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                  <text>Holding
Wells Fargo
accountable

Partly
sunny
H-77, L-53

Lady Eagles
sweep
Miller

EDITORIAL s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 163, Volume 70

Wednesday, October 12, 2016 s 50¢

Training and preparing for the unknown
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

Meigs County sheriff’s deputies search a building for break-in suspects during a training
exercise on Monday afternoon.

POMEROY — Ofﬁcers
train to be prepared in any
situation, although the
hope is that they will never
need that training.
Each month, deputies
with the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce complete
a training on a different
aspect of their job, whether
at the shooting range, in a
meeting room or — as was
the case on Monday — a
former car dealership.
Monday’s training was
also different as it included

other agencies, who given a
particular situation, may be
called to help alongside the
sheriff’s deputies.
Deputies, ofﬁcers from
the Pomeroy Police Department, Meigs County EMS
personnel and ﬁreﬁghters,
spent Monday afternoon
at the former Mark Porter
building in Pomeroy working through different scenarios in which the ofﬁcers
may encounter.
Chief Deputy Charlie
Mansﬁeld, who has spent
more than 30 years training ofﬁcers, explained that
the training is not only

important to know what
to do in a particular situation, but to help the ofﬁcers
to remain calm with their
heart rate down in the
situations. He said that as
the heart rate goes up, a
gun shot would become
less accurate, meaning an
active shooter who has
thought out the plan and
may be calm could be a
more accurate shot than
the ofﬁcers. By training for
the situation, it can help
the heart rate to stay down
and therefore make the shot
more accurate.
See TRAINING | 5

Early voting Safety first!
begins today
What’s on the November ballot?
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — As early and absentee voting
kicks off today, here is a look at what is on the
November general election ballot for Meigs County voters.
There are no contested in county races for local
ofﬁce holders. Candidates Randy Smith (commissioner), Michael Bartrum (commissioner), James
K. Stanley (prosecutor), Sammi Sisson Mugrage
(clerk of courts), Keith O. Wood (sheriff), Kay Hill
(recorder), Peggy Yost (treasurer) and Eugene
Triplett (engineer) are all running unopposed.
There is no candidate for coroner.
That being said, there is still plenty for voters
to decide on both at the local, state and national
level.
Meigs County voters will select between candidates Jay Edwards (R) and Sarah Grace (D) for
the 94th District House of Representatives.
For state senator in the 30th district candidates
are Frank Hoagland (R) and Lou Gentile (D). Bill
Johnson (R) and Michael Lorentz (D) are competing in the U.S. Representative 6th District race.
Statewide, voters will elect one person for United States Senator. Candidates are Rob Portman
(R) and Ted Strickland (D), along with Green
Party candidate Joseph DeMare and non-partisan
candidates Tom Connors and Scott Rupert.
See VOTING | 2

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

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

Photos by Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

Students at Carleton School received a visit from area first
responders on Tuesday morning as representatives from Meigs
County EMS, the Meigs County Sheriff’s Office, Syracuse Volunteer
Fire Department and MedFlight paid a visit to the school for Safety
Day.

Carleton
students learn
from first
responders
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

SYRACUSE — Students at Carleton School
received a visit from area
ﬁrst responders on Tuesday as part of the school’s
ﬁrst Safety Day.
Meigs County EMS,
the Meigs County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce, Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department
and MedFlight were on
hand, talking with the
students and giving them
a tour of the emergency
vehicles — including the
helicopter.
Director Kayla George
said the school previously had the Syracuse
Fire Department come
to the school as part of
Fire Prevention Week,
but decided to expand to
other agencies this year.
The visit by ﬁrst
responders, including K-9
Bax, gave the students
a chance to meet the

individuals who are there
to help them in an emergency so that they may
not be scared should one
of those ﬁrst responders
help them in the future.
The kids were given
pencils, stickers and even
ﬁre hats by the agencies

involved in the presentation.
George said that the
visit may even inspire
one of the kids to become
a ﬁreﬁghter, paramedic
or go in to a career in law
enforcement.
Judging from the

excitement over watching
the helicopter land and
sitting inside it, there
may be a few pilots in the
group.
Reach Sarah Hawley at 740-9922155 ext. 2555 or on Twitter @
SarahHawleyNews

We are moving to a new office.
We are moving around the corner to

109 W. 2nd st. Pomeroy, OH 45769
We will be located at the

intersection of Mulberry and 2nd.

60682567

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Safety first!

DEATH NOTICES
GRIMM
RACINE, Ohio — Linda A. Grimm, 69, of Racine,
died Monday, Oct. 10, 2016, at Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis, Ohio. Funeral services will be 11
a.m. Thursday, Oct. 13, 2016, at Racine First Baptist Church. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery,
Racine. Friends may call the church between 6-8 p.m.
Wednesday.

MAYO
JACKSON, Ohio — Joyce A. Mayo, 59, of Jackson,
formerly of Gallipolis, Ohio, died Tuesday, Oct. 11,
2016, in Wellston, Ohio. Funeral arrangements by
Cremeens-King Funeral Home, Gallipolis.

Photos by Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

Students at Carleton School received a visit from area first responders on Tuesday morning as representatives from Meigs County
EMS, the Meigs County Sheriff’s Office, Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department and MedFlight paid a visit to the school for Safety Day.

BOWEN
SCOTTOWN, Ohio — Willard Bowen, 93, of Scottown, died Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2016, in Crown City,
Ohio. Funeral arrangements by Cremeens-King Funeral Home, Gallipolis, Ohio

Voting

ballot. More on both of
these levies will appear
in upcoming editions of
The Daily Sentinel.
Additionally, county
voters will have the
choice of joining an
electric aggregation
program. Aggregation
allows for municipalities, or in this case the
county, to pull together
to negotiate a lower
electric rate. Additional
details and information
regarding electric aggregation will appear in an
upcoming edition.
Township levies for
consideration on the
November ballot include,
Chester Township road
improvement 1-mill
replacement; Lebanon
Township road maintenance 1.5 mills additional; Letart Township
cemetery maintenance
and operation 1-mill
renewal; Olive Township

From page 1

MCCOY
APPLE GROVE, W.Va. — Gary Roger McCoy, 58,
of Apple Grove, died Oct. 10, 2016. Funeral services
will be 1 p.m. Friday, Oct. 14, 2016, at Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Burial will follow in
Apple Grove Memorial Gardens. Friends may visit the
family at the funeral home between 6-8 p.m. Thursday.

THORNTON
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Tommy Lee Thornton, 70,
Gallipolis, died Sunday, Oct. 9, 2016, in Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 12,
2016, at Heck Funeral Home, Milton, West Virginia.
Burial will be in the Chestnut Grove Baptist Church
Cemetery. Visistation is one hour prior to the funeral
service.

WHALEN II
SPRING HILL, Fla. — Michael Ellsworth “Chip”
Whalen II, 50, of Spring Hill, formerly of Point Pleasant, W.Va., passed away Sept. 29, 2016, in Spring Hill.
There will be no formal service in honoring his wishes
and privacy.

For President, voters
will choose between the
tickets of Democratic
candidate Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine,
Republican candidate
Donald Trump and
Michael Pence, Green
Party candidate Jill Stein
and Ajamu Baraka, nonparty candidate Gary
Johnson and William
Weld, and non-party candidate Richard Duncan
and Ricky Johnson.
County-wide, there are
two levies and electric
aggregation for voters to
consider.
The Meigs County
Health Department has
a 1-mill replacement
levy on the ballot. Carleton School has a 2-mill
renewal levy on the

STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) - 61.34
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 22.40
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)
112.97
Big Lots (NYSE) - 45.98
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 39.33
BorgWarner (NYSE) 35.56
Century Alum (NASDAQ)
- 7.46
Champion (NASDAQ) 0.00

City Holding (NASDAQ) 49.98
Collins (NYSE) - 82.69
DuPont (NYSE) - 68.94
US Bank (NYSE) - 43.29
Gen Electric (NYSE) 28.92
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
- 50.02
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 68.31
Kroger (NYSE) - 30.11
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 70.55
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 94.67

OVBC (NASDAQ) - 22.45
BBT (NYSE) - 38.75
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 24.35
Pepsico (NYSE) - 105.57
Premier (NASDAQ) - 16.84
Rockwell (NYSE) - 115.20
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ)
- 10.35
Royal Dutch Shell - 51.22
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
- 11.04
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 67.39
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 10.62

