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                  <text>Today
in
History

Partly
cloudy,
H-60, L-43

Marshall
gets a
win

EDITORIAL s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 182, Volume 70

Tuesday, November 15, 2016 s 50¢

Quilters present Quilt of Valor
By Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

Sgt. Major Jim Freeman, right, is pictured with Forest Run Quilters (from left)
Rosemary Keller, Wilma Reiber, Carolyn Salser, Debbie Davis, Julie Hubbard, Jane
Harris and Marcia Arnold after receiving the Quilt of Valor on Sunday.

RACINE — As part of a Veterans Day recognition of Sunday, the Forest Run Quilters
presented a Quilt of Valor to
Sgt. Major Jim Freeman.
“I am so humbled by this,”
said Freeman of receiving the
quilt. “I love doing this. I love
being a soldier. It is something
I was good at. If you’re good
at it they let you go on to the
next step. I’m almost out of
steps. I’m almost at the top of
that ladder.”
Quilt of Valor began in 2003
as a dream of Catherine Roberts, whose son was deployed
in Iraq. In the dream, Roberts

saw a young man sitting on
the side of a bed hunched over.
The permeating feeling was
one of utter despair with his
war demons clustered around,
drawing him down, stated
Marcia Arnold prior to the
quilt presentation on Sunday.
In the next scene of the
dream, the man was wrapped
in a quilt, with his whole
demeanor having changed,
going from despair to a feeling
of hope and well-being. The
message of the dream was that
quilts equal healing.
It was from that dream that
Roberts started Quilt of Valor.
The Quilt of Valor is the civilian equivalent of a Purple
Heart. Volunteer quilters

throughout the country donate
time and materials to create
the quilts.
There are several rules and
requirements for the quilts.
The quilts must be quality made, the quilts are to be
awarded and not just passed
out. The quilts must be made
of high quality cotton in a
patriotic design, although it
does not have to be red, white
and blue. The quilt must be
large enough to cover an average size adult. It must be hand
or machine quilted.
“Quilts of Valor say to the
awardee, ‘Thank you for your
service, sacriﬁce and valor in

See QUILTERS | 5

Cash Mob invades King’s

Christmas
Flower Show set
for this weekend
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Garden
Clubs annual Winter Flower Show will be held this
weekend at Heath United Methodist Church in
Middleport.
The annual show will feature a variety of
designs, including, ﬂower arrangements, wreaths,
ornaments and decorated packages.
The Holiday ﬂower show to be held Nov. 19
and 20 at the Heath United Methodist on S. Third
Street in Middleport. The show will be open to
the public on both days from noon-4 p.m. The
show will be judged by Ohio Association of Garden Clubs standards by an accredited OAGC judge
on Saturday, Nov. 19 at 1 p.m. Spectators are welcome.
Categories for the show include:
I[d_eh�:[i_]di�=Wj^[h�7Zl[dj�CWj[h_Wbi0�
Madonna — modern; Madonna — traditional
9^[Ya�J^[�B_]^ji�Å�Bkc_dWho
;l[h]h[[d�&lt;eh�J^[�JWXb[�Å�JhWZ_j_edWb�Z[i_]d�
with candle or candles
See SHOW | 5

Photos by Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

Cash mobsters invaded King’s Ace Hardware on Thursday evening as part of a Cash Mob event organized by the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce. During the event, shoppers were able to purchase $10 deals throughout the entire store. Owner Tim King explained that
the deals were priced at $9.32, which with tax came out to $10. Shoppers could also sample food items which are available at the store,
as well as registering for door prizes. This is the Chamber’s second Cash Mob event.

OU SBDC expands service area
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

Courtesy photo

The Meigs County Garden Clubs annual Winter Flower Show
will be held this weekend at Heath United Methodist Church
in Middleport.

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

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ATHENS — Following
an award winning year,
the Ohio University Small
Business Development
Center (SBDC) at the
Voinovich School of Leadership and Public Affairs
will expand to serve a
12-county region of southeastern and eastern Ohio.
The Ohio University
SBDC has a proven track
record of working in Athens, Hocking, Meigs and
Perry counties with more
than 400 clients annually
while consistently exceeding goals. Due to this
strong performance, the
state of Ohio Lead SBDC
ofﬁce and the U.S. Small
Business Administration
(SBA) has expanded the
Ohio University SBDC
service region to include
the following additional
Yekdj_[i0�&lt;W_hÒ[bZ"�Ckiaingum, Morgan, Washington, Noble, Monroe,
Guernsey and Belmont.
The Ohio University
SBDC provides valuable

no-cost technical assistance to startup and existing businesses in a variety
of functional areas.
Clients are provided help
_d�Wh[Wi�ikY^�Wi0�YWf_jWb�
access, business planning,
market and industry analysis, ﬁnancial analysis and
budgeting. The expansion enables the Center
to continue the support
of the rural Appalachian
region, which faces economic obstacles that staff
members are constantly
working to improve.
“The SBDC team is
excited to broaden our
service area. We work
hard to provide existing
and startup businesses
with valuable assistance
that will help the business owners achieve their
goals, increase proﬁtability and grow. We will
consistently look for ways
that we can be a valuable
resource to economic
development in the southeastern Ohio region,”
Lissa Jollick, Regional
Director, said.
In spring 2016, the

Ohio University SBDC
was honored with the
Small Business Development Center Service
Excellence and Innovation Center Award from
the Ohio Small Business
Development Centers.
The Ohio University
SBDC has consistently
exceeded their goals.
In the 2016 ﬁscal year,
the Center assisted 35
business startups and
counseled clients for
more than 2,000 hours. In
addition to these metrics,
the SBDC signiﬁcantly
exceeded goals in the
areas of job creation and
retention, sales growth
and capital infusion. The
organization offers a
robust schedule of no-cost
trainings and professional
development opportunities to its clients. In the
2016 ﬁscal year, the Center held 56 professional
development events for
clients hosting more than
550 attendees.
Three new positions
have been added as part
of the SBDC expansion.

Cindy Voorhies, who has
served as director within
the SBDC network for 16
years will continue her
work serving Muskingum,
Guernsey and Belmont
counties. John Voorhies,
who also has experience
working within the state’s
SBDC network, was hired
as the business advisor
for Washington, Morgan,
Monroe and Noble counties. Carleen Dotson, formerly an IT Instructor at
Tri County Adult Career
Center, has joined the
Ohio University SBDC
team in a newly created
position as training specialist/business advisor.
Erin Gibson, a SBDC
Business Advisor since
2013, will continue to
serve Meigs, Athens,
Perry, Hocking and Fairﬁeld counties. Trenia
Twyman will provide
ongoing support as Ofﬁce
Manager.
For additional information or business assistance please contact Lissa
Jollick at jollickl@ohio.
edu or 740-593-0473.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, November 15, 2016

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS COUNTY BRIEFS

DIANA DAVIDSON

JOHN FREEMAN ROUSH

MIDDLEPORT —
Diana Lynn “Pee Wee”
Jeffrey Scot Roush. He is Davidson, 66 of MiddleINVERNESS, Fla. —
port, Ohio passed away
also survived by brothJohn Freeman Roush of
on Saturday, Nov. 12,
Inverness, Florida, passed ers Nathan and William
away Sunday, October 30, Roush of Mt. Sterling, Ky. 2016, at the Cabell Huntington Hospital in HunJack grew up
2016.
tington, West Virginia.
an outdoorsman,
“Jack” was born
She was born on Nov. 4,
spending much
on September 10,
1950, in Gallipolis, Ohio.
time hunting and
1937 in Mason,
She was a homemaker.
ﬁshing as well as
West Virginia
She is preceded in
gardening, and he
to the late Lois
death
by her parents, Lois
enjoyed a whis(Bush) (Roush)
and
James
Provience and
key at the end of
Robinson and
Bill
and
Sharon
Rupe;
his day. He was
Freeman Roush.
brother, Raymond Rupe.
a beloved husband and
He is survived by his
She is survived by her,
father, and he will be terwife Shirley (Lyons)
Roush and his daughters ribly missed. A graveside husband of 48 years,
Allen Davidson; children,
memorial will be held at
Cathy (Roush)Schaefer,
Lois (John) Lyons, Pomea later date at Graham
and Dianna (Roush)
roy, Ohio, Allen Eugene
Roclevitch. Jack was pre- Cemetery in West Vir“Todd” (Tracy) Davidson,
ceded in death by his son ginia.
Langsville, Ohio, Sabra
(David) Pierce, Rutland,
SLIWINSKI
Ohio; grandchildren, Pnut
(Amber) Davidson, MidGALLIPOLIS — Robert Andrew Sliwinski, 62, of
dleport, Chellsie (Philip)
Gallipolis, died Saturday, November 12, 2016 at his
Fetty, Henderson, W.Va.,
home.
Arrangements will be announced by Waugh-Halley- Maranda Riggs, Pomeroy,
Amber Davidson, LangsWood Funeral Home.
ville, Dylan Davidson,
Langsville, Chloe Pierce,
GRAHAM
PROCTORVILLE — Shelia Anne Graham, 59, of
Proctorville, died Friday, November 11, 2016 at St.
Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral service will be conducted 11 a.m. Tuesday, November 15, 2016 at Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville. Burial will follow in Rome
Cemetery, Proctorville. Visitation will be held 6 p.m.
to 8 p.m. Monday, November 14, 2016 at the funeral
home.

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IRONTON, Ohio — Paula J. Anderson, 73, of
Ironton, died Monday, Nov. 14, 2016 at the Emogene
Dolin Hospice House, Huntington, W.Va.
Hall Funeral Home in Proctorville is in charge of
arrangements which are incomplete.

CREWS
THURMAN — Laura M. Crews, 105, of Thurman,
died Saturday, November 12, 2016 at Holzer Medical
Center.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Friday, November
18, 2016 at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home. Burial
will follow at the Patriot Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home on Thursday from 6 -8 p.m.

MORGAN

BOWMAN

3
4
6
7
8
10
11

ROUSH

12

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. — Nelson Richard Roush, 89,
of New Haven, W.Va., passed away on November 14,
2016.
Funeral services will be held on Thursday, November 17, 2016 at 2 p.m. with Pastor Jason Simpkins
ofﬁciating at Anderson Funeral Home in New Haven.
Burial will follow at Sunrise Memorial Cemetery
where military honors will be presented by the American Legion and the VFW. Visiting hours will be on
Thursday from noon to 2 p.m. at the funeral home.

