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                  <text>Ohio Valley
Business
Page

Cloudy,
milder
H-58, L-42

TVC
Hocking
football

BUSINESS s 3

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 8

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 188, Volume 70

Thursday, November 24, 2016 s 50¢

Mother closes Shop small during Small Business Saturday
down den until
Thanksgiving
By Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

By Dean Wright
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis mother of four
Michele Keylor went
viral earlier this month
online as her son posted a photo of her closed
down living room that
was to remain shut
until Thanksgiving Day.
According to Keylor,
her oldest son had
gone off to attend to
his duties in the Army
National Guard and
she decided to do some
“deep cleaning” for
the holiday. She shampooed rugs, vacuumed
and more, in preparation for family and visitors over the holiday.
Her son, Nick Denbow,
posted a photo of her
taped down living room
entrance with a note on
Twitter which soon garnered the attention of
websites like Buzzfeed
and Today.com.
The note lists that
the living room was
closed off until Thanksgiving Day and that
“special permission will
be considered for you
(her children) to sit on
my clean furniture or
walk on my clean car-

pet after the following
conditions are met.”
Keylor then went on
to list that her children
must have showered,
be wearing freshly
laundered clothing and
that no drinks or food
could be brought into
the living room, if she
was feeling up to granting them permission to
cross her tape barrier.
She then signed the
note as “Payer of Bills,”
“Mom,” and other such
titles as “Queen of the
Castle.”
Keylor told the Tribune it was not uncommon for her family to
leave notes for one
another in occasional
spurts of family fun.
She noted she would
sometimes leave lists of
chores for her children
and they at times might
sign the notes back listing another family to
do their chores as part
of the lists of designated tasks.
Keylor said she was
surprised at the sudden
popularity of the post
as the activity was just
her family members
playing to their natural
personalities.

Courtesy photo

As shoppers are out and about at local businesses
this weekend, they have the opportunity to take
a photo (or selfie) with one of the small business
promotional signs and are being encouraged to share
it on social media using the hashtag #ShopSmall.

MEIGS COUNTY — While
shoppers are gearing up for
the holiday shopping season,
checking out the Black Friday
ads or maybe the Cyber
Monday deals, it is
important not to forget where you come
from and those in the
local community.
Small Business Saturday was ﬁrst launched
in 2010 as a way to celebrate
and support small businesses
and the impact they have on
local communities such as
those in Meigs County.
“It is a special day for the
community to come together
and support one another,”
said Susan Clark.

“I am proud to be part of
the business community I
grew up in. Supporting local
business provides for future
generations to continue in
local business,” said Clark
who owns Clark’s Jewelry
store. The business has
roots in the community dating back to
1881.
Clark noted that
she is proud to be part
of the business community which allows for her
and other local businesses to
give back to the communities
they are a part of. “Being able
to give back and be part of
the community is one of the
luxuries of being a small business,” explained Clark.

See BUSINESS | 5

Photos by Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

Students in the Lindsay Jackson’s preschool class at Carleton School learned about turkeys last week as Jenny Ridenour from Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation District visited with the students, reading them a turkey story and explaining the parts of the turkey. Kale
Butler was even dressed as a turkey using some items to represent the parts of the turkey. The students also made a Thanksgiving craft
tracing their hands to represent the turkey.

Students share what they are thankful for
Turkey lesson,
stories and
crafts lead up
to Thanksgiving
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com
Courtesy photo

Gallia mother Michele Keylor straps up a list of rules for her
children as she prohibits them from entering her living room
until Thanksgiving Day due to her having cleaned it. The story
went viral a few weeks ago after Keylor’s son Nick Denbow
commented and placed photos of the list on Twitter.

INDEX
Obituary: 2
Business: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 8
Classifieds: 10
Comics: 11

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

SYRACUSE —
Thanksgiving is a time
to reﬂect on some of the
things that we are thankful for in our daily lives
as well as spending time
with some of those we
are most thankful for.
When asked what it
is you are thankful for,
answers may be your
family, friends, health,
job, or any number of
other things.
But what is it that
some of the youngest in
society are thankful for.
Asking a room full of
preschool students what
it is they are thankful
for you get a range of
answers, that is until one
of the students hears
another one’s answer,
then that answer gets
repeated many times
over.
I sat down last week
with preschool students
in Kim Wolfe’s classroom at Carleton School

Students in Kim Wolfe’s preschool class at Carleton School spent time working on turkey masks as
well as incorporating fall items into the sensory table. Students also took time to share some of the
things that they were tankful for.

asking them what they
are thankful for as they
worked on coloring their
turkey masks.
For Dominik Price,
Juliet Arnott and Aubrey
Brown their dogs and
dads were at the top of
the list, while John Turley was thankful for his
dog and cat. Beau Durst

was thankful for his dad,
while Grayson Evans
was thankful for his dog,
daddy and mommy.
Others went along the
same theme, with C’Jae
Gillian being thankful for
her mom and Cadence
Jefferies being thankful
for her dog, family and
cat.

For Breelynn Sayre it
was Shopkins that she
was thankful for and
Abrum Kiser was thankful for drawing. Hunter
McKibben was thankful
for many things, including food, his brother, turkeys, buck and does.
See STUDENTS | 5

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Thursday, November 24, 2016

OBITUARIES

MEIGS COUNTY BRIEFS
CECIL SEE

POMEROY — Cecil
Ray See, 68, of Pomeroy,
died Tuesday, Nov. 22,
2016 at Fairﬁeld Medical
Center in Lancaster.
Born May 18, 1948, in
Pomeroy, Ohio, he was
the son of the late Kennie
and Laura Elliott See.
Cecil was a 1967 graduate of Middleport High
School, a US Army Veteran serving in Vietnam,
a member of the Pomeroy
American Legion Post
and a coal miner in Meigs
County Mine 2.
Cecil is survived by his
wife of 44 years Kathryn
Teaford See; three daughters, Darlene (Dennis)
Hoschar, Amy (Brett
Knott) See and Danette
See; seven grandchildren,
Jasmine Miller, Ashton
Smith, Tristyn Smith,
Brylie Knott, Felisha
See, Jamee Johnson and
Morgan Johnson; several
great grandchildren; a
brother, Dave (Cherie)
See; his mother-in-law,
Margarete Teaford; a

sister-in-law, Suzanne
Benz; two brothers-in-law,
Forrest (Launa) Teaford
and Cloist Teaford; and
several nieces, nephews
and cousins.
Besides his parents, he
was preceded in death by
a brother, Billy See and
his father-in-law, Raymond Teaford.
Funeral services will
be held Monday, Nov. 28,
2016, 10 a.m. at EwingSchwarzel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with Pastor
James Keesee ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow in the
Meigs County Memory
Gardens. Friends are
invited to visitation at
Ewing-Schwarzel Funeral
Home Sunday evening
from 6-8 p.m.
In lieu of ﬂowers, the
family requests donations
to be made to Kathryn
for medical and funeral
expenses.
You are invited to sign
the online guestbook at
www.ewingfuneralhome.
net.

MOORE III
HENDERSON, W.Va. — William Belmont “Buckie”
Moore III, 75, of Henderson, W.Va., passed away Tuesday, November 22, 2016, at the Emogene Dolin Jones
Hospice House in Huntington, W.Va.
A funeral service will be 11 a.m. Saturday, November 26, 2016, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant, W.Va., with Rev. Doug Mitchell ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow at Montgomery Memorial Park,
London, W.Va. Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m. Friday
at the funeral home.

SLIKER
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Scott M. Sliker, 40, of
Huntington, died Tuesday November 22, 2016 at St.
Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington.
Funeral service will be conducted 11 a.m. Saturday November 26, 2016 at Apostolic Life Cathedral,
Huntington. Burial will follow in Crooks Cemetery,
Wayne, W.Va. Visitation will be held from 10 to 11
a.m. Saturday November 26, 2016 at the church.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is in
charge of arrangements.

SVIANTEK
MASON, W.Va. — John Leonard Sviantek, 64, of
Mason, W.Va., passed away Tuesday, November 22,
2016 in Charleston Area Medical Center, General
Division following a brief illness.
Private services will be conducted in Cleveland,
Ohio at a later date. Arrangements provided by Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason.

Editor’s Note: The Meigs Briefs will only list
p.m. at the Carmel-Sutton United Methodist Church
event information that is open to the public and will Fellowship Hall, 48540 Carmel Road, Racine. Menu
be printed on a space-available basis.
includes homemade soups, sandwiches, desserts
and drinks. Dine-in or take-out. Cost is a donation
which is used for The Friendship Circle’s outreach
projects.

Road Closure
modified

PORTLAND — State Route 124 in Meigs County
will be closed from Bald Knob Stiversville Road to
Long Run for a tree trimming project through Dec. 2.
The original estimated completion date was Nov. 30.

