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                  <text>On this
day in
history

Rain.
High of 72,
low of 51

Ohio
all-district
football teams

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 184, Volume 69

Wednesday, November 18, 2015 s 50¢

A future with no Fracking

Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

Anyone entering, exiting or going under the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge would’ve been greeted by protestors informing the public about Fracking and Fracking waste. According to Meigs County Resident Tom
Zano, who is also a member of Swim, or Safe Water in Meigs Co., most Fracking waste that comes through the state is from Pennsylvania, and that this and injection wells in Athens and Meigs Counties are
also a threat to the Ohio Valley area. Protestors from both Meigs and Athens counties also wanted to protest the proposed barge dock and pipline facility in Portland. Milena Miller, of Athens, is part of SWIM
and said she protests because she, like many others, was poisoned by C8 in the water from Dupont, Ohio. Susie Quinn, of Torch, Ohio, said she lives a mile down the road from Athens injection wells, said
once she learned what they were she was concerned. Zano said in the end its the health of people that is more important than any money made from injection. “I think we’re mortgaging our future,” Zano
said. For more information visit Facebook.com/safewaterinmeigs.

State launches
‘Tie One On for
Safety’ campaign
Staff Report

COLUMBUS — Mothers Against Drunk
Driving, the Ohio Department of Public Safety,
including the Ohio State Highway Patrol, law
enforcement from around the state and other
safety advocates gathered Tuesday to launch
the annual “Tie One on for Safety” campaign
with a message to drive safe, sober and buckled up.
Carolyn Richie, whose son Eric was killed in
a drunk driving crash on Dec. 8, 2012, shared
the devastating impact impaired driving can
have on a family.
This is the 29th year for the holiday ribbon
campaign, which encourages motorists to tie
the MADD ribbon to their vehicles as a pledge
to be safe on the roadways. The campaign also
reminds drivers to buckle up, because a seatbelt is the best defense against a drunk driver.
“We urge all Ohio motorists to lead by example
and help spread the message of planning ahead for
a designated non-drinking driver when celebration
include alcohol,” Doug Scoles, MADD Ohio State
executive director, said.
See CAMPAIGN | 5

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5

By Lindsay Kriz

Council agreed to transfer
$216,200 from the general fund
into the sewer fund and $72,066
POMEROY — Pomeroy Council from the general fund into the
on Monday agreed to join the Ohio street fund. Baker said all the
Municipal League in 2016.
money coming from the FEMA balThe League is an organization
ance was allowed to be transferred
of municipal governments from
into the general fund, and from
around the state, according to their there could be dispersed where
website. Fiscal Ofﬁcer Sue Baker
council felt best.
said that the fee each year to join
Mitch Altier, from M-E Indusis $510. She said that if a mayor
tries Inc., brought to council some
in a village presides over court,
pay requests for projects happening
the League provides training for
in the village. Pullins Excavation,
the mayor twice per year at the
who is working on the Lincoln
Ohio Bar Association in Columbus. Terrace project, made a payment
Baker said the village did not join
request, and DV Weber Constructhis year. Mayor Jackie Welker was tion, who is completing Pomeroy
not able to attend Monday night’s
downtown street and sidewalk pavmeeting.
ing, made a request.
Baker also showed council that
Altier also said he had some
the village’s general fund has a
invoices from M-E Industries as
higher balance than it did at coun- well, and said that DV Weber have
cil’s most recent meeting. During
also started milling 2nd Street and
the last council meeting, council
side streets to be repaved. Altier
gave Baker permission to transfer
said that if there is money left from
funds from the FEMA fund into
the paving and sidewalk projects,
the general fund, which was then
they also plan to redo the sidewalk
transferred into the sewer and
on the corner of 2nd Street and
street funds. Baker said that before Butternut Avenue.
the money was transferred, the
Lastly, Altier talked about the
sewer fund balance had a deﬁcit of current slip project, and said Pullins has the anchors going in place
approximately $389,000.

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

now, with one being completed
per day. However, Altier said they
hoped to speed that up, and once
the anchors are in and the wall is
able to be backﬁlled, they can put
in the utilities and the road can be
done in hopefully two, but possibly
three weeks.
More discussion took place over
the potential Ordinance 774, which
would be a water debt fee for
Pomeroy water customers. However, no action was taken on the
ordinance.
Nelson Morrison, a village
employee, said that his vacation
time didn’t match up with how
much he actually should have,
and council voted to move discussion until the next meeting while
members ﬁnd paperwork regarding Morrison’s time off. Minutes
were also approved for Nov. 2,
along with the Mayor’s Report and
bills totaling $22,710.05, although
bill discussion led to a discussion
about various police cars and their
uses.
The next council meeting is set
for Monday, Dec. 7 at 7 p.m.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.

Suicide is a top cause of death in Ohio
Associated Press

— SPORTS
Football: 6
Briefs: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 7
Classified: 8
Comics: 9

Council joins Ohio Municipal League

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COLUMBUS — Suicide claims a life in Ohio
every seven hours, yet its
victims largely have been
ignored by lawmakers,
medical professionals
and much of the public,
a newspaper concluded
following a nine-month
investigation.
The Columbus Dispatch investigation found
that since 2000, more

than 20,000 people have
died by suicide in Ohio
— nearly triple the number of homicide victims.
Experts say it’s a public health crisis and the
deaths are preventable,
but lawmakers and public
ofﬁcials haven’t taken the
necessary steps.
“These are the forgotten people,” said Jan Gorniak, the former Franklin
County coroner who now
is the deputy chief medi-

cal examiner in Washington, D.C. “It doesn’t
make the newspaper, and
it’s not on TV. We could
save lives if we just talked
about it. Mental-health
problems are real, and
we can’t ignore it any
longer.”
After Gov. John Kasich
announced that Ohio was
investing $2 million in
suicide prevention, the
newspaper spent nine
months examining the

deaths that have claimed
thousands. The Dispatch
studied 15 years’ worth
of Ohio death records and
scrutinized more than
1,500 coroners’ investigative reports on suicides in
nine counties that represent a cross-section of the
state.
That investigation
found that more than
80 percent of those who
See DEATH | 5

�LOCAL/STATE

2 Wednesday, November 18, 2015

OBITUARY

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR

DAYTHINE KAY “CINDY” NICHOLS
POMEROY — Daythine Kay “Cindy” Nichols, 70, of Pomeroy, and
formerly of Leesville, La.,
passed away at 1:05 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 13, 2015.
Born Oct. 22, 1945, in
Charleston, W.Va., she
was the daughter of the
late Sherman Perry and
Helen Durham Hunter.
She was a retired nail
technician and owned her
own store called Nails
by Cindy in Leesville.
She was a member of
the Sandy Hill Baptist
Church in Leesville.
Cindy is survived by
her sisters, Ann Foyet, of
Barrington, Ill., and Lou
Hemsley, of Pomeroy; a

niece, Missy Hemsley;
and a nephew, Jay Hemsley.
In addition to her
mother and father, Cindy
was preceded in death by
her husband, William T.
“Nick” Nichols, on Nov.
19, 2013; and her stepfather, Bill F. Hunter.
Graveside services will
be at the convenience of
the family in Central Louisiana Veterans Cemetery,
Leesville. Cremeens-King
Funeral Home, of Pomeroy, is entrusted with
Cindy’s arrangements.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by visiting www.
cremeensking.com.

Racine, will hold its monthly
meeting at 7:30 p.m. This will be
Past Masters night, along with
elections for the upcoming year.
Refreshments will be served prior
to the opening of the meeting. All
Brethren are invited.
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District
Board of Supervisors will meet at
11:30 a.m. at the district ofﬁce,
located at 113 E. Memorial Drive,
Suite D, Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE — The Ladies of
THURSDAY, NOV. 19
MIDDLEPORT — The Middle- the Meigs County Republican
port congregation of the Jehovah’s Party will meet at 6:30 p.m. at
the Carlton School in Syracuse.
Witness will have their annual
corporation meeting at 9:30 p.m. Everyone is welcome.
POMEROY — Pomeroy/Racine
Lodge, located on the left, just
FRIDAY, NOV. 20
past Southern Local Schools in
POMEROY — The Pomeroy
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.

High School Class of 1959 will be
having their third Friday lunch
again at Fox Pizza at noon.

SATURDAY, NOV. 21

POMEROY —Return Jonathan
Meigs DAR will meet at 1 p.m.
in the community room of Farmers Bank in Pomeroy. Members
and guests are requested to park
and enter through the bank’s
back door. Darlene West, docent
for the Christian Waldschmidt
Homestead, will be presenting the
program.

MONDAY, NOV. 23

The next meeting of the Meigs
County Fairboard will be 7 p.m. at
the fairgrounds. All meetings are
open to the public.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS
DEATH NOTICES
CARGO
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Bonnie L. Cargo, 83, Gallipolis, died Monday, Nov. 16, 2015, at her residence.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Friday, Nov. 20, 2015,
at New Life Lutheran Church, Gallipolis. Burial will
follow in Addison-Reynolds Cemetery, Addison.
Friends and family may call McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, between 4-7
p.m. Thursday.
HOLLIS
COLFAX, Ind. — Allison Hollis, 25, Colfax, formerly of Point Pleasant, W.Va., passed away Monday, Nov.
16, 2015. Interment will be in the Workman Family
Cemetery, Louisa, Ky.
PLYBON
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — David Lee Plybon, 77,
of Chesapeake, died Saturday, Nov. 14, 2015, at St.
Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va. Funeral
service will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 18, 2015, at
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio.
WRAY
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Onedia Evelyn Wray, 65,
of Gallipolis, passed away Monday, Nov. 16, 2015, at
Cabell Huntington Hospital, Huntington, W.Va. There
will be no services. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, is in charge of arrangements.

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.

through Dec. 16. All non-perishable items are accepted
and can be dropped off at their ofﬁce located at 220 E.
Main St. in Pomeroy.

American Legion Drew
Public Works Commission
Webster Post 39 dues change District 18 meeting
POMEROY — Notice to members of American Legion
Drew Webster Post, 39 in Pomeroy: effective Jan. 1, 2016,
annual dues will be $30. Meetings are held the ﬁrst and
third Tuesday each month at 6:30 p.m. and includes dinner. For further information, call 740-742-286l.

Open House birthday
celebration for Barton
POMEROY — The children of Macel S. Barton,
of Reedsville, will be having a 90th birthday celebration in her honor between 2-4 p.m. Nov. 28 at the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center, located at 112 E
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. Cards can be sent to
39079 Success Road, Reedsville, OH 45772. The
celebration is open to the public.

Give a helping hand during
the holidays food donation
POMEROY — Reed and Baur Insurance Agency is
sponsoring a food drive to help families in need now

MARIETTA — A meeting of the District 18 Executive
Committee will be 10 a.m. Dec. 9 at the Best Western
(formerly known as the Holiday Inn), 701 Pike St.,
Marietta. The purpose of this meeting is for the Executive Committee to select projects for Round 30 funding
under the Ohio Public Works Commission State Capital
Improvement and Local Transportation Improvement
Programs. If you have questions regarding this meeting,
contact Michelle Hyer at (740) 376-1025.

Donate your Soles to
Mid-Valley Christian School
MIDDLEPORT — Donate your Soles to Mid-Valley
Christian School, 500 North 2nd Ave. in Middleport to
help raise funds for the organization by donating your new
or gently worn used shoes. The group will be collecting
shoes for Funds2orgs to help impoverished people start,
maintain and grow businesses in Haiti, Honduras, Central
America and Africa. Proceeds from the shoes are used to
feed, clothe and house their families. For more information contact Melissa Dailey at 740-992-6249.

