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                  <text>On this
day in
history

Mostly sunny.
High of 49,
low of 29

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

RedStorm
moving on
SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 187, Volume 69

Tuesday, November 24, 2015 s 50¢

Gavin plant experiences fire
Second fire at plant in less than six months
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

Courtesy photo

Eastern Local Students of the Month for October are pictured
from front row, left to right, Juli Durst and Darbi Mugrage; back
row, left to right, Peyton Rigsby and Teddi Casto; not pictured,
are Matthew Blanchard, Rylee Haggy, Natalie Hoffman and
Wyatt Reed.

Eastern
archery OK’d
for 2015-16
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

REEDSVILLE — The Eastern Archery Club
was given approval for their participation guidelines and bylaws as submitted by the coaches and
coordinator at a recent for Eastern Local School
District Board meeting.
The board met in regular session Oct. 21, where
they also approved the ﬁnancial reports for October and the transfer of funds from Eastern Elementary Student Council in the amount of $1000 to
the Eagle Pack Program.
The board then entered into executive session.
Upon their return, the following substitute
teachers for the 2015-16 school year were
approved pending proper certiﬁcation: Elizabeth
Blanchard, Braden Prater, Andy Sigman and Daniel Williams. The board approved Debbie Weber
retroactively to Sept. 13, 2015.
The board approved Karen Fick as a substitute
secretary, Garrett Hall from the University of Rio
Grande for 30 hours of Social Studies Methods,
with Mr. Kirk Reed and Donald Maxson Jr. as paid
Aassistant varsity softball coach for the upcoming
season — all pending proper certiﬁcation.
Archie Rose was hired as district on-board busing instructor, retroactive to Oct. 30.
Volunteer junior high school cheerleading
coaches Shelly Caldwell and Katie Jenkins were
approved pending proper certiﬁcation for the
2015-16 school year.
In other business, approval was given to the
new, updated, revised, replaced, deleted by laws,
policies, administrative guidelines, as recommended by Neola Inc., a service business that assists
school districts with their policy direction.
Open enrollment students Alex Collins and Seth
Collins were approved for the 2015-16 school year.
Open enrollment is an Ohio state law allowing students to attend schools outside of their resident school
if the receiving school has the capacity to accept them.
The district gave the go-ahead for the purchase
of two new buses from Edwin H. Davis and Son
Inc. The buses will cost $84,915 each, and the
board approved funding for both in the amount of
$169,830.
The board gave permission to pursue the
appraisal of a possible property purchase and the
advertisement for a future Board Member vacancy.
The next meeting of the Eastern Local Board
of Education is set for Wednesday, Dec, 16 at 6:30
p.m. in the elementary library conference room.

CHESHIRE — A
transformer at General
James M. Gavin Power
Plant in Cheshire
caught ﬁre early Sunday
afternoon, causing black
smoke to rise that could
be seen for miles across
the Ohio Valley.
According to Tammy
Ridout, manager for
media relations and
policy communications at
AEP, the 1 p.m. Sunday
ﬁre was a caused by a
failed generator step-up
transformer on Gavin
Plant Unit 2. This
transformer is what
handles the generator
voltage and increases it
to match the transmission
line voltage so that power
can leave the plant.
The plant is connected
to the grid by 765 kilovolt
transmission lines — the
highest rated voltage
in the U.S. The plant
currently has about 275
employees.
Middleport Fire Chief
Jeff Darst said the ﬁre
occurred in what is
known as Unit 2, where
the transformers are kept
behind the plant and can’t
be viewed from the road.
Pomeroy, Middleport
and Rutland ﬁre
departments were called
to the scene and no
injuries were reported.
Ridout said Unit 1 was
not affected and remains
in operation.
“The local ﬁre
departments were a big
help in containing the
ﬁre,” Ridout said. “We’re
still investigating the
cause and are working
on a recovery plan
to restore the unit to
operation.”
The Gavin Power Plant
is located in Cheshire up
the road from the smaller
Kyger Creek Power Plant.
It is a 2.6-gigawatt coalﬁred power station — the
largest facility of its kind
Photo courtesy of Kathy Frush in Ohio and one of the
Smoke was seen around 1 p.m. Sunday by those driving by and residents in the Cheshire area. The largest in the nation.
fire on scene was caused by a failing generator step-up transformer on Gavin Plant Unit 2. No injuries
were reported.

Crash sends Meigs man to hospital
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 Ext. 2551.

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Soccer: 6
NFL: 6
Golf: 10
— FEATURES
Television: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

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

See FIRE | 5

RACINE — A Meigs County
man was transported to West
Virginia hospital after a single-car
accident Friday evening.
Sgt. Jake Schuldt, assistant commander of the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the Ohio State Highway Patrol,
said that around 9:10 p.m. Friday,
Kody Murphy, 27, of Long Bottom,
was driving his red 1988 Honda
Civic northbound on Bashan Road
in Racine. He had one passenger,
Teresa Rose, 43, of Syracuse.
Murphy lost control of the
vehicle and struck an unnamed
building. Both passengers were
trapped and had to be extricated
from the car by the local ﬁre station. Rose had minor injuries and
refused treatment at the scene, and
Murphy, who had head injuries,
was transported to the Holzer

Emergency Room in Pomeroy and
then to Cabell Huntington Hospital
in Huntington, W.Va., where he
was listed in stable condition. The
police report did not list whether
or not Murphy wore a seat belt, but
listed Rose as wearing a seat belt.
Alcohol is believed to be a factor
in the crash. Schuldt said ofﬁcers
have a blood sample with test
results coming in later. The crash
remains under investigation with
charges for the crash pending.
This is the second Meigs County
crash in less than a week.
A Nov. 18 crash sent one woman
to Cabell Huntington as well.
Road Trooper Shawn Cunningham, of the Gallia-Meigs Post of
OSHP, said that his post got a call
at 7:54 a.m. that morning.
Cunningham said that Julie
Oiler, of Middleport, was driving
northbound on SR 7 in a black two-

door 2001 Chrysler Sebring when
she attempted to make a left turn
onto SR 143. However, police say
she turned in front of a southbound
black 2015 GMS Acadia on SR 7
driven by Nancy Gard of Pomeroy.
Cunningham said Gard attempted to brake and turn her vehicle
to the right to avoid striking Oiler
head-on, but still struck her on the
passenger side. Neither vehicle
had passengers inside. Oiler was
transported to St. Mary’s Medical
Center in Huntington.
Cunningham said Gard told him
she had some airbag burns on her
arm and felt a bit dizzy, but refused
treatment at the scene and instead
went to an undisclosed medical
facility to be treated.
Both women appear to have been
wearing safety belts, Cunningham
said.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.

�LOCAL

2 Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES
BUTLER
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Calma Jean Butler,
79, of Point Pleasant, passed away Sunday, Nov. 22,
2015, at her daughter’s home in Chesapeake, Ohio.
Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced
by Deal Funeral Home of Point Pleasant.
CAMMARATO
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Donna K. Cammarato,
58, of Huntington, passed away Saturday, Nov. 21,
2015, at Huntington Health and Rehabilitation Center, Huntington. There will be no services. She will be
interred at Lincoln Memorial Park in Hamlin, W.Va.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio,
assisted the family with arrangements.

will follow at Evergreen Cemetery. Friends may call
the funeral home between 5-8 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 24,
2015.
GILLENWATER
CROWN CITY, Ohio — Larry Joe Gillenwater, 58,
of Crown City, died Friday, Nov. 20, 2015. Funeral services will be noon Tuesday, Nov. 24, 2015, at WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home, Gallipolis, Ohio, with
Pastor Alfred Holley ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in
Ridgelawn Cemetery. Friends may call the funeral
home between 10 a.m. and noon Tuesday.

HARMON
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — Carolida “Kay”
Harmon, 54, of Gallipolis Ferry, died Nov. 21, 2015.
CASTO
Funeral services will be 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 24,
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Frankie Marie Casto, 89,
2015, at Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Columbus, died Sunday, Nov. 22, 2015. Graveside
Friends may visit the family at the funeral home
services will be 2 p.m. Friday, Nov. 27, 2015, at Vinton between 6-7:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Memorial Park Cemetery. Condolences can be sent to
the family at www. mccoymoore.com.
JOHNSON
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Melvin O. “Jiggs”
EXLINE
Johnson, 91, of Point Pleasant, died Sunday, Nov.
JACKSON, Ohio — Homer Junior “June” Exline,
22, 2015, at Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilita85, of Jackson, died Friday, Nov. 20, 2015. Funeral
tion Center, Point Pleasant. Service will be 11 a.m.
services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 25, 2015,
Wednesday, Nov. 25, 2015, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home
at Lewis &amp; Gillum Funeral Home of Jackson. Burial
in Point Pleasant. Burial will follow at New Lone Oak

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.

come dine with us at the Carmel-Sutton
United Methodist Church Fellowship
Hall, 48540 Carmel Rd. Racine, Monday Nov. 30 through Saturday, Dec. 5
from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. The menu
includes soup, sandwiches, drinks, desserts, for eat in or carry-out. Deer Hunters, working folks, stay at home folks,
everyone welcome and donations are
accepted. The luncheon is sponsored
by the Carmel-Sutton United Methodist
Church Friendship Circle and proceeds
will be used for local outreach projects.

Meigs parent,
teacher conference
POMEROY — The Meigs Local
High School will be having a ParentTeacher Conferences between 3-6 p.m.
Dec. 3. Parents and/or guardians are
encouraged to attend, as conferences
are a way of staying informed concerning your students progress. Students
will be bringing home a letter describing the conference scheduling procedure along with information on the
conferences.. Please return the form
attached to the letter to the school or
call 740-992-2158 by Wednesday Dec
2to schedule conferences.