WesBanco (NYSE) - 33.08
Worthington (NYSE) 48.16
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes
of transactions Oct. 11,
2016, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

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BlueB. "Front Page News"
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Grey's Anatomy "It's the
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Dance Moms
Know It" 2/2
Chat "Mini Mayhem" (N)
The Bachelor "After the
Ben &amp; Lauren: Happily Ever The Letter "Bridge and
Ben &amp; Lauren: Happily Ever
Final Rose"
After? "Moving On" (P) (N) Tunnel" (P) (N)
After? "Moving On"
Ink Master "Put on Your
Ink Master "Sparks Fly"
Ink Master "Sticky
Ink Master "New School,
Ink Master "Bent Out of
Armor"
Situation"
Old Scars"
Shape"
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in Meigs, Vinton and
Athens counties will be
voting on a 1.5 percent
earned income tax levy.
Absentee voting and/
or early voting begins
Oct. 12 and will continue
daily at the Meigs County Board of Elections
through Nov. 7.
The hours for early
and absentee voting are
as follows: Oct. 12-14,
8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Oct.
17-21, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.;
Oct. 24-28, 8 a.m. to 6
p.m.; Oct. 29, 8 a.m. to
4 p.m.; Oct. 30, 1 p.m.
to 5 p.m.; Oct. 31-Nov.
4, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Nov.
5, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Nov.
7, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.; with
the last day to vote being
Monday, Nov. 7, from 8
a.m. to 2 p.m.
Any registered voter in
the county may request
and vote an absentee ballot (or provisional ballot
beginning Oct. 12) in
person during these business hours. Registered
voters may also call the
Meigs County Board
of Elections at 740992-2697 to request an
absentee application to
have an absentee ballot
by mail.
The Board of Elections
Ofﬁce is now located at
113 E. Memorial Dr.,
Pomeroy.

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cemetery maintenance
and operation 1-mill
renewal; Orange Township ﬁre protection
1.5 mills replacement;
Rutland Township road
maintenance 2.16 mills
renewal; Rutland Township cemetery maintenance and operation
0.3-mill renewal; Salem
Township ﬁre protection
1-mill renewal; Salem
Township road maintenance 2.92 mills renewal;
Salisbury Township ﬁre
protection 1-mill additional.
Village levies on the
ballot include, Middleport Village police protection 2 mills renewal;
Middleport Village current expenses 3 mills
renewal; Middleport
Village ﬁre protection 2
mills renewal; Pomeroy
Village cemetery maintenance and operation
1-mill renewal; Pomeroy
Village ﬁre protection
2-mill renewal; Pomeroy
Village current expenses
1-mill renewal; Racine
Village current expenses
1.7 mills replacement;
Syracuse Village ﬁre
protection 1-mill replacement; Syracuse Village
ﬁre protection 0.5 mills
replacement.
Alexander Local
School District voters

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Wednesday, October 12, 2016 3

60684642

�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Holding Wells
Fargo accountable
Last month, we learned that Wells Fargo
defrauded tens of thousands of customers, opening as many as 2 million unauthorized accounts
and saddling victims with nearly $2.5 million in
fees.
This is an outrageous abuse of hardworking
families across the country, including in Ohio. We
need to get to the bottom of this scandal quickly,
make things right with Wells Fargo’s customers,
and then make sure this never happens again.
This isn’t a matter of account mix-ups or
“unwanted products,” as Wells Fargo called it –
this is 5,300 employees, over half a decade, forging signatures, stealing identities, swiping Social
Security numbers, and taking customers’ hardearned money. And if that wasn’t bad enough, the
tellers and other low-paid employees who faced
unrealistic account quotas lost their
jobs — while the bank executive in
charge of the department was set to
get a $125 million golden parachute.
Wells Fargo’s response has been as
outrageous as its actions. The bank
did not treat this as a problem until
it appeared in the papers, and didn’t
even begin the process of attemptSherrod
ing to rectify its mistakes and make
Brown
Contributing customers whole until this year. To
make matters worse, Wells Fargo is
columnist
using ﬁne print buried in the contracts of their real accounts to deny
victims their right to sue over fraudulent accounts
they never signed up for.
That’s wrong, and this month I announced
legislation to prevent Wells Fargo from blocking
victims from seeking justice in court.
We must hold Wells Fargo accountable for making things right for the hardworking Ohioans who
were victims of these abuses. After my colleagues
and I called for accountability for executives
that oversaw this scandal, Wells Fargo ﬁnally
announced it would claw back some of those executives’ multi-million dollar payouts.
I encourage any Wells Fargo customers in Ohio
who think they have been wronged to contact the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau at consumerﬁnance.gov or at 855-411-2372. You can submit
a complaint online or over the phone, and make
your voice heard. The CFPB is an entire agency
staffed by professionals who are there to look out
for you — average customers — and stand up to
the big banks on your behalf. Ohioans can also
visit my website, brown.senate.gov, and contact
my ofﬁce.
Abuses like this are why Ohioans are fed up
with Wall Street. Yet even as we work to clean up
after this scandal, too many in Washington seem
to have amnesia about why we passed Wall Street
Reform and created the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau in the ﬁrst place.
Washington and Wall Street may have moved
on, but Wells Fargo customers and the thousands
of other Ohioans who have been wronged by the
big banks’ risky behavior don’t have that luxury.
Instead of focusing on damage control, Wells
Fargo needs to admit the problem, ﬁx them, and
treat its customers with respect. And we need to
ensure strong rules are in place to protect consumers from the worst Wall Street abuses, and ensure
this fraud never happens again.
U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown is a Democrat who represents Ohio in the
U.S. Senate in Washington, D.C.

CONTACT SEN. SHERROD BROWN
Constituents may call (888) 896-6446 (toll-free
in Ohio) or (202) 224-2315 at his Washington,
D.C. office. He can also be reached electronically
at www.brown.senate.gov/contact. Facebook:
www.facebook.com/sherrod; and Twitter @
SenSherrodBrown.

THEIR VIEW

Trump should thank Bill Clinton
If he hasn’t already done
so, Donald Trump should
place a call to Bill Clinton
and say, “thank you.”
Trump should also
send thank you notes to
the mainstream national
media and the Democratic
Party, because they are
the reasons that Donald
Trump still has a chance
to be elected president
of the United States. For
that matter, Trump should
thank Hillary Clinton, too.
At Sunday night’s
debate, Trump said he
regretted making his
unsavory remarks caught
on tape about women,
but he didn’t overdo the
contrition act, because an
act it would have been.
He is who he is, love him,
hate him, take him or
leave him. In fact, so effectively did he point out the
hypocrisy of the media,
the Democratic Party and
Hillary herself — none of
whom want to talk about
Bill Clinton on this subject — that by the time
the debate was over, the
other topics and moments
were more memorable
than anything said about
the Trump tape.
Bill Clinton’s list of
sexual dalliances — in
some cases even described
as rape — and all while
married and while holding
public ofﬁce, is a lengthy
one. From Gennifer Flowers to Juanita Broaddrick
to Kathleen Willey to
Paula Jones to Monica
Lewinksy and others, Bill
Clinton didn’t just talk
about his conquests, real
or wished for. He conquered.
Contrary to the “champion of women’s rights”
crusader that Hillary likes
to project as her history