U.S. Senate candidate says he’d be tough on guns
By Julie Carr Smyth

I will not be intimidated. I am
here to say that Ohio deserves
leaders who will stand up and
ﬁght for the safety of our families,” he said. “And I am here
to say that it is time for the
slaughter to stop.”
Sittenfeld said he plans to
use his support for universal
background checks, safe storage laws and ammunition
micro-stamping in a statewide
campaign push on an issue
he believes can gain traction
among voters.
He faces former Ohio Gov.
Ted Strickland in the Democratic primary in March. The
winner of that contest will face
Republican incumbent Rob

Associated Press

COLUMBUS — U.S. Senate candidate P.G. Sittenfeld
portrayed himself Tuesday as
the only Ohio candidate in the
closely watched 2016 race who
would support signiﬁcant gun
restrictions if elected, a position that failed to rufﬂe the
feathers of his better known
rivals.
In remarks to reporters,
the 31-year-old Cincinnati
councilman said he would be
a fresh voice in Washington
not beholden to the powerful
National Riﬂe Association.
“So I have come here to say

Portman next fall. In early polling Strickland has been ahead
of or statistically tied with
Portman.
Sittenfeld has stalwartly
remained in the race despite
Strickland’s statewide name ID
and his landing of a rare preprimary endorsement from the
Ohio Democratic Party.
Sittenfeld said that Portman
has earned the NRA’s A rating,
and Strickland was rated A-plus
— that is, before some of his
more recent positions received
pushback from gun groups.
“When it comes to guns, Sen.
Portman and Gov. Strickland
are just different sides of the
same coin,” Sittenfeld said.

Strickland campaign spokeswoman Jennifer Donohue disputed the characterization.
“Of course, Ted supports
common-sense background
checks,” she said. “It’s Sen.
Portman who refuses to support common-sense ideas that
keep guns out of the hands of
criminals, terrorists and the
mentally ill.”
Portman spokesman Corry
Bliss said, “Rob Portman has
been clear that he believes
we can curb gun violence by
enforcing current law and
strengthening background
checks with far better mental
health records.”
Bliss contended that Strick-

land “betrayed gun owners”
when he went to work for an
arm of Center for American
Progress, a liberal policy group
that supports gun control laws.
It has been typical in the race
for Strickland and Portman
— the higher proﬁle, better
funded candidates — to ignore
Sittenfeld and his challenges.
But he was ﬂanked Tuesday
with several people — including the leader of an anti-gun
violence group in Cleveland,
and the mother of a son shot
to death in Dayton — who said
his strong stances on guns have
caused them to support him for
Senate.

Hearing set for manslaughter convict on lam since 1959
By Kantele Franko
Associated Press

COLUMBUS — A man
who disappeared from an

Ohio prison camp in 1959
while serving time for manslaughter and was found
this year is set for a public
hearing with the state

Civitas Media, LLC

board considering whether
he should get parole.
Frank Freshwaters was
living off Social Security
beneﬁts under an alias at
a weathered trailer in rural
Brevard County, Florida,
according to investigators
who tracked him down in
May. The 79-year-old widower was taken to a prison
in southeast Ohio and has

awaited a decision since
a majority of the parole
board had a closed hearing
on the matter in August.
Now members have
decided to put the matter
before the full parole board
in a hearing set for Feb. 25,
prisons spokeswoman JoEllen Smith said Tuesday.
Relatives and other witnesses on both sides of

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CONTACT US
PUBLISHER
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bhunt@civitasmedia.com

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elitteral@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
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michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

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bwalters@civitasmedia.com

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the case weren’t permitted
at the earlier hearing but
will have an opportunity
to attend or provide testimony for the public
hearing, according to the
Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.
Gordon Beggs, an attorney
who says he’s representing
Freshwaters, has said the
inmate has a large community of supporters in
Florida and elsewhere.
One of Freshwaters’
sons, Jim Cox, of West
Virginia, said he hopes
to attend the hearing and
is heartbroken his father
must wait months longer
for a decision.
“We just want him out
and want him home,” Cox
said.
Cox said that he’d spoken with his father by
phone earlier Tuesday and
that Freshwaters is “pretty
depressed” about the
news because he’ll remain
incarcerated at least three
months more.
The Akron man was
imprisoned in 1959 after
hitting a man with a vehi-

cle and violating probation,
and he disappeared from a
Sandusky camp later that
year.
He was found in 1975
in West Virginia, but its
then-governor concluded
Freshwaters had been rehabilitated during life on the
lam and refused to extradite him to Ohio, saying he
didn’t believe Freshwaters
was a danger to society.
Investigators believe
he ended up in Florida in
the 1980s. Why he wasn’t
found by Ohio authorities
for so long remains a mystery.
The Erie County prosecutor decided not to ﬁle
any new escape-related
charge against Freshwaters,
concluding the possibility
that he could serve up to
20 years on his original
charge allowed for “sufﬁcient penalty.”
The son of Eugene Flynt,
the man Freshwaters hit,
previously told reporters
he thought the inmate
should have to serve more
of his sentence.

�STATE/WORLD

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 18, 2015 3

French hunt 2nd fugitive, launch new airstrikes
By Lori Hinnant
and Jamey Keaten
Associated Press

PARIS — French police are
hunting for a second fugitive
directly involved in the deadly
Paris attacks, ofﬁcials said
Tuesday, as France made an
unprecedented demand that its
European Union allies support
its military action against the
Islamic State group.
The disclosure of a second
possible fugitive, whom authorities said they hadn’t identiﬁed,
came as French and Russian
warplanes pounded the jihadi
group’s self-declared capital in
Syria. President Vladimir Putin
ordered a Russian military
cruiser to work with France on
ﬁghting the militants in Syria
and U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry hinted at a possible
Syrian cease-ﬁre so the world
could focus on crushing IS.
French and Belgian police
were already looking for a
key suspect, 26-year-old Salah
Abdeslam, whose suicidebomber brother, Brahim, died
in the attacks Friday night that
killed at least 129 people and
left over 350 wounded in Paris.
Islamic state militants have
claimed responsibility for the
carnage.
Seven attackers died that
night — three near the national
stadium, three inside the Bataclan concert hall and one at
a restaurant nearby. A team
of gunmen also opened ﬁre
at nightspots in one of Paris’
trendiest neighborhoods.
However, French ofﬁcials
told The Associated Press on
Tuesday that an analysis of the
attacks showed that one person
directly involved in them was
unaccounted for. The three
ofﬁcials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they
were not authorized to provide
details about the ongoing investigation, said the second fugitive has not been identiﬁed.
The Paris attacks have galva-

nized international determination to confront the militants.
The French government
invoked a never-before-used
article of the EU’s Lisbon
Treaty obliging members of
the 28-nation bloc to give “aid
and assistance by all the means
in their power” to a member
country that is “the victim of
armed aggression on its territory.”
French Defense Minister
Jean-Yves Le Drian said all
27 of France’s EU partners
responded positively.
“Every country said: I am
going to assist, I am going to
help,” Drian said.
Arriving for talks in Brussels,
Greek Defense Minister Panagiotis Kammenos told reporters that the Paris attacks were
a game-changer for the bloc.
“This is Sept. 11 for Europe,”
he said.
Paris police said 16 people
had been arrested in connection to the deadly attacks, and
police have carried out 104
raids since a state of emergency
was declared Saturday.
French military spokesman
Col. Gilles Jaron said the latest
airstrikes in the Islamic State
group’s de-facto capital, the
Syrian city of Raqqa, destroyed
a command post and training
camp. NATO allies were sharing intelligence and working
closely with France, NATO
chief Jens Stoltenberg said.
In Moscow, Putin ordered
the Russian missile cruiser
Moskva, currently in the Mediterranean, to start cooperating
with the French military on
operations in Syria. His order
came as Russia’s defense minister said its warplanes ﬁred
cruise missiles on militant
positions in Syria’s Idlib and
Aleppo provinces. IS has positions in Aleppo province, while
the Nusra militant group is in
Idlib.
Moscow has vowed to hunt
down those responsible for
blowing up a Russian pas-

OTHER DEVELOPMENTS
TUESDAY
The Associated Press

In a show of solidarity, British Prime Minister
David Cameron was joining Prince William at a
soccer match Tuesday night between England
and France in London’s Wembley Stadium.
Armed police were patrolling the site.
Another Belgian car with a shattered front
passenger window was found in northern Paris —
the third vehicle police identified as having links
to the attacks.
The Eiffel Tower shut down again after opening

senger plane over Egypt last
month, killing 224 people,
mostly Russian tourists. IS has
also claimed responsibility for
that Oct. 31 attack.
Seven of the Paris attackers
died Friday, six after detonating suicide belts and one from
police gunﬁre. However, Iraqi
intelligence ofﬁcials have told
The Associated Press their
sources indicated 19 people
participated in the Paris attacks
and ﬁve others provided handson logistical support.
French Interior Minister
Bernard Cazeneuve conceded
that “the majority of those who
were involved in this attack
were unknown to our services.”
Mohamed Abdeslam, another
brother of fugitive Salah
Abdeslam, on Tuesday urged
his brother to turn himself in.
Mohamed, who was arrested
and questioned following the
attack but released Monday,
told French TV BFM that his
brother was devout but showed
no signs of being a radical
Islamist. He said Salah prayed
and attended a mosque occasionally, but also dressed in
jeans and pullovers.
Two men arrested in Belgium, meanwhile, admitted
driving to France to pick up
Salah Abdeslam early Saturday,
their lawyers said.
Mohammed Amri, 27, denies
any involvement in the Paris
attacks and says he went to

for just a day Monday, and heavily armed troops
patrolled the courtyard of the Louvre Museum.
Germany’s top security official said a Syrian
passport found with one of the Paris attackers
may have been planted to make Europeans
fearful of refugees. Interior Minister Thomas de
Maiziere told reporters in Berlin it was “unusual
that such a person was faithfully registered in
Greece, Serbia and Croatia” amid the chaos of
Europe’s immigration crisis. He said the multiple
passport registrations could be “a trail that was
intentionally laid.”
German police arrested seven people near the
western city of Aachen, but later released them,
saying no links to the Paris attacks were found.

Paris to collect his friend Salah,
according to his defense lawyer Xavier Carrette. Hamza
Attou, 21, says he went along
to keep Amri company, his
lawyer Carine Couquelet said.
Both are being held on charges
of terrorist murder and conspiracy.
Belgian media reported that
Amri and Attou were being
investigated as potential suppliers of the suicide bombs used
in the attacks, since ammonium
nitrate, a fertilizer that can be
used to make explosives, was
discovered in a search of their
residence.
Their defense lawyers said
they could not conﬁrm those
reports.
Salah and Brahim Abdeslam
booked a hotel in the southeastern Paris suburb of Alfortville and rented a house in
the northeastern suburb of
Bobigny several days before
the attacks, a French judicial
ofﬁcial told The Associated
Press. She spoke on condition
of anonymity because she was
not authorized to speak about
the ongoing investigation.
Austria’s Interior Ministry
said Salah Abdeslam, the suspected driver of one group of
gunmen carrying out attacks
on Paris, entered the country
about two months ago with two
unidentiﬁed companions. After
the attacks, Salah Abdeslam
slipped through France’s

ﬁngers, with French police
accidentally permitting him to
cross into Belgium on Saturday.
Kerry ﬂew to France as a
gesture of solidarity and met
Hollande and Foreign Minister
Laurent Fabius on Tuesday.
Standing next to Hollande at
the Elysee Palace, Kerry said
the carnage in the French capital, along with recent attacks
in Egypt, Lebanon and Turkey,
made it clear that more pressure must be brought to bear
on Islamic State extremists.
A cease-ﬁre between Syria’s
government and the opposition
could be just weeks away, Kerry
said, describing it as potentially a “gigantic step” toward
deeper international cooperation against IS.
A French security ofﬁcial,
meanwhile, said anti-terror
intelligence ofﬁcials had identiﬁed Abdelhamid Abaaoud, a
Belgian of Moroccan descent,
as the chief architect of the
Paris attacks.
The ofﬁcial cited chatter from
IS ﬁgures that Abaaoud had
recommended a concert as an
ideal target for inﬂicting maximum casualties, as well as electronic communications between
Abaaoud and one of the Paris
attackers who blew himself up.
The ofﬁcial spoke on condition
of anonymity to discuss the sensitive investigation.
It was not exactly clear
where Abaaoud is.

