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                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�FEATURES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE
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RE-ELECT Victor Young III

I’m aware that the people of Pomeroy are frustrated with the construction project
in the village. However, once this is complete we will be in compliance with state
and federal regulations.

to Pomeroy Village Council

Here are some of the things that are happening behind the scenes of this project.

Thank You for your Vote 4 years ago... I am asking
for your trust in myself and the current Mayor &amp;
Council...to allow us to finish what we have started...
to make Pomeroy a Better Place to Live...

*Water wells cleaned and fully functional.
*New pumps installed at the Waterworks Station.
*Up to date monitoring system for the Wells and Water Pressure.
*Upgrades to the Main Water Line from the wells to town.
*All new fire hydrants in the village.

Vote on November 4th,
Thank You,
Victor Young III

At the completion of the project all the roads will have been blacktopped.

Paid for by the candidate..

Your current mayor and council are working together...please give us the
opportunity to continue to improve Pomeroy - for us and future generations.
60462733

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INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Meigs High School
student receives
scholarship... Page 2

Mostly sunny.
High near 65. Low
around 42... Page 2

Local sports
coverage
... Page 5

Garnette Boswell, 74
Luzia Bowser, 77
Attie Foley, 91

50 cents daily

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 177

Janet L. Gaal, 72
Wanda Imboden, 76
Freta Thompson, 79

Southern awarded physical education grant
Board approves agenda items
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — Southern Local
School District was recently
awarded the Carol M. White
Physical Education Program
(PEP) grant.
The federally funded program

is in the amount of $384,507 for
the 2014 fiscal year. The program is for up to three years.
Over three years the grant could
provide approximately $1 million for the district’s physical
education programs.
This is the same grant program which was awarded to

Meigs Local one year ago.
Southern Physical Education
Teacher Alan Crisp has been
hired by the board to serve the
remainder of the 2013-14 school
year as the PEP grant coordinator at his current salary. Crisp
was also approved for a 20 day
supplemental contract for the
summer program. The continuation is contingent upon continued receipt of grant funding.

A contract with McGuire and
Associates was also approved by
the board for external evaluation
of the PEP grant.
Funding from the program will
allow the district to improve the
physical education curriculum to
include a wider range of physical
activities and technologies for
objective assessment of physical activity levels and fitness
programs; implement SPARK

curriculum; promote nutrition
education and collaborate with
several community partners
to increase opportunities for
students to be active and learn
about healthy eating choices.
In other business, the board
accepted the resignation of Brenna Call as the after school coordinator effective Oct. 25 due to
See GRANT | 3

Eastern approves
agenda items
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Donations to the Humane Society were used to purchase items to ensure a comfortable winter for animals at the dog pound.

Donors gifts
ensure comfortable
inter for animals
Charlene Hoeflich
choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Thanks to a generous
gift of $6,500 from an out-of-county donor and a Columbus-based charity, many
of the dogs and puppies housed at the
Meigs County Dog Shelter will be much
Chelsa Sargent, a volunteer, with Spanky, a three year old boxer dog at
safer and warmer this coming winter.

the shelter who is awaiting adoption. Chelsa is the daugher of the new

See GIFTS | 3 assistant dog warden, Becky Aiker.

TUPPERS PLAINS — The Eastern Local Board of
Education approved several agenda items including the
district’s five-year forecast during the recent meeting.
The five-year forecast looks at the district’s financial
standing for the past three years and projections for the
next five years.
The forecast and notes must be approved by Oct. 31 to
be submitted to the Ohio Department of Education. The
forecast is approved in May and October.
High school and middle school students of the month
were recognized by Student Achievement liaison Floyd
Ridenour. Those students were Paige Cline, Brandon
Coleman, Katie Keller, Dakota O’Brien, Haylie Blankenship, Colten Parker, Sophie Carleton and Emmalea Durst.
Certified substitutes were approved as follows: Cayla
Adkins, Cynthia S. Chadwell, James D. Essick, Bonne
Kreseen, Carrie Minenok, Shannon Plummer and William Nathan Robinette.
Roni D. Howery was approved as a substitute aide for
the 2013-14 school year pending proper certification.
Lesa Sidwell was approved as a substitute cook for the
remainder of the 2013-14 school year. James S. Brooks
was approved as a substitute custodian for the remainder
of the 2013-14 school year, and David Burt as a substitute
bus driver for the Soar Program.
Lorie Litchfield was hired as a part-time cook on a oneyear contract.
Rachel Marten was approved on a supplemental contract as the district curriculum coordinator. Dave Waters
was approved as safety coordinator.
The first reading of the NEOLA policies was approved
with multiple updates, revisions, replacements and deletions.
A donation from the R&amp;M Clark Family Foundation in
the amount of $2,000 was approved for the Opal Eichinger Scholarship.
One student was approved for open enrollment.
A request from high school art teacher Josh Fogle for
the Art 2, 3 and 4 students to take a trip to Frank Lloyd
Wright’s Fallingwater House at Mill Run, Pennsylvania for
the students and chaperones.
Amendments to the permanent appropriation resolution and certified revenue adjustments were approved.
The board also approved the financial reports as presented and the minutes from the September meeting.
The next Eastern Local Board of Education meeting
will be held at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 20 in the
elementary library conference room.

PVH named ‘Top Performer’
Beth Sergent

bsergent@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT — Pleasant Valley
Hospital (PVH) is one of only 1,099 hospitals in the United States that have earned the
distinction of Top Performer on Key Quality
Measures for attaining and sustaining excellence in accountability measure performance.
The Joint Commission, the leading accreditor of health care organizations in
America, named PVH a Top Performer
on Key Quality Measures. PVH was recognized for exemplary performance in
using evidence-based clinical processes
that are shown to improve care for certain
conditions. The clinical processes focus
on care for heart attack, pneumonia, surgery, children’s asthma, stroke and venous

thromboembolism, as well as inpatient
psychiatric services. New this year is a
category for immunization for pneumonia
and influenza.
As for what this means to the average patient at PVH, Agnes A. Enrico-Simon, MD
and medical staff president explained: “We
take patient care extremely seriously.”
Simon went on to explain PVH follows
the same evidence-based standards of care
found in larger hospitals across the country, saying despite PVH being a smaller
hospital, the standards of care are the
same as those in larger ones.
“The Joint Commission accreditation
Submitted photo
does not begin and end with the on-site Pleasant Valley Hospital (PVH) is one of only 1,099 hospitals in the United States that have
survey,” Simon explained. “It is a continu- earned the distinction of Top Performer on Key Quality Measures for attaining and sustaining
excellence in accountability measure performance. Pictured are PVH staff and Board Mem-

See PERFORMER | 3 bers celebrating the recent accreditation.