Plat Books
available

Holiday
events

MHS Parent-Teacher
Conferences

CHESTER — The Annual Christmas Open House
at the Chester Court House on Dec. 3, in Chester.
The event will include a Santa Claus display. The
Eastern Bell Choir will be playing starting at 1 p.m.
There will be refreshments served in the Chester
ROCKSPRINGS — Meigs High School will be
Academy Dining Hall after the program is over. The
holding Parent-Teacher Conferences on Thursday,
event is free for everyone.
Dec, 1, 2016, from 3-6 p.m. Students will be bringPOMEROY — Christmas Along the River will
ing home a letter describing the conference scheduling procedure along with information on the confer- take place on Sunday. Nov. 27. The annual Christences. We would like to encourage all parents and/or mas parade will take place at 2 p.m. Line up for the
guardians to attend that we may keep you informed parade will be at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy ball ﬁelds.
concerning the progress of your child. Please return All entries are welcome. For more information call
740-591-2260. In addition to the parade, the merthe form attached to the letter to the school or call
chants in Pomeroy will be hosting an open house
740-992-2158 to schedule conferences.
from noon to 4 p.m. that day. Following the parade,
Santa will be at Peoples Bank in Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT — Saturday, Dec. 3 will be the
annual Christmas Celebration in the Village of
Middleport hosted by the Middleport Community
Association. The Christmas Market will run from 10
POMEROY — The Meigs County Retired Teach- a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Riverbend Arts Council building. In addition, there will be free carriage rides for
ers will meet for lunch at noon on Dec. 1 at Trinity
Congregational Church in Pomeroy. Please call 740- the public from 1:30-4 p.m. loading beside the Riverbend Arts Council building. The community band
992-3214 by Nov. 29 for a count of lunch participawill perform a concert outside of the Arts Council
tion. Guests are welcome. A musical program will
be presented by the Eastern High School Bell Choir. Building beginning at 4 p.m. until the parade begins
at 4:30 p.m. Parade lineup takes place at 4 p.m. at
Members are reminded to bring books or art supDairy Queen and along Front Street. Following the
plies as Christmas gifts for children.
parade, Santa and Mrs. Claus will be at the Arts
Council Building to visit with the children.

Retired Teachers
luncheon

Community
Lunch

RACINE — A Community Lunch will be held
Monday, Nov. 28-Saturday, Dec. 3 from 11 a.m. to 2

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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
POMEROY — Meigs County 4-H Committee has
administration fee for state-funded childhood vacPlat Books for sale for $25. Funds support the 4-H
program in the county by providing funds for supplies, cines. Please bring medical cards and/or commercial
insurance cards, if applicable. Zostavax (shingles);
camp and college scholarships, learning opportunipneumonia ; inﬂuenza vaccines are also available.
ties and more. To purchase a Plat Book, you can stop
Call for eligibility determination and availability or
by the Extension Ofﬁce on Monday-Thursday from
visit our website at www.meigs-health.com to see a
8 a.m.-4:30 p.m., mail $30 (for book, shipping &amp;
handling) to Meigs County 4-H Committee, 113 East list of accepted commercial insurances and MedicMemorial Dr, Suite E, Pomeroy, OH 45769 or visit the aid for adults.
Meigs County Recorder’s Ofﬁce in the Court House. If
you have any questions, please contact Michelle Stumbo, Meigs County 4-H Youth Development Educator,
at stumbo.5@osu.edu or 740-992-6696.

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Spreading Christmas
Cheer program
POMEROY — The Meigs County Extension
Ofﬁce will be holding the 9th annual Holiday Program, “Spreading Christmas Cheer” on Thursday,
Dec. 1. Make and take craft, indoor pine tree, food
samplings and door prizes. One class at 11 a.m.
and the second class at 6 p.m. at the Meigs County
Extension Ofﬁce located at 113 E Memorial Drive,
Suite E, Pomeroy. Preregistration is required and
the cost is $25 per person. For more information
call 740-992-6696.

Holiday office
closures
POMEROY — Meigs County ofﬁces in the courthouse will be closed on Thursday, Nov. 24 and Friday, Nov. 25 in observance of Thanksgiving.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department will be closed on Thursday, Nov. 24 and Friday, Nov. 25 in observance of Thanksgiving.
POMEROY — The Meigs County TB Clinic will
be closed on Thursday, Nov. 24 and Friday, Nov. 25
in observance of Thanksgiving. Skin tests will only
be administered on Monday, Nov. 21 for the week of
Nov. 21-25 due to the holiday.

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�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 24, 2016 3

A closer look at Bob’s Market and Greenhouses
By Mindy Kearns

he has been joined by all ﬁve
of his sons – Bobby, Scott,
Rick, Jeff, and John, as well
MASON, W.Va. — Those as some grandsons. All have
who do not know details of
certain areas of expertise
Bob’s Market and Greenthat they are in charge of,
houses, Inc. beyond its ﬂag- from growing the plants, to
ship roadside retail market in trucking them from state-toMason, might be surprised
state, to wholesale and retail
when they hear the comsales.
pany’s statistics.
Sending ﬂowers and seedStarted in July 1970 by
lings as far west as Texas,
patriarch Bob Barnitz and
north to Michigan, east to
his wife, Corena, the small
New Jersey, and south to
Mason market began as a
Georgia, Bob’s Market prodside business while Bob still ucts can be found in over 20
worked at a local plant.
states, according to Anna
And what initiated as a
Barnitz, treasurer and chief
6,000-square-foot business,
ﬁnancial ofﬁcer at Bob’s.
has now, 46 years later,
The company employs
become a corporation of over 135 full-time equivalent
1 million square feet. It is
workers, with over 190 on
one of the largest greenhouse the payroll during the peak
operations on the east coast. season. Seasons for Bob’s
Nowadays, the company
Market employees differ
from those of other local
is still headed by Bob, but
Special to OVP

BOB’S BASICS

The company employs
135 full-time equivalent
workers, with over 190
on the payroll during the
peak season; has four
retail stores, including
Mason, Gallipolis and
Belpre, Ohio, and
Atlanta, Georgia; and
what initiated as a
6,000-square-foot
business, has now, 46
years later, become a
corporation of over 1
million square feet. It
is one of the largest
greenhouse operations
on the east coast.

Mindy Kearns/Courtesy

Mason is the site of the Bob’s Market and Greenhouses, Inc. flagship retail market. Bob and Corena
Barnitz opened the market in 1970, and now the business has grown from its original 6,000 square
feet to over 1 million square feet and four retail stores.

kets in the spring. Poinsettias
were growing while others
were attending local county
fairs.
residents. While the retail
Bob’s Market has four
stores are being stocked with retail stores, including
Christmas trees and colorful Mason, Gallipolis and
poinsettias, growers in the
Belpre, Ohio, and Atlanta,
greenhouses are already see- Georgia.
ing small ferns that will ﬁll
The Belpre market is presently undergoing a major
Bob’s famous hanging bas-

renovation project, which
will boast a 25,000-squarefoot greenhouse/garden
center. The center will be
open year round and will be
fully climate controlled. Concrete ﬂoors and wide aisles
will make it convenient for
customers.
While Bob’s Market
remains a family-owned busi-

ness, Anna Barnitz (wife of
Scott) points out that they
know the success of the
business is due to more than
family. She said they are
appreciative of the dedicated
workers the company is
blessed to have.
Mindy Kearns is a freelance writer for
Ohio Valley Publishing who can be
reached at mindykearns1@hotmail.com

Main Street Merchants
host open house

Courtesy photo

Local recipients of the Peoples Bank Foundation donation were Crosslight of Hope and the Point Pleasant Presbyterian Church Service Committee. Pictured are members of the Peoples Bank Marketing Team along with Sharon Stapleton, Peoples Bank Main
Street branch manager presenting a check to Delyssa Huffman, executive director of Crosslight, and Roxanne Weaver, Peoples Bank
North branch manager, presenting a check to John Holland, pastor of Point Pleasant Presbyterian Church.

Peoples Bank Foundation supports food pantries
Staff Report

support of food banks
and pantries in comPOINT PLEASANT
munities all across our
— The Peoples Bank
region,” Sharon StapleFoundation, a non-proﬁt ton, Peoples Bank branch
corporation formed
manager said. “The
to make donations in
people who beneﬁt from
Peoples Bank Market
hunger programming and
areas, announced it has
food assistance are our
donated $57,000 toward neighbors and friends.
regional food pantries,
More than 3.7 million
including some in Mason U.S. households with
County.
children were unable at
The foundation donat- times during the year
ed $2,000 to be divided
to provide adequate
among Crosslight of
nutrious food for their
Hope in Ashton and the children. This reality is
Point Pleasant Presbyconsistent across the
terian Church-Service
areas we serve. If you
Committee.
have a child, chances are
“Peoples Bank is
someone your child goes
pleased to increase its
to school with struggles

to get enough to eat”
and serve the markets
Since the inception of where Peoples Bank curPeoples Bank Foundation rently has ofﬁces.
in 2003, it has donated
more than $357,000 to
area food pantries.
The Peoples Bank
Foundation contributions
focus on charitable giving in four major areas:
community investment
and economic development, youth and education, human services
programs that improve
the social needs of lowto-moderate income communities and individuals,
and arts and culture.
Organizers receiving
foundation grants must
meet those requirements

Courtesy photo

Merchants on Main Street in downtown Point Pleasant recently
hosted a successful open house event to kick off the holiday
season. Merchants who participated donated items for a gift
basket worth over $300, with this basket given away to a person
who visited the “Sugar Plum Stroll” open house event. Donating
to the basket were Exclusive Realty, Four Seasons Florist, Plain
Valley Furniture, Main Street Consignment/Fringe Salon, Siders
Jewelers, Mason Jar, Mothman Museum, Babies n Beyond, Willas
Bible Book Store, Coffee Grinder, All About You, Shabby to Chic,
Main Street Furniture, Rio Bravo, Peoples Bank, Lowe Hotel, Harris
Steak House, Victoria’s Prom &amp; Bridal, Gallery 409, Decor Corner.
Pictured is the winner of the basket, Polly Roush.