Crews plan to pump oil cargo
TOLEDO (AP) — Salvage crews are
preparing for an underwater operation
to pump a hazardous oil-based substance from a sunken barge that apparently had been sitting undiscovered on
the bottom of Lake Erie for nearly 80
years.
The crews expect to start assembling
the pumps near the end of the week
before they can begin moving the cargo
to a barge on the surface.
How fast that happens will depend a
lot on conditions on the lake, which can
be rough in November, said Thomas
McKenzie, a spokesman for the project
being overseen by the U.S. Coast Guard
and the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency.
Crews have been monitoring the site
near the U.S.-Canadian border since
discovering a small leak in October that
appeared to coming from a barge called
the Argo that sank during a storm in
1937. The wreckage is one of 87 shipwrecks on a federal registry that identiﬁes the most serious pollution threats
to U.S. waters.

A shipwreck hunter spotted the barge
45 feet below the lake’s surface in late
August.
The process of removing oil from
sunken ships is commonly used and
safe, McKenzie said Tuesday.
Crews will drill into the tank and
pump lake water inside, pushing the
benzol into pipes that will carry it to
another barge, he said. The lake water
will help maintain a constant pressure
inside the tank and stop it from potentially rupturing.
There are seven other tanks on the
barge that will need to be evaluated and
possibly drained, McKenzie said. Historical documents have said the Argo
was transporting both benzol and crude
oil when it went down.
“We have a general idea of what the
Argo was carrying, but it has to be a
step-by-step process of checking each of
the tanks as we go,” he said.
The Coast Guard has been keeping
boaters away from the area because of
fumes in the air.

Questions continue about
school barricade devices rules
By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

for security pins. Others
attach to door handles.
The state buildings board
REYNOLDSBURG —
has an April deadline to
Fire marshals, architects
write rules governing the
and building hardware
devices after lawmakers
manufacturers renewed
approved their use in conquestions Monday about
cept earlier this year.
an Ohio law allowing
Capt. Scott Brooks
schools to deploy portable of the Westchester Fire
barricade devices in the
Department told the
event of an active shooter. board he’s concerned
The devices gained pop- about a lack of testing
ularity after the Virginia
standards.
Tech and Sandy Hook
“Every device that’s
Elementary School massa- been submitted to me for
cres and a 2012 shooting
approval is just some guy
in the Cleveland suburb
off the street that has built
of Chardon where three
a device that will lock a
students were killed.
door down,” Brooks said.
Some devices used
Ohio should wait for the
in Ohio and elsewhere
results of the International
slide under doors and
Code Council’s work
could require that holes
addressing active shooter
be drilled into the ﬂoor
situations before moving

Associated Press

ahead, said Elizabeth Murphy, representing the Ohio
chapter of the American
Institute of Architects.
Like many, she expressed
concern that the devices
could keep people from
leaving a classroom as
well as preventing bad
guys from getting in.
The rules developed
so far are poor and could
lead to terrible consequences such as someone
being attacked inside
a classroom, said John
Woestman, with the New
York City-based Builders
Hardware Manufacturers
Association.
“That law really needs
to be changed before it
moves forward and the
unimaginable occurs,”
Woestman said.

60621510

www.mydailysentinel.com

�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Daily Sentinel

OUR VIEW

We must
salvage our
freedom
Last Friday, the world was rocked when militant
Islamists attacked several different locations in
and around Paris.
French President Francois Hollande called
these atrocities an act of war. American President
Barack Obama condemned the attacks and said
the act was against all of humanity and the “universal values that we share.”
The media and much of the population in both
Europe and the United States were surprised by
the attacks, not to mention shocked by the numerous deaths. It was unspeakable that a terrorist
attack of such magnitude could be carried out in a
place such as Paris.
And now they’re threatening similar attacks in
other cities across the world — including Washington, D.C.
For months, we have seen in the news reports of
Syrian refugees streaming into various European
nations by the thousands. Our own leaders are still
pushing to bring refugees to the United States.
Several mayors from across the nation have signed
a petition to bring as many as 100,000 refugees to
the states.
Many Americans see this as an act of suicide
because surely there are going to be terrorists
among the refugees, while others condemn them
for being prejudiced toward a people in dire need
of a safe haven away from the daily acts of horror
to which they are subjected. The issue has become
politicized and people are condemning each other
for their stances rather than working toward a
solution.
It is still not yet known if any of the Paris attackers posed as refugees ﬂowing into Europe, but
ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) — sometimes also called ISIL (Islamic State of Iraq and
the Levant) — has publicly stated its intention
to exploit the refugee crisis to inﬁltrate Western
countries that accept them.
GOP presidential front-runner Donald Trump
said allowing Syrian refugees into the United
States could be “one of the great Trojan horses.
Ohio Gov. John Kasich, also a GOP presidential
candidate, joined other many Republican (and one
Democrat) governors who said they will refuse
Syrian refugees into their states.
On the ﬂip side, the Washington Post says,
“Perhaps one of the most persuasive arguments
against equating refugees with terrorists is simple:
It’s exactly what the Islamic State wants.” Welcoming refugees, the paper says, “undercuts” ISIS’s
“legitimacy” because the refugees would rather
leave their so-called caliphate to live in “inﬁdel
Western lands.”
While we argue and take sides, human beings
are being killed. While we denounce each other for
our respective stances, hostages are being taken.
And while our president goes on national TV and
tells us ISIS, the most signiﬁcant threat to the
United States, has been contained, they are taking
the lives of our allies.
Sept.11, 2001, was a wake-up call that let
Americans know that we are not immune from the
real threat of terror. Sadly, we have forgotten that
over the last 14 years. Unfortunately, it may take
another such crisis for Americans to realize that
we must act. We must root out terror and destroy
it before it consumes us.
But for that to happen, we must ﬁrst forget our
differences and come together. We cannot ﬁght
an enemy while we bicker among ourselves about
race, religion or political afﬁliation. We cannot
survive while we argue over Constitutional rights,
health care and education. We cannot overcome
this unprecedented threat to our way of life while
we label those who don’t share our same beliefs.
We all want the same things, and we all think we
know best how to obtain them, but at some point
we must compromise so that we can again face
outward and answer attacks from terrorist organizations.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt once said, “The only
thing we have to fear is fear itself.”
Terrorist organizations thrive on creating fear
among populations, and so Roosevelt’s quote
becomes truer today than ever before. We must
face our fears, we must ﬁght terror, and we must
sacriﬁce if we are to salvage freedom and our
great nation.

Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:

740.992.2155

THEIR VIEW

Time to close the border, for real

By Robert Romano
Guest Columnist

At least one of the Paris
bombers may have been a Syrian
war refugee. And Islamic State has
promised more attacks in England,
the U.S. and other countries that
have been taking in refugees from
the Middle East.
In light of these two facts, there
is only one solution, and that is
to immediately suspend entry
to all refugees and immigrants
from the Middle East into the
U.S., Americans for Limited
Government (ALG) President
Rick Manning urged in statement.
“President Obama, and
every sane leader in the West,
needs to immediately issue a
moratorium against all refugees
and immigration from the
Middle East. Under U.S. law, the
President singularly has discretion
to allow refugees in, and to refuse
entry. Generally, under 8 U.S.C.
1182(f)the President can refuse
entry to any class of immigrant
for any amount of time he deems
appropriate,” Manning said.
How to justify such a broad
travel ban? As Manning cited,
“The fact is, even if only a tiny
percentage of the Syrian war
refugees were adherents to radical
Islam, every country that lets
them in must accept they are also
inviting sleeper cells into their
country. And since there is no
way to scan them at the border,
the only solution is to simply say
no way. Not until this situation is
under control.”
Think that’s too harsh? Sorry.
The President has broad
authority to bar entry into the U.S.
under federal law, and in a time of
war or national emergency, with
an unknown number of enemy
combatants already here or on
their way here, it is perfectly
legitimate and reasonable to
issue such a proclamation. He
could close the entire border if
he wanted, airline stock prices be
damned.
Don’t tell us there is no
precedent. As Manning noted,
“There are currently 16 such

proclamations already in effect. It’s
time for number 17.”
The proclamations currently in
effect are the Belarus Proclamation
8015, the Bosnia Proclamation
6749, the Combat Trafﬁcking
In Persons Proclamation 8342,
the Corruption Proclamation
7750, the Cuba Proclamation
5377, the Haiti Proclamation
6685, the High Seas Interdiction
Proclamation 4865, the Human
Rights Proclamation 8697,
theLebanon Proclamation 8158,
the Presidential Proclamation
8693, Travel Bans, the Serbia and
Montenegro Proclamation 7249,
the Sierra Leone Proclamation
7062, the Sierra Leone
Proclamation 7359, the Sudan
Proclamation 6958, the Western
Balkans Proclamation 7452, and
the Zimbabwe Proclamation 7524.
At least one of those
proclamations dates back to 1981.
And Obama is not unfamiliar with
the practice, either. He has issued
two.
In light of the most recent
massacres in Paris and the
University of Kenya, there simply
is no alternative. No other more
effective, more immediate action
that can be taken by the President
to protect the homeland. Anything
else — that is, besides dealing
with the problem over there — is
dithering and posturing.
The fact is, after 9/11, we tried
it the nice way. The U.S. did not
close its borders, and all the while
we attempted to prop up moderate
regimes in the region, and arm
those Muslim allies there who
would dare ﬁght the terrorists,
and who bled the same blood on
the battleﬁelds of Afghanistan,
Iraq, and elsewhere as did U.S.
servicemen and women.
It was a sad day indeed when
the U.S. left those allies to die
on those battleﬁelds at the hands
of the enemy, undermining the
sacriﬁces that were made by
tens of thousands of brave men
and women. This was not their
fault, and still they have born
the consequences of standing
to be counted with the forces of

civilization and then subsequently
being abandoned.
Now their heads are on spikes,
and the enemy is coming for the
rest of us.
Power abhors a vacuum, and by
ceding Iraq and Afghanistan to
the enemy, the U.S. administration
bears its share of responsibility
for creating the situation in which
Islamic State has ﬂourished. That
is not trutherism. That is the
truth.
Sadly, with a little over 13
months left in the Obama
administration, it nonetheless falls
on the current occupant in the
White House that implemented
those policies to deal with the
current threat — and the fallout
from its own folly.
We acknowledge the inertia that
develops around administration
policies across party lines, and
the difﬁculty involved doing
a complete 180 on policy. But
there comes a time when you
have to check in with reality.
Unfortunately, it is still up to
Obama to deal with this.
As economist John Maynard
Keynes is credited with having
once said, “When the facts change,
I change my mind. What do you
do, sir?” Will Obama come to
his senses? At least the rest of us
have. What Obama does next is up
to him.
The war should be fought over
there, and a safe zone created for
refugees over there. Letting them
come here, and frankly, allowing
the humanitarian crisis to grow to
such proportions is only as a result
of not taking care of business —
over there.
Where do we draw the line when
it comes to political correctness?
When it starts getting people
killed? As ALG’s Manning
concluded, “The insanity at the
border must be brought to an end
immediately, or the American
people will seek new leadership
who will bring it to an end.
Enough pussy-footing around. It’s
time to get real.”

