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                  <text>Ohio
Valley
business

Breezy,
cloudy
H-39, L-24

Eastern
vs. South
Gallia

BUSINESS s 3

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 196, Volume 70

Thursday, December 8, 2016 s 50¢

NEWS BRIEFS

Holiday
Events
POMEROY — A
holiday Bazaar will be
held on Dec. 8 at New
Beginnings United
Methodist Church in
Pomeroy from 9 a.m. to
3 p.m. Crafts, bake sale,
Christmas and novelty
items. Lunch will be
available from 11 a.m.
to 1 p.m. with a menu
of soup, sandwiches and
dessert.
MIDDLEPORT —
Santa will be at the Middleport Police Department from noon-2 p.m.
on Dec. 10 and 5-7 p.m.
on Dec. 14. Cookies and
drinks will be served.
A mailbox will be set
up in the main lobby
for anyone wishing to
mail a letter to Santa at
the North Pole. Santa
will reply to each letter
placed in the box. In
addition, new toys will
be collected to be given
to the Meigs County
Department of Job and
Family Services.
RACINE — CarmelSutton United Methodist Church will hold its
annual Live Nativity
from 6-8 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 10 at the
Leanna Beegle Farm,
East of Racine, Ohio,
on Tornado Road. Light
refreshments available.
The event is free to the
public. Signs will be
posted for directions.
RUTLAND — The
Rutland Village Lighting
Contest will be judged
beginning at 6 p.m. on
Dec. 16. Prizes will be
awarded in three categories: Lighted entrance
way; Religious theme;
and Non-religious
theme. No mixture
of religious and nonreligious will be considered. Location of coverage in Rutland Village
go from the Dean Harris
property on Salem
Street, and following
Main street through the
village to the old hilltop
grocery. Coverage on
New Lima Road to the
Joe Bolin Property and
on Depot Street to the
Bill Nicholson property.
This is sponsored by
the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners with local
merchant support. Judging will be completed by
a non-member.
RUTLAND — The
Village of Rutland will
host a craft and vendor
show from 9 a.m. to 3

p.m. on Dec. 10 at the
Rutland Civic Center.
An open house will also
take place from 4-7 p.m.
RUTLAND — The
Village of Rutland will
host a Middle School
Dance at the Rutland
Civic Center from 7-10
p.m. on Dec. 16. The
dance is for grades
6-8 and admission is
$2. Concessions will
be available and a uniformed ofﬁcer will be
on duty at the event.
Children must be signed
out by an adult.
MIDDLEPORT —
Youth Christmas Play,
“Tis the Season”, to be
performed on Sunday,
Dec. 18, at 6:30 p.m.
at Ash Street Church
in Middleport, Ohio.
Come share the evening
with us.

Sarah Hawley/Sentinel

Feeney Bennett American Legion Post 128 member James Bradbury placed the wreath in the river on Wednesday morning as part of the
Pearl Harbor remembrance ceremony.

Remembering Pearl Harbor

Red Cross
Blood Drives

By Sarah Hawley

LANGSVILLE —
Dec. 21 from 1-6:30
p.m. at Star Grange
778, 35300 Salem
School Lot Road.
POMEROY — Dec.
28 from 1-6:30 p.m.,
Mulberry Community
Center, 260 Mulberry
Avenue.
MIDDLEPORT —
Dec. 30 from 9 a.m.2:30 p.m., Church of
Christ Family Life Center, 437 Main Street.

MIDDLEPORT — On
the shores of the Ohio
River, veterans and community members paused
early Wednesday morning
to remember those killed
in the attack on Pearl
Harbor 75 years before.
Just before 8 a.m. in
Hawaii on Dec. 7, 1941,
the ﬁrst of the Japanese
bombers began to attack
the United States Navy
base in Pearl Harbor.

Fruit
Baskets

Remembering ‘the 46’ some 49 years later

shawley@civitasmedia.com

The two-hour aerial raid
destroyed or heavily
damaged 21 ships and
320 aircraft, killing 2,390
people and wounding
1,178 others.
Feeney Bennett American Legion Post 128
member James Bradbury
lead a prayer before placing a wreath in the Ohio
River from the Middleport Levee. A 21-gun
salute and the playing of
taps concluded the ceremony.
Middleport has a

By Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

Smoke detector
program

See BRIEFS | 5

Beth Sergent/Register

A special observance in memory of the victims of the Silver Bridge
Tragedy will take place 6 p.m., Thursday, Dec. 15 in downtown Point
Pleasant. Participating in the ceremony will be residents from both
Mason and Gallia counties. Pictured is a scene from the memorial
after last year’s ceremony, including angels with the names of the
victims, hanging from the trees.

TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
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thoughts.

See PEARL HARBOR | 5

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Every Dec. 15,
time stands still in the
memories of those who
remember “the day the
bridge fell.”
The Silver Bridge,
which connected Point
Pleasant, W.Va. and
Kanagua, Ohio, tumbled
into the Ohio River on
Dec. 15, 1967, killing
46 people. This year, to
mark the 49th anniversary of the tragedy and
remember those victims,
a memorial will be held
in downtown Point Pleasant.
This is the second year

for the ceremony which
takes place at 6 p.m.,
Thursday, Dec. 15 at 6th
Street in Point Pleasant
at the memorial which
marks where the bridge
used to rest. The music
will begin around 5:45
p.m.
The event will include
singing by the Point
Pleasant Intermediate
School Choir, Grace Sydnor of the Gallia Academy High School Madrigals and a performance
by the Hannan High
School Bell Choir. The
names of the victims will
be read by Dr. Clyde M.
Evans, former Ohio state
See 46 | 5

OU to hold Fall Commencement ceremony
Staff Report

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

bridge was commander
of the destroyer U.S.S.
Ward, which engaged
and attacked a Japanese
midget submarine as it
attempted to slip into the
harbor.
Outerbridge reported
the action and the sinking
of the submarine before
the attack by Japan. In
2005, the submarine was
found and the shell holes
in the coning tower conﬁrmed as reported.

Ceremony to honor Silver Bridge victims

POMEROY — Drew
Webster #39 of the
American Legion
Pomeroy is taking
orders fro fruit baskets. Fruit baskets are
$15 each and will be
delivered on Dec. 18.
Proceeds beneﬁt local
veterans. To order call
John Hood 740-9926991 or Steve VanMeter 740-992-2875.

MIDDLEPORT —
Volunteer ﬁreﬁghters
and Red Cross volunteers will be going doorto-door in the Middleport area on Saturday,
Dec. 10 beginning
in mid-morning. The
ﬁreﬁghters will offer

unique connection to
the Pearl Harbor attack,
as was reported in The
Daily Sentinel in 2008.
According to the May
26, 2008 article which
discussed a memorial
plaque to be placed in
the village, the ﬁrst
American military action
against Japan in World
War II was initiated by
Middleport native William Outerbridge at 6:37
a.m. prior to the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor,
Dec. 7, 1941. Outer-

ATHENS — Approximately 800
students are expected to participate in the Fall Commencement
ceremony Saturday, Dec. 10 at
Ohio University’s Convocation Center. The combined undergraduate
and graduate ceremony will take
place at 2 p.m.
Dr. Jenny Chabot, associate professor of child and family studies
in the College of Health Sciences
and Professions, will serve as the
University’s Fall Commencement
speaker.
Dr. Chabot is a Certiﬁed Child
Life Specialist, having completed
her clinical training in the child life,
creative arts and education department at Children’s Hospital of
Philadelphia. She began her career
as a professor at Ohio University

in 1998. Dr. Chabot is currently
the coordinator of child and family studies and the CFS graduate
program, and oversees the child
life specialist academic program in
the department of social and public
health.
Dr. Chabot is a three-time recipient of the University Professor
Award, most recently in 2014;
received the Presidential Teaching
Award for 2006-2009 and again in
2014-2017; and is the Ohio University Student Senate Bobcat Medal
Award winner for 2014.
Degrees will be conferred in the
following order during Fall Commencement 2016:Candidates for
Doctoral Degrees
Candidates for Master’s Degrees
Candidates for Bachelor’s and
Associate Degrees
There will be a recessional for
this event. Once the name of a

graduate has been called at the
stage, they will return to their seat.
After all degrees have been conferred, the 2016 Fall Commencement will stand adjourned.
Doors will open at approximately
12:30 p.m. Tickets are not required,
and the ceremony is expected to
last approximately 2.5 hours.
Parking for Fall Commencement is available in any regular
non-metered, non-restricted space
within a dark green or purple lot
on campus. A map detailing these
parking lots is available at: https://
www.ohio.edu/athens/parking/.
Disability parking and a drop off
location for those with mobility
concerns is located in Lot 128 at
the Convocation Center and accessible from South Shafer Street. A
state issued disability placard or
license plate is required for long
term parking.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Thursday, December 8, 2016

