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                  <text>A new
health
plan

Rain,
chilly
46/38

Durst
runs in
state meet

EDITORIAL s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 177, Volume 71

Tuesday, November 7, 2017 s 50¢

Christmas shopping begins

Area man
arrested
for alleged
threats
Staff Report

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Merchants in Pomeroy kicked off the holiday season on Monday with the annual Christmas Open House event at several downtown businesses. Shoppers from around
the county and around the region packed into the shops to pick up their holiday decor, Christmas gifts and many other items for the quickly approaching Christmas
season. Pictured are shoppers at Weaving Stitches, Hartwell House and Front Paige Outfitters making their holiday purchases.

OhioHealth launches mobile mammography unit

ATHENS — A Rutland
man has been arrested
after allegedly making
threats
to “take
down”
himself
and other
employees
at Ohio
University.
Embrey
According to a
news release from the
Ohio University Police
Department, just before
noon on Monday ofﬁcers
from OUPD responded to
a report of an employee
of Nelson Dining Hall
(on the university’s South
Green) threatening to
“take down” himself
and other employees of
the dining hall when he
reported to work at 2
p.m.
The employee alleged
to have made the threat
See THREATS | 5

Staff Report

ATHENS — OhioHealth
O’Bleness Hospital has
launched its new mobile
mammography service, following the completion of a
$1.3 million fundraising campaign and a four month process to design and fabricate
the mobile unit.
The OhioHealth mobile
mammography program will
be the ﬁrst Athens Countybased program providing
accessible, advanced screening mammography in underserved areas in the region.
The program is expected to
screen over 1,500 patients in
the ﬁrst year, with services to
cover a multi-county region
of Appalachian Ohio. The
unit is anticipated to expand
into neighboring counties in
future years.
The mobile unit began
providing services two days
a week at the OhioHealth
Nelsonville Health Center in
early September. The unit
will go on the road to provide
services to regional employers and community partners
beginning November 1.
On Friday, the unit made
its ﬁrst off-site visit in Meigs
County, seeing patients in
Racine. Screenings were
scheduled for 13 patients during the ﬁrst visit, with return
trips already planned to take

Cheshire
man killed
in fatal
accident
Staff Report

Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Meigs County Commissioners Mike Bartrum and Randy Smith toured the new mobile mammography unit on Friday. The
commissioners are pictured with mammography techs Michelle Lehman and Kelly Jarrett, who drive the unit from location
to location and provide screenings on the unit.

place in January and March.
Screenings take approximately 20 minutes per patient.
Collaboration with local and
regional partners was critical
to the development of the program. Philanthropy accounted
for $1.3 million of the overall
project budget of $1.7 million.
On October 5, OhioHealth
will honor philanthropic
partners and community supporters of the mobile mammography project at a special

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

kickoff event.
“We are grateful to our partners for their generous support of this project, which we
believe will improve access to
care and decrease late-stage
diagnosis and death rates
for residents in southeast
Ohio,” said Karen Morrison,
president of the OhioHealth
Foundation. “We are humbled
to celebrate the launch of this
program with members of the
communities we serve.”

Major funders of
the program include:
American Electric Power
Foundation ($650,000)
Ohio Governor’s Ofﬁce of
Appalachia ($250,000)
Susan G. Komen Columbus
($200,000)
Charles G. O’Bleness Foundation ($100,000)
Peoples Bank Foundation,
Inc. ($25,000)
See UNIT | 2

Heated statewide issues, local
battles Tuesday in Ohio

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
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thoughts.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Highproﬁle statewide measures on crime
victims’ rights and prescription
drug prices will be decided Tuesday
in Ohio, along with local elections
including mayoral races in three of
the state’s four largest cities.
The two highly publicized state
issues highlight ballots with myriad
local races for leadership of the
state’s cities, townships and villages.
There are intraparty Democratic
battles for mayor in some key cities,
as Democrats look for emerging stars
after recent statewide domination by
Republicans.
A look at key issues and races

around the state:
Issue 1
Marsy’s Law for Ohio aims to
expand crime victims’ rights to more
closely match those of the accused.
The campaign is part of a multi-state
effort. The proposed constitutional
amendment assures that victims and
their families receive notice of court
proceedings, have input on plea deals
and other rights.
The measure is championed by
California billionaire Henry Nicholas
and named for his sister, who was
See OHIO | 5

CHESHIRE — Law
enforcement and
emergency personnel
responded to Ohio 7 in
Cheshire Monday morning for a fatal accident
involving a vehicle and
pedestrian which reportedly occurred around
6:36 a.m.
According to the Ohio
State Highway Patrol,
Lisa Roush, 57, of Pomeroy, was traveling south
on Ohio 7 when she
reportedly struck Norman Schoonover, 78,
of Cheshire, who was
See ACCIDENT | 3

Johnson
to serve as
Veterans
Day speaker
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — U.S.
Congressman Bill Johnson (R-Marietta) will
serve as
the Gallia
Veterans Day
keynote
speaker
and parade
marshal.
The Vet- Johnson
erans Day
Parade and
Ceremony for Gallipolis
will be held Saturday,
Nov. 11, organized by
the Gallia Veterans
See JOHNSON | 5