Robert Romano is the senior editor of
Americans for Limited Government.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Wednesday,
Nov. 18, the 322nd day of
2015. There are 43 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Nov. 18, 1865,
Mark Twain’s ﬁrst literary success, the original
version of his short story
“The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras
County,” was ﬁrst published in the New York
Saturday Press under the
title “Jim Smiley and His
Jumping Frog.”
On this date:

In 1883, the United
States and Canada adopted a system of Standard
Time zones.
In 1886, the 21st president of the United States,
Chester A. Arthur, died
in New York.
Today’s Birthdays:
Actress Brenda Vaccaro is 76. Author-poet
Margaret Atwood is 76.
Actress Linda Evans is
73. Actress Susan Sullivan is 73. Country singer
Jacky Ward is 69. Actor
Jameson Parker is 68.
Actress-singer Andrea

Marcovicci is 67. Rock
musician Herman Rarebell is 66. Singer Graham
Parker is 65. Actor Delroy Lindo is 63. Comedian Kevin Nealon is 62.
Pro Football Hall of Fame
quarterback Warren
Moon is 59. Actor Oscar
Nunez is 57. Actress
Elizabeth Perkins is 55.
Singer Kim Wilde is
55. Rock musician Kirk
Hammett (Metallica)
is 53. Rock singer Tim
DeLaughter is 50. Actor
Romany Malco is 47.
Actor Owen Wilson is

47. Actor Dan Bakkedahl
is 47. Singer Duncan
Sheik is 46. Actor Mike
Epps is 45. Actress Peta
Wilson is 45. Actress
Chloe Sevigny is 41.
Country singer Jessi
Alexander is 39. Actor
Steven Pasquale is 39.
Rapper Fabolous is 38.
Actor Nate Parker is 36.
Rapper Mike Jones is 35.
Actress/comedian Nasim
Pedrad is 34. Actress
Allison Tolman (TV:
“Fargo”) is 34. Actor
Damon Wayans Jr. is 33.
Actor Nathan Kress is 23.

�LOCAL/NATION

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 18, 2015 5

Paris attacks lead Americans to wonder about US safety
Associated Press

NEW YORK — From
cafes in New York to tailgate parties in the heartland, the bloodbath in Paris
is forcing Americans to
ponder the awful possibility
of terrorist attacks on “soft
targets” in the U.S. such as
restaurants, bars and other
ordinary gathering spots.
“Maybe I’m more
jittery,” said Jordan
Veneman, sitting at La
Colombe cafe in Manhattan’s SoHo neighborhood.
He said that when a car
backﬁred shortly after
the attacks in France, he

immediately thought of a
bomb.
Counterterrorism experts
say well-coordinated
assaults carried out by
foreigners are less likely in
the U.S., in part because of
tougher accessibility to the
mainland and better intelligence-gathering since 9/11.
But they acknowledge such
attacks cannot be ruled out.
They worry even more
about the possibility of
“lone wolf” attackers who
may have no direct connection to extremist groups
such as Islamic State but
embrace their ideology.
“It’s impossible to protect
everything and everyone all
the time,” said Lauren C.

Anderson, a retired FBI ofﬁcial who served in Paris and
headed the international
terrorism program for a
New York task force.
She said intelligencegathering and sharing is
crucial, but added that
everyone has a role: “The
front line when we’re talking about this now is people
being aware of what’s going
on around them.”
In the crowded lobby of
the Ace Hotel in Manhattan’s Garment District,
Daniel Bellino, who works
in the restaurant industry,
said authorities in New
York, where memories are
seared with images of 9/11,
have done “a great job”

Campaign

heading off attacks, but
there are limits to what can
be done.
“You could do many
things, and you stop
90-something percent of
planned attacks, but miss
some,” Bellino said. “I’m
happy nothing has happened. Yes, I do worry about
it, but I’ve got regular things
of life to worry about.”
A soft target is any place
that is largely unprotected,
unlike a military installation, an airport or a
courthouse. Soft targets can
include schools, shopping
malls, theaters and sporting
events.
Americans have seen
what an attack on a soft tar-

Death

people who die by suicide suffer from
a treatable mental illness, often depression, and don’t get the help they need.
From Page 1
“There is a huge, huge stigma,” said
state Rep. Marlene Anielski, whose
took their own lives were male. Middle- teenage son Joseph died by suicide in
age men, ages of 45 to 64, account for
2010. “It’s OK to have a broken arm, it’s
nearly a quarter of all suicides. The
OK to have cancer, but it’s not OK to
youngest victims were just 8 years old.
have a mental-health issue.”
Even though the state’s suicide rate
Coroners’ records, which by law are to
dropped last year to its lowest point in
include detailed histories of suicide vicmore than a decade, it still accounted
tims, paint a portrait of an overwhelmed
for 10.8 deaths per 100,000 people.
mental-health system, a rigid insurance
That means more than three Ohioans
industry, unequal treatment of the mentaldie by suicide every day.
ly ill and a society unequipped to see the
It’s a national problem, too. In 2013, the
warning signs that someone is in danger.
most recent national data available, more
Tragedy has re-energized the issue
than 41,000 people died by suicide, putof suicide lately. Reports of high suiting the U.S. rate at nearly 13 deaths per
cide rates among U.S. servicemen and
100,000. Ohio’s rate has mirrored the nation- women coupled with the high-proﬁle
al average in the past decade and a half.
death of comedian Robin Williams last
Experts say the vast majority of
year got people talking again.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

69°

62°

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.

61°
48°
56°
37°
82° in 1958
16° in 1933
(in inches)

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

0.00
0.47
1.90
41.86
37.74

Today
Thu.
7:14 a.m. 7:15 a.m.
5:13 p.m. 5:12 p.m.
12:41 p.m. 1:20 p.m.
11:50 p.m.
none

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

MOON PHASES
First

Full

Nov 19 Nov 25

Last

Dec 3

Dec 11

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

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

Major
4:42a
5:36a
6:27a
7:15a
8:03a
8:51a
9:41a

Minor
10:56a
11:49a
12:15a
1:02a
1:49a
2:37a
3:27a

Major
5:09p
6:02p
6:53p
7:42p
8:30p
9:18p
10:10p

Minor
11:22p
---12:40p
1:28p
2:16p
3:04p
3:55p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Nov. 18, 1421, surge from a
powerful storm swept inland and
destroyed Holland’s dikes. More than
70 villages were swept away; 10,000
people died.

Sunny to partly cloudy

2

Chillicothe
70/50

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

SUNDAY

52°
26°

Plenty of sun

Logan
70/49

Lucasville
71/50

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Portsmouth
72/49

AIR QUALITY

38°
22°

Rather cloudy

49
300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER

Belpre
71/52

Athens
70/50

St. Marys
71/54

Parkersburg
71/52

Coolville
70/50

Elizabeth
71/53

Spencer
70/53

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.34 -0.53
Marietta
34 16.33 -0.12
Parkersburg
36 21.43 -0.13
Belleville
35 12.80 -0.15
Racine
41 13.10 -0.30
Point Pleasant
40 25.15 +0.02
Gallipolis
50 13.15 +0.23
Huntington
50 26.27 +0.19
Ashland
52 34.67 +0.16
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.88 -0.04
Portsmouth
50 17.90 +0.60
Maysville
50 34.50 +0.10
Meldahl Dam
51 16.10 +0.10
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Buffalo
72/51
Milton
73/51

Clendenin
70/53

St. Albans
73/53

Huntington
72/48

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
49/41
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
65/49
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
78/54
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Not as cold with
plenty of sunshine

Marietta
70/51

Murray City
70/49

Ironton
72/50

Ashland
72/50
Grayson
72/50

TUESDAY

44°
28°

Partly sunny and
colder

Wilkesville
71/48
POMEROY
Jackson
70/50
71/48
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
71/52
72/50
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
66/46
GALLIPOLIS
72/51
71/52
71/51

South Shore Greenup
72/51
71/48

MONDAY

46°
28°
Mainly cloudy, chance
of a little rain

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
70/48

Waverly
70/49

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

0 50 100 150 200

New

SATURDAY

53°
33°

Adelphi
71/49

Q: What causes lake-effect snow?

SUN &amp; MOON

FRIDAY

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

impaired driving is a tragedy
that could have been prevented.
You can do your part by making smart decisions on Ohio’s
roadways and by displaying
the red ribbon,” Lt. Col. Kevin
Teaford, Ohio State Highway
Patrol, said. “Together, we can
stop future deaths on our roadways. That’s why we do what
we do.”

BBT (NYSE) —37.80
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.17
Pepsico (NYSE) — 98.83
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.35
Rockwell (NYSE) — 103.05
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 11.08
Royal Dutch Shell — 49.27
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 22.37
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 59.92
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.52
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.47
Worthington (NYSE) — 29.31
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Nov. 17, 2015, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

A: Cold air moving over warm water.

Precipitation

THURSDAY

Breezy and mild today; p.m. rain. Occasional
rain this evening. High 72° / Low 51°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

AEP (NYSE) — 55.02
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.07
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 109.71
Big Lots (NYSE) — 43.56
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) —39.51
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 40.64
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 3.48
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.220
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 48.87
Collins (NYSE) —88.67
DuPont (NYSE) — 67.05
US Bank (NYSE) — 43.02
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 30.31
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 48.35
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 66.14
Kroger (NYSE) — 37.02
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 90.85
Norfolk So (NYSE) —87.00
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 25.45

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

attacks in Mumbai, India, in
2008, ofﬁcials said. Intelligence ofﬁcials also monitor
social media postings, and
detectives press informants
for information on possible
plots.
At the University of Dayton in Ohio, Mark Ensalaco,
who has studied Middle
East terrorism and is the
school’s director of human
rights research, said the
greater immediate threat in
the U.S. is probably from
homegrown Islamic State
sympathizers the FBI says
are being recruited constantly, often through social
media messages that urge
them to commit violence on
their own.

