ﬁx it. I’ve
ﬁxed it before. And when
I can’t ﬁx it, I cut it out.”
The loss snapped West
Virginia’s four-game winning streak. The Mountaineers fell to 5-3. Chase
Harler led West Virginia
with 11 points.
“We knew we had to
come out and just match
their intensity just to give
us a chance to win the
ballgame,” Allen said.
Despite being outscored 14-4 in the ﬁnal
7:25 of the ﬁrst half,
Florida went into halftime with a 30-27 lead.
The Gators never trailed
until Logan Routt drove
the lane for a one-handed
dunk with 16:39 left in
the second half.
Florida responded with
a 14-2 run in a span of
5:57 to turn a 31-30 deﬁcit to a 44-33 lead. Keyontae Johnson’s driving
baseline two-handed jam
and Andrew Nembhard ‘s
3 on consecutive posses-

sions highlighted the run
and forced Bob Huggins
to call a timeout.
The break did not slow
the Gators and when play
resumed Allen drilled
a straightaway 3 and
Deaundrae Ballard made
a free throw to extend the
lead to 15.
“Our guys’ attention to
detail in (the 1-3-1 zone)
was pretty good, and we
hadn’t played a lot of it,”
White said. “We got off to
a pretty good start by getting a couple stops and
we just rode it.”
Florida would lead by
as many as 16 after Locke
made two free throws
with 5:15 left. The Gators
would make 11 free
throws in the ﬁnal 2:24 to
close out the game.
“Hopefully that gives us
some conﬁdence moving
forward because we’ve
struggled from the foul
line_and we struggled
from the foul line again
tonight until the end,”
White said. “Hopefully
this gets us going a little
bit to settle us in at the
foul line.”
West Virginia hosts
Pittsburgh Saturday.

Maroon and Gold won’t
dwell on the setback, but
will try to learn from it as
they move forward into
league play.
“Anytime you get a
loss, it’s what you do
with the loss that means
the most,” Hill said. “A
loss doesn’t deﬁne your
season, it’s what you
do with the loss that
deﬁnes your season.
We’re going to come
back in the gym tomor-

row and we’re going to
try to ﬁx the things we
did wrong.”
Meigs opens it’s TriValley Conference Ohio
Division campaign at
home against Wellston
on Friday. The Golden
Rockets and Marauders
were fourth and ﬁfth
respectively in the league
last season.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

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