�Page 2 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Meigs County Community Calendar

MHS student
receives scholarship

Tuesday, Nov. 5
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Veterans Service Office, 117 East Memorial Drive, Suite 3, will be closing at
noon for Election Day.
TUPPERS PLAINS — Rachel’s
Challenge community event, 6:30 p.m.
at Eastern High School.

POMEROY — Morgan Tucker of Pomeroy
has been accepted to Ashland University for the
fall semester of 2014.
Tucker, who is a senior at Meigs High School,
will receive the Ambassador Award for $1,500
annually to attend Ashland University.
Ashland University, ranked in the top 200
colleges and universities in U.S. News and
World Report’s National Universities category
for 2013, is a mid-sized, private university
conveniently located a short distance from
Akron, Cleveland and Columbus.
Ashland University (www.ashland.edu) values the individual student and offers a unique
educational experience that combines the challenge of strong, applied academic programs with
a faculty and staff who build nurturing relationships with their students.

Wednesday, Nov. 6
HARRISONVILLE — The Scipio
Township Trustees will hold the regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the
Harrisonville Fire House.
RACINE — Southern High School
open house, 4-6:30 p.m., followed by
the Rachel’s Challenge community
event in the high school gymnasium.
Thursday, Nov. 7
ROCKSPRINGS — Rachel’s Challenge community event, 6:30 p.m., at
Meigs High School.
CHESTER — The Chester Shade
Historical Association will meet at

7 p.m. at the Academy.
CHILLICOTHE — The Southern
Ohio Council of Governments (SOCOG) will hold its next board meeting at 10 a.m. in Room A of the Ross
County Service Center at 475 Western Avenue, Chillicothe, Ohio, 45601.
Board meetings usually are held the
first Thursday of the month. For more
information, call 740-775-5030, ext.
103. SOCOG provides administrative support for the County Boards
of Developmental Disabilities in Adams, Athens, Brown, Clinton, Fayette,
Gallia, Highland, Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs, Pickaway, Pike, Ross, Scioto
and Vinton counties. It’s primary focus
is quality assurance, provider compliance, investigative services and residential administration of waivers and
supportive living in order to provide
individualized, personal support to
people with developmental disabilities. SOCOG is a government entity
created under Chapter 167 of the Ohio

Revised Code, representing 15 county
boards of development disabilities.
Friday, Nov. 8
LONG BOTTOM — Faithful Gospel Church Sing, 7 p.m. Friday with
singers, Pathway.
Tuesday, Nov. 12
TUPPERS PLAINS — The Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer District will
have their regular meeting at 5 p.m. at
the TPRSD office.
Thursday, Nov. 14
CHESTER — Shade River Lodge
453 will hold its monthy meeting at
7:30 p.m. at the hall. Refreshments will
be served following the meeting.
Birthdays
LONG BOTTOM — Ernest Griffin
will observe his 96th birthday on Nov.
15. Cards may be sent to him at 36606
P. O. Road, Long Bottom, Ohio 45743.

Meigs County Local Briefs
Meigs FFA hosting
Veterans Day
POMEROY — The Meigs Local FFA Chapter will be honoring
veterans on Monday, Nov. 11. All
veteran’s and their guests are invited to attend. The program will
begin at 1:30 p.m. in the high
school gymnasium. Questions
can be directed to Tim Simpson,
FFA Advisor at 992-2158.
NRCS Local Work
Group Meeting
POMEROY—The local work
group for the Meigs County field
office of the Natural Resources
Conservation Service will meet
Tuesday Nov. 5 at 10 a.m. at the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District Office at 113 East
Memorial Drive, Suite D, Pomeroy. This meeting was previously
scheduled for October, but had
to be rescheduled due to the government shutdown.

The purpose of the local work
group is to provide guidance to
NRCS field offices concerning
the implementation and delivery
of conservation programs. The
LWG identifies program priorities by completing a natural resource needs assessment and
based on the assessment, develops proposals for priority areas.
Generally the local work group
consists of SWCD, NRCS, FSA and
Extension representatives, but anyone is invited to attend the meeting.
Election Day Dinners
SYRACUSE —The Syracuse
Community Center will be serving an Election Day dinner with
several kinds of soup, sandwiches and desserts, Starts at 10 a.m.
Can eat in or carry out.
LETART — The East Letart
United Methodist Church will
serve election day dinners of soup
and sandwiches at the church

Tuesday beginning at 11 a.m.
RACINE — The Racine United
Methodist Church will hold its
annual Election Day dinner Tuesday, with serving from 11 a.m to
4 p.m. Menu will include soup,
sandwiches, desserts and drinks.
Take containers for carry-out.
Delinquent Tax list
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs
County Treasurer Peggy Yost
advises that the delinquent list
for mobile homes and real estate
will be published in The Daily
Sentinel on Nov. 15 and Nov. 22.
The last day to make a payment
to avoid publication on this list
is 2 p.m. on Nov. 8. For more information contact the treasurer’s
office at (740) 992-2004.
Fall Carnival
RACINE — Southern Elementary will hold its fall carnival
from 5-9 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 8 at

the school. Admission is free and
activities will include inflatables,
games, bingo, dance, auction
and kids prizes. Concessions will
also be available.
Food Drive
RACINE — Racine Area Community Organization (RACO)
will hold their fall food drive on
November 2, at the Dollar General Parking lot in Racine from
8 a.m. to 1 p.m. We will be collecting canned food, non perishable food items, paper products,
personal hygiene products, and
monetary donations. All items
collected will be donated to
Meigs Cooperative Food Pantry
and will be distributed at Christmas time. For information, contact Kathryn Hart at 949-2656.
Immunization,
Flu Shot Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs

County Health Department
will conduct a childhood/adolescent immunization clinic
and flu shot clinic from 9-11
a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday at the health department.
High dose flu vaccines are also
available for those age 65 and
older. Please bring children’s
shot records. Also, bring medical cards/insurance for flu and
pneumonia vaccines otherwise
there will be a fee associated.
Christmas Craft Show
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. — A
Christmas Craft Show will be
held from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on
Saturday, Nov. 2 at the New Haven Fire Station. The craft show
is hosted by the New Haven Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary.
Santa Clause will be at the fire
station at 1 p.m. that day. For
more information contact Shelby
Duncan at (304) 882-2814.