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, November 7, 2017

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

HORACE ‘RALPH’ EDWARDS

HALE
VINTON — Billy Eugene Hale, 84, of Vinton, Ohio,
Levi (Brooklyn) MethGALLIPOLIS — HorMAE YOUNG
(Willkesville Community), died on Friday, Nov. 3,
eney, Chase McElfresh,
ace “Ralph” Edwards,
2017, in the Veterans Administration Hospital, HunHeather White and Katie tington, West Virginia.
MIAMISBURG — Mae her free time, she enjoyed 74 of Gallipolis, passed
Jo Freeman; 14 great
away at his residence
Funeral Services will be held at 1 p.m., Tuesday,
gardening, reading and
Young, age 96, of Miamgrandchildren; brother,
Nov. 7, 2017, in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
volunteering at the Meigs after extended medical
isburg, Ohio, passed
Joe (Betty) Edwards,
Vinton Chapel with Pastor Brian Bailey ofﬁciating.
County Humane Society. complications. He was
away on Saturday, Nov.
Cheshire; sister, June
born on Dec. 28, 1942,
Burial will follow in the Vinton Memorial Park with
Funeral services are
4, 2017, at Otterbein of
Wednesday, Nov. 8, 2017, in Cheshire, Ohio, to the (Fred) Thomas; and sev- Military Graveside Rites to be conducted by the VinSpringboro. Mae was
eral nieces and nephews. ton American Legion Post #161. Friends may call at
late Pearl “Penny” and
born in Morganette, West at 10 a.m. at Anderson
He is preceded in death the funeral home on Tuesday from 11 a.m. until the
Virginia, on Jan. 7, 1921, Funeral Homes, 40 North Gertrude Blanche (Bobo)
time of service.
Main Street, Springboro, Edwards. He retired as a by his parents; brother,
to the late Lonnie and
Pearl “Buddy” Edwards;
railroader from Norfolk
Ohio. Burial to follow in
Ella Forren.
Southern when he was 62 and sister, Elsie Folmer.
KINNAIRD
Springboro Cemetery.
Mae was preceded in
Funeral services will
SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. — Dolly Priddy Dodson KinVisitation will be held on years old.
death by her husband,
be held on Thursday,
He is survived by his
naird, 89, of Southside, W.Va., formerly of Nitro,
Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2017,
Earl Young; and numerNov. 9, 2017, at 7 p.m.
W.Va., died Sunday, November 5, 2017 at home.
from 5-7 p.m. at the funer- wife of 56 years Joan
ous brothers and sisters.
at the Anderson McDanEdwards of Gallipolis;
A funeral service will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, Novemal home.
She is survived by her
iel Funeral Home in
ber 8, 2017, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
In lieu of ﬂowers, dona- children, Joy (John)
son, Fred (Cathy) Young;
Pomeroy with Pastor
Pleasant, W.Va., with Pastor Harold White ofﬁciating.
tions can be made to Han- Freeman, Mason, W.Va.,
sister, Leta Hann; brothBurial will follow at Hambrick Cemetery in Southside.
nah’s Treasure Chest, 124 Troy Edwards, Cheshire, Carl Ward ofﬁciating.
er, Joe (Flo) Forren.
Anita (Bryan) Lawrence, Visitation for family and
The family will receive friends two hours prior to the
Westpark Road, Dayton,
Mae, a longtime elefriends will be held two
Portland, Stacy (Amy)
funeral service Wednesday at the funeral home.
Ohio 45459.
mentary school teacher,
hours prior to the funeral
Edwards, Cheshire;
Please visit www.
was a Rosie the Rivservice.
HARRISON
anderson-fh.com to send grandchildren, Samaneter during WWII at the
An online registry is
tha (Jay) Farra, Chris
BIDWELL — Thelma Kate Harrison, age 68, of
Glenn L. Martin Plant. In an online condolence.
available at www.ander(Tosha) Edwards, Jess
Bidwell, passed away on Sunday November 5, 2017
sonmcdaniel.com.
Edwards, Jake Edwards,
DORIS ‘EVELYN’ WELL
at Cabell Huntington Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Thursday,
is also survived by one
November 9, 2017 at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
STOUT
POMEROY — Doris
sister-in-law, Nancy Bahr.
Home with Pastor Jane Ann Miller ofﬁciating. Burial
BIDWELL — Betty Lou Stout, 82, Bidwell, Ohio
“Evelyn” Well, 90, went
In addition to her parwill follow in the Macedonia Cemetery. Friends may
to her heavenly home on
passed away Sunday, November 5, 2017 in Cabell
ents, she was preceded
Sunday, Nov. 5, 2017.
Huntington Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.. Funeral ser- call on Wednesday at the funeral home from 6-8 p.m.
in death in 1971 by her
She was born Feb. 14,
vices will be conducted 11 a.m. Wednesday, Novemhusband, Floyd “Eugene” ber 8, 2017 in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
1927, in Chester TownMILLER
ship to Ernest and Bertha Well. She was also preced- Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, Ohio with Evangelist
ed by her son, Kenneth
Betzing Bahr. Evelyn
Tim Gainer ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in the Ohio
NEW HAVEN — Sue Ellen Miller, 75, of New
Well; her father-in-law
was a homemaker who
Valley Memory Gardens. Friends and family may call Haven, West Virginia, died on Nov. 4, 2017.
and mother-in-law, Val
was dedicated to her
at the funeral home Tuesday 6-8 p.m..
Funeral services will be held on Friday, Nov. 10,
and Audith Well; siblings
family and her church,
2017 at 11 a.m. at the Anderson Funeral Home in
PARSONS, SR.
Silver Ridge Community and spouses, Kyle and
New Haven. Burial will follow at Graham Cemetery.
Elsie Bahr, Clayton and
RACINE, Ohio — Mark Alan Parsons Sr., 56, of
Church. She had many
Visiting hours will be on Thursday from 6-8 p.m. at
Virgene Bahr, Norman
Racine, Ohio, died Saturday, November 4, 2017, at
best friends throughout
the funeral home.
and Daylene Bahr, MilPleasant Valley Hospital.
the years and was a
dred and Victor Lipsey,
There will be no services. Burial will be at the consupport and conﬁdant
Victor and Wilma Bahr,
venience of the family. Arrangements are under the
to many. She faithfully
Lila and Harold Winters, direction of Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasserved others, always
in our region.”
ant.
helping wherever needed. Henry and Eileen Bahr,
The mobile unit
Vernon Bahr and Rex
Her faithful prayers and
will travel to major
Bentz; her husband’s sib- YOST, JR.
From page 1
service to others will be
community events in
greatly missed. Her faith lings and spouses, Dale
the region to enhance
BIDWELL — Cecil Darrell Yost, Jr., 43, Bidwell,
and Christian service is a and Virginia Well, Hazel
Ohio passed away Wednesday, November 1, 2017 at
Mark and Kathy Seck- awareness about the
and Leslie Hawk, Vern
legacy to her family.
availability of screenBidwell, Ohio. Funeral services will be held 1 p.m.,
inger ($25,000)
and Audrey Well, Orville Thursday, November 9, 2017 at the McCoy Moore
Evelyn is survived by
ing mammograms.
OhioHealth
and Jenny Well, Emerson Funeral Home, Vinton Chapel with Pastor Heath Jenher children, Deryl and
In addition to the
O’Bleness Hospital
and Elizabeth Well, Don- kins ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Family Cemetery
Doris Well of Highland
scheduling of appointCharity Golf Tournaald Well, Elta Mae Well,
Village, Texas, Russell
ments at the Nelsonon Morgan Lane. Family and friends may call on famment ($20,000)
Dayton and Evelyth Well; ily on Thursday beginning at 11 a.m. till the time of
and Linda Well of Chesville base site and the
“Offering mamand a host of nieces and
ter, Ohio, Barbara and
trips to Racine, the
service.
mography screenings
Scott Kerr of Mingo Junc- nephews.
mobile unit can be
where women live
We are thankful for
tion, Ohio and Brian and
scheduled to come to
and work is critically
JARRELL
Myra Well of Ripley West her wonderful caregivother locations.
important—screenPOINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Carol Rene (Knaul)
ers, especially Venedia
Virginia; grandchildren,
To schedule appointing improves breast
Jarrell, 53, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Friday,
McCloud, Kathy Stone,
Amy and James Scott of
ments, call 740-592cancer outcomes and
November 3, 2017, at Holzer Medical Center.
Mary Pellegrino and
Highland Village, Texas,
9454. Organization,
saves lives,” said
Funeral services will be held at the Deal Funeral
Amanda Wells and the
Heather and Jeremy
Mark Seckinger, presi- business or group
Home in Point Pleasant, Thursday, November 9,
Johnston of Orange Park, kind and compassionleaders who would like
dent of OhioHealth
2017, at 1 p.m., with Pastors Melvin Mock and Rich
ate care of the staff at
Florida, Josh Kerr and
O’Bleness Hospital in to schedule to unit to
Bartolli ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at Forest Hills
Holzer Medical Center.
Debbie Smith of Mingo
a news release. “We’re come to their location
Cemetery, Flatrock, W.Va. Friends may call on the
We would also like to
Junction, Ohio, Leah
may call 740-566so proud to offer this
family at the funeral home, Wednesday, November 8,
Well and Jacob Elderidge thank Kim Spencer for
service to the women 4539.
2017, from 5 - 8 p.m.
the excellent medical care
of Williamsburg, Ohio,
Elizabeth Well and Mariel she provided through the
TUESDAY EVENING
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7
Zaun of Columbus, Ohio, years.
BROADCAST
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
According to Evelyn’s
Ashton and Alyss Well
Jeopardy!
WSAZ News NBC Nightly Wheel of
The Voice "The Knockouts" This Is Us "The Most
Law &amp; Order (N)
3 (WSAZ)
wishes there will be no
of Chester, Ohio, Ashley
3 (N)
News (N)
Fortune (N) (N)
(N)
Disappointed Man" (N)
Jeopardy!
WTAP News NBC Nightly Wheel of
The Voice "The Knockouts" This Is Us "The Most
Law &amp; Order (N)
visitation hours.
Kerr of St. Clairsville,
4 (WTAP)
at Six (N)
News (N)
Fortune (N) (N)
(N)
Disappointed Man" (N)
Graveside services will
Ohio, Richard Well of
Middle "The Fresh Off the Black "First The Mayor Kevin (Probably) Saves the
ABC 6 News ABC World Entertainm- Access
6 (WSYX)
be held at 4 p.m., TuesBlue Springs, Missouri,
ent Tonight Hollywood Setup" (N)
at 6pm (N) News (N)
Boat (N)
and Last" (N) (N)
World "Rocky Road" (N)
day, Nov. 7, 2017, at the
Jacob Well and Cara
Arthur
Newswatch Newshour. A summary of
Finding Your Roots "Black The Vietnam War "The Veneer of Civilization (June 1968(N)
the day's national and
Like Me" (N)
May 1969)" American men of draft age face difficult
7 (WOUB)
Silver Ridge Cemetery.
Schafer of Toledo, Ohio,
international news. (N)
decisions and wrenching moral choices.
In lieu of ﬂowers, donaBrandon Well and MicayNews at 6
ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm- Middle "The Fresh Off the Black "First The Mayor Kevin (Probably) Saves the
8 (WCHS)
la Gibson of Huntington, tions may be sent to
(N)
News (N)
Boat (N)
and Last" (N) (N)
World "Rocky Road" (N)
ent Tonight Setup" (N)
Silver Ridge Community
West Virginia and Tyler
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
NCIS: New Orleans "The
NCIS "Burden of Proof" (N) Bull "No Good Deed" (N)
10 (WBNS)
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
(N)
Fortune (N)
Accident" (N)
Church, 39645 Silver
Wolfe of Myrtle Beach,
Daily Mail
The Mick (N) Brooklyn 99 Eyewitness News at 10
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang Lethal Weapon "Let It
Ridge, Reedsville, Ohio
South Carolina; great11 (WVAH)
TV
News (N)
Theory
Theory
Ride" (N)
(N)
p.m. (N)
45772
grandchildren, Jenna
PBS NewsHour Providing in- Finding Your Roots "Black The Vietnam War "The Veneer of Civilization (June 1968BBC World Nightly
You are invited to sign
Johnston, Colby Scott,
Business
depth analysis of current
Like Me" (N)
May 1969)" American men of draft age face difficult
12 (WVPB) News:
events. (N)
decisions and wrenching moral choices.
America
Report (N)
Luke Johnston, Matthew the online guestbook at
NCIS "Burden of Proof" (N) Bull "No Good Deed" (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
NCIS: New Orleans "The
www.whiteschwarzelfh.
Davis, Kailey Scott, Jor13 (WOWK)
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition
Accident" (N)
com.
dan Davis, Judah Well
CABLE
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
and Camden Well. She
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
18 (WGN) Blue Bloods "Mercy"

Unit

FISHER
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Wilma Fisher, 85, of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., died at St. Mary’s Medical Center in Huntington, W.Va., Monday, November 6, 2017.
Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced
by Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant.

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James, Zoë Kravitz, Shailene Woodley. Tris must escape
with Four beyond the wall the encircles Chicago. TV14
Nemr: No Bombing Nemr
(5:25) George Michael:
Freedom
performs comedy in both
Lebanon and America.
(:15)

8

PM

8:30

Post-game
Gold Glove Awards (L)

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Real Sports With Bryant
Rolling Stone: Stories From the Edge Get a behind-theGumbel Bryant Gumbel
scenes look at the iconic magazine on its milestone 50th
Anniversary.
profiles Patrick Ewing.
Fist Fight ('17, Com) Ice Cube. After getting (:35) A Low Down Dirty Shame A detective
his colleague fired, a mild English teacher is gets embroiled in a case that originally got
challenged to a fight. TVMA
him kicked out of the LAPD.
A Season
Shameless "We Become
Inside the NFL "2017 Week A Season
What We ... Frank!"
9" (N)
With Navy
With Navy
Football (N) Football

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs will only list event
information that is open to the public and will be
printed on a space-available basis.

Tuesday, November 7, 2017 3

RACO presents Halloween costume contest awards

Nursing service availability
POMEROY — There will be no nursing services
(including ﬂu shots) available at the Meigs County
Health Dept. on Thurs., Nov. 9th from 8 a.m.-2
p.m. because of staff participation in a mandated
public health exercise. The nurse will be available
from 2-4 p.m. We apologize for the inconvenience.

Holiday office closures
POMEROY — The Meigs County Courthouse
will close at noon on Tuesday, Nov. 7.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Courthouse
will be closed on Friday, Nov. 10 in observance of
Veterans Day.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health
Department will be closed on Friday. Nov. 10 in
observance of Veterans Day.

Immunization clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health
Department will conduct an Immunization
Clinic on Tuesday from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m.
at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring child(ren)’s shot records. Children must be
accompanied by a parent/legal guardian. A $15.00
donation is appreciated for immunization administration; however, no one will be denied services
because of an inability to pay an administration fee
for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please bring
medical cards and/or commercial insurance cards,
if applicable. Zostavax (shingles); pneumonia and
inﬂuenza vaccines are also available. Call for eligibility determination and availability or visit our
website at www.meigs-health.com to see a list of
accepted commercial insurances and Medicaid for
adults.

Music booster craft show
REEDSVILLE — The Eastern Music Boosters
will have their 30th annual craft show Saturday,
Nov. 11 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Eastern Elementary. The boosters are currently looking for crafters. If interested contact Jenny Ridenour at jenny.
ridenour@yahoo.com to get an application. There
are currently over 60 crafters, many are new this
year, with a few spaces left. The craft show will
feature performances by the Alumni Band, concert
band, marching band, choir, and hand bells. This
is the biggest fundraiser for the music program. It
pays for music for choir, hand bells, concert bands
both middle and high school, and repairs to all
instruments. It also provides transportation for
the marching band to attend away football games
and hand bells during Christmas concerts. It also
provides two $500 scholarships to graduating
seniors.

Courtesy photos

The Racine Area Community Organization (RACO) awarded prizes in the costume contest held during the annual Trick-or-Treat party
at the Racine Fire Department. In the Age 0-6 category, first place was Addie Halstead (unicorn), second place was Dayton Reiber
(Superman/Clark Kent), and third place was Harmony Brinager (Queen of Hearts). In the Age 7-12 age group, first place was Sydney
Stout (cat lady), second place was Riley Tucker (Rubik’s Cube) and third place was Emily Browning (cereal spoon). In the Age 13 to adult
category, first place was Clayton Moore and Carlee Norton as Branch and Princess Poppy from Trolls, second place was Logan Browning
(Kramer) and third place was Erin McKibben and Sam Eblin (Mario and Luigi). The Most Creative Costume Award went to Tory Bruster
as a bowl of fruit loops.

Yard of the Week winner

Holiday food drive
ATHENS —Dr. Mathews and staff at 530 W.
Union St., Suite A, Athens, will be conducting
their annual holiday food drive beginning Nov.
1. Donations of non-perishable food items maybe
dropped off from Nov. 1 through Dec. 21. The
ofﬁce will match all donations.

LANDAKER BIRTH
POMEROY — Joan King of Pomeroy announces
the Sept. 19, 2017, birth of her third great granddaughter, Leigh Anne Landaker. Her sisters are
Lexi Nichole, 3 years, 4 months; and Layla Marie,
17 months.
Parents are John and Bobbie Anne (Reeves)
Landaker of King Ridge Road, Pomeroy. Maternal grandparents are David Reeves of Pageville
Road and Rick and Julie Anne (King) Caruthers
of Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents are John and
Grace Landaker of King Ridge Road.
Leigh Anne is also the great granddaughter of
the late Jack King Sr. and the late Eugene (Jake)
and Juanita Reeves.