Daily Sentinel

MARK ZIELINSKI

OBITUARIES

BIDWELL — Mark
P. Zielinski, 65, Bidwell,
passed away Monday,
RACINE — John Cecil 11 great-grandchildren;
December 5, 2016 at his
sisters, Dorothy (Bob)
Chaney, 83, of Racine,
residence.
passed away at 10:05 a.m. Stewart, of Gahanna,
He was born January
on Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2016, Ohio, Katheryn McGraw,
16,
1951 in Milwaukee,
of Pomeroy, and Linda
in the Hospice Suite at
Wis.,
son of the late RayClary, of Wellston; and
Holzer Medical Center,
mond
and Anita (KochanGallipolis. Born Aug. 14, numerous nieces and
ski)
Zielinski.
Mark was
1933, in Pomeroy, he was nephews also survive.
a
United
States
Marine
In addition to
the son of the late
Corp
veteran,
an
iron
his parents, he is
Parker and Sadie
worker
and
carpenter
by
preceded in death
Pettit Chaney. He
trade
and
an
avid
outby his sister, Mae
was an operator
Nolan; daughter-in- doorsman who enjoyed
and retired after
hunting, trapping and
law, Grace Hysell
33 years from KaiChaney; and a son- ﬁshing. Whether ﬁshing
ser Aluminum, in
in-law, Bub Young. in the Sebastian Inlet or
Ravenswood, West
Funeral services ginseng hunting in the
Virginia. John also
will be held at 11 a.m. on hills of Ohio, he had a
drove a dump truck and
great respect and underSaturday, Dec. 10, 2016,
was a farmer.
standing of the outdoors.
in the Cremeens-King
He is survived by
Mark was a simple man
Funeral Home, Racine.
wife, Dorothy Bell
who took pride in caring
Pastor Bob Stewart will
Chaney, whom he marfor his chickens, homing
ofﬁciate and interment
ried on March 23, 1953,
will follow in the Gilmore pigeons and his beloved
in Pomeroy; his sons,
dogs.
Cemetery. Friends may
Gene Chaney, of Racine,
He had a gentle, genercall from 6-8 p.m. on FriRoger (Pam) Chaney, of
ous
soul and took pride
day at the funeral home.
Tuppers Plains, Steve
in
helping
his friends
Expressions of sympa(Charlene) Chaney, of
and
neighbors.
His witty
thy may be sent to the
Cheshire, and Edward
sense
of
humor
and
family by visiting www.
Chaney, of Racine; a
intellect
could
light
up a
cremeensfunealhomes.
daughter, Peg (Randall)
room.
He
was
loving,
carCarpenter, of Middleport. com.
ing and compassionate.
Nine Grandchildren;
He will be missed terribly

JOHN CECIL CHANEY

DEMENT

by all who knew him,
especially his children.
He is survived by his
children: Anita (Brian
Bean) Zielinski-Bean;
Scott (Amy Beech) Zielinski; Jennifer (Corey)
Longstreth and Ashley
Zielinski; ﬁve grandchildren; brothers: Paul
(Sharen Fulmer) Zielinski and John Zielinski;
special nephew, Graeme
Zielinski and very special
friends: Tim and Jamie
Bartee and Justin White.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in
death by a brother, Peter
Zielinski.
Memorial services
will be noon Saturday,
December 4, 2016 at
First Southern Baptist
Church, 41872 Pomeroy
Pike, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Cremation services are
under the direction of the
McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, Ohio who
is honored to serve the
Zielinski Family.
Comforting messages
may be sent to the family
at www.mccoymoore.com

PROCTORVILLE — Billy Dement, 56, of Proctorville, passed away Tuesday, December 6, 2016.
Funeral service will be conducted 11 a.m. Saturday
December 10, 2016 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville. Burial will follow in Forgey Cemetery, Proctorville. Visitation will be held from 6 to 9
p.m. Friday December 9, 2016 at the funeral home.

GRAHAM
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Patricia Sadler Graham,
73, of Huntington, W.Va., died December 5, 2016 after
a long battle with Lupus and Alzheimer’s.
Funeral services will be held 11 a.m. Friday, December 9, 2016 at Klingel-Carpenter Mortuary. Entombment will follow in Woodmere Memorial Park’s Garden Building. The family will receive friends 10 a.m.
until service time.

TABLER
POMEROY — Michael Tabler of Pomeroy, Ohio
passed away on Monday, Dec. 5, 2016, at the Meigs
Emergency Department in Pomeroy.
Visitation will be held from 10-10:45 a.m. on Friday, Dec. 9, 2016, at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. A graveside service will follow at
11 a.m. at the Meigs Memory Gardens.

EDWARDS
PROCTORVILLE — Michael R. Edwards, 65, of
Proctorville, died Tuesday, December 6, 2016 at The
Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House, Huntington,
W.Va.
Per his request, there will be no services.

CORBIN
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Mildred Walker Corbin,
94, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., passed away Tuesday,
November 29, 2016, at the home of her son.
A funeral service will be at 11 a.m. Thursday, December
8, 2016, at the Mount Zion Baptist Church in Arlington,
Va., with Rev. Wayne Thompson ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow at the National Memorial Park Cemetery in Falls
Church, Va. Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m. Wednesday,
December 7, 2016 at Chinn-Baker Funeral Home in
Arlington, Va. and one hour prior to the funeral service
Thursday at the church. Local arrangements are under the
direction of Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant.

Civitas Media, LLC

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Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
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CONTACT US
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bhunt@civitasmedia.com

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jschultz@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Tyler Wolfe, Ext. 2092
twolfe@civitasmedia.com

MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@civitasmedia.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

TUCKER

Thursday, Dec. 8
ROCKSPRINGS — The Meigs County Township Association will meet at 6 p.m. in the Meigs
High School Cafeteria. Reservations are due to
Opal at 740-742-2805 by Dec. 2. Election of ofﬁcers will be held.
WELLSTON — The GJMV Solid Waste Management District Board of Directors will meet at
3:30 p.m. at the district ofﬁce, 1056 S. New Hampshire Avenue in Wellston.
POMEROY — Alpha Iota Masters will meet at
11:30 a.m. at Annie Chapman’s house.

RACINE — Glenn Tucker, 72, Racine, passed away
Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2016, in the Meigs Holzer Emergency Room, Pomeroy.
Arrangements will be announced by Cremeens
Funeral Home, Racine.

Monday, Dec. 12
BEDFORD TWP. — The regular meeting of the
Bedford Township Trustees will be 7 p.m. at the
Bedford Township Hall.

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Africa's Deadliest "Cat
Savage Kingdom "Army of Darkness" A hyena queen
"Assassins"
Attack"
plots her revenge on the Marsh Lions.
(3:30) Auctions FINA Swimming World Championship (L)
Racing Roots Nitro Access Nitro Access Nitro Access Nitro Access
UFC Flash
NCAA Basketball Fordham vs. St. John's (L)
NCAA Basketball Texas A&amp;M vs. TCU Women's (L)
Hoops Extra
Pawn Stars Pawn "Rick Pawn Stars Pawn "Silver Alone "Making the Cut" (N) Alone "A New Land" (N)
(:05) The Selection "Dip in
"Sword Play" the Emperor"
Stash Pawn"
the Fire" (N)
Million Dollar List
Million Dollar List
Million Dollar List
Listing "Turn and Burn" (N) Top Chef (N)
(:20) Payne
(:55) Meet the Browns
(:25) Browns
Pride (2007, Drama) Bernie Mac, Kimberly Elise, Terrence Howard. TVPG
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop FlipFlop (N) Flip or Flop H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:00)
The Wolfman
Resident Evil: Afterlife (2010, Action) Wentworth
Maleficent (2014, Adventure) Elle Fanning, Sharlto
(‘10, Hor) Emily Blunt. TVMA Miller, Ali Larter, Milla Jovovich. TVMA
Copley, Angelina Jolie. TVPG

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

(5:25) The Divergent Series: Allegiant Tris

400 (HBO)

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JP Morgan (NYSE) - 84.07
Kroger (NYSE) - 33.63
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 74.61
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 109.75
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 26.40
BBT (NYSE) - 46.49
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 30.38
Pepsico (NYSE) - 102.81
Premier (NASDAQ) - 20.20
Rockwell (NYSE) - 138.93
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) - 11.30
Royal Dutch Shell - 52.85

THURSDAY EVENING

Holiday Orange Sunsation!

