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                  <text>Point
falls in
playoffs

EDITORIAL s 4

SPORTS s 6

OH-70014973

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 185, Volume 71

Official Vote Count:
Columbia Twp.
Trustee now a tie
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.
com

MEIGS COUNTY —
With the results in from
Monday’s ofﬁcial vote
count, there is a tie for
the second Columbia
Township Trustee seat.
While Gary Carr was
the top vote earner in
the race with two to be
elected, Don Cheadle
and Marco Jeffers were
tied for the second seat.
Cheadle had held a two
vote lead on election
night.
While a result that
close requires an automatic recount to be
conducted, a winner
had to be determined in
order to close the ofﬁ-

cial count.
According to the Secretary of State’s website, if there is a tie, the
tie must be broken by
casting lots. This can
be done by the chair
ﬂipping a coin, drawing
straws, picking a name
written on paper out of
a hat, or cutting cards,
among other options.
In this case, a coin
was ﬂipped and Cheadle declared the winner, pending a recount
which is scheduled for
Nov. 29 at 8:30 a.m.
According to the
board of elections no
other results were
changed as a result of
the ofﬁcial vote count.
Sarah Hawley is the managing
editor of The Daily Sentinel.

Tuesday, November 21, 2017 s 50¢

Working on the rails
Hobson yard creating jobs, development
Staff Report

MIDDLEPORT —
Just over a year ago
Hobson Yard in Middleport stood silent as
trains were idled, doors
were locked, and there
were no employees. The
outlook for the historic
switching station, and
line itself, was grim.
That changed in
August of 2016 when
Watco Transportation
Services, LLC., one of
the largest short line rail
operators in the world,
leased the line from Norfolk Southern, renamed
it the Kanawha River
Railroad, and put the
309 miles of track from

Columbus, Ohio to south
of Charleston, West Virginia back into service.
The success of that
line has brought an
additional 10 new jobs,
new transloading equipment, and new growth
and investment at Hobson Yard and in Meigs
County.
”We are pleased to see
the progress of this once
abandoned rail line. It
is great not only for our
company, but for the
communities we serve,”
said Derrick Jackson,
General Manager of the
Kanawha River Railroad.
“We are so happy to
have them in our community and happy to see

the new jobs and activity
at Hobson,” said Middleport Mayor Sandy Iannarelli. “They have been
wonderful to work with.”
Employees from the
company addressed
Middleport Council during last week’s regular
meeting.
“What they have done
in building the business
on the line is amazing,”
according to Meigs
County Economic Development Director Perry
Varnadoe. “They are an
economic asset for the
entire region.”
Watco is also planning
additional investments
on the line, including
putting all ﬁve lines

at Hobson back into
operation in a project
supported by the Ohio
Rail Development Commission. They are also
actively seeking new customers to use Hobson
and their transloading
facilities as they grow in
Meigs County.
Brigid Rich, Commercial Manager says,
“Our goal is to provide
transportation options
and solutions to the
region’s industries
through all of Watco’s
service offerings. The
Kanawha River Railroad
and Watco are open for
opportunities to grow
with you.”
Information provided by Meigs
County Economic Development
Office.

FOR THE RECORD
Official address School
Safety Concern
POMEROY — Meigs
County Sheriff Keith
Wood and Meigs Local
Supt. Scot Gheen both
issued statements
Sunday evening on an
alleged threat against
Meigs High School.
A Facebook post on
the Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce Facebook
page reads as follows:
Tonight I’m sending
this message out in
response to the numerous calls my ofﬁce has
received regarding
concerns of a threat to
the Meigs High School
tomorrow (Monday).
My ofﬁce has been
working closely with

school ofﬁcials to
protect the safety and
security of the students
and staff at Meigs High
School. My ofﬁce will
continue to monitor
all matters in any of
our schools in Meigs
County.
Message from Meigs
Local Superintendent
Scot Gheen:
This message is for
all parents, as your
superintendent I wanted to send this message
out to address numerous calls and rumors
from social media posts
regarding a safety
concern at Meigs High
School. The district
See RECORD | 3
Courtesy photo

MCCI members Darla Fickle, Linda King, Rosanna Manley, Lee Morris, Carolyn Grueser, Lenora Leifheit, Donna Jenkins, Courtney Midkiff,
and Louise Michael receiving check donation.

Columbus man
sentenced to prison

Raising $3K for local cancer initiative
By Erin Perkins
eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

Staff Report

POMEROY — A Columbus man was sentenced
to 30 months in prison on Monday morning following two convictions during a one day jury trial
last week.
Andrew Robinson, 38, appeared before Common
Pleas Judge I. Carson Crow for the hearing.
Prior to sentencing, Crow hear arguments from
both sides regarding the fact that the degree of
charge (felony, misdemeanor) was not on the verdict forms given to the jury.
See PRISON | 2

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

POMEROY — The
annual Poker run for
Ann Morris raised
$3,000 this year for the
Meigs County Cancer
Initiative (MCCI).
After losing his mother
and battling cancer himself, Lee Morris began
the poker run ﬁve years
ago giving his proceeds
to the MCCI. The MCCI
is a local organization

that increases awareness
and promotes prevention
of cancer. The members
of the organization
aid those in need as to
where to ﬁnd screenings,
help them understand
the complexities of the
health care system, and
where to they can seek
community resources
and support. Gas and
food cards are provided
to those in treatment
and vouchers can be purchased in Meigs County.

The MCCI aided Morris
during his time of treatment and he wanted to
give back to this organization after regaining
his health. Since he
began this event the total
amount of proceeds is
$12,003 and the amount
of gas vouchers for the
MCCI have doubled.
The Ann Morris Poker
run was held on Sept. 10
this year. The event had
a rummage sale in which
guests of the event gave

what they wished in
donation to purchase an
item and a Chinese auction with various goods
donated from local businesses. Morris’ sister,
Cammy Conlin along
with some members of
the Christian Motorcycle
Association provided
a spaghetti dinner to
guests for ﬁve dollars a
plate.
The run had a total of
See CANCER | 5

OU Marching 110 gearing up for Macy’s Parade
Staff Report

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ATHENS — On Thanksgiving
Day, the Ohio University Marching 110 will be featured on one of
the world’s biggest stages when
the “Most Exciting Band in the
Land” travels to New York City to
appear in the 91st Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade®.
The Marching 110, selected as
one of 10 bands to appear in this
year’s parade from a list of 175
applicants, will perform alongside
a growing list of Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade icons, including
intricate ﬂoats, colossal character
balloons, exciting performances
and more. The band previously

performed in the 2000 and 2005
Parades.
“I’m extremely honored for the
Marching 110 to return to the
Macy’s Parade for the third time,”
said Dr. Richard Suk, director of
the Ohio University Marching
110. “It is one of the premiere
performance opportunities for
marching bands and I’m thrilled,
for not only our current students,
but for our alumni and the Ohio
University community.”
The opportunity arrives in the
midst of a landmark season for the
Marching 110, as they’re currently
celebrating the 50th anniversary of
the band’s “big switch,” in which
then-director Gene Thrailkill

introduced the hard-driving, highenergy style exuded by all members of today’s internationallyknown marching band.
“Everyone who has been a part
of this band played a huge role in
making the 110 what it is today,
and it’s been a blast celebrating
our 50th anniversary with current
and past members,” said Josh
Boyer, assistant director of the
Marching 110. “The opportunity
to return to New York City and
to perform in this year’s Macy’s
Parade in the midst of such an
important year in our history is
truly an honor.”
See OU | 3

�2 Tuesday, November 21, 2017

OBITUARIES/NEWS

OBITUARIES

EULA B. HENSLER

JOSEPHINE ELIZABETH KIRBY
WEST COLUMBIA
— Josephine Elizabeth
(Fowler) Kirby, 99, of
West Columbia, W.Va.,
passed away, Nov. 17,
2017, in Belpre Landing
Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation
Center following a brief
illness.
She was born Sept. 24,
1918, in West Columbia,
a daughter of the late
Emery Cleveland and
Eliza May (Coleman)
Fowler. In addition to her
parents, she was preceded by her husband, Herman Kirby; sons, Joseph
Kirby Sr. and Michael
Kirby; sister, Pearlie
Elhart.
She was the owner
and operator of Fowlers
Grocery Store in West
Columbia, W.Va. She was
a member and pianist for
the West Columbia United Methodist Church.
Josephine, was also a

member and pianist of
the Order of the Eastern Star, Chapter # 157
Mason, W.Va.
Survivors include her
grandson, Joseph Kirby
Jr. and his wife Stephanie
of Belpre, Ohio; great
grandsons, Owen and
Aiden Kirby; nephew,
Vernon and Bonnie
Elhart.
Graveside service will
be Wednesday, Nov. 22,
2017, at 1 p.m. in the
Kirkland Memorial Gardens Cemetery, Point
Pleasant, W.Va., with Pastor Seth Fallon ofﬁciating
It was at Josephine’s
request to have graveside
services.
Arrangements provided
by Foglesong Funeral
Home, Mason, W.Va.
Condolences may be
shared with the family at
foglesongfuneralhome.
com.

DAVID SPURLOCK
COOLVILLE —
David Spurlock,
64, of Coolville,
Ohio, passed away
Saturday, Nov. 18,
2017, at Riverside
Methodist Hospital in Columbus,
Ohio.
He was born Dec. 28,
1952, in Milton, W.Va.,
son of the late Voyd and
Inez Harper Spurlock.
He was an Army Veteran of the Vietnam War
and loved deer hunting,
gardening, family gatherings, visiting with all his
friends, being the local
mechanic and most of all
his little pal, Rocky.
David is survived by
his wife of 33 years, Debbie Richardson Spurlock;
a daughter, Chastidy
and B.J. Murphy; a son,
Dustin Milhone; two
grandchildren, Nathan
Murphy and Shawna
(Jack Lemley) Murphy;
ﬁve sisters, Barbara Bissell, Kay Lanham, Kathy
(John) Walker, Carol
(Fred) Dodge and Pam
(Mark) Boyd; four brothers, Danny Spurlock,
Voyd Spurlock, Don

(Kathrina) Spurlock and Rodney
(Debbie) Spurlock;
his mother-in-law,
Evelyn Barringer;
a brother-in-law,
Robert Richardson; a sister-in-law,
Debbie Spurlock; and a
special friend, Howard
Lockhart.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in
death by three brothers,
Ronnie Spurlock, C.L.
Spurlock and Gary Spurlock; and his father-inlaw, Gerald Barringer.
Funeral services will be
held at 3 p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 22, 2017, at
White-Schwarzel Funeral
Home in Coolville, Ohio,
with Pastor Larry Lemley ofﬁciating. Military
services will be conducted at the funeral home.
Burial will follow in the
Heiney Cemetery.
Visitation will be held
Tuesday, from 2-4 and
6-8 p.m. at the funeral
home.
You are invited to sign
the online guestbook at
www.whiteschwarzelfh.
com.

KIPP
VINTON — Danny Ray Kipp, 45, of Vinton, Ohio
passed away Saturday November 18, 2017 at Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis, Ohio. He is survived by his
wife Angela Kipp. Funeral service will be conducted
11 a.m. Tuesday November 21, 2017 at Hall Funeral
Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. Burial will
follow in Miller Memorial Gardens, Miller, Ohio. Visitation will be held from 6-8 p.m. Monday November
20, 2017 at the funeral home.