a married woman, no less
and mission, that wasn’t
— was demeaning
exactly her stance
to women. His
when husband Bill
comment that as a
was involved. At the
“star” he could get
time, Hillary said
away with anything
Flowers has “got
is the height of
lots of problems”
braggadocio. And
and was “some
it’s silly to say that
failed cabaret singer
Gary
his comment was
who doesn’t even
Abernathy made 11 years ago,
have much of a
résumé to fall back Contributing so he’s probably
a different man
on.” She said Lewin- columnist
today. Let’s be honsky was a “narcisest, it is doubtful
sistic loony toon.”
there is any difference
According to Broaddrick,
Hillary actually threatened between 2005 Donald
Trump and 2016 Donald
her.
Trump on that subject.
Why is this relevant 20
But those who support
years later? Because if Bill
Clinton was deemed ﬁt to Trump already knew all
that. No one who has
continue serving as presifollowed Donald Trump,
dent after his numerous
even for just the last 18
affairs and his — let’s call
months, was truly shocked
it “Trump-like” — behavto hear the comments he
ior was actually put into
made on that tape. They
action, why isn’t Donald
ﬁt perfectly with the
Trump ﬁt to serve as
president for merely brag- hyperbole that we hear
from him when he talks
ging about what he was
of his business acumen,
thinking?
or even his golf game.
Bill Clinton’s defenders
Donald Trump is full of
insisted that his behavior
himself.
was personal, between
It is true that men
him and his wife. Not a
should not objectify
single Democratic U.S.
women, as the media is
senator voted guilty on
quick to lecture us. But
either of the two charges
that same media, on
Clinton faced.
their entertainment sides
The effort to kick Clinton out of ofﬁce was a par- (movies, TV shows, commercials, magazines and
tisan witch hunt, said the
music videos) constantly
Democrats, the media —
present women as suband Hillary, who called it
jects to be objectiﬁed. The
all a “vast right-wing conhypocrisy when it comes
spiracy.” Between them,
the media, the Democratic to this topic is unendParty, and Bill and Hillary ing, the responsibility or
blame widely shared.
Clinton forever lowered
I said in this space a
the bar to ground level
few months ago that, to
on the question of sexual
behavior and attitudes and paraphrase the old saying,
if you want a friend in the
the presidency.
Republican Party, buy a
What Donald Trump
dog. Once again, several
was caught saying in a
private conversation about Republican ofﬁceholdhis pursuit of a woman — ers announced over the

War II, American naval
forces defeated the Japanese in the Battle of Cape
Esperance. Attorney
General Francis Biddle
announced during a
Columbus Day celebration at Carnegie Hall in
New York that Italian
nationals in the United
States would no longer be
considered enemy aliens.
In 1964, the Soviet
Union launched a Voskhod space capsule with
a three-man crew on the
ﬁrst mission involving
more than one crew member (the ﬂight lasted just
over 24 hours).
In 1976, it was
announced in China that
Hua Guofeng had been
named to succeed the late
Mao Zedong as chairman

of the Communist Party;
it was also announced
that Mao’s widow and
three others, known as
the “Gang of Four,” had
been arrested.
In 1984, British Prime
Minister Margaret
Thatcher escaped an
attempt on her life when
an Irish Republican Army
bomb exploded at a hotel
in Brighton, England, killing ﬁve people.
In 1986, the superpower meeting in Reykjavik, Iceland, ended in
stalemate, with President
Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev unable to agree on
arms control or a date for
a full-ﬂedged summit in
the United States.
In 1997, singer John

weekend they were “unendorsing” Trump. The
Democrats never abandon
their candidates. Republicans do it in a heartbeat.
I was particularly disappointed to read Sen. Rob
Portman’s statement that
he is no longer supporting Trump and would be
voting for Mike Pence. If
by that he means a writein vote, he should just
announce it for what it is,
a vote for Hillary Clinton.
Most Trump supporters
will stick with him. What
does it say about Hillary
Clinton when so many
agree that Donald Trump,
on a personal level, is a
boorish lout, but that he
would still be a better
president than Hillary
Clinton? “Why aren’t I
leading by 50 points?”
Hillary has famously
wondered aloud. Good
question.
Against all odds, this
race is still not over.
Hillary is likely to get
a bounce in the polls –
maybe as much as 8 or 10
points – from the Trump
tape. But it will get close
again, despite what will
likely be a constant drip of
new, unsavory revelations
about Donald Trump that
are clearly coordinated
between the New York
Times, Washington Post,
etc. and the Clinton campaign.
But anyone who has
ever told us that Bill Clinton was a good or even
great president in spite
of his personal shortcomings with women cannot
criticize Donald Trump on
that same subject. At least
not with a straight face.
Especially Hillary.
Reach Gary Abernathy at 937-3933456 or on Twitter @abernathygary.

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY …
Today is Wednesday,
Oct. 12, the 286th day of
2016. There are 80 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Oct. 12, 1492
(according to the Old
Style calendar), Christopher Columbus arrived
with his expedition in the
present-day Bahamas.
On this date:
In 1810, the German
festival Oktoberfest was
ﬁrst held in Munich to
celebrate the wedding of
Bavarian Crown Prince
Ludwig and Princess
Therese of Saxe-Hildburghausen.
In 1870, General Robert E. Lee died in Lexing-

ton, Virginia, at age 63.
In 1915, English
nurse Edith Cavell was
executed by a German
ﬁring squad for helping
Allied soldiers escape
from occupied Belgium
during World War I. Former President Theodore
Roosevelt, speaking to
the Knights of Columbus
in New York, criticized
native-born Americans
who identiﬁed themselves
by dual nationalities,
saying that “a hyphenated American is not an
American at all.”
In 1933, bank robber
John Dillinger escaped
from a jail in Allen County, Ohio, with the help of
his gang, who killed the
sheriff, Jess Sarber.
In 1942, during World

THOUGHT FOR TODAY

“To know one’s self is wisdom, but not to know one’s
neighbors is genius.”
— Minna Antrim, American writer (1861-1950)

Denver was killed in the
crash of his privately built
aircraft in Monterey Bay,
California; he was 53.
In 2000, 17 sailors were
killed in a suicide bomb
attack on the destroyer
USS Cole in Yemen.
In 2002, bombs blamed
on al-Qaida-linked militants destroyed a nightclub on the Indonesian
island of Bali, killing
202 people, including 88
Australians and seven
Americans.
Ten years ago: The
United States introduced
a draft resolution in the
U.N. Security Council

to punish North Korea
for its nuclear test.
Suspected Shiite militiamen broke into an
Iraqi television station
and gunned down 11
executives, producers and
other staffers. Turkish
novelist Orhan Pamuk
won the Nobel prize in
literature. Madonna and
Guy Ritchie took custody
of David Banda, a 1-yearold boy from Malawi,
and received preliminary
approval from a judge to
adopt him. Italian ﬁlmmaker Gillo Pontecorvo
(“The Battle of Algiers”)
died in Rome at age 86.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 12, 2016 5

MEIGS COUNTY BRIEFS

Trick-or-Treat

Trick-or-Treat information can be
submitted to TDSnews@civitasme-

27, 6-7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs
County Council on Aging will be
handing out treats at the former
Middleport High School from 6-7 p.m.
on Oct. 27. There will be games and
refreshments at the building from 7-9
p.m. after trick or treat.

Route 124 will remain open.
TUPPERS PLAINS — Thursday,
Oct. 27, 6-7 p.m.
CHESTER — Thursday, Oct. 27,
6-7 p.m.
REEDSVILLE — Thursday, Oct.
27, 6-7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT — Thursday, Oct.

dia.com
RACINE — Friday, Oct. 28 from
6-7 p.m. with the annual Halloween
Party immediately afterward at the
ﬁrehouse.
SYRACUSE — Friday, Oct. 28th,
from 6-7:30 p.m. All village streets
will be closed to motor vehicle trafﬁc.

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

Training
From page 1

Photos by Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

A deputy uses police cruisers as a shield as he fires on suspects in the upstairs window of the building
during Monday’s training.

to evaluate the injured
ofﬁcers and suspects.
Once the scenario
was completed, those
involved sat down to
review what had happened, what worked
well and what could be
improved upon.
The suspects, who
were also deputies, and
others involved had cameras attached to themselves or their weapons
so that the footage could
also be reviewed in an
effort to ﬁnd out what
worked well and what
should be done differently.
The second scenario
staged a meeting with an
active shooter.
Chief Deputy Charlie
Mansﬁeld explained
there would be a difference in responses to the
two situations as in the
case of the active shooter
in the second scenario,
statistics show that every
three seconds a person in

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

48°

69°

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.

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

0.00
Trace
0.97
37.94
34.11

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:35 a.m.
6:54 p.m.
4:56 p.m.
3:19 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Last

New

Oct 16 Oct 22 Oct 30

First

Nov 7

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

Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.

Major
8:58a
9:45a
10:32a
11:23a
12:18p
12:48a
1:51a

Minor
2:45a
3:31a
4:19a
5:09a
6:04a
7:03a
8:06a

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Lucasville
78/53
Very High

Major
9:24p
10:11p
10:59p
11:50p
---1:17p
2:21p

Minor
3:11p
3:58p
4:46p
5:37p
6:32p
7:31p
8:35p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Oct. 12, 1979, the world’s lowest
sea level barometric pressure, 25.69
inches, was in the center of Typhoon
Tip, 520 miles northwest of Guam.
A U.S. Air Force plane recorded the
surface pressure.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
13.23
15.95
21.57
13.00
13.50
25.23
13.20
25.66
34.43
12.97
15.40
34.10
14.40

Portsmouth
78/53

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.25
-0.26
+0.10
+0.20
+0.23
+0.09
-0.09
-0.39
-0.24
-0.20
-0.70
-0.20
-0.70

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Sunshine and patchy Partly sunny, pleasant
clouds
and warmer

Mostly cloudy, a
shower in the p.m.