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Sunday, Nov. 12
RACINE — Carmel-Sutton United Methodist
Church, 31435 Pleasant View Road, Racine, will
hold an open house at its new location at 10:30
a.m. with food and fellowship to follow.

Accident
From page 1

crossing the roadway.
Schoonover died as a
result of his injuries.
Agencies responding
to the scene included
the Gallia Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce, Gallia EMS,
and Gallia County
ODOT.
According to OSHP,
Roush did not sustain
any injuries and was
wearing a seat belt. As
a result of the incident,

Ohio 7 was closed for
approximately three
hours. Roush’s vehicle,
a 2010 Chrysler
Sebring, sustained disabling damage and was
towed from the scene.
According to Lt.
Barry Call with OSHP,
there are no charges
issued at this time and
there is no suspicion of
impairment. The crash
is still under investigation.
Morgan McKinniss contributed
to this report.

Courtesy photo

Week 16 and final winner for 2016’s of the Yard of the Week is 175 North Third owned by Marshall McMillion. Marshall’s yard is always
neatly cut and trimmed and makes a great addition to Middleport’s yard of the week.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
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 space-available basis and in
chronological order. Events can
be emailed to: TDSnews@aimmediamidwest.com.

Card Shower
Ed Voss will be turning 90 on
Nov. 12. Cards may be sent to him
at 32210 Welchtown Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Tuesday, Nov. 7
SYRACUSE — Syracuse Community Center will be severing
Election Day Dinner. Menu
includes soups, sandwiches, and

desserts. You can eat in or take
home.
SALEM CENTER — Salem
Twp. Vol. Fire Dept. Firebelles
Election Day Lunch at the Fire
House in Salem Center from 11
a.m.-3 p.m. Menu is soups, sloppy
joes, hot dogs, desserts and
drinks. Please bring containers
for take-out soups.

Wednesday, Nov. 8
SCIPIO TWP. — Scipio Township Trustees regular monthly
meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. at
the Harrisonville Fire House.

Saturday, Nov. 11
LANGSVILLE — Joseph Freeman American Legion Post 476
will hosts its 1st annual Veteran’s
Day Dinner from 5-7 p.m. The
legion is located at 26100 Legion
Road, Langsville, Ohio 45741.

FREE for Veterans with Veteran
Status ID. Public is welcome.
RACINE — RACO will be having their Fall Food Drive from 8
a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Dollar General in Racine.

Monday, Nov. 13
BEFORD TWP. — The regular
monthly meeting of the Bedford
Township Trustees will be held at
7 p.m. at the Bedford Township
Hall.

Tuesday, Nov. 14
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District
Board of Supervisors will hold
their regular monthly meeting at
11:30 a.m. at the district ofﬁce.
The ofﬁce is located at 113 E.
Memorial Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy.

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

NY terrorist attack
shows terror of
online radicalization
What makes a terrorist? Can anyone really say?
There are generalities about poverty, but wellto-do men have gone on killing sprees.
There are accusations about being
raised
in certain countries, but terMitch
rorists
pledge fealty to groups halfAlbom
way
around
the world.
Contributing
Religious
fervor
is cited as a
columnist
motivator, but not every terrorist is
motivated by faith.
And while the “angry loner” is a common
movie proﬁle, we regularly see terrorists who
have wives and young
children. It doesn’t seem to It is no longer
stop them.
some rare space
There is one motivator,
where only
however, that is increasingly common in today’s
weirdos hang
breed of terrorist: inﬂuout. It is front
ence through the internet.
and center in our
Stories are now emerging about Sayfullo Saipov, battle against
the Uzbek immigrant who terror growth.
last week, using a rented
And it may be
truck, mowed down innoour greatest
cent pedestrians in New
York City, killing eight and challenge.
wounding many more.
I took interest in this CNN piece detail:
“Authorities say they found a trove of videos and
pictures related to ISIS on Saipov’s phone: 90
videos full of propaganda, beheadings, instructions on explosives and about 3,800 images,
including the ISIS ﬂag and images of the ISIS
leader.”
Here, folks, is your new terrorist incubator.
In the palm of your hand.
———
We all remember, in the aftermath of 9/11, the
stories of terrorist training camps in Pakistan
or Afghanistan. Grainy images of men in masks,
holding riﬂes, shooting at targets, usually in a
desert or mountain setting, suggesting it took a
four-hour, blindfolded ride to get there.
Today, all you need is your iPhone password.
Ninety videos? Who keeps 90 videos of anything
on his device? But 90 videos of beheadings and
propaganda, viewed Lord knows how many times
in the comfort of an apartment, or on a train,
or during coffee breaks? Well. Think about the
gradual inﬂuence that has on a person.
Think about the call to action he regularly
viewed, urging him to destroy the society he
lived in, telling him it was justiﬁed, that America
had it coming.
Saipov arrived here through legal means, had
his proper paperwork, drove a truck for a living,
got married, and had kids. And not once before
last week were his ﬁngerprints on a terrorist
act. He was suddenly radicalized without ever
visiting a training camp, without ever taking a
blindfolded ride, and in a few short minutes he
wreaked the worst havoc on our nation’s largest
city since 9/11.
This is a guy who, according to reports, comes
from a well-to-do-family, went to a respected
university in Uzbekistan, dressed in fancy clothes
(an unpopular trait with fervent Muslims) and
at least when he ﬁrst got to America, wasn’t particularly attentive to Islam.
Something changed. He’s a bona ﬁde murderer
now. And the scariest part isn’t what he did. The
scariest part is how easily he may have been
inﬂuenced to do it.
———
Authorities say Saipov’s truck attack was an
almost step-by-step enactment of ISIS instructions in a manual called “Just Terror Tactics”,
which ISIS published last year. The videos on his
phone included ISIS calls for inﬂicting as much
harm as possible on the U.S.
Saipov himself has reportedly been speaking
proudly of what he did as he recovers from his
gunshot wound by police, even asking if he could
display ISIS ﬂags in his hospital room. Brazen.
Unﬂinching. Unrepentant. And created, at least
in part, by the internet. Right here. In Florida. In
Ohio. In New Jersey. All places where he lived.
With the computer as an activation agent, what
are we supposed to do? How do we swat that
overwhelming power? Is the answer to squeeze
internet access here, as they do in China? Make
all sites have to go through a federal test? Monitor it all day and all night? Track people’s site
searches?
That hardly seems plausible. We are a nation
forged by the ignition of free expression, even if
we are now being singed by it. How do we close
access without closing liberty?
And yet that same liberty has been turned on
its dark side — freedom for a beheading video to
inspire you, freedom to download an instruction
manual to murder, freedom for the devil himself
to whisper in your ear.
It is no longer some rare space where only
weirdos hang out. It is front and center in our
battle against terror growth. And it may be our
greatest challenge. Because it is not in some hidden jungle or sweaty desert. It’s right here on the
home soil, plugged into our outlets.

THEIR VIEW

Step into a new health path
Pounding. Tapping.
Jogging. Skipping. Feet
get us where we are
going every day—in
various ways, but regardless how they get us
there, the healthier they
are, the happier you just
may ﬁnd you are. From
the “Happy Feet” penguin movie for kids and
Dr. Seuss’s “The Foot
Book,” to the surge of
foot reﬂexology clinics,
interest in foot health is
a hot topic. I’ve hopped
on board, surpassing the
simple pleasure of a pedicure and stepping into
Chinese Medicine which
associates each organ of
the body with a spot on
the foot.
I recently became
certiﬁed in foot reﬂexology. My interest in the
ancient art peaked when
I noticed my reaction
during a massage when
the therapist began rubbing my feet. I felt a sadness wash over me and
wanted to cry and wasn’t

areas on the foot.
sure why. I menIn integrative foot
tioned the feeling
reﬂexology, the
to him and he said
foot is separated
it was a common
into four zones,
reaction to experithe toes indicating
ence a variety of
the head and workemotions during a
foot massage.
Michele Z. ing down past the
lungs and stomach
I had encounMarcum
tered a similar
Contributing toward the heal.
In this therapeuexperience years
columnist
tic modality, the
before with my
foot areas depict
ﬁrst yoga classes.
I’d be hanging out upside the entire body as do the
ears and the hands and
down in downward facing dog when I’d sudden- follow suit with acupuncture which is based on
ly be giggling … and not
the premise of energy
because I was laughing
lines called meridians
at the person sprawled
through which energy
out beside me. Often
ﬂows to all the areas of
in a Vinyasa ﬂow class,
the body.
I’d ﬁnd tears running or
Western medicine is
be extremely elated. It
slowly incorporating
was more than a mood
more holistic approaches
swing. I simply couldn’t
control the urge to laugh to health and not relying
as much on electronic
or cry.
In addition to the emo- devices to diagnose and
treat disease. Acupunctions foot rubs evoke,
ture, reﬂexology and
diseases and ailments
massage are just a few
can be conﬁrmed or discovered based on tender- of the alternative health
options seeping into an
ness in corresponding

ever-expanding healthconscience society.
I’m a believer in the
merits of foot reﬂexology due to the numerous
medical research on the
beneﬁts of the practice
and health-related issues
that can be indicated
from assessing the zones
of the foot. For me personally, the area of my
feet that are most sensitive do correspond to
health issues I’m treating.
I urge you to tapdance into the wealth of
knowledge that has been
passed down through
generations of traditional medicine. Learn
and grow. Peak over the
ledge of your pharmaceutical county—even if
it’s on tiptoe. Let your
feet carry you where
your health wants to go.
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native
of Meigs County, author of “Rain
No Evil” and host of Life Speaks
on AIR radio. Access more at
soundcloud.comlifespeaks.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday,
Nov. 8, the 312th day of
2017. There are 53 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On Nov. 8, 2016,
Republican Donald
Trump was elected
America’s 45th president, defeating Democrat
Hillary Clinton in an
astonishing victory for
a celebrity businessman
and political novice.
Republicans kept their
majorities in the Senate
and House.
On this date
In 1793, the Louvre
began admitting the
public, even though the
French museum had
been ofﬁcially open since
August.
In 1889, Montana
became the 41st state.
In 1892, former President Cleveland defeated
incumbent Benjamin
Harrison, becoming the
ﬁrst (and, to date, only)
chief executive to win
non-consecutive terms to
the White House.
In 1923, Adolf Hitler launched his ﬁrst
attempt at seizing power
in Germany with a failed
coup in Munich that

came to be known as the
“Beer-Hall Putsch.”
In 1932, New York
Democratic Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt defeated
incumbent Republican
Herbert Hoover for the
presidency.
In 1942, Operation
Torch, resulting in an
Allied victory, began during World War II as U.S.
and British forces landed
in French North Africa.
In 1950, during the
Korean War, the ﬁrst jetplane battle took place as
U.S. Air Force Lt. Russell
J. Brown shot down a
North Korean MiG-15.
In 1960, Massachusetts Sen. John F. Kennedy defeated Vice President Richard M. Nixon
for the presidency.
In 1974, a federal
judge in Cleveland dismissed charges against
eight Ohio National
Guardsmen accused of
violating the civil rights
of students who were
killed or wounded in the
1970 Kent State shootings.
In 1987, 11 people
were killed when an Irish
Republican Army bomb
exploded as crowds
gathered in Enniskillen,
Northern Ireland, for a