MIDDLEPORT —
Eula B. Hensler, 85,
formerly of Middleport,
Ohio, later Laurels of
Athens, went to be with
her Lord, Saturday, Nov.
18, 2017, at O’Bleness
Hospital, Athens, Ohio.
She was born at Marlinton, W.Va., Oct. 7,
1932, to the late Maston
Roberts and Esta Roberts Roberts.She was
a homemaker enjoying
family, traveling, and
many friends. She was a
1951 graduate of Racine
High Scool and member
of Middleport Church of
Christ.
She is survived her
son, Bill (Sherry)
Hensler; grandson,
Christopher (Elizabeth)
Hensler; granddaughter,
Kristen (Roy) Johnson; great grandsons,
Jayden and Rece Johnson, Logan, Lance, and
Jaxon Hensler; a special
niece, Shawn (Mike)
Hassman; sisters-in-

LONG BOTTOM — Ross J.
Warren, 71, of
Long Bottom,
Ohio, passed away
Saturday, Nov. 18,
2017, after a long
battle with cancer
at Marietta Memorial
Hospital.
He was born March 31,
1946, in Columbus, Ohio,
son of the late Edward
B. and Olive Warren.
Ross was a veteran of the
U.S. Army serving in the
Vietnam War, where he
earned both Bronze and
Silver Stars. He retired
from the railroad where
he was a conductor for
over 40 years. He loved
to hunt, ﬁsh and build
things out of wood. Ross
was a tall man of 6’6” and
had a rough force but a
heart of gold. Ross will
be missed. Goodbye Ross
from family and friends.
He is survived by his
wife, Mary A. Warren;
two sons, Jack W. and

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POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Brian Nathan Preece,
41, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died November 17, 2017
from injuries sustained in a vehicle accident on Rt.62.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, November 22, 2017 at the Deal Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant, West Virginia, with Pastor James Snyder ofﬁciating. Burial will be in the Forest Hills Cemetery in Flat Rock, W.Va. Friends may visit the family
on Tuesday from 6 to 8 p.m. at the funeral home.

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Arlene Downer
and Mike A.
Downer; a daughter, Susie and
Dennis Furlong; a
brother, Bruce and
Donna Warren;
ﬁve grandchildren
and 12 great-grandchildren.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded
in death by a sister and
brother-in-law, Sharon E.
and Joe Z. Moore and a
daughter, Tina M. Sayres.
Services will be held
at 1 p.m., Wednesday,
Nov. 22, 2017 at WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home
in Coolville, Ohio, with
Pastor Steve Reed ofﬁciating. Military services
will be conducted at the
funeral home. Visitation
will be held Wednesday,
from 11 a.m. until time of
service.
You are invited to sign
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www.whiteschwarzelfh.
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6:30

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

Tuesday, Nov. 21
POMEROY — The Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church Ladies Auxiliary will hold a bake sale
beginning at 10 a.m. at Powell’s Foodfair.

Prison
From page 1

Prosecutor James K.
Stanley and defense
attorney Denise Bunce
each referenced appeals
cases regarding the matter, with Crow ultimately
sentencing Robinson on
the felony charges at the
degree of charge each
was indicted.
Following sentencing
argument, in which Stanley argued for the maximum sentence, Crow
sentenced Robinson to
12 months in prison for
his vandalism conviction
and 18 months in prison
for his failure to appear
conviction. Each sentence was the maximum
sentence that Robinson
could receive. The sentences were consecutive,
so Robinson received
a total sentence of 30
months.
The vandalism conviction stems from an
incident that occurred

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on Feb. 27, 2017, while
Robinson was an inmate
at the Middleport Jail.
Robinson had repeatedly kicked the holding
cell door until the door
handle and locking
mechanism broke and
dislodged from the door.
The door could not be
ﬁxed for approximately
two weeks, and the Middleport Jail could not
use the holding cell during that period of time.
Robinson was ordered to
pay $232.83 in restitution to the jail as part of
his sentence.
The failure to appear
conviction stems from
Robinson’s failure to
appear in court for his
ﬁnal pretrial conference
scheduled for Aug. 10,
2017, after previously
being released on his
own recognizance.
Stanley thanks the
Middleport Police
Departments and Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas personnel for
their assistance in this
matter.

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400 (HBO) Many Stars

109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH

HATTEN
BIDWELL — Garnet E. Hatten, 94, Bidwell, Ohio
passed away Saturday, November 18, 2017 in Holzer
Senior Care Center, Bidwell, Ohio. Funeral services
will be conducted 1 p.m. Saturday, November 25,
2017 in the Good News Baptist Church, 4045 Georges
Creek Road, Gallipolis, Ohio with Rev. Eric Fannin
and Rev. Joe Godwin, ofﬁciates. Entombment will follow in the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens, Gallipolis.
Friends and family may call at the church Saturday 11
a.m. to 1 p.m..

TUESDAY EVENING

12 (WVPB)

Prices are subject to change at any time.

law, Gail Paulos, Doris
Ihle, and Doris Roberts;
brother-in-law, Charles
Hensler; and special
friend Kayte (Sean)
Mullins; and several
nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents
she was preceded by
husband, Glenn Hensler;
infant son, Robert
Hensler; brothers, Waldon Roberts and Delwin
Roberts.
Graveside Services
are Wednesday, Nov.
22, 2017, at 11 a.m. at
Letart Falls Cemetery
chapel, Racine, Ohio,
with Pastor Barry Bolin
officiating. Eula will be
entombed with her husband Glenn Hensler, at
Letart Falls Cemetery.
The family ask that you
donate to the American
Heart Assoc. or Cancer
Society of your choice in
Eula”s name.
Online condolences
may be sent at birchfieldfuneralhome.com.

HILES
MARYSVILLE, OH — Betty Lou Hiles, 83, of
Marysville, and formerly of Gallia County, passed
away at 5:06 a.m. on Saturday, November 18, 2017.
Funeral services will be held on Wednesday, November 22, 2017 at 2 p.m. in the Cremeens-King Funeral
Home, Gallipolis. Rev. Truman Johnson will ofﬁciate
and interment will follow in the Kings Chapel Cemetery. Friends may call 1 hour prior to the funeral
services.

ROSS J. WARREN

PREECE

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Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

Daily Sentinel

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Daily Sentinel

From page 1

and Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
have looked into these
rumors and allegations
and the matter has been
addressed. Please understand safety is a very
important concern to us
and we will continue to
work together with all
parties to ensure the safest
learning environment for
all students.
Meigs County Sheriff’s Office
Night Shift
Nov. 6
Assist OUPD — Deputy
Stacy assisted Ohio University Police Department
with a search warrant at
55 Salem Street in Rutland.
Suspicious person —
Sgt. Jones checked a
report of a male subject
inside the Tuppers Plains
Post Ofﬁce. The male
advised he was inside getting warm. The male was
asked to leave the property. No further action was
taken in this matter
Nov. 7
Domestic dispute —
Deputy Stacy responded
to Fox Hill, Pomeroy, for a
possible domestic dispute.
The female caller refused
to make a statement and
stated she only wanted
someone to talk to the
male. No further action
was taken in this matter.
Nov. 8
Suspicious vehicle —
Sgt. Jones arrested Warren
M. Shirkey, age 60, South
Charleston W.Va., for driving under suspension and
physical control after the
vehicle he was driving was
parked along the roadway
on State Route 143.
Nov. 9
Well-being check —
Deputy Barnhart and Sgt.
Jones responded to Pinetree Drive, Reedsville, for
a well-being check. The
male was found to be ﬁne
and he stated he would
contact his family.
Nov. 10
Theft — Dispatch
received a call from
Meigs Holzer ER advising they needed a deputy
to come out and take a
theft report. Deputy Fennell arrived and spoke
with the hospital staff and
the victim. Deputy Fennell was advised that the
victim had left his coat
unattended in the waiting
room when he went back
to check on a friend that
was being treated. When
he returned to the waiting
area his coat was gone.
ER Security checked the
surveillance video which
showed a female, later
identiﬁed as Angela D.
Lambert, age 43 of Racine,
allegedly taking the coat.
The victim’s keys were
also in the coat and she is
seen using the key fob to
locate his car in the parking lot. As she approached
the car she was apparently

scared off by someone’s
presence in the lot. She
reportedly returned the
keys to the ER but kept
the coat and left the area.
Charges have been ﬁled
for theft on Lambert and
deputies are seeking to
arrest her at the time of
this news release.
Pursuit — Ohio State
Patrol dispatch contacted
our ofﬁce advising that
they have a unit in pursuit
on Wolf Pen Road. Deputies were dispatched to
assist. Just prior to the
deputies catching up to
the chase OSP terminated
the pursuit due to visibility and safety reasons.
Deputies and the trooper
continued to patrol the
area looking for the suspect vehicle, a black Chevy
Cobalt. It was not found.
Nov. 11
Stolen vehicle — Dispatch received a call
from a resident of Union
Avenue reporting her
black Chevy Cobalt stolen.
This car was immediately
suspected to be the car
from the earlier pursuit.
Sgt. Mohler and Trooper
Trelka arrive at the residence to speak with the
her about the reported
theft. At ﬁrst, she insisted
that her car had been stolen but after being advised
by the ofﬁcers of the information they already had
and the severity of ﬁling a
false report, she allegedly
admitted she had received
a call from her boyfriend
telling her he had run from
the police and to report
her car stolen so he did
not get in trouble. She
gave a written statement
about the incident and several charges are pending in
this case.
Assault — Dispatch
received a call from a man
requesting a well-being
check on his wife. He
advised that she is a care
provider for an individual
on Arbaugh Street in
Tuppers Plains and he will
not let her leave. Deputies
arrived at the residence
and made contact with the
female who, along with the
resident were reportedly
intoxicated. She stated
that he had allegedly held
a knife to her throat and
stomach threatening her
if she tried to leave. She
also showed the deputies
a small laceration on her
stomach. Due to her state
of intoxication, deputies
were unable to take her
written statement. She
was escorted form the
residence and transported
home. She was advised
when sober to follow up
with our ofﬁce to complete
the report. At this time the
investigation is pending.

taken and he was advised
that after he recovered his
truck not to return to the
property until he had permission from the owner
not the workers. An investigation was conducted
Nov. 17
by phone and the owner
Harassing phone calls
— Dispatch received a call located. He advised that
he had spoken with the
from a female on Rainbow Ridge Road advising suspect at the scene after
the deputies had left. He
that she had received
two strange calls from an did not have permission
unknown person and she to be there and was told
would like to see a deputy. by the owner not to return
after he got his truck out
Sgt. Mohler arrived and
spoke with her about the of the yard. The suspect
incident and was advised was again contacted and
advised by Sgt. Mohler
that she had been called
twice by a male that stated not to return and any further incidents would result
that he knew she had
in his arrest.
received a package from
Columbia and he would
be there to get it. When
Nov. 19
she told him that she
Fight — Dispatch
had no idea what he was received a call of and
talking about he became active ﬁght between sevabusive. Dispatch used
eral people on King Ridge
the internet to search the Road. Deputies were
number and it was tracked dispatched to the scene.
to an unknown address in The ﬁght was over and all
Zanesville. The complain- involved were separated
ant stated that the calls
in different residences.
had made her uneasy so
Deputies spoke with all
Sgt. Mohler stayed and
involved and no one wantpatrolled in the area for
ed to make statements or
about an hour. Nothing
sign charges. All suspects
was seen, and no further were advised to stay sepaaction was taken on this
rated for the night and if
call.
another call was received
Warrant arrest — While all would be cited for dison routine patrol Deputy orderly. No further calls
Fennell had a car run
were received to the locaout of gas in front of him tion and no further action
on Bradbury Road. He
was taken on this call.
stopped to assist the driver and noticed that he was Nov. 20
acting nervous. Deputy
Burglary — Dispatch
Fennell had dispatch run received a call from a
a check on the driver,
female advising that she
James R. Ellis, age 30 of
had received a call advisMiddleport, and it was
ing that her house on State
determined that he had a Route 124 near Racine had
warrant on indictment for been broken into. Deputy
his arrest for trafﬁcking
Stacy arrived, met with
in drugs out of the Com- the caller and checked the
mon Pleas Court of Meigs home. It was determined
County. Ellis was arrested that nothing was missing,
on the charge and the vehi- and it didn’t appear that
cle towed. While conduct- anyone had even entered
ing and inventory of the
to home. No further action
vehicle additional drugs
was taken on this call.
and paraphernalia were
allegedly found. Ellis was Day Shift
incarcerated in Middleport Nov. 6
Jail until he appears in
Suspicious person —
court on the Indictment. Deputy Stewart and Sgt.
Additional charges are
pending on the items
found in this incident.
of a suspicious vehicle
setting at the gas wells on
Ball Run Road. A deputy
patrolled the area, and
nothing was found.