ONLY

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

500 (SHOW)

7:30

Vice News
must escape with Four beyond the wall the Tonight
encircles Chicago. TV14
(:15)
The Conjuring (‘13, Hor) Vera Farmiga, Patrick
Wilson. A family is haunted and terrorized by a dark
paranormal presence in their farmhouse. TVMA
(5:30)
Domestic
Shameless "Ride or Die"
Disturbance (‘00, Thril) John Fiona contemplates Margo's
offer to buy the laundromat.
Travolta. TV14

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Any Given Sunday (1999, Sport) Jamie Foxx, Cameron Diaz, Al
(:40) Divorce
"Another
Pacino. A pro-football coach fights to motivate his quarterback as he
Party"
battles with the new owner. TVPG
(:10) The Last Witch Hunter (2015, Action) Rose Leslie,
Furious 7 (2015,
Elijah Wood, Vin Diesel. A witch hunter must once again
Action) Paul Walker, Jason
defeat the Queen Witch to save humanity. TV14
Statham, Vin Diesel. TV14
Tears of the Sun (2003, Action) Monica Bellucci, Cole The Affair Juliette finds
Noah an alluring prospect.
Hauser, Bruce Willis. A career soldier is forced to choose
between following orders and saving lives. TVMA

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 8, 2016 3

Holzer program celebrates 100th patient for 2016

Appalachian Power
announces executive
leadership changes

Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — Holzer Low Dose CT Scan
recently had its 100th
patient, Janice Ratliff, for
2016.
Holzer offers Low Dose
CT Scan services in Gallipolis and Athens. The
goal of screening is to
detect lung cancer at a
time when it is not causing symptoms and when
treatment can be most
successful.
Research has proven
that screening is effective
at increasing survival and
quality of life. Individuals who are eligible to
receive the low-dose CT
Scan include patients age
55-77, and are smokers or
who have quit within the
last 15 years with a smoking history of at least 30
packs-years. Pack-years
are calculated by multiplying the average num-

Staff Report

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Chris Beam has been
named president and chief operating ofﬁcer of Appalachian Power, announced AEP Chairman, President
and Chief Executive Ofﬁcer Nick Akins. Beam, 47,
is currently vice president of Projects, Controls and
Construction for AEP. Charles Patton, 57, current
Appalachian president and COO, has been promoted
to executive vice president of External Affairs for AEP.
“Chris is one of our talented leaders who has been
identiﬁed as a future senior executive candidate in our
corporate succession plans,” said Bob Powers, executive vice president and chief operating
ofﬁcer. “His proven leadership skills
and extensive experience in a variety of
roles in our Generation Business Unit
made him an excellent choice to lead
Appalachian Power.”
In addition, Appalachian Power
Mountaineer Plant Manager Debra
Patton
Osborne, 52, has been named Generating Assets Vice President. Current
Generating Assets Vice President Jeff
LaFleur, 57, has been promoted to
senior vice president of Commercial
Operations for AEP, replacing Tim
Light, who has been named senior vice
president Business Development.
Beam joined AEP at the Kammer
Osborne
Plant in 1990 and has served in a variety of leadership roles in Generation.
In his current position he is responsible
for all aspects of project management,
project controls, commissioning and
construction activities within the Generation organization. Beam has a bachelor’s degree in Technical Management
Lafleur
from DeVry University and has completed the AEP Management Development Program at The Ohio State
University, and the AEP Leadership
Program at Virginia Tech. He is a Certiﬁed Project Management Professional.
Beam is on the board of directors of
Huckleberry House in Columbus, nonproﬁt crisis intervention center for
Beam
youth and families dealing with abuse,
poverty, neglect and homelessness.
Debra Osborne joined the company in 1987 at the
Gavin Plant. In addition to serving as Mountaineer
Plant manager, she has also served as plant manager
for Clinch River, Sporn, and Kanawha River plants.
She also was manager of the Simulator Learning
Center in St. Albans, W.Va. Osborne has a bachelor’s
degree in electrical engineering from West Virginia
University and has completed the AEP Management
Development Program at The Ohio State University,
and the AEP Leadership Program at Virginia Tech.
She has a certiﬁcate in Utility Management from Williamette University.
Appalachian Power has 1 million customers in Virginia, West Virginia and Tennessee (as AEP Appalachian Power). It is a unit of American Electric Power,
one of the largest electric utilities in the United States,
delivering electricity and custom energy solutions to
nearly 5.4 million customers in 11 states. AEP owns
the nation’s largest electricity transmission system,
a more than 40,000-mile network that includes more
765-kilovolt extra-high voltage transmission lines than
all other U.S. transmission systems combined. AEP
also operates 223,000 miles of distribution lines. AEP
ranks among the nation’s largest generators of electricity, owning approximately 31,000 megawatts of generating capacity in the U.S.

Holzer Health System

Holzer Low Dose CT Scan recently had its 100th patient, Janice Ratliff (shown center), for 2016. Also
pictured, from left, Sandy Thomas, program coordinator, Holzer Low Dose CT Scan, and Robin Blagg,
Holzer CT Tech.

ber of packs of cigarettes
a person smokes per day

by the number of years a
person has smoked.

Submitted by Holzer Health
System.

Urging consumers to make smart online decisions
Special to the Tribune

veriﬁes a secure connection.
CHARLESTON —
Don’t wire money. It’s
West Virginia Attorney
like cash — once it’s gone,
General Patrick Morrisey it can’t be returned.
urges consumers to make
Avoid unfamiliar sites
smart online purchases
with unrealistic discounts.
and delivery arrangeBe wary of social media
ments when looking for
sites offering vouchers or
the perfect holiday gift.
gift cards as they could be
“There are many things a means to retrieve perthat go into picking a gift sonal information.
for loved ones,” Attorney
Don’t use public Wi-Fi
General Morrisey said.
when entering credit card
“That’s why it’s important information for online
to take all the necessary
purchases.
precautions to protect
Frequently check credit
personal information and and bank statements to
ensure the gift reaches its catch any fraudulent purﬁnal destination.”
chases.
Consumers shopping
Some consumers may
online can do a few things ﬁnd it easier to use apps
to ensure their personal
when shopping online and
information doesn’t end
should take precautions
up in the wrong hands:
to ensure the app is legitiMake sure websites
mate.
start with https://, which
Scammers can create

apps to lure consumers
into purchasing a “great
deal,” but the app is actually used to steal personal
information from the consumer’s phone and infect
it with malware. Read
customer reviews and
check for typos or run-on
sentences in descriptions.
Most of those online
buys will require shipping. Consumers should
always require a signature
to verify their receipt and
have purchases delivered
to work rather than sitting unattended at home.
Both ideas will prevent
a loved one’s gift from
being stolen.
Shoppers also should be
careful not to fall for the
“parcel-waiting trick” in
which consumers receive
a card alleging a delivery
attempt was made with a

number to call for more
detail. Once a consumer
makes the call, they may
be placed on hold and
connected to a premium
or overseas service that
can prove costly and jeopardize personal information.
Anyone with questions
regarding questionable
online purchasing practices can contact the
Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Division
at 1-800-368-8808 or visit
the ofﬁce online at www.
wvago.gov.
Earlier this week,
the Attorney General
urged consumers to carefully review holiday credit
offers (http://eepurl.com/
crUL0j) and exercise caution when giving to charities (http://eepurl.com/
csfjiT).