13

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shawley@civitasmedia.com

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bwalters@civitasmedia.com

111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

Meeting
Change
ROCKSPRINGS — The Meigs Local Board of
Education is moving their next regularly scheduled
board meeting from Tuesday, Nov. 8 at 7 p.m.
to Tuesday, Nov. 15 at 3 p.m. The Nov. 15 meeting will be held in the Hyatt Regency — second
ﬂoor, Columbus, Ohio at the annual OSBA Capital
Conference. The reason for the change is that the
Meigs Administration Building is a polling place
for the Nov. 8 general election.

Tea Party
Meeting
POMEROY — The Meigs Tea Party will hold
only one meeting on Nov. 15 at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center, Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
Doors open at 7 p.m. Agenda is to be determined. Refreshments will be served. Everyone
welcome.

Immunization
Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health
Department will conduct an Immunization
Clinic from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays
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 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 ; inﬂuenza vaccines are also
available. Call for eligibility determination and
availability or visit our website at www.meigshealth.com to see a list of accepted commercial
insurances and Medicaid for adults.

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RIO GRANDE — The University of Rio Grande
Masterworks Chorale will present its annual fall
performance Sunday, Nov. 20 at 3 p.m. in the John
W. Berry Fine and Performing Arts Center. The
performance this year will be a rendition of Benjamin Britten’s A Ceremony of Carols featuring
soloists Racquel Sims and Adelynne Michaels. The
Masterworks Chorale, under the direction of Dr.
Sarin Williams, will also feature guest musician
Sally Kelton. Kelton is a professional harpist from
Kentucky and will be an artist in residence with
the university this week. She plans to visit local
elementary schools for a demonstration on the
harp during her stay with Rio. The concert is free
to the public. For more information on the performance, contact the School of Arts and Letters at
740-245-7124.

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Daily stock reports
are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions Nov. 14, 2016,
provided by Edward
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Member SIPC.

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Rio Masterworks Chorale
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TUESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

WANA, W.Va. — Terri Sue Bowman, 57, of Wana,
W.Va., died Saturday, November 12, 2016 at her residence.
Friends may call at the Owen-Neely Funeral Home,
5894 Mason-Dixon Highway, Blacksville, W.Va. from
6-8 p.m., Tuesday. Funeral services will be held in
the funeral home at 1 p.m., Wednesday with Pastor
Steve Edwards ofﬁciating. Interment will follow in the
Eakin-Wana Memorial Cemetery.

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.

STOCKS

ANDERSON

BRISTOL, Va. — Ronald Rath Morgan, 83, of
Bristol, Va., passed away on Saturday, November 12,
2016, at Health South in Bristol.
The family will receive friends at Akard Funeral
Home on Saturday, November 19, 2016, from 1 p.m.
to 2:45 p.m. The funeral service will be conducted
at 3 p.m., Saturday by Rev. Jonathan Jonas of State
Street Methodist Church. Burial will be private with
Military Rites conducted by the Bristol VFW Honor
Guard. Akard Funeral Home, Bristol, is serving the
Morgan family.

Langsville, Ohio, David
Mikeal Pierce, Rutland,
Ohio; great-grandchildren, Logan and Bailee
Davidson; brothers and
sisters, Nancy Snyder,
Cheshire, Ohio, Lavada
(Denver) Biggs, Pomeroy,
Bev (Joe) Burden, Va.,
Wanda Rupe, Huntington,
W.Va., Peggy Baird, Gallipolis, Matthew (Beth)
Rupe; a very special hero
her uncle Bubby Chick;
and several nieces, nephews and aunts and uncles.
Funeral services will be
held on Thursday, Nov.
17, 2016 at 11 a.m. at
the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Middleport with Pastor Steve
Little ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow at the Gravel
Hill Cemetery. Visitation
for family and friends will
be held on Wednesday,
Nov. 16, 2016 from 6-8
p.m. at the funeral home.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

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Are Back" (N)
"Going for Broke" (N)
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House Payne House Payne The Browns The Browns Martin
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Florida State Florida State
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�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Brad Pitt back in China
SHANGHAI (AP) — Brad Pitt made his ﬁrst
promotional appearance for a movie in China since
reportedly being banned over a ﬁlm about Tibet
almost 20 years ago.
He spent 40 minutes giving autographs to Chinese fans on Monday and 20 minutes at a tightly
controlled media event promoting his latest movie.
The Chinese government reportedly didn’t like
his 1997 ﬁlm, “Seven Years in Tibet,” about an
Austrian explorer’s relationship with a young Dalai
Lama, because of its portrayal of harsh Chinese
rule in the Himalayan region.

MEIGS COUNTY
CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Tuesday, November 15, 2016 3

Tuppers Plains UMW meet
TUPPERS PLAINS — Tuppers
Plains St. Paul United Methodist Women recently met at there
church basement. Barb Roush led
Ten Prayers to carry you through
the holidays for the opening
prayer. The Litany was read by all
members. Members Judy Kennedy
and Betty Chevalier presented
a program on the World Thank
Offering. Election of Ofﬁcers the
President is Karen Thomas, Vice
President is Connie Rankin, Secre-

tary Joanna Weaver and Treasurer
Judy Kennedy. These are the new
ofﬁcers for 2017. Joanna Weaver
blessed the refreshments enjoyed
by all. Secretary and Treasurer
reports were read and approved.
December will be the last month
to order That’s My Pan. The group
and other church members served
a meal to the homeless in Athens.
Barb Roush thanked all for making our second Worship in Pink
program a success a offering was

sent to Susan K. Komen Columbus.
Special Recognition Pin has been
purchased that will go to a member
of the church who has went above
and beyond. A thank you letter
was received from Meigs County
Council on Aging. On Sunday,
Nov. 12, 2016, WOC 43rd Annual
Celebration at Lancaster, Ohio,
was discussed. The group will go
on a Christmas Outing on Dec. 5.
The group will meet on Nov. 29 to
decorate the church for Christmas.

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@civitasmedia.com.

Thursday, Nov. 17
ROCKSPRINGS — The Meigs County Retired
Teachers will sponsor a retirement planning
seminar for all active teachers and certiﬁed staff
of schools in Meigs County from 4-6 p.m. at the
Meigs High School cafeteria. Speakers from the
STRS and investment consultants will present
updates on projected beneﬁts and ﬁnancial planning for teachers of all ages. Refreshments and
door prizes will be provided. Please call 740-4166790 or email beckyjane.triplett@yahoo.com by
Nov. 10 to indicate participation.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Democratic
Party will meet at 7 p.m. at the Carpenter’s Hall
on Main Street, Pomeroy.
Friday, Nov. 18
MIDDLEPORT — The monthly Free Community Dinner at the Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center, located at the corner of Fifth
and Main Streets, will be held at 5 p.m. They will
be serving a Thanksgiving meal of turkey, dressing, mashed potatoes and gravy, noodles, green
beans, roll, and dessert. The public is invited to
attend.
MARIETTA — The Regional Advisory Council
of for the Area Agency on Aging will meet at 11
a.m. at The Knights of Columbus, 312 Franklin
St., Marietta.
MIDDLEPORT — Joni Owen, the Village Soap
Maker, will present a Holiday soap making demonstration from 6:30-8:30 p.m. at Riverbend Arts
Council, 290 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Admission
is $12 and each will receive a sample bar of soap.
Refreshments served. For additional info call 740416-1847.
POMEROY — The PHS Class of ‘59 will be
having their third Friday lunch at Fox Pizza at
noon.
Saturday, Nov. 19
RUTLAND — The annual Rutland Volunteer
Fire Department turkey dinner will be held at
Meigs Elementary School, with serving to begin
at 5 p.m. Tickets are $7 and are available at the
Rutland Department Store, Quality Print Shop
and Pomeroy Flower Shop.
POMEROY — Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
of the DAR will have a special program about our
treasured depression glass. Members are to bring
glass ware with them. The meeting will be held at
the Pomeroy Library at 1 p.m. in the large conference room. Brighten your holiday tables by using
this beautiful glassware.
SALEM CENTER — Star Grange Fun Night
and Potluck supper for Nov. 19 has been cancelled.
Monday, Nov. 21
LETART TWP. — The regular meeting of the
Letart Township Trustees will be held at 5 p.m. at
the Letart Township Building.

Courtesy photo

Costumers line up at the Belle and Beaus Western square dance club Halloween party

Square dance Halloween party winners
Staff Report

CHESHIRE — The
Bells and Beaus Western square dance club
of Cheshire had their
annual Halloween party
recently with 59 individuals present.
A parade of costumed
characters was enjoyed
by all dancers.
Costume contest

MEIGS COUNTY
CHURCH CALENDAR
Visitor Sunday — A Day of Thanksgiving
MIDDLEPORT — Ash Street Church in
Middleport invites the public for a special day of
thanksgiving on Sunday, Dec. 4. The church will
be thanking God for all that he has enabled them
to do in the past year. The day of thanksgiving
and celebration will include Sunday school at 9:30
a.m., worship service at 10:30 a.m., thanksgiving
dinner at 5 p.m. and gospel sing at 6 p.m.
Ongoing Events
MIDDLEPORT — Pastor Billy Zuspan of the
First Baptist Church of Middleport has begun an
in-depth Bible study of The Revelation during
the Sunday and Wednesday evening services at
7 p.m. at 211 S. 6th Ave., Middleport, Ohio. If
you have questions, please call 740-992-2755 and
leave a message.

Hook. Gail Buck, of
Leon, W.Va., won “most
original” costume with
her alien. Becky Jaycox,
of Wellson, took the
title of “famous frontiersman” and Connie
and Bob McCoy, of Oak
Hill, were named “most
famous celebrities” for
their version of Bonnie
and Clyde.
Grilled hotdogs were

prepared by Jackie Rodgers Starcher and Roger
Steele. A meal of delicious food was prepared
and enjoyed by all present. Belles and Beaus
Western square dance
club meets every Monday evening at 7 p.m.
at the Gavin Employees
Club House in Cheshire.
Western dancers are
encouraged to attend.