Christmas
celebration
MIDDLEPORT — Middleport
Christmas Celebration will be Dec.
5 and include a Christmas Market
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., carriage
rides from 1 to 4 p.m. and a parade
4:30 p.m. and a visit with Santa
and Mrs. Claus after the parade.

Community
Luncheon

Community dinners

RACINE — Don’t carry your lunch,

POMEROY — New Beginnings Unit-

ed Methodist Church in Pomeroy will not
have their community dinner Nov. 25 or
Dec. 23. The next one will be Jan. 27.

Woodland
Centers closed
OHIO VALLEY— Woodland Centers Inc. will close clinic locations in
Gallia, Meigs, Jackson and Vinton
counties in observance of Thanksgiving. Normal operations will resume
Nov. 30. Emergency services can be
accessed by calling 740-446-5500 in
Gallia County, or 1800-252-5554 from
Jackson, Meigs and Vinton counties.

Open House
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.

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PARSONS
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ethel Parsons, 84, of Columbus, died Saturday, Nov. 21, 2015, at her son’s home.
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 25, 2015, at
Willis Funeral Home. Burial will be in Mina Chapel
Cemetery. Friends may call the funeral home between
noon and 1 p.m. Wednesday.
SHELINE
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — Whittney Lynn
Sheline, 23 of Gallipolis Ferry, died Sunday, Nov. 22,
2015, at Nationwide Childrens Hospital in Columbus,
Ohio. Funeral services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday,
Nov. 25, 2015, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. Burial will follow in the Weethee family
cemetery. Visitation will be two hours prior to the
funeral service at the funeral home.

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 spaceavailable basis and in
chronological order.
Events can be emailed
to: TDSnews@civitasmedia.com.
Tuesday, Nov. 24
REEDSVILLE —
Eastern Band Concert
will be 7 p.m. at Eastern High School. The
concert will feature the
high school and middle
school concert bands.
Admission is $1,
which will be donated
to the Eastern Eagle

Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

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PUBLISHER
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bhunt@civitasmedia.com

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elitteral@civitasmedia.com

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michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

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

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
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jschultz@civitasmedia.com

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Thursday, Nov. 26
POMEROY — The
Veterans Outreach at
in Pomeroy will host
a Thanksgiving Day
dinner for veterans and
their families. The center will open at 9 a.m.
for coffee and doughnuts while guests watch
the Thanksgiving Day
parades. A full turkey
dinner will be served
at noon and guests are
encouraged to stay to
watch football games.
Friday, Nov. 27
MIDDLEPORT —
Riverbend Arts Council
will present “Christmas
Tonight!” the annual
talent revue. This year’s
review is directed by
B. J. Kreseen and will
showcase the local
talent. The Big Bend
Community Band will
perform at 7 p.m. and
the Riverbend Talent
Revue will begin at 7:30
p.m. Refreshments will
include popcorn and
homemade candy.
Saturday Nov. 28
POMEROY — Keep
Your Fork 5k Road Race
will be at 10 a.m. at
the Meigs High School
parking lot. Race day
registration will be from
8:30-9:30 a.m. Plan to
arrive at least 30 minutes before the start of
the race. Place cost is
$20. Proceeds from the
race go to a scholarship in honor of Brandi
Thomas, a Meigs track
and ﬁeld athlete and
graduate of Meigs High
School who earned two
letters in the sport.
For more information,
contact Mike Kennedy
at 740-992-2158 or 740357-2723. Walkers welcome.

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JUSTICE
BIDWELL, Ohio — Bernice Mae Justice, 95,
passed away Saturday, Nov. 21, 2015. Funeral service
will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 25, 2015, at McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Vinton Chapel. Burial will
follow at Vinton Memorial Park. Friends may call the
funeral home between 5-8 p.m. Tuesday.

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

ADD
HIGH-SPEED
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Cemetery in Point Pleasant. Visitation will be 6-9 p.m.
Tuesday at the funeral home.

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Monday Nov. 30
POMEROY — Public
meeting of the Veterans
Service Commission,
117 E. Memorial Drive
Ste. 3, Pomeroy, at 9
a.m. Community Luncheon.
Wednesday, Dec. 2
OLIVE TOWNSHIP
— Olive Township
Trustees will meet at
6:30 p.m. at the Township Garage on Joppa
Road.
Thursday, Dec. 3
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Retired
Teachers group will
meet Dec. 3 at the
Trinity Congregational
Church in Pomeroy for
a noon lunch meeting.
The Eastern Bell Choir
will present a program
of Christmas music.
Please call 740-9923214 by Dec. 1 with
your lunch reservations.

�LOCAL/STATE/AREA

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 24, 2015 3

Ohio Attorney General offers holiday shopping tips
Staff Report

COLUMBUS — Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine
encourages consumers to
remember their rights and
watch for potential scams while
shopping this holiday season.
“Understanding your rights
as a consumer can help you
avoid scams and make the most
of holiday shopping,” DeWine
said. “We want to help consumers identify potential problems,
and we encourage them to
contact the Ohio Attorney General’s Ofﬁce if they need help.”
Since January, the Ohio
Attorney General’s Consumer
Protection Section has received
more than 24,600 complaints
involving a variety of issues.
Top problem areas include billing, misrepresentation, failure
to deliver, poor service or shoddy work and refund problems.

To avoid problems in consumer transactions, DeWine
offers consumers the following
advice:Check the exclusions
and limitations of an offer.
Exclusions and limitations
must be clearly disclosed in
advertisements, including
online, so review terms and
conditions carefully before you
go to the store or make a purchase.
Find out if rain checks apply.
If a seller advertises a product
at a certain price but sells out
of that product by the time
you respond to the ad, you
may have the right to a rain
check. However, sellers are
not required to provide rain
checks if they clearly disclose
the number of goods available
at that price or if they clearly
state that no rain checks will be
given.
Understand return policies

before you buy. In Ohio, sellers
can choose to set their own
return policies, including policies of “no returns,” but they
should clearly tell you what
their return policy is before
you check out or complete the
transaction. (For example,
the return policy shouldn’t be
posted only on the back of a
receipt.)
Look out for misrepresentations. Sellers may not misrepresent important characteristics
of a product or use “bait-andswitch” tactics to lure you in
with one advertised product
only to encourage you to buy
more expensive items.
Know that “free” must really
mean free. Sellers may not
advertise goods or services
as “free” when the cost of the
“free” offer is passed on to the
consumer. For example, if a
seller is advertising a buy-one-

get-one-free sale, the seller
can’t raise the base price of the
ﬁrst item in order to offset the
cost of the “free” item.
Check delivery dates. Generally when you order a product
or service, the seller has eight
weeks to deliver the product
or to offer you a refund or
substitution. Carefully review
expected delivery dates before
you make a purchase so you
know when to expect the delivery. Pick up delivered packages
promptly so that they’re not
stolen or damaged outside your
door.
Keep your receipts. Maintaining a complete record of a sale
will help you handle problems
that may arise after the purchase. Keep copies of receipts,
sales agreements, advertisements, photos of products, or
other documentation of a sale
until the transaction and billing

process are complete.
Monitor your accounts. Regularly check your credit card
and bank accounts for unauthorized charges or unexpected
activity. If you ﬁnd problems,
immediately notify your credit
card provider or bank. The
sooner you identify a problem,
the sooner you can work to correct it.
Watch for scams. Con artists operate year round. If
you receive a message saying
you’ve won the lottery, the IRS
is coming to arrest you, or a
family member is out of the
country and in need of money
immediately, it’s likely a scam.
Consumers who suspect an
unfair business practice or
want help addressing a consumer problem should contact
the Ohio Attorney General’s
Ofﬁce at www.OhioAttorneyGeneral.gov or 800-282-0515.

Ohio a leader in State announces $3 million to treat illness
diverting youth
from prisons
prison system for being a
model for others around
the country.
“Ohio’s de-incarceration programs are less
expensive and more
effective than prisons
when youth are matched
to the right programs,”
said Erin Davies, the
nonproﬁt’s executive
director.
While the state continues to expand funding for
programs and community services, DYS ofﬁcials
said they aren’t worried
about the agency’s future.
“I don’t see us going
out of business,” said
DYS Director Harvey
Reed. “There’s always
going to be kids and families that have problems.”
DYS serves 80,000
young offenders in 600
community programs.

mental illness and substance-use
disorders are lingering in our jails
— not getting the help they need,”
Plouck said.
The money will help put offenders on a path to recovery as Ohio
tries to reduce jail recidivism and
improve public safety, she said.
Counties and social service agencies can use the grants to provide
treatment programs in jails and to
connect offenders with additional
treatment options once they’re out.
The funding comes from savings
gained when the state’s mental
health and addiction services agencies were combined in 2013. Ohio
also provided $3 million over the
past two ﬁscal years.

Some grant recipients will get
free training and technical assistance from the Stepping Up initiative, a collaboration of the Council
of State Governments, the National
Association of Counties and the
American Psychiatric Foundation.
The initiative urges counties to
create plans to reduce the number of
people with mental illnesses in jails.
In southeastern Ohio, Gallia, Meigs and Jackson counties
received a joint grant of $150,000
with a goal of providing mental
health assessments to nine of
every ten inmates in the Jackson
County Correctional Facility within
48 hours of a request for such an
assessment.