Nov. 18
Burglary in progress
— Dispatch received a
call advising of a possible
burglary in progress at an
abandon house on Minersville Hill, stating that
the suspect’s vehicle was
stuck in the mud behind
the house. Sgt. Mohler
and Deputy King arrived
on the scene and cleared
the area. The suspect’s
truck was still stuck in the
yard, but the suspect had
left the property. There
was no evidence found to
indicate that the house
had been entered. After
Nov. 12
a short time, the suspect
Fire — Dispatch
returned and advised that
received a call from a
motorist advising they had he was a neighbor and
had been removing scrap
passed a bag of burning
from the woods behind the
trash along US 33 near
home when he had gotten
Morning Star Road. A
deputy was sent to patrol stuck. He advised that
he had permission from
the area. Nothing was
the construction worker
found.
remodeling the home to be
Suspicious vehicle —
there. His information was
Dispatch received a call

Nov. 7
Trespass — Deputy
Campbell took a report
from an individual about
someone trespassing on
her property in Reedsville.
This incident remains
under investigation.
Disorderly — Deputy
Stewart responded to Dollar General in Racine on a
report of female in a verbal
altercation with the store
clerk. Upon his arrival
Stewart spoke with the
clerk who identiﬁed the
female and described the
female as having mental
issues and was arguing
over everything. The situation had calmed down
prior to Deputy Stewart’s
arrival and no charges will
be ﬁled.
Domestic violence —
Deputy Hupp, along with
Deputy Stewart, responded to Locust Street in
Rutland on a report of

a domestic. When units
arrived and spoke with
the parties involved it was
determined that no charges would be ﬁled. The parties agreed to separate for
the night.
Nov. 8
Domestic violence —
Deputy Campbell responded to Brown’s trailer park
on a report of a domestic.
When Campbell arrived,
he spoke with the parties
involved and they reported
arguing over animals in
the household. There had
not been any physical
violence or threats, so no
charges were ﬁled in this
incident although they did
separate for the day.
Theft — Deputy Stacy
took a report of a stolen
vehicle. After some investigation it was determined
that the vehicle had not
been stolen and that it is
a civil matter that must
be handled among the
involved parties.
Alarm — Deputy King
responded to an alarm at
a business on State Route
681. Upon arrival, the
buildings were checked
along with a key holder,
and everything appeared
to be secure. Unknown
cause for the alarm activation.
Unruly student —
School Resource Ofﬁcer
Patterson handled a call
of an unruly student at
Southern High School.
The student was referred
to the principal, and the
matter was taken care of.
Nov. 10
Unruly juvenile —
School Resource Ofﬁcer
Hupp met with one of
the Meigs School buses
in reference to an unruly
juvenile. The student was
removed from the bus and
transported to his residence without incident.
Medical — Deputies
responded to an incident
in the jail with one inmate
being removed and taken
to the ER for medical
treatment.

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Lung Cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer death in the

From page 1

The 110 has many
exciting New York City
experiences planned during their visit, including
viewing various Broadway shows on Tuesday, a
live performance on The
Today Show on Wednesday morning and a familystyle Thanksgiving dinner
cruise around Manhattan
on Thursday evening
after the Macy’s Parade.
Friday will allow for a
much deserved “day off”
in which students can tour
the numerous sights and
sounds of New York City.
The 2017 Macy’s
Thanksgiving Day Parade
steps off at 9 a.m. on
Thursday, Nov. 23.

Patterson responded to
report of a female yelling
in the woods along Dexter
Road. When units found
the female walking along
the railroad tracks she was
having some issues and
was transported to the
sheriff’s ofﬁce where she
met with a counselor from
Woodland Centers. The
female was later taken to a
family member.
Identity fraud — Sgt.
Patterson took a report
from a man who reported
that someone had used his
identifying information to
open an account with Verizon Wireless, and there
was now an outstanding
bill in his name. The incident remains under investigation.
Domestic violence —
Deputy Stewart responded
to a residence on Mitchell
Road, Racine, on a report
of a domestic. When
Deputy Stewart arrived,
and spoke with the parties involved there had
not been any violence or
threats, just a disagreement over child custody
issues. No further action
required.

United States. When detected early, survival rates increase
dramatically. Preventive care and health screenings are a critical part
of staying healthy. Pleasant Valley Hospital is committed to providing
you and your family with the care needed to live long and healthy lives
right here in the community we love.

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Courtesy photo

The Marching 110, selected as one of 10 bands to appear in the
2017 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade®, will perform alongside
a growing list of Parade icons this week. The band previously
performed in the 2000 (shown here) and 2005 Parades. Photo
courtesy of Ohio University.

OH-70013427

Record

Tuesday, November 21, 2017 3

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�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Gifts wrapped
with ribbon that
is indestructible
The most valuable gifts I’ve been given simply integrated into my being like foam forms
on a root beer float, bubbling from within as
the glass is filled. The treasures
didn’t come in a glitzy box with a
shiny bow on top—didn’t come in
a box or a physical package at all.
They were wrapped in a cloak of
invisibility, yet the effect of their
presence was so intense, they were
like beacons in the dead of night.
Mistletoe and ho ho ho. I am
Michele Z.
ready
for the season of giftMarcum
giving—for
the rush—for the jugContributing
gling
of
family
get-togethers—for
columnist
the checking of lists that crosspollinate between who bought
what and what items are still pending to be
purchased and for the holiday tunes that get
stuck in my head because they’re buzzing from
every store in town. No matter what gift you
are hunting or what one
you are wanting, the
As the pulse of
best gifts are contained the Christmas
with the industrial
strength ribbon of love. season begins
One of the best gifts a within your heart
friend of mine received and extends into
was when she was awak- each twinkling
ened in the night by an
eye, wrap each
angel bending over her
interaction with
bed. The angelic form
love.
seemed to be holding
something in its hands
and extending it toward
my friend who sat up, mesmerized. For several
weeks after this encounter, she received messages of hope. The word, “Hope” showed up in
many forms from words from strangers to signs
in stores and symbols in her daily routine.
Not everyone gets the vision of a heavenly
being delivering a gift like hope, but she did.
The delivery of this gift made it no more special than the hope others unwrapped in their
unique packages—hers was simply wrapped
differently. It was wrapped in a way that spoke
to her—in a way that inspired rather than
frightened her.
Someone else may have seen that angel and
had a heart attack or went bonafide crazy, but
the God who created invisible gifts knows how
to best deliver them. We get the gift we need in
a form most conducive to our happiness.
Wisdom from life experiences tops my list
of favorite gifts. For each tearful struggle, I
earned an ounce of insight. For each contented
smile from a hurting child I consoled, I added
a drop of joy into my soul. For each strained
friendship and family connection I mended,
I felt peace flowing into my elixir—the elixir
whose recipe the Infinite allows me to develop.
I am responsible for the contents of my cup.
If it runs over with joy, that’s because I spread
cheer through hardship. If it runs over with
pain, I have failed to be grateful for my challenges that create change.
Throughout the years, the contents of my
cup have been bitter and sweet and everything
in between. Too much honey and the mellow
taste is ruined. Too much vinegar and it burns
a hole in the esophagus. Just when I think
I have the perfect recipe, the manufacturer
changes the ingredients, or my taste buds react
differently.
The gift in this particular cup is yours to
both ask for and maintain. People and situations are in constant flux. We have to adapt
our responses in order to learn our lessons and
get the gifts they offer. One of my lessons came
in the form of a fear of public speaking. When
asked to speak in the smallest of crowds, my
stomach would churn and I’d shake.
It wasn’t until I realized that the fear had a
gift for me that I attempted to learn the lesson
of self-confidence. I began volunteering to read
at writer’s events and to give presentations
on a variety of topics. As I spoke and taught
every chance I could in front of an audience, I
learned more about myself and was given the
gift of self-confidence.
The best gift you can give yourself is finding the mixture that stimulates your senses
while fortifying that sweet balance between
excess and starvation. The best gift you can
give someone else is to discover the treasure of
invisible gifts within yourself. The more gifts
you have, the more you can give to others.
As the pulse of the Christmas season begins
within your heart and extends into each twinkling eye, wrap each interaction with love.
Send those good vibes to the strangers in line
for hot chocolate and to each package-laden
shopper. There are no scissors sharp enough to
cut the ribbon wrapped with love.
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.

THEIR VIEW

A stranger’s in the house, to drop off a package
This editorial recently
appeared in the Chicago
Tribune:
You’re waiting for an
important package to
be delivered. Or for the
furnace repairman to
arrive. Or the cable guy.
Their companies can’t
tell you exactly when
they’ll be there. So you
pace. And you peer out
the window. And you
hope you’re not in the
bathroom when someone rings the bell.
Because a serviceperson won’t linger or
circle back, you’ll have
to call and make another
appointment.
Delivery drivers won’t
leave the package without a signature. Or they
will leave it, increasing
the risk that it will be
swiped by porch pirates
patrolling neighborhoods around the holiday season.
If you step away, if
you get distracted, if
you don’t hear the bell,
you’re out of luck.
But what if these
package deliverers
and others had a way
to unlock your door
(legally and with your
permission), set the
package inside or do the
repair, and then leave

your house as secure
as when they entered?
And what if you could
monitor the action via a
video camera? And what
if there were real-time
notiﬁcation to watch the
delivery as it happens?
That’s the idea behind
Amazon’s new Amazon
Key service rolling
out this month in Chicago and 36 other cities.
Sounds great to those
of us who’ve encountered the frustrations
chronicled above. “Amazon Key gives customers
peace of mind knowing
their orders have been
safely delivered to their
homes and are waiting
for them when they walk
through their doors,”
Peter Larsen, vice president of delivery technology for Amazon, says in
a news release.
Well, maybe not for
everyone. We imagine
some people will balk at
allowing any stranger
into their homes while
they’re away — even
with the aforementioned
video monitoring and
real-time notiﬁcation
to watch the delivery
as it happens. There’s
still a stranger in your
home while you’re not
there. Amazon says its
delivery people will be

“thoroughly vetted.” But
we all know that’s not a
foolproof guarantee.
Still, we applaud
Amazon for seeking to
ﬁll what we’ve always
considered a huge,
inexplicable void in the
whole delivery biz. That
is: Deliveries generally
happen during the day,
when many people aren’t
home. Finding that door
tag dangling and then
being obliged to make
the pilgrimage to a local
delivery center is annoyingly inefﬁcient. In the
ideal world, delivery
would take place when
people are available.
There shouldn’t be any
guessing involved. If Fed
Ex and its ilk can track
a package every step of
the way from Beijing,
how come they don’t
know that you’re not
home?
We’ve waited for an
innovative tech guru to
one-up Fed Ex and UPS
by offering exclusive
nighttime service. Say,
Fed Ex After Hours —
from apres dinner to 10
p.m.? When people are
home to sign for important packages.
Yes, we’d pay extra for
that.
This isn’t so revolutionary. Many grocery

delivery services already
have night hours. People
can order Thai food or
pizza at all hours. Why
not packages?
Speaking of innovation, even the sclerotic
U.S. Postal Service plans
to offer cheap next-day
delivery service in 20
major U.S. cities on Sunday during this holiday
season. Why? Because
there’s overwhelming
demand.
Amazon plans to eventually expand its keyless
entry program so that
others — from dog walkers to repairmen — can
enter your home, do
their jobs and leave.
Walmart is testing a
similar program that will
allow drivers not just to
deliver, but stash groceries in the refrigerator, if
a customer requests.
A Florida company
is thinking even bigger.
Moon Express recently
revealed a plan to start
regular delivery service
on the moon — as soon
as there’s someone there
to open the door. We
like the company’s big
ambition. The rest of
us here on Earth still
dream of the day we can
get a package delivered
after we get home from
work.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Nov.
21, the 325th day of
2017. There are 40 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On Nov. 21, 1942, the
Alaska Highway, also
known as the Alcan
Highway, was formally
opened at Soldier’s Summit in the Yukon Territory.
On this date
In 1789, North Carolina became the 12th
state to ratify the U.S.
Constitution.
In 1864, President
Abraham Lincoln signed
a letter expressing condolences to Lydia Bixby,
a Boston widow whose
ﬁve sons supposedly died
while ﬁghting in the Civil
War. (As it turned out,
only two of Mrs. Bixby’s
sons had been killed.)
In 1922, Rebecca L.
Felton, a Georgia Democrat, was sworn in as
the ﬁrst woman to serve
in the U.S. Senate; her

term, the result of an
interim appointment,
ended the following day
as Walter F. George, the
winner of a special election, took ofﬁce.
In 1927, picketing
strikers at the Columbine
Mine in northern Colorado were ﬁred on by
state police; six miners
were killed.
In 1934, the Cole Porter musical “Anything
Goes,” starring Ethel
Merman as Reno Sweeney, opened on Broadway.
In 1967, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed
the Air Quality Act.
In 1969, the Senate
voted down the Supreme
Court nomination of
Clement F. Haynsworth,
55-45, the ﬁrst such
rejection since 1930.
In 1973, President
Richard Nixon’s attorney,
J. Fred Buzhardt (buhZAHRDT’), revealed
the existence of an
18-1/2-minute gap in one
of the White House tape