Gallia OSP post reports multiple accidents
Staff Report

GALLIA COUNTY —
The Gallipolis post of the
Ohio State Highway Patrol
is investigating a two vehicle
collision which injured two
parties Sunday evening.
According to reports, the
crash occurred around 8:12
p.m on State Route 160 near
County Road 111. The roadway closed as a result of the
crash and remained so for
roughly two hours. Troopers
say they are still investigating the collision.
Julie Greenlee, 42, of Vinton, suffered minor injuries
and was driving a 2008 Ford
Taurus. She was wearing a
seat belt. Lane Fitch, 16, of
Bidwell, was driving a 1998
Honda Civic. He was wearing a safety belt and suffered
incapacitating injuries.
Fitch was traveling southbound on State Route 160
while Greenlee traveled the
opposite direction. Fitch’s
vehicle reportedly traveled
left of center. Greenlee
reportedly struck Fitch’s
vehicle on the left side.

Dean Wright | Daily Tribune

A semi collided with a tree and dumped liquid asphalt Friday just south of Addison.

Fitch was transported to
Cabell Huntington Hospital
in Huntington, W.Va.
In a separate incident,
around 11:30 a.m. Friday
roughly a mile south of
Addison, a semi hauling
liquid asphalt attempted
to swerve around a vehicle
which had reportedly

stopped in front of the truck.
The semi connected with
trees off the right side of
the road. The truck reportedly was part of Red Dog
Trucking. The victim’s name
was not released as of press
time. The driver did not
suffer incapacitating injuries
and was walking about the

crash site.
The tank of liquid asphalt
spilled and settled in a pool
in a ditch off the side of
the road. Troopers are still
investigating.
Information on these
accidents submitted by the
Gallipolis post of the Ohio
State Highway Patrol.

Honoring the ‘greatest generation’
By Mindy Kearns

gunner. According to Jones’
biography, the sub chaser
was one of the ﬁrst ships to
NEW HAVEN — Two
enter a new harbor to check
World War II veterans
for mines and submarines.
received special recognition
His tour took him to the
Friday evening when the
Solomon Islands and the
Town of New Haven held its Philippine Islands. During
Veterans Day remembrance his 28 months in the Navy,
ceremony.
Jones served in the 3rd, 5th
Although the service is
and 7th ﬂeets. He is now 90
held for all service men and years old.
women, each year two-toRoush entered the U.S.
three veterans are chosen
Army in June 1943. While
for special recognition.
training to go to the Paciﬁc
They are presented with an Theater, the war ended, and
American ﬂag, encased in
he was sent to Germany.
a wooden display with an
Roush was discharged
engraved plaque.
in November 1945. He is
This year’s chosen veta past commander of the
erans were Nelson Roush
Smith-Capehart American
of New Haven and Joseph
Legion Post 140 of New
W. Jones of Mason. Both
Haven, and has attended
entered the service at the
over 200 veteran funerals
young age of 17 years.
since 1973.
Jones joined the Navy and
Neither Jones nor Roush
was sent to the Great Lakes was able to attend the cerNaval Training Center for
emony. Roush’s son, Ronnie,
basic seaman training. He
accepted the ﬂag on his
was then assigned to a “sub behalf, with several family
chaser” PC1598, where he
members in attendance.
served as a coxswain and a Accepting for Jones was
Special to the Register

Tuesday, Nov. 29
POMEROY — The OH-KAN Coin Club will
meet at 6:30 p.m. in the second ﬂoor meeting
room of the Farmers Bank location on East Main
Street, Pomeroy.

winners are as follows.
Phyllis Vogel, of Winﬁeld, W.Va., took the
title of “prettiest lady.”
“Most creative costume”
winners were CHick
Magnet and Chic,
Ann and Glen Davis,
of Jackson. “Scariest”
costume was given to
Keith Smith of Hurricane, W.Va, for his
rendition of Captain

Ray Varian.
Dave Sigman, commander of Legion Post
140, served as speaker
and emcee. The event also
included both the ﬂag folding ceremony, as well as
the P.O.W./M.I.A. table ceremony. The latter ceremony
contains an empty table to
represent the service men
and women who remain
missing yet today. Taking
part in the ceremonies,
along with the gun salute,
were members of both the
Legion and Stewart-Johnson
V.F.W. Post 9926 of Mason.

The event is sponsored
by the town each year at the
veterans memorial site, next
to the ﬁre station. Organizer for the service is Roberta
Hysell, town recorder.
(Editor’s Note: Nelson
Roush passed away on
Monday, Nov. 14, after
the veterans remembrance
ceremony took place in
New Haven. His obituary
appears inside this edition.)
Mindy Kearns is a freelance writer
for Ohio Valley Publishing who
lives in Mason County. She can be
reached at mindykearns1@hotmail.
com.

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Tuesday, Nov. 15
COLUMBUS — A Special Board Meeting of the
Southern Local Board of Education will take place
at 4 p.m. at the Hyatt Regency, Columbus Ohio.
There will be no regular scheduled meeting for
the month of November 2016.

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Don’t let skinny
jeans fool you: 2016
election explained
By Scott George
Contributing columnist

In a few years, we are all going to have to explain to
our children and grandchildren what happened in the
2016 election of our 45th president. I haven’t talked
to anyone the past few months who isn’t a bit embarrassed, ashamed and humiliated about what has taken
place. I am hoping that all of us can reﬂect, learn and
grow from this process and become stronger, better
and gentler.
In my reﬂection, I’ve discovered a few principles
that I will apply to my life and learn from, because the
only real mistake is the one from which we learn nothing.
—Lesson No. 1: What is done in secret will be
shouted from the rooftops.
Jean Racine, a 17th-century French playwright,
once said, “There are no secrets that time does not
reveal.”
I wonder if Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton had
any idea that emails, conversations and interviews
from years ago would become public consumption,
that the phone conversations, texts and comments
made in private would surface and cast judgment on
who they really are as politicians and leaders.
Nothing is secret — from WikiLeaks and emails, to
audio tape recordings on an “Access Hollywood” bus,
to FBI investigations, to employees and past business
dealings. It would be wise for all of us to remember
that every word, conversation or comment we make
could be brought to light.
I’m reminded of a song my Grandmother George
used to sing to me at bedtime: O, be careful little
mouth what you say/There’s a Father up above,/And
He’s looking down in love,/So, be careful little mouth
what you say.
I don’t have a problem, as a Christian, knowing
that the Father is up above looking down in love, but
I’m not too happy about WikiLeaks founder Julian
Assange, CNN and Fox News looking on, too, waiting
to uncover anything and everything.
—Lesson No. 2: Character still matters.
In this year’s election, it seems like the policies
have been overlooked and overshadowed by the lack
of character on both sides of the aisle. Our society is
ﬁlled with distrust, skepticism and suspicion because
neither candidate demonstrated a track record of
integrity, truthfulness or honesty.
My grandfather and father were both very simple
men who, thankfully, taught me the value of a good
name and the worth of a heart of character and integrity. Character never goes out of style.
I turned 55 last month, and my wife of 32 years,
Tammi, decided that for my birthday she was going to
replace my worn-out faded Levi’s with a new pair of
“skinny jeans.” As soon as I slipped them on, I knew
that it was time to get back to the good ol’ jeans.
Fashion trends may come and go, but old-fashioned
integrity, character and honesty still go a long way. I
don’t recommend us becoming so hip and trendy that
we lose sight of the old qualities that are still valuable
and need to be seen and demonstrated in any leader.
Attributes like loyalty, trustworthiness, faithfulness
and humility may be old-fashioned, but they never go
out of style.
—Lesson No. 3: A house divided cannot stand.
This great country is in a state of division. Democrats and Republicans are feuding. Some in the
African-American community are at odds with our
law-enforcement community. Liberals are debating
with conservatives. Those who love Sean Hannity are
bickering with those who adore Chris Matthews. Red
states are ﬁghting blue states.
In times like this, we all need to remember what it
was like when we were in elementary school. At the
beginning of each day, we would stand with childlike
faith and sincerity and declare with pride and optimism the pledge of allegiance that unites us as one
nation under God.
Let’s learn the important life lesson that there is
more power in unity than division.
—Lesson No. 4: We all need to do less complaining
and more praying to support our leaders.
Over the past two years, I have seen hundreds of my
Facebook friends drift from sharing happy pictures of
their children and families to posting political rants
and raves from both sides of the aisle. Neighbors ﬁghting neighbors, family opposing family, friends bickering with friends. What if we were to turn off CNN, Fox
News and MSNBC and invest that time in praying for
and supporting our leaders, regardless of their political afﬁliation, to create a culture of peace and unity?
Perhaps we could learn from the advice the apostle
Paul gave his younger aide Timothy in 1 Timothy 2:13:
“Here are my directions: Pray much for others;
plead for God’s mercy upon them; give thanks for all
he is going to do for them.
Pray in this way for kings and all others who are in
authority over us, or are in places of high responsibility, so that we can live in peace and quietness, spending our time in godly living and thinking much about
the Lord. This is good and pleases God our Savior.”
Life lessons, if applied, will be good for our children,
grandchildren, Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton and all
of us.
Scott George is senior pastor of Pine Castle United Methodist Church
in Orlando, Fla., and development director of Orlando Hope, a nonprofit
financial advisory. He wrote this for the Orlando Sentinel.