Come On Over To Bob’s...

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Stock rally fades ahead of holiday
4,529. On Wall Street, the
futures for the Dow Jones
industrial average and
the Standard &amp; Poor’s
500 index were both
unchanged, a day after
the Dow closed above the
19,000 mark for the ﬁrst
time. The U. S. markets
will be closed Thursday
for Thanksgiving holiday.
WALL STREET: U.S.
markets have been the
focus since the election
of Donald Trump as

U.S. president, which
many investors bet will
be positive for companies. They expect less
regulation of ﬁnancial
services and possibly tax
cuts as well as spending
on infrastructure. He
has afﬁrmed plans to
withdraw from the TransPaciﬁc Partnership but
avoided mentioning his
campaign pledge to build
a wall along the Mexican
border.

Available in a
variety of heights
and widths

Fresh from the Greenhouse

Beautiful Poinsettias
Sizes Available s 4RADITIONAL

the new improvements as
they’ve been added. It’s
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upgrade for our consumers.”

Remember Bob’s for:

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POMEROY, Ohio —
Big Bend Save A Lot in
Pomeroy, Ohio is currently going through a signiﬁcant remodel, which will
bring area consumers the
newest format of Save A
Lot shopping.
According to President
and co-owner Brent
Eastman, the facelift will
include changes in store
layout and refrigerated
case upgrades, along with
new décor, signage, and
merchandising.

Scott Litchﬁeld, store
manager, said “ We are
already receiving positive
comments, and customers are excited with all

s 6IBRANT #OLOR
s "LOOMS THRU
#HRISTMAS
s ! PERFECT
DECORATION
OR GIFT

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Save A Lot Pomeroy renovations on now
Staff Report

While Supplies Last

�)ORULGD�&amp;LWUXV� %\�WKH�SHLFH�RU�ER[

Two Convenient Locations...
1/4 Mile North Pomeroy
Mason Bridge
Mason, WV
Phone (304) 773-5323
2400 Eastern Ave.
(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) 446-1711

60693134

BEIJING (AP) — The
rally in global stock markets, which saw the Dow
close above 19,000 for
the ﬁrst time, petered
out on Wednesday as
investors prepared for a
holiday in the U.S.
KEEPING SCORE:
Britain’s FTSE 100 rose
0.3 percent to 6,636
while Germany’s DAX
shed 0.6 percent to
10,655. France’s CAC 40
dropped 0.4 percent to

Fresh Cut
Pine Garland,
Wreaths and
Grave blankets

�E ditorial
4 Thursday, November 24, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Pushing back against
anti-Muslim rhetoric
By Heidi Stevens
Contributing columnist

President-elect Donald Trump’s selection of
retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn for national security
adviser has added to a growing sense of fear that
Trump’s administration could implement a database
to keep tabs on Muslims in America, a campaign
promise made by Trump last fall.
In February, Flynn tweeted a link to a YouTube
video with the message: “Fear of Muslims is
RATIONAL: Please forward a link to this video
so that people may learn the BASICS of Islam.”
Coupled with Trump’s campaign talk of “a total and
complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United
States,” the selection has many concerned that our
nation will abandon some of its core values, including freedom of religion.
George Takei penned a powerful op-ed this
week about his family’s experience being forced
into a Japanese internment camp when he was 5.
“‘National security’ must never again be permitted
to justify wholesale denial of constitutional rights
and protections,” Takei writes. “If it is freedom and
our way of life that we ﬁght for, our ﬁrst obligation
is to ensure that our own government adheres to
those principles.”
But how do we go about ensuring that?
On social media, I frequently see non-Muslims
pledging to register themselves on a hypothetical
Muslim database in a show of solidarity.
Is that feasible? Is that enough? I called a couple
of experts to get their take.
“While the sentiment behind the pledge (to register) is appreciated and welcomed, the unintended
effect may be to legitimize the concept of registering Americans of a particular faith,” Tabassum Haleem, executive director of the Council of Islamic
Organization of Greater Chicago, told me. “If the
pushback against these types of nefarious initiatives is part of a larger, united campaign against the
erosion of civil liberties of all Americans, it would
send a loud and unequivocal message to Presidentelect Trump that he cannot divide and conquer the
American people. That we are, indeed, stronger
together.”
Corey Saylor is director of the department to
monitor and combat Islamophobia at the Council
on American-Islamic Relations. Saylor says a Muslim database would most likely mean a reinstatement of the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System, a controversial program launched after
the 9/11 terrorist attacks that collected information, ﬁngerprints and photographs of noncitizens
entering the United States from certain (mostly
majority Muslim) countries and monitored their
status and movement once they arrived. It was canceled in 2011.
If a broader Muslim database is implemented for
U.S. citizens, however, Saylor said his group welcomes the idea of non-Muslims adding their names.
“People being willing to register themselves if an
all-inclusive Muslim registry comes up is greatly
appreciated,” Saylor said. “When the Constitution
is being challenged, it’s important that everyone be
willing to stand up and not just talk about it with
their friends, but do something useful. Registering
would be one way to do that.”
We don’t need to wait for a database to push back
against anti-Muslim rhetoric, though.
Muslims make up less than 2 percent of the U.S.
population, but Americans of all faiths are welcome
to attend open mosque days and educate themselves about the faith and its practitioners.
The Council of Islamic Organizations of Greater
Chicago organizes regional open-mosque days, Haleem said, and churches often hold interfaith events.
“DuPage United, a community organizing group
made of churches, mosques and synagogues, started a Solidarity With Muslims campaign earlier this
year with standing-room-only events,” Haleem said.
“The evening of Nov. 17th, nearly 650 people of all
faiths gathered at the Islamic Center of Naperville.
DuPage United leaders presented the work being
done by their member institutions on establishing
mental health crises centers, organizing resources
for refugees and combating Islamophobia. Police
chiefs pledged to continue to protect their citizens,
regardless of their race or religion. School districts
around the country are afﬁrming policies to protect
American Muslim students and other minorities
against bullying.”
Saylor recommends signing up to receive emails
from groups that ﬁght against religious persecution, particularly CAIR, the American Civil Liberties Union, the Southern Poverty Law Center and
Amnesty International.
“These groups will ask you do things that are
usually pretty simple and straightforward,” Saylor
said. “That takes individuals and merges them into
a movement. You want to magnify your own impact
by joining an organization.”
Monthly donations to one or more of those
organizations can help them staff lawyers for an
organized pushback in the event that Americans’
constitutional rights are being threatened, he said.
“We ask people to ﬁnd a group that you feel is
doing good work and make sure you’re supporting
them,” Saylor said. “Not just by reading the emails,
but by contributing, by showing up at meetings, by
taking action.”
Heidi Stevens is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune. Readers may
email her at hstevens@chicagotribune.com.

THEIR VIEW

Avoiding sensitive topics — sort of
By Ellen Scolnic
and Joyce Eisenberg
Contributing columnists

Our sister who’s hosting Thanksgiving dinner
just texted all the guests a
directive: “No talking politics when we get together
for the holiday.”
She’s trying to head
off heated discussions
because, two weeks
post-election, people still
haven’t cooled off. You
think you know people,
but you don’t know whom
they voted for. And when
you ﬁnd out, you’re mad
at them.
We’ll be able to abide
by the no-politics request
because we’ve been avoiding sensitive subjects
at family gatherings for
years. We don’t ask Cousin
Louise if she ﬁnally got
her promotion. We don’t
ask our sister’s friends if
their son is still living in
their basement.
Apparently, we’re not
alone in avoiding the big,
touchy questions. It’s a
big enough problem that
it warranted a solution
because you can buy a
T-shirt that reads, “No, I
don’t have a boyfriend. I
haven’t declared a major

yet. I’ll let you know when
I get a job.”
We’ve ordered ﬁve
of these shirts for our
college-age children and
their friends who are tired
of answering the same old
questions from relatives
who mean well but can’t
help asking.
We’ve read the T-shirt
so we know enough not
to ask our niece if she has
a new boyfriend, but we
might dance around the
subject and ask her if she
knows about the Coffee
Meets Bagel dating app.
We wouldn’t ask the
young people if they’ve
heard anything back from
their on-campus job interviews. That’s too much
pressure. However, we
could tell them that we
read an interesting article
about Information Security Analysts. It pays well,
you only need a bachelor’s
degree and the ﬁeld is
expected to grow by 30
percent in the next ﬁve
years.
We’ve warned our
husbands not to ask the
newlyweds when they are
planning to start a family, but we really want to
know if we should buy a
Baby Exersaucer on Black

Friday or wait a couple of
years. So we might say,
“Are you going to need to
trade in your Mini Cooper
for a bigger car any time
soon?”
Our nephew will be
bringing his adorable
toddler to dinner. We
won’t ask him how the allnatural elimination communication toilet training
is going. We’ll just peek at
the back of the toddler’s
outﬁt. If we see that he’s
wearing a puffy pull-up
diaper, we’ll remind his
dad of the old parenting
axiom: “No matter how
hopeless toilet training
seems, don’t worry. He
won’t get married in diapers.”
We know that Aunt Minnie and Uncle Sid don’t
want to move out of their
sprawling ﬁve-bedroom
home ﬁlled with a lifetime
of tchotchkes, so we won’t
ask how they are managing with two ﬂights of
stairs and their washing
machine down in the basement. Instead we’ll give
them the magazine ad for
the brand-new 55-plus
development that’s taking
deposits now.
When our dinner host
said “no politics,” we tried

to think of other safe topics to talk about, but we
realized that any topic
could be a mineﬁeld. A
simple “Did you watch the
game last Sunday?” will
likely bring out armchair
quarterbacks and people
who will tell you that they
know how to manage
the clock better than the
coach.
If we comment that,
“We’ve been so lucky with
this warm November
weather” it could be an
invitation to those around
the table who want to
remind us that this warm
weather is due to the
deadly effects of global
warming.
You know what’s safe?
Keeping ours mouths ﬁlled
with delicious food so we
can’t talk. “Pass the bowl
of stufﬁng please, we want
just a little bit more.”
We want to make sure
that we’ll still ﬁt into our
pantsuits.
Joyce Eisenberg and Ellen Scolnic,
known as the Word Mavens, are
the authors of the new book, “The
Whole Spiel: Funny essays about
digital nudniks, seder selfies and
chicken soup memories.” They can
be reached via thewordmavens.com.
They wrote this for The Philadelphia
Inquirer.