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“You simply cannot hang a millionaire in
America.”
— Bourke Cockran
American politician and orator (1854-1923)

recordings related to
Watergate.
In 1974, bombs exploded at a pair of pubs in
Birmingham, England,
killing 21 people. (Six
suspects were convicted
of the attack, but the convictions of the so-called
“Birmingham Six” were
overturned in 1991.)
In 1980, 87 people
died in a ﬁre at the
MGM Grand Hotel in
Las Vegas, Nevada. An
estimated 83 million TV
viewers tuned in to the
CBS prime-time soap
opera “Dallas” to ﬁnd
out “who shot J.R.” (The
shooter turned out to be
J.R. Ewing’s sister-in-law,
Kristin Shepard.)
In 1985, U.S. Navy
intelligence analyst

Jonathan Jay Pollard was
arrested, accused of spying for Israel. (Pollard
later pleaded guilty to
espionage and was sentenced to life in prison;
he was released on parole
on Nov. 20, 2015.)
In 1992, a three-day
tornado outbreak that
struck 13 states began in
the Houston area before
spreading to the Midwest
and eastern U.S.; 26 people were killed. Sen. Bob
Packwood, R-Ore., issued
an apology but refused
to discuss allegations
that he’d made unwelcome sexual advances
toward ten women over
the years. (Faced with a
threat of expulsion, Packwood ended up resigning
from the Senate in 1995.)

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Tuesday, November 21, 2017 5

Hemlock Grange holds November meeting

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.

canvas. Sara Cullums received
ﬁrst place for quilt background.
In creative writing, Margaret
Parker received second place.
Janice Weber received third
place in deaf report. Members
were reminded to bring donations for the Christmas project
to the December meeting.
Charles and Olivia Yost gave
reports on the state convention
they attended in Columbus.

HEMLOCK GROVE — Hemlock Grange held their November meeting after a meal of
baked steak and potatoes. Kim
Romine thanked everyone for
coming.
Maxine and Opal Dyer were
there to hand out awards from
state convention. Rosalie Johnson won third place in cross
stitch; fourth place in embroidery and participation in plastic

Wednesday, Nov. 22
POMEROY — The Meigs County Commissioners
will hold their regular weekly meeting at 11 a.m.

Charles gave out papers concerning resolutions and budget.
He answered questions from
grangers and gave a good report.
It was noted that the new
plants in front of the grange hall
look very nice. Ham loaf and
macaroni and cheese will be
served prior to the December
meeting.
Information submitted by Barbara Fry.

Monday, Nov. 27

MEIGS BRIEFS

MIDDLEPORT — Snack and Canvas with Michele
Musser will be held at 6 p.m. at the Riverbend Art
Council, 290 North 2nd Avenue, Middleport, Ohio.
For more information and to reserve a space call
Michele at 740-416-0879 or Donna at 740-992-5123

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.

be closed on Thursday and Friday, Nov. 23 and 24.

Parent Teacher conferences

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.

Wednesday, Nov. 29

POMEROY — Meigs High School will be holding
Parent-Teacher Conferences on Thursday, Nov. 30,
from 3-6 p.m. Students will be bringing home a letter with information on the conferences. The school
would like to encourage all parents and/or guardians
to attend that we may keep you informed concerning the progress of your child. You may ﬁll out the
form and return it to the school, call to make an
appointment or walk in if you would like. For more
information please call 740-992-2158.

LEBANON TWP. — The Lebanon Township Trustees will hold their regular monthly meeting at 4 p.m.
at the township garage.

Cancer

cash, goods, or services.
Morris expressed appreciation for many businesses
and organizations from
From page 1
Rutland, Racine, Pomeroy, Middleport, Tuppers
27 riders. The winners
Plains, Baxter, and Point
were as follows: Best
Pleasant who supported
Hand - Amber Tripp;
the event. He is thankful
Worst Hand - Charity
for the help he received
King; Youngest Rider
- Michael DeQuasie; Old- from his wife, Mindy
Morris; brother, Roland
est Rider - Ralph Ross;
Morris; sister-in-law, Lisa
Farthest Rider - Chris
Wellington; and Largest Allen; and sister, Cammy
Conlin to bring the event
Club - Heaven Saints of
together.
Mason County. Prize
Morris is determined
money went to the farto match or exceed the
thest rider for $20, the
proceeds of $3000 he
best hand for $10, and
received this year. Next
the worst hand for $5.
The village of Rutland year’s run is tentatively
set for Sept. 9, 2018.
let Morris utilize the
Civic Center to host the
Erin Perkins is a staff writer for
event. Sponsors of the
Ohio Valley Publishing.
event gave $150 worth of

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

39°

55°

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)

0.00
2.21
2.26
43.13
38.10

Today
7:18 a.m.
5:11 p.m.
9:49 a.m.
7:52 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Wed.
7:19 a.m.
5:10 p.m.
10:37 a.m.
8:41 p.m.

MOON PHASES
Full

First

Nov 26

Dec 3

Last

New

Dec 10 Dec 18

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

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

Major
1:05a
1:58a
2:51a
3:43a
4:33a
5:21a
6:07a

Minor
7:17a
8:10a
9:03a
9:55a
10:45a
11:33a
12:19p

Major
1:29p
2:22p
3:15p
4:07p
4:57p
5:45p
6:31p

Minor
7:41p
8:34p
9:27p
10:18p
11:08p
11:56p
----

WEATHER HISTORY
Heavy rain in Southern California
brought 14 inches of rainfall to
the mountains and 7.96 inches to
downtown Los Angeles on Nov. 21,
1967. All the rain caused severe local
ﬂooding with damaging mudslides.

Partly sunny and
chilly

THURSDAY

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.

0

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Logan
55/29

Lucasville
57/31
Portsmouth
59/33

Plenty of sunshine

AIR QUALITY

44°
27°

Times of clouds and
sun

Cooler with times of
clouds and sun

52
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

Belpre
57/33

Athens
56/31

St. Marys
57/34

Parkersburg
56/35

Coolville
57/32

Elizabeth
58/34

Spencer
59/36

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
12.62
23.30
23.97
12.27
13.31
26.20
12.48
27.12
34.32
12.02
22.00
34.10
21.60

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.51
+4.03
+2.55
-0.15
+0.01
+1.45
-0.20
+1.27
+0.10
-0.62
+5.30
+0.20
+3.20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

Buffalo
60/35

Ironton
59/33

Ashland
59/34
Grayson
60/34

Milton
61/36

St. Albans
62/37

Huntington
59/33

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
55/53
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
70/55
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
87/63
T-storms
Rain
Showers
El Paso
Snow
75/43
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

44°
30°
Partial sunshine

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
56/33

Wilkesville
57/30
POMEROY
Jackson
59/33
58/30
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
59/34
59/32
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
52/28
GALLIPOLIS
60/33
60/34
59/33

South Shore Greenup
60/34
58/32

SUNDAY

57°
38°

Murray City
55/29

McArthur
56/29

Waverly
55/29

SATURDAY

52°
36°

Chilly with more sun
than clouds

Adelphi
55/29
Chillicothe
55/29

FRIDAY

45°
27°

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

0

Q: Does Buffalo or Syracuse, N.Y.,
receive more snow in an average year?

SUN &amp; MOON

WEDNESDAY

A: Syracuse

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

EXTENDED FORECAST

49°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Precipitation

Holiday office closure

Partly sunny and windy today. A couple of
showers this evening. High 60° / Low 33°

HEALTH TODAY

Nominations for assistance

OHIO VALLEY — Each location of The Ohio
Valley Animal Clinic would like to give back to the
community this Christmas by supporting a child
or children of a deserving family in need. “We are
asking our community’s assistance for nominating
this family. This family will be chosen based upon a
combination of sincerity of nomination and level of
need,” stated a news release from the clinic. Nominations are being accepted from now until Dec.
15. All nominations need to be hand delivered in
a sealed envelope or mailed to Ohio Valley Animal
Clinic, 39350 Union Ave., Pomeroy, OH 45769.
POMEROY — Meigs County Health Department Nominations can be submitted anonymously. The
submissions should include the following: Child/
will be closed on Nov. 23: Thanksgiving Day and
Nov. 24. Normal business hours will resume at 8 a.m. Children’s ﬁrst and last name; Address of Family;
Age; Gender; Interests; Clothing size; Reasoning for
on Nov. 27.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Courthouse will being nominated.

45°
25°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

47°
27°
55°
36°
80° in 1931
16° in 1914

MIDDLEPORT — Vendors are still needed for
the Christmas Market on Dec. 2 as part of the
Middleport Christmas Celebration. The annual
Christmas Market is held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
in the Riverbend Arts Council building. Tables
will be provided for your displays. The cost is $20
fee per 8 foot table, $10 for an additional table.
The Middleport Fire Department Auxiliary will
sell concessions. If you are interested or have
questions, please call 740-992-5877 or 740-9921121. Electricity is available upon request. Spaces
are limited so please call as soon as possible.

