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                  <text>OVP
business
page

Breezy,
cloudy
H-46, L-34

Rebels
versus
Defenders

BUSINESS s 3

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 7

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 192, Volume 70

Thursday, December 1, 2016 s 50¢

Painted plows parade through Pomeroy

Dave Harris photo

First responders were called to a two vehicle crash on Route 7
Wednesday afternoon.

One killed in two
vehicle crash
near Pomeroy
Staff Report

POMEROY — One
man was killed and
another injured in a two
vehicle crash on Route
7 Wednesday afternoon.
According to a news
release from the Gallipolis Post of the Ohio
State Highway Patrol,
John E. Blake, 84, of
Middleport died as
a result of the crash
which occurred near the
intersection of Route 7
and 33.
Blake was reportedly

driving westbound in
the eastbound lane of
Route 7 in the area of
the Meigs Motel and
struck a vehicle driving
eastbound (in the eastbound lane) head on.
The eastbound
vehicle was driven by
Adam C. Doczi, 33,
of Pomeroy who was
transported by Meigs
County EMS to St.
Mary’s Hospital with
non-incapacitating injuries.
See CRASH | 5

Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

The Ohio Department of Transportation Meigs County garage took part in the Pomeroy Christmas parade on Sunday with four painted
snow plows making their way down Main Street. ODOT spokesperson Ashley Rittenhouse said the Grinch and Military plows were painted
by Meigs County Garage employees Katie Sayre and Jimmy Durst, while Eastern and Southern high schools painted the other two plows.

‘Crawl for Cash’ scheduled at area schools
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

FOR THE RECORD

Meigs County
Sheriff ’s Office
Day shift, Nov. 23-26
Wednesday, Nov. 23
11 a.m. — Deputies attended active shooter
training at Meigs County Department of Family
Services.
4:08 p.m. — Dispatch received a call from
Meigs EMS reporting that they received several
911 calls from a residence in Reedsville, where the
caller seemed to be making motor boat sounds. A
deputy went to the residence and determined it
was a child messing around.
Thursday, Nov. 24
9:20 a.m. — Dispatch received a call from a
female who was having problems with her son.
Deputies responded to the scene and spoke with
the juvenile. The situation was taken care of, no
charges ﬁled.
12:52 p.m. — Dispatch received a call about
two subjects messing around with the bikes
outside the Racine Library. A deputy went to
the scene and the subjects had already left the
area. None of the bikes appeared to have been
disturbed. The deputy patrolled the area but the
suspects were not found.
See RECORD | 5

OHIO VALLEY — Students in the tri-county
area will soon be crawling around the basketball
court in search of cash.
Farmers Bank has
scheduled ﬁve “Crawl
for Cash” events to be
held in Meigs, Gallia and
Mason counties during
the upcoming basketball
season.
The ﬁrst event will
take place on Dec. 13 at
Meigs High School during the Alexander versus
Meigs boys basketball
game.
Crawl for Cash is
scheduled at Gallia Academy High School on Dec.
23 at the South Gallia
versus Gallia Academy
basketball game.
Dec. 27 will be the
Crawl for Cash at Wahama High School during
the game between Point
Pleasant versus Wahama.
The Southern versus
Eastern boys basketball
game at Eastern High
School on Jan. 13 will be
the fourth event, with the
Wahama versus Southern

Sentinel File Photo

Students crawl for cash during one of the Crawl for Cash events last winter.

game at Southern High
School on Jan. 24 as the
ﬁnal scheduled event.
At each event, four students will be randomly
selected to “crawl for
cash” while blindfolded.
Students are given 30
seconds to crawl around
collecting as much cash
as possible with the
assistance of Farmers
Bank employees who will
be guiding them.

The event will take
place during halftime
of the varsity basketball
games each night.
In addition to the
craw for cash will be a
food drive competition
between the opposing
schools and fans involved
in the game.
For example, at the
Meigs versus Alexander
game, individuals from
each of the schools (fans,

students, etc.) are asked
to bring non-perishable
food items to be donated.
The side which collects
the most items will
receive a $250 donation
to that school’s athletic
boosters from Farmers
Bank. Items donated will
go to local food pantries.
For more information
on the events visit the
Farmers Bank Facebook
page.

Annual Bend Area C.A.R.E. concert Sunday

INDEX
Obituary: 2
Business: 3
Editorial: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

By Mindy Kearns
Special to the Sentinel

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

MASON — One of the largest
holiday events of the season in the
Bend Area is set to take center
stage Sunday afternoon at the
Wahama High School gymnasium.
Hundreds of both high school
and elementary school students
will be performing at the annual
Bend Area C.A.R.E. Concert. The
production will begin at 2 p.m.
Proceeds from the beneﬁt event
will go to the C.A.R.E. organization to purchase meals and gifts
for the “Kids for Christmas” program. C.A.R.E. member Leonard
Koenig said recently the organization will be helping approximately
60 families this year.
See C.A.R.E. | 5

Mindy Kearns/Register

The New Haven Elementary School Choir, under the direction of Kimberly Bond, will be
one of many groups performing during the annual Bend Area C.A.R.E. Concert Sunday,
2 p.m., in the Wahama High School gymnasium. All proceeds from the event will go to
the C.A.R.E. organization’s “Kids for Christmas” program, which benefits needy families
during the holidays.

�OBITUARIES

2 Thursday, December 1, 2016

JEAN R. MORRIS
LONG BOTTOM —
Jean R. Morris, 88, of
Long Bottom passed
away Nov. 29, 2016, at
Overbrook Rehab and
Nursing Center Middleport, Ohio.
Jean was born June 3,
1928, in Virginia. She
married her high school
sweetheart, Clyde J. Morris, and they celebrated
60 years together before
his passing in 2006.
Jean was an avid
reader, bowler and bingo
player.
Jean is survived by
a daughter, Elizabeth
(Dale) Stewart of S.C;
a sister, Ann Bennett of
Fla.; a brother, James
Reitelbach of Va.; her
grandchildren, Kevin

Daily Sentinel

POLLY MARTIN

JESSICA A. HANN

(Corey) Morris of Ohio,
Kelly (Miles) Beene of
N.C., Keith (Eva) Morris
of N.C., Karen (Branden)
Shuler of N.C., Crystal
(John) Ottman of Ohio,
Shannon (Todd) Boggess
of N.C. and Glen (Jennifer) Wadford of S.C.;
as well as her many great
grandchildren.
Jean joins in heaven her
beloved husband, Clyde
J. Morris and her loving
son, Clyde R. Morris.
A graveside service
will be held at 11 a.m.,
Friday, Dec. 2, 2016, at
Meigs Memory Gardens
in Pomeroy.
You are invited to sign
the online guestbook at
www.whiteschwarzelfh.
com.

ATHENS — Jessica
A. Hann, 33, of Athens,
Ohio, passed away, Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2016, in
Albany, Ohio. Born Oct.
31, 1983, the daughter
of Bruce E Hann, who
survives in Athens, and
Melanie A. Beegle Hann,
who survives in Letart
Falls. She was a graduate
of the Ohio State University, and was a merchandise buyer.
In addition to her parents Jessica is survived
by maternal grandparents, Paul and Eileen
Beegle, of Letart Falls;
paternal grandparents,
Gerald and Evelyn Hann,
of Athens; cousins,
Nicole (Ron) Michaelson, Davis Michaelson,
Nicholas Michaelson,
Evan Michaelson, and
SANDERS
numerous other cousins.
GALLIPOLIS — Neil Hollis Sanders, 88, of Gallipo- Aunt and uncles, Deborah
and Morgan James, of
lis, died Tuesday, Nov. 29 after a lengthy illness.
Florida, Susan and RobPrivate family graveside rites will be conducted
ert Handley, of Athens,
Thursday.
Theresa and Jerry Iles,
of Athens, Jim and HanMURPHY
nah Hann, of Alabama,
OHIO VALLEY — Aaron Lee Murphy, 44, died
Dean (Susan Calhoun)
Monday, Nov. 28.
Hann, of Athens, Vanessa
The family will hold a memorial service at a later
Hann, of Athens, Chrisdate. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,
is assisting the family with arrangements.
MCCAIN

RICHMOND HILL, Ga — .Jesse P. McCain, 66, of
Richmond Hill, died on Saturday, Nov. 26 at his home
after a brief illness.
Visitation will be held 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Saturday,
Dec. 3 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville.
Graveside funeral services will follow at p.m. at the
Centerpoint Cemetery, Thurman.

MOSSBURG
PROCTORVILLE — Thomas Mossburg, 79, of
Proctorville, died Wednesday, November 30, 2016 at
Wyngate at River’s Edge, Proctorville.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is
in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete.