THEIR VIEW

Among immigrants, some of our greatest minds
By Bettina Hoerlin
and Gino Segre
Contributing columnists

In 1939, when an Italian immigrant arrived
for his appointment with
a Navy admiral in Washington, he overheard the
desk ofﬁcer announcing,
“There’s a wop outside.”
The immigrant had
been designated by
key physicists to warn
American military leaders about the impending
peril of the Nazis developing nuclear weapons.
The scientists thought
that Enrico Fermi, having just won the 1938
Nobel Prize for physics,
would give extra weight
to the military’s fears.
Fermi had reached
American shores a mere
two months earlier,
picking up his Nobel in
Sweden as he traveled
his escape route from fascism and anti-Semitism
in Italy.
Today the derogatory
term “wop,” roughly
meaning Italian thug, is
rarely used. But America
has regrettably found
other ways of stigmatizing immigrants, equally
demeaning and conveying a clear message of
their not being wanted
or valued. Luckily Fermi
ignored the insult and
went on to become one
of this country’s most
loyal citizens and among
its most celebrated physicists.
Under Fermi’s leadership, the world’s ﬁrst
nuclear self-sustaining
chain reaction was
achieved Dec. 2, 1942,
at the University of Chicago. This seminal event
marked the birth of the
atomic age and was the
necessary precursor to
nuclear weapons, as it
was to nuclear medicine.
Shrouded in secrecy,
the discovery became a

the reason for frequent
trips to questioning
bureaucrats. But by the
time Fermi moved to Los
Alamos in the summer
of 1944, his status had
changed from enemy
alien to one of holding
this nation’s highest
security clearance. And
he had become a U.S.
citizen.
Upon Fermi’s untimely
death at age 53 in 1954,
the iconic broadcaster
Edward R. Murrow commented: “It was the good
fortune of this country
that Dr. Fermi found
asylum in 1938. Under
the present immigration
laws, he might not be
admissible. … His exclusion would be shared by
other immigrant founding fathers of the atomic
age.”
With trademark
astuteness, Murrow was
alluding to the rampant
McCarthyism of the
time that was sullying
America’s reputation as
a decent and inclusive
country. Murrow brought
to the fore an issue that
still resounds in America.
Obviously not all
refugees are Fermis, but
there just might be one
like him among them. It
is worth noting that ﬁve
of the six U.S. recipients
of 2016 Nobel Prizes are
immigrants. Even in the
case of the one outlier
— Bob Dylan — it was
his grandparents, not he,
who came to America in
search of a better life.
With the growing
threat of sweeping changes to immigration policies, America’s place as a
welcoming land of opportunity is more important
to preserve than ever.

basis for the Manhattan
Project, the major industrial enterprise employing 100,000 people, all
sharing the common
mission of beating Nazi
Germany in building an
atomic bomb. Fermi was
recruited to its Los Alamos Laboratory site as
an associate director and
a special division became
named after him.
On this remote mesa
in New Mexico, Fermi
joined forces with several
other fellow refugees
who had ﬂed tyranny
and persecution to live
in a country of freedom
and tolerance. They,
too, were drawn to Los
Alamos by the desire to
participate in the war
effort and by the urgency
of the task.
Sometimes called
“refugee scientists,” they
were renowned in the
world of physics. Many
were Jewish or, like
Fermi, were married to
someone Jewish. The cafeteria at the Los Alamos
Scientiﬁc Laboratory
was abuzz with foreign
languages, although the
scientists were all urged
to speak English with
one another. They did
so gladly, although occasionally, when excited
about a result, Italians,
Germans, Hungarians,
and others might break
into their native tongues,
only to immediately correct themselves.
The discoveries of
yet another refugee
to America had been
instrumental to the tasks
at Los Alamos. Fermi
had prophetically noted
in 1922 that Einstein’s
famous equation implied
the possible delivery of a
vast quantity of nuclear
energy. “It does not
seem possible, at least
in the near future,” he
observed, “to discover

a way to release such a
frightening amount of
energy, just as well for its
ﬁrst effect would be to
smash into smithereens
the physicist who had the
misfortune of ﬁnding the
way to produce it.”
Little did Fermi realize that he would be one
of those physicists who
found “a way to produce
it.” He was involved
in every phase of the
Manhattan Project,
whether as a researcher,
an administrator or an
adviser, and he played a
pivotal role in its success.
All of this is particularly
remarkable because government bureaucracies
had alternatively regarded Fermi as a security
risk, an enemy alien, and
most hurtfully, a committed fascist. When the
Army had performed
a background check of
him in August 1940,
its report concluded,
“Employment of this
person on secret work is
not recommended.” That
recommendation was
thankfully overruled.
In 1941, when the
United States ofﬁcially
entered WWII, the government imposed a set
of restrictions on Italian,
German and Japanese
immigrants, labeling
them enemy aliens. For
Fermi, this meant it was
cumbersome to commute
between Columbia University, where he taught,
to the University of Chicago, where he headed a
research team intent on
proving that ﬁssion could
be controlled.
Every time Fermi traveled, he needed special
permission that was
granted only grudgingly
by authorities. It was
made more complicated
by the secret nature of
his mission that prohibited him from explaining

Aldrin Jr. splashed down
safely in the Atlantic
after spending four days
in orbit.
On this date:
In 1777, the Second
Continental Congress
approved the Articles of
Confederation.
In 1806, explorer
Zebulon Pike sighted
the mountaintop now
known as Pikes (cq)
Peak in present-day

THOUGHT FOR TODAY

Bettina Hoerlin and Gino Segre are
authors of the recently published
“The Pope of Physics: Enrico
Fermi and the Birth of the Atomic
Age.” They wrote this for The
Philadelphia Inquirer.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday,
Nov. 15, the 320th day
of 2016. There are 46
days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Nov. 15, 1966,
the ﬂight of Gemini 12,
the ﬁnal mission of the
Gemini program, ended
successfully as astronauts James A. Lovell
and Edwin “Buzz”

“News reports don’t change the world. Only
facts change it, and those have already
happened when we get the news.”
— Friedrich Durrenmatt,
Swiss author and playwright (1921-1990)

Colorado.
In 1864, during the
Civil War, Union forces
led by Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman began

their “March to the Sea”
from Atlanta; the campaign ended with the
capture of Savannah on
Dec. 21.

�NEWS/WEATHER

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TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

36°

55°

49°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

(in inches)

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

0.00
0.56
1.54
40.77
37.49

Wed.
7:12 a.m.
5:14 p.m.
7:38 p.m.
9:17 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Last

New

Nov 21 Nov 29

First

Dec 7

Full

Dec 13

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

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

Major
11:55a
12:25a
1:36a
2:43a
3:45a
4:43a
5:34a

Minor
5:40a
6:45a
7:51a
8:57a
9:59a
10:55a
11:46a

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™

Major
---12:30a
2:06p
3:11p
4:12p
5:08p
5:58p

Minor
6:10p
7:15p
8:21p
9:26p
10:26p
11:21p
----

WEATHER HISTORY
A devastating tornado cut an
18.5-mile-long path through Huntsville, Ala., on Nov. 15, 1989. Twentyone people died, and 463 were
injured. Over 500 buildings were
damaged at a cost of $100 million.

A: Local snowfall that occurs along the
leeward side of the Great Lakes.

Today
7:11 a.m.
5:14 p.m.
6:41 p.m.
8:08 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Mostly sunny

Quilters

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THURSDAY

AIR QUALITY
300

Portsmouth
61/44

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.32 -0.31
Marietta
34 15.86 -0.39
Parkersburg
36 21.32 -0.38
Belleville
35 12.73 -0.28
Racine
41 13.09 +0.06
Point Pleasant
40 24.88 -0.26
Gallipolis
50 13.08 -0.12
Huntington
50 26.13 -0.10
Ashland
52 34.78 +0.02
Lloyd Greenup 54 13.29 +0.05
Portsmouth
50 16.00 -0.10
Maysville
50 34.30 none
Meldahl Dam
51 15.00 -0.10
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Sunshine, nice and
warm

Partly sunny and nice

Logan
58/40

42°
30°
Mostly cloudy and
colder

Marietta
59/41

Murray City
58/40
Belpre
59/42

Athens
59/40

St. Marys
59/42

Parkersburg
59/41

Coolville
59/41

Elizabeth
60/42

Spencer
59/42

Buffalo
60/43
Milton
61/43

Clendenin
59/39

St. Albans
61/43

Huntington
62/43

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
53/42
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
66/55
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
80/57
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

47°
29°
Times of clouds and
sun

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
63/44

Ashland
63/44
Grayson
62/44

SUNDAY

Pleasant with plenty
of sun

Wilkesville
59/41
POMEROY
Jackson
60/42
60/42
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
60/44
60/43
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
57/41
GALLIPOLIS
60/43
60/43
60/44

South Shore Greenup
63/44
60/42

59
0 50 100 150 200

Lucasville
61/43

SATURDAY

61°
35°

McArthur
59/40

Waverly
60/42

FRIDAY

73°
47°

Adelphi
59/41
Chillicothe
59/42

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68°
44°

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

0

Q: The term lake effect refers to what?

SUN &amp; MOON

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From page 1

WEDNESDAY

Periods of clouds and sunshine today. Patchy
clouds tonight. High 60° / Low 43°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

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62°
38°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

59°
28°
58°
37°
82° in 1993
13° in 1986

By Dean Wright

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

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Tuesday, November 15, 2016 5

Charleston
61/42

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
48/30
Montreal
52/42

Billings
63/42

Minneapolis
Detroit
60/36
58/43
Chicago
58/40
Kansas City
69/43

Denver
77/47

Toronto
55/44
New York
50/43
Washington
60/42

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
68/42/s
35/23/pc
70/49/s
57/45/r
58/37/sh
63/42/pc
58/37/r
54/48/r
61/42/pc
67/38/s
72/40/s
58/40/pc
59/40/pc
60/46/pc
58/40/pc
79/55/s
77/47/s
68/40/s
58/43/pc
84/71/pc
81/54/s
61/41/pc
69/43/s
78/58/s
72/47/s
80/57/s
66/43/pc
76/64/sh
60/36/pc
69/42/pc
77/59/pc
50/43/r
77/47/s
77/53/s
57/41/r
87/60/s
57/43/pc
54/45/r
65/38/s
63/35/pc
65/47/s
71/43/s
66/55/c
53/42/sh
60/42/pc

Hi/Lo/W
67/47/pc
27/18/s
73/48/s
61/48/s
61/39/s
48/29/sh
48/28/sh
61/43/pc
63/38/pc
68/40/s
70/31/pc
60/46/s
61/41/s
57/40/pc
60/37/s
82/59/s
77/33/pc
70/54/s
58/39/s
85/72/pc
83/60/s
62/45/s
73/59/s
75/46/pc
76/52/s
71/50/pc
68/46/s
77/65/pc
58/46/pc
72/45/s
76/59/s
60/48/s
79/56/s
78/53/s
62/44/s
83/54/c
58/37/c
57/39/c
67/39/s
64/40/s
71/56/s
57/33/sh
62/49/c
50/40/sh
63/45/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
Atlanta
70/49

El Paso
75/44
Chihuahua
74/38

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

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

91° in Miramar MCAS, CA
8° in Angel Fire, NM

Global
Houston
81/54
Monterrey
80/52

Miami
76/64

High 111° in Fitzroy Crossing, Australia
Low -49° 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