Logan
77/53

Murray City
76/52
Belpre
78/50

Athens
77/52

75°
55°
Mostly cloudy

St. Marys
78/49

Parkersburg
78/51

Coolville
77/50

Elizabeth
78/50

Spencer
76/50

Buffalo
77/51
Milton
78/51

St. Albans
78/51

Huntington
79/54

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
63/52
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
67/55
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
72/56
T-storms
Rain
Showers
El Paso
Snow
89/60
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

76°
56°
An afternoon
thunderstorm possible

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
80/51

Ashland
80/52
Grayson
79/51

MONDAY

Marietta
78/49

Wilkesville
77/51
POMEROY
Jackson
77/51
77/51
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
77/51
77/52
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
76/54
GALLIPOLIS
77/53
78/51
76/53

South Shore Greenup
79/51
76/51

43

75°
57°

McArthur
77/51

Very High

Primary: grasses and other
Mold: 1446

SUNDAY

75°
55°

Adelphi
77/54
Chillicothe
77/56

One of the suspects takes an EMT hostage during Monday’s
training exercise.

SATURDAY

64°
43°

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

Waverly
77/55

Pollen: 3

Low

MOON PHASES

Reach Sarah Hawley at 740-9922155 ext. 2555 or on Twitter @
SarahHawleyNews

FRIDAY

A morning shower in
spots; not as warm

0

Primary: cladosporium
Thu.
7:36 a.m.
6:52 p.m.
5:34 p.m.
4:25 a.m.

THURSDAY

64°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

(in inches)

the training scenarios on
Monday. The guns were
made possible by funds
from the federal government.
These situations, and
others for which the ofﬁcers train, are not something with which they
come into contact often,
if ever, but it is better to
be prepared.

EXTENDED FORECAST

Partly sunny and nice today. Rain at times late
tonight. High 77° / Low 53°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

the building or a hostage
would be shot, making a
quick response increasingly important.
Mansﬁeld explained
that since the department
does not have a dedicated
Special Response Team,
the entire agency trains
for these type situations.
The ofﬁce recently
acquired patrol riﬂes
which the ofﬁcers have
become certiﬁed in using.
Those riﬂes were used in

67°
39°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

71°
40°
70°
46°
89° in 1949
24° in 1906

A deputy keeps an eye an exit of the building and is ready to fire if
needed during Monday’s training.

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

A deputy watches the stairwell for possible suspects as a “downed
officer” lays on the floor of the building during a training on
Monday afternoon.

Clendenin
78/50
Charleston
78/50

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
44/27

Montreal
67/50

Billings
48/36

Toronto
72/56

Minneapolis
51/34
Denver
59/40

Kansas City
56/35

Detroit
76/49
Chicago
69/42

New York
66/55
Washington
70/55

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

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
77/49/s
50/38/s
77/54/s
68/58/pc
68/52/pc
48/36/s
67/46/pc
63/52/pc
78/50/s
74/46/s
55/33/pc
69/42/r
78/55/s
78/55/pc
78/55/s
89/62/pc
59/40/pc
54/34/sh
76/49/c
85/73/pc
88/71/pc
76/51/pc
56/35/sh
87/63/s
85/61/pc
72/56/pc
81/60/s
87/76/c
51/34/pc
81/57/s
87/69/s
66/55/pc
73/48/pc
87/71/c
68/55/pc
93/66/s
74/52/s
64/48/pc
73/52/pc
71/51/c
75/48/t
67/45/pc
67/55/pc
63/52/pc
70/55/pc

Hi/Lo/W
74/49/pc
54/34/s
83/59/s
71/52/pc
73/48/pc
62/50/pc
67/54/c
68/47/c
66/40/sh
79/53/s
70/43/pc
56/38/s
64/42/pc
58/41/pc
62/40/pc
74/67/pc
75/48/pc
59/43/s
57/39/pc
86/74/pc
88/68/pc
62/41/s
58/45/pc
88/68/s
72/57/pc
74/59/pc
68/48/pc
87/74/pc
56/41/s
73/49/pc
87/69/s
70/48/c
63/55/r
87/68/pc
72/49/c
94/67/s
60/36/sh
65/43/c
78/53/s
75/48/s
63/49/s
74/58/pc
72/60/c
59/53/r
74/50/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
77/54

High
Low

94° in McAllen, TX
14° in Dunkirk, MT

Global
Chihuahua
88/53

Houston
88/71
Monterrey
89/64

Miami
87/76

High
109° in Mecca, Saudi Arabia
Low -18° in Summit Station, Greenland
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

60647073

The ﬁrst scenario was
a deputy and the Pomeroy ofﬁcer responding
to the building for a call
of individuals inside the
building. The deputy was
the ﬁrst to respond, with
the Pomeroy ofﬁcer soon
after. The deputy was to
check the doors of the
building and, upon ﬁnding one, made entry. In
the lobby of the building,
the deputy made contact
with the ﬁrst suspect,
speaking with him about
why he was there. As
the ofﬁcer approached,
a second suspect was
able to ﬁre a shot which
injured the ofﬁcer. The
Pomeroy ofﬁcer who had
arrived outside radioed
to dispatch for a call of
shots ﬁred.
As the responding ofﬁcers worked through the
training, some entered
the building clearing
room by room before
locating the suspects.
Other ofﬁcers remained
outside monitoring the
building should a suspect
attempt to exit.
As the scenario played
out, the suspects were
able to take down a
responding ofﬁcer as
he exited his cruiser, as
well as injuring another
responding ofﬁcer.
Eventually, deputies
were able to take down
the two subjects.
After the building was
cleared, a deputy escorted EMS into the building

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

'/.8/=.+CM��-&gt;9,/&lt;�� M� �� �s�

Lady Eagles sweep Miller
By Alex Hawley

Green, White and Gold claimed
the next nine points and
cruised to the 25-14 victory,
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio — sealing the match sweep.
“The girls played very well
Trying to end on a high note,
tonight,” EHS head coach Katie
the Lady Eagles start the ﬁnal
week of the regular season with Williams said. “We said, ‘let’s
play excited and intense’ and
a sweep.
I thought they did a very good
With the postseason beginjob of doing that. We’re trying
ning in a week, the Eastern
to take some momentum into
volleyball defeated Tri-Valley
next week.”
Conference Hocking Division
The EHS service attack was
guest Miller in straight games,
led by Abby Litchﬁeld with 18
on Monday evening in Meigs
points and one ace. Morgain
County.
Little was next for EHS, postThe Lady Eagles (11-9, 9-5
TVC Hocking) never trailed in ing nine points and one ace,
while Morgan Baer chipped in
the opening game, rolling to a
with six points and one ace.
25-14 victory.
Allison Barber ﬁnished with
Miller led 4-3 in the second
ﬁve points, Katlyn Barber and
game, but Eastern took the
lead with a 17-0 run. The Lady Abbie Hawley both marked
Eagles won the second game by three points and one ace, while
Mackenzie Brooks and Alexus
a 25-10 count, moving ahead
Metheney rounded out the
2-0 in the match.
MHS led by as much as three Eastern total with two points
and one point respectively.
early in the third game, but
“We’ve been working really
Eastern battled back to tie the
hard trying to get our serving
game at 10. From there, the
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

Eastern junior Abby Litchfield (center) passes the ball during the Lady Eagles’
victory over Miller, on Monday in Tuppers Plains.

back on track,” said Williams.
“The girls made the adjustments that I asked them to
make and our serves were much
tougher tonight.”
Katlyn Barber led the victors at the net with 11 kills,
followed by Brooks with eight
kills. Little posted six kills and
one block, while Baer chipped
in with four kills and team-bests
in blocks with two, and assists
with 22. Kelsey Casto contributed three kills to the winning
cause, while Allison Barber had
two kills and one block.
Katlyn Barber also posted a
team-high 13 digs, followed by
Allison Barber with seven.
Ryleigh Newman led the
MHS service attack with four
points, followed by Laci Alexander and Olivia Houk with three
each. Haille Joseph and Brooklyn Wilson each had one service
point for the Lady Falcons.
Eastern also defeated MHS
See EAGLES | 7