THEIR VIEW

Trump’s offense at mild dissent at theater laughable
By Peter Burian
Contributing columnist

As a student of ancient
Greek theater, I was
amused by Donald Trump’s
weekend tweet-storm over
what he called the “harassment” of Mike Pence.
The cause of the supposed outrage was a brief
speech addressed to the
vice president-elect following a performance
Friday of the hit musical
“Hamilton.” As the cast
stood on stage for their
curtain call, one of the lead
actors, Brandon Victor
Dixon, politely but clearly
expressed the cast’s shared
apprehension:
“We, sir, we are the
diverse America who are
alarmed and anxious that
your new administration
will not protect us, our
planet, our children, our
parents, or defend us and
uphold our inalienable
rights.”
Pence listened to Dixon
from the lobby, and on
“Fox News Sunday”
allowed that he was not
offended by what he heard.
But Trump, not surprisingly, was. He seems incapable
of letting any slight, however slight, pass untweeted. It’s as if he’s actively
courting the “demagogue”
label hurled at him during
the campaign.
Greek comedy provides
an ironic perch from which
to examine Trump’s reac-

tion. We need only consider an early work (5th
century BCE) by Athens’
great comic playwright
Aristophanes, a politicallythemed musical comedy
like “Hamilton” called “The
Knights.” In it, Aristophanes attacks a successful
populist politician named
Cleon who became, for the
Athenians, the paradigm of
the demagogue.
Like our president-elect,
Cleon was a wealthy scion
of the commercial class, a
man with a penchant for
litigation (he apparently
sued Aristophanes) and
a somewhat uncouth but
charismatic manner. For
his supporters, he was a
breath of fresh air because
he did not belong to the
traditional political class
and promised to steer Athens to success in its war
with Sparta. To his opponents, his bravado, apparent lack of scruples and
blatant appeal to the crowd
seemed to place the very
institution of democracy in
jeopardy.
If Trump wants to know
what theatrical harassment
look like, he need only read
“The Knights,” which is
unsparing in its satire and
exults in verbal abuse. By
such standards, the polite
address to Pence at the end
of Hamilton was a model of
deference and decorum.
On further reﬂection, I
was upset by the suggestion that even the mildest

criticism could now be
regarded as off limits.
Trump apparently believes
the theater is (of all things)
a “safe space.” According
to his second tweet, “The
theatre must always be a
safe and special place. The
cast of Hamilton was very
rude last night to a very
good man, Mike Pence.
Apologize!”
The theater as an institution is certainly a special
place, but only sometimes
a safe one. The rich history
of theatrical censorship
would be enough to establish that point. For me,
however, the most telling
point is that the tradition
— which it set under way
more than 2,500 years ago
— was shaped by the ideas
and practices of democratic
speech.
Whatever the ﬂaws of
the Athenian democracy,
and there were many, it
deserves credit for having
at its heart the citizen’s
right to speak freely in
the public square, in the
assembly where laws were
debated and enacted, and
in the theater. Democracy
was then and is still the
form of governance that
leaves everything open
for discussion, including
democracy itself.
Drama, intrinsically
dialogic, draws the breath
of life from characters in
conﬂict, opposing points
of view, the clash of ideas.
In ancient Athens, the the-

ater was in many ways the
school of democracy, where
hearing characters confront
each other’s perspectives
helped citizens listen to,
make sense of, and participate in democratic debate.
The experience was never
meant to be “safe” and in
the case of tragedy was
often (as it still can be)
deeply disturbing.
Today, when the virtual
worlds of the internet and
so-called social media have
largely supplanted civil
conversation on matters of
public concern, live theater
is one of the last remaining
spaces where people can
come together in shared
engagement with important ideas and emotions.
But how often does this
happen as directly as it did
last Friday evening?
Trump’s objection to
even so mild a form of dissent implies that the role
of the theater is to offer
entertainment to an audience that doesn’t care to be
confronted with gratuitous
opinions from those it
hired to entertain them.
If that is so, what public
space is left for face-toface expression of critical,
contentious or contrarian
views? What school of
democracy will we have?
Peter Burian is a professor emeritus
of classical studies at Duke University.
He wrote this for the Philadelphia
Inquirer. Readers may email him at
pburian@duke.edu.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Students

Business

nesses in the area we
of the local businesses,
appreciate your support
with Herbal Sage Tea
spearheading the promo- of the work we put in day
in and day out to bring
tional items.
From page 1
you your local news.
Herbal Sage, which
It is the support of
Meigs County Comis relatively new to
local customers and the
missioner Tim Ihle noted
Pomeroy, is not typilocal community that
cally a retail location, but that shopping locally is
helps businesses like
more important than
will be open for Small
Clark’s and Hartwell
ever as the county is
Business Saturday and
House remain in the
other events in Pomeroy funded off of the sale tax
community for many
revenue from those who
this weekend, allowyears.
shop locally.
ing shoppers to see the
“Local business is
“When we go down
renovation work to their
important because
and see all the business
building, located at the
stores will not be in busi- intersection of Butternut fronts in Pomeroy, and
ness for 21 years like I
and Second in Pomeroy. even a few things going
have if you don’t have
on in Middleport again,
Other shops and busilocal support. We are
we’re very optimistic
nesses along Butternut,
getting ready to start
Second Street, Mulberry about the future of Meigs
our 22nd year and we
County and our busiAvenue, Main Street
count on local customnesses. We really feel like
and Court Street, and
ers,” explained Bobbie
right now is a good time
many other locations
Karr, owner of Hartwell
throughout the area will for anybody to want to
House. “Every little bit
invest in small business.
be taking part in Small
helps whether its a dollar Business Saturday activi- Get with our Chambers,
or a hundred dollars.”
get with the CIC, come
ties as well.
“It is important everysee the commissioners,
When considering
day,” said Front Paige
your local businesses for invest locally — not only
Outﬁtters owner Paige
buying but developing
Christmas gift needs or
Cleek of shopping local,
other shopping opportu- a small business,” said
noting that Small BusiIhle.
nities, don’t forget your
ness Saturday helps to
“If you get out and
local newspaper as well.
promote the local shoptravel much, there is no
We offer subscription
ping opportunities.
place like home,” said
opportunities for both
Since 2010, Small Busi- print and electronic ediIhle of what Meigs Counness Saturday has grown tions as well as numerous ty has to offer for those
into a nationwide event, advertising opportunities in the community.
which according to a
throughout the year.
2015 Small Business SatLike the other busiurday Consumer Insights
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TODAY
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pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.02
0.70
2.62
40.91
38.57

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Nov 29

First

Dec 7

Full

Last

Dec 13 Dec 20

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

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

Major
7:40a
8:18a
8:56a
9:35a
10:17a
11:01a
11:22a

Minor
1:30a
2:07a
2:45a
3:24a
4:05a
4:50a
5:38a

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™

Fri.
7:22 a.m.
5:09 p.m.
3:36 a.m. AIR
3:23 p.m. 0

MOON PHASES
New

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

A: Maine. On Mistake Island, it’s foggy
1,580 hours per year.

Today
7:21 a.m.
5:09 p.m.
2:40 a.m.
2:53 p.m.

Major
8:02p
8:39p
9:17p
9:57p
10:39p
11:25p
----

Minor
1:51p
2:29p
3:06p
3:46p
4:28p
5:13p
6:01p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Nov. 24, 1989, a band of heavy
lake-effect snow contributed to an
accident involving 60 cars on I-81
north of Rome, N.Y. Abrupt weather
changes in a short distance can
surprise drivers.

is until Dec. 15th for Jan 1st effective date
or Jan 15th for a Feb 1st effective date

*Open Enrollment begins
November for the
Affordable Care Act Plans
(Obama Care).
* help clients with
individual health plans,
dental p
plans and vision plans.