LAX suspect remains heavily sedated, under guard
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The
man accused of opening fire at
Los Angeles International Airport, shooting employees and terrorizing travelers, accomplished
two of his goals, according to authorities: killing a Transportation
Security Administration officer
and showing how easy it is to get
a gun into an airport.
The deadly rampage left investigators to piece together what
motivated Paul Ciancia’s hatred
toward the agency formed to
make air travel safer after the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. But
the attack could ultimately lead
to changes in the way airports
are patrolled.

Ciancia, who was shot four
times by airport police, remained
in critical condition Monday. He
has not been scheduled to appear in court. Any appearance
will depend on when his doctors
say he’s ready, FBI spokeswoman
Laura Eimiller said.
The FBI said Ciancia had a
handwritten letter, stating that
he made the conscious decision
to try to kill multiple TSA officers and “instill fear in your traitorous minds.”
The unemployed motorcycle
mechanic who recently moved
to Los Angeles from the small,
blue-collar town of Pennsville,
N.J., had a friend drop him at

LAX on Friday just moments
before he pulled a .223-caliber assault rifle from his duffel bag and opened fire, killing
one TSA officer and wounding
three other people, including
two more TSA workers.
Officials do not believe that
the friend knew of the shooter’s
plans. Ciancia arrived at the airport in a black Hyundai and was
not a ticketed passenger.
Ciancia is charged with murder of a federal officer and committing violence at an international airport, charges that
could qualify him for the death
penalty. It was not immediately
clear when he would make a

first court appearance given his
medical condition.
In court documents and interviews, authorities spelled out a
chilling chain of events, saying
Ciancia walked into the airport’s
Terminal 3, pulled the assault
rifle from his duffel bag and fired
repeatedly at 39-year-old TSA
officer Gerardo I. Hernandez.
He went up an escalator, turned
back to see Hernandez move and
returned to shoot him again, according to surveillance video reviewed by investigators.
He then fired on two other uniformed TSA employees and an
airline passenger, who all were
wounded, as he moved methodi-

cally through the security checkpoint to the passenger gate area
before airport police shot him as
panicked travelers hid in stores
and restaurants.
It wasn’t clear why Ciancia targeted TSA officers, but
what he left behind indicated
he was willing to kill any of
them who crossed his path, authorities revealed.
The letter in his duffel bag
refers to how Ciancia believed
his constitutional rights were
being violated by TSA searches and that he’s a “pissed-off
patriot,” upset at former Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano.

Bribery case reverberates across Navy with arrests
SAN DIEGO (AP) —
It started with an invitation to the Broadway
production of “The Lion
King” in Tokyo for the
Navy commander, his
wife and their children.
In the end, the Malay-

sian defense contractor
known in military circles
as “Fat Leonard” would
use prostitutes, plane
tickets and other bribes
to hook the U.S. Naval officer into a scheme that
overbilled the Pentagon

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Misiewicz and Francis
moved Navy vessels like
chess pieces, diverting aircraft carriers, destroyers
and other ships to Asian
ports with lax oversight
where Francis could inflate costs, the criminal
complaint alleges. The
firm overcharged the Navy
millions for fuel, food and
other services it provided,
and invented tariffs by using phony port authorities,
prosecutors say.
“It’s pretty big when you
have one person who can
dictate where ships are
going to go and being influenced by a contractor,”
said retired Rear Adm.
Terry McKnight, who has
no direct knowledge of
the investigation. “A lot
of people are saying, ‘How

Ohio Valley Forecast

Voting Starts Nov. 3rd
Voting Ends Nov. 11th

OLD MILL CRAFT BEER

(740) 245-9463 � BIDWELL, OHIO

by millions, investigators
say in court papers.
The accusations unfolding in a federal court
case in San Diego signal
serious national security
breaches and corruption,
setting off high-level
meetings at the Pentagon
with the threat that more
people, including those
of higher ranks, could be
swept up as the investigation continues. A hearing
Nov. 8 could set a trial date.
According to the court
documents, Navy commander Michael Vannak
Khem Misiewicz passed
confidential information
on ship routes to Leonard Francis’ Singaporebased company, Glenn
Defense Marine Asia
Ltd., or GDMA.

60449855

Tuesday: Partly sunny, with a high near 65. Southeast
wind 3 to 8 mph.
Tuesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 42.
Southeast wind 3 to 5 mph.
Wednesday: Partly sunny, with a high near 69. Calm
wind becoming south 5 to 8 mph in the morning.
Wednesday Night: Showers likely, mainly after 4 a.m.
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 53. South wind around
9 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.
Thursday: Showers and thunderstorms likely before 1
p.m., then a slight chance of showers between 1 p.m. and
3 p.m. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 56. Chance of precipitation is 70 percent. New rainfall amounts between a
tenth and quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 33.
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 54.
Friday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 32.

could this happen?’”
So far, authorities have
arrested Misiewicz; Francis; the general manager
of global government contracts for Francis’ company, Alex Wisidagama; and
a senior Navy investigator,
John Beliveau II.
Beliveau is accused of
keeping Francis abreast
of the probe and advising
him on how to respond in
exchange for such things
as luxury trips and prostitution services. All have
pleaded not guilty. Defense attorneys declined
to comment.
Senior Navy officials
said they believe more people likely will be implicated
in the scheme, but it’s too
early to tell how many or
how high this will go in

the naval ranks. Other unnamed Navy personnel are
mentioned in court documents as getting gifts from
Francis.
Francis is legendary
in military circles in that
part of the world, said
McKnight, who does not
know him personally. He
is known for extravagance.
His
70,000-square-foot
bungalow in an upscale
Singapore neighborhood
has drawn spectators yearly since 2007 to its lavish,
outdoor Christmas decorations, which The Straits
Times described as rivaling the island city-state’s
main shopping street
with replicas of snowmen, lighted towering
trees, and Chinese and
Japanese ornaments.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 47.19
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 24.28
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 93.85
Big Lots (NYSE) — 36.87
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 56.24
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 103.00
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 9.26
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.43
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 45.49
Collins (NYSE) — 70.57
DuPont (NYSE) — 60.31
US Bank (NYSE) — 37.54
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.43
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 65.00
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 52.04
Kroger (NYSE) — 42.51
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 63.03
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 86.84
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 20.75
BBT (NYSE) — 33.87

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.81
Pepsico (NYSE) — 84.37
Premier (NASDAQ) — 12.30
Rockwell (NYSE) — 109.77
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 15.63
Royal Dutch Shell — 67.13
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 60.86
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 77.33
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.11
WesBanco (NYSE) — 29.04
Worthington (NYSE) — 41.23
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
November 4, 2013, 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.

�Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Death Notices
BOSWELL
LEON — Garnett Sue
Boswell, 74, of Leon, W.Va.,
died October 31, 2013, at
Charleston Medical Center
Memorial Division.
A graveside service
will be held on Tuesday,
November 5, 2013, at 11
a.m., at the Craig Douglas
Cemetery in Leon, with
Rev. Ron Hall officiating.
Friends may visit the family at the Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant,
WV, on Monday evening,
November 4, from 6-8 p.m.
BOWSER
GALLIPOLIS FERRY —
Luzia Marianne (Sowodniok) Bowser, 77, of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., died
peacefully at her home,
with her family by her side,
on Saturday, November 2,
2013.
A Christian Burial Mass
will be held at 10 a.m.,
Wednesday, November 6,
2013, at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church in Point
Pleasant, with Father Dave
Schmitt officiating. Burial
will follow in the Henderson Cemetery at Henderson. Visitation will be from
6-8 p.m., Tuesday, at the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant, with the
prayer of the rosary to follow at 8 p.m.
FOLEY
GALLIPOLIS — Attie
Foley, 91, of Gallipolis,
died Saturday, November 2, 2013, at Abbyshire
Place.
Services will be conducted at 2 p.m., Wednesday,
November 6, 2013, at the
Willis Funeral Home with
Bishop Al Sines and Kenneth Vickers officiating.
Burial will follow at Mound

The Daily Sentinel s Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call from 1 – 2 p.m.
prior to the service at the
funeral home.
GAAL
COLUMBUS — Janet
L. Gaal, 72, died October
31, 2013, surrounded by
family at her son’s home in
Columbus.
Visitation is Tuesday,
Nov. 5 from 2-4 p.m. and
6-8 p.m. at Graumlich
Funeral Home, 1351 S.
High St., Columbus, Ohio
where service will be held
Wednesday at 10 a.m., Pastor Richard Match officiating. Interment to follow at
Obetz Cemetery.
IMBODEN
MIDDLEPORT — Wanda
Imboden, 76, of Middleport,
Ohio, died Monday, Nov. 4,
2013, at the Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis.
Funeral Services will
be held on Friday, Nov. 8,
2013, at 11 a.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Visitation will be held from 6-8
p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 7,
2013 at the funeral home.
THOMPSON
CHESAPEAKE — Freta
Lois Thompson, 79, of
Chesapeake, Ohio, died
Sunday, November 3,
2013, at St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington,
WV. FA funeral service
will be conducted at 1 p.m.
Wednesday,
November
6, 2013, at Hall Funeral
Home, Proctorville, Ohio,
by Rev. E.S. Harper. Burial
will follow in Miller Memorial Gardens, Miller, Ohio.
Visitation will be held 6
p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday,
November 5, 2013, at Hall
Funeral Home.

Defense: Ohio man ‘snapped,’ shot wife in hospital
AKRON, Ohio (AP) — An
Ohio man who believed his wife’s
medical condition was worsening
“mentally snapped” and shot her
to death as she lay in a hospital’s
intensive care unit, a defense attorney said Monday during opening statements of a murder trial.
Nothing in John Wise’s past
would have indicated he would
fatally shoot his wife of 45 years,
lawyer Paul Adamson told jurors
in Akron as he pursues an insanity
defense for the 68-year-old Massillon man.
Wise could face life in prison if
convicted of killing his wife, Barbara, in August 2012.
Adamson said a psychiatrist
serving as an expert witness will
testify that Wise’s mental state
declined in the week before the
shooting as he struggled with his
inability to help his wife and his

own physical ailments, which included chronic heart disease, diabetes and several others.
“Who in their right mind would
take a gun into a hospital and
shoot someone?” Adamson said.
He said Wise didn’t know “the unlawfulness of his act.”
Friends of the couple call it a
mercy killing, but that’s not a legal
defense in Ohio.
Wise, dressed in a gray suit
and seated in a wheelchair, appeared teary-eyed in court as a
prosecutor recounted how the
defendant visited his wife at the
hospital days after she suffered
a brain aneurysm. He returned
home and wrote an apologetic
note, then took a taxi back to the
hospital, armed with a gun his
son had given him for security,
Summit County Assistant Prosecutor Brian LoPrinzi said.

“He had a gun, a 9 mm semi-automatic pistol. He put it in a bag,
and he writes a note: ‘I’m sorry
for the way I did this. Do not resuscitate,’ or words to that effect,”
LoPrinzi said.
Wise tried to kill himself in the
hospital room after shooting his
wife, but the gun jammed and
wouldn’t fire before authorities
arrived, LoPrinzi said.
Two hospital security guards
testified Monday about finding
Wise sitting in his wife’s room
with a gun in his hand.
LoPrinzi said that people who
suffer cerebral aneurysms sometimes recovery fully and that doctors never had indicated Barbara
Wise’s condition was terminal.
Testimony was expected to
continue Tuesday before a jury of
seven men and five women.

AP-CNBC poll: Twitter faces skeptical investors
NEW YORK (AP) —
Twitter faces skepticism
from potential investors
and the broader public
ahead of its initial public
offering, according to an
Associated Press-CNBC
poll released Monday.
Some 36 percent of
Americans say buying
stock in the 7-year-old
short messaging service
would be a good investment, while 47 percent
disagree. Last May, ahead
of Facebook’s IPO, 51 percent of Americans said
Facebook Inc. would be a
good investment. Just 31
percent didn’t agree.
Twitter plans to make its
Wall Street debut this week
and surprisingly, 52 percent
of people ages 18 to 34 say
investing in the company’s
stock is not a good idea.