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“One never notices what has been done; one
can only see what remains to be done.”
— Marie Curie (1867-1934)

ceremony honoring Britain’s war dead.
In 1988, Vice President
George H.W. Bush won
the presidential election,
defeating the Democratic
nominee, Massachusetts
Gov. Michael Dukakis.
In 1994, midterm elections resulted in Republicans winning a majority
in the Senate while at the
same time gaining control of the House for the
ﬁrst time in 40 years.
Ten years ago: The
Senate conﬁrmed President George W. Bush’s
nomination of Michael
Mukasey to be attorney
general, 53-40. President
Bush suffered the ﬁrst
veto override of his seven-year-old presidency
as the Senate enacted,
79-14, a $23 billion water
resources bill despite his
protest that it was ﬁlled
with unnecessary projects. Dominican singersongwriter Juan Luis
Guerra swept the Latin
Grammy Awards, taking

home ﬁve musical honors
including album of the
year, record of the year
and song of the year.
Five years ago: Jared
Lee Loughner was sentenced to life in prison
without parole for the
January 2011 shootings
in Tucson, Arizona,
that killed six people
and wounded 13 others,
including Rep. Gabrielle
Giffords. Longtime baseball executive and Hall
of Famer Lee MacPhail,
95, died in Delray Beach,
Florida.
One year ago: Democrat Zena Stephens of
Jefferson County made
history upon her election
as the ﬁrst black woman
sheriff in Texas.
Today’s Birthdays
Actor Norman Lloyd
is 103. Actress Stephane
Audran is 85. Actor
Alain Delon is 82. Singer-actress Bonnie Bramlett is 73. Singer Bonnie
Raitt is 68.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

From page 1

stalked and killed by her
ex-boyfriend in 1983.
Similar measures have
seen pushback in some
states where they’ve
passed. Opponents cite
unintended consequences, such as law enforcers
halting the release of
vehicle crash reports for
fear it would be unconstitutional.
Issue 2
The Ohio Drug Price
Relief Act seeks to curb
prescription drug prices
paid by the state for
prisoners, injured workers and poor people.
The citizen-initiated
measure would require
the state to pay no more
for prescription drugs
than the Department of
Veterans Affairs’ lowest
price, which is often
deeply discounted.
Supporters, led by the
California-based AIDS
Healthcare Foundation,
say it would save the
state millions and could

Cincinatti Mayor
Mayor John Cranley
faces a spirited challenge from councilwoman Yvette Simpson
in Cincinnati.
He has pointed to
downtown development
and the nationally recognized revitalization
of the historic Over-theRhine neighborhood. He
claims “a proven track
record of progress” that
shows he knows how to
get things done.
The former two-time
congressional candidate
has the backing of some
Democratic Party leaders in the nonpartisan
election against another

Johnson

begin at 10:30 a.m. and
end at Gallipolis City
Park with the ceremony
From page 1
beginning at 11 a.m.
Contact the Gallia Veterans Service Ofﬁce at
Service Commission.
740-446-2005 no later
All veterans, veterans
service groups and com- than Nov. 9 to conﬁrm
munity organizations are participation in the
parade.
encouraged to particiJohnson was born and
pate. The Veterans Day
raised on family farms.
Parade and Ceremony
is to honor military vet- Johnson entered the U.S.
Air Force in 1973, and
erans and demonstrate
retired as a lieutenant
community support for
colonel after a distintheir service and sacguished military career
riﬁce. The parade will

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

44°

42°

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. yest.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.70
0.76
0.67
41.68
36.51

Today
7:02 a.m.
5:22 p.m.
8:50 p.m.
10:39 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Wed.
7:03 a.m.
5:21 p.m.
9:53 p.m.
11:39 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Last

New

First

Nov 10 Nov 18 Nov 26

Full

Dec 3

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

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

Major
1:53a
3:01a
4:06a
5:06a
6:01a
6:49a
7:33a

Minor
8:09a
9:16a
10:20a
11:20a
12:14p
12:37a
1:22a

Major
2:24p
3:31p
4:35p
5:34p
6:27p
7:14p
7:57p

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.

2

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: What is solar winter in the northern
hemisphere?

SUN &amp; MOON

Minor
8:39p
9:46p
10:50p
11:48p
---1:02p
1:45p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Nov. 7, 1940, 31-mph winds hit
the Tacoma Narrows Bridge over
Puget Sound, Wash., causing vibrations which eventually collapsed the
$6 million, four-month-old bridge.

THURSDAY

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

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. yesterday

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
12.82
20.22
22.10
13.08
12.52
25.05
12.72
26.42
34.68
12.98
17.70
33.90
18.90

Chillicothe
47/37
Waverly
45/36
Lucasville
46/38
Portsmouth
46/38

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.26
+2.90
-0.05
+0.02
-0.85
+0.07
+0.40
-0.03
-0.18
+0.19
+0.40
-0.30
+0.60

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

Threats
From page 1

was identiﬁed of Curtis Scott Embrey, 38,
of Rutland.
Ofﬁcers and detectives from OUPD,
with the assistance of
the Fairﬁeld-HockingAthens Major Crimes
Unit, conﬁrmed the
veracity of the threats
and immediately
obtained an arrest
warrant for Embrey,
charging him with
making terroristic
threats, a third degree
felony, according to

sional District, which
covers much of eastern
and southeastern Ohio.
He was subsequently
reelected in 2012, 2014
and 2016. He currently
serves on the House
Energy and Commerce
Committee and the
House Budget Committee. Additionally, he is
a member of the House
Shale Caucus.
Johnson is also the
author of the book entitled “Raising Fathers”
in which he addresses

SATURDAY

46°
27°
Plenty of sunshine,
but cold

the release.
In an abundance of
caution, OUPD was
working with dining
services to temporarily
close Nelson Commons
when Embrey was
taken into custody,
without incident, in a
nearby parking garage
at 1:35 p.m. He was
transported to Southeastern Ohio Regional
Jail and banned from
campus.
The jail website lists
his bond at $50,000.
If Embrey is seen
on campus individuals
are advised to contact
OUPD at 740-5931911.

the importance of
fatherhood, and begins
confronting the destructive social and cultural
impacts caused by what
he feels to be the staggering number of America’s children that are
being raised in fatherless
homes.
Johnson and his wife
LeeAnn, currently reside
in Marietta with a son,
Nathan. He is also the
proud parent of three
grown children and is a
grandfather of six.

MONDAY

54°
39°

Partly sunny

Chance of an
afternoon shower

Marietta
45/36

Murray City
47/36
Belpre
46/37

Athens
47/37

St. Marys
45/37

Parkersburg
45/35

Coolville
46/37

Elizabeth
45/38

Spencer
46/38

Buffalo
47/39

Ironton
47/40

Milton
47/39

St. Albans
47/39

Huntington
45/38

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
48/39
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
65/51
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
T-storms
72/58
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

OVBC (NASDAQ)
35.70
BBT (NYSE)
49.48
Peoples (NASDAQ)
33.16
Pepsico (NYSE)
109.26
Premier (NASDAQ)
20.11
Rockwell (NYSE)
196.83
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ)
16.75
Royal Dutch Shell
65.52
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
5.24
Wal-Mart (NYSE)
88.70
Wendy’s (NYSE)
14.93
WesBanco (NYSE)
40.88
Worthington (NYSE)
44.77
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions Nov. 7,
2017.

SUNDAY

52°
41°

Wilkesville
45/36
POMEROY
Jackson
46/38
46/37
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
46/39
46/37
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
46/37
GALLIPOLIS
46/38
46/39
45/38

Ashland
47/41
Grayson
46/39

73.73
30.12
52.24
77.24
52.64
14.62
69.61
135.04
83.93
54.85
20.13
45.15
100.78
21.33
47.58
130.12

54°
37°
Snow or ﬂurries
possible in the a.m.

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
47/36

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

Logan
46/35

Adelphi
47/36

South Shore Greenup
47/40
46/38

32

Mostly sunny

AEP (NYSE)
Akzo Nobel
Big Lots, Inc.
Bob Evans Farms
BorgWarner (NYSE)
Century Alum (NASDAQ)
City Holding (NASDAQ)
Collins (NYSE)
DuPont (NYSE)
US Bank (NYSE)
Gen Electric (NYSE)
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
JP Morgan (NYSE)
Kroger (NYSE)
Ltd Brands (NYSE)
Norfolk So (NYSE)

FRIDAY

55°
28°

Warmer with partial
sunshine

1

A: The 1/4 year with the least sunlight;
early Nov. through early Feb.

Precipitation

WEDNESDAY

Mostly cloudy and chilly today. Clouds breaking
tonight. High 46° / Low 38°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

72°
54°
61°
40°
82° in 1975
21° in 1944

congressional staff and
leaders within the US
intelligence community.
Following his retirement from military
service, Johnson turned
to creating and building
high technology businesses and also served
in the executive leadership team as chief information ofﬁcer of a global
manufacturing company.
In 2010, Johnson was
elected to his ﬁrst term
to represent the people
of Ohio’s Sixth Congres-

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

of more than 26 years. In
that time, he was awarded the honors of the
Air Force Meritorious
Service Medal, the Air
Force Commendation
Medal, and the National
Defense Service Medal.
As a director of the
Air Force’s Chief Information Ofﬁcer staff
with the US Special
Operations Command,
Johnson was known to
work with Secretary
of Defense representatives as well as senior

52°
36°
44°

STOCKS

Toledo Mayor
In Toledo, Mayor Paula
Hicks-Hudson, a former
city council president, is
seeking her ﬁrst full term
after winning a special
election two years ago to
serve out the term of her
predecessor, D. Michael
Collins, who died after
Cleveland Mayor
suffering cardiac arrest.
Frank Jackson hopes
She’s up against Lucas
to win a record fourth
four-year term as Cleve- County Treasurer Wade
Kapszukiewicz. They’ve
land’s mayor. He also
faces a fellow Democrat, tangled over city spendlongtime east side Coun- ing and how best to deal
with the algae in Lake
cilman Zack Reed.
Erie.
Jackson has business
The Blade newspaper
community backing and
endorsed Kapszukiewicz,
the fundraising advansaying Hicks-Hudson
tage. Reed drew police
hasn’t shown leaderunion support with his
pledge to increase public ship during her time in
ofﬁce and that he offers
safety, including hiring
professionalism and
hundreds more police
imagination. Both are
ofﬁcers.
Democrats.
Jackson has emphaDayton’s mayor, Nan
sized his stewardship
Whaley, is running unopof the city through the
posed for re-election
national housing crisis
while also vying for the
and recession that hit
Democratic nomination
hard there. He says
in 2018 for governor.
while Reed has been
Meanwhile, Democritical of him, Reed
cratic incumbents in
hasn’t laid out detailed
plans for what he would Columbus and Akron
are still midway through
do.
their ﬁrst terms.

Democrat. Simpson has
said she has “a strong
vision for our city” and
will be more inclusive
than Cranley. She grew
up in poverty and says
she has empathy for others trying to escape it.

force the industry to
reduce prices elsewhere.
An opposition campaign
funded by the pharmaceutical industry says
it would reduce access
to medicines and raise
prices for veterans and
others.
Reported spending
has already topped $65
million, making Issue
2 the most expensive
ballot campaign in state
history.