60691958

505 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Tel: 740-992-9784
Toll Free: 877-992-9784
Fax: 740-992-7980
www.thevaughanagency.com

QUALITY

0 50 100 150 200

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

Level
13.36
16.13
21.37
12.78
13.18
25.10
13.21
26.04
34.85
13.31
14.80
33.80
14.40

Lucasville
58/38
Portsmouth
59/39

500

Primary pollutant:

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

Waverly
56/37

24-hr.
Chg.
none
-0.24
-0.22
-0.27
-0.30
-0.05
-0.04
+0.03
+0.03
+0.03
none
+0.10
-0.30

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

57°
46°

Partly sunny

56°
34°

Warmer with rain

Marietta
56/41

Murray City
55/36
Belpre
57/42

Athens
56/37

St. Marys
56/43

Parkersburg
56/39

Coolville
56/40

Elizabeth
57/43

Spencer
57/44

Buffalo
59/45

Ironton
62/44

Milton
61/45
Huntington
62/42

St. Albans
61/45

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
51/44
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
60/48
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
76/49
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

WEDNESDAY

66°
47°

Cloudy

Wilkesville
57/37
POMEROY
Jackson
57/41
58/37
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
57/43
58/40
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
52/37
GALLIPOLIS
58/42
58/44
58/42

Ashland
62/45
Grayson
61/43

TUESDAY

Mostly cloudy

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
56/36

South Shore Greenup
61/44
58/38

300

Logan
54/35

MONDAY

53°
32°

Intervals of clouds
and sun

Adelphi
54/35
Chillicothe
55/37

SUNDAY

47°
28°

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

60692366

OPEN ENROLLMENT

SATURDAY

Cloudy

0

Q: In which state would you ﬁnd the
foggiest place in the eastern U.S.?

SUN &amp; MOON

Check
out our
&amp;ODVVLÀ�HGV�
for
bargains!

FRIDAY

Cloudy and milder today. Considerable clouds
tonight. High 58° / Low 42°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

48°
28°
53°
35°
78° in 1931
14° in 1970

In Lindsay Jackson’s
preschool classroom,
students were also
learning about the
Thanksgiving season,
as Jenny Ridenour
from Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation
District spent time
reading the students
a book about turkeys,
explaining the parts of
the turkey and making
a turkey craft.
Students got to see
and feel the foot of
a turkey, as well as
a turkey beard. The
students then colored
turkeys which were
made from tracing
their hands on a piece
of paper.

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

From page 1

53°
36°
48°

Thursday, November 24, 2016 5

Clendenin
58/41
Charleston
60/44

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
37/26

Billings
45/30

Montreal
34/29
Toronto
42/36

Minneapolis
37/30

New York
50/44

Denver
49/26

Detroit
Chicago 50/35
43/31
Washington
58/43

Kansas City
54/33

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
54/31/pc
22/16/s
72/54/r
57/44/r
55/38/pc
45/30/pc
49/38/pc
43/41/c
60/44/c
68/46/s
45/24/pc
43/31/c
53/34/c
51/38/c
54/36/r
71/48/s
49/26/s
47/34/pc
50/35/c
83/73/c
72/50/s
48/34/c
54/33/pc
62/39/s
61/41/s
76/49/s
58/37/c
81/70/pc
37/30/c
64/43/pc
75/56/pc
50/44/r
68/37/s
80/60/pc
55/41/c
76/52/s
52/39/c
40/32/c
65/46/sh
58/41/sh
53/38/pc
47/28/pc
60/48/pc
51/44/r
58/43/pc

Hi/Lo/W
54/33/s
24/18/sn
72/47/s
55/45/c
58/36/c
50/34/pc
50/38/pc
49/43/sh
56/35/c
70/41/pc
56/29/pc
43/29/c
50/31/c
46/37/c
47/32/c
65/41/s
59/30/s
49/31/s
47/34/r
82/72/pc
75/50/pc
48/32/c
53/33/s
61/42/s
63/34/pc
74/47/s
57/35/c
80/68/pc
39/25/c
64/36/pc
74/55/pc
52/44/c
61/29/pc
81/59/pc
56/44/c
78/56/s
49/34/c
45/36/r
69/43/pc
62/40/pc
55/32/pc
54/34/pc
62/51/c
52/41/c
61/43/c

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
72/54

El Paso
68/45

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

High
Low

86° in McAllen, TX
-5° in Bodie State Park, CA

Global
Chihuahua
77/44
Monterrey
77/56

High
107° in Julia Creek, Australia
Low -62° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
72/50
Miami
81/70

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

�6 Thursday, November 24, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Tha

Frien

Point Pleasant Register

Gallipolis D

304-675-1333

740-44

Mason County:

Gallia C

Christmas Parade Pt. Pleasant, Dec. 2nd @ 6pm
-Christmas Tree Lighting following the Parade
Krodel Park Lights 5:30pm – 9pm until Dec. 31st.
Mason Christmas Parade Noon on Dec. 3rd.

The Our House Tavern is havin
also around the time of the lig
from 6 to 9 p.m. with live music
(dulcimer) and Robert Bence (g
will have a variety of teas to sam
will also be served. The Gallia Ac
Christmas Carols in front of the ta
The Gallipolis Christmas Parade
Dec. 3 at 1 p.m. Santa will be av
afterwards in the San

-Santa at Mason Town Hall after Parade
New Haven Parade on Dec. 3rd

Shop Local

Bandstand
Necklace
come in to register to
win a Bandstand Charm!
$45 and free gift with purchase
on “Shop Local” Small Business
Saturday! 2 sizes now to choose from.

Acquisitions
Fine Jewelry

The Ohio Valley Symphony wil
the same Saturday night at 7:3
Performing Arts Centre on S

151 2nd Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
M-F 9:30-5
Sat 9:30-4

740-446-2842

Gallipolis in Lights will be holdin
The event will start a 6 p.m. with
at 7 p.m. Comers can expect an
spirits and Christmas favorites pe
actual lighting ceremony for Galli
Park with pre-ceremony activiti
and refreshments. Admission is f
the stage

60691876

Happy Thanksgiving!

All your
quilting needs
qu

Rick
McDaniel
Income Tax Services
Specializing In

Individual, Small Business &amp; Minister Tax Returns

Authorized IRS E-File Provider
Preparing Tax Returns Professionally Since 1973

740-441-9941
60476942

�� ,OCUST 3T� s 'ALLIPOLIS /(
E-mail: rickmcdanielinctax@sbcglobal.net

Give Thanks To The Lord...His Love Endures Forever!

Black
Bl
kF
Friday
id
all kits
25% oﬀ

Rick McDaniel
Registered Representative
60476943
60654159

Advisory Services are provided through Creative Financial Designs,Inc., a Registered Investment
Adviser, and Securities offered through cfd Investments, Inc., a Registered Broker/Dealer,
Member FINRA &amp; SIPC. Faith Investment Services is not owned or controlled by CFD companies.

Christmas Fabric,
Wide Backs, patterns
and books

30% oﬀ

FAITH
INVESTMENT
SERVICES

19 Locust Street, Gallipolis, Ohio
740-441-9941

Small Business
Saturday

60692808

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URXQG�VXSSRUW�PHDQV�WKH�ZRUOG�WR�XV��
DQG�ZH�WKDQN�\RX�IRU�\RXU�YLVLWV�

Mon thru Sat 9-5
110 West Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-2284
thefabricgirls@gmail.com

1/4 mile North Mason/Pomeroy Bridge | Mason WV | 304-773-5437
2400 Eastern Ave | (Across KMart) Gallipolis OH | 740-446-1711
60693132

DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT
MENT
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RINGS
ING
GS

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WEDDING BANDS

Good Only Friday Nov 25
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STARTING @

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60692393

740-446-8051

9900

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2499
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WATCHES

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Serving you since 1933

422 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH

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60692514

Jeanne Ingles FNP -BC
Family Practice

151 2nd Ave, Gallipolis, Oh 45631

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60691100

topefurniture.com

60691872

Healthcare With
Witth a Touch
Toucch
ch of Heart
H
21 Central Ave.
Suite D
Galipolis, OH 45631
jinglesccrn@yahoo.com

60692096

Wishes You a
Happy Thanksgiving!!

from
MTS Coins

(740) 446-7393
Fax: (740) 446-7391

�Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 24, 2016 7

anks,

nds!

POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL

Daily Tribune

46-2342

740-992-2155

County:

Meigs County:

ng its 2016 Gala at the Elks Lodge.
social hour and dinner will begin
evening filled with fine dining,
erformed by John Eric Booth. The
polis in Lights will be held in City
es at 5:30 p.m., including drinks
free. Entertainment will begin on
at 6 p.m.

Pomeroy Parade Nov. 27th at 2pm
CHESTER — The Annual Christmas Open House
at the Chester Court House on Dec. 3, 2016 @ 1pm
Middleport Christmas Celebrations
Saturday, Dec. 3rd -10am-5pm
Christmas Market at the Riverbend Arts Council
Building -1:30pm-4pm

ng an open house holiday event
ghting ceremony. Tours will be
in the ballroom by Kendra Ward
uitar). A Pup and A Cup Tea Co.
mple. Cookies and hot chocolate
ademy Madrigals will be singing
avern. This is all free to the public.
will be held on Second Avenue,
vailable to speak with children
ta House in City Park.

Free Carriage Rides besides the Riverbend Arts
Council Building -4pm
Community Band Concert -4:30pm Parade Begins
Thanks for shopping Local!

1/2 price everything in
the store now thru 12/3!!
(740)
((7
7 446-0332
1151 2nd Ave,
Gallip
G
ipp
Gallipolis,
OH 45631
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l host its annual Christmas show
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From our family to yours,

warmest wishes this Thanksgiving Season!

Happy Thanksgiving!

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nty ’s Ch
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60691879

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Jeff --Precision Audio-Car Stereo Store"-1313 Eastern Ave

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e

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Ar t

i

Stan Evans, CRPC®
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san Mar
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Hartwell House

+

Happy Thanksgiving!
g!