LOCAL STOCKS

61°
33°
58°

from DUI Task Forces around
the state attended the event
in support of the campaign.
Local deputy registrars for the
Bureau of Motor Vehicles are
passing out the red ribbons
throughout the campaign and
the Ohio Investigative Unit will
continue its focus on over-serving and underage consumption.
“Every death resulting from

deaths and injuries so that no
family has to experience this
preventable tragedy.”
All of ODPS’ divisions are
working to remind people to
drive safe and sober. OSHP
and local law enforcement are
using stepped up enforcement
and educational efforts to prevent injuries and deaths. Law
enforcement representatives

“Partnerships developed
through collaborative efforts
like the ‘Tie One on for Safety’
From Page 1
campaign are critical to reaching out to all Ohioans to
According to OSHP crash
encourage them to drive safe
statistics, in Ohio last year 327
people were killed in 297 alcohol- and sober during this holiday
season and every day of the
related crashes. There were 27
year,” ODPS Director John
deaths in 25 of alcohol-related
Born said. “Together, we can
crashes that occurred between
help reduce the number of
Thanksgiving and New Year’s.

get can look like. A gunman
in body armor killed 12 people in a suburban Denver
movie theater in 2012. But
the killer was a mentally ill
American graduate student
with no political agenda.
New York Mayor Bill
de Blasio told the ﬁrst
120 members of a new
500-ofﬁcer-strong counterterror unit on Monday that
the city “is the chief terror
target in the country,” and
daily vigilance is needed.
The New York Police
Department’s counterterror
units can now respond to as
many as two dozen active
shooting situations at once,
having learned from such
tragedies as the terrorist

Charleston
72/51

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
39/27

Billings
43/25

Toronto
57/53
Minneapolis
54/30

Detroit
65/46
New York
58/55

Chicago
62/40

Denver
48/22

Montreal
49/38

Washington
65/60

Kansas City
51/34

Monterrey
75/48

GOALS

Thu.
Hi/Lo/W
54/32/s
28/27/sn
66/47/s
66/51/r
67/45/r
39/23/c
42/30/sh
55/49/r
63/34/s
76/45/r
41/26/pc
47/29/pc
58/31/s
60/34/c
58/31/s
67/47/s
42/27/pc
48/28/s
56/33/pc
87/76/sh
75/50/s
55/30/s
52/32/s
67/47/s
64/39/s
81/53/s
61/35/s
85/74/c
37/25/c
64/37/s
70/55/s
65/54/r
58/37/s
86/70/t
67/48/r
75/50/s
62/34/pc
51/43/r
75/50/r
70/47/r
55/35/s
50/41/c
66/51/s
47/34/r
68/46/r

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
High
Low

90° in Brownsville, TX
2° in Milford, UT

Global

Houston
72/47

Chihuahua
70/35

Today
Hi/Lo/W
53/29/pc
6/3/c
70/52/r
62/57/pc
63/57/c
43/25/pc
45/32/pc
50/42/pc
72/51/r
70/63/c
45/21/pc
62/40/r
67/46/r
68/53/r
69/48/r
67/45/s
48/22/pc
51/33/c
65/46/r
87/75/pc
72/47/s
65/42/r
51/34/pc
66/46/pc
62/43/s
78/54/s
69/47/r
85/77/sh
54/30/r
66/45/r
67/53/r
58/55/c
65/40/s
86/71/pc
64/57/c
68/47/pc
65/56/c
48/34/s
72/63/c
68/60/pc
61/42/c
46/31/sh
65/49/pc
49/41/c
65/60/c

National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
70/52
El Paso
62/39

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
112° in Marble Bar, Australia
Low -57° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
85/77

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589

By Jake Pearson
and Dan Sewell

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 18, 2015 s Page 6

11 locals named to D-7 district teams
By Alex Hawley

all-purpose ﬁrst teamer last
year and a special mention
selection in 2013, was named
ATHENS, Ohio — Five
ﬁrst team quarterback this
Rebels, four Tornadoes and season. In the regular season
two Eagles earned spots on Landon completed 59-of-132
the Associated Press 2015 passes for 844 yards and 10
Division VII All-Southeast touchdowns, while rushing
District team, as selected
for 1,071 yards and 14 scores
by a media panel from the
on 141 carries.
district.
Kane Hutchinson, who
South Gallia, which ﬁnwas a special mention
ished 6-5 after the Rebels’
selection as a junior in
ﬁrst playoff appearance
2014, was named ﬁrst team
since 2011, landed three
wide receiver after hauling
ﬁrst team selections on the in 35 passes for 507 yards
offensive side of the ball,
and eight touchdowns in
with two players earning
the regular season. SGHS
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
special
mention
spots.
senior Isaiah Geiger earned
South Gallia senior Kane Hutchinson hauls in a pass between a trio of Southern defenders during
Rebel senior Landon
his ﬁrst-ever district honor
a Week 9 TVC Hocking football contest in Racine, Ohio. The Rebels and Tornadoes accounted for
Hutchinson, who was an
as a running back, after
nine of the 11 players chosen from the OVP area on the 2015 D-7 AP all-district team.
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

rushing for 1,260 yards and
11 touchdowns in the regular season.
SGHS senior Ty Carpenter and junior Johnny
Sheets were both named
special mention for the Red
and Gold. Carpenter had
59 tackles, 10 for a loss,
with three sacks, while
Sheets had 674 rushing
yards with 10 touchdowns,
to go with 28 tackles 10 for
a loss and four sacks.
Southern, which ﬁnished
4-6, landed one player of
the ﬁrst team offense, one
player on the ﬁrst team
defense and two special
mention selections.

See DISTRICT | 10

OSU hopes its
best is yet to come
in last games
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — The defending
national champions are
still an enigma to many,
including themselves.
No. 2 Ohio State has
won all 10 games this
season. Its current winning streak is 23 games.
But the Buckeyes
have looked unimpressive at times against
unranked teams, while
repeating the mantra
that playing their best
is most important at the
end of the season.
That time is
approaching as Ohio
State (10-0, 6-0 Big
Ten, No. 3 CFP) faces
its sternest — and ﬁrst,
some would argue —
challenge of the season
against No. 9 Michigan
State (9-1, 5-1, No. 13)
Saturday in Ohio Stadium.
“We haven’t really
been tested,” Ohio
State left tackle Taylor
Decker said. “This is a
huge gauge for us going
into some of the biggest
games at the end of the
season, because this is
the biggest game we’ve
played yet this season.
“We haven’t even
played our best yet,”
Decker said. “We have
to focus on that and not
what people are talking
about.”
The games against
Michigan State and
Nov. 28 at No.14 Michigan have long been
targeted as Ohio State’s
most important of the
season, almost rendering the previous 10 as
warmup acts.

If the Buckeyes reach
the Big Ten Championship Game, they might
face No. 5/6 Iowa.
“It’s do or die time,
make it or break it these
last few games if we
want to get what we
trained for,” Ohio State
right guard Pat Elﬂein
said. “It’s part of being
a Buckeye. You feel the
pressure all the time
to be the best at everything you do.”
Ohio State has struggled offensively beyond
running back Ezekiel
Elliott, a Heisman Trophy candidate with 15
straight games of 100plus yards rushing.
The quarterback
debate ended with J.T.
Barrett winning the
starting job over Cardale Jones, but a 28-3
win last week at Illinois
did nothing to dispel
the perception that the
offense is not clicking.
Or maybe the expectations coming off last
season can’t be met.
“There’s probably
10 places like this in
America where you
keep building a beast
and you’ve got to feed
it,” Ohio State coach
Urban Meyer said.
“We know there are
issues. This is not a perfect team. I’ve never seen
a perfect team. As a matter of fact, we’ve got a
long way to go,” he said.
“There are certain areas
we’re not playing very
good, and that’s why we
practice all the time.”
See OSU | 10

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Friday, Nov. 20
Football
Huntington at Point Pleasant, 7:30
Girls Basketball
South Gallia at River Valley, 7:30
Southern at Wellston, 7:30
Men’s College Basketball
Wright State-Lake at Rio Grande, 8 p.m.
Women’s College Basketball
OU-Lancaster at Rio Grande, 6 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 21
Boys Basketball
Ohio Valley Christian at Kingsway Tournament,
TBA
Girls Basketball
Amanda-Clearcreek at Meigs, 7 p.m.
Men’s College Basketball
Bevo Francis Invitational at Rio Grande, 5 p.m.
Women’s College Basketball
Bevo Francis Invitational at Rio Grande, 3 p.m.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Meigs junior Cody Bartrum (2) passes over the head of lineman Nick Combs (55) during the Marauders 26-12 victory over Gallia
Academy, on August 28 at Farmers Bank Stadium.

8 locals named to D-4 district teams
By Alex Hawley

son, who had 69 tackles, including 2.5
sacks and 14 tackles for a loss.
Meigs senior linemen Nick Combs
ATHENS, Ohio — A total of six
and Dalton Clark were both special
Marauders and two Blue Devils earned mention for the Maroon and Gold.
Associated Press all-district honors for Combs had 36 tackles, 10.5 for a loss
their efforts on the gridiron this fall.
and 2.5 sacks, while Clark had 32 tackThe 2015 Division IV Southeast
les and six for a loss.
District football team, as selected by a
Gallia Academy — which was 1-9
media panel from the district, consists overall this year, including 1-3 in the
of three local offensive players, two
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
local defenders and three local special — earned one ﬁrst teamer and one
mention selections.
special mention.
Meigs, which was 6-4 overall and
GAHS senior Kole Carter was
4-2 in the Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
named ﬁrst team linebacker, after
recording 94 tackles, including 12
Division, received three offensive
selections, one defensive spot and two for a loss this year. Carter, who was a
special mention in 2014, had 12 touchspecial mentions.
MHS junior quarterback Cody Bar- downs and 931 yards passing this seatrum, who received a special mention son, while rushing for 899 yards and
spot in 2014, earned Offensive Player nine scores.
Blue Devils senior Anthony Sipple,
of the Year honors after completing
157-of-267 passes for 2,206 yards and who was a ﬁrst team offensive lineman
17 touchdowns. Bartrum also had nine in 2014, earned a special mention spot
after recording 38 tackles this fall,
scores and 418 yards on the ground
including ﬁve sacks and 7.5 tackles for
this fall.
a loss.
Joining Bartrum on the ﬁrst team
Logan Elm senior defensive back
offense are Meigs senior wide receiver
Stephen Saxton, who had 45 tackles
Colton Lilly and Meigs senior alland seven interceptions for the 6-4
purpose player Kaileb Sheets. Lilly
Braves, was named Division IV Defenhauled in 52 passes for 809 yards and
eight scores for the Maroon and Gold, sive Player of the Year, while no Coach
of the Year was named in Division IV.
while adding 52 yards and a score
on the ground. Sheets, who was also
DIVISION IV
a ﬁrst team all purpose player as a
First Team
sophomore, ran for 665 yards and a
OFFENSE
touchdown, while catching 56 passes
All-Purpose — Erique Hosley, Chillicothe
for 720 yards and six scores.
Unioto, 6-3, 215, Sr.; Marcus Paul, Circleville
The lone Marauders representative Logan Elm, 6-0, 200, Sr.; Kaileb Sheets,
on the defensive side of the ball is
Pomeroy Meigs, 6-0, 180, Sr.; Andrew
senior defensive lineman Colton Atkin- Spicer, New Lexington, 5-10, 165, Sr.; OL

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

— Zach Finley, Circleville Logan Elm, 6-1,
275, Sr.; Trevor Hicks, Wash. Court House
Washington, 6-5, 235, Jr.; WR — Cade
Marquez, Waverly, 5-11, 140, Jr.; Aaron
Manson, Circleville, 6-1, 175, Sr.; Connor
Warden, Circleville, 6-1, 145, Sr.; Colton
Lilly, Pomeroy Meigs, 6-1, 180, Sr.; QB —
Clay Edler, Chillicothe Unioto, 5-10, 165,
Jr.; Michael Camp, Circleville, 6-4, 165,
Sr.; Cody Bartrum, Pomeroy Meigs, 6-1,
180, Jr.; RB — Drew Harris, Waverly, 5-11,
175, Jr.; Aaron Greer, Wash. Court House
Washington, 6-0, 230, Sr.; PK — Bowen
Boldoser, Circleville Logan Elm, 6-0, 170, Sr.
DEFENSE
DL — Austin Houser, Chillicothe Unioto,
6-5, 270, Sr.; Colton Atkinson, Pomeroy
Meigs, 6-0, 225, Sr.; LB — Christian
Redman, Circleville, 6-1, 195, Sr.; Colin
Woodside, Lancaster Fairfield Union,
6-5, 245, So.; Kole Carter, Gallipolis Gallia
Academy, 6-0, 195, Sr.; DB — Stephen
Saxton, Circleville Logan Elm, 6-0, 190, Sr.
Offensive Player of the Year: Cody
Bartrum, Pomeroy Meigs
Defensive Player of the Year: Stephen
Saxton, Circleville Logan Elm
Coach of the Year: No coach selected
Special Mention
Andrew Oyler, Chillicothe Unioto; Clayton
Howell, Waverly; Andrew Trego, Waverly;
Micah Linton, Circleville Logan Elm;
Jakob Sheumaker, Circleville Logan
Elm; Dalton Conley, Circleville; Hunter
Sunkle, Lancaster Fairfield Union;
Braden Heston, Lancaster Fairfield
Union; Kyle Garrett, Wash. Court House
Washington; Anthony Sipple, Gallipolis
Gallia Academy; Alex Hollar, Greenfield
McClain; Bradley Clapper, New
Lexington; Nick Combs, Pomeroy Meigs;
Dalton Clark, Pomeroy Meigs.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 18, 2015 7