Daily Sentinel

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 15, 2016 s 6

Buckeyes win
2nd straight
by 62-3 count
By Jim Naveau
jnaveau@civitasmedia.com

COLLEGE PARK, Md. — Driven
by the intensity of their coach and
pushed by their own pursuit of perfection, Ohio State’s players said
after their 62-3 win over Maryland
on Saturday that they can play better.
Maryland’s reaction might have
been something like, “Yeah, right.”
It might not have been perfect, but
OSU’s second straight win by a 62-3
score was impressive.
The Buckeyes (9-1, 6-1 Big Ten)
scored 10 of the ﬁrst 13 times they
had the football and their defense
held an opponent without a touchdown for the ﬁfth time this season.
Maryland (5-5, 2-5 Big Ten) was
never in the game and most of its
student section wasn’t in the stadium anymore by the time Ohio State
went up 45-3 at halftime.
The Buckeyes rolled up 581 yards
total offense and held the Terrapins
to 176 yards even with OSU’s starters spending much of the ﬁnal two
quarters on the sideline one week
after they put 62 points on Nebraska.
Quarterback J.T. Barrett (18-of-27
for 253 yards, two passing TDs, two
rushing TDs) and H-back Curtis
Samuel (two rushing touchdowns
and another receiving) led the skill
players.
But OSU coach Urban Meyer singled out the offensive and defensive
lines when he analyzed his team’s
second consecutive November outburst.
“We have a nice rotation at
defensive line. Our offensive line is
playing much better in the last two
weeks. Offensive football is dictated
by the offensive line. When they’re
playing the way they’re playing right
now, that’s pretty good,” Meyer said.
Maryland’s last two weeks have
been the polar opposite of Ohio
State’s.
The Terrapins were beaten 59-3 by
Michigan last Saturday.
“It was just back-to-back weeks
where the game got away from us
early,” Maryland coach D.J. Durkin
said.
It was over by halftime when Ohio
State led 45-3.
Actually it was done long before
halftime.
Whether it was 45-3 or 35-3 or
28-3, it was obvious Maryland didn’t
have the talent to come back on
Ohio State when it was playing as
well as it was on Saturday.
Even when Maryland did something well in the ﬁrst half — and
that wasn’t very often — it was often
followed by a negative play by the
Terrapins.
Maybe the most glaring example
came late in the second quarter.
With Ohio State already up 28-3,
Maryland stopped Ohio State short
on fourth down at the Terrapins’
30-yard line.
But on the ﬁrst play after the
change of possession, Marshon Lattimore intercepted Caleb Rowe’s pass,
setting up yet another Ohio State
touchdown drive that made it 35-3
with four minutes left in the half.
Maryland also cost itself at least
one, maybe two touchdowns with
penalties in the ﬁrst half.
On Ohio State’s ﬁrst offensive play,
Maryland’s J.C. Jackson appeared
to get an interception and took it to
the end zone, but he was ﬂagged for
pass interference.
Later in the quarter, with Ohio
State leading 14-0, Maryland had a
fourth-and-one situation at the oneyard line, but a false start penalty set
them back ﬁve yards and it had to
settle for a ﬁeld goal, its only points
in the ﬁrst half.
OSU safety Malik Hooker said,
“This is November. This is when
a lot of teams make it and a lot of
teams don’t make it. We just have
to go out there and take it week
by week. I deﬁnitely feel like we’re
improving every week.”
Barrett said, “We just go out there
and play our best. If we play our
best, the score is like this.”
The Buckeyes’ offense looks very
See BUCKEYES | 7

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Marshall defenders Frankie Hernandez (35) and Ryan Bee (91) converge to tackle Middle Tennessee’s I’Tavius Mathers during Saturday night’s Conference
USA football game at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington.

Herd hammers Blue Raiders, 42-17
By Paul Boggs

pboggs@civitasmedia.com

HUNTINGTON, W. Va.
— As the temperature continued to drop on Saturday
night, the Thundering Herd
were just getting warmed
up.
And, not just getting
warmed up — Marshall
simply looked like the Herd
teams of yesteryear, while
remembering two years in
particular, in the ﬁnal 30
minutes.
That’s because Marshall
outscored the visiting Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders
28-0 in the second half — en
route to a dominating 42-17
Conference USA football victory in front of 20,841 inside
a frigid Joan C. Edwards
Stadium in Huntington.
After trading scores with
the Blue Raiders and trailing
17-14 at halftime, the Thundering Herd took the lead
for good with 11:13 remaining in the third quarter.
Then, two more Marshall
touchdowns in a span of
a minute and 20 seconds
at the outset of the fourth
period put the Blue Raiders
on ice.
With the win — coming
on the anniversary weekend
of the 1970 plane crash
which killed 75 members
of the Marshall University
football team, coaches, staff
and community — the Herd
improved to 3-7, and 2-4 in
Conference USA.
“We were kind of
cheatin’,” said sophomore
quarterback Chase Litton.
“We had 75 angels playing
for us.”
On Saturday night, the
Herd donned special white
helmets with the number
“75” on the back — in
remembrance of the 75
individuals lost on Nov. 14,
1970.
In addition, those helmets
included decals on each side
in honor of the 1971 squad.
Playing inspired, the
Thundering Herd certainly
played well over the ﬁnal 26
minutes and 13 seconds.
Litton threw for four
touchdowns and had no
interceptions, while Marshall — for the ﬁrst time
in head coach Doc Holliday’s seven-year tenure (88
games) — forced at least
four turnovers while not
having one itself.
The Herd also enjoyed a

season-best rushing performance against a Football
Bowl Subdivision opponent
— amassing 207 yards on 41
carries.
Marshall’s defense — conversely — stymied the Blue
Raiders to 283 yards of total
offense, including only 88 in
the entire second half.
It was the ﬁrst time that
Middle Tennessee, which
fell to 6-4 and 3-3 in the
conference, had been held to
under 300 yards in its last
20 games.
I’Tavius Mathers, the Blue
Raiders’ standout running
back which entered Saturday night with 1,145 yards
on the season, was held to
a season-low 45 — part of
only 63 rushing yards for the
entire club.
Middle Tennessee was
also forced to punt ﬁve
times.
“That was the most complete game we’ve played all
year,” said Marshall coach
Doc Holliday. “We had some
guys step up. Our quarterback was sensational. We
were plus-four in turnover
margin; took it away from
them four times. We didn’t
turn it over. We were able to
run the ball extremely well
and made good decisions
out there.”
The Herd deﬁnitely did
those two things.
Marshall racked up 29
ﬁrst downs to the Blue Raiders’ 13, and amounted 453
total yards on 78 plays from
scrimmage.
In fact, Middle Tennessee
tallied only four ﬁrst downs
in the second half, while the
Herd had four touchdowns.
Litton led the offensive
attack with 246 yards on
21-of-37 passing, completing
touchdown tosses of 25, 28
and 22 yards — including
the 25 and 28-yarders to Justin Hunt.
Hunt’s 25-yard reception,
with 9:17 remaining in the
second stanza, put the Herd
in front for the second time
at 14-10 with Amoreto Curraj’s second extra-point kick.
The 28-yard pitch-andcatch made it 21-17 Marshall
at the 11:13 mark of the
third quarter, kick-starting
the Herd’s second-half
onslaught.
Both plays capped lengthy
scoring drives — 14 plays
and 80 yards in six minutes
and eight seconds on the
ﬁrst and nine plays and 74

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Marshall quarterback Chase Litton (14) prepares to throw during the
Thundering Herd’s Conference USA football game against Middle Tennessee
on Saturday night at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington.

yards in 3:47 on the other.
Litton’s ﬁnal TD strike
— to Hyleck Foster for 22
yards with six-and-a-half
minutes remaining — made
it 42-17 and ended a nineplay, 49-yard, ﬁve-minute
and three-second march.
Foster got the Herd on
the board only two-and-ahalf minutes in — scoring
from three yards out to cap
a quick, four-play 39-yard
drive.
The opening touchdown
was set up by a Terry Richardson interception of Middle Tennessee quarterback
John Urzua — and a 26-yard
return.
Urzua, a redshirt freshman, was intercepted twice
and sacked three times —
completing 25-of-37 passes
for 220 yards.
For the Herd, on the other
hand, it was a career night
for several individuals.
Hunt had a career-high
ﬁve receptions for 87 yards,
as Anthony Anderson added
a career-best 109 rushing
yards on 16 attempts.
Anderson extended the
Herd’s lead to 28-17 only a
minute and 37 seconds into
the ﬁnal quarter, following
a Blue Raider punt and a

Marshall drive which began
at the MT 35.
Anderson carried all three
plays on the series, picking
up nine and 11 yards before
rushing into the end zone
for the ﬁnal 15.
Then, following a Mathers
fumble on the Blue Raiders’
very next play, Marshall
struck again only a minute
later at the 12-minute mark
— going three plays and 31
yards to make it 35-17 with
Curraj’s ﬁfth of six successful extra points.
Josh Knight, who led the
Herd in receptions with six
for 73 yards, caught a 9-yard
touchdown pass from Litton.
Tony Pittman complemented Anderson with a
season-high 88 yards on 15
totes.
Defensively, senior safety
Corey Neely notched a
career-high 13 tackles, and
also made an acrobatic interception while forcing the
fumble by Mathers.
Holliday hinted that a certain number on the Herd’s
helmets had something to
do with the outstanding
play.
“I’m so happy on this occasion that our guys were able
See HERD | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 15, 2016 7