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Andrew James Noe

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ATTORNEY AT LAW

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19 Locust Street, Lower Level
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740-992-7696

60692805

Warm Wishes From Our
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FRIDAY: Be sure to check out our
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SATURDAY: Support Small Business
SUNDAY: Open House 12-4

740-446-9356

w
www.hartwellhouse1995.com

+

HAPPY THANKSGIVING!!

+

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60692203

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�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 24, 2016 s 8

Eiflein got early
lesson about
The Game
By Jim Naveau
jnaveau@civitasmedia.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio
— Sixteen ﬁrst-year
Ohio State starters have
had a whole football
season to anticipate
playing in their ﬁrst
Michigan game.
But Pat Elﬂein didn’t
have that luxury. His
ﬁrst Michigan game
experience came with
only a few seconds of
advance warning.
Ohio State’s starting
center was a back-up at
right guard to Marcus
Hall when OSU played
at Michigan in 2013.
But early in the second
quarter of Ohio State’s
42-41 win, he found
himself in the lineup
when Hall was ejected
for joining in a brawl
that broke out after
OSU’s Dontre Wilson
thought he was roughed
up a little too much on
a kick return.
“I saw a ﬁght break
out and someone said,
‘Marcus just threw a
punch,’ and I was like,

‘Uh-oh,’ ” Elﬂein said
earlier this week. “They
started naming off numbers that were ejected
and I heard 79 (Hall’s
number), so I was like,
‘All right, I’m in.’
“You didn’t really
have time to freak out.
I just had to go in and
start playing right
away. Everything happened so fast. I just
remember at the end of
the game I took a second and thought, ‘Wow.
I just played in The
Game and we won.’ I’ll
remember that one the
rest of my life,” he said.
Elﬂein played in all
14 Ohio State games
in 2013, but other than
being on the ﬁeld for
most of a 76-0 blowout
of overmatched Florida
A&amp;M, his experience in
actual game situations
was limited.
“I earned the role
of sixth man during
(preseason) camp and
during the season, so I
knew they trusted me

9 from OVP earn TVC-Ohio football
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Five River Valley
Raiders and four Meigs
Marauders, along with
26 other individuals,
made all Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division football for 2016
— which the conference
ofﬁcially announced on
Monday.
The annual list for the
now seven-team division
is selected by the division’s coaches, as Nelsonville-York — which
won the TVC-Ohio
championship for the
ﬁrst time since 2010 —
amassed the maximum
eight selections.
The Buckeyes, which
went winless in the
league only a year ago
but reversed course to
a perfect 6-0 this year,
also swept the top hon-

ors.
Nelsonville-York
senior linebacker Noah
Andrews, the only allleague player to also
make the unit in 2013,
was tabbed as the Defensive Player of the Year.
Alex Mount, a senior
running back for the
Buckeyes, and Athens
senior quarterback Brendan Sano shared the
Offensive Player of the
Year award.
Nelsonville-York ﬁrstyear head coach Rusty
Richards collected Coach
of the Year honors.
Athens had won four
consecutive division
championships, before
Alexander won the title
for the ﬁrst time last
year.
The runner-up Bulldogs (5-1 TVC) gained
six spots on the all-TVCOhio squad, followed

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Meigs sophomore Zach Bartrum (1) captured all-Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division football honors.

by third-place ﬁnishers
River Valley and Vinton
County with ﬁve nods
apiece.
Both the Raiders and
Vikings went 3-3 in the
league, as River Valley
just completed only its
third season in the TVC.
Wellston and Meigs

tied for ﬁfth at 2-4, as
Alexander went winless
at 0-6.
Both the Golden Rockets and Marauders mustered four picks apiece,
while the Spartans
secured three names for
their seventh-place ﬁnish.
See OVP | 9

See EIFLEIN | 9

Final games give
3 Big Ten teams
shots at bowls
CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
(AP) — The winners
of both Big Ten divisions will be decided
this weekend, but a
few slots lower in the
conference standings
are three teams looking
for tickets to the postseason.
Indiana, Maryland
and Northwestern are
all looking for their
sixth wins and bowl
eligibility. Lined up
against them in those
games are three teams
— Purdue, Rutgers and
Illinois, respectively —
that won’t make bowls
but with the opportunity to play spoiler.
Coaches said Tuesday
that getting to six wins
is a big deal for a team
looking to build itself
up, bigger than just
the chance to play in a
lower-tier bowl.
D.J. Durkin is in his
ﬁrst season at Maryland
(5-6, 2-6 Big Ten) and
would love to get his
young team the extra
practices that come
ahead of a bowl game.
They allow key work on
fundamentals.
“You get the extra
practice those weeks,
you can’t work on bowl
prep every day,” he
said. “It gets stale.”
Northwestern coach
Pat Fitzgerald believes
that without the extra
sessions almost a year
ago before the Outback
Bowl, this season’s
team (5-6, 4-4) might
not have the ﬁve wins it
already has.
“I saw a return on
that investment a year
ago,” he said.
Coaches disagreed on
the degree to which the
chance to ruin someone
else’s post-season hopes
or shot at a title can
motivate a team.

Rutgers coach Chris
Ash, whose team (2-9,
0-8) will be trying to
keep Maryland at home
during bowl season,
believes it can.
But Wisconsin coach
Paul Chryst said that
whatever boost that
idea might provide is
quickly lost.
“I don’t think it sustains itself when you’re
playing the game,” he
said.
DIVISION CHAMPS
In the Big Ten East,
No. 2 Ohio State, No.
3 Michigan and No. 8
Penn State are tied for
ﬁrst and all go into the
weekend with a shot at
a division title. But the
West is up for grabs,
too.
No. 5 Wisconsin,
which hosts Minnesota,
and No. 17 Nebraska,
which plays at Iowa, are
both still in the running
for the West championship.
Nebraska coach Mike
Riley believes that with
newer coaches at his
school, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois and perhaps Purdue, the West
will only become even
more competitive.
“I see lots of teams
rising and getting better and growing,” he
said.

Eastern senior quarterback Jett Facemyer made all-Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division football honors.

17 from OVP make TVC-Hocking football
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

The Ohio Valley Publishing area, as ofﬁcially
announced on Monday,
amassed 17 players on
the 2016 all-Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking
Division football team
—as selected by the division’s coaches.
Southern, which ﬁnished third in the TVCHocking at 6-2, secured
ﬁve selections — while
sixth-place Eastern (3-5
TVC), seventh-place
South Gallia (2-6 TVC)
and eighth-place Wahama (1-7) all had four
picks apiece.
For South Gallia, one
of those honorees was
senior running back

Johnny Sheets, who was
named the division’s
Offensive Player of the
Year.
Sheets is now only the
second Rebel — boys or
girls — in school history
to earn a TVC-Hocking
POY award, joining
Joseph Ehman, who
earned the exact same
honor in boys basketball
last season.
South Gallia joined the
TVC in 2010.
Waterford won this
season’s championship
with a perfect 8-0 league
record, and captured the
maximum eight spots
on the division squad —
including four repeaters
from a year ago.
The Wildcats’ Ty
McGraw — a senior

See GAMES | 9

linebacker — landed the
Defensive Player of the
Year award.
Waterford’s Eric
McCutcheon and Miller’s
Sean Bartley shared the
Coach of the Year.
Trimble, after three
consecutive division
titles, was the league
runner-up this year —
suffering its only TVC
setback against Waterford.
The Tomcats scored
six selections on the allleague list.
Miller, which ﬁnished
fourth at 5-3, and Belpre
— which took ﬁfth at
4-4 — also earned four
choices apiece.
Federal Hocking,
which went winless in
the division, had the

minimum three.
Southern’s senior trio
of Crenson Rogers, Blake
Johnson and Jordan
Fisher all made the club
— as did juniors Riley
Roush and Dylan Smith.
Johnson and Rogers
repeated to the all-TVCHocking team from last
year.
Eastern’s only repeater
was senior Jett Facemyer, as he was joined by
fellow seniors Jeremiah
Martindale and Corbett
Catlett.
The other Eagle honored was junior Wyatt
Bissell.
Besides Sheets, South
Gallia gained fellow
seniors Joey Woodall and
See FOOTBALL | 9

Playoff rankings look promising for Ohio State
By Ralph D. Russo
Associated Press

TARGETING TROUBLE
Minnesota players
have been called for
targeting seven times
this season, including
a pair of calls against
safety Duke McGhee
on tackles that knocked
Northwestern receiver
Austin Carr and Illinois
receiver Malik Turner
out of games. Minnesota coach Tracy Claeys

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Alabama, Ohio State, Michigan
and Clemson held the top four
spots in the College Football
Playoff rankings for the second
straight week and Washington
moved up a spot to ﬁfth this week.
Wisconsin is sixth in the selection committee rankings released
Tuesday night. Louisville was the
team that took a big drop. The
Cardinals fell from ﬁfth to 11th
after losing at Houston.
Ohio State and Michigan play
Saturday in Columbus, Ohio, and

the loser is likely — though not
deﬁnitely — out of the playoff
race. The Wolverines would move
on the Big Ten championship
game by beating the Buckeyes.
The Buckeyes, though, need help
to reach the conference title game.
Unbeaten Alabama meets
Auburn on Saturday, but the Crimson Tide has already clinched a
spot in the SEC title game.
Clemson ﬁnishes its regular
season against South Carolina and
then will play in the Atlantic Coast
Conference championship game
against either Virginia Tech or
North Carolina.