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Christmas celebration

Clendenin
61/35
Charleston
61/39

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
19/4
Montreal
49/34

Billings
43/37

Minneapolis
31/17
Chicago
45/23

Toronto
49/30
Detroit
48/28

Denver
51/34

New York
57/48

Washington
60/49

Kansas City
49/20

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

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
65/38/s
19/12/pc
62/46/c
60/54/pc
59/45/s
43/37/c
58/47/c
56/47/s
61/39/pc
57/42/pc
49/36/pc
45/23/pc
53/28/pc
51/32/pc
53/29/pc
70/43/pc
51/34/pc
39/19/s
48/28/pc
83/69/pc
76/55/pc
50/25/pc
49/20/pc
75/55/pc
62/34/pc
87/63/pc
58/31/pc
84/68/t
31/17/pc
62/33/pc
72/54/pc
57/48/s
62/30/s
75/62/t
59/48/s
83/59/pc
53/30/s
51/38/s
61/47/c
62/49/pc
55/26/pc
57/42/pc
70/55/pc
55/53/r
60/49/pc

Hi/Lo/W
64/40/s
18/11/s
62/41/pc
58/30/r
53/27/s
61/45/c
63/50/c
53/28/r
44/24/pc
62/34/pc
60/44/pc
35/28/s
41/25/s
37/26/pc
40/25/pc
60/38/s
64/38/pc
40/31/s
37/26/pc
84/71/pc
68/41/pc
39/26/s
43/32/s
79/57/s
52/28/s
94/64/s
44/28/s
84/68/pc
32/26/pc
48/28/s
68/44/pc
53/31/r
53/36/s
77/62/c
54/32/pc
88/62/s
37/22/c
49/23/r
61/32/pc
59/30/s
41/31/s
63/43/c
69/56/pc
63/55/r
54/31/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
Atlanta
62/46

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

81° in Naples, FL
-4° in Gothic, CO

Global
Chihuahua
78/37

High
110° in Marble Bar, Australia
Low -67° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
76/55
Monterrey
84/53

Miami
84/68

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.
OH-70004384

Home National Bank is large enough to handle all of your
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
loan quickly. Please come see us for all your banking needs, we
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promise to make you feel right at home.
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60701680

TODAY

Immunization clinic

�Sports
6 s Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Cardinal Stritch shocks Rio soccer
By Randy Payton

Bapist (TX) - which upended
13th-seeded MidAmerican
Nazarene (Kan.), 2-1, in another of Saturday’s contests - on
RIO GRANDE, Ohio —
Monday, Nov. 27, at 11 a.m., in
Liam Heywood’s third goal
Delray Beach, Fla.
of the game - on a penalty
Rio Grande, the tournament’s
kick with 12:58 left to play No. 4 seed, saw its bid for a
snapped the second tie of the
day and lifted Cardinal Stritch third straight appearance in the
(Wis.) University to a 5-4 upset national championship game
of the University of Rio Grande squashed and ended its season
at 14-2-2.
in the NAIA Men’s Soccer
The rare home loss was
National Championship Opening Round, Saturday afternoon, notable in a number of other
ways for head coach Scott Morat an overcast, wind-blown
rissey’s club.
Evan E. Davis Field.
The RedStorm fell in the
The Wolves, who won for the
ﬁrst time in three national tour- Opening Round for the ﬁrst
nament appearances, improved time since the tournament
adopted its current format in
to 16-3-2 with the victory and
2008 and the setback ended
will advance to the tourney’s
a 47-match unbeaten streak
second round to face Wayland

For Ohio Valley Publishing

Courtesy photo

Cardinal Stritch keeper Pablo Ortiz pulls down the ball amidst a number of players
from both teams in Saturday’s NAIA Men’s Soccer National Championship
Opening Round game against the University of Rio Grande at Evan E. Davis Field.

at home which dated back to
a 2-1 loss at the hands of the
University of Northwestern on
October 30, 2013.
The ﬁve goals allowed by Rio
were the most since the RedStorm surrendered three scores
in a 5-3 triumph over Talladega
College in the semiﬁnal round
of the Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference Tournament on November 14, 2014.
Prior to Saturday’s loss, the
last time an opponent scored
ﬁve goals or more against the
RedStorm was Dec. 4, 2013 - a
5-1 loss to now-defunct Ashford (Iowa) University in the
quarterﬁnal round of the NAIA
National Championship.
See CARDINAL | 7

Buckeyes
blast Illinois
in rout, 52-14
By Jim Naveau
jnaveau@limanews.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Beating Illinois was obviously the ﬁrst thing on Ohio State’s agenda, but
beating the weather was also in the game plan for
the Buckeyes when they dominated the Illini 52-14
on Saturday.
An ominous weather forecast that called for
heavy rain and possibly thunderstorms by halftime
was on coach Urban Meyer’s mind before the game
and factored into how he approached the game
and what he told his team.
“The message in the locker room was to get out
and get out fast, take care of the ball and execute
the game plan,” Ohio State center Billy Price said.
Meyer said he would have broken with his usual
choice and would have gone on offense ﬁrst if
Ohio State had won the coin toss.
“We watched it very closely,” Meyer said about
the weather. “They won the toss and deferred. It
worked out ﬁne anyway.”
The rain took a while to arrive but Ohio State
(9-2, 7-1 Big Ten) rained points on a young, glaringly overmatched Illinois team (2-8, 0-8 Big Ten)
right away.
Ohio State scored the ﬁrst ﬁve times it had the
ball – four touchdowns followed by a ﬁeld goal.
Illinois didn’t get a ﬁrst down until its sixth possession of the game with 3:38 left in the ﬁrst half.
The Buckeyes rolled up 543 yards of total
offense and held Illinois to 105 yards overall.
The only score by Illinois came on an Ohio State
turnover when Ahmari Hayes recovered a fumble
by back-up quarterback Dwayne Haskins and
returned it 53 yards for a touchdown with Ohio
State leading 38-0 early in the second half.
Starting quarterback J.T. Barrett and the ﬁrstteam Ohio State offense had come out of the game
with just under six minutes to play in the ﬁrst half,
but returned after Hayes’ touchdown cut the lead
to 38-7.
“I didn’t want it to turn into a clown show,
which it looked like for a minute,” Meyer said.
Ohio State’s win, combined with Michigan’s
24-10 loss to Wisconsin, clinched the Big Ten East
Division title for OSU and guaranteed the Buckeyes a match-up with the Badgers in the Big Ten
championship game regardless of what happens in
the Ohio State-Michigan game next Saturday.
“We celebrated for a quick minute. Now it’s time
to put our laser lights on our rival,” Meyer said.
The Buckeyes needed nine plays to score their
ﬁrst touchdown, which came on a 4-yard run by
Mike Weber.
See OSU | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Nov. 21
Rio Athletics
Men’s Basketball vs
Shawnee State, 7 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 24
College Football
Ohio at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 25
College Football
Ohio State at Michigan,
noon
Southern Miss at
Marshall, 2:30
West Virginia at
Oklahoma, 3:45

Rio Athletics
Men’s Basketball vs
Reinhardt (Ga.) at
Kingsport, TN, 11 a.m.
Women’s Basketball vs
Washington Adventist
(Md.) at Kingsport, TN, 7
p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 26
Rio Athletics
Men’s Basketball vs
University of MichiganDearborn at Kingsport,
TN, 11 a.m.
Women’s Basketball
vs Georgetown (KY) at
Kingsport, TN, 5 p.m.

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant senior Jacob Bryant (35) kicks in a field goal, during the first half of the Big Blacks’ 49-17 loss in the Class AA quarterfinal
on Saturday in Bluefield, W.Va.

Beavers pull away from Point, 49-17
By Bryan Walters

ries — broke a 78-yard
run just before halftime
for a 21-10 lead, then
BLUEFIELD, W.Va. — tacked on third quarter
scores of 29 and 20 while
To quote a passage from
helping the hosts estabJohn Steinbeck’s epic
lish a 35-10 advantage
novel Of Mice and Men,
headed into the ﬁnale.
“The best-laid plans of
Jason ‘Truck’ Edwards
mice and men often go
added a 61-yard run
awry.”
And these Beavers were just 13 seconds into the
fourth for a 32-point cushmuch bigger, and faster,
ion, then Jamere Edwards
than regular mice.
added a 46-yard scamper
Second-seeded Bluewith 6:06 remaining for
ﬁeld broke away from
the largest lead of the
a 14-10 second quarter
game at 49-10.
edge by reeling off 35
With the clock running
straight points in just
continuously from that
under 20 minutes Saturpoint, the Big Blacks
day afternoon en route
pieced together one ﬁnal
to a 49-17 victory over
scoring drive as Alec
seventh-seeded Point
Smith hauled in a 5-yard
Pleasant in the second
pass from Payne with a
round of the 2017 Class
minute left in regulation,
AA football playoffs at
Mitchell Stadium in Mer- wrapping up the 32-point
outcome.
cer County.
Point Pleasant proThe visiting Big Blacks
duced a respectable 341
(8-3) had some success
yards of total offense and
early on by executing a
actually had more ﬁrst
well-devised game plan
that relied heavily on sus- downs (21-13) overall,
but the Beavers simply
tained offensive drives,
proved to be too much
as well as a swarming
again. BHS also defeated
yet disciplined defense
the visiting Big Blacks
in hopes of containing
42-13 back in Week 7.
Latrell ‘Mookie’ Collier.
In seeing his 11th seaThough the Red and
son as PPHS head coach
Black never led in the
come to an end, Dave
contest, the game plan
Darst was actually pretty
worked well for roughly
upbeat following the
20 minutes as Point
game.
Pleasant found itself in
He was disappointed
the hunt following an
in the outcome and not
8-yard TD pass from
having Payne — who was
Cason Payne to Tucker
dealing with an ankle
Mayes with 4:10 left
injury — at full strength,
before halftime.
but he also felt like his
With the Beavers (12troops couldn’t have done
0) clinging to a slim
much more than what
14-10 cushion at that
they did.
point, Collier found a
“We had a game plan
second gear — and ultimately left Point Pleasant early on to slow things
looking up the rest of the down, eat clock and try
to keep that offense off
way.
the ﬁeld. It worked pretty
Collier — who rushed
well early on, but we had
for 167 yards on 11 car-

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Point Pleasant junior Josh Wamsley runs with the ball after one
of his 15 receptions, during Saturday’s Class AA quarterfinal in
Bluefield, W.Va.

to rely on some other
things because Cason
wasn’t at full strength to
run the ball,” Darst said.
“With that said, that’s a
really good football team
over there at Blueﬁeld. I
thought our kids played
pretty well, but they just
had too many athletes for
us to contain.”
Darst was also left wondering how his program
managed to claim a 45-24
victory over these same
Beavers during Week 7
of the 2016 campaign,
although that game was
at Ohio Valley Bank
Track and Field in Mason
County.
As he noted, they are
night and day from where
they were a little over 13
months ago.
“Give a lot of credit to
Coach (Fred) Simon and
what he’s done with that
group in the year-plus
since they came to Point
Pleasant,” Darst said. “I
cannot ﬁnd a single negative thing to say about
that team and you can tell

that they’ve worked their
hind-ends off over the last
year. It’s going to take a
really good football team
to beat them.”
Blueﬁeld churned out
336 rushing yards on just
26 carries, an average of
12.9 yards per attempt.
The Beavers also forced
the game’s only turnover
— and it came at a very
critical time in the contest.
After Collier’s 29-yard
run gave BHS a 28-10
lead with 7:40 left in the
third, the Big Blacks followed by fumbling the
ensuing kickoff — which
was recovered by Shemar
Hairston.
Collier added a 20-yard
TD run less than a minute and a half later — and
the rout was on at 35-10
with 6:06 remaining.
Both teams started the
game with three-and-out
drives that led to punts,
but the hosts needed
just two plays to cover
See BEAVERS | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

NFL
All Times EDT
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
New England 8 2 0 .800 290 203
Buffalo
5 5 0 .500 208 250
Miami
4 6 0 .400 157 254
N.Y. Jets
4 6 0 .400 201 222
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Jacksonville 7 3 0 .700 245 141
Tennessee
6 4 0 .600 222 253
Houston
4 6 0 .400 267 262
Indianapolis 3 7 0 .300 179 280
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Pittsburgh
8 2 0 .800 227 165
Baltimore
5 5 0 .500 213 171
Cincinnati
4 6 0 .400 169 199
Cleveland
0 10 0 .000 150 259
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Kansas City 6 4 0 .600 262 220
L.A. Chargers 4 6 0 .400 221 196
Oakland
4 6 0 .400 204 247
Denver
3 7 0 .300 183 259
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
Philadelphia 9 1 0 .900 320 188
Dallas
5 5 0 .500 242 242
Washington 4 6 0 .400 238 266
N.Y. Giants
2 8 0 .200 162 247
South
W L T Pct PF PA
New Orleans 8 2 0 .800 302 196
Carolina
7 3 0 .700 213 180
Atlanta
5 4 0 .556 197 179
Tampa Bay
4 6 0 .400 203 228
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Minnesota
8 2 0 .800 241 172
Detroit
6 4 0 .600 271 234
Green Bay
5 5 0 .500 204 230
Chicago
3 7 0 .300 174 221

West
W L T Pct PF PA
L.A. Rams
7 3 0 .700 303 186
Seattle
6 3 0 .667 211 165
Arizona
4 6 0 .400 176 254
San Francisco 1 9 0 .100 174 260
Thursday’s Games
Pittsburgh 40, Tennessee 17
Sunday’s Games
Baltimore 23, Green Bay 0
Detroit 27, Chicago 24
Minnesota 24, L.A. Rams 7
Jacksonville 19, Cleveland 7
Houston 31, Arizona 21
Tampa Bay 30, Miami 20
N.Y. Giants 12, Kansas City 9, OT
New Orleans 34, Washington 31, OT
L.A. Chargers 54, Buffalo 24
Cincinnati 20, Denver 17
New England 33, Oakland 8
Philadelphia 37, Dallas 9
Open: Indianapolis, San Francisco, Carolina, N.Y. Jets
Monday’s Games
Atlanta at Seattle, 8:30 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 23
Minnesota at Detroit, 12:30 p.m.
L.A. Chargers at Dallas, 4:30 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Washington, 8:30 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 26
Tennessee at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.
Carolina at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.
Cleveland at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Atlanta, 1 p.m.
Miami at New England, 1 p.m.
Buffalo at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Chicago at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
Seattle at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
Jacksonville at Arizona, 4:25 p.m.
Denver at Oakland, 4:25 p.m.
New Orleans at L.A. Rams, 4:25 p.m.
Green Bay at Pittsburgh, 8:30 p.m.
Monday, Nov. 27
Houston at Baltimore, 8:30 p.m.