Logano wins Phoenix as he and Kyle Busch complete final 4
AVONDALE, Ariz. (AP) —
Matt Kenseth’s misfortune gave
Joey Logano a chance to race
for the championship.
In an improbable turn of
events, Kenseth came within
two laps of a spot in next week
in the title-deciding ﬁnale to
eliminated from NASCAR’s
playoffs. Logano was gifted a
victory Sunday that put him in
the ﬁnal four after a tense double-overtime event at Phoenix
International Raceway.
Kenseth had the win in hand
until a late caution sent the
race to extra laps. Although he
cleared trafﬁc on the restart,
his teammate Kyle Busch had
contact with Alex Bowman
that altered Bowman’s racing
line.
Kenseth’s spotter told the
driver he was clear, but he
actually cut down on Bowman
and the contact caused him to
crash.
Logano saw the sequence
unfolding, let off his gas early,
and slid into the lead after
the accident. He then held off
Busch in the second overtime
for the win that qualiﬁed him
for the championship next
week at Homestead-Miami
Speedway. Prior to Kenseth’s
accident, Logano was in danger of elimination.
“I’m like ‘Oh, shoot, we’re
out,’ and it was going to be so
close there at the end to try to
get ourselves through, and next
thing you know the caution
comes out and the whole game
changes,” Logano said. “We
ﬁnd ourselves as the leader and
we win the race. That’s NASCAR racing at its ﬁnest.”
Logano won the race — the
second time in this Chase he
used a victory in an elimination race to advance — and

will race for his ﬁrst Sprint
Cup title next Sunday. He’ll be
trying to give Roger Penske a
season sweep during its 50th
anniversary season. Simon
Pagenaud won the IndyCar
title in September.
“I’ve never felt this good
about a win before,” Logano
said. “There was so much on
the line and everyone brings
their A-game when it comes
to winning championships and
this team did it.
“I feel like I just won the
Daytona 500 again.”
Busch ﬁnished second and
earned a chance to defend
last year’s title. He’ll meet Joe
Gibbs Racing teammate Carl
Edwards and Jimmie Johnson,
who is seeking a record-tying
seventh championship, in
Homestead.
JGR, which was trying to get
all four of its Toyotas into the
ﬁnal , wound up with only two
and Busch wasn’t feeling celebratory. He believed his contact
with Bowman triggered the
accident that wrecked Kenseth’s season.
“It’s really unfortunate and
devastating to have the race
come down like that,” Busch
said. “That’s so frustrating and
aggravating, and I feel horrible.”
Eliminated from the playoffs
on Sunday were Kevin Harvick,
an eight-time winner at Phoenix who had raced in the last
two ﬁnales, as well as his Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Kurt
Busch. Gibbs drivers Kenseth
and Denny Hamlin were also
knocked out of the ﬁeld.
“Disappointing would be the
way to put it lightly,” Kenseth
said. “Finish that race ﬁve
minutes before that, looked like
we had a chance to go race for

Ralph Freso | AP

Joey Logano celebrates in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race Sunday at Phoenix
International Raceway in Avondale, Ariz.

a championship. It was a big
swing in 10 or 15 minutes.”
Hamlin ﬁnished seventh
after a bizarre decision not to
pit with the rest of the ﬁeld
for track position. Although it
gave him a brief lead, he was
no match for drivers with fresh
tires.
“I knew it was going to be an
uphill climb,” Hamlin said.
PIT ROAD PENALTIES:
NASCAR picked Sunday to
enforce a rule against passing
the pace car when a driver dips
onto pit road for a stop. Martin
Truex Jr. and Jimmie Johnson
were both penalized for the
infraction, and the punishment
was holding the car for a lap on
pit road.
Johnson and crew chief Chad
Knaus were incredulous.
“I don’t understand that in

the least little bit,” Johnson
said on his radio. “This is absolutely ridiculous, NASCAR. I
have no clue what I did wrong.”
Johnson said he’ll ask for
clariﬁcation this week.
“In 15 years, that has never
been a concern, and I was
always told that the last thing
NASCAR wanted to do would
be to penalize the leader,”
Johnson said. “I am still bafﬂed, and I don’t know if I will
stop being bafﬂed.”
BOWMAN OUT FRONT:
Alex Bowman badly wants
a job for next year, and his
continued strong pace as the
replacement driver for Dale
Earnhardt Jr. is giving him a
solid case to present to prospective employers.
Bowman had led just nine
laps in his ﬁrst 79 career Sprint

Cup races. Six of those laps
were earlier this year driving
Earnhardt’s Chevrolet. A polewinning run for Sunday’s race
helped Bowman lead a racehigh 194 laps and was attempting to win the race before
the late accident. He faded to
sixth, and felt bad about his
incident with Kenseth.
“I hate it for Matt. I would
have raced the hell out of him
for the win, but deﬁnitely don’t
want to do that,” Bowman said.
“Hate that, and it ruined our
day, too. So it’s unfortunate.”
UP NEXT: The season
ﬁnale at Homestead, where the
championship will be decided.
Harvick won the race in 2014
to win his championship, and
Kyle Busch won last year to
claim the title.

AP TOP 25
Goal line defense
Ohio St, Louisville rise after surprise Saturday
works out for
chian State and their only
fell 13 spots after the
The only teams that
loss was by six points at
Aggies lost for the secheld onto the spots in
Seahawks this time
ond straight week. A&amp;M Clemson.
the Top 25 that they had
By Ralph D. Russo
Associated Press

By Barry Wilner

Tom Brady couldn’t
AP Pro Football Writer
connect with Rob
Gronkowski on a fade
pattern on fourth down
FOXBOROUGH,
as New England (7-2)
Mass. — This time,
failed four times from
Seattle won it at the
inside the 2 in the
goal line.
dying moments.
It certainly won’t
It was reminiscent of
make up for the Super
how the Seahawks (6-2Bowl loss two seasons
back, but the Seahawks’ 1) lost the 2015 Super
Bowl when Malcolm
goal-line stand lifted
them to a 31-24 victory Butler intercepted at
the goal line to win the
over the New England
NFL title for the PatriPatriots on Sunday
ots.
night.

Buckeyes

offense would come
around.
“I really wasn’t sweatFrom page 6
ing it. I wasn’t sweating
it at all. When it comes
different than it did
when it was struggling to November we’re
to some degree against going to play our best
Wisconsin, Penn State, ball and I think we’re
Indiana and Northwest- doing that,” he said.
He’d probably get
ern.
Barrett said he wasn’t no disagreement from
Maryland or Nebraska
worried back then.
He says he knew the
about that.

Herd

for its ﬁnal road game
of the season.
Holliday hopes that,
with two games left,
From page 6
the Herd can bottle up
to rally like they did
its performance from
and play like that,” he
Saturday night and
said. “I’m happy for our
carry it over for these
fan base, our commuﬁnal two tilts.
nity and our school to
The ﬁnal contest is
be able to come out on
against rival Western
this occasion with the
Kentucky — at home
‘75’ on their helmet,
on Nov. 26.
honoring the Young
“This game right
Thundering Herd and
here is going to help
to play the way we
us as a football team
played. We have to conmoving forward,”said
tinue that for the next
Holliday. “We had a lot
couple of weeks. It’s
of young guys out there
amazing that when you
who had a lot of sucput that ‘75’ on your
cess and at the end of
helmet, they seem to
the day, they felt pretty
make plays they haven’t
good about themselves
made.”
in that locker room.”
Marshall will travel
to Florida International Paul Boggs can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2106
on Saturday (Nov. 19)

Ohio State and Louisville moved up behind
No. 1 Alabama in The
Associated Press college
football poll after the
most surprising Saturday
of the season gave the
rankings a major makeover.
Three of the top four
(Michigan, Clemson and
Washington), ﬁve of the
top 10 and seven teams
overall in last week’s
rankings lost to unranked
opponents.
On Sunday, Alabama
was a unanimous No.
1 for the ﬁrst time this
season, receiving all 61
votes. Ohio State is No.
2, a season best for the
Buckeyes, and Louisville
is No. 3, matching its best
ranking ever.
No. 4 Michigan and No.
5 Clemson each dropped
two spots and No. 7
Washington fell three
after losing for the ﬁrst
time. Wisconsin moved
up a spot to No. 6.
___
POLL POINTS

last week were the only
unbeatens left in the FBS:
the top-ranked Crimson
Tide and No. 14 Western
Michigan. The Crimson
Tide have been No. 1
since the preseason.
The Crimson Tide is
the ﬁrst unanimous No. 1
since Ohio State on Sept.
8, 2015.
UP
No. 12 Colorado and
No. 13 Oklahoma State
each moved up four
spots.
— Colorado has its
highest ranking since it
was No. 12 on Dec. 1,
2002.
No. 9 Penn State, No.
16 LSU, No. 17 Florida
State and No. 20 Washington State all moved up
three spots.
— Washington State
has its best ranking since
the Cougars ﬁnished the
2003 season at No. 9.
DOWN
A couple of Southeastern Conference teams
took the biggest falls.
— No. 23 Texas A&amp;M

started 6-0 but has now
lost three of four and
three consecutive SEC
games.
— No. 18 Auburn
dropped 10 spots after
losing 13-7 at Georgia.
The Tigers’ loss eliminated them from the SEC
West race and helped Alabama clinch.
IN
— No. 15 Southern
California is back in the
rankings for the ﬁrst time
since the preseason after
handing Washington its
ﬁrst loss. The Trojans
started the season 1-3
but have won six straight
behind redshirt freshman
quarterback Sam Darnold.
— No. 24 San Diego
State is in the rankings
for the second time this
season.
— No. 25 Troy is
ranked for the ﬁrst time
in school history. The
Trojans (8-1) won a
matchup of unbeaten Sun
Belt Conference teams on
Saturday against Appala-

OUT
— Virginia Tech and
North Carolina dropped
out after losing to
unranked Atlantic Coast
Conference rivals.
— Baylor is out of the
rankings for the ﬁrst time
this season.
CONFERENCE CALL
SEC — 5
Big Ten — 5
Pac-12 — 5
ACC — 3
Big 12 — 3
Mountain West — 2
MAC — 1
Sun Belt — 1
RANKED VS.
RANKED
No. 8 Oklahoma at No.
10 West Virginia. Big 12
championship implications.
No. 20 Washington
State at No. 12 Colorado.
First-place in the Pac-12
North vs. ﬁrst-place in the
Pac-12 South. Who would
have guessed that?
No. 21 Florida at No.
15 LSU. The Gators can
clinch the SEC East with
a victory.