Washington must win at Washington State, ranked 23rd by the
committee, on Friday to win the
Pac-12 North and move on to the
conference title game against No.
9 Colorado or No. 12 Southern
California
BUCKEYES LOOKING GOOD
Ohio State could get shut out of
the Big Ten championship game
if Penn State, seventh in the committee’s rankings, beats Michigan
State on Saturday. But listening to
committee chairman Kirby Hocutt
See OHIO | 9

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 24, 2016 9

Top US civilian honor goes to 21 artists, athletes, others
WASHINGTON (AP) —
President Barack Obama
awarded the nation’s highest
civilian honor to 21 groundbreaking actors, musicians,
athletes and innovators who
inspired him over the years and
“helped make me who I am.”
“Everybody on this stage has
touched me in a very powerful,
personal way, in ways that they
probably couldn’t imagine,”
Obama said in concluding an
hour-long ceremony Tuesday in
the White House East Room.

The Presidential Medal of
Freedom recognizes especially
meritorious contributions to
the national interests of the
United States, its security and
its culture. Obama called the
2016 group a “particularly
impressive class.”
In the ﬁlm world, Obama
honored Tom Hanks, Robert
De Niro, Robert Redford and
Cicely Tyson.
Michael Jordan and Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar, two of the greatest basketball players ever,

Eiflein

the country.
Elﬂein deﬁnitely
has the endorsement
of OSU coach Urban
From page 8
Meyer.
to some extent. But
“I can’t give an adjecI never got to test it
tive to over emphasize
against a real live oppo- his value to our pronent,” he said.
gram. I’ve done this 29
His relief appearance years. He’s as good a
was followed by a start player, person, leader as
in the Big Ten chamI’ve ever been around,”
pionship game against
Meyer said.
Michigan State after
Saturday’s game at
coach Urban Meyer
Ohio Stadium will be a
suspended Hall for
reunion with long-time
saluting the Michigan
friend and Pickerington
fans with two upraised North High School
middle ﬁngers as he
teammate Jake Butt,
left the ﬁeld after being the tight end for Michiejected.
gan.
Elﬂein says he gained
As captains for their
more conﬁdence from
teams, the two will
a 34-24 loss to the
meet at midﬁeld for
Spartans in the Big Ten the coin toss before the
championship game
game.
than he did in the win
“We talked about
over Michigan.
that,” Elﬂein said on
“I know we lost, but
Monday. “That was one
personally I played to a of the ﬁrst things we
higher level. After that talked about when he
game, I was like, `I can got elected captain for
do this, I can not only
his team is we’re going
go in but I can go in
to see each other at the
and play well,’ ” Elﬂein 50 for the coin toss. So
said. “That’s when I
that will be cool for us,
came out a different
will be cool for Pickerington back home and
man.”
for our families and
As a sophomore,
friends we grew up
Elﬂein started every
game on OSU’s national with. “It’s pretty cool
to see two guys from
champion team and
the same town make it
was ﬁrst-team All-Big
to be captains on their
Ten. Last season, he
teams — especially in a
was ﬁrst-team All-Big
Ten and a second-team rivalry like this.”
“We’re friends and
All-American.
friendship is bigger
This year, Elﬂein
than football,” Elﬂein
moved to center and
has been as productive said. “But this week, it’s
as he was at guard. He not. He knows that and
I’m sure he feels the
is one of ﬁve semiﬁexact same way.”
nalsts for the Outland
Trophy, which is given
Reach Jim Naveau at The Lima
to the player voted the News at 567-242-0414 or on
best interior lineman in Twitter at @Lima_Naveau.

Games

worked out ﬁne for the
Wolverines. They beat
the Buckeyes, 26-24,
and got to the Rose
From page 8
Bowl, just as their
says he does not worry
cocky quarterback
his team is developing
promised they would.
a reputation for ruleHarbaugh’s coach, Bo
breaking hits.
Schembechler, report“Not at all. There’s
edly both cringed at the
three of them or so,
guarantee and loved
four of them, that, yeah, that his quarterback
by the rules, that’s (a
was conﬁdent enough
good call),” he said.
to deliver it.
“And the other ones,
With Ohio State on
I don’t know how you
the schedule this week,
avoid them. We practice Harbaugh the coach
the way you’re supisn’t looking for any of
posed to practice, lowhis players to step out
ering the target down.” on that limb.
“Having done it, I
MAKING THE BIG TEN’S
don’t recommend it,”
CASE
he said.
With Ohio State,
Michigan and WisconPITCHING A SHUTOUT
sin holding down topIowa blanked Illinois
ﬁve spots in the Top 25 on Saturday 28-0, just
and Penn State ranked
the ﬁfth shutout in
eighth, the some Big
games between Big
Ten coaches are making Ten teams this season
a case that, this year,
(Rutgers was on the
the conference really is losing end of the other
the best in the country. four). The shutout was
Ohio State coach
the ﬁrst in the Big Ten
Urban Meyer says such since 2009 for Iowa,
talk would have been
and Hawkeyes coach
easily dismissed by peo- Kirk Ferentz said such
ple outside the region
games are hard to come
just a few years ago.
by, in part because
When he was hired
of the desire to get
in 2012, “I was shocked backups on the ﬁeld in
at the disrespect on a
blowouts.
national level for the
“We did that about
Big Ten,” Meyer said.
ﬁve weeks ago and gave
up a bunch of points,”
IN HINDSIGHT
he said, referring to
Iowa’s 49-35 win over
Jim Harbaugh’s
Purdue. The Boilermakguarantee of victory
ers scored 21 fourthover Ohio State before
quarter points.
the teams met in 1986

were also among the honorees.
Obama noted how Jordan’s
name is synonymous with
excellence.
“There is a reason you call
somebody ‘the Michael Jordan
of,’” Obama said. “The Michael
Jordan of neurosurgery, or the
Michael Jordan of rabbis, or
the Michael Jordan of outrigger canoeing. Everyone knows
what you’re talking about.”
Bruce Springsteen and Diana
Ross were recognized for their
music. Of “The Boss,” he said

Springsteen crafted “anthems
of our America, the reality of
who we are and the reverie of
who we want to be.”
Other honorees included philanthropists Bill and Melinda
Gates, comedian Ellen DeGeneres and broadcaster Vin
Scully. Of DeGeneres, Obama
said she has a way of making
people laugh at something
rather than someone, “except
when I danced on her show.”
He said it’s also easy to forget
that she had risked her career

nearly 20 years ago when she
came out as gay.
“What an incredible burden
that was to bear, to risk her
career like that. People don’t
do that very often, and then to
have the hopes of millions on
your shoulders,” Obama said.
The diverse group seemed
to enjoy themselves at the
White House, participating in
a mannequin challenge before
the ceremony, trying not to
move as they were recorded on
video.

Notre Dame must vacate wins after misconduct
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) —
Brian Kelly’s worst season at Notre
Dame took a embarrassing turn
Tuesday as the NCAA announced
that academic misconduct orchestrated by a student athletic trainer
will cost the storied program all 21
victories from the 2012-13 seasons,
including the 12-0 run that vaulted
the Fighting Irish into the national
championship game against Alabama.
It marked just the fourth time
the NCAA has cited Notre Dame
for a major rules violation. The
vacated games include Notre
Dame’s 12-0 record in 2012, their
best regular season since winning
their last national championship
in 1988. The season ﬁnished with
an embarrassing 42-14 loss to the
Crimson Tide in the title game
and the revelation that linebacker
Manti Te’o had been the victim of a
fake girlfriend hoax.
The school ripped the NCAA for
its decision to vacate the wins and
immediately said it would appeal.
The Rev. John Jenkins, the university president, said the NCAA has
never before vacated records in

such a case.
“We believe that imposition
of the vacation of records penalty without serious underlying
institutional misconduct will not
primarily punish those responsible
for the misconduct, but rather will
punish coaches, student-athletes
and indeed the entire institution
who did nothing wrong and, with
regard to this case, did everything
right,” Jenkins said. He noted the
NCAA has since voted to change
the rule that brought this case
under NCAA jurisdiction rather
than leaving such decisions to individual schools.
The Division I Committee on
Infractions panel also put Notre
Dame on probation for a year and
ordered a $5,000 ﬁne, penalties the
school agreed with. There were no
bowl or scholarship punishments.
According to the NCAA, the
trainer was employed by the athletics department from fall 2009
through the spring of 2013 and
“partially or wholly completed
numerous academic assignments
for football student-athletes in
numerous courses” from 2011 into

2013. It said she did substantial
coursework for two players and
gave impermissible help to six
others in 18 courses over two
academic years. The NCAA said
the woman “continued to provide
impermissible academic beneﬁts
to football student-athletes for a
full year after she graduated” and
was in her ﬁrst year of law school
elsewhere.
In all, the NCAA said, three athletes would up playing while ineligible, one during the 2012 season
and the other two the following
season, when the Irish went 9-4.
Kelly said he knew the vacated
wins were a possibility since Notre
Dame ofﬁcials met with the NCAA
several months ago. He said he had
hoped “reasonable people would
come to a reasonable decision.”
“If doing the right thing means
that you’ve got to put an asterisk
next to these games, that’s ﬁne
with me,” he said. “We still beat
Oklahoma. We still beat Wake Forest, we still beat all those teams, so
you can put an asterisk next to it.
If that makes you feel better, then
that’s ﬁne with me.”

Ohio

State and No. 8 Oklahoma, No. 9 Colorado and
No. 10 Oklahoma State.