Clendenin
49/40
Charleston
50/38

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
25/11

Billings
33/18

Minneapolis
34/23

Toronto
47/28

Detroit
Chicago 47/30
46/29

Denver
33/22

Montreal
42/29

New York
52/40
Washington
50/44

Kansas City
44/27

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
67/44/pc
31/24/s
79/59/c
56/47/r
48/40/r
33/18/s
43/29/s
50/39/pc
50/38/r
70/47/r
30/16/sn
46/29/pc
46/37/r
46/37/c
46/37/c
69/44/c
33/22/sn
44/26/c
47/30/pc
86/75/c
87/62/pc
45/35/c
44/27/pc
72/47/pc
63/45/t
72/58/pc
52/41/r
86/72/pc
34/23/s
65/45/r
83/66/s
52/40/r
51/35/c
84/65/pc
50/41/r
82/58/pc
44/34/r
48/29/pc
58/44/r
51/42/r
49/35/c
46/26/pc
65/51/s
48/39/c
50/44/r

Hi/Lo/W
60/37/s
31/23/pc
68/53/t
55/49/r
49/42/r
32/16/pc
51/37/c
49/41/pc
51/37/r
55/45/t
46/24/s
45/31/s
50/30/pc
50/31/pc
51/31/s
54/40/r
52/28/s
47/29/s
47/28/s
87/74/pc
67/52/sh
49/29/s
47/28/s
69/48/s
52/37/c
73/57/s
54/35/pc
86/72/s
41/21/s
55/40/c
78/57/pc
52/44/pc
47/31/r
84/65/pc
53/43/c
82/58/s
48/31/s
46/32/s
52/44/r
49/44/r
51/32/s
51/34/pc
67/56/r
52/42/r
49/45/r

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
79/59

High
Low

El Paso
81/58
Chihuahua
86/56

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

96° in Kingsville, TX
-4° in Rudyard, MT

Global
High
Low

Houston
87/62
Monterrey
86/59

Miami
86/72

109° in Vioolsdrif, South Africa
-39° in Verkhoyansk, Russia

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

You’ll Feel
Right At Home.
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financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
www.homenatlbank.com
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close a
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Ohio

Tuesday, November 7, 2017 5

�Sports
6 s Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Jacksonville bullies Bengals, 23-7

Stephen B. Morton | AP

Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver A.J. Green (18) is escorted off the field after he
was involved in an altercation with players from the Jacksonville Jaguars during
the first half of an NFL football game Sunday in Jacksonville, Fla.

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)
— As offensively inept as the
Cincinnati Bengals were to
start the season, they were
even worse Sunday at Jacksonville.
The Bengals ﬁnished with a
season-low 148 yards in a 23-7
loss that showed — again —
just how dominant the Jaguars
(5-3) can be.
The game will be remembered more for a ﬁght between
receiver A.J. Green and cornerback Jalen Ramsey. But Cincinnati’s offense was the one that
really got whipped.
It was the team’s worst output since a 27-0 drubbing at
Indianapolis in 2014 in which
Cincy managed 135 yards.
The Bengals (3-5) might not

have reached the end zone in
this one had it not been for a
59-yard pass play from Andy
Dalton to Tyler Kroft during
which two defenders collided
while missing the tackle. Rookie Joe Mixon scored two plays
later.
Jacksonville dominated from
there, controlling the ball for
more than 40 minutes in a
chippy game that could have
been much more lopsided.
“When we’re playing like
this, what can you really do
with us?” Jaguars cornerback
Aaron Colvin said. “Where
you going to go with the ball?
Where are you going to run
the ball? We keep trying to tell
y’all: There isn’t no secondary
out there that’s better than

us. We’re trying to show y’all.
Eventually everybody will catch
on.”
Mixon ﬁnished with 31 yards
rushing on 13 carries. Dalton
threw for 136 yards and was
sacked twice.
“Obviously we’re not executing at the level that we want
to,” Dalton said. “We need to
play better, and it starts with
the mentality of knowing that
you’re going to play better, and
telling yourself, and trusting
the guy next to you.”
Blake Bortles threw for 259
yards and a touchdown in
another efﬁcient day. Marqise
Lee had his ﬁrst TD reception
of the season. And Jaydon
See BENGALS | 7

Hawkeyes
hammer Ohio
State, 55-24
By Jim Naveau
jnaveau@limanews.com

IOWA CITY, Iowa – If Ohio State had played
at home against Iowa, Urban Meyer might have
made the Buckeyes walk home from the stadium.
As it was, after Iowa embarrassed them 55-24
in Kinnick Stadium on Saturday, that thought still
might have crossed his mind once or twice.
Dominated only begins to describe what the
Hawkeyes did to the Buckeyes in the worst loss in
Meyer’s six seasons as OSU’s coach.
Before Saturday, the most points Ohio State had
given up in the last six seasons was 49 in a 52-49
win over Indiana in 2012. And the 55 Iowa scored
is the most points allowed by an OSU team since a
63-14 loss at Penn State in 1994.
Iowa, a team averaging 25 points a game, scored
31 points by halftime and had a 31-17 lead going
into the second half. One week removed from
overcoming a bigger lead to beat Penn State, there
was still hope for Ohio State to make a comeback.
But when OSU had only 120 yards total offense
in the second half, that hope evaporated.
It was a stunning loss for Ohio State (7-2, 5-1
Big Ten) a team ranked No. 3 in the polls and No.
6 in the ﬁrst College Football Playoff rankings.
And it was a game to celebrate deep into the
night for Iowa (6-3, 3-3 Big Ten).
“Obviously, it’s terrible feeling right now, coming off an emotional win,” Ohio State offensive
lineman Billy Price said. “We took one on the
chin. You go from the high of highs to the low of
the lows.”
Defensive end Tyquan Lewis said, “You go into
every game expecting to dominate. Obviously, it
didn’t turn out that way.
“A loss is a loss to me. They feel the same. It
makes you sick to your stomach,” he said.
OSU coach Urban Meyer said he didn’t sense a
letdown during the week leading up to the embarrassment Iowa handed his team.
“I was concerned. I tried to watch it very closely
but I didn’t see it. Sometimes I see signs but I
didn’t,” Meyer said.
He pointed to four major factors that hurt the
Buckeyes the most. “Obviously, turnovers. They
controlled the line of scrimmage. We didn’t stop
them. It was a tough environment.”
In addition to those issues, OSU lost defensive
lineman Nick Bosa for the second half after he was
called for a personal foul and targeting.
Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz said, “We came into
this game as heavy underdogs for good reason. We
grew up a little today.”
Iowa quarterback Nate Stanley passed for 226
yards threw ﬁve touchdown passes – two each to
See HAWKEYES | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, Nov. 8
College Football
Toledo at Ohio, 7 p.m.
Rio Grande Athletics
Men’s Soccer at WVUTech, 6 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 10
Rio Grande Athletics
Women’s Basketball vs
Bryan (TN) at Union (KY)
Classic, 6 p.m.
Men’s Basketball at MVNU
Classic, 7:30

Saturday, Nov. 11
WVSSAC Football
Playoffs
(10) Philip Barbour at (7)
Point Pleasant, 7:30
College Football
Michigan State at Ohio
State, noon
West Virginia at Kansas
State, 3:30
Western Kentucky at
Marshall, 6:30
Rio Grande Athletics
Bowling in Raider Classic
at Beavercreek, 12:15

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Eastern junior Ally Durst, right, sprints toward the finish line ahead of a pack of runners during the 2017 OHSAA Division III girls cross
country championships held Saturday at National Trail Raceway in Hebron, Ohio.

Durst runs in 1st state CC meet
By Bryan Walters

experience and it was a
lot of fun. I need to thank
my teammates and coachHEBRON, Ohio — An es for pushing me to get
where I am,” Durst said.
old hat with a new ﬁt.
“I’ve been running since
Eastern junior Ally
I was in the eighth grade
Durst became the latest
and I have had some great
Lady Eagle to compete
teammates along the way
at the highest level on
Saturday during the 2017 that also ran in this race.
I’ve always wanted to be
OHSAA Division III
one of them, one of the
Cross Country ChampiEastern girls to compete
onships held at National
Trail Raceway in Licking at the state meet. Now,
here I am.
County.
“This was a dream
Durst — who was
come true for me and I
competing in her ﬁrst
have another year to try
state ﬁnal — extended
and get back here. I’m
the Lady Eagles’ streak
deﬁnitely going to aim
to ﬁve consecutive years
for it.”
with at least one runEHS coach Josh Fogle
ner in the championship
— completing his 13th
event.
season at the helm —
There were 20 teams
admitted that it never
and 183 competitors in
gets old seeing an athlete
the D-3 girls ﬁnal, and
compete at the highest
Durst ended up 87th
level, especially for the
overall with a time of
ﬁrst time.
20:44.2. Durst was 90th
The venerable mentor
(6:17.8) at the 1-mile
has seen several Eastern
mark and was in 84th
athletes ﬁnish the year at
place (13:14.9) at the
state during his tenure,
2-mile split.
Durst’s time was almost and Fogle was pleased
to see Durst become the
30 seconds off her 16th
latest member of a pretty
place regional mark of
elite club.
20:18.41, but the junior
“This is always a big
wasn’t discouraged that
deal, regardless how
she didn’t have her best
many times you do it. I
race of the year.
don’t think the kids realActually, as she noted
ize how big it is until they
afterward Saturday, it
get here because they
was probably the most
memorable race of her life are always just trying to
— regardless of the ﬁnal get here. Once they get
here, though, they realize
outcome.
how big a deal it really
And, with any luck,
is,” Fogle said. “It was
Durst will have another
a another great day for
chance to take in this
our program and for Ally,
experience.
“It was a super-amazing especially in seeing all of

bwalters@aimmediamiwest.com

Eastern junior Ally Durst (277) hits full stride during the 2017
OHSAA Division III girls cross country championships held
Saturday at National Trail Raceway in Hebron, Ohio.

her hard work pay off in a
ﬁrst state appearance. It’s
always nice to be competing in November.”
The Lady Eagles
claimed both a Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division title and D-3 district
championship for a seventh straight fall, and having the state-qualifying
streak extended to ﬁve
straight postseasons was
just another feather in the
cap for Eastern.
When asked how gratifying this day and this
season truly was, Fogle
quickly deﬂected all the
credit to the kids in the
program.