UConn opens with a 100-56 win
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
UConn picked up where it left off
last season in its season opener.
The top-ranked Huskies routed
No. 7 Ohio State 100-56 on Monday night.
“It’s the ﬁrst game of the year
but at the same time we’ve got four
starters back,” UConn coach Geno
Auriemma said of his team which
has won three straight national
championships.
The quartet that beat Notre
Dame 63-53 on April 7 to win a
third straight title was back in
force.
Breanna Stewart had 24 points,
Moriah Jefferson 21, Kia Nurse 16
and Morgan Tuck 15. Also, new
starter Gabby Williams had 10
points and 11 rebounds.
“They should be able to look
like they’ve played together awhile
because they have played together
awhile,” Auriemma said.
Ohio State (0-2), coming off
an 88-80 loss at No. 2 South
Carolina on Friday, trailed by
three with just over two minutes
left in the first quarter before the

Huskies took over.
At one point of the second period the Huskies hit eight straight
ﬁeld goals and 10 of 11 and led
50-24 at the half.
“We got our (rear) kicked
tonight,” Ohio State coach Kevin
McGuff said. “They were coached
better. They played better. They
were more prepared. They
deserved to win by the margin they
did.”
Shayla Cooper led Ohio State
with 17 points. All-American guard
Kelsey Mitchell, who had 36 points
against South Carolina and last
season became the ﬁrst freshman
to lead the nation in scoring with
a 24.9 average, picked up two fouls
in the opening minutes.
She had eight points on 2 of 14
shooting from the ﬂoor.
“She didn’t have a great night
but they did a great job defending
her,” McGuff said.
UConn started the game scoring
10 of the ﬁrst 12 points with half
of the by Nurse. But the Buckeyes
worked their way back into the
game. A jumper from the left cor-

ner by Alexa Hart brought Ohio
State to within 18-15 but those
would be the last points of the
quarter as the Huskies ran off six
straight for a 24-15 lead.
The Huskies hit 37 of 65 from
the ﬂoor (56.9 percent) and outrebounded the Buckeyes 49-29 and
had 14 fast break points compared
to 2 for Ohio State.
“They’re a great team,” Cooper
said. “We have to learn from this
game and get better.”
TIP-IN
UConn: The teams have met
three times and the Huskies have
been ranked ﬁrst in all. They won
the previous games 81-50 in 2010
and 70-49 in 2013. UConn is
48-10 against top 10 teams since
the start of the 2008-09 season.
The Huskies are 33-9 in road
openers.
Ohio State: The Buckeyes lost
their home opener for the ﬁrst time
in 17 games, back to a 92-84 loss
to Kentucky in 1998. Ohio State is
2-16 against Associated Press No.
1 teams with both victories coming
in the 1987-88 season.

Big 12 bowl eligibility at 5 teams
By Stephen Hawkins
Associated Press

West Virginia coach
Dana Holgorsen will ﬁnally talk about the Mountaineers’ chances to get
into a bowl this season.
“We got ﬁve (wins),”
Holgorsen said Monday
during the Big 12 coaches
teleconference. “When
it’s one more, that’s when
I feel it’s appropriate to
start talking about it.”
Texas Tech on Saturday
became the ﬁfth Big 12
team to get the sixth victory that guarantees bowl
eligibility. The Red Raiders joined the four Top 25
teams still contending for
the league title and a possible playoff spot — No.
4 Oklahoma State, No. 7
Oklahoma, No. 10 Baylor

and No. 11 TCU.
West Virginia (5-4),
which has won two games
in a row since an 0-4
Big 12 start against the
playoff contenders, has
three more chances to get
eligible for its 14th bowl
in 15 seasons. Texas (4-6)
and Kansas State (3-6)
are the only other Big 12
teams that can get to six
wins, but neither can lose
another game.
“It was tough in October. There’s no doubt
about it, we played four
really good teams and
caught them all four, it
seems, like when they
were playing at their
best,” Holgorsen said.
“We’ve got about 20
seniors. We met with
those guys, and said we’ve

Call Now: 800-595-3120

got a lot to play for.”
The Mountaineers are
at winless Kansas on
Saturday, then play Iowa
State and Kansas State.
The Wildcats, who also
play the Jayhawks (0-10)
and Cyclones (3-7) need
three consecutive wins.
“Yes, we address it, but
we can’t belabor the point
because it is common
knowledge and understood by everybody in
our program, or anybody
that’s not in our program
for that matter,” K-State
coach Bill Snyder said.
“If we’re thinking down
the road for three games,
then we’re going to be in
trouble.”
Kansas State is 0-6 in
Big 12 play for the ﬁrst
time ever, a stretch that

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Presale tickets
available at PPJSHS
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Presale tickets
for the Class AAA quarterﬁnal football contest
between Point Pleasant and Huntington will be on
sale at the school during school hours on Thursday and Friday.
The cost is $7 apiece for adults and $5 each for
students. All tickets at gate will be $7 and there is
no reserve seating. If you leave the game before it
ends, you must pay to re-enter.
No county passes will be accepted at the game.
Only WVSSAC courtesy passes will be accepted.

Rio’s Bonar named KIAC
Player of the Week
FLORENCE, Ky. — Sarah Bonar of the University of Rio Grande averaged 18.5 points per game
over the ﬁrst two games of the season to earn
KIAC Women’s Basketball Player of the Week honors for Nov. 9-15.
The 5-foot-11 senior forward from Hartford,
Ohio, averaged 18.5 ppg, 6.0 rpg and shot 57
percent from the ﬁeld to lead Rio Grande to a 2-0
start to the year. She also made all ﬁve of her free
throws on the week for 100 percent.
Bonar had a high of 27 points, eight rebounds,
three assists and two blocks in a win over Wilberforce (Ohio). She also made 11 of 15 ﬁeld goals
in that game. Bonar then had 10 points, four
rebounds and block in a win over St. Catharine
(Ky.).
Through two games, Bonar’s 18.5 ppg put her
second in the KIAC. The RedStorm (2-0) are in
action again tonight (Tuesday) at the University
of the Cumberlands (Ky.).

CLARIFICATION
In the Point Pleasant versus Musselman opening round Class AAA playoff game from this past
weekend, it was noted in the story that PPHS
senior Cody Mitchell became the state’s all-time
leader in rushing touchdowns in a playoff game.
Mitchell is, in fact, the state’s all-time leader in
rushing touchdowns in a Class AAA playoff game
with seven. The overall playoff record is eight
touchdowns (and 399 rushing yards) by Jordan
Roberts of Scott in a 2007 Class AA win over
Berkeley Springs. The original story never stated
that it was a state record for all divisions, only
Class AAA.

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includes a 36-34 loss to
Oklahoma State and seven-point losses to Baylor
and TCU. The Wildcats
are home for the Dec.
5 regular-season ﬁnale
against WVU.
Texas Tech ended a
three-game losing streak
and got bowl eligible Saturday with a 59-44 victory
over Kansas State. The
Red Raiders next have
their regular-season ﬁnale
Thanksgiving night at
Texas, which then will have
another game at Baylor.
“They’re going to come
out and go compete,”
Longhorns coach Charlie
Strong said, when asked
about keeping his players focused not throwing
in the towel. “I don’t see
them quitting at all.”

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Ghost in the Machine" (N)
Laura "The Mystery of the
Ghost in the Machine" (N)
The Middle Goldberg (N)
(N)
Earth's Natural Wonders
"Living Wonders" (N)

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Chicago P.D. "Never Forget
I Love You" (N)
Chicago P.D. "Never Forget
I Love You" (N)
Nashville "Unguarded
Moments" (N)
The Brain With David
Eagleman "Who Will We
Be?" (N)
The Middle Goldberg (N) Modern
Black "Chop Nashville "Unguarded
(N)
Family (N)
Shop" (N)
Moments" (N)
Criminal Minds "Awake" Code Black "You Are the
Survivor - Cambodia
"Witches Coven" (N)
(N)
Heart" (N)
Rosewood "Bloodhunt and Empire "My Bad Parts" (N) Eyewitness News at 10
Beats" (N)
Earth's Natural Wonders Nova "Making North
The Brain With David
"Living Wonders" (N)
America: Human" (N)
Eagleman "Who Will We
Be?" (N)
Survivor - Cambodia
Criminal Minds "Awake" Code Black "You Are the
"Witches Coven" (N)
(N)
Heart" (N)

8 PM

8:30

Law &amp; Order: S.V.U.
"Depravity Standard" (N)
Law &amp; Order: S.V.U.
"Depravity Standard" (N)
Modern
Black "Chop
Family (N)
Shop" (N)
Nova "Making North
America: Human" (N)