Grant

Twitter Inc. will begin
trading on the New York
Stock Exchange on Thursday morning after setting a
price for its IPO sometime
Wednesday evening. As it
stands, the San Franciscobased company plans to
raise as much as $1.6 billion in the process. The
transaction values Twitter
at as much as $12.5 billion.
That’s little more than oneeighth of Facebook’s roughly $104 billion market value
when it went public.
Twitter has not turned a
profit since its launch, but
its future depends on advertisements as a primary
source of income. The
company mainly sells three
types of ads: promoted
tweets, promoted accounts
and promoted trends. A
company like Starbucks,

for instance, can pay Twitter to promote a single
tweet or it can pay the
company to ask users to
follow its account.
It does not bode well
that more than half of
Twitter users say they
have not noticed advertising. Among the 42
percent of users who did
notice, 31 percent say
they’ve clicked on or followed one of the promoted items in question.
Among the poll’s other
key findings:
* One in 5 Americans
has a Twitter account.
One in 10, meanwhile,
looks at Twitter feeds but
doesn’t have an account
of their own.
* Nearly a quarter of
Twitter account holders
send tweets at least once

a day, while 29 percent
say they never do. More
account holders say they
read others’ tweets daily,
35 percent.
* About 30 percent of
Twitter users say they have
used the service to register
complaints about a product or service or when they
are looking for information
about services or products.
* Twitter has billed itself as the place for public,
real-time
conversations,
but only 16 percent of users say they turn to Twitter frequently for breaking
news. That said, 44 percent of users do so at least
some of the time.
* Just 19 percent of respondents say they have a
“favorable” view of Twitter,
while 47 percent feel the
same way about Facebook.

Gifts

From Page 1
other employment.
Andrea Weakley was hired as
the 21st Century Coordinator
for the remainder of the 201314 school year.
The hiring of Debbie Harris as a
first grade teacher was approved.
Brian Weaver was approved
as a tutor for a student for
health reasons.
Supplemental
contracts
were approved as follows, Zane
Beegle, eighth grade girls basketball; Danille Combs, seventh
grade girls basketball; Sandra
Mayes, Echo; Deborah McCoy,
11th grade class advisor; Christi
Hendrix, 12th grade class advisor; Christi Hendrix, safety coordinator; Mike Hill, volunteer
high school girls basketball;
Andrea Cline, VLA coordinator; Alice Williams, head cook;
Jeff Beaver, head custodian; Jeff
Caldwell, Title IX; Elizabeth
Johnson, junior high student
council; Scott Cleland, work
study; Steve Randolph, assistant
boys basketball (reserve); Chad
Dodson, assistant band and pep
band; Daniel Otto, Missy Hoback, Shelly Barr, Amy Roush,
and Ann Ohlinger (chair),
LPDC; Johnathan Polster, yearbook; Amy Roush, elementary
yearbook; Amy Roush, variety
show; Scott Wolfe, Daniel Otto,
Kent Wolfe, Tricia McNickle,
Ann Ohlinger, Jenny Manuel,
Missy Hoback, Marty Rose, Beth
Bay, Andrea Cline and Courtney

Ginther, Race to the Top.
The following individuals was
approved as teachers for the elementary after school program,
Wendy Beegle, Susan Cochran,
Lisa Schenkelberg, Ashli Thompson, Sandra Mayes, Kelly Drummer, Andrea Edwards, Courtney
Lively, Jonathan Polster, Marty
Rose, and David Maxson.
Teachers approved for the
high school after school program were, Alicia Ngo, Ryan
Davis, Jonathan Polster, Marsha
Weaver, and Kevin Vernon.
Bus drivers approved for
the after school program were
Kathy Miller, Cheryl Smith and
Sherry Cogar.
An amendment to a purchase
order was approved for PSI
Testing Services from $90,000
to $104,592.50.
The board approved a resolution
to reduce on cook position, which
is vacant and will not result in the
layoff of any current employee.
The board approved Ricky’s
Tree Services to lift and clean out
10 oak trees in front of the school.
The FFA trip to Louisville,
Kentucky was approved.
The open house for the high
school was set for Nov. 6 and a
ribbon cutting on Nov. 22.
The next Southern Local
Board of Education meeting will
be held at 6:30 p.m. on Nov. 25.
The five year forecast was
approved as presented by Treasurer Roy Johnson.
Revised board policies were
approved as presented.

From Page 1
A gift from Andy Ross, a retired attorney and previous donor to the Meigs County Humane
Society (MCHS), kicked off the
MCHS’s Pound Upgrade Project
(PUP), the animal welfare organization’s campaign, to renovate
the Meigs County Dog Shelter.
A grant for $1,000 came from
an anonymous donor with the
Hachiko’s Legacy Fund of the Columbus Foundation.
Vicki Baer, the MCHS secretarytreasurer, said that Ross is well
aware of the need in our county,
and as the owner of several dogs,
he was particularly concerned
that the dogs and puppies would
be warm and healthy this winter.
“In the past, this kind donor has
also contributed to our spay/neuter program and other programs
we have administered,” said Baer
adding that several years ago, he
also helped the MCHS put a roof
on the outside runs at the shelter.
She noted that the Mission
Statement asserts that “the
MCHS was formed with the goal
of preventing acts of cruelty
to animals, relieving suffering
among animals, and providing
the extension of humane education and assistance in the operation of the dog shelter. Baer
said that the society members
jumped in when they saw the
need at the facility. The shelter

needed to be upgraded so that
the dogs were kept separated
and protected from the freezing
temperatures this winter.
The Ross and the Hachiko’s
Legacy Fund donations made
the purchase of 22 plastic dog
houses. The ones from Detwillers
were provided at a discount to the
Humane Society. Also obtained
were six large dog kennels and
kennel tops to protect the dogs
from weather; twenty-five 4 by6
foot rubber mats to go into the
dog houses, the existing houses
as well as the new ones, which
can be cut, hosed down and disinfected. Also purchased were 20
Kuranda Dog Beds, which Baer
said will go a long way to making
dogs, particularly the older ones,
more comfortable.
Baer explained the MCHS is
asking for financial donations
from citizens within the county.
“Many people have taken dogs
and puppies to the shelter, had
the dog warden pick up strays,
or taken advantage of the half-off
vouchers provided by the MCHS
for newly adopted shelter dogs.
Making a donation is one way for
t hem to give back.
She added that the goal of the
dog warden, his assistant, and the
volunteers, is, as always,” to connect with rescue organizations
and send dogs and puppies to new
homes as companion animals.
This way we can significantly

decrease the number of dogs and
puppies that are euthanized. Together, all of us can make the shelter a temporary home for happy,
healthy, and stress-free dogs of all
kinds and ages.”
Baer went on to explain that
the nonprofit MCHS, which has
been working for the welfare
of the county’s animals since
the early 1970s, receives no
federal, state, or county funds.
It relies on donations and proceeds from the Meigs County
Humane Society Thrift Shoppe
in Middleport. In addition to its
low-cost spay/neuter and other
programs, the MCHS also continues to pay half of the Meigs
County Humane Officer’s parttime salary, and the County
Commissioners pay the other
half. The MCHS is contributing
some funds for the pound upgrade project but come spring
more will be needed to upgrade
the pound like sanitation, insulation, and supplying light fixtures and venting.
Baer said financial donations
of any amount, large or small,
or any in-kind help or material
gifts, are always welcome. She
reminded that donations are
tax deductible. Checks should
be made out to the PUP Fund.
For more information, contact
the Meigs County Humane Society, PO Box 682, Pomeroy, OH
45769 or call 992-6060.