Lady Tornadoes
top Waterford, 3-1
SHS and WHS now
tied for 1st place in
TVC Hocking
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

WATERFORD,
Ohio — A tie atop the
Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division.
The Southern volleyball team — which
dropped a 3-1 decision to Waterford
on September 19, in
Racine — avenged that
setback on Monday
night in Washington
County, defeating WHS
3-1 and moving into a
tie for ﬁrst place in the
league.
Southern (18-2, 14-1
TVC Hocking) led
8-to-3 in the opening
game, and expanded
the advantage to 14-8.
Waterford (15-5, 14-1)
scored the next seven
points, taking the lead
at 15-14. WHS pushed
its lead to 18-15, but
the Lady Tornadoes
claimed the next ﬁve
points and never trailed
again, en rout to the
25-22 victory.
The Lady Wildcats
scored the ﬁrst eight
points of the second
and led wire-to-wire,

taking the game by a
25-17 count and tying
the match at 1-1.
Southern grabbed an
early three-point edge
in the third game, but
Waterford took the
lead at 7-6. The WHS
advantage was shortlived, as Lady Tornadoes took the lead back
at 8-7. From that point,
the Green and White
tied the game six
times, but regained the
lead, falling by a 25-22
ﬁnal.
The ﬁrst 15 points
of the fourth game featured ﬁve lead changes
and six ties. From the
time they took the 8-7
advantage, the Lady
Tornadoes led the rest
of the way to the 25-22
victory, capping off the
3-1 win.
“We came into
tonight’s game with
some momentum from
our win against Eastern,” said SHS head
coach Kim Hupp. “I
told the girls it wasn’t
going to be easy and
every point counted.
They came out focused
and made some great
hustle plays to keep the
intensity up. I’m very
proud of the team-work
they showed tonight,
See TORNADOES | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, October 12
Volleyball
South Gallia at Symmes Valley, 6:30
Soccer
Lincoln County at Point Pleasant girls, 7 p.m.
Thursday, October 13
Volleyball
Meigs at River Valley, 7:15
Eastern at Wahama, 7:15
South Point at Gallia Academy, 7 p.m.
Waterford at South Gallia, 7:15
Hannan at Huntington, 5 p.m.
Cross Country
OVC Championships at Fairland, 4 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Poca, 6 p.m.
Boys Soccer
Gallia Academy at Chesapeake, 7 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca, 7:30
Women’s College Soccer
URG at WVU Tech, 5 p.m.
Men’s College Soccer
URG at WVU Tech, 7 p.m.

Bryan Walters/OVP Sports

Ohio Valley Christian sophomore Emily Childers (30) leaps for a spike attempt during Game 1 of Monday night’s non-conference
volleyball match against Team Ignite in Gallipolis, Ohio.

Lady Defenders sweep Team Ignite
By Bryan Walters

for a 1-0 match advantage.
The Lady Defenders
never trailed in Game
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
2 and broke away from
— A Senior Night to
a one-all tie by scoring
remember, just like all
19 of the next 23 points
the others.
The Ohio Valley Chris- for a 20-5 cushion, then
scored the ﬁnal ﬁve
tian volleyball team
remained unbeaten while points for a 19-point win
and a 2-0 match cushion.
wrapping up a perfect
Team Ignite — a
regular season home
sports program for
schedule on Monday
home-schooled kids in
night following a 25-3,
the Teays Valley (W.Va.)
25-6, 25-15 victory over
visiting Team Ignite in a area — managed to make
non-conference match in things a little more competitive in Game 3, as
the Old French City.
the guests stormed out
The Lady Defenders
to early leads of 4-2 and
(19-0) honored seniors
5-3.
Katlyn Bradley and
OVCS, however, counRachel Sargent before the
tered with four straight
contest, then the hosts
points to secure a 7-5
proceeded to assure a
edge and never trailed
ﬁtting send-off for their
again. The hosts went on
two upperclassmen by
rolling to a straight-game to lead 23-13 before trading points the rest of the
triumph.
way — wrapping up the
OVCS trailed 1-0 in
3-0 match triumph.
opening game, but the
The Lady Defenders
hosts reeled off 16 of the
next 17 points and never also claimed a season
sweep of Team Ignite
looked back while postafter posting a 25-18,
ing a 22-point decision
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

23-25, 25-22, 25-16 win
in Teays Valley back on
September 12.
Afterwards, OVCS
coach Heather Priddy
was pleased that her
troops were able to give
the two upperclassmen
a Senior Night worth
remembering.
“Both of the seniors
are good girls. They are
good players, they have
good attitudes and they
are good team leaders,”
Priddy said. “It’s a joy to
have them on the team
and it is nice to send
them out with a win in
their ﬁnal home game of
the regular season.
Cori Hutchison led
Ohio Valley Christian
with 16 service points
and six aces, followed by
Sargent with 12 points
and Emily Childers with
11 points. Sargent also
had ﬁve aces in the victory.
Bradley was next with
eight points, while Katie
Westfall and Marcie Kessinger respectively added

seven points and two
points.
Bradley led the hosts
with seven kills, followed
by Sargent with six kills
and Westfall with ﬁve
kills. Childers was next
with three kills, with
Hutchison and Makala
Sizemore also recording
a kill apiece.
Hutchison also had
both blocks for the Lady
Defenders.
Natalie Parra led Team
Ignite with four service
points. Emma Tapley
and Erica Rhodes also
recorded a point each in
the setback.
OVCS will have another home game this year
as the Lady Defenders
earned the top-seed in
the OCSAA Southeast
Regional tournament.
The Lady Defenders will
host an opening round
game against a yet-to-bedetermined opponent at
6 p.m. Friday, Oct. 21.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

OSU aims for more
hits, fewer misses
By Jim Naveau
jnaveau@civitasmedia.com

COLUMBUS – When it comes to mentors in
the coaching profession who Ohio State football
coach Urban Meyer quotes, Earle Bruce and
Lou Holtz are at the top of the list.
With No. 2 Ohio State coming off its least
impressive offensive game of the year in a 38-17
win over Indiana last Saturday, Meyer reached
into the Holtz quote ﬁle when he talked about
what will be done this week to improve the
offense when the Buckeyes play at No. 8 Wisconsin on Saturday night.
“Lou Holtz would say, and it’s forever branded on my heart, that you don’t attack a team
when you lose a game. You attack them when
they won a game and didn’t play very well. So,
we’re attacking them (in practice) and there’s
some urgency,” Meyer said on Monday at his
weekly press conference.
Ohio State (5-0, 2-0 Big Ten) had 383 yards
of total offense but got only 93 of those yards
on passes against Indiana.
Quarterback J.T. Barrett was 9 of 21 for 93
yards, his third-lowest total in 21 starts.
The biggest problems were what Meyer called
“mis-hits” on deep throws and some poorly run
routes by receivers.
“The ﬁrst thing I saw was a couple mis-hits
on deep balls. One was eight yards behind a
guy, one was 10 yards behind a guy. Those are
two examples,” he said. “We had a couple plays
called where we ran poor routes, too. I don’t
want to name names, but there are a couple
guys who just ran very poor routes.”
Barrett said, “We did have our struggles in
that game. They exposed some things in us, so
that lets us reﬂect and try to deal with those
mistakes. Our game plan was good, we just
missed on some plays. It was everybody as a
whole on offense, not just a particular group.”
Asked about what practice was like on Sunday, he said, “It was get back to the fundamentals of what we do. The main thing is the fundamentals were lacking in the game. That’s why
we played poorly.”
Wisconsin (4-1, 1-1 Big Ten) won its ﬁrst
four games over LSU, Akron, Georgia State and
Michigan State before losing 14-7 to Michigan
on Oct. 1.
The Badgers did not play last Saturday.
Defense has been the foundation of the Badgers’ success.
They are third in the Big Ten in points
allowed (12.2 a game) but eleventh in points
scored (25.6 a game).
Wisconsin’s defense will be without two of its
top players, though.
Linebacker Vince Biegel suffered a broken
foot against Michigan and will be out several
weeks.
Cornerback Natrell Jamerson has not played
since a leg injury took him out of the Akron
game the second week of the season.
“They’re a typical Wisconsin team, 6-6 or
6-8 and 315 pounds on the offensive line. They
have an excellent running back, a very efﬁcient
pass game. They’re outstanding on defense.
They’re one of the best teams in America,”
Meyer said.