Cardinal

England) with 15:10
remaining in the half to
make it 2-1, but Stritch
got the goal back just 47
seconds later when an
attempt to clear the ball
by Rio senior Danny Carroll (Liverpool, England)
hit Heywood, who recovered to gather in the ball
just outside the 18-yard
box and push a shot past
Rio freshman keeper Luis
Rodriguez (San Jose,
Costa Rica) for another
two-goal cushion.
The RedStorm rallied,
though, tying the game at
3-3 with a pair of markers
inside the ﬁrst 15 minutes of the second half one by Carroll with 37:11
left to play on a header
off a corner kick by Reilly
and the other just over
seven minutes later by
Walcott, who got behind
the Wolves’ defensive
back line and beat Stritch
keeper Pablo Ortiz in a
one-on-one situation.
Gian Pico put the
Wolves back in front
with 19:29 remaining by
tapping in a deﬂection
which resulted from a
mad scramble in front of
the goal following a corner kick, setting up the
two penalty kicks which
closed out the scoring.
Ortiz was credited with
seven saves in the win for
Cardinal Stritch.
Rodriguez recorded one
save in a losing cause for
Rio Grande.
Saturday’s loss was
the last match in a Rio
uniform for a quartet of
seniors - Carroll, Jorge
Guinovart (Barcelona,
Spain), Matheus Morgan
(Vila Velha, Brazil) and
Isaiah Chapman (Cincinnati, OH).

From page 6

Heywood secured
his hat trick - and what
proved to be the game
winner marker - just 21
seconds after Rio Grande
sophomore Deri Corfe
(Chester, England) knotted the score at 4-4 with a
penalty kick of his own.
The RedStorm had just
one solid scoring chance
after the Heywood PK,
but a header by Corfe
following a corner kick
by junior Harry Reilly
(Coventry, England) with
9:04 remaining hit off
the crossbar and a subsequent follow by junior
Omar Walcott (Kingston,
Jamaica) sailed over the
goal.
Rio Grande, which
played without the services of junior Eduardo Zurita (Sant Boi de Llobregat,
Spain), who suffered a
season-ending knee injury
against WVU-Tech in the
semiﬁnal round of the
RSC Tournament, fell
despite enjoying a staggering 32-11 advantage
in overall shots - 12-6
in shots on goal - and a
19-3 edge in corner kick
chances.
Stritch took advantage
of its corner opportunities, though, turning each
of their ﬁrst two tries into
goals.
Heywood headed in a
ball struck by teammate
Scott Evans just 9:07
into the match and Teren
Schuster did the same
just over seven minutes
later for a quick 2-0
Wolves’ lead.
Rio got on the scoreboard when Corfe headed
in a cross from the right
wing by freshman Samuel
Pedersen (Aldershot,

OSU

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

that made it 38-0 with
seven minutes left in the
ﬁrst half.
Ohio State’s starters
From page 6
didn’t score immediately
After that, they needed after they returned in the
second half. But when
only six plays, three
plays, two plays to score Illinois fumbled a punt,
it took only ﬁve plays for
their next three TDs.
Barrett ran for a three- Ohio State to score again,
on a 12-yard pass from
yard touchdown to raise
Barrett to Marcus Baugh,
Ohio State’s lead to
for a 45-7 lead with 7:58
14-0. Mike Weber had a
left in the third quarter.
43-yard run to make it
Haskins bounced back
21-0 and Barrett connectfrom the earlier fumble
ed with Binjimen Victor
for an 11-yard touchdown to throw a 22-yard touchpass to put OSU in front down pass to Victor with
11:41 left in the fourth
28-0 after one quarter.
quarter to push the lead
Barrett’s touchdown
to 52-7 before Illinois
pass was the 100th of
his career. He is the only got a touchdown against
Big Ten quarterback ever the second team defense
later in the fourth quarto throw for 100 TDs.
ter.
He was 11 of 19 for 141
Illinois coach Lovie
yards and two touchSmith said, “They are a
downs. Weber led Ohio
fantastic football team
State’s rushing attack
in all three areas. They
with 108 yards.
were better than us up
After a 33-yard ﬁeld
front. They dominated
goal by Sean Nuernus on both sides of the
berger, J.K. Dobbins ran
one yard for a touchdown football.”

Tuesday, November 21, 2017 7

Rio women win Bevo title
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE,
Ohio — Jasmine Smith
poured in a career-high
24 points, while teammates Abby Wendel
and Alexis Payne also
reached double ﬁgures
to lead the University of
Rio Grande in an 84-72
win over Wilberforce
University in the Women’s Division championship game of the Bevo
Francis Invitational
Tournament, Saturday
afternoon, at the Newt
Oliver Arena.
Rio Grande improved
to 6-1 with the victory.
Wilberforce slipped to
5-3 with the loss.
Smith, a junior from
Canal Winchester, Ohio,
connected on 11 of her
13 ﬁeld goal attempts
en route to surpassing
her previous career-best
mark of 18 points, which
she’d reached twice
before - most recently
against Asbury University on Jan. 24 of this
year.
Smith also ﬁnished
with eight rebounds.
Wendel, a sophomore
from Portland, Ind.,
rebounded from a scoreless outing in Friday
night’s win over Ohio
University-Lancaster
with 18 points, while
Payne - a senior from
Deep Water, W.Va. scored 17 points and
pulled down a game-high
12 rebounds.
The game was a seesaw affair throughout
the opening quarter and
the better part of the second stanza, with eight
ties and a pair of lead
changes. Wilberforce
enjoyed its biggest lead
of the day during the
stretch, taking an 18-14
lead after a Jamee Denman three-pointer with
7:42 left before the intermission.
Rio forged the game’s
ﬁnal tie with 4:18 left
in the ﬁrst half when a
three-pointer by freshman Chyna Chambers
knotted the score at
25-25 and took the lead
for good just 22 seconds

Beaver
From page 6

58 yards on their second drive as Chandler
Cooper found Derrick
Blevins on a 42-yard
TD pass, making it a
7-0 contest with 7:41
remaining in the ﬁrst.
The Big Blacks
answered with their
most-impressive drive
of the game — and perhaps the season — after
marching 70 yards in
19 plays, but the guests
mustered only a 26-yard
ﬁeld goal by Jacob Bryant for a 7-3 deﬁcit with
just ﬁve seconds left in
the opening stanza.
Both teams traded
punts again on their
ensuing drives, but Blueﬁeld churned together a
5-play, 46-yard drive that
ended with a 22-yard
TD pass from Cooper to
Javon Davis — making
it a 14-3 contest with
6:12 left in the half.
Point Pleasant
answered the bell with a
7-play, 68-yard drive that
ended with an 8-yard
pass from Payne to
Mayes, cutting the deﬁcit down to four points
(14-10).
After converting a
critical third-down
play deep in their own
territory, the Beavers
handed the ball to Collier on ﬁrst down — and
the junior made a juke,
delivered a stiff arm and
broke away from crowd

Courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Jasmine Smith scores two of her career-high 24 points in Saturday’s 84-72 win over
Wilberforce University in the women’s bracket championship game of the Bevo Francis Invitational
Tournament at the Newt Oliver Arena.

later on a jumper by
Wendel.
After trailing by six
points after halftime,
the Bulldogs pulled to
within two points, 38-36,
following a steal and a
layup by Brittany Wells
with 8:23 remaining in
the third period, but got
no closer the rest of the
way.
The RedStorm
stretched their lead to
nine points by the close
of the third quarter and
to as many as 14 points
in the closing seconds
before settling on a

12-point margin of victory.
Rio Grande shot 54.5
percent from the ﬁeld
(18-for-33) in the second
half and 48.5 percent for
the game (33-for-68),
while also outrebounding its guests, 46-34.
Freshman Nia McCormick (Cincinnati, OH)
added a game-high six
assists to the winning
effort for the RedStorm,
while sophomore Sydney
Holden (Wheelersburg,
OH) had four steals.
Wilberforce got a
game-high 29 points and

four steals from Wells,
while Alexandra Shealey
netted 18 points, Denman ﬁnished with 10
and Tivia Hylton equaled
Payne’s game-best total
of 12 rebounds.
Rio Grande returns
to action next Saturday
against Washington
Adventist (Md.) in the
opening round of the
NAIA DII Showcase in
Kingsport, Tenn. Tipoff
is set for 7 p.m.

for a 78-yard scamper.
His ﬁrst of three scores
gave Blueﬁeld both
momentum and a 35-10
cushion headed into the
break.
The Beavers owned
a 215-151 advantage in
total yards at the break,
but Point Pleasant held
a 9-6 advantage in ﬁrst
downs.
Overall, the Big Blacks
produced 137 rushing
yards on 35 attempts for
an average of 3.9 yards
per carry. Justin Brumﬁeld led the way with
134 yards on 25 carries,
while Logan Southall
chipped in 26 yards on
three totes.
Payne — who ran for
minus-23 yards on seven
tries — completed 27-of35 passes for 204 yards,
including two TD passes
and zero interceptions.
Josh Wamsley set a
PPHS record with 16
receptions, which led to
102 yards. Smith was
next with seven catches
for 69 yards and a score,
while Mayes hauled in
three passes for 27 yards
and a score.
Ryan Oliver also had
one catch for six yards
in the setback.
The Beavers — who
will host Bridgeport
sometime next week in
the state semiﬁnals —
produced 450 yards of
total offense, with 114
of those coming through
the air.
Truck Edwards followed Collier with 11
carries for 102 yards and

a score, while Jamere
Edwards had two carries for 62 yards. Arnold
Martin and Cooper
each ran the ball once
for three yards and two
yards, respectively.
Cooper completed
4-of-5 passes for 114
yards and two scores.
Blevins led the wideouts
with two catches for 54
yards, while Davis and
Drake Mullins had a
catch apiece for 22 and
38 yards, respectively.
The Big Blacks punted
ﬁve times for an average
of 33 yards and were
also ﬂagged twice for
10 yards. BHS had three
penalties for 25 yards
and also punted three
times for an average of
48 yards.
The loss marked the
seventh straight postseason in which the
team that defeated Point
Pleasant advanced to the
state semiﬁnal round.
Wheeling Park (2015)
and Wayne (2011) are
the only previous teams
to ever reach the state
ﬁnal — and both ended
up winning Class AAA
and Class AA crowns
in those respective seasons.
Saturday marked the
ﬁnal football game for
seniors Ryan Oliver,
Aaron Turner, Justin
Brumﬁeld, Jacob Bryant,
Keshawn Stover, Alec
Smith, Tucker Mayes,
Cameron Nott, Andrew
Flowers, Wyatt Pearson,
Jason Chapman, Jesse
Gleason, Tre Craddock,

Alex Gibbs, Brian Gillespie and Clayton Hill
in the Red and Black.
Darst wants those 16
upperclassmen to know
how proud is he is of
what they managed to
accomplish this year.
He also wants the
returnees to realize how
much work they have to
put in between now and
next August to hopefully
get the Big Blacks back
to this spot.
“I’m proud of our kids
and what we’ve accomplished this year. I mean,
we’ve lost twice to the
number two team and
once on a Hail Mary to
the number one team.
Both are unbeaten,
so it’s kind of hard to
be disappointed in
losses like that,” Darst
said. “We’ve got some
really good seniors
on this team and I’m
really proud of how they
stepped it up this year
to get us back to where
we are. These kids have
seen a lot of playoff
games and have a lot
of fun memories to be
proud of.
Those guys will deﬁnitely be missed, but I
am excited about what
we have coming back.
We have more work
to do to get ready for
another run.”
Ohio Valley Publishing sports writer Alex
Hawley contributed to
this report.