FirstEnergy bills may increase by $9
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) — FirstEnergy customers in West Virginia
could see their monthly bills
go up $9 if the Public Service Commission approves
two proposed settlement
agreements.
The Charleston Gazette-

Mail reports that the
FirstEnergy could get an
additional $133.6 million
in revenue from customers
next year under the agreements.
That means that an average residential customer
who uses 1,000 kilowatts

a month could see a $9.04
increase in their monthly
bills.
FirstEnergy, the parent
company of MonPower and
Potomac Edison, initially
asked for an annual increase
of $37.6 million so it can
expand tree trimming efforts

and $165 million for fuel
costs and other expenses.
The settlement agreements reduce some of the
company’s initial requests.
They also require mandatory
meetings with energy efﬁciency proponents, among
other things.

OPEN ENROLLMENT
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Prescription Drug coverage
*Seniors (over 65) or on Disability, help with their choices
between Advantage Plans or Supplement (Medigap) Plans.
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SHOP LOCAL - Everything From SHOES to SNOWMEN …

ALONG THE RIVER CONTINUED….
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60623184

COLUMBUS (AP)
— A new study shows
Ohio as a national leader
in diverting juveniles
to lower-cost community programs instead of
prison.
The national study by
the Ofﬁce of Juvenile
Justice and Delinquency
Prevention shows the
number of young people
in Ohio sent to prison
dropped 80 percent from
1997 to 2013. Figures
show the national average of juvenile incarceration rates for that time
dropped 55 percent.
A total of 491 juveniles
currently are incarcerated
in three Ohio Department of Youth Services
facilities and four contract agencies. In 1997,
the average number of
offenders held in 12 state
lockups and some contract agencies was more
than 2,000.
In addition to saving
taxpayer money, authorities said research shows
that youths do better
when they stay closer
to home, The Columbus
Dispatch reported.
“Statistics show that
spending even one night
in a juvenile-detention
center reduces a youth’s
chance of graduating
from high school by
50 percent,” Franklin
County Juvenile Court
Judge Elizabeth Gill said.
“It exposes him or her
to people who’ve done a
lot worse things. You’re
basically sending him
to criminal school and
exposing him or her to
more trauma.”
The Ofﬁce of Juvenile
Justice and Delinquency
Prevention’s study comes
on the heels of an October report by the Juvenile
Justice Coalition that
praised Ohio’s youth

YOUNGSTOWN (AP) — The
state has announced $3 million in
grants to address the mental health
needs of offenders in county jails in
hopes of reducing jail populations
and the number of inmates returning to the facilities.
The Department of Mental
Health and Addiction Services
said the latest funding will go to 23
projects that serve 38 counties.
Agency director Tracy Plouck
announced the funding Thursday
at the Mahoning County Minimum Security Jail in Youngstown.
Mahoning County and participating agencies received one of several $150,000 grants.
“Too many Ohioans with serious

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Contest a chance
to talk to children
about safety
About 1.3 million children have been reported
missing this year in the United States, more than
18,000 of them in Ohio.
Today, there are more than 600 children unaccounted for in this state. For those children, we
must never stop asking questions,
never quit pursuing leads, and never
give up the search.
To safeguard the children of Ohio,
my ofﬁce started a Crimes Against
Children Initiative in 2011 to focus
on identifying, arresting and convicting people who prey on children.
Mike
As part of the initiative, we formed
DeWine
a Crimes Against Children Unit,
Contributing which receives assistance from other
Columnist
units at the Ohio Attorney General’s
Bureau of Criminal Investigation
(BCI), and the Special Prosecutions
and Crime Victim Services sections of my ofﬁce.
In 2014, the Crimes Against Children Unit assisted 73 law enforcement agencies in 150 cases.
In a crisis, the vast resources of law enforcement and community unite with a passion to save
a missing child. From the earliest moments when
a child is missing, the Crimes Against Children,
Missing Persons and Intelligence units at BCI
start gathering information and preparing to assist
local law enforcement and the family. Once the
Child Abduction Response Team (CART) is called
in, coordinators summon resources and help manage the recovery of the child.
In honor of the children who are still missing,
we urge teachers and parents of ﬁfth-graders to
encourage them to take part in the 2016 National
Missing Children’s Day Poster Contest. The contest not only gives kids a chance to exercise their
creativity, but also provides an opportunity to
remind children about staying safe.
The contest, whose theme is “Bring Our Missing Children Home,” is sponsored by the U.S.
Department of Justice. Teachers should have their
students create posters based on the theme and
mail a winning entry from each class to the Ohio
Attorney General’s Bureau of Criminal Investigation by March 1.
A panel of judges from the Amber Alert Steering
Committee and my ofﬁce will chose the top three
Ohio posters. They will be judged on creativity,
reﬂection of the contest theme, and design originality. The winners and their parents and teachers will be invited to Columbus to meet me and
receive their awards. The ﬁrst-place entry will be
forwarded to compete in the national contest. The
winner of the national contest will travel in May
to Washington, D.C., to participate in the National
Missing Children’s Day ceremony.
Of course, parents and teachers can do a lot to
keep children safe, and should spend time talking
to kids about safety. Among topics of conversation, adults can remind kids that if approached by
a stranger, a child should:Make a commotion; yell
“No!” or “Help!”
Run away.
Keep away from a person approaching in a car.
Take suspicious situations seriously, and don’t
be afraid to hurt someone’s feelings by running
away or screaming.
Try to pay attention to details such as a person’s
appearance, clothing, vehicle, and license plate.
Know that it is OK to tell your parents what
happened. Don’t feel ashamed.
Parents should:Walk to and from school with
their children, or arrange for them to walk with
friends.
Know the route their children take to and from
school.
Walk the route with their children and show
them safe places to go in case of an emergency.
I hope the poster contest sparks some conversation and draws attention to children’s safety. All of
us have a role to play in making sure children stay
safe and that missing kids return home.
To read about, see photos of, or offer tips about
missing persons, visit: www.OhioAttorneyGeneral.
gov/Ohio-Missing-Persons.
For an application and poster contest rules, visit
www.ohioamberplan.org.
Mike DeWine is Ohio’s Attorney General.

The Daily Sentinel
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300
words. All letters are subject to editing, must
be signed and include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities. “Thank You” letters
will not be accepted for publication.

THEIR VIEW

Sights unseen right before your eyes

The full moon hung
more afraid of the ocean or of
low over the island like a
the people he might meet.
crystal ball ready for my
The Native Americans, as
hands to wrap around.
some scientists believe, may
It was midnight and I
have failed to see Columbus’s
was alone on the beach.
ships approaching their land.
The outline of a ship
The theory is that the Native
Michele Z. Americans didn’t expect to
where the sky meets the
horizon catches my gaze. Marcum
see anything on the water
Contributing because they had never seen a
I press my feet deep into
the sand and look into the Columnist
ship so the boats carrying the
expansive darkness full
Europeans were invisible to
of water, imagining what
them. The Native Americans’
Christopher Columbus must have
eyes could see the ships, but their
felt as he sailed through the ocean, brains couldn’t comprehend the
wondering if his ship would ﬁnd
alien image.
land or simply slide off the horiI’m not sure if the Native Amerizon and into oblivion.
cans saw the ships or not, but I
I wonder if Columbus wished he know I locked myself out of my
could consult the glowing oracle in car the other day, and after lookthe sky to see his destiny or if he
ing in every cranny of my bag and
prayed to see through the depths
patting all my pockets, found the
of the ocean to what was on the
bulky set of keys in the pocket
other side. I wonder, if I were him, of the jeans I was still wearing. I
if I’d have had enough faith to
know my dad often searches the
brave the trip and the possibility
house for the spectacles that are
of dying, submerged in the inﬁnite perched on his shiny, bald head. So
water. I wonder if Columbus was
just maybe those ships did elude

the Native Americans’ vision.
Columbus expected to ﬁnd land
and he did, not because he could
see it or because he saw a vision in
the moon, but because he had faith
despite the unknown. The Native
Americans may have disregarded the
image of the foreign ships because
they doubted their own eyes.
When we neglect to see opportunities that beckon our attention,
we remain in the dark. If we truly
want to see what’s on the horizon,
we must expect the unexpected.
I still ﬁnd myself wanting the
moon to show me the future, but
that would remove the element of
faith and that tingle in my belly
that buzzes me alive from venturing into scary territory.
Having faith can be as simple as
accepting what is right before your
eyes. Don’t miss your opportunities — they are right in front of
you, or on occasion, on your head.
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native of Meigs
County and an author. Her column appears
each Tuesday.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Tuesday, Nov.
24, the 328th day of 2015.
There are 37 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Nov. 24, 1865, Mississippi became the ﬁrst
Southern state to enact
laws which came to be
known as “Black Codes”
aimed at limiting the rights
of newly freed blacks; other
states of the former Confederacy soon followed.
On this date:
In 1784, Zachary Taylor,
the 12th President of the
United States, was born in
Orange County, Virginia.
In 1859, British naturalist Charles Darwin published “On the Origin of
Species,” which explained
his theory of evolution by
means of natural selection.
In 1939, British Overseas Airways Corp.
(BOAC) was formally
established.
In 1944, during World
War II, U.S. bombers based
on Saipan attacked Tokyo
in the ﬁrst raid against the
Japanese capital by landbased planes.
In 1950, the musical
“Guys and Dolls,” based
on the writings of Damon
Runyon and featuring
songs by Frank Loesser,
opened on Broadway.
In 1963, Jack Ruby shot
and mortally wounded
Lee Harvey Oswald, the
accused assassin of Presi-