Donors contribute $172K to WVU travel fund
Staff Report

national event was an honor,” Drury
said. “We’d like to thank all who
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – A
contributed to the Pride Travel Fund
record $172,842 was donated this
and made our travel to New York
fall to help the West Virginia UniCity possible.”
versity Marching Band travel to the
Band member Adam Richardson,
Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade
a senior saxophone player, recounted
in New York City and other perforthe feeling of marching through the
mances around the state and region. streets of Manhattan with his fellow
WVU Foundation representatives Mountaineers.
say 1,282 donors gave to the 2016
“We had just turned onto 6th
Pride Travel Fund Campaign, result- Avenue, and up on one of the balcoing in the largest amount ever connies were about 30 people in gold
tributed since the Fund was initiated and blue, with about 50 or so gold
in 2007.
and blue balloons. As we made that
This year, the band had the
turn and the group saw us, they let
extraordinary opportunity to lead
the balloons go and cheered. There
the 2016 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day
were so many people there just to
Parade, performing in front of milsee the Pride, and I never expected
lions of people live and on national
that,” Richardson said. “None of this
television. As one of ten marching
would have been possible without
bands and the only featured colthe gracious support of the people
legiate band, the “Pride of West Vir- who donated to the Pride Travel
ginia” paved the Manhattan parade
Fund. I don’t think a single member
route for ﬂoats, balloons, and celeb- of the band will forget this trip anyrity performers.
time soon.”
Director of the WVU Marching
Senior piccolo player Katie WilBand Jay Drury said the experience liams said marching in the Macy’s
was an unforgettable one for all
Parade has been a childhood dream
involved.
of hers.
“Representing West Virginia and
“The entire parade itself was so
surreal. Seeing gold and blue line the
the University at such a beloved

Submitted by Appalachian Power.

Daily Tribune to partner
with Medical Shoppe
Staff Report

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. Those who donate new,
unused and unwrapped gifts with a minimum value
of $5, will be eligible to enter a drawing for a free lift
chair. Winner of the chair will be drawn between 5-7
p.m., Dec. 16 at the Medical Shoppe.

streets of New York City made the
city feel like home,” Williams said.
“This trip was truly made possible
by donations through the Pride Travel Fund. Having people support an
organization that is so near and dear
to me means the absolute world.”
“The support we received from
WVU alumni and friends for this
year’s Pride Travel Fund has truly
been incredible,” said Mary Esposito, who headed up this year’s travel
fund campaign for the WVU Foundation. “Every donor to this year’s
travel fund helped make this once in
a lifetime trip a possibility for members of the Pride of West Virginia.
We are truly grateful for the recordbreaking support.”
The Pride Travel Fund is also
used to assist the band travel to
performances at away football games
as well as parades and exhibition
performances around the state and
region. This past season the band
performed at the West Virginia
State Fair in Fairlea, the WVU-BYU
football game at FedEx Field in
Maryland, and the Forest Festival in
Elkins among other events.
Submitted by WVU Foundation.

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�E ditorial
4 Thursday, December 8, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Who’s to
blame for
fake news?
By Greta Van Susteren
Contributing Columnist

When the problem of fake news ﬁrst started making
headlines, I was traveling across Southeast Asia and the
Middle East. That vantage point provided a striking
contrast: While we in America waste the right to a free
press, half a world away, the right is so precious that
people routinely risk their lives to support it.
In nations where media are state run or state
approved, journalists who try to work independently are
often threatened, arrested and even shot or beheaded.
To simply be harassed is a good day. In Turkey since the
July coup, for example, the government has detained
at least 200 journalists, and, according to Punto 24, a
Turkish nonproﬁt devoted to press freedom, more than
2,300 have been ﬁred. On Nov. 11 in Egypt, four reporters were detained when they tried to cover economic
protests. In places like Myanmar, it’s risky to list your
profession as “journalist.” I said, instead, I was a lawyer.
Without a doubt, the proliferation of fake news in
the United States is a problem. But when I hear calls to
shut down or block websites or censor what people can
read or watch, my First Amendment hackles rise. A free
press is fundamental to a free society, and curtailing it is
an even bigger threat to our way of life than fake news.
Besides, banning content won’t solve anything.
Fake news is hardly a new phenomenon. For decades,
Americans have had an appetite for fringe stories, from
grassy knoll conspiracy theories surrounding the Kennedy assassination to the alien secrets of Area 51 and
the baseless notion that 9/11 was an inside job. We
sometimes want truth to be stranger than ﬁction.
What is new is a propensity for large segments of society to believe things that are clearly untrue. Pope Francis
wouldn’t and didn’t endorse Donald Trump. An FBI
agent involved with Hillary Clinton’s email investigation
wasn’t found dead in a murder-suicide. These memes
were launched by specious internet sites as satire or
were put out as purposeful misinformation. Their spread
could have been halted by a more skeptical public.
But we delude ourselves if we think that this problem
originates only with online trolls and heedless consumers in the thrall of the internet and social media.
Consider one of the bigger fake news stories of this
decade — that a low-budget online video making fun
of Islam and the prophet Muhammad spontaneously
sparked the violent protest at the U.S. facilities in Benghazi, Libya, on Sept. 11, 2012, and led to the deaths
of four Americans, including the U.S. ambassador to
Libya.
This was the story initially pushed by key members of
the Obama administration, including the White House
national security advisor, and accepted by much of the
mainstream American media. Throughout September
2012, President Obama himself repeatedly cited the
“extremely offensive video” made by a “sort of shadowy
character” as the cause or proximate cause of the attack
— to David Letterman, to Univision’s Jorge Ramos and
to Joy Behar of “The View.” We’ve since learned from
then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s private email
to her daughter, Chelsea, on the night of the attack that
Clinton believed the violence was the work of “an alQaeda-like group.” It wasn’t a reporter who uncovered
that fact but a U.S. congressional committee.
Forcing Facebook to change its newsfeed algorithm or
shutting down websites won’t ﬁx fundamental problems
like this.
For Americans to pay attention to real news, newsrooms have to supply it. Too often today, newsrooms
are like courtrooms. Reporters, editors and anchors cast
themselves as prosecutors or defense attorneys, building a case for or against a story line and molding the
evidence to ﬁt their argument. (Some even anoint themselves as judge and jury and explicitly render a verdict
after that.)
Reporters must ask tough questions and go where the
answers, rather than their preconceptions, lead them.
Recall that in the run-up to the Iraq war, The New York
Times breathlessly reported on Saddam Hussein’s extensive programs to create weapons of mass destruction.
After the invasion, many of these claims could not be
substantiated.
Real reporting is detective work, trying to get to the
bottom of a story or event. That requires skepticism and
patience. If a reporter is going to be an advocate, he or
she should play devil’s advocate — and do it with every
source, on all sides.
Part of the reason fake news is so easy to believe is
that fringe stories no longer read or sound all that different from too many of the real stories. Too often, both
have little or no sourcing; they lack context and they get
disseminated with almost no fact-checking. Sometimes
the fake stories look, sound or read better than real
ones. And both are chasing the same thing: ratings or
online clicks.
There’s a reason our Founding Fathers explicitly guaranteed freedom of the press in the First Amendment. It
is imperative for a free and healthy society. Just ask the
journalists in unfree places who every day risk their lives
on its behalf. If we are squandering that freedom, don’t
just blame Facebook or Twitter. Blame all of us.
Greta Van Susteren, a lawyer and former anchor of Fox News’“On the Record,”
is working on a book on social media. She wrote this for the Los Angeles Times.

THEIR VIEW

Democrats should remember the lessons of RFK
By Larry Tye
Contributing Columnist

Here’s an idea for
beleaguered Democrats
looking for a way out of
their postelection wilderness: Look back to a
Democratic icon of half
a century ago who was
on the cusp of uniting
precisely those angry
working-class whites
who rallied to Donald
Trump with Hillary
Clinton’s coalition of
minorities and liberals.
The Robert F. Kennedy who ran for
president in 1968 was a
racial healer, a tribune
for the dispossessed
and an uncommon optimist in an age of political distrust.
“Each time a man
stands up for an ideal,”
Bobby reminded us,
“he sends forth a tiny
ripple of hope, and
crossing each other
from a million different
centers of energy and
daring, those ripples
build a current which
can sweep down the
mightiest walls of
oppression and resistance.”
No wonder audiences
swooned. And his
words seem even more
resonant in this looming Era of Trump.
The ﬁrst key to
Bobby’s broad appeal
was that our favorite
liberal began life on the
other side of the ideological chasm. He was
nurtured on the rightist orthodoxies of his
dynasty-building father
and he kick-started his
public career as counsel
to the left-baiting Sen.
Joseph McCarthy. That
younger RFK was a
bare-knuckled political
operative who masterminded his brother’s
whatever-it-takes bids
for senator and president. As attorney general, Kennedy approved
FBI wiretaps of Martin
Luther King Jr., whom
he never trusted or
liked. Even guerrilla
warfare was in his tool
kit: Bobby masterminded cloak-and-dagger
operations against
Communist Cuba that
included plotting the
elimination of Fidel
Castro. His steely
conservatism made
him an idol to a young
Rudolph Giuliani and
younger Bill O’Reilly