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(:20) NFL Football Dallas Cowboys at Minnesota Vikings Site: U.S. Bank Stadium --

Minneapolis, Minn. (L)
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A Charlie Brown Christmas The Great American Baking Show "Cake Week/ Cookie
Week" (SP) (N)
Last of the Breed The hit album Last of the Moneytrack See strategies for building and
Breed is now a concert event with the
maintaining a financially secure future for
legendary Willie Nelson.
retirement.
Judge Judy Ent. Tonight A Charlie Brown Christmas The Great American Baking Show "Cake Week/ Cookie
Week" (SP) (N)
Wheel of
Life in Pieces Genius "Bunker Hill, We
Jeopardy!
Big Bang
The Great
Mom (N)
Fortune
Theory (N)
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(N)
Have a Problem" (N)
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Eyewitness News at 10
Big Bang
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Rosewood "Half-Life and
Theory
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Havana Nights" (N)
p.m.
The Carpenters: Close to You &amp; Christmas Memories
PBS NewsHour
Christmastime Fine chefs,
(My Music) A special holiday program starring the beloved actors and jazz musicians are
featured.
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13 News at Inside
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Life in Pieces Genius "Bunker Hill, We
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18 (WGN) Blue Bloods
Pre-game
24 (ROOT) Football
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
26 (ESPN2) Horn
Interrupt
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

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58
60
61

(WE)
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62 (NGEO)
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65 (FS1)
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Element. "Ready or Not"
Elementary
NHL Hockey Dallas Stars at Pittsburgh Penguins (L)
Post-game Room
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Profile
E:60Pics
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Pop Up"
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(N)
The Year Without a Santa (:05)
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation
(:15)
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Worth"
HO! HO!"
"Texas"
Arizona"
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H.Danger
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Paradise
Thunder
Ice Age (‘02, Ani) Ray Romano. TVPG
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SVU "Home Invasions"
SVU "Hunting Ground"
SVU "Unholiest Alliance"
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Sister Act (1992, Comedy) Maggie Smith, Kathy
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Kathy Najimy, Whoopi Goldberg. TVPG
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Law:CI "Bedfellows"
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FULLER
PROCTORVILLE — George Lewis Fuller, 77, of
Proctorville, died Monday, November 28, 2016 at St.
Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
A memorial service will be held at a later date.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is in
charge of arrangements.

PATRIOT, Ohio — Ivan A. Yoder, 40, of 394 Wolf
Run Road, Patriot, Ohio, died at his home Tuesday,
November 29, 2016 around 3 p.m., following a twoyear illness.
Services will be Friday, December 2, 2016 at 9 a.m.
with Bishop Albert Byler ofﬁciating. Burial will be
in the Troyer Cemetery. Visitation will be Thursday,
December 1, 2016 from noon to 9 p.m. at the family
home. Arrangements are by the Willis Funeral Home
of Gallipolis, Ohio.

PROCTORVILLE — Pearl Virginia Burger, 89, of
Proctorville, died Tuesday, November 29, 2016 at
Heartland of Riverview, South Point.
A graveside service will be held 3 p.m. Saturday,
December 3, 2016 at Alleghany Memorial Park, Covington, Va.

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need. She enjoyed playing
the harmonica, playing
Bingo, gardening, and
cooking and baking. She
especially loved baking
bread and sharing it with
her neighbors. She was
an avid fan of the Cincinnati Reds baseball team.
Her family was the joy of
her life.
Survivors include her
daughter, Connie Sue
Bales and her husband,
Ralph Bales of Rutland;
her beloved granddaughter, Rachel Bales, of
Syracuse; two grandsons,
Richard “Ricky” Gibbs of
Middleport and Samuel
A. Gibbs III of Arizona;
several nieces and nephews and many dear
friends.
Funeral services will
be held at 11 a.m. on
Saturday, Dec. 3, 2016, at
the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Pastor Larry
Lemley ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow at Miles Cemetery, Rutland. Friends
may call at the funeral
home on Friday, Dec. 2,
2016, from 6-8 p.m.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

BURGER

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RUTLAND — Verna
Pauline “Polly” Martin,
86, of Rutland passed
away on Wednesday, Nov.
30, 2016, at the Abbyshire Place in Gallipolis.
Polly was born Dec. 14,
1929, at Pomeroy, Ohio,
daughter of Walter and
Ruth Linscott Hendricks.
On March 5, 1946 she
married Samuel Aumiller
Gibbs and he passed away
on March 4, 1981. She
married Edward Martin
on Nov. 24, 1989 and he
passed away on Feb. 22,
1994. Also preceding her
in death were her sons,
Samuel A. Gibbs Jr. on
Oct. 2, 2008, and Kevin
Lee Gibbs on Aug. 28,
2011.
Polly was a homemaker.
She operated a general
store/gas station for several years in Rutland and
she worked as a caregiver,
assisting many elderly
people in their homes
through the years until
her health began to fail.
She also served on the
Village Council for a number of years. She was a
longtime member of the
Rutland United Methodist church and was ever
willing to help anyone in

YODER

WAYNESBORO, Va. — Robert O. Errett, Jr., 67,
formerly of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Monday,
November 28, 2016.
Pastor J. Barrett Owen will ofﬁciate the memorial
service at 2 p.m. on Friday, December 2, 2016 at First
Baptist Church of Waynesboro. A reception at the
church will follow the service. There will be a private
burial at a later date. McDow Funeral Home, Waynesboro, is handling the arrangements.

Tangerines

ONLY

tine (Derek) Atchley, of
Columbus, Ohio, special
friends Kenny and Sue
Ferguson and family, of
Athens, also survive.
Jessica is preceded in
death by her uncle, Mark
Beegle.
Funeral services will
be held on Saturday, Dec.
3, 2016 at 1 p.m. in the
Cremeens-King Funeral
Home, Racine. Pastor
Brenda Barnhart and Rev.
Bill Marshall will ofﬁciate. Interment will follow
in the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call on
Friday from 6-8 p.m. at
the funeral home.
In Lieu of ﬂowers
memorials may be made
in Jessica’s name to the
American Leukemia Society, Tri-State Chapter,
4370 Glendale Milford
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio
45242 or The Alzheimer’s
Foundation of America,
Attn: Dept #4, 3222
8th Ave, New York, NY,
10001.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by visiting www.
cremeensfuneralhomes.
com.

SISSON
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Erma Belle Queen Sisson,
90, of Gallipolis, Ohio passed away on Wednesday,
November 30, 2016 in Hilliard, Ohio. Arrangements
will be announced later by Willis Funeral Home.

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�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 1, 2016 3

Shabby to Chic Hair Boutique opens in Point Piggly Wiggly

food drive benefits
local pantries
Staff Report

WHO BENEFITS

Shabby to Chic Hair Boutique celebrated its grand opening at 508 Main Street in Point Pleasant this week. To mark the occassion, a
special ribbon cutting was held and attended by city officials and those from Main Street Point Pleasant. The full service hair salon and
boutique can be reached by calling 304-857-6524 or found on Facebook. Pictured at the ribbon cutting, from left, Carolin Harris of Main
Street Point Pleasant, Elizabeth Jones, city councilwoman, Tina Pinson Kearns, Destiny Thornton of Shabby to Chic, Mayor Brian Billings,
Lydia Allen and Karrie Peck of Shabby to Chic and Angie and Dennis Zimmerman, owners of Shabby to Chic, City Clerk Amber Tatterson.

Local Eastman’s Piggly Wiggly Supermarkets are having a food
drive, giving area consumers an opportunity
to help those in need
during the holiday
season.
Here’s how the food
drive works:
Customers will purchase pre-made bags
of groceries available
at each Piggly Wiggly
store. There are two
price points available $5
and $10. The customer
will purchase the bag of
groceries as they proceed through the checkout area, and then place
it in a collection bin at
the store. Designated
local food pantries will
then pick up the bags
at local stores, to stock
their facilities.
Each store is working
with several designated

Binge watching on Netflix no longer requires internet

BUSINESS BRIEFS

Shannon Johnson/Courtesy

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
— Netﬂix subscribers can
now binge on many of
their favorite shows and
movies even when they
don’t have an internet connection.
The long-awaited
ofﬂine option announced
Wednesday gives Netﬂix’s
87 million subscribers
ofﬂine access to videos for the ﬁrst time in
the streaming service’s
decade-long history.
Netﬂix is matching
a downloading feature
that one of its biggest
rivals, Amazon.com, has
been offering to its video
subscribers for the past
year. It’s something that
also has been available on
YouTube’s popular video
site, though a subscription
is required in the U.S. and
other countries where the
site sells its “Red” premium service.
The new feature puts
Netﬂix a step ahead of two
other major rivals. Ofﬂine

options aren’t available on
HBO’s internet-only package, HBO Now, or Hulu,
although that service has
publicly said it hopes to
introduce a downloading
feature.
Netﬂix subscribers
wishing to download a
video on their smartphone
or tablet need to update
the app on their Apple or
Android device.
Not all of the selections
in Netﬂix’s video library
can be downloaded,
although several of the service’s most popular shows,
including “Orange Is The
New Black,” ”House of
Cards,” and “Stranger
Things,” are now available
to watch ofﬂine.
Downloadable movies
include “Spotlight,” this
year’s Oscar winner for
best ﬁlm. Notably missing
from the downloadable
menu are movies and TV
shows made by Walt Disney Co. Those still require
an internet connection to

watch on Netﬂix.
The Los Gatos, California, company is promising
to continue to adding
more titles to its ofﬂine
roster.
Netﬂix CEO Reed Hastings had long resisted
calls for an ofﬂine-viewing
option, much to the frustration of customers who
wanted ﬂexibility to use
their subscriptions to
watch a show or movie
when traveling on a train,
plane or car where internet connections are spotty
or completely unavailable.
Earlier this year, Hastings ﬁnally indicated he
might relent and introduce
downloading.
The change of heart
coincided with Netﬂix’s
expansion into more than
130 countries, including
many areas with shoddy
or expensive internet
connections that make
the ability to watch video
ofﬂine even more appealing.