Iowa’s win over Michigan jumbles up Big Ten race
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) —
After bringing the big hits
all day, the West Virginia
defense still had to watch as
the Texas desperation pass
gently ﬂoated toward the
end zone and then drifted
too far.
Then came the celebration.
Then the wait to see if
the Mountaineers had too
many players on the ﬁeld
and if Texas would get one
last shot to win.
Nope. Game over. West
Virginia’s chase for its ﬁrst
Big 12 championship is still
alive.
Kennedy McKoy ran for
two touchdowns and Mountaineers (8-1, 5-1, No. 16
CFP) earned a tough 24-20

Big 12 road win, setting up
a showdown with league
leader Oklahoma next week.
The Mountaineers have
not yet won a league title
since joining the Big 12 in
2012 but are chasing one
with rugged defense in a
league spends most weekends breaking scoreboards.
“They wanted to get this
win pretty bad,” West Virginia coach Dana Holgorsen
said. “Our goal has always
been to win the Big 12 …
That defense was excellent.”
Skyler Howard passed for
269 yards and a touchdown
for the Mountaineers. The
defense gave up 536 yards
but got four sacks, forced
three turnovers and kept

Texas running back D’Onta
Foreman, the Big 12’s leading rusher, out of the end
zone .
One of those turnovers
came on a big hit on Texas
quarterback Shane Buechele
by Kyzir White that forced a
fourth-quarter fumble inside
the West Virginia 25.
Buechele passed for 318
yards and drove the Longhorns to ﬁnal chance to
win before his last pass fell
incomplete. The Longhorns
twice fought back from
double-digit deﬁcits before
the ﬁnal play.
“We kept taking our
punches and kept coming
back,” Texas Charlie Strong
said. “Throw the Hail Mary
and had the chance to win

it.”
Foreman ﬁnished with
167 yards, his 11th consecutive 100-yard game, which
tied former Heisman Trophy winner Earl Campbell’s
Texas school record.
THE TAKEAWAY
West Virginia: The Mountaineers came in with the
Big 12’s best defense and
lived up to the billing. Most
of Foreman’s yards came
early and the Mountaineers
pounded him and Buechele
in the second half. The West
Virginia offense had four
turnovers, three by Howard,
but the defense surrendered
just seven points off those.
Foreman also had an early
fumble.

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Miscellaneous

Help Wanted General

For Sale By Owner

Help Wanted General

Diesel Mechanic Needed,
salary is negotiable, benefit
package available.
Experience is recommended
but not required.
Send your resume to:
Blind Box 101
825 3rd ave.
Gallipolis, Oh 45631

For Sale By Owner
2 rental properties
at the same location
1 house- 1 Apartment
call 740-709-9697

$$$$$$$$$

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor under
an agreement with

Pomeroy Daily
Sentinel??
s Be your own boss
s 5 day delivery
s Delivery times is approx.
3 hours daily
s Must be 18 years of age
s Must have a valid driver’s
license, dependable vehicle
&amp; provide proof of insurance
s Must provide your own
substitute
OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH
For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
twolfe@civitasmedia.com or
apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

$$$$$$$$$

Warehouse Data Entry Clerk
employees needed for a
warehouse The successful
candidates will have excellent
warehouse and computer
experience. Our client is
looking for people who have
computer experience.specific
experience with receiving,
picking, maintaining inventory
and strong data entry skills.
You can contact me here
jason.wright59@aol.com
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Houses For Sale
Mobile Home For Sale 2010
Redman 2 Bed, Electric, 1
Owner, in Mobile Home Park.
Leave a Message at (304)
812-5328
Land (Acreage)
Land For Rent
Hunting rights on 75 acres
on wooded property
located at Wray Road
in Green Township
$2000.00 year
call 740-709-9697
Apartments/Townhouses
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$425 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-688-9416
or 740-988-6130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

Notices

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposals for a slip repair on Lincoln Pike will be
received by the Gallia County Engineer at the office of the
Gallia County Commissioners, 18 Locust Street, Room 1292,
Gallipolis, Ohio, until 11:00 AM Thursday, December 8, 2016,
and then at 11:00 AM at said office opened and read aloud.
Plans, Specifications, and Bid/Contract Forms may be secured
at the office of the Gallia County Engineer, 1167 State Route
160, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. All bidders must furnish, as a part of
their bid, all materials, tools, labor, and equipment.
Only ODOT prequalified contractors will be eligible to submit
bids. The contractor must be prequalified for all work types involved with the project. Each bid must be accompanied by either
a bid bond in an amount of 100% of the bid amount with a surety
satisfactory to the aforesaid Gallia County or by certified check,
cashiers check or letter of credit upon a solvent bank in an
amount of not less than 10% of the bid amount in favor of the
aforesaid Gallia County. Bid Bonds shall be accompanied by
Proof of Authority of the official or agent signing the bond.
“DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN
SECTION 153.011 OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS
PROJECT. COPIES OF SECTION 153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF
THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES.”
Bids shall be sealed and marked as "BID FOR LINCOLN PIKE
SLIP REPAIR" and mailed or delivered to: Gallia County
Commissioners Office, 18 Locust Street, Room 1292, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631.
Attention of bidders is called to all of the requirements
contained in the bid packet, various insurance requirements,
federal prevailing wage requirements, various equal opportunity
provisions, and the requirement for a payment bond and
performance bond of 100% of the contract price.
No bidder may withdraw his bid within thirty (30) days after the
actual date of the opening thereof. Gallia County reserves the
right to waive any informalities or reject any or all bids.
Gallia County adheres to all state policies pertaining to
Handicapped Accessibility and Equal Employment
Opportunities.
11/8/16,11/15/16,11/22/16,

Notices
60583312

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Help Wanted General
Wanted: Person with a
chainsaw to cut firewood.
304 812 3438

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposals for a slip repair on Kemper Hollow Road will
be received by the Gallia County Engineer at the office of the
Gallia County Commissioners, 18 Locust Street, Room 1292,
Gallipolis, Ohio, until 11:00 AM Thursday, December 8, 2016,
and then at 11:00 AM at said office opened and read aloud.
Plans, Specifications, and Bid/Contract Forms may be secured
at the office of the Gallia County Engineer, 1167 State Route
160, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. All bidders must furnish, as a part of
their bid, all materials, tools, labor, and equipment.
Only ODOT prequalified contractors will be eligible to submit
bids. The contractor must be prequalified for all work types
involved with the project. Each bid must be accompanied by
either a bid bond in an amount of 100% of the bid amount with a
surety satisfactory to the aforesaid Gallia County or by certified
check, cashiers check or letter of credit upon a solvent bank in
an amount of not less than 10% of the bid amount in favor of the
aforesaid Gallia County. Bid Bonds shall be accompanied by
Proof of Authority of the official or agent signing the bond.
“DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN
SECTION 153.011 OF THE REVISED CODE APPLY TO THIS
PROJECT. COPIES OF SECTION 153.011 OF THE REVISED
CODE CAN BE OBTAINED FROM ANY OF THE OFFICES OF
THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES.”
Bids shall be sealed and marked as "BID FOR KEMPER
HOLLOW SLIP REPAIR" and mailed or delivered to: Gallia
County Commissioners Office, 18 Locust Street, Room 1292,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Attention of bidders is called to all of the requirements
contained in the bid packet, various insurance requirements,
federal prevailing wage requirements, various equal opportunity
provisions, and the requirement for a payment bond and
performance bond of 100% of the contract price.
No bidder may withdraw his bid within thirty (30) days after the
actual date of the opening thereof. Gallia County reserves the
right to waive any informalities or reject any or all bids.
Gallia County adheres to all state policies pertaining to
Handicapped Accessibility and Equal Employment
Opportunities.

Apartments/Townhouses
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Nice 1 BR unfurnished
apartment. Refrig. &amp; range
provided. Water, sewage &amp;
garbage paid.
Deposit required.
Call 740-709-0072
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

Daily Sentinel

Houses For Rent

Rentals

2 HOMES FOR RENT:
3BR, 1 bath house,
recently remodeled.
No pets. $800/mo
2BR, 1 bath home
w/garage $500/mo.
Call 740-446-3644
for application.
Beautiful 1 BR apartment in
the country freshly painted
very clean W/D hook up nice
country setting only 10 mins
from town must see to
appreciate water/trash pd.
$399 month 740-645-5953
614-595-7773

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

House for Rent-3 Bedroom,
No Pets, Gallipolis Area
monthly rent $625.00 deposit
required 740-853-1101
Land (Acreage)
5 acres of bottom land and
40-100 acres in prime deer
hunting location $1400 a acres
call 740-256-6444

Houses For Rent
2 bedroom apartments
$550/$600 and deposit
located in Bidwell some
utilities paid call 740-446-4175
Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

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

Tree Service
Jones Tree Service:
Complete Tree Care,
Stump Grinding
740-367-0266
740-339-3366
Insured

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, November 15, 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

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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6 9 3
4
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8 7
2
6
5
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3
1
2
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7 6
1
4
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8
4

By Hilary Price

Difficulty Level

Hank Ketcham’s

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Today’s Solution

By Bil and Jeff Keane

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

By Dave Green

�10 Tuesday, November 15, 2016

SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Elliott scores twice late, Cowboys top Steelers 35-30
PITTSBURGH (AP) —
Dak Prescott and Ezekiel
Elliott have little interest
in the big picture. Yes,
the rookies understand
the Dallas Cowboys are
on a historic roll. Just
don’t expect them to start
thinking about what it all
means.
“I really don’t think
about what’s normal
and what’s abnormal,”
Prescott said.
Maybe because what’s
happening in Dallas
might be the new normal.
Elliott ran for 114 yards
and two touchdowns
— both in the ﬁnal two
minutes — and turned
a screen pass into an
83-yard score as the Cowboys pulled off a thrilling
35-30 victory over the
Pittsburgh Steelers on
Sunday night for their
eighth straight win.
Twice late in the fourth
quarter Dallas (8-1) had
the ball in Pittsburgh
territory with a chance
to run out the clock and
attempt a game-winning
ﬁeld goal. Twice Elliott
found himself running
free into the end zone,
the last a 32-yard sprint
up the middle with 9 seconds left.
“It parted like the Red
Sea,” Elliott said after
pushing his season rushing total to an NFL-best
1,005 yards. “All I had to
do was run.”
Prescott overcame an
early fumble to pass for
319 yards and two scores
and felt his jaw drop
while watching Elliott
score the third and ﬁnal
touchdown of a wild ﬁnal
115 seconds.
“I was just shaking my
head like ‘Wow,’” Prescott
said. “We were just trying to get us in position
to get in good ﬁeld goal

range and Zeke said otherwise.”
When safety Byron
Jones pushed Pittsburgh
wide receiver Antonio
Brown out of bounds
at the Dallas 20 on the
ﬁnal play, the Cowboys
had perhaps their most
impressive victory of an
increasingly surprising
season. Prescott also
took another step toward
stopping any discussion
about the team’s starting
quarterback.
Veteran Tony Romo
practiced during the week
and is nearly fully recovered from a broken bone
in his back, but he spent
his Sunday afternoon the
same way he spent every
other one this season: in
street clothes watching
Prescott do his thing.
Owner and general manager Jerry Jones
declined to name Prescott
the permanent starter
in the giddy aftermath,
though there appears to
be no plans — and really
no reason — to make a
switch even though Jones
anticipates Romo being
the backup next week
against Baltimore.
“I think the longer
(Prescott) plays like
this, the more we have a
chance to have another
win,” Jones said. “Everybody here wants to do
one thing and that’s win.
There’s nobody that
would introduce any
other issue or any other
consideration than doing
what it takes to win the
game.”
Asked if he’s been
around a team where
two rookies have done
so much so quickly, and
the 74-year-old gleefully
shook his head.
“Not two that are so
in sync to where they’re