Ten seems to have a better chance to get two
teams into the ﬁeld than
the Big 12 has to get one.

Football

McGraw — along with
seniors Tyler McCutcheon and Isaac Huffman
and junior Teddy Smith
— were Waterford’s
repeat picks from a year
ago.
Huffman and McCutcheon made the all-TVCHocking unit in 2014 as
well.
The four ﬁrst-timers for
the Wildcats were sophomore Braden Bellville,
junior Cody Harris, and

seniors Cylus Reynolds
and Riley Burns.
For Trimble, it was represented by ﬁve seniors
— Kamron Curry, Nathan
Downs, Jacob Hardy,
Shaye Cowan and Austin
Coffman — along with
sophomore Alex Coffman.
Curry was the Tomcats’
only all-league repeater.
Miller mustered four
juniors — repeaters Carson Starlin and Seattle
Compston and ﬁrst-

timers Zach Waldrop and
Jacob McCune.
All four of Belpre’s
choices were ﬁrst-time
honorees — seniors
Logan Racy and Aric
Ross and juniors Isaac
Tullius and Tojzae Reams.
Federal Hocking had
three ﬁrst-time selections
— juniors Gavin Conkle
and Colton Roark and
senior Walker Church.

All eight Buckeyes
that were chosen were
all seniors — Andrews,
Mount, Hunter Edwards,
Christian Berry, Matt
Carter, Aron Davis, Skylar Canter and Garret
O’Nail.
Edwards and Davis
repeated to the list from
last year, while Mount,
Andrews and Edwards
also made all-TVC two
years ago.
Besides Sano, Athens’
other seniors included
Brody Rodgers, Luke Carpenter, Andy Kostival and

Nick Engelmann.
Athens’ only underclassman was junior Robert Dickelman, as Kostival claimed repeat honors
from last season.
Vinton County’s ﬁve
honorees sported seniors
Caleb Montgomery and
Darren Perry — and
juniors Donnie Stevens,
Hunter Nichols and Naylen Yates.
Montgomery was the
Vikings’ only repeat selection.
Wellston was represented by seniors Nick Cox,

Chris Edmisten and Rodney Brown — along with
junior Travis Jayjohn.
For Alexander, its honorees were seniors Chace
Harris and A.J. Marks —
along with the only freshman on the list in Kaleb
Easley.
Cox of Wellston and
Harris of Alexander made
the all-league club for
the third straight season,
while Marks repeated
from last year.

tee rankings this week,
the most at any point
this season. The highest
ranked champion from
From page 8
the Group of Five conferTHE BIG 12
it certainly sounds like
ences will receive a bid to
USC LURKING
Oklahoma and Oklathe Buckeyes have sepathe Cotton Bowl.
The Trojans have won
homa State have set up a
rated themselves enough de facto Big 12 title game seven straight games
Boise State was best at
from Penn State that the for Dec. 3, but the confer- since starting 1-3, play
No. 19, followed by Houscommittee is willing to
ence still looks shutout of Notre Dame on Saturday ton and Western Michioverlook their loss to the the playoff without upsets and still have a chance to gan. Navy was No. 24.
Nittany Lions and the
The rankings changed
in the other conferences. be Pac-12 champions.
possible lack of a conferbut the situation is still
With Sam Darnold at
The Cowboys have
ence champions.
the same as last week.
quarterback since game
two losses but one was
The committee uses
Boise State can’t reach
against Central Michigan four, USC has been
conference championand it came on a last-play looked like one of the best the Mountain West chamships and head-to-head
teams in the country and pionship game on Dec.
touchdown that was set
results to separate teams up be an ofﬁciating error. it would be fascinating to 3 without a Wyoming
with similar resumes.
loss Saturday. Houston is
see how much the comHocutt said the commitBut Hocutt, the athletic tee does not adjust the
locked out of the Amerimittee weighs improvedirector of Texas Tech,
can Athletic Conference
ment over the course of
Cowboys record for the
said as of now the commistake, but it does con- the season against the full title game. Navy has the
mittee does not see a
AAC West clinched.
body of work if a couple
sider the circumstances
small gap between Ohio
That puts unbeaten
of upsets clear a path for
of the loss.
State and Penn State.
The Big 12, at the very the Trojans to climb into Western Michigan in the
Hocutt said committee least, needs one other
best position to go to the
the discussion for the
took a lot of time ranking Power Five champion to
Cotton Bowl if it wins the
ﬁnal spot.
teams two through ﬁve,
Mid-American Conferﬁnish with two losses to
spent little time placing
ence, but still in danger
GROUP OF FIVE
have a shot to make the
Wisconsin at six, and
There were four teams of being nudged out if
playoff. But if it comes
then found very little
down to a bunch of teams from outside Power Five Boise State wins its conconference in the commit- ference.
separation between Penn with two losses the Big

From page 8

David Kuhn — along
with the list’s only freshman in Austin Day.
Wahama’s Wyatt
Edwards was the only
White Falcon senior, as
he was joined by juniors
Critter Hesson, Christian Thomas and Colton
Arrington.

OVP
From page 8

The Raiders’ selections
featured ﬁve ﬁrst-timers
— seniors Tre Craycraft,
Jacob Dovenbarger and
Brody Moles, sophomore
Jacob Campbell and
junior Patrick Brown.
The Marauders’ four
choices were also ﬁrsttimers — sophomores
Zach Bartrum and Cole
Adams and juniors Zach
Helton and Matt Brown.

Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

�CLASSIFIEDS

10 Thursday, November 24, 2016

Miscellaneous

Money To Lend

Apartments/Townhouses

Help Wanted General

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)

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
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$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
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304-882-3017

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$$$$$$$$$

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
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Business &amp; Trade School
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Miscellaneous
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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,
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call 740-709-9697
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call 740-709-9697
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Help Wanted General

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Education Instructor who will teach behind the wheel driver
training and conduct classroom training to new drivers in the
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and weekends.
COMPENSATION: $10.90 to $12.50/hour
(based on experience)
QUALIFICATIONS: Valid Driverҋs License Must pass extensive
background checks and a drug test Traffic Safety, Law
Enforcement, or Teaching background is preferred
60583312

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some knowledge helpful if
interested call 740-441-1236.
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Or for more information call 502-779-3623.

Help Wanted General

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Must have WV license. Must be able to
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Apply at Human Resources,
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apply on-line at www.pvalley.org.
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60692793

Miscellaneous

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, November 24, 2016 11

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

2

4

9

5
8 4

7

5

1

3

1

5

7
1 9
4

5
2 9

8
5

11/24

Difficulty Level

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

11/24

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

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Hank Ketcham’s

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

By Hilary Price

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RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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�SPORTS

12 Thursday, November 24, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Thank You Meyer, Harbaugh can
recharge the rivalry
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The story of the Ohio
State-Michigan rivalry
will always best be told
through the tale of Woody
and Bo.
For 10 years, Woody
Hayes’ Buckeyes and Bo
Schembechler’s Wolverines
reigned over the Big Ten
and captivated the country.
Teacher vs. pupil. Dear
friends and ﬁerce competitors, their legacies are
linked.
More than three decades
since their Ten Year War
concluded, Michigan and
Ohio State are about to
play one of the higheststakes games in the history
of series that will reach
114 games Saturday in
Columbus, Ohio.
With modern-day titans
of coaching on each side
and both teams contending for a national championship, this feels as if it
could be the start of something big: A new era of
epic competition between
two coaches with roots
that trace back to the men
who deﬁned the rivalry.
On one side, Ohio
State’s Urban Meyer, a
Buckeye by birth who was
mentored by Hayes’ successor in Columbus. With
three national championships on his resume, he is
4-0 against Michigan since
taking over at Ohio State.
On the other, Michigan’s
Jim Harbaugh, who played
quarterback for Schembechler in the mid-1980s.
After turning around

Mitch Stacy | AP

Red tape covers the Ms on the official state Ohio historical
marker recognizing former Ohio State NCAA college football coach
Woody Hayes at the Woody Hayes Football Center on the Ohio
State University campus in Columbus, Ohio, Monday. Ohio State
fans’ distaste for Michigan is so strong that even the letter M is
unpopular in Columbus this week.

Stanford and taking the
San Francisco 49ers to the
Super Bowl, he returned to
Michigan and needed just
two seasons to make the
Wolverines great again.
“Ohio State-Michigan is
always special, but when
you put such brash personalities and big personalities, guys who have a little
bit of an ego with all they
have accomplished, and
you put them on sideline
with all that’s at stake
it just really adds to the
drama,” said ESPN’s Kirk
Herbstreit, a former Ohio
State quarterback whose
father played for and
coached under Hayes.
College football’s best
rivalries have always been
at their most compelling when the teams are
being led by powerhouse
coaches, whether it was
Tom Osborne at Nebraska

facing Barry Switzer at
Oklahoma or Florida’s
Steve Spurrier matching
wits and throwing zingers at Bobby Bowden and
Florida State. Meyer vs.
Harbaugh is a throwback
not just for the Ohio StateMichigan rivalry but for
college football in general.
“This is college football
at its ﬁnest and at its peak
in my opinion,” former
Ohio State linebacker and
Fox NFL analyst Chris
Spielman.
Schembechler was an
assistant to Hayes at Ohio
State for ﬁve years before
eventually taking over at
Michigan. Their teams
played 10 times from
1969-78. Michigan won
ﬁve, Ohio State four and
there was one tie. One or
the other won the Big Ten
title ever year, unless they
shared it.

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