dent John F. Kennedy, in
a scene captured on live
television.
In 1965, Joseph-Desire
Mobutu (later known as
Mobutu Sese Seko) seized
power in the Congo (later
known as the Democratic
Republic of Congo, and for
a time, as Zaire) through a
military coup.
In 1969, Apollo 12
splashed down safely in the
Paciﬁc.
In 1971, a hijacker calling himself “Dan Cooper”
(but who became popularly
known as “D.B. Cooper”)
parachuted from a Northwest Orient Airlines 727
over the Paciﬁc Northwest
after receiving $200,000
dollars in ransom; his fate
remains unknown.
In 1974, the bone fragments of a 3.2 millionyear-old hominid were
discovered by scientists
in Ethiopia; the skeletal
remains were nicknamed
“Lucy.”
In 1985, the hijacking of
an Egyptair jetliner parked
on the ground in Malta
ended violently as Egyptian
commandos stormed the
plane. Fifty-eight people
died in the raid, in addition
to two others killed by the
hijackers.
In 1995, voters in Ireland narrowly approved a
constitutional amendment
legalizing divorce.
Ten years ago: A suicide bomber struck outside

a hospital south of Baghdad while U.S. troops were
handing out candy and
food to children; the blast
killed some 30 people. A
giant balloon in the Macy’s
Thanksgiving Day Parade
in New York snagged a
street light and caused
part of it to fall, injuring a
woman and a child. Actor
Pat Morita died in Las
Vegas at age 73.
Five years ago: A jury
in Austin convicted former
U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, on
charges he’d illegally funneled corporate money to
Texas candidates in 2002.
(DeLay’s convictions were
overturned on appeal.)
One year ago: Under
pressure from President
Barack Obama, Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel
submitted his resignation
amid White House concerns about his effectiveness and broader criticism
from outside about the
administration’s Middle
East crisis management.
It was announced that a
grand jury in St. Louis
County, Missouri, had
decided against indicting
Ferguson police ofﬁcer
Darren Wilson in the death
of Michael Brown; the decision enraged protesters
who set ﬁre to buildings
and cars and looted businesses in the area where
Brown had been fatally
shot.

Today’s Birthdays: Basketball Hall of Famer Oscar
Robertson is 77. Country
singer Johnny Carver is
75. Former NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue is 75.
Rock drummer Pete Best
is 74. Actor-comedian Billy
Connolly is 73. Former
White House news secretary Marlin Fitzwater is
73. Former Motion Picture
Association of America
Chairman Dan Glickman is
71. Singer Lee Michaels is
70. Actor Dwight Schultz
is 68. Actor Stanley Livingston is 65. Rock musician Clem Burke (Blondie;
The Romantics) is 61.
Record producer Terry
Lewis is 59. Actor/director
Ruben Santiago-Hudson is
59. Actress Denise Crosby
is 58. Actress Shae D’Lyn
is 53. Rock musician John
Squire (The Stone Roses)
is 53. Rock musician Gary
Stonadge (Big Audio) is
53. Actor Conleth Hill is
51. Actor-comedian Brad
Sherwood is 51. Actor
Garret Dillahunt is 51.
Actor-comedian Scott Krinsky is 47. Rock musician
Chad Taylor (Live) is 45.
Actress Lola Glaudini is
44. Actress Danielle Nicolet is 42. Actor/writer/
director/producer Stephen
Merchant is 41. Olympic
bronze medal ﬁgure skater
Chen Lu is 39. Actor Colin
Hanks is 38. Actress Katherine Heigl is 37. Actress
Sarah Hyland is 25.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 24, 2015 5

Deer gun season begins in W.Va.
By Beth Sergent

open check station. This will also
bsergent@civitasmedia.com
save hunters time, gas and wear
and tear on their vehicles. If a
POINT PLEASANT — Deer
hunter has cellphone coverage in
gun season began with a bang
the woods, he or she can check
Monday in West Virginia —
the game in over the phone and
literally.
immediately dress and chill their
As of 3:30 p.m. opening day,
game, helping to preserve the
307 deer had been harvested in
freshness of the meat.
Mason County, according to Kem
According to WVDNR, hunters
Shaw, assistant district wildlife
and trappers can check in their
biologist with the West Virginia
game by visiting a license agent,
Division of Natural Resources.
by calling 1-844-WVCheck
Shaw said Mason County was in
(1-844-982-4325) or going to
the top ﬁve counties in terms of
www.wvhunt.com, though they
deer kills on Monday.
will need their unique DNR ID
These numbers were readily
available thanks to the WVDNR’s number, which is valid for a
lifetime.
new electronic game check
Three hunting and ﬁshing
system that began in April during
license
agents are physically
turkey season. There are no
located
in Mason County at the
longer ofﬁcial game checking
Mason
County
Clerk’s Ofﬁce at
stations.
the
county
courthouse,
Mason
Shaw said so far, the new
County
Exxon
on
Sand
Hill Road
electronic system seemed to be
outside
Point
Pleasant
and
Walcatching on and he believes the
Mart
in
Mason.
Though
hunters
“availability” of the system is its
no longer have to physically take
greatest selling point.
deer to a location to be checked,
According to the WVDNR,
they still need to ﬁeld tag their
electronic game checking will
deer.
beneﬁt hunters and trappers in
As for this year’s deer gun
several ways. Hunters can hunt
later in the day without worrying season harvest, Shaw said he
about driving around to ﬁnd an
expects it to be up from 2014.

45°

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.

43°
18°
53°
35°
78° in 1931
14° in 1970

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

Trace
0.79
2.62
42.18
38.46

Today
7:20 a.m.
5:09 p.m.
4:36 p.m.
5:33 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Wed.
7:21 a.m.
5:09 p.m.
5:24 p.m.
6:42 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Full

Last

Nov 25

Dec 3

New

Dec 11 Dec 18

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

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

Major
9:41a
10:35a
11:33a
12:02a
1:06a
2:07a
3:05a

Minor
3:27a
4:21a
5:18a
6:19a
7:20a
8:20a
9:17a

0

Chillicothe
47/28

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

0

Lucasville
50/29

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Major
10:10p
11:04p
---12:33p
1:34p
2:33p
3:30p

Minor
3:55p
4:50p
5:47p
6:47p
7:48p
8:47p
9:42p

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

Portsmouth
51/29

SATURDAY

60°
38°

AIR QUALITY

45°
28°

Cloudy and mild; a
little p.m. rain

55
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
47/26

Athens
46/26

St. Marys
47/28

Parkersburg
48/27

Coolville
46/27

Elizabeth
48/28

Spencer
48/29

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.43 +0.13
Marietta
34 15.64 -0.12
Parkersburg
36 20.98 +0.18
Belleville
35 12.34 +0.17
Racine
41 12.96 +0.05
Point Pleasant
40 25.50 +0.36
Gallipolis
50 12.87 -0.03
Huntington
50 26.23 -0.84
Ashland
52 34.55 -0.34
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.75 -0.02
Portsmouth
50 17.60 -2.40
Maysville
50 34.20 -0.50
Meldahl Dam
51 18.00 -0.80
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Buffalo
49/28
Milton
50/30

Clendenin
50/31

St. Albans
52/31

Huntington
51/30

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
45/33
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
57/45
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
69/50
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Mostly cloudy

Marietta
46/28

Murray City
46/26

Ironton
51/30

Ashland
50/30
Grayson
52/33

MONDAY

47°
37°

Cooler; rain and
drizzle in the a.m.

Wilkesville
48/27
POMEROY
Jackson
48/28
49/27
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
48/28
49/28
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
47/32
GALLIPOLIS
49/29
49/28
49/29

South Shore Greenup
51/32
50/29

SUNDAY

52°
37°
Cloudy with a shower
in places

NATIONAL CITIES

Logan
46/26

McArthur
47/26

Waverly
48/28

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

0 50 100 150 200

First

60°
47°

Adelphi
46/28

Q: What is the average annual precipitation at the South Pole?

SUN &amp; MOON

FRIDAY

Sunny to partly cloudy Partly sunny and mild

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

BBT (NYSE) —38.77
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.73
Pepsico (NYSE) — 100.85
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.13
Rockwell (NYSE) — 104.47
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 11.61
Royal Dutch Shell — 49.23
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 20.37
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 60.26
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 10.58
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.77
Worthington (NYSE) — 29.75
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Nov. 23, 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: Only 0.10 of an inch of liquid

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

THURSDAY

Sunshine and some clouds today. Mainly clear
tonight. High 49° / Low 29°

ALMANAC

completed in 2010.
Also, in the Nov. 22
edition of the Sunday Times-Sentinel,
the date listed for the
Pomeroy Christmas
Parade should have
been listed as Sunday,
Nov. 29.
Ohio Valley Publishing apologizes for the
errors.

Online, anytime at: www.mydailysentinel.com

WEDNESDAY

36°

Ohio Valley Publishing strives for accuracy
in all of its content and
moves quickly to correct errors.
In the Nov. 17 edition of The Daily
Sentinel, a dissolution
of marriage for Lita
L. Burt and David A.
Burt was published.
The couple’s divorce
was ﬁled in 2009 and

AEP (NYSE) — 55.99
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.17
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 112.15
Big Lots (NYSE) — 45.97
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) —40.61
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 43.05
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 3.60
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.260
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 49.80
Collins (NYSE) —93.94
DuPont (NYSE) — 66.52
US Bank (NYSE) — 43.80
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 30.54
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 49.72
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 66.88
Kroger (NYSE) — 37.25
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 95.06
Norfolk So (NYSE) —95.56
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 25.79

57°
37°
30°

CORRECTION

LOCAL STOCKS

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Land Transfers
To view speciﬁc land transfer records, visit the
Recorder’s Ofﬁce at the Meigs County Courthouse
during regular hours.