and Karl Rove. It also
ensured that blue-collar
whites stuck with him
even as he moved leftward.
The upshot: In his
ﬁrst contested presidential primary, in
Indiana, Bobby won the
seven largest counties
where the racial-backlash candidate George
Wallace had done best
in 1964 (at the same
time he scored a crushing 85 percent of the
votes in African-American districts). He did
better still in Nebraska,
which had even fewer
blacks and more farmers. All of which is why
Richard Nixon was so
nervous about facing
off against another
Kennedy in November,
and why contemporary
Democrats should
worry less about ideological purity and more
about ﬁnding someone
with Bobby’s populist
passion.
Lesson two for
today’s hyperpartisan
politics is the way Sen.
Bobby Kennedy fashioned bold bipartisan
solutions to nagging
problems like rebuilding the Brooklyn neighborhood of BedfordStuyvesant, America’s
biggest ghetto. Washington would pay for
training unemployed
adults, constructing a
cultural complex and
other classic liberal
initiatives. Tax breaks
would lure big business to build industrial
plants and shopping
centers, an idea that
drew raves from the
conservative standardbearer William F. Buckley Jr. And borrowing
an approach from the
New Left protest movement, local residents
would exercise unprecedented self-governance.
“We are striking out
in new directions,” the
New York senator said,
“perhaps without map
or compass to guide
us.” Half Che Guevara,
half Niccolo Machiavelli, Bobby was a shakerupper dedicated to the
art of the possible.
It doesn’t take much
imagination to know
where Bobby would
have stood on Trump.
As a Harvard undergraduate, Kennedy took
on the anti-Semitic
demagogue Father

“Each time a man stands up for an ideal,
he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and
crossing each other from a million different
centers of energy and daring, those ripples
build a current which can sweep down
the mightiest walls of oppression and
resistance.”
—Robert F. Kennedy

Leonard Feeney. As
attorney general, he
stood down Gov. Wallace, who vowed to
block the schoolhouse
door to black students
seeking admission to
the University of Alabama. The only ﬁgure
who ranked ahead of
Jimmy Hoffa and J.
Edgar Hoover on Bobby’s most-hated list was
Roy Cohn, the young
McCarthy protege who,
as an old man, served
as a political mentor
to the young Donald
Trump.
The truest key to
Bobby’s political success was his authenticity. Over the course of
his 82-day campaign
for president, Bobby
deﬁed people’s prototypes of pandering politicians. He knew how
issues like crime could
be used as a wedge
between blacks and
whites, poor and rich.
So he made sure that
every speech on crime
included a call for justice, and that what he
said to chambers of
commerce differed in
the sequence but not
the elements from what
he said in the slums.
He told college kids
everywhere he went
that they could change
the world, so why
weren’t they?
It happened again at
a luncheon of Civitans,
a men’s service club. As
his audience chewed
on Salisbury steaks, he
took the requisite questions on gun control
and daylight saving
time. Then he turned
to his biggest issue —
“American children,
starving in America”
— and asked, “Do you
know, there are more
rats than people in New
York City?” Hearing
guffaws, this senator
who was kept up nights
by images of the hungry children he’d met
in the Mississippi Delta
grew grim: “Don’t …
laugh.” Thomas Congdon Jr., an editor at the

Saturday Evening Post,
was struck by what he
witnessed: “He was
telling them precisely
the opposite of what
they wanted to hear.”
It was demagoguery in
reverse.
What Bobby accomplished in 1968 could
be a beacon for 2016,
if the progressive
opposition is listening.
America was as riven
then as it is today, and
as tempted by divisive
demagogues. The Cold
War and New Deal
seemed archaic to the
generation of the Thaw
and the New Left. Race
riots were igniting the
cities and overseas
tensions were widening the split between
parents and children.
There was no national
consensus anymore
— but there were few
ﬁgures in American
politics more able and
determined to build
bridges between the
alienated and the mainstream than Bobby,
who had lived on both
sides. He’d laid claim to
a rare piece of political
ground as a pragmatic
idealist, which was the
same terrain JFK had
hoped to plow. While
some remained skeptical, others were dazzled
by the possibilities of
a standard-bearer with
that blend of tenaciousness and gentleness.
“One of the reasons, I
suspect, that some people are puzzled by Senator Kennedy is that he
is a tough-minded man
with a tender heart,”
said Sen. George
McGovern, who stood
with Bobby against
both hunger in America
and U.S. involvement in
Vietnam. “He is, to borrow Dr. King’s ﬁtting
description of the good
life, ‘a creative synthesis of opposites.’”
Larry Tye is the author of
“Bobby Kennedy: The Making
of a Liberal Icon.” Readers may
send him email at larrytye@
gmail.com. He wrote this for The
Philadelphia Inquirer.

�NEWS/WEATHER

46

MEIGS COUNTY BRIEFS

Red Cross, Fire Department
smoke detector program

representative. From the
Mason County Courthouse, bells will toll for
each individual victim.
Holdyn Keefer, a
young man from Mason
County who has been
battling leukemia, will
throw the honorary
“switch” on the lights
which will decorate the
trees around the bridge
memorial. A star will
also be placed at the site
and a wreath. Last year,
a memorial tree in front
of the courthouse was lit
in remembrance of the
victims, but this year,
due to the tree’s deteriorating condition, the
lighting ceremony was
moved to the group of
trees around the actual
memorial.

Fruit
Baskets
POMEROY — Drew Webster #39 of the American Legion Pomeroy is taking orders fro fruit baskets. Fruit baskets are $15 each and will be delivered on Dec. 18. Proceeds beneﬁt local veterans.
To order call John Hood 740-992-6991 or Steve
VanMeter 740-992-2875.

Pearl Harbor

Chili
Dinner

During World War II, he went on
to command U.S.S. O’Brien, which
served in support of the Normandy
DDay landings on the beaches and
at the port of Cherbourg and served
in the Paciﬁc Theater during island
invasions leading up to the Japanese islands and the end of the war.
He later commanded the cruiser,
U.S.S. Los Angeles. Rear Admiral
Outerbridge’s family home was at
499 Fisher Street, Middleport.
Thousands of miles from Middleport at the site of the attack, in
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, thousands
gathered for a ceremony to mark
the 75th anniversary.
The crowd bowed their heads at
the precise moment decades ago
when Japanese planes began their
assault on the U.S. naval base at the
harbor. And they stood and clapped
when survivors joined active-duty
servicemen and women and National Park Service rangers in dedicating wreaths to those killed.
Attendees also gave a lengthy
ovation to Adm. Harry Harris of

Briefs

ﬁre departments. In
case of a house ﬁre,
residents have only a
From page 1
few moments to escape,
and the sounding of a
offer to install free
smoke alarm can give
smoke alarms to resipeople notice and help
dents, and Red Cross
save lives. Residents
volunteers will have
not visited on Dec. 10
information on ﬁre
can call the Red Cross
safety and the best
at 740-593-5273 to
plans to evacuate in
request the information
case of a house ﬁre.
and smoke alarms. A
This is a free program
offered by the American volunteer will visit as
time allows.
Red Cross and area

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

30°

36°

29°

Breezy today with variable cloudiness. Partly
cloudy and cold tonight. High 39° / Low 24°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

48°/35°
48°/31°
78° in 1951
3° in 1977

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.15
Month to date/normal
0.57/0.77
Year to date/normal
42.86/40.16

Snowfall

(in inches)

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.

1

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.0
Month to date/normal
0.0/0.5
Season to date/normal
Trace/1.3

WEATHER TRIVIA™

SUN &amp; MOON

Q: What weather instrument contains
spirits?
Fri.
7:35 a.m.
5:06 p.m.
2:16 p.m.
2:10 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Full

Last

New

Dec 13 Dec 20 Dec 29

First

Jan 5

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

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

Major
6:23a
7:10a
7:57a
8:46a
9:39a
10:35a
11:36a

Minor
12:12a
12:57a
1:44a
2:32a
3:24a
4:20a
5:21a

Major
6:48p
7:36p
8:25p
9:15p
10:08p
11:06p
----

Minor
12:36p
1:23p
2:11p
3:01p
3:54p
4:51p
5:51p

WEATHER HISTORY
A large storm system brought heavy
rain to the East on Dec. 8, 1963.
Lightning caused the explosion of
fuel under one of the outboard wing
tanks of a jetliner passing through
the storm. Eighty-one people died.