NEW TO
NETFLIX

Netflix is matching a
downloading feature
that one of its biggest
rivals, Amazon.com, has
been offering to its video
subscribers for the past
year.

Netﬂix ended September with 39 million subscribers outside of the U.S.
The ofﬂine option may
accelerate the decline of
Netﬂix’s steadily shrinking DVD-by-mail service,
which offers the ability
to watch video without
an internet connection.
Netﬂix’s DVD side still has
one distinct advantage —
access to recent theatrical
releases before they are
available for streaming.
Netﬂix’s DVD service
ended September with
4.3 million subscribers, a
decrease of nearly 10 million customers during the
past ﬁve years.

The Piggly Wiggly Food
Drive is planned to
continue through Dec.
23. Designated local
food pantries will pick
up the bags at their local
stores, to stock their
facilities.

local food pantries. The
program, which began
recently, has already
proven to be a great
way for local consumers to join in on a good
cause, which directly
beneﬁts local citizens.
The Piggly Wiggly
Food Drive is planned
to continue through
Dec. 23. Stop by your
local Piggly Wiggly in
downtown Gallipolis,
the Ohio Valley store
in the Spring Valley
area, Point Pleasant,
Wellston, and Oak Hill
for more information on
this program.

Daily Tribune to partner
with Medical Shoppe
GALLIPOLIS — Santa Claus will be passing
out gifts to children at the Medical Shoppe on
Jackson Pike in Gallipolis from 5-7 p.m. on Dec.
16. For those wishing to donate toys, they may
do so by stopping in at the Medical Shoppe or
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune. Deadline to drop
off gifts and enter the Christmas giveaway is 6
p.m., Dec. 14. Winner of the chair will be drawn
between 5-7 p.m., Dec. 16 at the Medical Shoppe.

Pizza Hut
donates pizza

US consumer spending, incomes rose in October
marked the strongest
pace since prices had
risen 1.5 percent for the
12 months ending in
October 2014.
“These readings continue to move closer to the
Fed’s 2 percent target,”
said Gregory Daco, senior
economist at Oxford Economics.

Courtesy photo

Microsoft cheers year of ‘solid progress’

Pizza Huts in the Ohio Valley region donated 50 pizzas to
police, fire fighters, businesses and those who looked like
they could use a pie Tuesday in celebration of the season.
According to Pizza Hut District Manager Amber Saber, she and
colleague Michael Warren spent the day knocking on doors
and greeting folks in the street to hand them off tasty treats.

Consumer spending
increased 0.3 percent in
October after a revised
0.7 percent jump in September, the Commerce
Department said Wednesday. Incomes increased
0.6 percent, the best
showing since April.
An inﬂation gauge
closely followed by the

By Matt Day
Seattle Times

SEATTLE — Microsoft executives struck an upbeat tone at the
company’s annual shareholders
meeting on Wednesday, touting
signs of success in the company’s
campaign to remain relevant in a
fast-changing technology world with
a new generation of software tools.
“This last year has been a year of
solid progress at Microsoft,” Chief
Executive Satya Nadella said at the
event, attended by a few hundred
shareholders and company ofﬁcials.
In contrast to the era in which
many shareholder questions circled
Microsoft’s stagnant stock price,
the company, headquartered outside
Seattle, is set to end 2016 on a high
note.
Microsoft’s share price is hovering near all-time highs, aided by
growth in the company’s cloud-computing units. Shareholder-friendly
policies, including billions of dollars
paid out annually in dividends and
share buybacks, have also helped
buoy shares.
Shareholders voiced their approv-

Federal Reserve increased
1.4 percent compared to
a year ago. That was the
fastest 12-month advance
since 2014. The rise was
still below the Fed’s 2
percent target, but with
inﬂation ﬁrming, the Fed
is expected to boost a key
interest rate next month.
The inﬂation gain

al of the company’s direction in
their near unanimous re-election of
the board of directors. Microsoft’s
slate of board of directors candidates were all approved with more
than 98 percent of votes cast.
The board’s composition last
changed a year ago with the
appointment of Johnson &amp; Johnson
executive Sandra Peterson, and a
former Cisco executive, Padmasree
Warrior.
The addition of two women to the
board, replacing the retiring Maria
Klawe, made Microsoft’s directors a
bit more diverse. But the company
as a whole hasn’t fared as well,
recently reporting a second consecutive annual decline in the portion
of women employed by the company, and muted gains in the share
of underrepresented minorities.
Nadella said the company had
been bringing in more diverse classes of university graduates recently,
“but we need to do more, both at
Microsoft and across our industry.”
Shareholders also voiced approval
for Microsoft’s evolving executive
compensation practices, a break
from past years. The company said

95 percent of shareholder votes
were to approve the symbolic advisory vote on executive pay.
In each of the past two years,
shareholders delivered Microsoft a
rebuke on the company’s pay practices, which critics said included
too many giant stock grants and
were only loosely connected to the
company’s performance. Those
grants included a giant package, valued by an independent shareholder
advisory ﬁrm at more than $90 million, to Nadella after he was named
CEO in 2014.
Since then, Microsoft has moved
to tie more of executives’ pay to
Microsoft’s business goals and
ﬁnancial performance.
Absent from the room on
Wednesday were Bill Gates, Microsoft’s co-founder and current board
member, and Steve Ballmer, the
ex-CEO who remains a major shareholder. Technology news site GeekWire reported that both had prior
commitments preventing them from
attending.
Matt Day wrote this for the Seattle Times, www.
seattletimes.com.

Close to Home
Catering &amp; Bakery
can help you with your Holidays
Luncheons-Dinners-Parties-Receptions

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60694026

WASHINGTON (AP)
— U.S. consumers boosted their spending again
in October, while their
incomes increased at the
fastest clip in six months.
A key gauge of inﬂation
watched by the Federal
Reserve posted the fastest 12-month gain in two
years.

�E ditorial
4 Thursday, December 1, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

The kind of gifts
guys really need
this Christmas
By Rex Huppke
Contributing Columnist

According to the Internet, I need to start drinking
whiskey.
And taking my meat grilling more seriously.
And wearing watches that could be traded in for a
year’s worth of college tuition.
I need to start liking uncomfortable-looking jeans.
And cigars. And I have to start wanting to read books
about Teddy Roosevelt, presumably while drinking
whiskey in my uncomfortable jeans and occasionally
checking my expensive watch to see if it’s time to light
the grill with my cigar.
That is disappointing, to say the least.
When my wife, who I haven’t broken the not-a-guy
news to yet, asked for a Christmas list, I turn to the
internet for answers. (Well, I didn’t actually turn. I’m
in front of it pretty much all the time, so I really just
looked forward.)
I Googled things like “Christmas gifts for guys” and
“Christmas gifts for dads” and “fun Christmas gifts for
guys” and kept coming up with the same assortment
of stuff: snazzy whiskey glasses; exotic meat rubs;
watches with names I can’t pronounce; sausage-casingstyle jeans; more whiskey stuff; whiskey-scented soap;
whiskey-ﬂavored meat rubs. About the only thing missing was a hickory-smoked whiskey glass made of meat
and denim that also tells time.
It’s worth noting that I have nothing against people
who like whiskey or grilling or watches or anything
that apparently deﬁnes the modern man. It’s just that
none of those things are really my bag.
I grill, but only in the most basic sense. I don’t savor
the experience or try out new techniques. I get in and
get out and hope the meat isn’t raw and the back deck
isn’t on ﬁre.
I don’t wear a watch because a phone that’s 17 million times smarter than a watch (and me) is never
more than a foot from my body. (I also don’t believe in
the concept of time, but that’s a subject for a future —
or, perhaps, a past — column.)
It seemed the only other guy gift ideas I could ﬁnd
involved varying forms of drills and screwdrivers. I
have a drill and several screwdrivers and I don’t think
getting one that has a hand-carved teak handle will
make life much better.
So I Googled “why are all these gifts the same” and
“is there something wrong with me” and “where’s the
nearest Dairy Queen, I’m sad and hungry.”
Then it dawned on me that I can’t possibly be the
only guy not seeing himself represented in holiday gift
lists. In fact, I’d bet many fellow dudes ﬁnd these lists
uninspiring.
After returning from Dairy Queen, I made a decision: I’m going to come up with a list of gift ideas that
captures real guys like me, men who work and have
kids and are tired and try to stay ﬁt but kind of just
really enjoy watching television and occasionally stand
in the basement to get a quick moment of peace.
Here then, for my wife and anyone else who wants
to buy me or guys like me a present, is Rex Huppke’s
List of Practical Christmas Gift Ideas for Guys:
Torso Drones: After a few hours of comfortably
reclining on the couch, there’s nothing worse than
having to get up. It reminds me of how many different
parts of my body hurt, and that makes me feel old, and
that makes me sad, and being sad makes me want to
go to Dairy Queen. So I would like several small Torso
Drones that, with the push of a button, will lift me off
the couch and into a standing position.
Self-Repairing Underwear: Like most guys who don’t
wear uncomfortable jeans, I like comfortable underwear, and I wear them until they are little more than
a loosely knit array of atoms with a waistband. Then,
when I have to throw them out, I feel sad, and we all
know where that leads. So I would like underwear that,
as it ages, ﬁxes itself and stays with me forever.
A Living-Room Dairy Queen Franchise: Let’s just
say this would cut down on driving expenses considerably.
A Nap Dome: This would be a collapsible and
comfortably padded man-container that can be transported anywhere, one with walls that are impervious
to the phrases “Dad, can you look at this?” and “Dad, I
dropped my retainer in the toilet” and “Rex, you need
to get out of your Nap Dome and ﬁsh that retainer out
of the toilet.”
Modern-Man-Noise-Canceling Head Phones: These
non-fashionable ear buds would block out the sound of
any man talking about exotic meat rubs from Mozambique or the new whiskey stones he got for Christmas.
(Would also ﬁlter trace amounts of “Dad, can you look
at this?”)
Sigh Assistant: This app would transform your
smartphone into a monitor that responds to your surroundings by emitting a belabored sigh any time life
seems too daunting. After a preset number of sighs,
the app would automatically ﬁnd the nearest Dairy
Queen and sync with your Torso Drones to take you
there.
That’s a list for the kind of man I am. And now it will
be on the Internet so other like-minded, non-whiskeydrinking, tattered-undergarment-wearing, back-aching
men can rejoice and be glad.
And then, hopefully, retreat to the comfort of their
Nap Domes.
Rex Huppke is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune. Readers may email him
at rhuppke@chicagotribune.com.