“The kids have built
the program to where
it is. As a coach, you
just cannot do anything
without the kids,” Fogle
said. “We’ve won seven
straight TVC Hocking
titles and seven straight
district titles to go along
with ﬁve straight years
of having a competitor at
the state level. That’s the
part that I take pride in as
a coach, seeing how hard
the kids work to continue
the tradition we’ve been
able to build here at Eastern.
“I’m proud of Ally for
See DURST | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

RedStorm women top Racers in opener

NFL

New England
Buffalo
Miami
N.Y. Jets

W
6
5
4
4

L
2
3
4
5

T
0
0
0
0

Tennessee
Jacksonville
Houston
Indianapolis

W
5
5
3
3

L
3
3
5
6

T
0
0
0
0

Pittsburgh
Baltimore
Cincinnati
Cleveland

W
6
4
3
0

L
2
5
5
8

T
0
0
0
0

Kansas City
Oakland
Denver
L.A. Chargers

W
6
4
3
3

L
3
5
5
5

T
0
0
0
0

Philadelphia
Dallas
Washington
N.Y. Giants

W
8
5
4
1

L
1
3
4
7

T
0
0
0
0

New Orleans
Carolina
Atlanta
Tampa Bay

W
6
6
4
2

L
2
3
4
6

T
0
0
0
0

Minnesota
Green Bay
Detroit
Chicago

W
6
4
3
3

L
2
3
4
5

T
0
0
0
0

L.A. Rams
Seattle
Arizona
San Francisco

W
6
5
4
0

L
2
3
4
9

T
0
0
0
0

All Times EST
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
Pct PF PA Home Away
.750 216 179 3-2-0 3-0-0
.625 174 149 4-0-0 1-3-0
.500 116 179 2-2-0 2-2-0
.444 191 207 3-2-0 1-3-0
South
Pct PF PA Home Away
.625 181 193 3-1-0 2-2-0
.625 206 117 2-2-0 3-1-0
.375 229 208 2-3-0 1-2-0
.333 162 260 2-2-0 1-4-0
North
Pct PF PA Home Away
.750 167 131 2-1-0 4-1-0
.444 190 171 2-2-0 2-3-0
.375 129 158 2-2-0 1-3-0
.000 119 202 0-5-0 0-3-0
West
Pct PF PA Home Away
.667 253 208 3-1-0 3-2-0
.444 196 214 2-2-0 2-3-0
.375 150 198 3-1-0 0-4-0
.375 150 152 1-3-0 2-2-0
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
Pct PF PA Home Away
.889 283 179 5-0-0 3-1-0
.625 226 178 2-2-0 3-1-0
.500 177 194 2-2-0 2-2-0
.125 129 207 0-4-0 1-3-0
South
Pct PF PA Home Away
.750 221 155 3-1-0 3-1-0
.667 168 159 2-2-0 4-1-0
.500 170 172 1-2-0 3-2-0
.250 158 198 2-2-0 0-4-0
North
Pct PF PA Home Away
.750 179 135 4-1-0 2-1-0
.571 164 161 3-1-0 1-2-0
.429 176 169 1-3-0 2-1-0
.375 134 171 2-2-0 1-3-0
West
Pct PF PA Home Away
.750 263 155 2-2-0 4-0-0
.625 189 149 3-1-0 2-2-0
.500 139 201 2-1-0 2-3-0
.000 143 239 0-4-0 0-5-0

AFC
3-1-0
3-2-0
3-3-0
4-4-0

NFC
3-1-0
2-1-0
1-1-0
0-1-0

Div
1-0-0
1-1-0
1-1-0
2-3-0

AFC
4-3-0
5-2-0
3-4-0
2-3-0

NFC
1-0-0
0-1-0
0-1-0
1-3-0

Div
2-1-0
2-1-0
1-2-0
1-2-0

AFC
4-1-0
4-3-0
3-4-0
0-7-0

NFC
2-1-0
0-2-0
0-1-0
0-1-0

Div
3-0-0
2-1-0
1-2-0
0-3-0

AFC
4-2-0
4-4-0
2-3-0
2-4-0

NFC
2-1-0
0-1-0
1-2-0
1-1-0

Div
2-1-0
1-2-0
2-2-0
2-2-0

NFC
6-0-0
4-2-0
3-3-0
0-6-0

AFC
2-1-0
1-1-0
1-1-0
1-1-0

Div
3-0-0
2-0-0
0-3-0
0-2-0

NFC
5-1-0
4-3-0
3-1-0
2-4-0

AFC
1-1-0
2-0-0
1-3-0
0-2-0

Div
2-0-0
2-1-0
0-1-0
0-2-0

NFC
4-1-0
3-3-0
3-3-0
1-5-0

AFC
2-1-0
1-0-0
0-1-0
2-0-0

Div
2-1-0
1-1-0
1-0-0
0-2-0

NFC
4-2-0
3-2-0
3-4-0
0-8-0

AFC
2-0-0
2-1-0
1-0-0
0-1-0

Div
2-1-0
2-0-0
2-1-0
0-4-0

Thursday’s Games
N.Y. Jets 34, Buffalo 21
Sunday’s Games
Jacksonville 23, Cincinnati 7
L.A. Rams 51, N.Y. Giants 17
New Orleans 30, Tampa Bay 10
Carolina 20, Atlanta 17
Tennessee 23, Baltimore 20
Indianapolis 20, Houston 14
Philadelphia 51, Denver 23
Dallas 28, Kansas City 17
Arizona 20, San Francisco 10
Washington 17, Seattle 14
Oakland 27, Miami 24
Open: Chicago, Minnesota, New England, L.A. Chargers, Cleveland, Pittsburgh
Monday’s Games
Detroit at Green Bay, 8:30 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 9

Seattle at Arizona, 8:25 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 12
Pittsburgh at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.
Minnesota at Washington, 1 p.m.
L.A. Chargers at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Jets at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Cleveland at Detroit, 1 p.m.
Houston at L.A. Rams, 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at San Francisco, 4:25 p.m.
Dallas at Atlanta, 4:25 p.m.
New England at Denver, 8:30 p.m.
Open: Kansas City, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Oakland
Monday, Nov. 13
Miami at Carolina, 8:30 p.m.

NFL Calendar
Nov. 19 — New England vs. Oakland
at Mexico City.
Dec. 31 — Regular season ends.
Jan. 6-7 — Wild-card playoffs.

Jan. 13-14 — Divisional playoffs.
Jan. 21 — Conference
championships.
Feb. 4 — Super Bowl at Minneapolis.

Hawkeyes

The offensive struggles
seemed to be magniﬁed
when starting left tackle
Jamarco Jones and startFrom page 6
ing right guard Demetight ends T.J. Hockeson trius Knox were injured
on consecutive plays with
and Noah Fant and one
to fullback Drake Kulick. the game tied 17-17 halfway through the second
Running back Akrum
Wadley had 118 yards on quarter.
They returned to the
20 carries and the Hawkgame but the offense was
eyes rolled up 487 yards
never the same. The only
total offense.
Ohio State quarterback points Ohio State scored
in the ﬁnal 40 minutes
J.T. Barrett, who was
of the game were set up
spectacular in a 39-38
when Iowa’s punter called
comeback win against
a fake punt on his own
Penn State, struggled
and OSU took over deep
through possibly the
worst game of his career in Iowa territory.
Iowa ranked tenth in
on Saturday.
the Big Ten in scoring
Barrett threw for
and 88th nationally com208 yards and three
ing into the game.
touchdowns, but he also
The Buckeyes’ defenthrew a career-worst four
sive deﬁciencies probably
interceptions, includhurt them as badly as the
ing one on Ohio State’s
ﬁrst offensive play of the struggles of Barrett and
the offense.
game that Iowa’s Amani
OSU’s defensive backs
Hooker turned into a
and linebackers have had
touchdown.
letdowns throughout the
Barrett had gone 190
consecutive passes with- season and the linebackers have been inconsisout an interception dating back to the Oklahoma tent. But the defensive
line also struggled this
game Sept. 9 before
time, getting only one
Hooker’s pick.
sack of Stanley.
Ohio State played
“They just played very
catch-up the rest of the
well against us. They
game. It tied the Hawkdidn’t really do anything
eyes three times in the
different than they’d been
ﬁrst half but never took
doing,” Meyer said.
the lead.

Durst

Tuesday, November 7, 2017 7

the boys and girls team
titles in Division II. Zach
Kreft of Buckeye Valley
was the D-2 boys champiFrom page 6
on with a time of 15:20.6,
while Annie Zimmer of
getting here today, and
Chagrin Falls was the D-2
I’m proud of all of them
girls winner with a mark
for what they’ve accomof 18:13.5.
plished this year. It was
Hudson won the Divianother great season for
sion I boys team title, and
our program.”
Minster was on the D-3 Dustin Horter of Lakota
girls title with 34 points, East was the individual
ﬁnishing 97 points ahead champion with a mark of
15:03.5.
of runner-up Mount GilCenterville was the
ead (131). Emma Watcke
Division I girls champion,
of Minster was the indiwith Morgan Gigandet
vidual champion with a
of Troy claiming the inditime of 18:38.4.
vidual title with a time of
East Canton (120)
defeated McDonald (140) 17:30.9.
Visit baumspage.com
for the D-3 boys team
for complete results of
championship. Chad
Johnson of Colonel Craw- the 2017 OHSAA Cross
Country Championships
ford won the D-3 race
held at National Trail
with a mark of 15:33.
Raceway.
Lexington won both

By Randy Payton

with an apparent leg
injury.
Just under six minutes
later, sophomore forRIO GRANDE, Ohio
— More often than not, ward Kamryn Conaway
season-opening victories (Lucasville, OH), who’d
been slowed in the preinclude a sense of celebration and excitement. season by shin splints,
But for the University also went down with a
leg injury and had to be
of Rio Grande women’s
helped from the ﬂoor.
basketball team, much
The extent of their
of the buzz from Saturinjuries - and their
day afternoon’s 80-65
potential availability for
triumph over the University of Northwestern Monday night’s game at
Ohio at the Newt Oliver home against Madonna
(Mich.) University - was
Arena was tempered by
not immediately availa pair of injuries.
able.
Junior guard Jaida
As for the game itself,
Carter (New PhiladelRio Grande raced to a
phia, OH), Rio’s rep14-point ﬁrst quarter
resentative on the prelead, which it extended
season All-River States
Conference team, had to to as many as 19 points
be helped from the ﬂoor late in the ﬁrst half and
to as much as 24 points,
with 6:41 remaining in
68-44, following a
the third quarter after
rebound and stickleback
crumpling to the court

For Ohio Valley Publishing

by senior Alexis Payne
(Deep Water, WV) with
2:23 remaining in the
third period.
The Racers (1-2) got
no closer than the RedStorm’s ﬁnal margin of
victory the rest of the
way.
UNOH did itself in by
hitting just eight of its
26 ﬁrst half ﬁeld goal
attempts (30.8%) and
committing 14 of its
game total 23 turnovers
before the intermission.
Payne - the lone senior
on the Rio roster - led a
quartet of double-digit
scorers for the RedStorm
with 23 points. She also
had a game-high eight
rebounds.
Junior Jasmine Smith
(Canal Winchester, OH)
added 15 points to the
winning effort, while
sophomore Sydney

Holden (Wheelersburg,
OH) netted 11 - including nine of Rio’s ﬁrst 11
points in the game - and
Carter ﬁnished with 10
before her premature
exit.
The RedStorm shot
41.3 percent from the
ﬁeld overall (31-for-75)
and outrebounded its
guests, 44-39.
Emily Patton had a
team-best 14 points
and equaled Payne’s
game-high total of eight
rebounds to pace the
Racers, while Kierra Billingsley added 13 points
and three steals in a losing cause.
Cori Dickson and Jertaya Hall had 10 points
each for UNOH.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Maple Leafs hold off Rio men
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

MARION, Ind. —
Goshen College survived a furious comeback effort by the University of Rio Grande
in the closing minutes
to post an 87-82 win
over the RedStorm in
the ﬁnal round of the
Caleb Dimmich Memorial Classic, Saturday
afternoon, at Indiana
Wesleyan University’s
Luckey Arena.
The Maple Leafs
improved to 2-0 with
the victory.
Rio Grande slipped to

0-2 with the loss.
Goshen grabbed its
biggest lead of the day,
63-50, after a threepointer by Carter Boos
with 12:45 left to play,
but the RedStorm
methodically chipped
away and drew to within
one, 79-78, after a steal
and a bucket by sophomore Cameron Schreiter
(Mason, OH) with 49
seconds remaining.
Christian Grider
countered with a threepointer on the Maple
Leafs ensuing possession, though, and Rio
got no closer the rest of
the way.