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

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

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Bulldogs rally, bounce RedStorm men
By Randy Payton

18:29 remaining in the
contest, but that’s when
the Bulldogs began their
comeback.
Wilberforce scored 17
of the game’s next 19
points in a span of just
over six minutes and
grabbed a 59-57 lead on
a Malik Breckenbridge
three-pointer with 12:22
left to play.
The Bulldogs extended
the run to 24-4 and
grabbed their largest
lead of the game, 66-59,
on a bucket by Austin
Daniels with 10:19 left
to play - the ﬁrst of three
occasions that the visitors would lead by seven
points.
Rio Grande mounted a
rally of its own, though,

which outgunned Indiana
University Northwest,
100-88, in Friday’s other
semiﬁnal.
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
Rio Grande, which
— Arthur Haggard
dropped to 0-5 with the
scored 17 of his gameloss, will face the Redhigh 19 points in the
Hawks in the consolation
second half, leading Wilberforce University from game on Saturday at 5
p.m.
a 13-point second half
The RedStorm looked
deﬁcit to an 86-82 win
over the University of Rio primed to record their
ﬁrst win of the year in
Grande in the opening
their home opener, using
round of the Bevo Frana 12-2 run over the ﬁnal
cis Tournament, Friday
night, at the Newt Oliver 1:54 of the ﬁrst half to
take a 50-40 lead at the
Arena.
The Bulldogs snapped a intermission.
The advantage grew
seven-game losing streak
to as many as 13 points,
with the win, improving
after sophomore Stanley
to 2-7 and advancing to
Christian (Norfolk, VA)
Saturday’s 1 p.m. chamhit one of two free throws
pionship game against
Mount Vernon Nazarene, to make it 55-42 with

For Ohio Valley Publishing

after the last of those
seven-point deﬁcits with
a 10-2 run capped by
consecutive buckets by
senior Kenny Council
(Jacksonville, FL) which
produced a 75-74 lead
with 3:24 remaining.
Haggard answered with
consecutive baskets of his
own on each of the next
two Wilberforce possessions and the Bulldogs
never trailed again.
Christian hit a pair of
free throws with 1:49 left
to put Rio within one,
78-77, but they got no
closer the rest of the way.
Haggard scored 11
of Wilberforce’s ﬁnal
12 points, including a
pair of free throws with
six-tenths of a second

remaining, to seal the
win.
Daniels added 15
points to the winning
effort for the Bulldogs,
while Torien Moore and
Breckenbridge ﬁnished
with 12 and 10 points,
respectively.
Wilberforce shot 58.9
percent from the ﬁeld
(33-for-56) for the game,
including a sizzling
18-for-25 (72 percent) in
the second half.
Rio shot a respectable
45.5 percent for the game
(30-for-66) and enjoyed
a whopping 40-27 edge
in rebounding in a seesaw affair that featured
14 ties and as many lead
changes.
Christian had a game-

best 19 points and nine
rebounds in the loss for
the RedStorm, while
junior Abe Eze (Lagos,
Nigeria) netted a seasonhigh 16 points and freshman Trey Kelley (Minford, OH) ﬁnished with a
career-high 14 points.
Senior Will Hill
(Worthington, OH)
and Council ﬁnished
with 12 and 10 points,
respectively, in a losing
cause for Rio. Hill also
had eight rebounds and
a game-high four steals,
while fellow senior Devon
Price (Pickerington, OH)
handed out a game-high
six assists.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Jags fend off Browns, 19-7 Dalton’s 3 touchdowns lead
Bengals past Broncos, 20-17
CLEVELAND (AP)
— With a smack-talking, quarterback-sacking
defense, Jacksonville is
all alone atop the AFC
South.
The Jaguars intend to
stay there.
Blake Bortles threw
a touchdown pass ,
linebacker Telvin Smith
recovered a fumble for
a TD with 1:14 remaining on Sunday and the
surprising Jaguars won
their fourth straight,
19-7 over the winless
Browns to move into
sole possession of ﬁrst
place in their division.
Jacksonville’s topranked “Sacksonville”
defense forced ﬁve turnovers, including two in
the ﬁnal two minutes
when the Browns were
still within six points.
“We’ve got some good
players on that side of
the ball,” Jaguars coach
Doug Marrone said of a
defense that has recorded 40 sacks and allowed
a league-low 141 points.
“There’s not really a
lot you can do, trying
to win the game on the
other side. It’s hard to
sit back there. I see it in
practice.
“You’ve got those cats
coming at you and those
guys covering. They did
a nice job.”
The Jaguars (7-3)
built a 10-0 lead and
turned things over to a
defense gaining conﬁdence and developing a
nasty reputation. They
intercepted Browns
rookie quarterback
DeShone Kizer twice,
recorded ﬁve sacks and
blanked the Browns
(0-10) in the second
half.
Cleveland’s last hopes
ended when Yannick
Ngakoue swarmed

David Richard | AP

Cleveland Browns quarterback DeShone Kizer (7) is sacked in
the second half of an NFL football game against the Jacksonville
Jaguars Sunday in Cleveland.

Kizer and knocked the
ball into the end zone,
where Smith recovered
. Earlier, Ngakoue and
Calais Campbell combined to sack Kizer,
who fumbled as he fell
and it was recovered
near mid-ﬁeld by Dante
Fowler with 1:48 left.
With the win, Jacksonville is leading its
division after 10 games
for the ﬁrst time since
1999, when the Jags
were atop the AFC Central at 9-1.
It’s a stunning turnaround for a team that
went 3-13 last year and
wasn’t expected to do
much.
Josh Lambo kicked
a pair of ﬁeld goals for
the Jaguars, who have
held six opponents to
seven points or less.
On a blustery, rainy
and snowy afternoon
along Lake Erie, the
warm-weather Jaguars
were unable to move
the ball with much success. But their defense
came through again
with another impressive performance,
and backed up safety
Tashaun Gipson’s prediction that Jacksonville
would keep the Browns

winless.
Earlier in the week,
Gipson, a former Pro
Bowler in Cleveland,
ripped the Browns’
front ofﬁce and said his
former team will “probably go 0-16.” He also
predicted a shutout.
While his forecast
was slightly off, the
Jaguars extended their
longest winning streak
since 2007 and continued their climb.
“I would have had
to play quarterback if
I had to for us to get a
win,” Gipson said. “I
knew we couldn’t leave
out of here without a
win, but they deﬁnitely
kind of got me nervous
a little bit at about the
ﬁve-minute mark. Blood
started rising a little
bit like, ‘Man I can’t
leave Cleveland with a
loss, man.’ I’m going to
have to delete my social
media.”
The Browns fell to
1-25 under coach Hue
Jackson and are 4-43
since Nov. 30, 2014
— the worst 47-game
stretch in NFL history.

DENVER (AP) —
Andy Dalton and the
Cincinnati Bengals only
made things tougher on
the Denver Broncos 48
hours after their boss
labeled them as soft.
Dalton’s three touchdown throws and a
defense that contributed
two takeaways helped the
Bengals beat the Broncos
20-17 Sunday for their
ﬁrst win in Denver since
1975, when franchise
founder Paul Brown was
their head coach.
“I didn’t know that
stat,” Dalton said. “It
feels good anytime you
can win. It’s tough to win
on the road. For us, this
is big.”
Bengals coach Marvin
Lewis conveniently left
out the fact that the Bengals had lost 10 in a row
at Denver in prepping his
team for this game.
“These guys weren’t
even alive in ‘75, were
they?” Lewis said.
That year, Brown’s
Bengals prevailed 17-16
at the old Mile High
Stadium, which is now a
parking lot.
“No, I don’t remember
that,” cracked A.J. Green,
who wasn’t born until
1988. “I don’t keep up
with history a lot.”
Denver’s dive is certainly reaching historic
proportions.
Not only did the Broncos see their 10-game
home winning streak
against Cincinnati (4-6)
snapped, but they lost
their sixth straight game,
their longest skid since
1990.

“This isn’t the culture
here,” lamented quarterback Brock Osweiler,
who just two years ago
helped as the Broncos
won Super Bowl 50. “The
standard here is to win
championships, get to the
playoffs every year and
contend for Super Bowls,
and right now we’re not
playing football like that.
So, it’s very frustrating.”
The Broncos (3-7) have
been outscored by 100
points during their skid
that led general manager
John Elway to suggest
over the weekend that
“we got a little bit soft”
after a 3-1 start that
followed a perfect preseason.
“I was initially offended, but in some aspects
he’s right,” said Broncos rookie coach Vance
Joseph, who also received
a vote of conﬁdence from
Elway, who suggested
it was up to the players,
not the coaching staff,
to pull Denver out of its
doldrums.
Players’ reactions to
Elway’s insult ranged
from anger to acceptance.
“None of us are soft,”
fumed Brandon Marshall.
“He was telling the
truth,” allowed Von
Miller.
Trailing by a ﬁeld goal,
the Broncos got the ball
back with 1:52 left on
their 20-yard line, and on
fourth-and-4 Osweiler’s
low throw to Emmanuel
Sanders was broken
up by Dre Kirkpatrick,
whose big play in the
ﬁrst half set the tone for

Cincinnati’s historic win.
Kirkpatrick’s interception return nearly
covered 102 yards. But
he fumbled the ball at
the Denver 15-yard line
before smothering it at
the 1.
“I’ve got to punch that
in,” lamented Kirkpatrick.
Dalton had his back,
connecting with Tyler
Kroft for the score three
plays later.
Because his ﬁrst completion had lost a yard,
Dalton had this oddball
stat line: zero passing
yards but one TD throw.
Dalton only ended up
throwing for 154 yards
while completing 15 of
25 passes, but he had a
29-yard TD toss to Alex
Erickson for a 13-7 halftime lead, and an 18-yarder to Green, which made
it 20-10 with just under
nine minutes remaining.
Demaryius Thomas’
17-yard touchdown catch
pulled the Broncos within
20-17 with ﬁve minutes
left.
But cornerback Bradley Roby, burned for the
last two touchdowns,
committed a crucial pass
interference call on a
third-down incompletion
to Green which allowed
the Bengals to burn off
more time.
“We’re still in it,” Bengals receiver Brandon
LaFell said. “You look
around the league, there’s
a lot of teams 4-6, 5-5.
So, we’re right in the
thick of things.”
And the Broncos are
still stuck in reverse.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Wahama alumni
basketball game
MASON, W.Va. — The Wahama girls basketball program will be sponsoring an Alumni Basketball Game
on Saturday, Nov. 25, at the high school gymnasium.
All former White Falcon players — male or female
— are encouraged to participate in the event, but
there is a $10 fee per player.
The games will begin at 7 p.m., with registration for
the event opening up at 6 p.m.
Contact WHS girls basketball coach John Arnott at
304-674-5956 for more information.