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

BlueB. "Ends and Means" P. of Interest "One Percent" ..Interest "Booked Solid" P. of Interest "Relevance" P. of Interest "Proteus"
(5:00) NCAA Basketball
NCAA Basketball Wofford at North Carolina (L)
The Dan Patrick Show (N) ACC Gridiron Live! (L)
SportsCenter
Countdown NBA Basketball New Orleans Pelicans at Oklahoma City Thunder (L)
NBA Basket.
Around Horn Interruption SEC Storied SportsCenter NCAA Football Western Michigan at Northern Illinois Site: Huskie Stadium (L)
(4:00)
Hitch (‘05, Com)
27 Dresses A perennial bridesmaid struggles to
People's Sexiest Man Alive People's Sexiest Man Alive
Will Smith. TV14
accept that her sister is marrying her secret crush. TV14
2015
2015
(5:30)
Forrest Gump Tom Hanks. A simple man finds himself in
Grease (‘78, Mus) John Travolta. A leather-jacketed boy and a
extraordinary situations throughout the course of his life. TV14
goody-two-shoes girl fall in and out of love in the 1950s. TVPG
(4:00) Never
I Am Legend (‘07, Sci-Fi) Alice Braga, Will Smith. The seemingly
2 Fast 2 Furious A former police officer is recruited to
Back Down lone survivor of a plague struggles to survive and find a cure. TV14
infiltrate an illegal Miami street racing circuit. TV14
Nicky
H.Danger
Thunder
Thunder (N) Bella (N)
GShakers
Full House Full House Full House Full House
NCIS "Iceman"
NCIS "Grace Period"
NCIS "Choke Hold"
NCIS "Semper Fortis"
NCIS "Grounded"
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
This Is Life (N)
CNN Tonight
Castle
Castle "The Greater Good"
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (‘12, Fant) Martin Freeman. TVPG
(5:30)
I, Robot In 2035, a Chicago detective
Independence Day (1996, Sci-Fi) Bill Pullman, Jeff Goldblum, Will Smith. A group
investigates a robot's role in the death of a scientist. TV14 of people race against time to try to save the world from alien invaders. TV14
Bush "Never Give Up"
Bush "Endless Summer"
Alaskan Bush People (N) Bush "Shots Fired" (N)
Men,Wild "For Worse" (N)
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck D. "De- Duck Dynasty "Glory is the Duck
Duck
Duck
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Bug Life"
Reward of Mallard"
Dynasty
Dynasty
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
Snapped "Jane Reth"
Snapped "Adrienne
Snapped "Amy Bishop"
Snapped "Christine Paolilla" Snapped "Jennifer Nibbe"
Davidson"
Law &amp; Order "Burned"
Law &amp; Order "Ritual"
Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order "Expert"
Law &amp; Order "Castoff"
The Kardashians
E! News (N)
Botched "The Bacon Bra" Botched "Dolly'd Up"
Botched "The Living Doll"
(:25) The Facts of Life
Facts of Life (:35) FactsLife (:10) FactsLife (:50) Ray
(:25) Everybody Loves Ray Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Border Wars "Fence
Underworld, Inc. "Ghost
Drugs, Inc. "Silicon Valley Drugs, Inc. "Heroin Island, Drugs, Inc. "Holidaze" (N)
Jumpers"
Guns"
High"
NYC" (N)
Pro FB Talk Football
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Washington Capitals at Detroit Red Wings (L)
Overtime
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
NCAA Basketball Illinois vs. Providence (L)
TUF: McGregor/ Faber
TUF: 22 "Bullseye" (N)
American Pickers "Frank's American Pickers "Good &amp; American Pickers "Beetle In American Pickers
(:05) American Pickers "Let
Holy Grail"
Evel"
a Haystack"
It Go"
Listing "All Cash Chaos"
Listing "Bait and Switch" Listing "The Hustler Hustle" Million Dollar List (N)
Untying the Knot (N)
(:05) Not Easily Broken (‘09, Dra) Morris Chestnut. TVPG
Martin
Martin
Martin
#TheWestbrooks (N)
Buying and Selling
Buying and Selling
Property Brothers
Property Brothers (N)
H.Hunt (N) House (N)
Ghost Hunters "Darker
Ghost Hunters "Innocent Ghost Hunters "Rockets
Ghost Hunters "1st Edition Paranormal Witness "Ashes
Learning"
Until Proven Dead"
Red Scare"
Apparition" (N)
to Ashes" (N)

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

Night at the Museum (‘06, Com) Robin
The Leisure Class (2015, Comedy) Ed
FirstLook "The
400 (HBO) Williams, Ben Stiller. A father is hired as the night guard at Weeks, Bridget Regan, Larrs Jackson. TVMA Danish Girl"
(N)/ Get On
a museum where the exhibitions come to life. TVPG
(5:25)
Frantic Betty Buckley. An
Ouija (‘14, Hor) Olivia Cooke. A group of
The Knick
450 (MAX) American doctor finds it impossible to find friends is tormented by malevolent forces
help when his wife disappears in Paris. TVM after using a Ouija board. TV14
(4:45)
I Am Giant: Victor Cruz
Play It Forward (‘15, Doc) Heather Davis. Homeland "Oriole" Carrie
500 (SHOW) Bernie Jack
Tony Gonzalez shares his emotional story of reconnects with old friends.
Saul opens up.
Black. TVPG
family, sacrifice, and dreams. TVPG
(:05)

10 PM

10:30

(:15) The Leftovers "A Most

Powerful Adversary"
28 Weeks Later (‘07,
Hor) Robert Carlyle,
Catherine McCormack. TV14
The Affair Alison confronts
Noah about his book.

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Wednesday, November 18, 2015

LEGALS

Help Wanted General

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby given that
on Saturday, November 21,
2015, at 10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at 211 W. 2nd
Street Pomeroy, OH 45769.
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Company is selling
for cash in hand or certified
check the following collateral:
2005 Ford Mustang VIN:
1ZVFT80N555112313
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the right to bid
at this sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral prior to
sale. Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company
reserves the right to reject any
or all bids submitted. The
above described collateral will
be sold “as is-where is”, with
no expressed or implied
warranty given. For further
information, or for an
appointment to inspect
collateral, prior to sale date
contract Randy Hays at
740-992-4048.
11/18/15-11/19/15-11/20/15
The Village of Middleport is
accepting sealed bids for
purchase of the following
items: 1. a very old Elgin
Pelican Street Sweeper, some
rust, might run; 2. 1987 Ford
truck with dump bed, bad
transmission, very rusty; 3. 3
unrepairable fire hydrants.
these can be sold separately.
Each item requires separate
bid. Sealed bids must be
delivered to the Middleport
Water Department and the
deadline for bids is Nov 9th at
4pm. The Village has the right
to accept or reject any or all
bids. Phone 992-3037 for
more details.
11/15/15-11/17/15-11/18/1511/19/15
Notices
Mollohan Carpet
Remnants Sales
Carpet &amp; Vinyl
up to 30% off
317 State Route 7 South
Gallipolis, Oh 45632
740-446-7444

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.

Help Wanted General

NOW HIRING

$$$$$$$$$

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

$$$$$$$$$

Full Time STNAs
Part Time STNAs
PRN STNAs
RN UNIT MANAGER
Come join our
incredible team of
caring professionals!
Please apply within or send
Resume
36759 Rocksprings Rd
Pomeroy OH 45769

60622369

Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local References.
Established in 1975. Call
24HRS 740-446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

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

Help Wanted General
Help Needed In Dining Room
And Kitchen Help.
Apply In Person At Gallipolis
Quality Inn.
"Please No Phone Calls"
Industrial Cleaners
Needed in Buffalo, WV.
Full-time Positions Available.
Days/Evenings. Must pass
background check and drug
test. 304-768-6309.
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Apartments/Townhouses
1-Bdrm Apt. Appliances included Call 740-446-2804 ask
for Jennifer

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.

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

Yard Sale
Yard Sale Nov 20 &amp; 21 @
Rodney Community Building
9am to 5pm.

60583312

NOW LEASING
Jordan Landing Apartments
1, 2, 3 &amp; 4 Bdrms
$410-$610 Rent Mnthly
Sect. 8 Vouchers Accepted
EHO/ADA
For Info call: 304-674-0023

Daily Sentinel

Apartments/Townhouses
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
1-Bdrm Home @ 23 Pine
Street(Gallipolis) $450 Rent
$450 deposit, plus utilities,
740-339-3639

Houses For Rent
For Rent:
2105 N. Main St. Pt. Pleasant
$475.00 Per Month + Deposit
References Required
(304)675-2749
Land (Acreage)
ATTENTION HUNTERS:
For Sale: 100+ acres
Joining McClintic Wildlife
Refuge
Create your
hunting paradise
Build your own fishing pond
A place for food plots
Plus beautiful house sites.
Utilities available including
County Water and
High Speed Internet
Everything for a great place
to live.
Only 3 miles from
Point Pleasant
$120,000
Phone (304) 675-2929
or (304) 6753927

Rentals
2 bdrm mobile home on farm.
$450.00 mo. includes water
540-729-1331
Completely Furnished
2 bedroom 2 bath mobile
home with carport
overlooking Ohio River.New
furniture and appliances.
$550.00 month
must see to appreciate.
614-595-7773
or 740-645-5953
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

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

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

LEGALS

HILL’S SELF STORAGE

PUBLIC SALE

Notice is hereby given that on November 21, 2015 at 10:00 a.m. a public sale will
be held for the purpose of satisfying a landlord’s lien on the contents of self-service
storage room. The goods to be sold are described generally as miscellaneous
personal &amp; household. The room will be opened for viewing immediately prior to
solicitation of bids, no cartons or containers are to be opened. Unit will be sold at
one price for the entire unit. Unit must be emptied and cleaned by 4pm on day of
sale, all garbage must be removed from the grounds.

Bay #60
Hill’s Self Storage
Name: Bryce Bowling
29625 Bashan Rd
Address: 47942 Greenwood Cemetery Road
Racine, OH 45771
City: Racine, OH 45771
Terms of the sale will be cash or certified fund ONLY. 60624032
LEGALS

HILL’S SELF STORAGE

PUBLIC SALE

Notice is hereby given that on November 21, 2015 at 10:00 a.m. a public sale will
be held for the purpose of satisfying a landlord’s lien on the contents of self-service
storage room. The goods to be sold are described generally as miscellaneous
personal &amp; household. The room will be opened for viewing immediately prior to
solicitation of bids, no cartons or containers are to be opened. Unit will be sold at
one price for the entire unit. Unit must be emptied and cleaned by 4pm on day of
sale, all garbage must be removed from the grounds.

Bay #39 &amp; 40
Hill’s Self Storage
Name: Pete Sisson
29625 Bashan Rd
Address: 1154 College Road
Racine, OH 45771
City: Syracuse, OH 45779
Terms of the sale will be cash or certified fund ONLY. 60624034

LEGALS

LEGALS

HILL’S SELF STORAGE

HILL’S SELF STORAGE

Notice is hereby given that on November 21, 2015 at 10:00 a.m. a public sale will
be held for the purpose of satisfying a landlord’s lien on the contents of self-service
storage room. The goods to be sold are described generally as miscellaneous
personal &amp; household. The room will be opened for viewing immediately prior to
solicitation of bids, no cartons or containers are to be opened. Unit will be sold at
one price for the entire unit. Unit must be emptied and cleaned by 4pm on day of
sale, all garbage must be removed from the grounds.

Notice is hereby given that on November 21, 2015 at 10:00 a.m. a public sale will
be held for the purpose of satisfying a landlord’s lien on the contents of self-service
storage room. The goods to be sold are described generally as miscellaneous
personal &amp; household. The room will be opened for viewing immediately prior to
solicitation of bids, no cartons or containers are to be opened. Unit will be sold at
one price for the entire unit. Unit must be emptied and cleaned by 4pm on day of
sale, all garbage must be removed from the grounds.

Bay #21
Hill’s Self Storage
Name: Bobby Marshal
29625 Bashan Rd
Address: 46354 SR 124
Racine, OH 45771
City: Racine, OH 45771
Terms of the sale will be cash or certified fund ONLY. 60624033

Bay #18
Hill’s Self Storage
Name: Carol Sellers
29625 Bashan Rd
Address: PO Box 21
Racine, OH 45771
City: Portland, OH 45770
Terms of the sale will be cash or certified fund ONLY. 60624035

PUBLIC SALE

PUBLIC SALE

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, November 18, 2015 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
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

8 7
5
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9
3
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By Hilary Price

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11/18

Difficulty Level

By Bil and Jeff Keane

11/18

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�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Daily Sentinel

NASCAR chairman France calls meeting with Kenseth
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
— NASCAR chairman Brian
France met Monday with Matt
Kenseth three days after the
suspended driver deﬁantly
promised to remain aggressive
when he returns for the season
ﬁnale this weekend.
France met with Kenseth in
Charlotte and “was pleased with
the dialogue,” said NASCAR
spokesman Brett Jewkes, who
declined to disclose details of
the discussion. He said attention was now being turned to
the championship weekend at
Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Kenseth was suspended two
races for intentionally wrecking
Joey Logano as payback for an
earlier incident in the Chase
for the Sprint Cup championship. Kenseth’s action ultimately
cost Logano a spot in Sunday’s
title-deciding race. Kenseth was
knocked out of the playoffs in
part because Logano spun him
while the two raced for the win
at Kansas last month.
In an interview with The
Associated Press last week,
Kenseth stood by his actions
and said he felt encouraged to
retaliate because France praised

Logano’s actions at Kansas as
“quintessential NASCAR.” The
two-time Daytona 500 winner
told AP he had no regret over
wrecking Logano and vowed
to be more aggressive upon
his return. Kenseth also noted
that NASCAR ofﬁcials failed to
mediate the feud between Kenseth and Logano as it continued
to simmer.
Kenseth found it unusual that
NASCAR did not sit the drivers
down, and said he felt he had
no choice but to retaliate or
risk losing respect in the garage
area.