THEIR VIEW

A whole lot of rigging going on
By Jay Ambrose
Contributing Columnist

Hillary Clinton is
appalled at Hillary Clinton — or should be.
When Donald Trump
was saying the presidential election was rigged,
she said he was “denigrating” our democratic
system. She said she
was appalled. Now she
is joining an effort to get
a recount in three states
because the election just
might have been rigged,
and she should be
appalled at herself, right?
She isn’t. She is
instead reverting to
another Hillary of
the past, the one who
tells lies. The Clinton
entourage is saying her
legal participation in
the recount process,
intended for Wisconsin,
Michigan and Pennsylvania, is not participation.
I think it is, although
this much is in her favor:
She did not organize the
effort or help raise the
money needed to ﬁnance
it. That was done by Jill
Stein, the Green Party
presidential candidate
who is rumored to have
gotten some votes.
Stein may have bought
into some computer
nerds saying it was possible that some entity
— Russia is a favorite
suspect — had somehow
managed to tinker with

some voting machines on
election night. There’s no
evidence. It is a conspiracy theory as probable as
two plus two equals ﬁve.
But many have asked
what’s wrong with moving ahead.
You can ﬁnd the
answer to that question
by reading what was said
about Trump’s rigging
thesis (lately repeated
with assertions of illegal
immigrants voting).
“We’ve been around for
240 years. We’ve had free
and fair elections. We’ve
accepted the outcomes
when we may not have
liked them. And that is
what must be expected
of anyone standing on
a debate stage during a
general election.”
—Hillary Clinton,
third presidential debate,
Oct. 19, Las Vegas.
“Rigging an election
would demand a widespread, nationwide effort
with the two major parties colluding at every
level. This is why election law experts say it
would be extremely difﬁcult, if not impossible.”
—Sari Horwitz,
reporter, Washington
Post.
“Just as he tried to
undermine the legitimacy of Barack Obama’s
presidency with the malicious and false ‘birther’
issue, now he’s gearing
up to assail the legiti-

macy of Hillary Clinton’s
presidency with the
‘rigged election’ issue.”
— Jesse Jackson, civil
rights activist, The Philadelphia Tribune.
“The candidate’s reckless closing message that
nothing is on the level —
not Democrats, not the
press, not the polls, not
Republican leaders, not
even the integrity of the
voting process — has left
many of his supporters
prepared to declare the
election results illegitimate.”
—Dana Milbank,
Washington Post columnist.
“These types of claims
… may erode the electoral legitimacy of the
winner, sowing doubts
about their governing
authority, as well as causing chaos by making it
harder to bring Congress
and the country together
after a bitterly fought
campaign.”
—Political scientist
Pippa Norris, Washington Post’s Monkey Cage
political blog.
“Trump’s anti-democratic conspiracymongering is unprecedented in
modern elections. And
we can begin to guess at
the consequences of this
rhetoric. Angry people,
stirred by demagoguery
and convinced they’ve
been robbed of their
rightful power, are a real

threat to the alreadyfrayed fabric of our
democracy. … And if he
doesn’t (win)? If he loses
and pushes his base to
reject the outcome? Then
we could see protests,
we could see mobs — we
could even see violence,
all directed against
the people supposedly
stealing the election.
It wouldn’t be the ﬁrst
time.”
—Jamelle Bouie, chief
political correspondent
for Slate.
“I think the only thing
rigged that I’ve seen in
this election is (Trump’s)
mind.”
—Harry Reid, Senate
minority leader, NBC
interview.
Some things are wrong
with the above statements, just a tiny fraction of the voiced outrage. Rigging would not
take a nationwide effort
and there have certainly
been rigging allegations
in modern presidential
elections. But it is true
that the charge can be
demeaning to the process, and where has all
the whining gone? Here
is Reid showing off his
rigged mind when asked
about the recount moving ahead.
“Sure, why not?”
Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist
for Tribune News Service. Readers
may email him at speaktojay@
aol.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday,
Dec. 1, the 336th day of
2016. There are 30 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlights in
History:
On Dec. 1, 1941,
Japan’s Emperor Hirohito approved waging
war against the United
States, Britain and the
Netherlands after his
government rejected U.S.
demands contained in
the Hull Note. Britishborn journalist and
broadcaster Alistair
Cooke became a naturalized American citizen.
On this date:
In 1824, the presidential election was turned
over to the U.S. House
of Representatives when
a deadlock developed
between John Quincy
Adams, Andrew Jackson,
William H. Crawford
and Henry Clay. (Adams
ended up the winner.)
In 1862, President
Abraham Lincoln sent
his Second Annual Message to Congress, in

which he called for the
abolition of slavery, and
went on to say, “Fellowcitizens, we can not
escape history. We of
this Congress and this
Administration will be
remembered in spite of
ourselves.”
In 1866, Welsh surveyor Sir George Everest
(EEV’-rihst), 79, whose
name had been conferred
upon the mountain in
Nepal by the Royal Geographical Society over
his objections, died in
London.
In 1921, the Navy ﬂew
the ﬁrst non-rigid dirigible to use helium; the
C-7 traveled from Hampton Roads, Virginia, to
Washington, D.C.
In 1934, Soviet communist ofﬁcial Sergei
M. Kirov, an associate of
Josef Stalin, was assassinated in Leningrad,
resulting in a massive
purge.
In 1942, nationwide
gasoline rationing went
into effect in the United
States.
In 1955, Rosa Parks,

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“People, when they first come to America,
whether as travelers or settlers, become
aware of a new and agreeable feeling: that
the whole country is their oyster.”
— Alistair Cooke (1908-2004)

a black seamstress, was
arrested after refusing
to give up her seat to a
white man on a Montgomery, Alabama, city
bus; the incident sparked
a year-long boycott of the
buses by blacks.
In 1965, an airlift of
refugees from Cuba to
the United States began
in which thousands of
Cubans were allowed to
leave their homeland.
In 1969, the U.S. government held its ﬁrst
draft lottery since World
War II.
In 1973, David BenGurion, Israel’s ﬁrst
prime minister, died in
Tel Aviv at age 87.
In 1989, Soviet
President Mikhail S.
Gorbachev met with
Pope John Paul II at the

Vatican.
In 1990, British and
French workers digging
the Channel Tunnel
between their countries
ﬁnally met after knocking out a passage in a
service tunnel.
Ten years ago: Felipe
Calderon (fay-LEE’-pay
kahl-duh-ROHN’) took
the oath of ofﬁce as
Mexico’s president amid
catcalls and brawling lawmakers, a chaotic start
to a term in which he
pledged to heal a country
divided by his narrow
victory. Ofﬁcials reported
that Typhoon Durian
had killed as many as
200 people when it tore
through the eastern Philippines (the storm was
eventually blamed for
some 1,400 deaths).

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

C.A.R.E.