Grider ﬁnished with a
game-high 27 points for
Goshen, which closed
the ﬁrst half on a 9-2
run to take a 46-37 lead
at the intermission.
Billy Geschke and
Devin Heath-Granger
added 24 and 11 points,
respectively, in the winning effort for the Maple
Leafs, while Alhassan
Barrie pulled down a
game-high 10 rebounds.
Senior Will Hill
(Worthington, OH)
led Rio Grande with
20 points, including a
12-for-12 showing at the
free throw line.
Sophomore Stanley

Christian (Norfolk, VA)
added 18 points in a
losing cause for the RedStorm, while freshman
Raul Timoner (Alaior,
Spain) handed out a
game-high six assists
and pulled down a teambest ﬁve rebounds.
Rio Grande returns
to action next Friday,
taking on host Mount
Vernon Nazarene University in the opening
round of the MVNU
Classic. Tipoff is set for
7:30 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Harvick passes Truex for Texas win
needed to.”
Kyle Busch had already
clinched a championship spot with his win
at Martinsville a week
ago to start the third
round of the playoffs.
That leaves only one spot
up for grabs among the
ﬁve remaining playoff
contenders next week at
Phoenix.
After doing a long
burnout along the frontstretch in the No. 4 Ford
for Stewart-Haas Racing,
Harvick went to Victory
Lane, where the Texas
celebration was missing
the traditional ﬁring of
six-shooters by the winner.
TMS ofﬁcials bypassed
the use of the pistols
after a man armed with
an assault riﬂe opened
ﬁre earlier Sunday inside
a church in the small
community of Sutherland Springs, about 300
miles south of the track
near San Antonio. The
man killed 26 people
and wounded about 20
in what Texas Gov. Greg
Abbott said was the
deadliest mass shooting
in the state’s history.
Denny Hamlin, another
of the playoff contenders,
ﬁnished third, while Brad

Keselowski was ﬁfth and
Ryan Blaney sixth. Chase
Elliott ﬁnished eighth,
and his teammate Jimmie Johnson dealt with
a loose car all day and
ﬁnished 27th.
Keselowski dropped
from third to fourth in
points, 57 behind Truex.
Hamlin is ﬁfth in the
standings, followed by
Ryan Blaney, Elliott and
seventh-time Cup champion Johnson.
“I’d feel conﬁdent if we
were locked in. These
races you don’t know
what’s gonna happen,”
Keselowski said.
Elliott knows that feeling, having been in the
lead and two laps shy
of the checkered ﬂag at
Martinsville before getting wrecked by Hamlin.
Instead of the possible
win then that would have
clinched a championship spot, he now likely
has to win at Phoenix to
advance.
“Yeah, I guess. … I
assume so,” Elliott said.
“We’ll just go on to Phoenix. We are going to try
our best, try to get a victory and go on to Homestead.”
Harvick felt good about
his car all day, but had to

earn the victory in Texas.
Tony Stewart, the former
Cup champion and car
owner, liked what he saw
in those last 20-25 laps.
“It wasn’t just the fact
of winning this race,
but it’s just how it was
won,” Stewart said. “I
know Kevin, and I can
tell watching his driving
style, there’s something
that ﬁeld and those other
three guys that are going
to make it to Homestead
here in a couple of weeks,
they’ve got something to
be worried about.”
After several laps chasing down Truex, Harvick
was eventually able to get
around the No. 78 when
he executed on a cue he
had taken from watching Kyle Larson driving
really deep into turn one
earlier in the race.
“I knew I needed to do
something different in
order to get past Martin.
I tried to just start driving it in there and we
kept going faster and
faster,” Harvick said. “I
kept driving it in there
and one lap I got close
enough to get the air off
the back of his car. I actually got to the outside
and was able to pass him
on the outside.”

grabbed Ramsey around
the neck and slammed
him to the ground.
From page 6
Green then delivered
numerous punches to
Ramsey’s helmet —
Mickens returned a
never the smartest
punt 63 yards for a
score that put the game idea — and put another
away in the fourth quar- MMA-style choke hold
on Ramsey. It was
ter.
the kind of aggressive
Green and Ramsey
attack that could lead to
were the main topic
league discipline, maybe
afterward.
even a suspension.
The perennial Pro
Green and Ramsey
Bowler retaliated
against the trash-talking were ejected.
“I should have walked
Ramsey in a violent
off in that situation,”
way. After Ramsey
Green said. “It’s never
pushed Green to the
going to happen again.
ground at the end of
I regret my actions.
a running play, Green

Whatever my punishments are I accept them
because I put myself in
that situation. … I’ve
got to control my emotions better. I’ve got to
handle my stuff better.
I can’t put myself in a
situation like that, hurt
my team and not be
able to play.”
Ramsey was not in
the locker room after
the game.
The Jaguars preferred
to talk about their latest
defensive gem, one that
followed two 10-sack
performances (Houston, Indianapolis) and
a ﬁve-turnover outing

(Pittsburgh).
“When we’re all working together like that,
like we’ve been the past
couple of weeks, it’s a
scary sight,” linebacker
Myles Jack said. “I can
feel it on the ﬁeld. It’s
fun.”

FORT WORTH, Texas
(AP) — The timing was
perfect for Kevin Harvick’s ﬁrst NASCAR Cup
Series victory at Texas.
So was his winning pass.
Harvick went around
the outside of Martin
Truex Jr. for the lead
with 10 laps to go, then
stayed in front the rest of
the way Sunday to earn
his championship shot in
NASCAR’s season ﬁnale.
“It’s been a long time
coming,” said Harvick,
who had won ﬁve Xﬁnity races and a NASCAR
Truck race at Texas in
the past. “Great to check
that one off.”
Truex led 107 of 334
laps and was still up front
until his bobble on the
backstretch that allowed
Harvick to take the lead.
But Truex, with a signiﬁcant points lead and
wins in three of the eight
playoff races, also locked
into one of the four spots
to race for the championship at Homestead in two
weeks.
“A little disappointed
to come up short, but to
clinch a spot in Miami
is unbelievable,” Truex
said. “Deﬁnitely got the
job done today, and came
here and did what we

Bengals

Jags homecoming
The Jaguars welcomed
back nearly 60 former
players for their annual
homecoming game. In
conjunction with the
reunion, the Jaguars
wore teal jersey and
black pants for the ﬁrst
time since December
2006.

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Rio outlasts Lady Eagles in OT
By Randy Payton

night’s semiﬁnal round
where a showdown with
top-seeded West Virginia
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — University-Tech awaits.
Kickoff is set for 6
There must be something
p.m. at the YMCA/Paul
about overtime contests
Cline Soccer Complex in
that appeals to the UniBeckley, W.Va. Rio played
versity of Rio Grande
the Golden Bears to a 1-1
women’s soccer team.
draw at home on Oct. 14
Head coach Tony Daniels’ club ventured beyond in their regular season
meeting.
regulation for the sixth
Fifth-seeded Cincinnati
time this season and was
the beneﬁciary of a Kelsey Christian, which suffered
a 2-1 double-overtime loss
Lee goal just over three
minutes into the extra ses- at Rio in regular season
sion which produced a 2-1 play just nine days earlier,
win over Cincinnati Chris- ﬁnished its season at 8-83.
tian University in the
Lee, a junior from West
quarterﬁnal round of the
Chester, Ohio, netted the
River States Conference
game-winning marker
Women’s Soccer Tournaby making a move past a
ment, Saturday night, at
CCU defender just inside
Evan E. Davis Field.
The RedStorm, who are the top right corner of
the 18-yard box and then
seeded fourth in the sixwhistling a shot past
team tourney, improved
to 9-8-1 with the win and Eagles net-minder Kendra
Steepe with 3:04 gone in
advanced to Wednesday
For Ohio Valley Publishing

the overtime period.
The goal was Lee’s second of the game and her
sixth of the season, tying
freshman Payten Davis
(Chillicothe, OH) for the
team lead.
The victory also allowed
the RedStorm to improve
to 5-0-1 in overtime games
this season.
Cincinnati Christian
actually drew ﬁrst blood
in the match when Kassandra Kiley scored on
a nifty side kick from 12
yards out on the right
wing, giving the Eagles a
1-0 with 15:26 left in the
ﬁrst half.
That’s how things
stayed until Lee tallied
the equalizer, gathering
in a crossing pass from
Davis and sending a shot
past Steepe and into the
back of the net with 13:55
remaining in the game.
Kiley managed another

shot on goal for CCU just
under two minutes later,
but that was the only
scoring opportunity that
either team managed over
the rest of regulation time.
Rio Grande ﬁnished
with a commanding 23-12
advantage in shots, but
had just a 6-5 edge in
shots on frame.
The RedStorm also
enjoyed a 7-3 cushion in
corner kick chances.
Junior keeper Andrea
Vera (Quito, Ecuador),
who had missed Rio’s
three previous outings due
to injury, recorded four
saves in her return to the
lineup.
Steepe also had four
saves in a losing cause for
the Eagles, who dressed
just 11 players for the
contest.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

WVU beats No. 14 Cyclones, 20-16

Daily Sentinel

AP Top 25: ND,
Clemson rise;
OSU, PSU tumble
By Ralph D. Russo
Associated Press

Notre Dame and Clemson climbed while Ohio
State and Penn State tumbled out of the top 10,
leaving the latest Associated Press college football poll looking a lot like the College Football
Playoff rankings — with one big difference.
Alabama remained No. 1 in the AP Top 25
on Sunday , as it has been since the preseason .
No. 2 Georgia picked up three more ﬁrst-place
votes for a total of ﬁve. In the playoff rankings,
Georgia is No. 1 and Alabama is No. 2. Notre
Dame moved up two spots to No. 3 and Clemson did the same to No. 4. Oklahoma jumped
three spots to No. 5, leaving those three in the
same order as the selection committee had them
on Tuesday.
Unbeaten Wisconsin slipped two spots to No.
6 but is now the highest ranked team in the
Big Ten. Ohio State fell eight spots to No. 11
after getting blown out at Iowa and Penn State
dropped nine to No. 16 after spending all season in the top 10.
Poll points
For the ﬁrst time this season, the Big Ten has
only one team ranked in the top 10. The conference has had as many as four teams in the ﬁrst
10 at times this season, but with Michigan State,
Penn State, Ohio State and Michigan beating up
each other, plus surprising losses by those East
Division powers to Iowa and Northwestern the
past two weeks, the Big Ten has devoured itself.
— Notre Dame has its highest AP ranking
since the 2012 season, when the Irish had an
unbeaten regular season and reached No. 1
before losing the BCS title game to Alabama.
— No. 7 Miami has its best ranking since
2013, when the Hurricanes reached No. 7 for
two weeks in late October. That team lost four of
six to ﬁnish the season unranked. The last time
Miami was ranked in the top 10 in November
was 2005.