Meigs youth
holiday tournament
RUTLAND, Ohio — The Pomeroy and Middleport
youth leagues will be holding there annual holiday
youth basketball tournament at the Rutland Civic
Center from Dec. 19-23 and will then resume Dec.
26-30.
The tournament will be separated by divisions for
both boys and girls in grades 4-6. For more information, call Ken at 740-416-8901 or Dave at 740-5900438.

EMPLOYMENT

Apartments/Townhouses

Help Wanted General

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REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
Apartments/Townhouses
$600 FREE RENT
Ellm View Apts.
Rent: $425 &amp; Up
Includes: AC, W/D hook up
&amp; much more.
Landlords pays Water,
Trash, Sewage
304-88-3017
Equal Housing Opportunity

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ANIMALS

Pets
German Shepherd Puppies
AKC,ready now for Christmas
large breed $500, both parents
on site. Call Heritage Farms
304-674-1866 or 304-675-5724
leave message.

The Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of Forestry, 345 Allen Avenue, Chillicothe, OH, 45601 offers for sale
an estimated 52,400 board feet International 1/4" rule of hardwood sawtimber, 112 tons of hardwood pulpwood, 61 tons of
softwood sawtimber, and 20 tons of softwood pulpwood on 27
acres in compartment A-12 of Shade River State Forest, Olive
Township, Meigs County, Ohio. The bid opening shall be December 14, 2017 at 3:00 pm in Chillicothe. For further information and timber inspection. contact the Hocking State Forest
office; 19275 SR 374; Rockbridge, OH; (740) 385~4402 OR
ODNR Division of Forestry. Southern District headquarters; 345
Allen Ave.; Chillicothe, OH 45601; (740) 774-1596 ext. 111.
11/21/17,11/28/17

NOW HIRING
The Village of Pomeroy is currently accepting
applications for a full-time position in the
water/wastewater department. Must be able
to work weekends and overtime, work outside
in inclement weather, possess a valid driver’s
license, have a high school diploma or GED
and pass a drug screen. Full beneﬁt package
included. Applications and resume may be
submitted at Pomeroy Village Hall, 660 E.
Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
OH-70015277

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, November 21, 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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Hank Ketcham’s

Having A Yard Sale?
Call your classified department
to schedule your ad today!

�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Rio men notch 1st win
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— Finally, the monkey
that had afﬁxed itself to
the back of the University of Rio Grande men’s
basketball team decided
to take up residence elsewhere.
The RedStorm built
an 18-point second half
lead and then held off
a late rally by Indiana
University Northwest to
post a 91-84 win over the
Redhawks in the men’s
bracket consolation game
of the Bevo Francis Invitational Tournament, Saturday night, at the Newt
Oliver Arena.
The win was the ﬁrst
of the season for Rio,
which began the 2017-18
campaign with ﬁve consecutive losses, including
a four-point setback at
the hands of Wilberforce
University in Friday’s
opening round after the
RedStorm failed to hang
on to a 13-point second
half advantage.
IU Northwest, an
NAIA Division II independent located in Gary,
Indiana, slipped to 2-6
with the loss in the ﬁrst
all-time meeting between
the two schools.
Rio Grande led from
start to ﬁnish, although
its seven-point halftime
lead ballooned to 18
points with just under
13 minutes left before
shrinking to just ﬁve
points on ﬁve different
occasions inside the ﬁnal
4-1/2 minutes.
The last of the ﬁvepoint margins came with
38.2 seconds left when
a bucket by Northwest’s
Chris Dixon-Williams got
the RedHawks within
89-84, but the RedStorm
sealed the win just 12
seconds later on a pair of

Courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Abe Eze (34) and Kenny Council (0) attempt to block
the shot of Indiana University Northwest’s Ronald Alexander
during the first half of Saturday’s men’s consolation game in the
Bevo Francis Tournament at the Newt Oliver Arena.

free throws by senior Will
Hill (Worthington, OH).
Hill ﬁnished with a
game-high 34 points - one
short of his career-high
- including an 18-for-18
performance at the free
throw line. He’s now
59-for-60 at the charity
stripe this season and
leads NAIA Division II
with a 98.3 free throw
percentage.
Hill, who also had a
team-high four assists in
the win, is now 19 points
shy of the 1,000-point
mark for his career.
Three other RedStorm
players reached double
ﬁgures in the victory.
Senior Kenny Council
(Jacksonville, FL) and
junior Abe Eze (Lagos,
Nigeria) both netted a
season-high 16 points
and senior Devon Price
(Pickerington, OH)
added a season-best
13 points. Council also
yanked down a careerand game-high 11
rebounds.
Rio Grande survived a
season-high 25 turnovers

by shooting 49.1 percent (28-for-57) for the
game, including a 55.6
percent mark (15-for-27)
in the second half. The
RedStorm also outscored
the RedHawks by nine
points at the free throw
line, going 30-for-41 as a
team, and ﬁnished with a
whopping 50-31 edge in
rebounding.
Dixon-Williams, who
had a career-high 33
points in IU Northwest’s
loss to Mount Vernon
Nazarene on Friday, had
31 points - and a gamehigh seven steals - in a
losing cause against the
RedStorm.
Rashad Richardson
added 19 points and a
team-best three assists
for the RedHawks, while
Chris Bolden and Jovan
Jackson tossed in 11
points apiece. Bolden
also had nine rebounds.
Rio Grande returns to
action on Tuesday night
when rival Shawnee
State University visits
for a non-conference tilt.
Tipoff is set for 7 p.m.

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Daily Sentinel

Truex Jr. caps career
season with 1st title
HOMESTEAD, Fla.
(AP) — NASCAR’s
newest champion
wouldn’t take his helmet off.
He couldn’t.
If he did, then everyone would see Martin
Truex Jr. cry.
Truex capped the
most successful season of his journeyman
career as NASCAR’s
champion Sunday, then
struggled to start the
celebration. He was
mobbed on the frontstretch by his Furniture
Row Racing team, and
after his girlfriend
pushed through the
crowd to get to him, he
finally pulled the helmet and black visor off
to show his face.
Truex was sobbing.
“I was a mess. I
couldn’t even talk,”
Truex said. “I was a
wreck thinking about
all the tough days, the
bad days, the times
where I thought my
career was over with,
the times when I didn’t
think anyone believed
in me, but the guys, the
people who mattered
did, my fans, my family.
“Then when I got
with this team … they
resurrected my career
and made me a champion.”
Truex won his first
Cup title by winning
the finale, beating Kyle
Busch, Kevin Harvick
and Brad Keselowski
for the championship.
The other three were
former champions.
Truex was the favorite .
He thrived in that
role, didn’t flinch when
fellow Toyota driver
Busch tried to use a
different pit strategy to
steal the race and then
held off a hard-charging
Busch over the final
12 laps to capture the
title.
It was the eighth win
of the season for Truex
and first championship
for Denver-based Furniture Row Racing. It
was the second title in
three years for manufacturer Toyota.
“Just a dream season.
I was going to be gutted if we didn’t win,”
Truex said. “We gave
it our all, and it was
enough tonight.”
Busch finished second for Joe Gibbs Racing as Toyota, the most
dominant manufacturer
this season, went 1-2 in
the finale.
Kyle Larson, who
was eliminated from
the playoffs last month,
finished third in a

Terry Renna | AP

Crew members for Martin Truex Jr. work on his car after he
scraped the wall during practice for a NASCAR Cup Series auto
race at Homestead-Miami Speedway in Homestead, Fla., on
Saturday.

Chevrolet for Chip
Ganassi Racing. Harvick, seeking his second title, was fourth in
a Stewart-Haas Racing
Ford.
Keselowski wound
up seventh and was
stopped short in trying
to give Team Penske
a season sweep of the
two top American racing series. Penske won
the IndyCar title in
September.
Truex’s victory also
denied Ford its third
win of the weekend.
Ford drivers won the
Truck Series race and
the Xfinity Series race.
The manufacturer has
not won a Cup title
since 2004.
But it may not have
even had a chance
Sunday because that’s
how strong Truex has
been all year . Through
his tears, he tried
to express what this
season — a year in
which longtime partner
Sherry Pollex suffered
a recurrence of ovarian
cancer — has meant.
“A lot of it was for
(Pollex). A lot of it was
for me. A lot of it was
for this team,” Truex
said. “I’ve wanted this
since I was a little kid.
Just never give up on
your dreams no matter
what happens and what
kind of crap you go
through.”
Missing from the celebration party was Furniture Row team owner
Barney Visser. He
suffered a heart attack
two weeks ago and is
sidelined in Colorado.
After pouring millions
into his race team,
Visser watched it win
its first championship
on television.
Truex led nearly
every statistical category this year, including
wins, laps led and stage
victories. Heading
into Homestead, six of
Truex’s wins came on
1 1/2-mile tracks, the

same layout as Homestead. Now seven of
his career-best eight
wins are on those sized
tracks.
It was the final race
as full-time drivers for
Dale Earnhardt Jr., the
most popular in NASCAR , as well as Danica
Patrick and Matt Kenseth. Earnhardt retired
after his 25th-place
finish.
Patrick blew a tire
and wrecked , finishing
37th. The only woman
to lead laps in the Daytona 500 and the Indianapolis 500, Patrick
said in a tearful news
conference this weekend that she would
race only in those two
events next season and
then retire.
Kenseth, who finished 15th, has no ride
lined up for next year
and said he will take
time away from NASCAR.
Earnhardt’s final ride
slightly overshadowed
the championship race,
but he tried to put the
focus back on good
friend Truex afterward.
He drove up alongside
Truex, hit his car in
celebration and talked
after the race about his
happiness for Truex.
Truex won two Xfinity
Series championships
driving for Earnhardt
early in his career.
“I was glad to have
a hand in getting his
career started, I am
so proud of him,”
Earnhardt said. “This
sport needs drivers
like Martin Truex Jr.,
and everything that
he went through as a
driver, and everything
he went through in
his personal life, and
everything Sherry has
gone through, it’s just
great. And they (Furniture Row) are the
outsiders up there in
Colorado, came down
here and beat all of us
from North Carolina.”

Rio women clobber Cougars
By Randy Payton

OU-Lancaster
dropped to 2-3 with the
loss.
The Cougars trailed
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— It might have been a just 16-11 after a jumper in the lane by Renee
slow start for the UniMason with 8:00 left in
versity of Rio Grande
the ﬁrst half, but Rio
women’s basketball
reeled off 16 straight
team, but it certainly
points and 21 of the
wasn’t a slow ﬁnish.
The RedStorm closed ﬁnal 23 points in the
half to take a 37-13 lead
the ﬁrst half on a 21-2
at the intermission.
run to blow open a
The RedStorm conclose game and fuel
tinued to add to their
an 81-34 rout of Ohio
University-Lancaster in lead over the ﬁnal two
periods, pushing the
the opening round of
the Bevo Francis Invita- advantage to 44 points
tional Tournament, Fri- by the end of the third
quarter and to as many
day night, at the Newt
as 49 points, 78-29,
Oliver Arena.
Rio Grande improved after a three-pointer by
to 5-1 with the win and junior Megan Liedtke
(Beverly, OH) with 2:35
advances to Saturday’s
left in the game.
championship game
Liedtke’s trifecta was
against Wilberforce University, which defeated one of a season-high 12
Blueﬁeld State College, three-pointers for Rio
78-57, in Friday’s other Grande, which shot 57
percent from the ﬁeld
semiﬁnal contest.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

overall (16-for-28) in
the second half.
OU-Lancaster shot
just 24.4 percent from
the ﬁeld overall (11-for45), while going 4-for20 from three-point
range and committing
26 turnovers.
The Cougars were
also out rebounded
47-22.
Sophomore Sydney
Holden (Wheelersburg,
OH) led 11 different
Rio scorers with a
game-high 19 points
and nine rebounds,
while senior Alexis
Payne (Deep Water,
WV) had 16 points and
junior Jasmine Smith
(Canal Winchester, OH)
ﬁnished with 11 points.
Arjanna Knul led
OU-L in a losing cause
with 10 points.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

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