Performer
ous process. Every time a
Pleasant Valley Hospital
nurse double-checks a patient’s identification before
administering a medication,
every time the Pleasant Valley Hospital surgical team
calls a ‘timeout’ to verify
they agree they’re about to
perform the correct procedure, at the correct site, on
the correct patient, they live
and breathe the accreditation process. Every three
months, we submit data to
The Joint Commission on
how we treat conditions
such as heart attack care
and pneumonia. Every year,
we evaluate our ongoing
standards of compliance
through a periodic performance review. The Joint
Commission accreditation
is woven into the fabric
of health care at Pleasant
Valley Hospital. I am very
proud of the Pleasant Valley physicians, nursing and
medical staff. This team has

made Pleasant Valley Hospital a very good place to
receive and give care.”
The data collected for
PVH’s accreditation as a
Top Performer on Key Quality Measures was collected
in 2012, prior to significant
staff layoffs which occurred
earlier this year at the hospital. When asked if PVH
would be able to achieve
that “Top Performer” accreditation with less staff,
Simon said the accreditation was about adhering
to procedures already in
place, as well as following
existing protocols and exposure to continuing education, no matter the size of
the workforce.
PVH was recognized
for its achievement on the
following measure sets:
pneumonia and surgical
care. Again, the ratings are
based on an aggregation
of accountability measure
data reported to The Joint
Commission during the
2012 calendar year. The

list of Top Performer organizations increased by 77
percent from last year and
it represents 33 percent of
all Joint Commission-accredited hospitals reporting accountability measure
performance data for 2012.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
and each of the hospitals
that were named as a Top
Performer on Key Quality
Measures must: 1) achieve
cumulative performance of
95 percent or above across
all reported accountability
measures; 2) achieve performance of 95 percent or
above on each and every
reported
accountability
measure where there are at
least 30 denominator cases;
and 3) have at least one
core measure set that has
a composite rate of 95 percent or above, and within
that measure set all applicable individual accountability measures have a performance rate of 95 percent
or above. A 95 percent score
means a hospital provided

an evidence-based practice
95 times out of 100 opportunities. Each accountability measure represents
an evidence-based practice
– examples include giving
aspirin at arrival for heart
attack patients, giving antibiotics one hour before surgery, or providing a home
management plan of care for
children with asthma.
“Pleasant Valley Hospital
and all the Top Performer
hospitals have demonstrated an exceptional
commitment to quality improvement and they should
be proud of their achievement,” says Mark R. Chassin, M.D., FACP, M.P.P.,
M.P.H., president and chief
executive officer, The Joint
Commission. “We have
much to celebrate this year.
Nearly half of our accredited hospitals have attained
or nearly attained the Top
Performer distinction. This
truly shows that we are approaching a tipping point
in hospital quality perfor-

mance that will directly
contribute to better health
outcomes for patients.”
“We understand that
what matters most to
patients at Pleasant Valley Hospital is safe, effective care. That’s why
Pleasant Valley Hospital
has made a commitment

to accreditation and to
positive patient outcomes
through
evidence-based
care processes. Pleasant
Valley Hospital is proud
to receive the distinction
of being a Joint Commission Top Performer on Key
Quality Measures,” says
Larry Unroe, CEO.

It's Fall Carnival Time!
Southern Elementary
Friday November 8th, 5 - 9 pm
FREE ADMISSION

Dance
5th - 8th grade
$3.00
60462186

From Page 1

•
•
•
•
•
•

Principal Duct-taping
M&amp;M Inflatables
Bingo Games
Auction
Kids Prizes
Concessions
sions

King/Queen
Prince/Princess Crowning

�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Page 4
Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Voters to decide elections Strep scorecard might
coast to coast Tuesday
help tell if you need a doctor
Steve Peoples

The Associated Press

NEWARK, N.J. — From
rural Iowa to urban New York,
voters across America will
render judgment in a slate of
political contests Tuesday.
The biggest: elections
for governor in New Jersey
and Virginia where outcomes could highlight the
Republican Party division
between pragmatists and
ideologues.
Elsewhere,
Colorado voters will set a
tax rate for marijuana.
New York will elect a successor to Michael Bloomberg after 12 years in office,
while Boston’s mayoral race
pits white collar against
blue collar, and Detroit’s
spotlights the city’s bankruptcy — just three of the
many mayoral contests
from coast to coast.
Republican and Democratic strategists alike say
that Tuesday’s contests are
more defined by candidate
personalities and regionspecific issues than political trends likely to influence next year’s larger fight
for control of Congress.
Turnout is expected to be
low across the country,
typical for elections held
in years when the White
House and Congress aren’t
up for grabs.
Candidates across the
country made their last
pitches to voters as local elections boards made
their final preparations.
“We can’t take anything
for granted. We are Republicans in New Jersey,” Christie told supporters Monday,
although polls suggest he
likely will cruise to a second
term over his little-known
Democratic opponent, state
Sen. Barbara Buono. A potential presidential candidate, Christie could become
the state’s first Republican
to exceed 50 percent of the
vote in a statewide election
in 25 years.
And a Republican victory in a Democraticleaning state could stoke
the notion within part of
the GOP that a pragmatic
approach is the answer to
the party’s national woes.
To the south, a defeat of
a conservative Republican
in the swing-voting state