Charleston
51/27

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

Billings
45/19

Winnipeg
29/25
Minneapolis
41/31
Chicago
39/33

Denver
61/32

Toronto
43/26

New York
47/37

Detroit
40/29

Washington
52/35

Kansas City
58/46

GOALS

Wed.
Hi/Lo/W
62/43/pc
40/36/r
58/44/pc
52/43/s
53/35/s
22/11/sn
40/24/sn
47/39/s
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58/39/s
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46/40/c
57/42/s
55/41/pc
55/39/s
72/65/c
44/19/pc
52/39/c
49/41/pc
83/74/c
76/65/c
55/43/pc
58/52/c
60/39/c
63/54/c
64/43/c
60/46/s
80/71/sh
45/29/r
63/47/s
73/64/pc
51/45/s
68/58/c
78/65/c
52/38/s
74/49/s
53/36/s
44/32/s
58/39/s
56/37/s
58/51/pc
50/28/c
55/40/c
42/31/s
55/39/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
High
Low

81° in Fallbrook, CA
-6° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global

Houston
70/60

Monterrey
73/56

Today
Hi/Lo/W
60/36/s
43/39/c
59/39/s
49/36/s
50/29/s
45/19/c
47/32/c
44/32/pc
51/27/s
57/31/s
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51/34/s
44/31/sf
44/30/pc
67/59/pc
61/32/s
47/39/pc
40/29/pc
83/73/c
70/60/pc
48/34/pc
58/46/pc
72/51/pc
61/41/s
69/50/pc
55/38/s
76/69/c
41/31/pc
59/38/s
66/57/pc
47/37/pc
62/54/pc
73/61/pc
51/33/s
80/56/s
44/28/pc
42/24/pc
55/31/s
53/30/s
59/42/pc
56/40/pc
57/45/sh
45/33/r
52/35/s

National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
59/39

El Paso
71/45
Chihuahua
78/44

Montreal
33/21

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

Miami
76/69

High
Low

115° in Marble Bar, Australia
-47° in Oymyakon, Russia

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

WEATHER

2 PM

Domestic
An action of dissolution of marriage was ﬁled by
Lori A. Evans and Michael A. Evans.

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

“Unfortunately, when you are
dealing with large electrical
equipment and there is some type
From Page 1
of equipment failure, it can cause
a fire,” Ridout said of the previous
Cheshire resident Robert Roush
said he could see the smoke from his incident. “We have systems in place
such as fire suppression systems,
home.
the fire brigade at the plant, training
“Our house shook when (the fire)
for our employees and relationships
went up,” he said.
with local emergency responders and
This is the second fire reported
in this case, those systems worked
at the plant in the last half of 2015.
Another small fire was also reported and we were able to put the fire out
around 10 a.m. July 30 at the plant.
safely.”
That fire was also caused by a similar
There were no injuries reported
failed generator step-up transformer. during the July event as well. Darst
Ridout said that Meigs County
said the fire was contained by the
ﬁre stations, including Middleport,
Gavin Fire Brigade by the time
Pomeroy and Rutland ﬁre
he and his crew arrived, but that
departments, were called to the
his crew, as well as Pomeroy and
scene, but the ﬂames were contained
Rutland, all helped extinguish the
before they arrived. The ﬁre was
flames.
extinguished by a deluge system, or an
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.
activated sprinkler system, she said.

8 AM

Probate Court
Marriage licenses were recently issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Terry Menford Jewell III,
of Langsville, and Dianna Lee Evans, of Rutland;
and Michael Alan Welsh and Tracy Lynn Sinclair,
both of Rutland.

Last year’s opening day consisted
of warmer, windy weather —
warmth, wind and rain all point
to a lower harvest.
This year’s opening day had
none of that and this year, the oak
is spotty which means deer are
being pushed out of the woods
into the ﬁelds to search for more
food. Last year, Shaw said the
oak was plentiful and deer stayed
deep in the woods to forage for
their food source, which left
many hunters searching for a
population they couldn’t ﬁnd.
The plentiful oak last year and
a mild winter, means deer had
another year to grow larger for
2015. This should lead to some
impressive racks in 2015 as well.
Shaw said in 2014, deer harvests
were down 20,000 statewide.
Deer gun season ends Dec. 5
in West Virginia. Shaw reminds
hunters that doe and deer gun
seasons are two seasons that
overlap.
According to WVDNR, it’s
estimated hunters spend $165
million in West Virginia each
year.

Fire

TODAY

FOR THE RECORD

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 24, 2015 s Page 6

RedStorm moving on
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Joao
Paulo Antonio scored a pair of
second half goals and Eduardo
Zurita added a goal and an assist
to lead the University of Rio
Grande in a 4-1 win over Bethel
(Tenn.) University in the opening round of the NAIA Men’s
Soccer National Championship
Tournament, Saturday afternoon, at Evan E. Davis Field.
The top-ranked RedStorm, the
tourney’s top seed, improved to
19-1 with the victory - its ﬁrst in
three all-time outings against the
Wildcats.
Bethel ﬁnished 10-7-1 with the
loss.
The win sends Rio into the
tourney’s second round where
it will face 16th-seeded Union
Photo courtesy of URG
(Ky.) on Monday, Nov. 30, at
Rio Grande’s Pau Delgado Rodriguez looks for an open teammate during
Saturday afternoon’s NAIA Men’s Soccer Tournament opening round game at 11 a.m., at the Seacrest Soccer
Evan E. Davis Field. The top-ranked and top-seeded RedStorm posted a 4-1 win Complex in Delray Beach, Fla.
Union, which advanced to the
over the Wildcats.

second round with a 1-0 double
overtime win over Lyon (Ark.)
on Saturday, handed the RedStorm their only loss this season
on Oct.3 in Barbourville, Ky.
Antonio, a sophomore from
Sao Paulo, Brazil, snapped a 1-1
tie just over 15 minutes into the
second half when he headed in
a crossing pass from Zurita - a
freshman from Barcelona, Spain
- from the far right win.
Twelve minutes later, Antonio
managed to steal the ball away
from Bethel net-minder Mark
Weir near the top of the 18-yard
box and ﬁred a shot into an open
net for a 3-1 RedStorm lead.
Zurita closed out the scoring
with 12:07 left in the game off
an assist by senior Luiz Filho
(Sao Paulo, Brazil).
“I thought we started out
well in the ﬁrst 20 minutes of
the match, but then we lost the
momentum,” said Rio Grande
head coach Scott Morrissey. “We
made a few adjustments at half

and played a much better second
half. I also thought we were very
sound defensively in the second
half. We limited their chances
to just a few set pieces. We just
need to put a full 90 minutes
together.”
Rio took a 1-0 just 13:47 into
the contest when junior Heitor
de Melo (Sao Paulo, Brazil)
riﬂed a direct kick from the top
of the 18-yard box into the net,
but Bethel tied the score on
a penalty kick with 12:20 left
before the intermission.
The RedStorm ﬁnished with
a 27-8 edge in shots, including a
10-2 advantage in shots on goal.
Freshman goalkeeper Ben
Martinez (Montpellier, France)
had one save in the victory for
Rio Grande.
Weir stopped six shots in a
losing cause for the Wildcats.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director at the University of Rio Grande.

Lady Tornadoes
thump Wellston
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

WELLSTON, Ohio
— Talk about starting
the season on the right
foot.
The Southern
girls basketball team
kicked off the 201516 campaign in style
Friday night, defeating
non-conference host
Wellston 53-24, in Jackson County.
The Lady Tornadoes
(1-0) stormed out to
a 16-6 lead through
the ﬁrst eight minutes
of play, and expanded
their lead to 31-9 at
halftime. Southern
edged the Lady Rockets
(0-1) 12-to-10 in the
third canto, pushing
the advantage to 43-19.
SHS ﬁnished the night
with a 10-to-5 spurt,
capping off the 53-24
victory.
Southern junior Faith
Teaford paced the Purple and Gold with 16
points on 6-of-13 shooting from the ﬁeld and
4-of-9 from the charity
stripe, while pulling
in a team-best eight
rebounds.
SHS senior guard
Haley Hill, who was a
perfect 4-of-4 from the
free throw line, marked
14 points, while Jansen
Wolfe had nine points
in the win. Savannah
Bailey and Sierra Cleland both ﬁnished with
ﬁve points, while Macie
Michael rounded out
the Southern scoring
with four markers.
Wolfe, who grabbed
seven rebounds on the

night, led the defense
with eight blocks and
two steals. Hill posted
ﬁve steals and two
blocks for the Purple
and Gold, while Cleland, who hit the Lady
Tornadoes’ lone trifecta, had two blocks
and one steal in the
triumph. SHS senior Ali
Deem ﬁnished with four
steals, Bailey added
three, while Teaford and
Michael each had one
steal. Deem, Wolfe and
Michael led Southern
with three assists each,
followed by Hill with
two.
As a team Southern
shot 10-of-17 (58.8
percent) from the free
throw line, 21-of-54
(38.9 percent) from the
ﬁeld, including just 1-of11 (9.1 percent) from
beyond the arc. The
Lady Tornadoes had 31
rebounds, 13 assists, 17
steals, 12 blocks and 22
turnovers.
Green led the Lady
Rockets with seven
points, followed by Mullins with six. Doles and
Sowers both ﬁnished
with four points, while
Kisor had two and Jeffries added one.
These teams will
meet again on December 21, in Racine.
Southern, which hosted
River Valley in nonconference action on
Monday, returns to the
court on November
30, when Miller visits
Meigs County.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Friday, Nov. 27
Football
Wheeling Park at Point Pleasant, 7:30
Boys Basketball
Eastern at River Valley, 7:30
Saturday, Nov. 28
Boys Basketball
South Gallia at Green, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Meigs at Belpre, 2:15
Men’s College Basketball
Rio Grande vs. Southeastern at The Show in
Kingsport Tennessee, 5 p.m.
Women’s College Basketball
Rio Grande at Kentucky Wesleyan, 12:30

Rick Scuteri | AP

Cincinnati Bengals running back Jeremy Hill (32) stiff arms Arizona Cardinals nose tackle Rodney Gunter (95) during the first half of an
NFL football game, Sunday, Nov. 22, 2015, in Glendale, Ariz.