MEIGS COUNTY BRIEFS

performed Sunday. The
full program features
“Christmas on Broadway Medley,” “Ring SilFrom page 1
ver Bells,” “Christmas
Admission is $3 per
Is,” “Little Saint Nick,”
person or $5 per family.
and “Frosty and the
Following the concert,
Hand Jive.”
poinsettias used to
The Wahama choir
decorate the stage will
will
be presenting a
be sold for $10 each.
number
of tunes, featurGroups set to perform
ing
an
arrangement
of
include the Wahama
“Ding
Dong
Merrily
On
High School Concert
High.”
The
Tiger
Music
Choir, the New Haven
ensemble will feature
Elementary School
the song, “Joy to the
Choir, Wahama Concert Band, Tiger Music World.”
Recorder players
Orff Ensemble, piano
Mikie
Lieving and
students, and the newly
Carson
Gibbs will be
formed Wahama Glee
featured
in the New
Club. Also participatHaven
choir’s
rendition
ing will be the Wahama
of
the
traditional
GerVisual Arts Departman carol, “O Come
ment.
Little Children.” Other
A highlight of the
songs by the elementary
concert will be a
choir, under the direcglimpse of the newly
tion of Kimberly Bond,
formed glee club’s
are “African Noel,” “O
program, “Christmas
Arbol De Navidad,”
on Broadway.” Four“Joy to the World,” and
teen members are in
a song from the school’s
the club, according to
Christmas play, “Elﬁs
Rachel Reynolds, high
and the Frozen Prinschool choir and glee
cess.”
club director.
Five selections make
Mindy Kearns is a freelance
up the glee club’s total
writer for Ohio Valley Publishing
program, although only who can be reached at
mindykearns1@hotmail.com.
a portion of it will be

College Credit
Plus meeting
ROCKSPRINGS — The Meigs
High School guidance department will have a counseling
session for students who are
interested in the College Credit
Plus Program for the 2017-2018
school year at 5:30 p.m. on Dec.
1 in the high school library. College Credit Plus is for students
who would like to take college
classes while in high school
for both high school and college credit. Students could take
classes either full or part-time. A
representative from the University of Rio Grande (URG Meigs

37°

44°

Fri.
7:29 a.m.
5:07 p.m.
9:48 a.m.
8:03 p.m.

MOON PHASES
First

Dec 7

Full

Last

New

Dec 13 Dec 20 Dec 29

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

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

Major
12:12p
1:09a
2:03a
2:57a
3:51a
4:44a
5:34a

Minor
6:28a
7:21a
8:15a
9:10a
10:04a
10:56a
11:47a

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™
The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local
weather with a number of demographic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.

2

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Major
12:40p
1:33p
2:28p
3:22p
4:16p
5:08p
5:59p

Minor
6:52p
7:46p
8:40p
9:34p
10:28p
11:21p
----

WEATHER HISTORY
The temperature soared to 65
degrees on Dec. 1, 1927, in State
College, Pa. This was the highest December reading ever recorded there
in the ﬁrst half of the 20th century.

A: One of the most stormy, ranking in
the top three.

Today
7:28 a.m.
5:07 p.m.
9:00 a.m.
7:11 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

FRIDAY

AIR QUALITY
300

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
13.12
16.22
21.00
12.67
13.07
25.18
13.07
25.79
34.59
13.08
15.00
33.80
14.10

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.37
+0.19
-0.22
+0.07
+0.16
+0.08
-0.02
+0.10
+0.13
+0.12
-0.40
-0.30
-1.00

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Route 7 was closed for
approximately two hours
due to the accident.
In addition to Highway
Patrol, the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce, Meigs

SUNDAY

MONDAY

44°
30°

Chilly with times of
clouds and sun

Chilly with times of
clouds and sun

A bit of snow and rain
in the p.m.

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

Logan
43/32

Adelphi
44/33
Chillicothe
44/33
Waverly
45/32
Lucasville
46/33
Portsmouth
47/33

WEDNESDAY

50°
44°

Rather cloudy

Chance of a little
morning rain

Marietta
45/34

Murray City
43/32
Belpre
46/35

Athens
45/33

St. Marys
45/34

Parkersburg
46/32

Coolville
45/33

Elizabeth
46/34

Spencer
45/34

Buffalo
46/34

Ironton
49/33

Milton
48/34

Clendenin
46/30

St. Albans
47/34

Huntington
49/33

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
49/44
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
58/47
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
66/48
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

48°
37°

Wilkesville
46/32
POMEROY
Jackson
46/33
46/32
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
46/35
46/33
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
43/34
GALLIPOLIS
46/34
46/35
46/34

Ashland
49/34
Grayson
48/33

County EMS, the Pomeroy Fire Department and
other ﬁrst responders
were at the scene.
The crash remains
under investigation.

57°
39°
Considerable clouds

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
45/33

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

Monday, Dec. 5
RUTLAND TWP. —
The Rutland Township
Trustees will meet at 7:30
a.m. at the Rutland Township Garage.
LETART TWP. — The
regular meeting of the
Letart Township Trustees
will be held at 5 p.m. at
Sunday, Dec. 4
the Letart Township BuildRACINE — Racine
ing.
American Legion is hostMIDDLEPORT — The
ing its monthly dinner
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The Meigs County Veterans
Service Commission will
menu this month is fried
meet at 9 a.m. at the Veterchicken, turkey, homeans Service Ofﬁce, located
made noodles, mashed
at 97 North Second Avepotatoes, green beans,
dressing, cranberry relish, nue, Middleport.
Saturday, Dec. 3
SALEM CENTER —
Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior Grange #878
will meet in regular session with potluck supper
at 6:30 p.m. followed by
meeting at 7:30 p.m.

45°
29°

South Shore Greenup
49/33
45/32

58
0 50 100 150 200

SATURDAY

potato salad, roll, dessert,
and drink.

will be held at 7 p.m. at
the township building.

45°
31°

0

Q: Is December is one of the most or
least stormy months in the U.S.?

SUN &amp; MOON

EXTENDED FORECAST

41°

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.

0.88
2.03
3.44
42.24
39.39

2008 Mercury Grand Marquis. Doczi was driving a
2006 Honda Civic. Both
drivers were wearing
their safety belts, according to the release.

Breezy today with times of clouds and sun.
Mostly cloudy tonight. High 46° / Low 34°

Temperature

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

Crash

8 PM

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

(in inches)

area at 6:30 p.m. CSHA
Presidential election to be
held.

Blake was driving a

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

Community
Lunch

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.

From page 1

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

61°
53°
50°
33°
80° in 1934
4° in 1929

SYRACUSE — The third annual
Ugly Christmas Sweater ThirtyOne and Basket Games will be held
on Thursday, Dec. 1 at the Syracuse Community Center. Proceeds
from the event beneﬁt the Meigs
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce. Doors
open at 5 p.m. with games beginning at 6 p.m. Advance tickets are
on sale at Farmers Bank in Pomeroy, Tuppers Plains and Mason.
RACINE — A Community
There will be an ugly sweater conLunch will be held Monday, Nov.
28-Saturday, Dec. 3 from 11 a.m. to test and vendors.

Friday, Dec. 2
POMEROY — The
regular meeting of Meigs
County PERI Chapter 74
will be held at noon at
the Mulberry Community
Center, located at 156 Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy. A
catered Christmas lunch
will be served at noon and
a $5 gift exchange will be
held for those who wish
to participate. All retired
Thursday, Dec. 1
Meigs County Public
CHESTER — The
Employees may attend.
Chester Shade Historical
ORANGE TWP. — The
Association monthly board
meeting will be held at the monthly meeting of the
Orange Township Trustees
Chester Academy dining

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Ugly Christmas
Sweater Games

Charleston
48/33

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

Winnipeg
28/19
Minneapolis
39/28

Billings
42/26

Chicago
43/32
Denver
42/17

Kansas City
45/26

Montreal
45/35
Toronto
45/37
Detroit
45/34

New York
55/39
Washington
59/39

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
43/28/pc
24/18/sf
57/38/s
57/40/s
56/35/s
42/26/pc
40/22/pc
58/39/pc
48/33/c
64/33/s
36/16/c
43/32/c
45/31/pc
44/35/c
44/32/pc
66/45/s
42/17/pc
41/31/c
45/34/c
81/68/sh
67/46/s
43/32/pc
45/26/s
57/42/pc
57/35/s
66/48/s
50/32/pc
83/71/sh
39/28/sf
54/32/s
63/48/s
55/39/pc
61/32/s
85/59/c
56/38/pc
63/44/s
44/34/c
51/35/pc
65/35/s
61/34/s
47/30/s
36/20/sf
58/47/s
49/44/c
59/39/s

Hi/Lo/W
46/28/c
22/11/sn
59/39/s
52/39/s
52/34/s
39/27/s
39/28/c
51/37/s
45/32/c
58/32/s
32/16/sn
40/26/pc
44/27/pc
44/35/sn
43/29/c
65/48/pc
36/18/c
41/28/pc
45/31/c
82/69/sh
69/53/sh
42/28/pc
47/29/pc
55/38/s
58/40/pc
65/45/s
49/31/pc
83/71/pc
35/24/c
56/34/pc
66/52/pc
51/39/s
58/40/pc
72/53/pc
52/38/s
63/45/pc
43/31/c
50/32/pc
57/33/s
55/31/s
47/31/pc
32/18/pc
61/45/s
50/44/r
54/37/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
57/38

High
Low

El Paso
60/37
Chihuahua
74/41

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

86° in Fernandina Beach, FL
-9° in Gunnison, CO

Global
High
112° in Wyndham, Australia
Low -59° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
67/46
Monterrey
73/56

Miami
83/71

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

60647073

WEATHER

2 PM

2 p.m. at the Carmel-Sutton United
Methodist Church Fellowship Hall,
48540 Carmel Road, Racine. Menu
includes homemade soups, sandwiches, desserts and drinks. Dinein or take-out. Cost is a donation
which is used for The Friendship
Circle’s outreach projects.