of Virginia also could feed
into that argument.
Republican Ken Cuccinelli, who comes from the
party’s right flank and promotes his role as the first
state attorney general to
challenge the health care
overhaul, is struggling
against former national
Democratic Party chairman Terry McAuliffe, and
polls suggest that he could
lose. He has been hurt both
by the government shutdown that Republicans are
bearing most of the blame
for and by a political scandal involving accusations
of lavish gift-giving by a
political supporter to Republican Gov. Bob McDonnell and his family.
A McAuliffe victory would
break a three decade-long
trend: Virginia has elected a
governor from the party not
occupying the White House
in every gubernatorial election since 1977.
Neither race will offer
significant clues about
the state of the electorate
heading into a midterm
election year.
“They’re a far cry from being a crystal ball for 2014,”
said longtime Democratic
pollster John Anzalone.
“These two big races are all
about the individuals.”
The same could be
said for down-ballot races
across the nation.
In Coralville, Iowa, population 19,000, the national tea party ally Americans
for Prosperity is saturating
mailboxes and telephone
lines to support conservative candidates for city
council as the area struggles to control its debt.
The outside group,
backed by the billionaire
Koch brothers, spent $36
million last year mostly
supporting Republican candidates and attacking Democrats in the presidential
and U.S. Senate races. In
Iowa, the group is showing
that no race is too small to
fight government spending.
The issues extend beyond public debt in Colorado, where voters will
decide on a tax rate for
marijuana, a suggested 25
percent tax to fund school
construction and regulation of the newly legal

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drug. Also, 11 counties in
northern and eastern Colorado were taking non-binding votes on secession and
creating a new state.
Mayors will be elected
in some of the nation’s
largest cities.
In New York, Public Advocate Bill de Blasio is the
heavy favorite, with polls
suggesting that he’s on
the verge of being the first
Democrat to be elected
mayor since 1989.
De Blasio, an unabashed
liberal, positioned himself
as a clean break with the
Bloomberg years, promoting a sweeping progressive
agenda. He faces Republican rival Joe Lhota, former
head of the Metropolitan
Transportation
Authority and a one-time deputy
mayor to Rudy Giuliani.
Lhota has largely campaigned on continuing the
policies of both his former
boss and Bloomberg.
In Boston, it’s a race
of blue-collar Democrat
against white-collar Democrat as state Rep. Martin
Walsh and City Councilor
John Connolly vie for the
chance to succeed longtime
Mayor Thomas Menino.
Walsh, a union laborer
before being elected to the
state House, has highlighted his life story, including
surviving cancer as a boy
and overcoming alcoholism as a young adult. Connolly, a corporate attorney,
has focused on education
issues. Polls suggest the
race will be close.
Detroit may feature the
nation’s most unusual contest. Wayne County Sheriff
Benny Napoleon and former Detroit Medical Center chief Mike Duggan are
competing for a mayor’s
title that will have little immediate power as the debtridden metropolis is guided
through the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history by a state-appointed
emergency manager.
One of the top remaining issues for both candidates: Who can work
better under the thumb
of the state turnaround
expert, who will continue to run the show for at
least another year.

Lauran Neergaard
AP Medical Writer

WASHINGTON — Debating whether
to seek a strep test for that sore throat?
One day there could be an app for that:
Researchers are developing a home scorecard that aims to prevent thousands of unnecessary trips to the doctor for this common complaint.
More than 12 million people make doctors’ visits for a sore throat every year.
Usually the culprit is a virus that they just
have to wait out with a little TLC.
In fact, the risk of strep throat is low
enough for adults that doctors may skip
testing them, deciding not to bother after
running down a list of symptoms. That
can leave patients wondering why they
spent hours in the waiting room and had
to pay the doctor’s bill.
“If you could know that your risk was
low enough that you wouldn’t even be tested, you might actually save yourself a visit,” said Dr. Andrew Fine, an emergency
physician at Boston Children’s Hospital.
The trick: Combine some of the symptoms that doctors look for with a bit of
computer data to tell if strep throat is circulating in your geographical region. If the
bug’s in your neighborhood, that increases
the chances that you’ve caught it, said Dr.
Kenneth Mandl, a Harvard professor and informatics specialist with Boston Children’s.
As a first step, Fine and Mandl turned to
the records of more than 70,000 sore-throat
patients who got strep tests and had their
symptoms recorded at CVS MinuteClinics
in six states between 2006 and 2008. They
determined those people’s risk of strep using the experimental scorecard approach
and checked the computer model’s accuracy against the strep test results.
Nationally, identifying those with less
than a 10 percent chance of strep throat
could save 230,000 doctor visits a year,
the team reported Monday in the journal
Annals of Internal Medicine.
The method wasn’t perfect: It meant
8,500 strep cases would have been missed,
or the diagnosis delayed, concluded the
government-funded study.
But Mandl said it’s unlikely that would
lead to lasting harm as most of those infections would clear up on their own, or
persisting pain eventually would send patients to the doctor. And he noted that the
rapid strep tests that doctors use in their
offices can miss cases, too.
Much more research is needed to prove
if the method would work in everyday life
and if a mobile app or a phone call to the
doctor would be the best approach. The
Boston team has begun the next step:
Parents of kids who come to the hospital’s
emergency room for a strep test are handed a digital tablet and asked to fill out the

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exercise thereof; or abridging
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peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a
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The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

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scorecard first. Researchers will see how
the combination of symptoms and local
infection trends compare with actual strep
test results.
Sore throats are a challenge. Strep
throat, caused by bacteria named Group A
streptococcus, is to blame for only about
10 percent of cases in adults, and 30 percent in children.
It’s hard to tell who needs a strep test
based on symptoms alone, cautioned Dr.
Chris Van Beneden of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which helped
fund the new research. But what is clear:
Doctors should be sure it’s strep before prescribing antibiotics because those bacteriafighting drugs have no effect on viruses.
Yet research published last month in the
journal JAMA Internal Medicine found 60
percent of adults who sought care for a
sore throat received antibiotics. Unneeded antibiotic use can spur development of
drug-resistant germs.
The Boston team looked at the flip side
of the issue: Who could safely skip a strep
check? Because strep is most common in
children ages 5 to 15, doctors usually test
youngsters with a sore throat for the bacteria.
For anyone 15 or older, Mandl said doctors may skip a test depending on symptoms. While a cough and runny nose are
more typical of a cold virus, strep symptoms might include a fever, enlarged
lymph nodes, tonsils with swelling or pus
and lack of a cough.
So Fine and Mandl focused first on the
over-15 crowd. Because feeling lymph
nodes and peeking at tonsils could be difficult for the average layman, their scorecard posed easy questions: Is there a fever? Is there a cough?
Then came the key: The scorecard automatically merged those symptoms with
local trends in strep diagnosis.
It’s a practice called biosurveillance. Already, hundreds of hospitals, clinics and
health departments automatically report
certain symptoms and diagnoses to the
government. That lets officials track the
spread of flu every year, for example —
and some web sites now show flu activity
by zip code so people can check if influenza has reached their community.
Likewise, results of strep tests are available digitally from testing laboratories,
clinics, even large doctors’ offices, Mandl
said. They just have to be collected and
used, which isn’t routine.
In an accompanying editorial, Dr. Robert
Centor of the University of Alabama, Birmingham, said too many clinics and emergency rooms still give a strep test to every
sore throat patient. But he questioned if
the home scorecard approach would make
a difference, wondering if biosurveillance
would be too costly or if average patients
even would use it before seeking care.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Newspapers
111 Court Street
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Phone (740) 992-2156
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Stephanie Filson
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�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