Tornadoes

Michael and Drummer
each posted won kill
for the victors.
From page 6
Southern — which
shared the 2015 TVC
they were determined
Hocking title with both
and played smart volWaterford and Trimble
leyball when it count— will clinch a share of
ed.”
the 2016 league crown
SHS senior Sierra
Cleland led the victors with a win over Wahama, on Tuesday in
with 10 service points
and three aces. Kamryn Racine. The Lady Cats
— who host Fort Frye
Smith was next with
in non-league action
eight points, followed
by Talon Drummer and on Wednesday — will
clinch a share of the
Marissa Johnson with
league championship
seven points apiece,
with a victory at South
including one ace by
Gallia, on Thursday, or
Drummer. Amanda
with a Lady Tornadoes
Cole had ﬁve points
loss to Wahama.
and one ace in the
SHS has now won
win, Marlee Maynard
added three points and eight straight games
with its last loss comone ace, while Macie
ing to WHS. The Lady
Michael rounded out
Cats — who ﬁnished
the Southern service
18th in the ﬁnal Ohio
attack with one point.
Cole led Southern at High School Volleyball
Coaches Association
the net with 12 kills,
followed by Smith with Division IV poll — had
won eight consecutive
eight. Faith Teaford
decisions headed into
marked four kills and
a team-best six blocks, Monday.
while Cleland had three
kills and four blocks
Alex Hawley can be reached at
in the win. Johnson,
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Eagles
From page 6

on September 19, in Hemlock.
This was Eastern’s Volley for the Cure game.
After hosting Federal Hocking on Tuesday, the
Lady Eagles will visit Wahama on Thursday for
the regular season ﬁnale.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.2100.

Wednesday, October 12, 2016 7

Lady Marauders sweep Fed Hock
By Bryan Walters

of the next 16 points for
a 15-9 edge, then closed
out the opener with a
STEWART, Ohio — It 10-5 run to secure a 1-0
took a little longer the
match lead.
second time around, but
The Lady Lancers
the Lady Marauders still overcame a 12-4 deﬁcit
came away with the same in Game 2 by going on a
result.
21-11 surge that resulted
The Meigs volleyball
in a minimal two-point
team claimed wins in all
decision, which ended up
of the odd games Monday tying the match at a game
night en route to a thrill- apiece.
ing 25-14, 23-25, 25-20,
MHS broke away from
20-25, 15-11 victory over a ﬁve-all tie in Game 3
host Federal Hocking in a with a 12-8 run to estabnon-conference matchup
lish a 17-13 cushion, then
at McInturf Gymnasium
made a small 8-7 push to
in Athens County.
claim a ﬁve-point win and
The visiting Lady
a 2-1 match advantage.
Marauders (9-11) broke
Both teams were tied
away from a four-all tie in at 10 and again at 18 in
Game 1 by reeling off 11 Game 4, but the hosts

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

reeled off seven of the
ﬁnal nine points to knot
the match up at two with
a race to 15 ensuing.
In the pivotal ﬁfth
game, Meigs overcame
deﬁcits of 1-0 and 5-2
while jumping out to
leads of 9-7 and 11-9. The
guests went on to score
four of the ﬁnal six points
down the stretch to wrap
up the 3-2 match triumph.
The Lady Marauders
also claimed a season
sweep of the FHHS after
posting a 25-18, 25-23,
24-26, 25-19 win in Rocksprings back on August
30.
Kassidy Betzing led
the MHS service attack
with 24 points, followed

by Alliyah Pullins with
17 points and Devyn
Oliver with 14 points.
Paige Denney also had 10
points for the victors.
Maddie Fields and
Maddie Hendricks both
had ﬁve service points
and four aces apiece,
while Devin Humphreys,
Jordan Roush and Morgan Lodwick also had two
points each.
Betzing led the Meigs
net attack with 20 kills
and three blocks, followed
by Pullins with 15 kills
and Oliver with 12 kills.
Denney also had eight
kills and two blocks for
the victors.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

NASCAR catches break with Chase race
By Jenna Fryer

that means? A reprieve
from talking about laser
inspection, changing
CHARLOTTE, N.C.
rules and encumbered
— When it’s all said and
ﬁnishes.
done at the end of this
Finally, a chance to
season, NASCAR just
focus on what should
might have to thank Hur- really matter: the racing!
ricane Matthew for savThe word “drama”
ing its Chase.
was bandied about often
It sure didn’t seem like Sunday as contender
that when rain was trying after contender went to
to swamp the weekend at the garage. First up was
Charlotte Motor SpeedJoey Logano , who had a
way. No track activity
wrecked car because of a
Friday, nothing again on
tire issue. Then Harvick
Saturday and no buzz
pulled into his stall with
about the opening race of a mechanical problem.
the second round of the
Austin Dillon was spun
playoffs.
by Martin Truex Jr. on a
Forced to run two
restart. Chase Elliott was
races on Sunday, both
collected in that accident.
NASCAR and Charlotte
Then Hamlin had an
Motor Speedway someengine failure while runhow managed to pull off
ning second late in the
a miracle. They got a pair race.
of decent races on a perNone of that is the kind
fect North Carolina fall
of “drama” that has drivafternoon — not great
en the Chase the last two
races, but good enough
years. That excitement
that the Chase now warcentered around Brad
rants some chatter .
Keselowski getting tackEven better, conversaled, Keselowski getting
tion will be about drivers punched and Matt Kensand the standings and
eth’s running feud with
how teams are going to
Logano. Yes, those are
react after a race of attri- the instances that make
tion at Charlotte caused
NASCAR a watercooler
ﬁve championship drivers conversation on Monday
to ﬁnish 30th or worse.
mornings, but the drivers
Now, only eight points
absolutely abhor the senseparate Denny Hamlin
sationalism and scrutiny
in the transfer position
that comes with such
from last-place Kevin
displays of emotion or
Harvick.
personality.
Do you know what
So now they’ve proAssociated Press

vided an opportunity to
really look at the racing
and wonder how each
team will react in this
suddenly intense Chase.
The ﬁrst round didn’t
knock anyone’s socks off
— two Truex wins and
a Harvick victory — and
no shocking elimination.
Everyone probably wanted Tony Stewart to make
it out of the ﬁrst round,
but nobody thought he
was running well enough
to do it. Stewart getting
knocked out was hardly
the same level of stunner
as Jimmie Johnson’s ﬁrstround elimination a year
ago.
But after Sunday’s
opener , this round has
the potential for some
serious nail-biting over
the next two weeks.
Some really big names
are going to be eliminated
at Talladega Superspeedway, where the Chase
ﬁeld will be trimmed
from 12 to eight drivers.
Free from worry is
Johnson, the somewhat
surprise winner on Sunday. It was his eighth
victory at the Hendrick
Motorsports home track,
but Johnson has been a
bit overlooked the last
three years. He’d failed
in the ﬁrst two years of
the elimination format
to get past the second
round, and there’s been
no reason to think that

Hendrick Motorsports
can compete with the
four Toyota drivers or
Harvick.
But a summer of hard
work has suddenly put
Hendrick on the radar
, and both Johnson and
teammate Elliott have
turned it up in the Chase.
Now, Johnson has a spot
in the round of eight, and
his sights squarely on a
seventh championship.
History has shown that
Johnson dominance does
little for the NASCAR fan
base, and there’s been a
total lack of appreciation
for his ﬁve consecutive
championships and six
overall. But his win at
Charlotte felt different.
There was a sense that
seven might actually be
doable, and Johnson’s
pursuit of Richard Petty
and Dale Earnhardt in
the record books could be
embraced this year.
Whether Johnson
moves your meter, his
hunt for that seventh title
is surely more entertaining that which driver fails
the laser inspection each
week.
So thank you, NASCAR. Thank you, Chase
teams. Thank you, Charlotte Motor Speedway.
Thank you, Jimmie Johnson.
Finally, there’s something to talk about in
NASCAR.