MEIGS COUNTY CALENDAR OF EVENTS

8:57 a.m. — Dispatch
received a report of
cows in the roadway
on Mount Union Road.
From page 1
A deputy checked the
2:49 p.m. — Deputy
area and found the
conducted a trafﬁc
cows. After speaking
stop on a vehicle with
with a couple subjects
ﬁctitious plates and
the deputy located the
after running a license
owner who took care of
check on the driver it
the cows.
was determined that
4:45 p.m. — Dispatch
the driver’s license was received a call to report
also under suspension. a theft on Tornado
The driver was issued
Road. A deputy went to
citations for ﬁctitious
scene and took a report
registration and driving of the incident. It is
under suspension and
believed the theft was
given a court date to
committed by a subject
appear in Meigs County known to the victim
Court.
and was allowed in the
residence. Case still
Friday, Nov. 25
under investigation.

8 AM

Branch) and Ohio University will
be present at this meeting. This
session is the only group counseling session planned at this
time so please try to attend if
interested. Both student and parent should attend a counseling
session in order to participate in
the program. Interested students
should pick up an information
handout from the Meigs High
School Guidance Ofﬁce or Meigs
Middle School Ofﬁce. This information should be read by both
student and parent/guardian. If
you have questions you can call
the Meigs High School Guidance
Ofﬁce at 992-2158.

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.

Record

TODAY

Thursday, December 1, 2016 5

�6 Thursday, December 1, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Have Yourself
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�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 1, 2016 s 7

Ohio State
holds firm
to 2nd
in CFP
rankings
By Ralph D. Russo
Associated Press

Ohio State held ﬁrm
at second in the College
Football Playoff rankings,
putting the Buckeyes in
position to become the
ﬁrst team to be selected
to the ﬁnal four without
winning its conference.
The second-to-last
rankings were released
Tuesday night and Alabama was No. 1, followed
by Ohio State, Clemson
and Washington. The
Crimson Tide, Tigers
and Huskies all play conference championship
games this weekend and
presumably would be in
good shape to make the
playoff if they win. The
ﬁnal rankings and playoff
pairings will be released
Sunday.
Unbeaten Alabama is
probably in good shape to
make the playoff even if
it loses to Florida in the
Southeastern Conference
title game Saturday
Michigan dropped to
ﬁve after losing to Ohio
State. Wisconsin was
sixth and Penn State was
seventh. The Badgers and
Nittany Lions will play
for the Big Ten title in
Indianapolis on Saturday.
HUSKIES vs. WOLVERINES
Assuming the Buckeyes
are a lock, and it looks
good for them, and Clemson doesn’t get upset by
Virginia Tech in the ACC
title game, the debate for
the committee when it
gathers in Texas on Saturday night to watch games
See OHIO | 10

OVP SPORTS
SCHEDULE
Thursday, December 1
Girls Basketball
Gallia Academy at
Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Southern at Meigs, 7:30
Warren at Eastern, 7:30
River Valley at Fairland,
7:30
Friday, December 2
Boys Basketball
Gallia Academy at
Meigs, 7:30
River Valley at Eastern,
7:30
South Gallia at Symmes
Valley, 7:30
Ohio Valley Christian at
Calvary Christian, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Scott at Wahama, 7:30
Hannan at Fairview,
6:30
Ohio Valley Christian at
Calvary Christian, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
Point Pleasant at University, 5 p.m.
Saturday, December 3
Boys Basketball
South Gallia at South
Webster, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Jackson at River Valley,
2:30
Point Pleasant at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
Southern at Pike Eastern, 2:30
Wrestling
Point Pleasant at University, 10 a.m.
Gallia Academy at Fairland, 9 a.m.
Meigs, River Valley at
Jackson, 10 a.m.

Photos by Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

South Gallia’s Erin Evans (4) goes up for a layup against Ohio Valley Christian School senior Katie Bradley (3) during Tuesday’s season-opening girls basketball game
at the OVCS gym.

Rebels top Defenders in season opener
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
Truth be told, the Lady Rebels
are young, indeed inexperienced, and will endure their
share of growing pains this
girls basketball season.
However, they are at least off
to a good start.
That’s because visiting South
Gallia captured Tuesday’s season opener against Ohio Valley
Christian School, erasing an
early deﬁcit to post a 54-38 victory over the Lady Defenders.
The contest marked the
season opener for both teams,
as the Lady Rebels sport no
seniors — while OVCS only
has seven total players.
There are 13 in the entire
South Gallia program, which
started its three most experienced players — juniors Erin
Evans, Olivia Hornsby and
Aaliyah Howell.
Joining them were two freshmen starters — along with
two freshmen substitutes, the
Rebels’ lone sophomore in Jessica Luther, and junior Brooke
Campbell.
In trailing 11-5 only nine
minutes into the game, the
Rebels outscored OVCS 49-27
the remainder of the way.
Nine unanswered points

pushed South Gallia in front
17-12 at the 4:20 mark of the
second quarter, as they outdid
OVCS 15-6 in the period.
The Lady Rebels then maintained their second-half lead
between four and 13 points
throughout the third quarter,
as their fourth-quarter cushion
never dipped below double
ﬁgures.
South Gallia’s largest lead
was the ﬁnal score, as Hornsby had a driving layup off
an OVCS turnover with 1:52
remaining.
While ﬁfth-year head coach
Corey Small admits his Lady
Rebels have plenty to work on,
it’s always nice to get the season started on the right foot.
“We started out slow, but
that is to be expected with a
young group like this. But once
the jitters got out of the way,
the second, third and fourth
quarter, I was happy with their
performance,” said Small. “We
got a lot of buckets and easy
layups off steals. Our defense
was okay tonight. We still have
a lot to work on, but hopefully
by the middle of the season
we’ll start to click and play our
best ball. It’s always nice to
start the season with a win at
least.”
For the Lady Defenders,
their seven-person roster fea-

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Ohio Valley Christian School senior Rachel Sargent (11) drives in against the
defense of South Gallia’s Amaya Howell (2) during Tuesday night’s seasonopening girls basketball game.

tures two seniors, a junior and
four sophomores.
Despite leading for the ﬁnal
three-and-a-half minutes of the
opening stanza, and the ﬁrst
two minutes and 55 seconds
of the second period, OVCS

struggled with turnovers —
which led to many runouts and
second-half transition points by
the Rebels.
“One thing we’ve really tried
See REBELS | 10

Scott outlasts Lady Cats in opener, 45-33
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

ASHTON, W.Va. — An
inspiring ﬁnish following
three periods of frustration.
The Hannan girls basketball team mustered
only 11 points headed
into the ﬁnale, but the
hosts rallied to make
things interesting with
a 22-7 fourth quarter
surge before ultimately
falling 45-33 to Scott on
Tuesday night during the
season-opening contest
for both squads in Mason
County.
The Lady Wildcats
(0-1) never led in the
contest as the visiting Lady Hawks (1-0)
Bryan Walters/OVP Sports
Hannan junior Cassidy Duffer (3) hauls in a rebound between a pair of Scott players during the jumped out to a commanding 17-2 advantage
second half of Tuesday night’s non-conference girls basketball contest in Ashton, W.Va.

through the ﬁrst eight
minutes of play.
SHS followed with a
7-4 run to take its biggest lead of the ﬁrst half
at 24-6 midway through
the second canto, but the
Blue and White responded with four consecutive
points to close to within
24-10 with under a minute remaining.
Scott received a late
trifecta from Sarah
Mayse, which allowed
the guests to take a 27-10
advantage into the break.
The Lady Hawks
opened the second half
by scoring 11 consecutive
points while increasing
their largest lead of the
night out to 38-10, but
HHS ended an eight-plus
See OPENER | 10

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, December 1, 2016

Lost &amp; Found

Apartments/Townhouses

Found set of keys beside the
bowling alley call to identify
740-853-1143

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

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.

$$$$$$$$$

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

$$$$$$$$$

Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
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Mason Co. WV. Ron
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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
ACCOUNTING/TAX
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Daily Sentinel

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, December 1, 2016 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

Written By Brian &amp; Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

by Dave Green

By Dave Green

3

1

9

9

8

7

3

4

6

1

1

8

4

5

1

6

2

9

1

12/01

Difficulty Level

By Bil and Jeff Keane

12/01

6
5
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9

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3
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6
7