Bengals lose to Cards after late penalty
GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Domata
Peko has been in the NFL for 10 seasons and seen and been called for his
share of penalties. The one he was
ﬂagged for in the last second Sunday
night was a new one.
The Cincinnati defensive tackle was
whistled for unsportsmanlike conduct
for calling out offensive signals to try
to confuse the Arizona Cardinals as
they lined up to spike the ball leading
up to a ﬁeld-goal attempt.
So instead of a 46-yard try, the
penalty moved the ball from the 28
to the 14. Chandler Catanzaro sent a
32-yarder through the uprights with 2
seconds to play and the Cardinals beat
the Bengals 34-31.
“They were on the ball pretty quick
and I am a big communicator on our
defensive line,” Peko said. “Runs, passes. I am trying to communicate stuff.
I was saying, ‘get set, get set,’ because
they were on the ball quick. They
thought I said ‘hike’ or something.
“I don’t think I have ever seen that
call, ever since I have been in the
NFL,” Peko added. “We had way too
many penalties today. That was the
name of the game. We were ﬁghting
the refs and the Cardinals.”
The Bengals (8-2) committed 10
penalties for 108 yards in losing their
second straight game. Cincinnati had
tied the score with two late scores.
Carson Palmer overcame two early
interceptions against his former team
to throw four touchdown passes and,
with 57 seconds left, completed three
quick passes to move the Cardinals
into ﬁeld-goal range after the Bengals
rallied to tie it at 31.
“I just made two really stupid
plays,” Palmer said. “Just kind of got
the jitters out and we got rolling. We

caught ﬁre in the second half.”
Andy Dalton threw two touchdown
passes for the Bengals, both to Tyler
Eifert. The second, a 10-yarder, cut
it to 31-28 with 3:44 to play. Mike
Nugent tied it at 31 with a 43-yard ﬁeld
goal 1:03 from the ﬁnish.
Palmer, who had said during the
week that this one against his former
team was “not just another game,”
completed 20 of 31 passes for 317
yards and has 11 TD passes in his last
three games — four against Cleveland,
three against Seattle and four against
Cincinnati.
Dalton bounced back from a shaky
start to the second half to engineer the
Bengals’ comeback. He ﬁnished 22 of
39 for 315 yards.
Arizona rookie speedster J.J. Nelson caught four passes for 142 yards,
including a 64-yard touchdown reception.
Cincinnati running back Giovani
Bernard caught eight passes for 128
yards. Jeremy Hill had two short scoring runs for Cincinnati.
The Cardinals trailed 14-7 at the
half, led 28-14 in the third quarter and
31-21 in the fourth before the Bengals
rallied.
Arizona had the ball at its 16 with
58 seconds to go and Palmer quickly
threw 19 yards to Nelson. He followed
with passes of 18 and 20 yards to Larry
Fitzgerald to move the ball to the Cincinnati 27.
The Cardinals were trying to spike
the ball because they were out of
timeouts when the referees blew their
whistles and announced the penalty
against Peko.
“Who knows, they get the phantom
call there at the end. It’s kind of ridiculous,” Bengals coach Marvin Lewis

said. “I trust what our player did and
said. I don’t see how they can make that
call at that point in the game like that,
“We’ve got to just regroup and we’ve
got to get focused and we’ve got to go
win the football game next week.”
While Dalton started the second half
with six straight incompletions, Palmer
moved Arizona to three third-quarter
touchdowns on three possessions.
After the Bengals took the secondhalf kickoff and were forced to punt,
Palmer threw deep to the speedy Nelson who caught it at about the 10 and
scored, a 64-yard play that tied it at 14.
Cincinnati went three and out, and
Arizona went 66 yards in eight plays,
Palmer throwing 18 yards to John
Brown for the score to give the Cardinals their ﬁrst lead of the night, 21-14
with 5:32 left in the half.
Passes of 11 yards to Fitzgerald and
14 to Nelson set up Palmer’s 16-yard
scoring pass to David Johnson and Arizona opened a 28-14 lead after three
quarters.
Dalton had his heroics, too.
Cincinnati had third-and-26 at the
Arizona 38 when Dalton threw 22
yards to Marvin Jones. On fourth-and-4
from the 16, Dalton threw 10 yards to
Mohammed Sanu, and Hill’s 1-yard run
cut it to 28-21 with 11:26 still remaining.
Dalton even had a shot at giving the
Bengals the lead on his team’s ﬁnal
drive, the one that ended in Nugent’s
ﬁeld goal. On third-and-2, he had A.J.
Green for a 25-yard touchdown but
Arizona’s Justin Bethel was able to
break up the pass at the last moment.
“aWe left too much time,” Dalton
said. “It’s tough for it to end this way.
We fought until the very end and that’s
good to see.”

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 24, 2015 7

Rio women drop ‘Dogs in title game
By Randy Payton

with the loss.
Rio Grande shot just 25
percent from the ﬁeld in
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
the opening half and led
— Sarah Bonar tossed
just 28-22 at the intermisin 16 points to lead a
sion, but connected on
quartet of double-digit
18 of their 35 ﬁeld goal
scorers for the University attempts in the second half
of Rio Grande as the Red- (51.4%) and methodically
Storm overcame a slow
pulled away for the win.
start for a 75-58 win over
In fact, the RedStorm
Wilberforce University in built a 25-point lead,
the championship game
70-45, following a convenof the 33rd Annual Bevo
tional three-point play by
Francis Tournament,
freshman Megan Liedtke
Saturday afternoon, at the (Beverly, OH) with 4:08
Newt Oliver Arena.
remaining - their largest
Rio Grande, which
lead of the day.
posted its second win
Wilberforce, which
over the Bulldogs in a
also shot 25 percent in
span of 11 days, improved the opening half, never
to 4-1 with the victory.
lead and got no closer
Wilberforce fell to 2-5 than ﬁve points early in

For Ohio Valley Publishing

the second half.
Bonar, a senior from
Hartford, Ohio, scored
eight points in each half
en route to her teamleading tally.
Junior Sharday Baines
(East Cleveland, OH)
had a season-high 14
points in the win, while
Liedtke ﬁnished with 11
and freshman Jasmine
Smith (Canal Winchester,
OH) tossed in 10 points.
Baines also had a teamhigh four assists.
Junior Brooke Marcum
(Vinton, OH) and freshman Jaida Carter (New
Philadelphia, OH) both
narrowly missed doubledouble efforts for Rio.
Marcum had nine points

and seven rebounds,
while Carter had eight
points and a team-high
nine rebounds.
Brooklynn Peterson
scored a game-high 21
points in the loss for Wilberforce, while Kendra
Moss ﬁnished with 13
points and a game-high
10 rebounds - all on the
offensive end.
Brieanna Carter added
11 points and nine
rebounds for the Bulldogs.
Rio Grande will return
to action on Saturday,
Nov. 28, at Kentucky Wesleyan.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Freed leads Rio trio at NAIA Championship
By Randy Payton

Freed, who ﬁnished second
in the Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference championCHARLOTTE, N.C. — Junior
ship meet, had the best ﬁnish of
Blake Freed gave the University of any runner representing a KIAC
Rio Grande its best ﬁnish among
school in the race. KIAC champion
the three runners representing
Brian Moore of Point Park had the
the RedStorm in Saturday’s NAIA
league’s second-best ﬁnish, placing
Men’s Cross Country National
113th in 26:21.
Championship at McAlpine Creek
Freed ﬁnished 2:07 behind
Park.
individual champion Geoffrey KipFreed, a native of Uhrichsville,
chumba of William Carey.
Ohio, ﬁnished 77th in the 326-runRio Grande’s other two particiner ﬁeld by ﬁnishing the 8K course pants - junior Dallas Guy (Buffalo,
in 26:02.2.
OH) and Mike Norris (Dayton,

For Ohio Valley Publishing

OH) - ﬁnished 173rd and 178th,
respectively, with times of 26:45
and 26:47.
Oklahoma City won the team
championship with 78 points, easily outdistancing the 168 points of
runner-up St. Mary (Kan.). Indiana
Wesleyan (178), St. Francis, Ill.
(201) and British Columbia (219)
rounded out the top ﬁve.
KIAC champion Point Park ﬁnished 35th in the 36-team ﬁeld.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director
at the University of Rio Grande.