McCown could return for black-and-blue Browns
BEREA, Ohio (AP)
— Rookie Cody Kessler
uncoiled an ice wrap
around his upper body
as Charlie Whitehurst
limped by with an elastic
sleeve on his left knee.
Two more Browns
quarterbacks are black,
blue and beaten up.
A day after Kessler
and Whitehurst were
both injured in a 33-13
loss to the New England
Patriots, Cleveland’s
quarterback situation was as messy and
unclear as it has been in
many weeks.
And around here,
that’s saying something.
Kessler is recovering
from a painful injury to
his chest and ribs when
he was drilled by linebacker Dont’a Hightower
in the ﬁrst quarter.
But after X-rays on
Kessler did not reveal
any breaks, Browns
coach Hue Jackson said
Monday there’s a chance
that the third-round draft
pick, who vaulted up the
depth chart after Robert
Grifﬁn III (shoulder)
and Josh McCown (collarbone) were injured in
the ﬁrst two weeks, will
practice this week and
play Sunday at Tennessee.
“I’m sure it’s a pain
tolerance issue, every

Jackson may ﬁnally
have more than one
option this week.
“We’ll have three guys
standing out there (at
practice),” he quipped.
“So we’ll be able to pick
somebody out of the
group.”
At the rate Cleveland’s
QBs are falling, it may
be hard to ﬁnd a volunteer.
McCown has been
out since breaking his
left collarbone in Week
2 against Baltimore.
Ron Schwane | AP
Cleveland Browns quarterback Cody Kessler (6) is helped up by He showed incredible
Joel Bitonio after being injured on a hit by New England Patriots toughness by playing
outside linebacker Dont’a Hightower in the first half Sunday in three quarters with the
Cleveland. New England won 33-13.
fracture, and less than a
month later said it’s realistic he’ll face the Titans.
day is going to change,” could be in uniform
“Yeah, I’m going to
against the Titans. The
said Jackson, who has
practice Wednesday, and
37-year-old McCown
endured a season full of
that’s the next step to
hardship in his ﬁrst sea- wants to play after
this thing,” he said. “So
spending the past three
son with Cleveland.
we’ll see how it plays
weeks watching his
“It is today, it is
out.
tomorrow and practice is teammates come up
“But I’m looking
short.
Wednesday. We will see
forward to that part of
“Anytime you ﬁnd
where he is then.”
it. When you’re kind
Whitehurst may not be yourself in a situation
of going through what
as ready. After becoming like our team is where
we’re going through, just
it’s gone this way and
the ﬁfth quarterback to
to be out there on the
play in ﬁve games for the you’re 0-5, I think it’s
practice ﬁeld and to get
all hands on deck, and
Browns this season, he
back moving around like
you’ve got to want to
hyperextended his knee
that, it’s exciting for me.
help,” he said. “You
in the ﬁnal minutes and
And then we’ll see where
watch tape from yesteris listed day to day.
it goes. But I’m looking
For a change, though, day and you watch the
effort that guys put forth forward to helping any
it’s not all bad news for
and they’re battling, and way I can and getting
the Browns.
back out there with the
you just want to be a
McCown has been
guys.”
part of it.”
cleared to practice and

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Daily Sentinel

LEGALS

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TO ALL PERSONS
INTERESTED IN THE
ESTATE OF NELLIE BELLE
CORNELL, DECEASED,
LATE OF PORTLAND
ROUTE 1, PORTLAND, OH.
MEIGS COUNTY
CASE NO. 20161104.
An application has been filed
asking to relieve the estate
from administration, saying
that the assets do not exceed
the statutory limits. A hearing
on the application will be held
October 17th, 2016
at 11:00 a.m. Persons
knowing any reason why the
application should not be
granted should appear and
inform the Court. The Court is
located at 100 E. Second St.
Rm 203, Pomeroy, OH 45769
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The Town of Hartford
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and resumes for a part time,
as needed Water Department
General Laborer or Certified
Water Operator.
Please send to
Town of Hartford
PO Box 96
Hartford WV 25247
or hand deliver by
Oct. 19, 2016.

2 bdrm mobile home
on farm. $500.00 mo.
includes water,
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540-729-1331
Mobile Home For Rent
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1 Bathroom 1.5 miles out of
Gallipolis $375 a month plus
deposit and references M-F
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DECEASED, LATE OF BOX
215, RACINE, OH.
MEIGS COUNTY
CASE NO. 20161105.
An application has been filed
asking to relieve the estate
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knowing any reason why the
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Rm 203, Pomeroy, OH 45769
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Pictures that have been
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The Out Reach Center
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local business and or private
residents to stay in operation
all donations will be greatly
appreciated &amp; tax deductible.
Miscellaneous

Collectibles of a Lifetime part
8 Glassware (fenton),
Bargains galore
some Items 50%off
Misc. &amp; More reduce prices to
sell fast. At 440 Adamsville Rd.
1 mile south of Bob Evans
(Rio Grande)
Thursday October 13
Friday October 14

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5 Family yard sale antiques
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tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Immaculate 2 BR apt.
Appliances, W/D hook-ups,
water/trash paid. 10 minutes
from town. $425/mo
614-595-7773 or
740-645-5953
Immaculate 2 BR apt.
Appliances, W/D hook-ups,
water/trash paid. 10 minutes
from town. $425/mo
614-595-7773 or
740-645-5953
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
4 BR House $700.00 mth
and $700.00 dep.
Ph. 740-367-0438
Spring Valley area,
2Br.,Office, Kitchen, dining rm,
utility closet, 1 &amp; 1/2 bathrooms, 2 car garage.
No pets or smoking, gas heat
&amp; air. $685 month plus utilities
and deposit.
Phone 740-645-3836.

Help Wanted General
NEW WAGE RATE
Overbrook Center, a privately owned 100 bed Skilled Nursing
Facility at 333 Page St., Middleport, OH, currently has opportunities available for F/T RN’s &amp; LPN’s to join our outstanding team
of professional caregivers. We appreciate our employees!
Come and experience the Overbrook Difference! Applications
available on site Mon.-Fri. 8:30AM-5:00PM or contact Susie
Drehel, Staff Development Coord. At 740-992-6472. EOE &amp; a
participant of the Drug-Free Workplace Program.

Help Wanted General
Portsmouth Daily Times is looking for sports reporters who can
bolster coverage in the communities we cover for print, the web,
Facebook and Twitter. The Portsmouth Daily Times is a daily,
publishing Monday through Saturday while The Community
Common publishes on Sunday. We need hard workers, multitaskers, those with a love for local sports reporting, a flair for
writing and a commitment to making our publications the best
they can be in print and online. These are entry level positions
but reporters with experience are encouraged to apply. Sports
Reporters are not required to have a personal digital camera but
having one is a plus. What we are looking for:
 Accuracy and clarity in writing
 Ability to work independently and as part of a team
 Ability to meet deadlines and effectively manage time
 Ability to think outside the box
 Available for evening/weekend shifts
To apply, send your resume/cover letter with at least five references who can speak directly to your talent, writing samples that
show your local writing chops and photography skills and a letter telling us why you are the person for the job. Send to Chris
Slone at cslone@civitasmedia.com

Miscellaneous

Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, October 12, 2016 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

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

by Dave Green

By Dave Green

3
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4 6 1
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4 9
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5

6

By Hilary Price

3
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4 3 7
2
1
9
8
5 2

10/12

Difficulty Level

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Today’s Solution

By Bil and Jeff Keane

10/12

8
1
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2016 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

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4
6
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DENNIS THE MENACE

Difficulty Level

Hank Ketcham’s

5
7
3
9
2
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1
8
6

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

2016 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

1 9

8 7

�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Tribe completes sweep of Boston