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

35°
25°
Mostly sunny and
cold

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

Logan
33/21

Adelphi
34/21
Chillicothe
34/22

Lucasville
37/22
Portsmouth
38/22

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

39°
29°

Cloudy and chilly; a
little p.m. rain

Morning rain; cloudy,
chilly

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
12.24
17.21
21.59
13.25
13.09
24.40
12.33
25.54
34.27
12.52
17.20
34.00
17.10

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.92
+0.62
-0.15
+0.30
+0.02
-0.62
-0.33
-0.65
-0.40
-0.51
+0.10
+0.50
+0.90

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Mainly cloudy and
cold

36°
20°
Colder with a snow
shower possible

NATIONAL CITIES
Belpre
38/22

St. Marys
38/23

Parkersburg
37/21

Coolville
37/22

Elizabeth
39/22

Spencer
38/22

Buffalo
39/23

Ironton
39/22

Milton
40/22

St. Albans
40/23

Huntington
39/21

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
37/32
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
San Francisco
0s
60/55
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
67/52
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

WEDNESDAY

38°
23°

Marietta
37/22

Athens
36/21

Ashland
39/22
Grayson
39/21

Reach Beth Sergent at bsergent@
civitasmedia.com or on Twitter @
BSergentWrites.

TUESDAY

40°
32°

Wilkesville
37/22
POMEROY
Jackson
38/23
37/22
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
39/23
38/23
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
31/21
GALLIPOLIS
39/24
39/23
39/23

South Shore Greenup
39/22
37/21

37

opened to trafﬁc in 1928.
At the grand opening of
the bridge, there were an
estimated 10,000 people
at the event that was
talked about not only in
the immediate area, but
across the Midwest. The
bridge was a two-lane,
1760-foot-long eyebar
suspension bridge with
a 700-foot main span
102 feet above the bottom of the Ohio River
channel and two 380-foot
anchor spans. It was
the ﬁrst bridge in the
world to be coated with
aluminum. The bridge
was not designed to hold
the weight of increasing
trafﬁc and heavier vehicles over ensuing years.
It had a “one-eighth of
an inch crack” in one of
the structure’s eyebars
that caused the disaster.

today” never failed to stand for
the national anthem. The crowd
applauded for nearly a minute.
Pearl Harbor events took place
across the country Wednesday. In
Texas, hundreds of well-wishers
applauded World War II veterans
George H.W. Bush and Bob Dole
during a patriotic ceremony. A tattered U.S. ﬂag that ﬂew at Pearl
Harbor was on display at an Ohio
museum, and dozens of WWII
veterans in the Cincinnati region
recounted their experiences for
high school students gathered at the
Sharonville Convention Center.
President Barack Obama issued
a statement saying he and ﬁrst lady
Michelle Obama join Americans in
remembering those who gave their
lives on Dec. 7, 1941.
“We can never repay the profound
debt of gratitude we owe to those
who served on our behalf,” he said.
The president said he will visit
the USS Arizona Memorial later
this month with Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe of Japan.
Information on the Pearl Harbor
ceremony at Pearl Harbor and
other locations taken from Associated Press reports.

MONDAY

Murray City
34/21

McArthur
35/21

Waverly
35/22

SUNDAY

A: An alcohol thermometer.

Today
7:35 a.m.
5:06 p.m.
1:39 p.m.
1:03 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

SATURDAY

Mostly cloudy and
cold

0

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

FRIDAY

33°
21°

ALMANAC
High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

this year.
“I thought it was beautiful,” Grady said about
last year’s inaugural
observance. “I couldn’t
have asked for anything
better. I hope everyone
comes out and shows
their support again.”
Grady explained, he’s
always a little stunned
when some people don’t
know about the tragedy
but these types of observances remind everyone,
that what happened on
Dec. 15, 1967, is not forgotten.
Grady added, assisting
with the event are the
Mason County Commission and Point Pleasant
Fire Department.
About the Silver
Bridge: Dr. Charles Holzer has been recognized
as being one of the people
who helped pushed the
project that was completed in one year and

the U.S. Paciﬁc Command when he
spoke in favor of standing for the
national anthem.
The anniversary is a tribute to
“what freedom does when it is faced
with fascism,” said Paul Hilliard of
the National World War II Museum.
“America went abroad to gain
freedom for millions of other people,” said Hilliard, a Marine veteran
and one of several dignitaries and
ofﬁcials who presented wreaths for
the fallen at a memorial over the
sunken hull of USS Arizona. “We
are kind of unique. We are an exceptional nation.”
Wednesday’s ceremony started
with the USS Halsey sounding its
whistle to mark the start of the
moment of silence at 7:55 a.m. It
ended with F-22 ﬁghter jets ﬂying
in formation overhead.
Harris told the crowd the servicemen attacked at Pearl Harbor
“engaged the enemy as best they
could,” and there is sorrow for
those who died. “Yet we are also
inspired by their great gift to the
world — the gift of freedom itself,”
he said.
Harris also said: “You can bet
that the men and women we honor

From page 1

POMEROY — An all you can eat chili dinner
will be held from 1-5 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 11 at
Court Street Grill to beneﬁt the Pomeroy Blues
and Jazz Society. Menu will include chili, hot
dogs, sauce, sloppy joes, peanut butter sandwiches
and desserts.

Precipitation

Kenny Grady of Mason
County, who has once
again organized the
event, said Keefer was
chosen because he’s
been an “inspiration” to
people from across the
area and the ceremony
is ultimately about hope.
Grady has also said he
sees the memorial ceremony as an opportunity
to be inspired by the
memory of those who
were lost and support
the loved ones who are
left. The ceremony also
provides support to
the towns which were
forever affected by the
tragedy.
Though there have
been observances to
mark the tragic anniversary, last year was the
ﬁrst time the ceremony
at 6th Street was held.
That ceremony had a
large crowd - a scenerio
Grady hopes will repeat

From page 1

MIDDLEPORT — Volunteer ﬁreﬁghters and
Red Cross volunteers will be going door-to-door
in the Middleport area on Saturday, Dec. 10 beginning in mid-morning. The ﬁreﬁghters will offer
to install free smoke alarms to residents, and Red
Cross volunteers will have information on ﬁre
safety and the best plans to evacuate in case of a
house ﬁre. This is a free program offered by the
American Red Cross and area ﬁre departments.
In case of a house ﬁre, residents have only a few
moments to escape, and the sounding of a smoke
alarm can give people notice and help save lives.
Residents not visited on Dec. 10 can call the Red
Cross at 740-593-5273 to request the information
and smoke alarms. A volunteer will visit as time
allows.

Thursday, December 8, 2016 5

Clendenin
39/18
Charleston
39/22

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
14/-4

Billings
7/-3

Montreal
35/25

Toronto
33/23

Minneapolis
24/10
Detroit
32/25
Chicago
26/18

Denver
22/8

Kansas City
25/11

Monterrey
62/41

Washington
50/30

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
42/28/s
15/9/pc
49/26/c
49/32/pc
47/26/pc
7/-3/pc
30/28/sn
44/30/c
39/22/pc
54/25/pc
17/8/s
26/18/sf
32/19/c
31/25/sf
30/21/c
42/26/s
22/8/s
24/12/s
32/25/sf
79/67/sh
50/34/r
28/18/c
25/11/s
55/40/pc
41/20/pc
67/52/pc
37/21/pc
83/66/t
24/10/sn
41/20/pc
55/37/c
44/32/c
35/15/s
74/52/pc
46/30/pc
69/49/s
35/23/c
41/24/c
53/26/pc
51/25/pc
31/17/pc
35/32/sf
60/55/r
37/32/sn
50/30/pc

Hi/Lo/W
49/30/s
15/6/pc
42/25/s
43/30/s
41/24/s
12/3/sf
42/29/sn
38/22/pc
32/21/c
44/19/s
43/28/pc
25/12/pc
31/18/pc
34/21/sf
33/18/sf
45/34/s
48/23/pc
26/18/pc
34/21/sf
80/70/sh
51/36/s
30/16/pc
28/19/s
59/42/pc
37/22/s
67/57/pc
34/20/pc
73/67/c
18/9/c
35/20/s
47/36/s
40/28/pc
40/26/s
63/46/pc
42/27/s
70/49/pc
33/21/sf
35/15/pc
44/22/s
42/23/s
31/19/s
46/38/sh
61/50/sh
43/36/r
43/30/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
49/26

El Paso
49/29
Chihuahua
54/33

New York
44/32

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 Opa Locka, FL
-31° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global

Houston
50/34

High
Low
Miami
83/66

111° in Julia Creek, Australia
-59° in D’elind’e, Russia

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

60647073

Daily Sentinel

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 8, 2016 s 6

Tornadoes
thump
Federal
Hocking,
61-25
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

South Gallia’s Caleb Henry shoots in between four Eagles, during Eastern’s 40-39 victory, on Tuesday at SGHS.