Cougars avenge earlier loss to Rio men
By Randy Payton

into the game and held
a 28-25 advantage after
a jumper by senior KevRIO GRANDE, Ohio
onta Black (Nashville,
— Visiting Mount Vernon TN) with a little more
Nazarene University used than 8-1/2 minutes left
a 10-0 ﬁrst half run to
in the ﬁrst half, when
erase a three-point deﬁcit Mount Vernon reeled off
and the Cougars went on 10 straight points to take
to post a 97-78 win over
a seven-point lead of its
the University of Rio
own.
Grande in the men’s diviIt was a lead the Cousion championship of the gars would never relin33rd Annual Bevo Francis quish.
Tournament, Saturday
Rio Grande closed the
night, at the Newt Oliver gap to just ﬁve, 44-39,
Arena.
following a pair of free
The Cougars, who
throws by D.D. Joiner
improved to 4-3, avenged with 2:38 left before the
a 10-point loss at home to intermission, but got no
the RedStorm one week
closer the rest of the way.
earlier.
Mount Vernon led by
Rio Grande suffered
eight points at the break
its second loss in its last
and pushed the advantage
three outings, falling to
to as many as 24 points,
5-3 overall.
90-66, with 5:04 left in
The RedStorm jumped the game.
out to a seven-point lead
The Cougars, who shot
just under three minutes 55.6 percent in the sec-

For Ohio Valley Publishing

ond half (20-for-36) and
52 percent for the game,
had ﬁve players ﬁnish in
double ﬁgures.
Eric Roby led the quintet with 25 points, while
Joey Schmitz had 19,
Brett Vipperman netted
16 and the duo of Cliff
Bussey and Josh Ashwill
tallied 13 points each.
Ashwill also had a teamhigh seven rebounds and
a game-best four assists.
Joiner ﬁnished with
a game-high 33 points
in a losing cause for the

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Playing without its star
quarterback, Michigan State put the defending national
champions on the outside looking in at the College
Football Playoff race.
Michael Geiger kicked a 41-yard ﬁeld goal as time
expired and No. 9 Michigan State, playing without
injured Connor Cook, beat No. 2 Ohio State 17-14 Saturday to snap the Buckeyes’ 23-game winning streak.
On a rainy and windy day at Ohio Stadium, the Spartans (10-1, 6-1 Big Ten) took control of the Big Ten
East, put themselves into the thick of the playoff hunt
and very likely ended the Buckeyes’ chances to repeat
as national champs.
Ohio State (10-1, 6-1) managed just 132 yards
against a rugged Spartans defense and lost for the ﬁrst
time to a Big Ten team in the regular season since
Urban Meyer became coach four seasons ago. The Rose
Bowl might be the best that the Buckeyes can do now.
Without Cook, the Spartans completed one pass in
the second half, but they gave Geiger a chance to win
it with 3 seconds left and the 5-foot-8 junior curved it
through.
The Buckeyes started the season as the unanimous
No. 1 team in the country, an overwhelming favorite to
win another national title. They had more quarterbacks
then they knew what to do with, one of the best running backs in the country and a defense with potential
All-Americans at every level. Ohio State sputtered some
through 10 games but was never really challenged. At
least not like this.
The Spartans relish the role of underdog like no powerhouse program in the country and it seemed to fuel
them in the Horseshoe. They were 13-point underdogs
coming into the game and you probably could have gotten another touchdown from the odds makers Michigan State took the ﬁeld for its ﬁrst drive without Cook.

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

By Randy Payton

Katie Guarnaccia of Point
Park had the league’s top
showing, placing 42nd in
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — the 321-runner ﬁeld with a
Freshman Lucy Williams
time of 18:28.
ran to a 130th place ﬁnish
Biola’s Kellian Hunt took
for the University of Rio
the individual title with a
Grande in Saturday’s NAIA time of 17:16.
Women’s Cross Country
Northwest Christian capNational Championship at tured the team championMcAlpine Creek Park.
ship with 98 points, while
Williams, who hails from
British Columbia was secAthens, Ohio, completed
ond with 118 points. Biola
the 5K course in 19:15.
(170), Aquinas (184) and
She was the only Rio runCarroll (223) comprised
ner in the competition.
the remainder of the top
Williams, who was
ﬁve.
fourth in the Kentucky
KIAC champion Point
Intercollegiate Athletic
Park
ﬁnished 31st in the
Conference championship
35-team
ﬁeld.
meet, was second among
the runners representRandy Payton is the Sports
ing KIAC schools in the
Information Director at the
event. KIAC champion
University of Rio Grande.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Presale tickets available
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Presale tickets for the
Class AAA semiﬁnal football contest between Point
Pleasant and Wheeling Park will be on sale at the school
from 1 p.m. until 4 p.m. on Tuesday and also from 8 a.m.
until 3 p.m. on Wednesday.
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.
The game between Wheeling Park and Point Pleasant
will be played at 7:30 p.m. Friday night at Ohio Valley
Bank Track and Field.

Holiday youth tournament
RUTLAND, Ohio — The Middleport and Pomeroy
Youth Leagues will be holding their annual two-week holiday basketball tournament for boys and girls in grades
4-6 in the days leading into and following Christmas.
The tournament will start on Thursday, Dec. 17, and run
through Wednesday, Dec. 23, before resuming Saturday,
Dec. 26. The event is scheduled to end on Wednesday, Dec.
30, and all games will be held at the Rutland Civic Center.
For more information, contact Ken at 740-416-8901 or
Dave at 740-590-0438.

TUESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

6 PM

6:30

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24
7 PM

7:30

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Sara's Meals
"Thanksgi7 (WOUB)
ving 101"
Eyewitness ABC World
8 (WCHS)
News at 6
News
10TV News CBS Evening
10 (WBNS)
at 6 p.m.
News
2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls
WSAZ News
3 (WSAZ)
3
WTAP News
4 (WTAP)
at Six
ABC 6 News
6 (WSYX)
at 6:00 p.m.
Arthur

11 (WVAH)

No. 9 MSU beats
No. 2 OSU 17-14

RedStorm, while senior
Dwayne Bazemore
(Columbus, OH) had 14
points and 13 rebounds
and sophomore Will Hill
(Worthington, OH) ﬁnished with 11 points.
Rio Grande will return
to action on Saturday,
Nov. 28, against No. 23
Southeastern (Fla.) in
the opening round of the
NAIA Division II Showcase in Kingsport, Tenn.

Williams
competes in
women’s NAIA
Championships

BBC World
12 (WVPB) News:

America
13 News at
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6:00 p.m.
CABLE

6 PM

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
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Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
Judge Judy Entertainment Tonight
Jeopardy!
Wheel of
Fortune
The Big Bang The Big Bang
Theory
Theory
Nightly
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depth analysis of current
Report (N)
events.
CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition

6:30

7 PM

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8 PM

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10:30

The Voice "Live
Chicago Med "Just Two
Chicago Fire "Sharp
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Blocks" (N)
Elbows" (N)
The Voice "Live
Chicago Med "Just Two
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Elbows" (N)
A Charlie Brown
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Thanksgiving
American Experience "The Pilgrims" The converging
Secrets of the Dead
forces and events that led the pilgrims to cross the Atlantic "Jamestown's Dark Winter"
(N)
in 1620. (N)
A Charlie Brown
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Thanksgiving
NCIS "Blood Brothers" (N) NCIS: New Orleans "Billy
Limitless "Arm-ageddon"
and the Kid" (N)
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American Experience "The Pilgrims" The converging
Secrets of the Dead
forces and events that led the pilgrims to cross the Atlantic "Jamestown's Dark Winter"
(N)
in 1620. (N)
Limitless "Arm-ageddon"
NCIS "Blood Brothers" (N) NCIS: New Orleans "Billy
and the Kid" (N)
(N)

8 PM

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Kindergarten Cop (‘90, Com) Penelope Ann Miller, Arnold Schwarzenegger. TVPG Manhattan (N)
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24 (ROOT) DayLife (N) Pirates (N)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
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26 (ESPN2) (4:30) Basket. Scoreboard SportsCenter
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NCAA Basketball
27 (LIFE)
29

(FAM)