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

4
2
9
7
6
3
5
8
1

DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

Difficulty Level

Hank Ketcham’s

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

By Hilary Price

9

6

3

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

8

2

4

�SPORTS

10 Thursday, December 1, 2016

Rebels
From page 7

to work on is taking
care of the basketball.
Tonight we didn’t do
that,” said OVCS coach
Chris Burnett. “We
played well at times in
the half-court set, and
when we were able to
take care of the ball,
we got the shots we
wanted. But too many
turnovers led to too
many leak-outs and
easy points for them. “
The biggest beneﬁciaries for South Gallia
were freshman Amaya
Howell and Hornsby,
as Howell went off for
20 points in her ﬁrst
varsity game.
Hornsby had 10
points on four secondhalf ﬁeld goals and
2-of-2 free throws,
while Aaliyah Howell
hit for four second-half
ﬁeld goals as well.
Evans added seven
points on three secondhalf ﬁeld goals and a
foul shot, as Luther
and Christine Grifﬁth
gained a ﬁrst-half basket apiece.
Speaking of the ﬁrst
half, Amaya Howell hit
three threes, including
two in the second quarter to turn the 11-5
deﬁcit into a 17-12
advantage in a matter
of 2:45.
Her other triple
came for the Lady Rebels’ ﬁrst points of the
season.
Hornsby with two
free throws and a
putback basket, sandwiched around Griffth’s stickback, gave
South Gallia a 14-12
cushion that it never
relinquished from
there.
Alyssa Cremeens
canned a three-ball
to make it 20-14 with
1:55 remaining in
the half, as that score
stood all the way until
Hornsby’s ﬁrst ﬁeld
goal — with 53 seconds gone by in the
third frame.
Because of their sixperson rotation, the
Defenders played a 2-3
zone defense during
that stretch — and
were shot out of it.
“Numbers-wise, we
had to go to that zone

in the second quarter
to get a little bit of
rest. But they hit us
with those threes,”
said Burnett. “We had
to come out of that
pretty quick.”
The closest the
Defenders got in the
entire second half was
a 26-22 deﬁcit, thanks
to Katie Bradley’s
second three-pointer
and Rachel Sargent’s
second free throw.
“Turnovers here
and there, and we just
weren’t able to close
that gap,” said Burnett.
“Trying to come back,
we expended a lot of
energy and I think it
just caught the best of
us toward the end.”
Sargent, on ﬁve
ﬁeld goals and ﬁve
free throws, led the
Lady Defenders with
a dozen points — as
Bradley bucketed 10
on two twos and two
treys.
Emily Childers and
Cori Hutchinson had a
trifecta apiece as part
of ﬁve points each, and
Kristen Durst scored
a ﬁeld goal in the third.
The Lady Rebels
held a 23-13 advantage
in total ﬁeld goals.
Burnett said he was
proud of his Defenders’
effort, but they too are
young and somewhat
inexperienced — and
have only had six practices prior to Tuesday.
The seniors Sargent
and Bradley, along
with Childers and
Hutchinson, were
integral players for the
Lady Defenders’ volleyball squad — which
reached the OCSAA
state championship
tilt.
“Our execution
wasn’t where it needed
to be tonight, but we’re
a young team still battling,” he said. “I was
proud of their effort
and we’re going to
keep jelling, growing
and getting better.”
The Defenders’
next opportunity at
improvement comes
on Friday at Calvary
Christian.
South Gallia hosted
Symmes Valley on
Wednesday night for
another non-league tilt.
Paul Boggs can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2106

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Daily Sentinel

Milwaukee routs Cavaliers, 118-101

MILWAUKEE (AP) — After
building a big third-quarter
lead against the defending NBA
champions, the Milwaukee Bucks
poured it on in the fourth.
And when the Cleveland
Cavaliers pulled their starters,
including LeBron James, midway
through the ﬁnal period, the young
Bucks still didn’t let up.
“We didn’t let them off the hook.

We were attacking,” said Giannis
Antetokounmpo, who tied a career
high with 34 points while the
Bucks stunned the Cavaliers 118101 on Tuesday night.
“They are the champs, but this is
a great win.”
Bucks coach Jason Kidd had
high praise for Antetokounmpo,
who was often matched up against
James.

Ohio

in the Big Ten title game
would eliminate the controversy. The Badgers
lost to Ohio State during
From page 7
the regular season
and discuss the only
Penn State fans, howrankings that matter will ever, are already crankbe Pac-12 or Big Ten.
ing up the complaints.
Can Michigan, or
The Nittany Lions beat
maybe the Big Ten cham- Ohio State in October.
pion with two losses,
Add a Big Ten title and
edge a Washington team Penn State is bound to
that would ﬁnish 12-1 by feel slighted.
beating Colorado Friday
Conference titles and
night in the Pac-12 title
head-to-head results are
game?
essentially used by the
“There is a small sepa- committee like tiebreakration between these two ers when teams are very
teams,” selection comclose. The Buckeyes and
mittee chairman Kirby
Nittany Lions are not in
Hocutt said of Michigan the committee’s eyes. At
and Washington. At one least not yet.
point Hocutt added that
“The selection committhe difference between
tee recognizes the headthe Wolverines and Hus- to-head win, but in this
kies was “razor thin.”
particular case, it hasn’t
It looks like not only
been the distinguishing
does the committee not
point in our evaluation
mind putting one Big
of those two teams,” he
Ten team without a con- said.
ference championship in
the playoff, but it is also SUGAR BOWL
comfortable with two.
Assuming Alabama
Michigan at 10-2 has vic- is in the playoff, the
tories against both Penn Southeastern Conference
State and Wisconsin.
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be decided when No. 9
Oklahoma and No. 10
Oklahoma State play in
Norman on Saturday.
No. 14 Auburn is that
SEC team right now.
Florida is 15th, so a
good performance —
even in a loss — against
the Crimson Tide might
get the Gators to New
Orleans on a two-game
losing streak. A Florida
loss would leave every
SEC team other than
Alabama with at least
four losses.
But the contract with
the Sugar says the SEC
gets the spot mediocre
or not.

ence in the Orange Bowl.
Hocutt said Florida
State has played one of
the toughest schedules
in the country while Louisville has beaten only
one team with a winning
record (Florida State).
He said the Seminoles
are playing better lately.

GROUP OF FIVE
The highest-ranked
conference champion
from outside the Power
Five is getting a Cotton
Bowl bid and at this
point it looks as if it
will be No. 17 Western
Michigan if the unbeaten
Broncos defeat Ohio in
the Mid-American Conference championship
ORANGE BOWL
Louisville beat Florida game Friday night.
The next highest
State by 43 points in
September, but the Car- ranked Group of Five
team is No. 19 Navy
dinals have stumbled
(9-2), which will play
down the stretch and
Temple for the Amerinow the Seminoles are
can Athletic Conference
12th and the Cardinal
championship on Saturare 13th.
day at home.
If that order holds —
Don’t consider WMU
and there is no reason
to think it won’t because a lock. Hocutt said the
neither is playing — and committee is still concerned about the BronClemson goes to the
ranked team to the Sugar playoff as the ACC cham- cos weak schedule. But
it looks promising for
pion, then Florida State
Bowl to face the Big 12
will represent the confer- coach P.J. Fleck’s team.
champion, which will

Opener

column in the ﬁnal period — most
of which were a direct results of
takeaways.
From page 7
Hannan ultimately never came
closer
than the ﬁnal dozen-point
minute scoring drought as Cassidy
margin,
but the hosts did take a
Duffer sank the second of two free
28-point
deﬁcit and cut it down
throws for a 38-11 contest just
to
12
in
the
span of less than nine
before the end of the third quarter.
minutes.
With Scott going deep into its
The Lady Cats had seven difbench, the Lady Cats used the ﬁnal
ferent
players reach the scoring
stanza to work on its full court
column
in the setback, led by
press — which yielded very posiMadison
Staggs with a game-high
tive results as the hosts doubled
14
points.
Duffer was next with
their three-quarter offensive output
ﬁve
markers,
while Maggie Waugh
in only eight minutes of work.
and Julie Frazier each contributed
Besides forcing numerous turnfour points.
overs, the Lady Cats also had ﬁve
different players reach the scoring
Lindsey Holley, Josie Cooper and

Josie McCoy completed the HHS
scoring with two points apiece.
The hosts were 5-of-10 at the free
throw line for 50 percent.
Emily Foley paced Scott with
12 points, followed by Mayse and
Kaylee Justice with nine markers
each. Brooke Burns was next with
six points and Chloe Older chipped
in ﬁve points.
Randi Buckner and Allison Matthews completed the winning tally
with two markers apiece. SHS —
which four of its ﬁve trifectas in
the ﬁrst half — also went 2-of-5 at
the charity stripe for 40 percent.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2101.

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“He’s getting better with hard
work,” Kidd said. “He was going
against the best player in the
world.”
Antetokounmpo added 12
rebounds and ﬁve assists while
Milwaukee ended Cleveland’s
four-game winning streak. Jabari
Parker had 18 points and Michael
Beasley had 17 off the bench for
the Bucks.