Fred Vuich | AP

Dallas Cowboys running back Ezekiel Elliott (21) beats Pittsburgh Steelers strong safety Robert Golden (21) to the end zone for a
touchdown during the second half Sunday in Pittsburgh.

teammates ﬁgure Bryant’s
play on the ﬁeld did all
the talking necessary.
“I think the game gives
him peace,” Prescott said.
“I told him ‘Your father
is watching. He’s got the
best seat in the house.’
I told him to honor him
today and Dez went out
and did exactly that and
had a great night.”

clock and instead found
Brown on a play similar
to one by Hall of Famer
Dan Marino for Miami
against the New York Jets
in 1994 .
DOING IT FOR DAD
Marino’s heady play
Dallas wide receiver
won the game. RoethlisDez Bryant caught six
berger’s may have come a
passes for a season-high
little too quickly.
116 yards, including a
“I guess we left them
50-yard touchdown in the
too much time,” said
third quarter that gave
Roethlisberger, who
the Cowboys a 23-18 lead.
moved past Hall of FamRather than do his typical AT A LOSS
Even another remarkers Johnny Unitas and
touchdown celebration
able day by Ben Roethlis- Warren Moon and into
— making an X with his
berger couldn’t prevent
10th on the career passforearms while barking
the Steelers (4-5) from
ing touchdown list with
at the crowd — Bryant
292.
pointed at the sky instead a fourth straight loss.
Roethlisberger passed
Brown ﬁnished with
in tribute to his father,
for 408 yards and three
14 receptions for 154
MacArthur Hatton.
touchdowns, the ﬁnal one yards, and Le’Veon Bell
Hatton passed away
a 15-yard strike to Brown added 134 total yards and
on Saturday, according
to Jones. And while Bry- with 42 seconds to go
scored two touchdowns.
ant quietly ducked out of that put the Steelers up
the locker room without
by a point. Roethlisberger TWO FOR THE SHOW?
speaking to reporters, his faked a spike to stop the
The Steelers have made

feeding off each other
and the team feeding
off them,” Jones said. “I
haven’t seen that.”

a habit of attempting
2-point conversions early
in games hoping to dictate the tempo over the
last two seasons, often
with great success.
It stopped abruptly
against the Cowboys.
Four times Pittsburgh
went for 2. And all four
times the Steelers came
up short, forcing them to
chase points.
“We want to be aggressive,” Roethlisberger said.
“We practice it every day.
We need to be better at
it.”
UP NEXT
Cowboys: Play their
third AFC North team in
as many weeks when the
Ravens visit.
Steelers: Head to Cleveland to take on the 0-10
Browns next Sunday.

JGR gets 2 through in the Chase, wanted 1 more
All Blacks flyhalf
AVONDALE, Ariz.
Barrett voted World (AP)
— Matt Kenseth
ﬁgured he would be in
good shape even after a
Player of the Year
caution with two laps to
LONDON (AP) —
New Zealand ﬂyhalf
Beauden Barrett has
been voted World Player
of the Year as the world
champion All Blacks
swept the major awards
at the end of a recordbreaking rugby season.
Barrett beat teammate
Dane Coles, England’s
Maro Itoje, Billy Vunipola and Owen Farrell
and Ireland’s Jamie Heaslip to the sport’s highest
individual honor.
New Zealand won
Team of the Year after
posting a world-record
18 consecutive test wins
before losing to Ireland
in Chicago last week.
The All Blacks beat England and Olympic sevens
gold medalists Fiji to that
award. All Blacks coach
Steve Hansen was voted
Coach of the Year for the
fourth time, beating England’s Australian coach
Eddie Jones and Fiji sevens coach Ben Ryan.
Barrett established
himself as the All Blacks’
ﬁrst-choice ﬂyhalf this
season after taking over
the No. 10 jersey from
the previous winner of
the Player of the Year
award, Dan Carter, who
is now playing club rugby
in France. All Blacks
have won the top award
in each of the last ﬁve
years — Carter twice
and Barrett, Kieran Read
and Brodie Retallick on
one occasion each.
Barrett quickly made a
mark as one of the most
skilful and inventive
ﬂyhalves in world rugby,
playing a major role
in the development of
New Zealand’s attacking

game. Barrett’s goalkicking has been sub-par in
recent matches but he
remains a key member of
the All Blacks lineup.
He started the 2016
season behind Aaron
Cruden in New Zealand’s
pecking order at ﬂyhalf
but took over starting
role after outstanding
performances off the
bench against Wales in
June and has started at
No. 10 in the All Blacks’
last nine tests.
Coles has also been
a major contributor to
New Zealand’s recent
successes, proving
himself one of the most
mobile and skilful forwards in world rugby as
well as a strong performer in the tight.
Farrell was the pivot of
the England team which
won the Six Nations
Championship this season and beat the Wallabies in a three-test series
in Australia for the ﬁrst
time ever. Vunipola has
also been a key member
of that team, currently
unbeaten since former
Australia coach Jones
took over following England’s group-stage exit
at last year’s World Cup.
Itoje has been outstanding since making his
England debut against
Italy in March.
England’s Sarah Hunter was voted Women’s
Player of the Year, and
Australia’s Olympic
gold medalist Charlotte
Caslick was named Women’s Sevens Player of
the Year. South Africa’s
Seabelo Senatla was the
men’s Sevens Player of
the Year.

go. Stay in the lead or at
least ahead of the other
Chase drivers and he
would be one of four drivers in the ﬁnal round of
the Chase for the Sprint
Cup championship.
A mistake on the
restart cost Kenseth his
shot at the championship.
Thinking he was clear
heading into the ﬁrst
turn, Kenseth tried to
get the inside line and
was clipped from behind,
sending him into the
wall and out of the Chase
playoffs.
“Disappointing would
be the way to put it
lightly,” Kenseth said
Sunday at Phoenix International Raceway. “Finish
that race ﬁve minutes
before, looked like we had
a chance to go race for a
championship.”
Kenseth’s misfortunes
capped a topsy-turvy day
for Joe Gibbs Racing.
The team had hoped
to get all four of its
Toyotas into the ﬁnal at
Homestead, but Hendrick
Motorsports’ Jimmie
Johnson claimed one spot
with his victory at Martinsville two weeks ago
for a shot at his seventh
series title.
JGR already had one
driver in the ﬁnal after
Carl Edwards, who had
been last in the standings, won at Texas to
claim the second spot
with Johnson.
Kenseth, Kyle Busch
and Denny Hamlin all
had legitimate shots at
joining Edwards, entering
Phoenix with two points
separating them. Busch,
the reigning series champion, was tied with Joey
Logano entering Sunday.

Ralph Freso | AP

Matt Kenseth makes a pit stop for right-side tires and fuel during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto
race Sunday at Phoenix International Raceway in Avondale, Ariz.

Only one more got in.
Logano won the Phoenix race to earn a spot
in the ﬁnal and Busch
joined him after ﬁnishing
second, though wasn’t
exactly thrilled about the
circumstances that got
him there.
That’s because Busch
believed he triggered the
collision that took out
Kenseth.
“It’s really unfortunate
and devastating to have
the race come down like
that,” he said. “That’s so
frustrating and aggravating, and I feel horrible.”
The twist of events
came when the race went
to overtime after Michael
McDowell spun his car
into the wall. Needing to
stay ahead of Logano and
Busch, Kenseth appeared
to be in good shape, taking the lead on the restart
from the outside.
As Kenseth reached the
ﬁrst turn, his spotter said
the coast was clear, so he
started to drive toward
the inside.
Only the coast wasn’t
clear.
Alex Bowman, who

started on the inside,
appeared to spin his tires
on the restart and was
bumped from behind by
Busch. Thinking Bowman was farther back,
Kenseth started to drop
to the inside and was
clipped, sending him into
the wall.
In a matter of seconds,
his championship chase
was over.
“Apologies to EVERY
(at)mattkenseth fan out
there for ending our
chase hopes today!”
Kenseth’s spotter, Chris
Osborne, said on Twitter.
“Obviously this 1’s on
me!!”
Kenseth refused to
blame his spotter, despite
his disappointment.
“It’s a team effort.
Win as a team, lose as a
team,” he said. “I can’t
blame Chris. I didn’t see
what happened. He said
I was clear, so I started
looking toward the
corner and got turned
around. Things happen in
a hurry.”
Hamlin’s bid to make
the ﬁnal came down to
a pit decision that back-

ﬁred.
It came during a caution with 55 laps left.
While all the leaders
came into the pits to
get gas and tires, Hamlin stayed out, ﬁguring
his No. 11 Toyota had
enough fuel to make it to
the end.
It didn’t, thanks to the
late caution, but that
wasn’t the problem.
Tires were what hurt
Hamlin. He had old ones,
the leaders had four fresh
ones and they started
passing him. Hamlin still
managed to ﬁnish ﬁfth,
but it wasn’t enough to
get him into the ﬁnal
four.
“I still thought we were
OK,” Hamlin said. “We
got the second caution
and got caught on the
bottom and just got shufﬂed from there. I knew it
was going to be an uphill
climb. We performed well
in this round, just not
great and you needed to
be great to advance.”
Just like JGR’s bid for
the ﬁnal: Two is good,
four would have been
great.

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>graham</name>
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    <tag tagId="245">
      <name>morgan</name>
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    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
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    <tag tagId="2434">
      <name>sliwinski</name>
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