Eagles slip past South Gallia, 40-39
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

MERCERVILLE, Ohio —
There’s nothing wrong with a
little drama.
The Eastern boys basketball
team claimed a 40-39 Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division
triumph over host South Gallia, on Thursday night in Gallia
County.
The Rebels (0-3, 0-1 TVC
Hocking) took a one-point,
39-38 lead with two seconds
remaining in regulation, but
SGHS fouled Eastern (1-1, 1-0)
sophomore Sharp Facemyer on
his last-second shot attempt,
that came from well beyond
midcourt.
With the game clock at zero,
Sharp Facemyer missed the
ﬁrst of his three throws, but
sank the next two, giving Eastern the 40-39 victory.
“Sharp went 1-of-12 from the
ﬁeld on Friday, but he stepped
up and made shots when he

See HOCKING | 7

OVP SPORTS
SCHEDULE
Thursday, December 8
Boys Basketball
Cross Lanes Christian
at Ohio Valley Christian,
7:30
Girls Basketball
Wahama at Southern,
7:30
Meigs at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Rock Hill at Gallia
Academy, 7:30
Wellston at River Valley, 7:15
Waterford at South Gallia, 7:15
Cross Lanes Christian
at Ohio Valley Christian,
6 p.m.
Eastern at Miller, 7:15
Friday, December 9
Boys Basketball
Point Pleasant at Gallia
Academy 7:30
Miller at Southern, 7:30
Trimble at Eastern,
7:30
Jackson at Meigs, 7:30
Athens at River Valley,
7:30
Wahama at Belpre, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Ironton St. Joseph at
Ohio Valley Christian, 6
p.m.
Wrestling
Wahama at Point Pleasant Jason Eades Memorial Duals, 6 p.m.

Photos by Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

needed to tonight,” Eastern
head coach Jeremy Hill said.
“His cousin, Jett Facemyer
didn’t have his best effort, but
we had other guys step up.
That’s a sign of a good ball
club, when someone steps up
and takes the place of a scorer.”
South Gallia led 6-2, 4:45
into the game, but Eastern
fought back to take a 7-6 lead
by the end of the ﬁrst canto.
Less than a minute into the
second quarter, EHS senior
Jett Facemyer — the Eagles
top returnee, who averaged
over 23 points per game last
season — picked up his third
foul and was forced the sit for
the remainder of the half.
South Gallia took advantage
initially, jumping out to a 10-7
lead, but Eastern ended the
ﬁrst half with a 13-8 run and a
20-18 lead.
“That’s something we can
build on and give the other
See EAGLES | 7

Eastern sophomore Sharp Facemyer (4) shoots over South Gallia’s Curtis Haner
(5) during the Eagles’ one-point victory, on Tuesday in Mercerville.

Weihl, Warriors down Meigs
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

Meigs senior Dillon Mahr battles Warren’s Bryce
Gandee (34) and Trace Congleton (3) for possession
of the ball during Tuesday night’s non-league boys
basketball game at Meigs High School.

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — It may have
taken a while, but Chase Weihl and the
Warriors ﬁnally got going against the
Meigs Marauders.
Spearheaded by a 1-3-1 second-half
zone defense, and with Weihl scoring 17
of his game-high 22 points in the ﬁnal
16 minutes, visiting Warren captured a
60-46 non-league boys basketball victory
on Tuesday night — inside Meigs High
School’s Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
The contest marked Warren’s season
opener, while the Marauders — which
opened with a 70-53 non-league loss to

Anderson www.andersonmcdaniel.com Meigs
Memory
McDaniel ������������������

Funeral Homes

949-2300

PLAYER
Meigs:
Kassidy Betzing Sophomore
in one game had 15 pts,
6 rebounds, 6 assists, 4
steals and led her team in
both offense and defense.

Gardens

OF THE

Gallia Academy on Friday night — fell to
0-2.
While the Marauders are known for
their 1-3-1 zone, it was the Warriors —
with their 1-3-1 half-court zone in the
second half — that turned the tide on
Tuesday.
With Warren leading 25-24 at halftime,
the Warriors forced a bevy of Marauder
turnovers that turned into offense.
The Warriors outscored Meigs 35-21 in
the second half, but it was a 22-13 thirdquarter surge that propelled Warren into
runaway mode.
And, speaking of runaway, watching
See WARRIORS | 7

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7440
spaces available

WEEK

Southern:
Faith Teaford Senior
in 2 games she scored 31 points,
19 rebounds, and 4 steals. She
led her team in both offense and
defense in both games.

Eastern:
Laura Pullins Senior
in one game she had
16 points, 15 rebounds,
and 6 assists. She
led the team in both
defense and offense.

Taylor Motors

250 North Columbus Road,
Athens, Oh 45701

(877)812-9603

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60694852

60694851

STEWART, Ohio —
Starting the season in
style.
The Southern boys
basketball team rolled
to a 61-25 victory over
Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division host
Federal Hocking, in the
Tornadoes season opener,
on Tuesday in McInturf
Gymnasium.
The Tornadoes (1-0,
1-0 TVC Hocking) connected on ﬁve trifectas in
the opening stanza, and
led 19-6 eight minutes
into play.
Southern outscored the
Lancers (0-4, 0-1) 20-to-5
in the second quarter, and
the Purple and Gold held
a 39-11 lead at the break.
The Tornadoes led
55-20 at the conclusion of
the third quarter and outscored FHHS 6-to-5 over
the ﬁnal eight minutes,
sealing the 61-25 victory.
SHS was outrebounded

�SPORTS

Eagles

that by now. We didn’t lost
the game on that play, we lost
the game with turnovers, free
throws and missed layups. You
From page 6
don’t lose games at the end,
guys conﬁdence,” Coach Hill
you lose them in the duration.
said of his team’s ability to play I’m proud of the kids, they
without its senior leader. “I’m made the plays to win the
proud of our effort, you never game.”
want to play as sloppy as we
Both team ﬁnished the
did, but sometimes you can
game with 18 rebounds, with
play a bad game and still come the Eagles holding a 5-to-4
out on top.”
edge on the offensive glass.
The teams exchanged the
The Eagles committed 18
lead four times in the third
turnovers, while SGHS gave
quarter, but Eastern still led
the ball away 17 times.
by two, 29-27, headed into the
“We did everything but win
ﬁnale.
the game,” Coach Howell said.
Eastern expanded its lead
“We got beat at Symmes Valley
to four, just 30 seconds into
on Friday and now that’s two
the fourth, but South Gallia
games that we’ve had a pretty
answered with a 6-0 run and
good chance to win. You can’t
led 33-31 with 4:30 remaining. make those turnovers and
However, the Eagles scored
mental mistakes.”
the next ﬁve points — making
Eastern was 18-of-24 (75
5-of-6 free throw attempts —
percent) from the free throw
retaking the lead at 36-33.
line, including 9-of-11 (81.8
With 52 seconds left, SGHS percent) in the ﬁnal period.
took a 37-36 advantage, as
The Eagles shot just 10-of-28
Caleb Henry came up with a
(35.7 percent) from the ﬁeld,
steal and break-away layup.
including 2-of-6 (33.3 percent)
Eastern answered with 44
from beyond the arc.
seconds left, as Sharp Face“We shot the ball well from
myer made 2-of-2 free throw
the free throw line, but we
attempts. With two seconds
didn’t shoot well from the
left in the game, Caleb Henry ﬁeld,” said Coach Hill. “We
sank a jump shot to give the
missed a lot of layups, but
Rebels a one-point lead, but
we did get a win and that’s
Sharp Facemyer made two
something we’re proud of. If
clutch free throws with no
we could have played better
time on the clock, giving EHS basketball, we could be hapthe 40-39 win.
pier about the win, but a win
“That’s my fault, because we is a win.”
haven’t covered that,” SGHS
The Rebels were 5-of-14
head coach Larry Howell said (35.7 percent) from the free
of the foul that sent Sharp
throw line and 16-of-33 (48.5
Facemyer to the line. “We
percent) from the ﬁeld, includhaven’t got to that yet and,
ing 2-of-8 (25 percent) from
deep.
as a coach, you should get to