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�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 1, 2016 11

No. 6 Badgers get lift from jet sweep
Just like last week in
the 31-17 win over Minnesota .
Peavy went 71 yards
down the right sideline
to the Gophers 11. Two
plays later, tailback Corey
Clement barreled into the
end zone from 2 yards for
the go-ahead touchdown
with 6:42 left.
“It happens so fast you
can’t really think about
it,” Peavy said.
The jet sweep has been
a tool at Wisconsin in the
past, spanning coaching
staffs. But it was really
dusted off this year on
Oct. 15 in the 30-23 loss
in overtime to No. 2 Ohio
State. Peavy, a junior who
has emerged as a key
offensive weapon, gashed
the Buckeyes for 70 yards
rushing on six carries.
Peavy has reached “a
point where he belongs
and he can make those

URG men advance to
NAIA quarterfinals
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

DELRAY BEACH, Fla. — Pau Delgado Rodriguez scored a pair of goals to help the University
of Rio Grande pull away for a 3-1 win over Corban
(Ore.) University in the second round of the NAIA
Men’s Soccer National Championship, Tuesday
morning, at the Seacrest Soccer Complex.
The RedStorm, the tourney’s No. 2 seed and the
defending national champions, improved to 20-11 with the victory and advanced to Wednesday’s
quarterﬁnal round against seventh-seeded Union
(Ky.) College - a 3-0 winner over Spring Arbor
(Mich.) in another of Tuesday’s second round
games.
Corban, which was ranked 12th and seeded
15th, ﬁnished 20-3 with the loss.
Delgado Rodriguez, a senior from Barcelona,
Spain and the River States Conference Offensive
Player of the Year, scored his 19th and 20th goals
of the season in the second half after the two
teams played to a scoreless draw at the intermission.
Rio Grande, which was ranked No. 3 in the ﬁnal
regular season coaches’ poll, dominated play after
halftime by recording a 16-5 edge in shots, including an 8-3 advantage in shots on frame.
Senior Jeremy de Hoog (Rotterdam, The Netherlands), who scored the game-winning marker
in last year’s national title game, got the scoring
underway just 2:41 into the second stanza by
pushing a penalty kick past Corban goal keeper
Jordan Farr for a 1-0 lead.
Delgado Rodriguez then added both of his insurance scores in a span of just over three minutes.
His ﬁrst score came at 65:55 - a shot from in
front of the goal, which drew a dual assist from
senior Lucas Talaveria-Beﬁ (Sao Paulo, Brazil)
and sophomore Eduardo Zurita (Sant Boi de Llobregat, Spain) - and the second at 69:09 when he
tipped in a right-side pass from sophomore Ben
Mendoza (Chichester, England).
Corban avoided a shutout with 11:43 left in the
contest when Timur Zhividze scored from the far
left side on a shot into the near post. Armando
Guevara assisted on the play, returning the ball
back to Zhividze following a corner kick.
Sophomore Ben Martinez (Montpellier, France)
stopped three shots in goal for Rio Grande.
Farr had seven saves in the loss for the Warriors.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the University of
Rio Grande.

plays,” Gilmore said. “I
tell him all the time to
trust himself.”
The receiver has left
such an impression that
the play has a new nickname: the “Jazz sweep.”
Whatever it’s called, the
Nittany Lions want to put
a stop to it.
A defense reinforced by
the midseason returns of
linebackers Brandon Bell
and Jason Cabinda from
injuries has helped hold
opponents to less than 47
yards rushing in three of
the last ﬁve games. But
the Nittany Lions got
gashed by sweeps, shovel
passes and play-action in
a 42-39 loss to Pittsburgh
in September. Cabinda,
the starting middle linebacker, didn’t play in that
game.
“It’s something we kind
of plan on happening,”
cornerback John Reid said

Wednesday when asked
if Penn State would be
brushing up on defending
the sweep.
The sweep is just one
of a series of tweaks that
coach Paul Chryst — a
former Wisconsin offensive coordinator — has
made since midseason,
when the running game
became more productive.
With Wisconsin coming
off a bye week, Ohio State
didn’t look prepared for
Peavy running the sweep.
The next week, Chryst
started using senior Bart
Houston again at quarterback. The former starter
began taking a few series
each game, alternating
with Alex Hornibrook,
the redshirt freshman
who took his job.
Houston has embraced
his role, often giving the
offense a spark. A former
option quarterback in

high school, the righthanded senior has more
mobility and presents
defenses a different look
from Hornibrook, a lefthanded pocket passer.
With Hornibrook listed
as questionable with a
head injury, Houston may
get the call again to start
against Penn State.
After rotating offensive
linemen for much of the
ﬁrst half of the season,
Wisconsin’s front ﬁve has
more stability. Clement
remains Wisconsin’s go-to
back and best breakaway
threat, though speedy
freshman Bradrick Shaw
has taken more carries
later in the season.
The Badgers lead the
FBS in time of possession
(35:12). The ball-control
offense sets the tempo,
and keeps a big-play
defense fresh.
“What you can’t allow

this type of offense to
do is ball control, eat up
the clock, just grind you
down with three- and
four-yard plays down the
ﬁeld,” Penn State coach
James Franklin said.
It’s all part of the coaching chess match that will
play out on Saturday.
The jet sweep isn’t necessarily an integral part of
the playbook each week,
but just the act of Peavy
running from his wideout
position toward the quarterback before the snap
could cause a distraction
to the defense — enough
so that a handoff up the
middle to Clement inﬂicts
just as much damage.
“It really opens up and
spreads out the offense,”
Clement said. “Whether
it’s a phony or it’s going
to be given to Jazz, it
keeps defenses on their
toes.”

Tiger counts it a success to play golf again
NASSAU, Bahamas
(AP) — This might
be one time that Tiger
Woods doesn’t measure
success on the golf course
by the score on his card.
He measured it with
three words Tuesday:
“I’m playing again.”
There were times during his 15 months away
from golf that Woods
wasn’t entirely sure that
would be the case. He
said that when he was
at the Hero World Challenge last year, he needed
help just to climb out of
bed. At an outdoor party
at Albany Golf Club, he
would mingle for a few
minutes and then sit on a
stone bench.
He spent more time
looking back than looking
forward, saying at one
point that anything else
he achieved in golf would
be “gravy.”
And now he can’t wait
to get started on Thursday.
The 15-month break
to heal following back
surgeries is the longest he
has been away from golf.
Woods was a mixture
of optimism and reality
about his return. He talked about having all the
shots he needs to compete against a ﬁeld that
includes 17 players from
the top 40 and Woods,
the tournament host who
is at a career-low No. 898.
He is playing, so he said
he wants to win. The outlook is no different.
He also noted that
Bubba Watson won last
year at 25-under par,
and it probably will take
something around that to
win.
“I know that’s a tall

order since I’ve been
away from the game for
so long and I’ve made a
lot of different changes in
my game,” he said. “Physically and also equipment,
practice schedules, training, all that has evolved.
The mindset of competing hasn’t. That is to go
out there and try to beat
these guys.”
He still is working with
swing coach Chris Como,
whom he brought on two
years ago. Now that Nike
is out of the equipment
business, Woods is using
a TaylorMade driver and
fairway metals, a Bridgestone golf ball and his old
Scotty Cameron putter
that he used to win all but
one of his 14 majors.
But it starts with play-

Doug Ferguson | AP

Tiger Woods speaks at a press conference for the Hero World
Challenge golf tournament in Nassau, Bahamas, Tuesday.

ing.
“Put it this way: It’s a
lot better situation this
year than last,” Woods
said. “I just couldn’t get
out of bed. I needed help.
It was a tough, tough

time. You asked me then,
‘Could I play?’ No. I can’t
even get out of bed. How
am I supposed to swing
a club at 120 miles an
hour? That’s just two different worlds.”

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60694051

60680181

MADISON, Wis. (AP)
— The ﬁrst key to executing a successful jet sweep
at No. 6 Wisconsin can be
summarized in two words
by receivers coach Ted
Gilmore.
“Run scared,” Gilmore
said Wednesday.
Speed to beat defenders
to the edge and vision to
ﬁnd the right hole help,
too. The eighth-ranked
Penn State Nittany Lions
(10-2, No. 7 CFP) will be
watching for the sweep
when they face the Badgers (10-2, No. 6 CFP) on
Saturday night in Indianapolis in the Big Ten
Championship game.
“The ﬁrst thing that
goes through my head is
get up ﬁeld and get whatever you can,” Wisconsin
receiver Jazz Peavy said.
“When you see a lot of
green grass like that it’s
just run, run, run.”

�12 Thursday, December 1, 2016

Daily Sentinel

We Want To Help You Count
the Days ‘til Christmas!
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Let the little one count the days ‘til Santa arrives.

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60693834

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    <name>Text</name>
    <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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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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        </elementTextContainer>
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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <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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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="6619">
              <text>December 1, 2016</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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      <name>fuller</name>
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    <tag tagId="2457">
      <name>hann</name>
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    <tag tagId="1919">
      <name>hendricks</name>
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    <tag tagId="39">
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    <tag tagId="1034">
      <name>mccain</name>
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    <tag tagId="140">
      <name>morris</name>
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    <tag tagId="2458">
      <name>mossburg</name>
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    <tag tagId="87">
      <name>murphy</name>
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    <tag tagId="527">
      <name>sanders</name>
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    <tag tagId="1203">
      <name>sisson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="656">
      <name>yoder</name>
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  </tagContainer>
</item>