30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
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37 (CNN)
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39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
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52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Sister Act A lounge singer witnesses a murder by her
Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit Lounge singer Deloris returns to Abducted:
mobster boyfriend and hides out in a convent. TVPG
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The Carlina...
Pretty Little Liars "Five
(5:30) Finding Nemo A fish gathers his courage and sets
Young and Pretty Little Liars "Five
Young and
out to find his son, who is trapped in an aquarium. TVG
Years Forward" (N)
Hungry (N) Years Forward"
Hungry
Cops
Jail
Cops "Stupid Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Liar, Cops
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Cops "Coast
Behavior #4" to Coast"
to Coast"
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to Coast"
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Law&amp;Order: SVU "Totem" Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Chrisley (N) Donny! (N)
Seinfeld
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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
CNN Special Report
CNN Tonight
Castle "Kill Switch"
Castle
NBA Basketball Boston Celtics at Atlanta Hawks Site: Philips Arena (L)
NBA Basket.
(5:30) Remember the Titans An African American coach is
Jumanji (‘95, Fant) Robin Williams. Two children find a mysterious Zathura: A
hired to unify an integrated high school football team.
board game which causes dangerous things to come to life. TVPG
Space Adv...
Moonshiners
Moonshiners "The Shining" Moonshiners: Cuts (N)
Moonshiners (N)
Men Wild "For Worse" (N)
Storage
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River Monsters: Unhooked RivMon "Body Snatcher"
River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters "Face Ripper"
Bad Girls Club "Bye With a Bad Girls Club "Reunion" Bad Girls
(:45) Bad
Pretty. Strong. (N)
Fix My Mom "Words and
Bang"
1/2
Girls Club
Letters" (N)
"Reunion"
Law &amp; Order "Divorce"
Law &amp; Order "Carrier"
Law &amp; Order "Stalker"
Law &amp; Order "Disappeared" Law &amp; Order "Burden"
Botched
E! News (N)
Botched "The Living Doll" Botched (N)
Botched
(:25) The Facts of Life
Facts of Life (:35) FactsLife (:10) FactsLife (:50) Ray
(:25) Loves Ray "Italy" 2/2 Jim Gaffigan Jim Gaffigan
Dirty Rotten Survival
Life Below Zero
Life Below Zero "Land of
Life Below Zero "The
Badlands, Texas "End of
"Fool's Gold"
"Aftermath"
Extremes"
Resurrection" (N)
the Road" (N)
Pro FB Talk Football
Mixed Martial Arts World Series of Fighting 23
Mixed Martial Arts World Series of Fighting 25
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
NFL Films (N) UFC 1on1 (N) UFC 188 Heavyweights Velasquez and Werdum fight.
Hunting Hitler "Secret Nazi Curse of Oak Island "The Curse of Oak Island "Pipe The Curse of Oak Island
Hunting Hitler "Escape
Lair"
Hole Truth"
Down" (N)
From Berlin" (N)
"Time to Dig" (N)
Below Deck
Below Deck "Dirty Laundry" Below Deck
Below Deck (N)
The People's Couch (N)
(:55) Payne
Martin
Martin
Just Wright (‘10, Com) Common, Paula Patton, Queen Latifah. TVPG Being Mary Jane (N)
House Hunters Renovation Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(4:30) Aeon
The Fifth Element Bruce Willis. A cab driver becomes involved
Men in Black II Two secret agents are called in to
Flux TV14
with a mysterious woman who holds the key to saving Earth. TV14
battle an alien disguised as a lingerie model. TV14

6 PM
(5:20) The

6:30

7 PM

7:30

(:50) Leftovers "International Assassin"

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

Fifty Shades of Grey (‘15, Dra) Jamie Dornan,
400 (HBO) Leisure Class Questions and answers emerge in the wake Jennifer Ehle, Dakota Johnson. A literature student falls for
of Kevin's decision to vanquish Patti.
TVMA
a wealthy young entrepreneur with singular tastes. TVMA
(:05)
Shanghai Noon (2000, Action) Owen Wilson,
A Million Ways to Die in the West (‘14, Com)
450 (MAX) Lucy Liu, Jackie Chan. A member of the Chinese Imperial
Seth MacFarlane. A craven farmer's new-found bravery is
Guard is sent to the Wild West to rescue a princess. TVPG put to the test when an outlaw gunslinger rides in. TVMA
Homeland "All About
(:55)
Out of Sight (‘98, Cri) Jennifer Lopez, George
Inside the NFL "2015 Week
500 (SHOW) Clooney. An escaped robber plots to rob a tycoon and
Allison"
11" (N)
seduce the federal marshal sent to catch him. TVPG
(:55)

10 PM

10:30

Real Sports With Bryant
Gumbel (N)
The Knick "There Are
Rules"
Notre Dame Notre Dame
Football (N) Football

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Help Wanted General

NOW HIRING
Full Time STNAs
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RN UNIT MANAGER
Come join our
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Please apply within or send
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60622369

Special Notices
The NEAD
Free Alcohol &amp; Drug
Education Consultant
Prevention
call 740-645-6632
Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local References.
Established in 1975. Call
24HRS 740-446-0870. Rogers
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60583312

Notices
Mollohan Carpet
Remnants Sales
Carpet &amp; Vinyl
up to 30% off
317 State Route 7 South
Gallipolis, Oh 45632
740-446-7444

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
Admissions.
Bachelor degree preferred,
sales experience helpful.
Submit resume to
rshirey@gallipoliscareercollege.edu
.

Industrial Cleaners
Needed in Buffalo, WV.
Full-time Positions Available.
Days/Evenings. Must pass
background check and drug
test. 304-768-6309.
Industrial Cleaners
Needed in Buffalo, WV.
Full-time Positions Available.
Days/Evenings.
Must pass background
check and drug test.
304-768-6309.
Lot Attendant Needed;
Apply in Person
Smith Chevrolet
1911 Eastern ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

NOW HIRING:
Front desk / Teller
Twin Oaks Federal
Credit Union
Pt. Pleasant Branch
HOURS:
M-Thurs.
9am-5pm
Fri. 9am-1pm.
Resumes can be
mailed to:
Twin Oaks FCU
ATTN:Carrie Payne
PO Box 70
Apple Grove, WV
25502
or emailed to:
service
@twinoaksfcu.com
Deadline is Monday,
Nov 30th.
The Mason County
Development Authority
is seeking full-time Executive
Director. If interested, please
send resumes to MCDA, 305
Main Street, Point Pleasant,
WV 25550,
ATTN: Lana. Resumes
will be accepted through
December 4, 2015.
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

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

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.

For Lease: Office or
Commercial space, first floor,
approx. 1600 sq. ft., one
bathroom, carpeted, storage
area, street parking, $650 per
mo., negotiable, security
deposit required, condition
excellent. Call 740-441-7875
or 740-446-4425

Daily Sentinel

Houses For Sale
For Sale
Nice 3 Bdrm 1-1/2 Bath
home -Full Basement -Lg Lot2 car Garage Good Neighborhood
and Location
$115,000.00
Seller pays closing cost,
low or no down payment
if qualified.
740-446-9966
Consider property trade in.
Apartments/Townhouses
2 bedroom apt. for rent,
Centenary, water &amp; trash paid,
stove &amp; refrig furnished,
$400.00 mo.
call 740-339-2957
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
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renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Clean 1 bdr. furnished apt.
No Smoking.
Deposit and references req.
Call: 304-593-5125
Miscellaneous

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
For Lease: Three bedroom,
unfurnished, 2nd floor,
townhouse, on Court Street.
Condition excellent. No pets.
Lease application, with
references. Security deposit
required. $750 per month. No
Smoking. Call 740-441-7875 or
740-446-4425
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
Pleasant Valley Apartments
is now taking applications
for 2, 3, &amp; 4 Bedroom
HUD Subsidized Apartments.
Applications are taken
Monday through Thursday
9:00 am-11:30 am.
Office is located at
1151 Evergreen Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV.
(304) 675-5806.

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Happy Family Banquet

Twin Rivers
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list for HUD
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elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

49

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

Want To Buy
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coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, November 24, 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

3
By Hilary Price

5
2

4

3
2
7
3 6

9

1
8
5
4 9 3 5

2
11/24

Difficulty Level

By Bil and Jeff Keane

11/24

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DENNIS THE MENACE

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Difficulty Level

THE LOCKHORNS

Hank Ketcham’s

5
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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Daily Sentinel

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60624595

HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP)
— When he crashed into a
concrete wall at Daytona,
Kyle Busch knew instantly
his right leg and left foot
were broken.
His ﬁrst thought was that
his career was over.
“I was really worried. I
was like, ‘Man, I don’t know
if I’m ever going to be able
to get back in a car again,’”
Busch said. “It did cross my
mind, I was thinking, ‘My
wife’s pregnant and I got no
job.’ I think that’s just the
emotion that goes through
in that moment.”
Busch completed a
comeback for the ages on
Sunday when he won at
Homestead-Miami Speedway to earn his ﬁrst Sprint
Cup championship. It came
nine months after his crash
into a concrete wall the
day before the Daytona
500 — a wreck that forced
NASCAR to make serious
safety improvements across
the circuit.
Busch watched the season opener from a hospital
bed, had multiple surgeries
and withstood a grueling
rehabilitation program. He
wound up missing just 11
races and returned to his
Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
right before his 30th birthday and right before wife
Samantha gave birth to
their ﬁrst child, a son.
In the hours after that
February crash at Daytona,
no one predicted he’d end
the year as champion.
“I was just terriﬁed that
he was really, really in bad
shape,” said crew chief
Adam Stevens. “I didn’t
know what shape his legs
were in, if it was going to
be this year or next year, or
if he would walk again.”
But once he was back in
the car, there was no stopping Busch.
He reeled off four wins in
ﬁve weeks to earn a berth
in the Chase for the Sprint
Cup championship, then
weathered three rounds of
eliminations to knock Kevin
Harvick from his perch as
reigning champion. Busch
also denied Jeff Gordon a
ﬁfth crown in his ﬁnal race.
Harvick ﬁnished a distant
second, Gordon was sixth,
and Martin Truex Jr., the
fourth driver in the championship ﬁeld, ﬁnished 12th.
There was a strong sentimental push for Gordon
to go out on top in his ﬁnal
race. But he was only average all season, and that
didn’t change Sunday night
in front of a huge contingent of friends and family
that included Formula One
champion Lewis Hamilton
and Mario Andretti, who
both sat atop his pit box at
the start of the race.
Gordon led nine laps
early in the race and was
third for an early restart
but he bobbled it and
plummeted to eighth.
That was about as good
as he’d be the rest of
the race as he struggled
mightily with the handling of his Hendrick
Motorsports Chevrolet.
“Gosh, I’m a little disappointed, I’ll be honest,”
Gordon said. “I thought
going into the race we had
something for them.”
Gordon eventually made
his way to victory lane to
congratulate Busch, who
began his career as Gordon’s teammate at Hendrick
Motorsports. Temper
tantrums and wrecked race
cars led to his release before
the 2008 season, and Busch
has been chasing a Cup
championship ever since.
He’s the most successful
driver in the second-tier
Xﬁnity Series and on Friday
he captured his fourth owners’ championship in the
Truck Series.

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