BOSTON (AP) — The ball
settled into the right ﬁelder’s
glove, the Cleveland Indians
poured onto the diamond and
the Fenway fans fell silent.
Then, slowly from the crowd
rose a chant of “Pa-pi!”
Cleveland swept the Red Sox
out of the postseason and sent
David Ortiz into retirement on
Monday night with a 4-3 victory that completed a three-game
AL Division Series sweep. But
even as the Indians frolicked
on the ﬁeld in their celebratory hats and T-shirts, Boston
fans weren’t ready to let their
beloved Big Papi go.
“I’m glad he didn’t get a hit to
beat us,” manager Terry Francona said after leading the Indians to just the second postseason sweep in franchise history.
“I thought it was an honor to be
on the ﬁeld, competing against
him in his last game, because
he’s truly one of the best.
You could tell the way people
were hanging around yelling
his name and everything. He
deserves every bit of that.”
Coco Crisp hit a two-run
homer , closer Cody Allen
got four outs and the Indians
advanced the AL Championship
Series for the ﬁrst time since
2007. That year, they took a 3-1
lead in the best-of-seven series
against Boston before losing
three in a row.
Cleveland also blew a 2-0 lead
against Boston in the best-ofﬁve round in 1999.
But this year there would be
no fold.
Perhaps inspired by the
Cavaliers’ NBA title — the
city’s ﬁrst pro sports champion-

ship since 1964 — the Indians
shut down Ortiz and the most
proliﬁc offense in the league.
Rookie Tyler Naquin delivered a
two-run single and Josh Tomlin
pitched ﬁve strong innings for
the Indians, who will open the
ALCS at home against Toronto
on Friday.
Cleveland went 4-3 this year
against the wild-card Blue Jays,
who swept AL West champion
Texas to reach the ALCS for
the second straight year.
To advance, the Indians had
to shut down the most proliﬁc
offense in the major leagues
and weather the emotional farewell to Ortiz . The Red Sox designated hitter went 1 for 9 in
the series, collecting a sacriﬁce
ﬂy in Game 3 before walking
on four pitches in his ﬁnal plate
appearance .
Ortiz was lifted for a pinch
runner in the eighth and left to
a standing ovation.
Boston raised fans’ hopes
with an 11-game winning streak
in September but then lost
eight of its last nine games,
including the playoffs. After
winning the ﬁrst two games
in the best-of-ﬁve AL Division
Series, and then waiting an
extra day because of Sunday’s
rainout, the Indians it took a
2-0 lead off Clay Buchholz in
the fourth inning on Naquin’s
single.
Tomlin gave up Andrew
Benintendi’s Green Monsterscraping RBI double in the
ﬁfth, which gave some life to
the Fenway crowd.
But with one run in, one out,
one on and the fans taunting
the Indians starter — “Tom-

Elise Amendola | AP

The Cleveland Indians celebrate their 4-3 win over the Boston Red Sox in Game 3 of baseball’s American League Division
Series, Monday in Boston.

lin! Tom-lin!” — he struck out
Sandy Leon on a pitch in the
dirt and then Jackie Bradley
Jr. grounded out to ﬁrst. In
the sixth, Crisp hit a two-run
homer over the left-ﬁeld wall to
make it 4-1.
Buchholz allowed two runs
and six hits in four innings,
joining David Price and Rick
Porcello as postseason losers.
Tomlin allowed two runs on
four in ﬁve-plus innings. Miller
pitched two innings , Bryan
Shaw got two outs and Allen
came on to face Ortiz with two
out and a man on ﬁrst in the
eighth.

After walking on four pitches
, Ortiz stood on ﬁrst and waved
his arms at the mostly dormant
crowd. The fans rose to cheer
for him and stayed there as
Hanley Ramirez singled to
make it 4-3.
Now representing the tying
run at second, Ortiz was lifted
for pinch-runner Marco Hernandez, leaving the ﬁeld to a
raucous cheer. But even after
coming out of the game, his
work wasn’t done: With one
foot on the top step of the dugout, he continued to cheer the
team on.
Xander Bogaerts hit a hard

line drive to second and Ortiz
jumped onto the dirt, only to
turn around and walk dejectedly back into the dugout when
it was caught for the last out.
In the ninth, Jackie Bradley
Jr. singled with two out and
Dustin Pedroia drew a walk on
a 3-2 pitch. Travis Shaw worked
the count full before popping up
to end it.
“I was cheering so bad,”
Ortiz said. “Once I got out of
the game I was screaming at my
team to put me back in it. Make
me wear this uniform one more
day. Because I wasn’t ready to
be over with the playoff.”

Steelers’ Heyward may miss time with hamstring injury
weeks of the season.
And the list keeps
growing.
Defensive end Cameron
Heyward was the latest
starter affected after he

left Sunday’s 31-13 victory against the New York
Jets in the second quarter
with a hamstring injury.
The Steelers’ defense
didn’t miss a beat in the

second half despite the
loss of the defensive captain.
“We know Cam is one
of the leaders on our
defense,” defensive end
Stephon Tuitt said. “The
next guy stepped up and
stepped up big.”
Tuitt led the defensive line with Heyward
sidelined as Pittsburgh
shut out the Jets in the
second half. The Steelers
limited New York to ﬁve
ﬁrst downs and just 100
yards over the ﬁnal two
quarters while harassing
quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick with an effective pass
rush.
They may have to do
it again Sunday at Miami
(1-4) with Heyward’s
consecutive games-played
and started streaks in
jeopardy.
Since entering the NFL
as the Steelers’ ﬁrst-round
pick in 2011, Heyward
has played in 85 consecutive regular-season
games, third-longest
active among NFL defensive ends. He also started
49 straight, which is ﬁfthbest among defensive
ends.

Heyward didn’t speak
with reporters on Monday, but he didn’t sound
optimistic about his availability following Sunday’s
game. He underwent a
MRI and said he felt soreness, but didn’t know if
there was a ‘pop’ in his
hamstring.
“It deﬁnitely wasn’t
precautionary,” Heyward
said Sunday. “If I could be
out there I would. Other
guys have to step up.
We’re going to need them
all as long as I’m out.”
Rookie Javon Hargrave
and veteran Ricardo
Mathews shared snaps
at defensive end with
Heyward out. Hargrave,
who also played defensive
tackle on Sunday, would
like to see Heyward on
the ﬁeld, but he’s comfortable with the additional
workload.
“It was pretty good to
see my role increase,”
Hargrave said. “If he can’t
go, we’ll have to step up
as a defensive line. He’s
our leader, but at the
same time, we have guys
that can ﬁll that role.”
The Steelers at least
have a little bit of practice

subbing for Heyward. He
sustained a high ankle
sprain during the Steelers’ third preseason game
and missed practice time,
but worked his way back
in time for the team’s
regular-season opener at
Washington.
Heyward led the way
again two weeks ago as
the Steelers defensive end
— frustrated after a lopsided rout at Philadelphia
— had a career-best three
sacks and tipped a pass
that led to a timely interception during a blowout
win against Kansas City.
“He goes hard every
time,” Hargrave said.
“When you see somebody
dominating, you want to
be dominant too.”
Heyward expects Tuitt
to ﬁll that role if he can’t
play.
“He better be ready,”
Heyward said. “I don’t
know how long I’ll be
out, but he’s got to step
up. He’s telling me he’s
talking a lot more and
we need him to do that.
When I come back, we
can do that twice as
much. He’s only going to
grow in this situation.”

Bengals hit low point after Dallas

60684339

PITTSBURGH (AP)
— The Pittsburgh Steelers are a team that has
become accustomed to
dealing with injuries
through the ﬁrst ﬁve

CINCINNATI (AP) —
Asked how surprising it
was to see his team get
run over so completely,
Bengals coach Marvin
Lewis answered with a
question.
“You want the press
conference answer or the
honest answer?” Lewis
said. Told that honesty was preferred, Lewis
responded, “Can’t give
that one.”
His hesitance said it all.
A 28-14 loss in Dallas that
was essentially over early
in the third quarter left
the Bengals (2-3) in a very
uncomfortable spot. They
played their worst game
in years, and now are off
to their worst start since
2010, when they won four
games.
Up next is a trip to New

England (4-1) for Tom
Brady’s home opener. The
Bengals haven’t won in
New England since 1986,
losing six straight there,
so it seems foreboding.
“If I watched the way we
played yesterday, I’d say
the same thing,” defensive
end Carlos Dunlap said.
The Bengals spent Monday re-watching the game
at Dallas, with no more
insight as to why so much
went so wrong. The Cowboys (4-1) scored touchdowns on their ﬁrst three
possessions and led 28-0
early in the third quarter
before easing up.
“There was not a lot to
be happy about,” Lewis
said.
The biggest issues were
on defense. The Bengals
knew that Dallas would

run right at them, trying
to keep rookie quarterback Dak Prescott out of
stressful situations. The
Cowboys did whatever
they wanted to do, with
Ezekiel Elliott running for
134 yards on only 15 carries — his 60-yard touchdown run put the game
away early in the third
quarter.
Prescott threw for a
touchdown and ran for
another. The Cowboys
piled up 180 yards on the
ground, the most allowed
by a Bengals defense since
Seattle ran for 200 in the
ﬁfth game last season.
Last season, the Bengals allowed only seven
opponents to rush for 100
yards in 17 games; they’ve
already done it three
times in ﬁve games.

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