Hocking

ﬁeld, including just 1-of-10 (10
percent) from beyond the arc.
SHS senior Crenson Rogers
led all scorers with 18 points,
From page 6
followed by Tylar Blevins with
32-to-29 in the game, but held
16 and Blake Johnson with 11.
an 18-to-5 advantage in assists
Dylan Smith poured in seven
and a 16-to-4 edge in steals.
points for the victors, Weston
The Purple and Gold commitThorla added ﬁve, while Eli
ted 17 turnovers in the win,
Hunter and Trey Pickens both
seven fewer than FHHS.
ﬁnished with two markers.
Southern shot 24-of-58 (41.4
Rogers and Pickens led the
percent) from the ﬁeld, includTornadoes on the glass with
ing 8-of-25 (32 percent) from
six rebounds apiece. Jonah
long range. The Tornadoes
Hoback marked a team-best
also made 5-of-7 free throw
ﬁve assists, followed by Clayattempts, equaling 71.4 perton Wood with three. Smith
cent.
paced the SHS defense with
Meanwhile, the Lancers
ﬁve steals, while Johnson and
were 4-of-10 (40 percent) from
Kody Greene each had three
the free throw stripe and 10-ofsteals.
38 (26.3 percent) from the
Brandon Gould led the hosts

Warriors
From page 6

Weihl — the six-foot, seveninch Warren center — was
like witnessing a locomotive
barrelling in for two thunderous dunks.
His ﬁrst slam capped a
spree of seven unanswered
Warren points that made it
34-27 just two minutes and 20
seconds into the third quarter.
With three minutes and ﬁve
seconds to play, Weihl ran the
fast break — and threw down
another two-hander to make
it 53-39.
In all, Weihl went off for
eight ﬁeld goals and 6-of-9
free throws — with all but
two buckets and one foul shot
in the second half.
He also grabbed seven
rebounds, and blocked ﬁve
shots.
“Chase (Weihl) had a great
second half, and we had to
make some adjustments and
went to a 1-3-1 (zone defense)
that created some offense for
us. Sometimes, we’re going to
have to do some zone things
and use our size and keep our
bigs in the middle and contest
shots,” said Warren coach
Blane Maddox. “We’re not
necessarily quick in all spots,
but we’re big and long. We
found a way to shorten the
court on Meigs a little bit.”
The Marauders, meanwhile, missed a lot of shots.
They made just 30-percent
overall on 16-of-53 — netting
only 10 of their 33 two-point
attempts, combined with a
6-of-20 performance from
three-point range.
Weihl — with his wingspan
— was on top of the 1-3-1,
and the Marauders mounted

turnovers in the form of poor
passes or giveaways as the
result of Warren’s length.
Still, despite seeing shots
being contested, Meigs coach
Ed Fry admitted that his
squad simply isn’t shooting
well.
“We’re missing three-pointers, but we’re also missing a
lot of two-point baskets, a lot
of easy baskets we should be
getting,” he said. “Zones are
giving us trouble right now.
We’re shooting a lot with a
hand of our face.”
Warren went to its zone
thanks to ﬁrst-half foul trouble, in which Weihl and fellow
forward Josh Huffman had to
be benched.
Aside from the ties at 2-2
and 7-7, the Marauders had
trailed for the entire half —
including by a count of 21-11
with 6:11 to play in the second stanza.
But Meigs scored nine
unanswered to trail by one at
the three-minute mark, before
Bishop Ford scored his second
ﬁeld goal to make it 23-20
only 15 seconds later.
The Marauders’ Dillon
Mahr then made two free
throws with 2:19 left in the
quarter, then Luke Musser
made a steal and layup off
an inbound turnover to put
Meigs in front for its only lead
(24-23).
However, that Marauders’
lead lasted only 52 seconds,
as Kyler Dennis drained two
free throws with 15.5 tics to
go — giving the Warriors the
advantage for good.
Huffman hit a shot only 20
seconds into the second half,
then Musser made the second
of his four threes for a 27-27
tie.
The Maroon and Gold got
no closer, though, as Weihl

“We made plays when we
had to,” Coach Howell said.
“We’re not going to be a high
possession team. Our kids
were gritty on defense tonight,
I thought we did a pretty good
job on Jett and I’m proud of
our kids. We talked with the
kids about competing better
and getting better daily, and I
think we did that tonight.”
Eastern’s offense was led by
sophomore Sharp Facemyer
with 14 points, followed by
Jon Wolfe with eight points
and two assists. Jett Facemyer
scored seven points, Corbett
Catlett added six, while Garrett Barringer scored four and
Nate Dust scored one to round
out the EHS total.
Wolfe led the Eagle defense
with a trio steals. Wolfe and
Sharp Facemyer also led
EHS on the boards with ﬁve
rebounds apiece.
Caleb Henry led the Rebels
with 16 points, followed by Eli
Ellis and Josh Henry with six
each. Colton Bowers scored
four, Curtis Haner and Joey
Woodall each added three,
while Austin Day scored one
point. Haner had a team-best
two assists, while Caleb Henry
had team-highs in rebounds
and steals, with ﬁve and three
respectively.
These teams will meet again
on February 7, in Tuppers
Plains.
Both teams are scheduled to
face Trimble next, as Eastern
hosts the Tomcats on Friday,
and SGHS visits Glouster on
Tuesday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2100.

with eight points, followed
by Jared Hawk and Michael
Johns with ﬁve apiece. Walker
Church and Deakin Hatﬁeld
rounded out the FHHS offense
with four and three points
respectively. This is the ﬁrst
time in its four games so far
this season that Federal Hocking has surpassed 20 points.
Southern will look to sweep
FHHS on February 7, when the
Lancers invade Racine.
The Tornadoes are back in
action on Friday, when Miller
visits Meigs County for a TVC
Hocking showdown. Federal
Hocking will visit Waterford
on Friday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2100.

bagged a baseline jumper,
Dennis dropped in a threeball, and ﬁnally Weihl raced in
for his ﬁrst of two dunks.
Mahr made a ﬁeld goal to
trim the deﬁcit to 34-29, but
a 10-3 Warrior run over the
next two minutes and 20 seconds pushed the lead to double ﬁgures where it remained
the rest of the way.
Warren’s largest margin
stood at 60-43, as the advantage remained at least double
digits for the ﬁnal 10 minutes
and 15 seconds.
Dennis — on two deuces,
two treys and 3-of-3 free
throws — added 13 points
for the Warriors, while Huffman hit ﬁve ﬁeld goals and
2-of-2 ﬁrst-quarter free throws
towards 12.
Bryce Gandee, on a thirdquarter three and a fourthquarter two, ﬁnished with
ﬁve.
Huffman had nine
rebounds, as Meigs’ Jared
Kennedy led all rebounders
with 10 — in addition to
three blocks.
Musser made three of his
four trifectas in the third
frame, part of six total ﬁeld
goals and a team-high 16
points.
Mahr managed the other
two Meigs triples en route to
13 points, as Christian Mattox
— on four ﬁeld goals and 2-of5 free throws — mustered 10.
Both Kennedy and Mahr
made 3-of-4 free throws, as
Kennedy connected for ﬁve
points while Garrett Buckley
bucketed a ﬁeld goal.
Meigs will welcome Jackson for another non-league tilt
on Friday night, before facing
Oak Hill at the University of
Rio Grande on Saturday.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2106

Thursday, December 8, 2016 7

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do is strengthen all your bladder and pelvic

Number of urination accidents

Daily Sentinel

8
7

7.3

79%

6
5.5

5
4

reduction
4.1

3
2

2.2
1.5

1
0

Pre

Week Week Week Week
1
2
4
6

Sogabe H, et al. (2001), J Med Pharm Sci. 46 (5) 727-37

Participants who took part in a clinical
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THESE STATEMENTS HAVE NOT BEEN EVALUATED BY THE FDA. THIS PRODUCT IS NOT
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�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, December 8, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

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Personals
Lift chair in very good
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cost $1250 sell for $800 cash
call 740-645-8545

In Print. Online. In Touch.

Houses For Rent
2 bdrm house for rent in
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References &amp; security deposit
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740-446-3870.
2 bedroom apartments
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Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
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MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
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BLONDIE

Thursday, December 8, 2016 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

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�10 Thursday, December 8, 2016

Daily Sentinel

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        <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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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="6634">
              <text>December 8, 2016</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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      <name>chaney</name>
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    <tag tagId="958">
      <name>corbin</name>
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    <tag tagId="1436">
      <name>dement</name>
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    <tag tagId="81">
      <name>edwards</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="441">
      <name>graham</name>
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    <tag tagId="2469">
      <name>tabler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="359">
      <name>tucker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1066">
      <name>zielinski</name>
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</item>