Logano and Kenseth were
two of the top drivers this season and neither will race for the
title. Logano won the Daytona
500 and ﬁve other races, including a three-race sweep of the
second round of the Chase.
Before Kenseth wrecked him,
Logano was likely going to win
at Martinsville to earn an automatic berth into the ﬁnale.
Kenseth won ﬁve races, but
was in a must-win situation to
avoid elimination in the second
round of the Chase. He was
headed to the win at Kansas
that would have moved him into

the third round of the Chase,
but Logano spun him to snatch
the victory.
Logano chalked it up as a racing incident, but Kenseth felt
the act was intentional. The two
never attempted to clear the
air before Martinsville, where
most everyone had a hunch that
Kenseth would exact revenge.
Jeff Gordon went on to win at
Martinsville and will race for his
ﬁfth championship on Sunday in
his ﬁnal event before retirement.
He’ll be racing reigning champion
Kevin Harvick, Kyle Busch and
Martin Truex Jr. for the title.

Bengals seem more Browns name Manziel full-time starter
bothered by how they
lost than loss itself
CINCINNATI (AP) — Ugly. Sloppy. Self-destructive. Ineffective. The Bengals seemed to be more
bothered by how they lost their ﬁrst game than by the
loss itself.
They had a lot to do with the best start in franchise
history ﬁnally hitting the wall.
Cincinnati played by far its worst all-around game
on Monday night, resulting in a 10-6 loss to the Houston Texans in front of a less-than-capacity crowd at
Paul Brown Stadium that was booing in the fourth
quarter.
Yep. It was that ugly.
Defensive tackle Domata Peko said the players talked on the ﬁeld as the clock ran out about how they’d
let one slip away. “We can’t do that, especially here at
home,” Peko said.
It was a strange night in many ways.
For one, an 8-0 team couldn’t ﬁll its stadium for a
Monday night game. The Bengals sold 61,381 tickets,
leaving roughly 4,000 empty seats at Paul Brown Stadium. And the fans booed as the mishaps piled up.
— Andy Dalton was repeatedly off-target and
ﬁnished with a passer rating of 61, his lowest of the
season.

BEREA, Ohio (AP) — Johnny
Manziel is no longer just a celebrated backup for the Browns.
The second-year quarterback
will start the rest of Cleveland’s
games this season, taking over
for veteran Josh McCown, who
missed the past two games with
injured ribs.
The Browns made the announcement before practice Tuesday , two
days after Manziel passed for 372
yards in a 30-9 loss at Pittsburgh
on Sunday. Manziel also ﬂashed
a few of those Johnny Football
moments that made him famous
at Texas A&amp;M, scrambling to turn
broken plays into big gains.
“It’s a great opportunity for me,”
Manziel said after the Browns
practiced on an unseasonably
warm November day. “I was a little
caught off-guard, just watching
ﬁlm this morning and coach Pettine kind of came in and grabbed
me. I was very excited.”
“I was just looking forward to
coming out and trying to have a
little bit of a spark — and more
than anything get some wins,” he
said.
Browns coach Mike Pettine

District

All four Tornadoes are making
their ﬁrst appearance on the
all-district team.
From Page 6
Eastern, which ﬁnished 2-8,
earned one ﬁrst team offensive
SHS senior Joe Beegle, who
selection and one special menhad 54 tackles, seven for a
tion spot. EHS senior Ross
loss and two sacks on defense, Keller, who anchored both lines
earned his ﬁrst-ever district
for EHS this fall, was named
honor as a ﬁrst team offensive
ﬁrst team offensive lineman
lineman. Southern senior
for the second straight season.
Tommy Ramthun, who had
Keller, who was a special meneight offensive scores this fall,
tion in his sophomore season,
earned a ﬁrst team defensive
had 50 tackles, seven for a loss
back spot after intercepting
and two sacks on the defensive
two passes and recording 52
side of the ball this season.
tackles, three for a loss and one
Cameron Richmond earned a
sack this fall.
special mention for the Eagles,
Earning special mention
after grabbing 56 passes for
spots for the Tornadoes were
768 yards and six scores, and
junior Blake Johnson and soph- rushing for 196 yards and a
omore Dylan Smith. Johnson
touchdown on 14 carries, while
had 1,601 yards and 19 scores
recording 42 tackles and two
in his second year as Southinterceptions on defense.
ern’s starting quarterback,
Trimble senior running back
while Smith had 234 yards and Justice Jenkins was named
two scores on the ground, 316 Offensive Player of the Year in
yards and two scores receivDivision VII after leading the
ing, with one touchdown pass. Tomcats to their third straight

hinted at the switch on Monday
when he offered high praise for
Manziel, who has had a bumpy
start in his NFL career but has
shown progress. Manziel shook off
an early turnover — he fumbled on
Cleveland’s ﬁrst play — and completed 33 of 45 passes with one
touchdown.
“The performance against Pittsburgh validated for us the progress
he’s made and the improvement
he’s shown and that he deserves
this opportunity,” Pettine said. “We
understand where our season is at
this point and this is a kid we’ve
invested a lot in. This will give us
an opportunity to see how far he’s
come and what he’s capable of.”
The 2012 Heisman Trophy winner followed a rough rookie season
with 70 days in a rehab facility for
an unspeciﬁed condition. However, Manziel has shown signs
of maturing, though he remains
under league investigation for a
recent domestic incident.
Pettine said McCown’s health
was also a factor in the switch.
With the Browns on a bye,
Manziel will have some time off.
Pettine spoke with him about his

behavior and the club’s expectations for him away from the ﬁeld.
“I let him know that I’m not
going to do anything that’s going
to be a distraction to this team or
be an embarrassment to the organization,” Manziel said.
He said he’s ready with the rest
of his team for a well-deserved bye.
“I’m going to come back and
gear up for these last set of games
that we have and come in freshminded, ready to go and excited
to be back on the football ﬁeld,”
he said. “So I don’t think they’re
going to have to worry about me
this week.”
McCown, 36, was brought in to
mentor Manziel and groom the
talented and troubled quarterback.
McCown played well but went 1-6
as a starter.
McCown said Monday that he
could understand if the Browns
wanted to turn their offense over
to Manziel.
“Just from a philosophical standpoint, if you pick somebody in the
ﬁrst round and they start to play
and start to do some good things,
I understand it if that’s the decision,” he said.

Landon Hutchinson, Crown City
South Gallia, 6-1, 175, Sr.; RB —
Akia Brown, Sciotoville Community
East, 6-0, 180, Jr.; Isaiah Geiger,
Crown City South Gallia, 5-11,
161, Sr.; Justice Jenkins, Glouster
Trimble, 6-1, 195, Sr.; Kody
McKinniss, Corning Miller, 5-9, 170,
Sr.; Sam Kayser, Portsmouth Notre
Dame, 5-9, 145, Jr.; Cole Fremont,
DIVISION VII
Beaver Eastern, 6-1, 205, Sr.
First Team
DEFENSE
OFFENSE
DL — Jacob Stevens, Glouster
All-Purpose — Deijon Bedgood,
Trimble, 6-0, 250, Sr.; Nathan
Belpre, 6-2, 155, Jr.; Jordan
Mason, Belpre, 6-3, 240, Sr.;
Freeman, Manchester, 6-0, 180,
Dakota Watson, Willow Wood
Sr.; WR — Kamron Curry, Glouster Symmes Valley, 6-5, 240, Sr.;
Trimble, 5-11, 170, Jr.; Montana
Cameron Meadows, Willow Wood
Brooker, Waterford, 5-9, 140, Sr.;
Symmes Valley, 5-11, 205, Sr.; LB
Kane Hutchinson, Crown City
— Aaron Bazler, Portsmouth Notre
South Gallia, 6-0, 165, Sr.; Garrett
Dame, 6-2, 170, Jr.; Eric Worstell,
Bartley, Corning Miller, 5-9, 155,
Belpre, 6-2, 210, Sr.; Tyler Dement,
Sr.; OL —Blaine Scott, Sciotoville
Willow Wood Symmes Valley,
Community East, 6-5, 301, So.;
6-0, 195, Sr.; Seattle Compston,
T.J. Spears, Glouster Trimble,
Corning Miller, 6-2, 210, So.; Jacob
5-10, 215, Sr.; Joe Beegle, Racine
Cruse, Beaver Eastern, 5-11, 205,
Southern, 6-2, 295, Sr.; Ross
Jr.; DB —Tommy Ramthun, Racine
Keller, Reedsville Eastern, 6-3, 265, Southern, 5-10, 150, Sr.; Ethan
Sr.; QB —Andrew Losey, Glouster
Gifford, 5-11, 205, So., Sciotoville
Trimble, 6-2, 170, Sr.; Tavian
Community East.
Miller, Belpre, 6-0, 195, Sr.; Isaac
Offensive Player of the Year:
Huffman, Waterford, 5-11, 160, Jr.;
Justice Jenkins, Glouster Trimble

Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division title. Tyler Dement, a
senior linebacker from Symmes
Valley was named Defensive
Player of the Year, while Greg
Adams of Belpre and Sean
Bartley of Miller shared Coach
of the Year honors.

Defensive Player of the Year: Tyler
Dement, Willow Wood Symmes
Valley
Co-Coaches of the Year: Greg
Adams, Belpre; Sean Bartley,
Corning Miller
Special Mention
Matthew Colvin, Belpre; Josh
Moore, Belpre; Tyler McCutcheon,
Waterford; Teddy Smith,
Waterford; Collin Webb, Willow
Wood Symmes Valley; Tyler
Darnell, Franklin Furnace Green;
Ty Carpenter, Crown South Gallia;
Johnny Sheets, Crown City South
Gallia; Blake Johnson, Racine
Southern; Dylan Smith, Racine
Southern; Cameron Richmond,
Reedsville Eastern; Bryce Guthrie,
Glouster Trimble; Jonathan
Roback, Glouster Trimble; Dakota
Smathers, Glouster Trimble;
Carson Starlin, Corning Miller;
A.J. Cobb, Stewart Federal
Hocking; Ethan Carver, Sciotoville
Community East; Michael Collins,
Portsmouth Notre Dame; Isaiah
Johnson, Portsmouth Notre Dame;
Jared Stricklett, Manchester.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2100.

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OSU
Besides the inside track
to winning the East Division, there are bragging
rights at stake. Although
Ohio State has won 30
straight regular-season
conference games since
Meyer became coach
in the 2012 season, the
Spartans handed him his
only Big Ten loss — a
34-24 defeat in the 2013
conference title game
that ended Ohio State’s
23-game winning streak.
Last season, the
14-ranked Buckeyes went
to East Lansing and
beat the No. 8 Spartans
49-37. Meyer said it was
the best offensive performance of the season.
Decker said he hopes
this year’s game can have
a similar effect.
“If we perform well
(Saturday) it will show
everybody we’re for real
because people are questioning how good we
really are,” he said.

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