MORGANTOWN,
W.Va. (AP) — A scolding from coach Dana
Holgorsen after a doubledigit loss a week ago
helped West Virginia’s
players regain their focus
and throw a wrench in
No. 14 Iowa State’s magical season.
Will Grier threw two
touchdown passes, Justin
Crawford broke out of a
three-game slump with
102 yards rushing and
West Virginia held on for
a 20-16 victory over the
Cyclones on Saturday.
The Mountaineers (6-3,
4-2 Big 12) became bowl
eligible and knocked the
Cyclones (6-3, 4-2, No.
15 CFP) out of a four-way
tie for ﬁrst place.
Iowa State trailed 20-0

late in the second quarter
and never recovered in
losing on the road for the
ﬁrst time.
Holgorsen had publicly
ridiculed his team for
lacking toughness last
week in a loss to Oklahoma State , and the
Mountaineers started
well Saturday on both
sides of the ball and their
big lead held up.
“I was proud of our
guys with the way that
they responded with me
kind of calling them out,”
Holgorsen said. “We ran
the ball effectively and
played pretty smart.”
Not all the time.
West Virginia penalties
extended three scoring
drives for the Cyclones
in the second half, but

Iowa State twice settled
for ﬁeld goals inside the
10-yard line to pull within
20-16. The Cyclones
got the ball back with
ﬁve minutes left after
D’Andre Payne ripped the
ball from West Virginia’s
David Sills in the end
zone for an interception.
But West Virginia’s
Kenny Robinson broke
up Kyle Kempt’s fourthdown pass to Marchie
Murdock at the Iowa
State 37. West Virginia’s
Kennedy McKoy then
ran for a ﬁrst down on
third-and-17, and the
Mountaineers ran out the
clock.
“I give so much credit
to our kids,” Iowa State
coach Matt Campbell
said. “They just kept

ﬁghting and kept playing.
They gave themselves a
chance to win at the end
of the football game. We
just came up short. A lot
of those had to do with
some of our inefﬁciencies
in the ﬁrst half.”
Grier rebounded from
his worst performance
of the season when he
threw four interceptions
against Oklahoma State.
He found Ka’Raun
White for a 63-yard
pass on the game’s ﬁrst
series. White would have
scored easily except he
stepped out of bounds
with no one around him
at the Iowa State 10. Sills
caught a scoring toss on
the next play to increase
his national lead to 16
TD catches.

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, November 7, 2017 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

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10 Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Big Ten’s playoff
hopes riding
on Wisconsin
By Michael Marot
Associated Press

The Big Ten suddenly has a whole lot more riding on No. 6 Wisconsin.
As skeptics claim the unbeaten Badgers padded
their record with a weak schedule and the College
Football Playoff selection committee appears to be
equally unimpressed, Wisconsin ﬁnds itself on a
mission.
The league’s playoff spot may depend on it.
With two of the conference’s top teams losing
for a second time Saturday, Wisconsin — which
dropped two spots in The Associated Press college football poll despite a win — becomes the Big
Ten’s best hope of making college football’s Final
Four.
“This whole week we wanted to send our message and say that we’re a really good team and
people should respect us,” fullback Alec Ingold
said after scoring three touchdowns in the Badgers’ 45-17 win at Indiana . “At halftime, we were
kind of looking around at each other like, ‘This is
our chance.’ We didn’t start fast but we felt like we
could deﬁnitely ﬁnish the way we wanted.”
The Badgers can clinch the Big Ten West and
a trip to the conference title game with a victory
against No. 25 Iowa in Madison, Wisconsin, next
Saturday.
They left nothing to chance against the Hoosiers, rallying from a 10-0 ﬁrst-half deﬁcit with 24
consecutive points before sealing the win by scoring the last 21.
It was good enough to get a win on the road —
something Ohio State and Penn State, the expected national contenders, failed to do.
When the Buckeyes went down 55-24 at Iowa
and the Nittany Lions fell 27-24 at Michigan State,
Wisconsin (9-0, 6-0, CFP No. 9) became the last
Big Ten team with fewer than two losses. Committee members have never put a two-loss team in the
playoff.
The bizarre twists have also made the East Division a jumbled mess.
No. 13 Michigan State and No. 11 Ohio State
head into next weekend’s showdown in Columbus
tied for the division lead at 5-1.
No. 16 Penn State and No. 21 Michigan are one
game behind at 4-2. All are 7-2. The Nittany Lions
are reeling after back-to-back losses to the Buckeyes and Spartans while the Wolverines’ losses
came to their in-state rival and Penn State.
Big Ten Commissioner Jim Delany declined an
interview request to talk about the Big Ten’s postseason prospects Saturday night.
The big question is whether Wisconsin belongs
in the championship conversation after playing no
ranked teams and facing only two teams that currently have winning records.
“We can’t really control that,” quarterback Alex
Hornibrook said. “We just have to control what
we’ve got to control. It’s each game. It’s this game,
and we’re doing a good job so far.”
The Badgers’ 10-game winning streak is tied
with Georgia for the second longest in the Football
Bowl Subdivision. Their 12 consecutive conference wins are a school record. They are one of ﬁve
unbeaten FBS teams.
The defense is No. 5 nationally in points
allowed, yards allowed, yards rushing allowed and
sacks. It’s No. 1 in pass efﬁciency allowed and
defensive red-zone TD percentage.
Wisconsin has the Big Ten’s top runner,
Jonathan Taylor, and a veteran quarterback who
showed Indiana he can make enough big plays to
keep defenses honest.
While next weekend’s game against the Hawkeyes looks much more intriguing now, Wisconsin
may only get one or two more chances to really
impress the selection committee. They host Michigan on Nov. 18 and then would likely get a ranked
opponent in the Dec. 2 league championship game
in Indianapolis. In between, there’s a trip to Minnesota.
The Big Ten’s other problem may be ﬁlling all
11 bowl spots. Right now, seven teams are bowl
eligible and ﬁve are sitting at 4-5 with three games
left and Indiana (3-6, 0-6) needs to win its ﬁnal
three to reach the postseason.

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Hawks beat Cavaliers, 117-115
CLEVELAND (AP)
— Coming off LeBron
James’ 57-point performance, it appeared the
Cavaliers had ﬁnally
gained some momentum.
A team that hadn’t won
since its season opener
proved otherwise.
Dennis Schroeder
scored 28 points and the
injury-riddled Atlanta
Hawks ended an eightgame losing streak, beating skidding Cleveland
117-115 on Sunday.
The Hawks hadn’t won
since beating Dallas on
Oct. 18 and were missing
ﬁve players, but the Cavaliers went down to yet
another puzzling loss.
James, who had 26
points and 13 rebounds,
was soaking his feet in
a tub of ice water and
had ice wraps on both
knees and his right elbow
following the game. He
didn’t have an explanation for why there was no
carry-over from Friday’s
130-122 win over Washington.
“That’s a question I
cannot answer,” James
said. “I was ready to go.
A lot of the guys were
ready to go. I cannot
answer that question.”
Cavaliers forward
Kevin Love was taken to
the hospital after leaving in the third quarter
with an illness. The team
announced that Love,
who had four points
and four rebounds in 19
minutes, was treated and
released.
The Cavaliers cut a
16-point deﬁcit in the
second half to two on
James’ basket with 21
seconds left. Atlanta’s
Isaiah Taylor missed
two free throws with
12.1 seconds to go, but

Tony Dejak | AP

Atlanta Hawks’ Dennis Schroder (17), from Germany, looks to pass against Cleveland Cavaliers’
Derrick Rose (1) in the first half of an NBA basketball game Sunday in Cleveland.

Channing Frye missed
a 3-pointer and Dwyane
Wade’s tip-in fell off the
rim.
“To get a win in
Cleveland is not easy to
do,” Hawks coach Mike
Budenholzer said. “They
had a chance down the
stretch where they got
back in it, but I’m happy
for our guys. It’s a good
win.”
The Cavaliers have
also lost to Orlando,
New York, Indiana and
Brooklyn during their
rocky stretch, which has
included three straight
defeats at home. Wade
kept Cleveland in the
game with 19 points in
the ﬁrst half and ﬁnished
with a season-high 25.
Cleveland’s ﬁrst-quarter problems continued.
Coach Tyronn Lue used
two timeouts in the
ﬁrst seven minutes as
the Hawks raced ahead
27-11.

“No energy. The effort
was pretty bad,” James
said of the early deﬁcit.
“You turn the corner but
you can’t ﬁx it in one
game. We just have to try
and ﬁgure it out.”
Schroeder scored 11
straight points in the
third quarter to kept
Atlanta ahead. Cleveland
steadily cut into the lead
behind Kyle Korver’s 19
points in the fourth.
“It’s a special place
to play and everyone
was excited to compete
against these guys,” Schroder said.
Atlanta put seven
players in double ﬁgures, including the ﬁve
starters. Luke Babbitt,
making his ﬁrst start of
the season in place of
Mike Muscala (sprained
ankle), and Taurean
Prince each scored 17
points.
The Cavs host Milwaukee on Tuesday. Cleve-

land earned a 116-97
road win over the Bucks
on Oct. 20.
On the way back
Cleveland point guard
Isaiah Thomas, acquired
as part of the trade that
sent Kyrie Irving to Boston, has been doing oncourt workouts. The team
announced before the
season that it hoped he
would return by January.
“The staff’s doing a
great job trying to get
him ready,” Lue said.
“We don’t want to rush
him back if he’s not 100
percent. They’ve been
doing a good job taking it
slow and make sure they
rehabilitate him the right
way.”
Thomas averaged a
career-high 28.9 points,
third in the league, last
season. Derrick Rose has
been starting at point
guard while James has
also run the offense.

Bedlam prevails throughout Big 12
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) —
Bedlam indeed in the Big 12 Conference, and not just in Oklahoma.
Sooners quarterback Baker
Mayﬁeld had a possible Heisman
Trophy moment in arguably the
wildest game in the rivalry actually known as Bedlam. TCU stayed
defensive in another win over an
in-state rival and surprising Iowa
State, already with wins over both
Big 12 co-leaders, had a bit of a
stumble.
That was only the start of what
could be a wild November in the
Big 12.
There are three weeks left in the
regular season, and at least half of
the 10 teams still have legitimate
shots at getting into the Big 12’s
ﬁrst championship game in seven
years. The real drawback in all the
madness is that the conference
will be down to a single one-loss
team after No. 5 Oklahoma and
No. 8 TCU play next Saturday in
Norman.
“Next week, we’re going to have

to score points. We’re going to
have to move the football,” TCU
coach Gary Patterson said after
his Horned Frogs rebounded from
their only loss with a 24-7 win
over Texas.
Mayﬁeld passed for a schoolrecord 598 yards with ﬁve touchdowns, and ran for another score,
as the Sooners outlasted Oklahoma State 62-52 in the highestscoring game of the 112 the rivals
have now played.
TCU and Oklahoma are both 8-1
overall, 5-1 in the Big 12. While
pretty much out of playoff contention, No. 12 Oklahoma State,
No. 23 West Virginia and No. 24
Iowa State all have 4-2 conference
records and are still very much
alive in the conference race.
It may still be a bit early to
start working through those tiebreaker scenarios, but that oftenoverlooked page could come into
play when it’s time to determine
which two teams play in the Big
12 championship game.

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“The sad part about it will be
is it will come down to that piece
of paper of how all the ties would
work out when we all get done,”
Patterson said. “I’d be interested
because I didn’t read it past if you
tie, the winner between head to
head will go. Outside of that, it’s
like a full page.”
The Sooners and Cowboys met
in Bedlam before the ﬁnal weekend of the regular season for only
the second time in 13 years. That
switch in the schedule avoided
the potential of the two teams
meeting in a ﬁnale, and then again
the very next week in the Big 12
championship game. That would
have been the case each of the
last two years had there been title
games then.
“We win ballgames, no matter
how you put it. We win ballgames.
And right now, that’s all that matters,” Mayﬁeld said. “Championship November, you keep winning
and we’ll take care of our own
destiny.”

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