TUESDAY,
NOVEMBER 5, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Raiders fall to Fairland, 58-32 in season finale
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

PROCTORVILLE, Ohio
— The Raiders were outgunned in the finale.
River Valley, which
gained 266 total yards Friday night, was out matched
by Ohio Valley Conference
host and Champion Fairland, which gained 554
yards, in the regular season finale.
River Valley (1-9, 0-5
OVC) struck first with a 33
yard touchdown pass from
Dayton Hardway to Mark
Wray at the 9:17 mark. Just
over a minute later Fairland (7-3, 5-0) answered
with a 68 yard scoring pass
from Chance Short to Kyle

Sowards. Isiah Vidal added
the point after and FHS
held the 7-6 lead.
Fairland added on to its
lead at the 5:24 mark of
the first period with a 12
yard Evan Maddox run and
a Vidal extra point. The
Dragons were in the endzone again at the 4:04 mark
when Maddox intercepted
Dayton Hardway’s pass
and took it 34 yards for the
score. Vidal’s point after
put Fairland on top 21-6.
With 52 seconds remaining in the first quarter
Hardway connected with
Wray again, this time for
a 65 yard touchdown. The
Raiders trailed 21-12 at the
end of the first period.
Just eight seconds into

the second period the Raiders pulled within three
points as Hardway connected with Austin Bradley for
the 21 yard touchdown.
Fairland answered with
back-to-back scores to end
the half with a 34-18 lead.
The first of the two scores
was on a 57 yard pass from
Short to Sowards, while the
second came on a 40 yard
Maddox run and was followed by a Vidal extra point.
Nathan Campbell got
into the action for Fairland
at the 10:05 mark of the
third canto with a five yard
run, followed by a Vidal
point after. Fairland went
ahead 48-18 after Dylan
Murphy returned a Hardway interception 41 yards

for the touchdown and Vidal kicked the PAT at the
5:44 mark.
River Valley’s Dustin Bickers intercepted Short on the
Raider 12-yard line and ran
88 yards for the score. Devin
McDonald added the RVHS
point after and the Raiders
trailed 48-25.
With 54 seconds remaining in the third period
Short connected with Sowards for the duo’s third
score of the night, this time
from 14 yards out. Vidal’s
PAT made the score 55-25
at the end of the third.
With 10:58 remaining
in the game River Valley’s
Josh Campbell recovered a
See RAIDERS | 6

Bryan Walters | Daily Sentinel

Point Pleasant sophomore Cody Mitchell carries Oak Glen
defender Michael Campbell (2) during a first half run Saturday afternoon in a Week 10 football contest at OVB Field
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Point Pleasant pounds
Golden Bears, 50-0
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — More of the same,
both ways around.
Point Pleasant surrendered just 55 yards defensively, scored 10 points
through special teams and
churned out 503 yards of
total offense Saturday afternoon en route to a 50-0
thrashing of winless Oak
Glen during a Week 10
gridiron matchup at Ohio
Valley Bank Track and
Field in Mason County.
The unbeaten Big Blacks
(9-0) dominated the game
from the start, as the hosts
stormed out to leads of
19-0 and 43-0 after each
of the first two quarters of
play. PPHS once again executed to near-perfection in
the first half, as the Golden
Bears (0-9) were outgained
in total yardage by a sizable 321-18 overall margin
— which included negative
five rushing yards on 14
carries and a 14-2 difference in first downs.
Point Pleasant — which
has now won 13 straight
regular season contests —
finished the night with a
robust 383 rushing yards
on 41 attempts, an average of 9.34 yards per carry.
OGHS, conversely, managed just 24 rushing yards
on 27 attempts.
The Big Blacks did not
have a punt or a turnover
in the contest and finished
the day plus-3 in turnover
differential. Colin McDermitt recovered a fumble for
the hosts, while teammates
Jason Wamsley and Zach
Hardman came away with
an interception apiece.
Chase Walton gave
PPHS an early 7-0 lead
with a four-yard run at 6:15
mark, then Cody Mitchell
hauled in a 40-yard scoring
pass from Aden Yates with
3:42 left in the first quarter
for a 13-0 edge. Cody Mar-

cum tacked on a three-yard
scamper with 11 seconds
remaining, pushing Point’s
advantage out to 19-0.
The Big Blacks followed
with a three-and-out defensive stand, and the ensuing
punt was returned 65 yards
by Mitchell — giving the
hosts a comfortable 27-0
cushion with 11:34 left
until halftime. Colin Peal
tacked on a 21-yard field
goal six minutes later, allowing Point to claim a
30-0 lead at the 5:32 mark.
Mitchell hauled in a 10yard scoring pass from
Yates at the 3:09 mark for
a 37-0 advantage, then
snagged a 22-yard pass
from Yates with 2:10 left
until halftime — allowing
the hosts to secure a 43-0
lead at the break. PPHS
had 201 rushing yards on
21 attempts in the first half.
Chase Walton tacked on
the final score of the day following a five-yard scamper
with 8:48 remaining in the
third, making it a 50-0 contest. Mostly backups and reserves finished the game for
PPHS from that point on.
Point Pleasant — currently ranked ninth in the
Charleston Daily Mail Poll
— had one minor letdown
in the entire contest, as the
hosts failed to convert three
of their seven PAT opportunities. The Big Blacks were
previously 47-of-50 on PAT
conversions headed into
Saturday’s affair.
Point Pleasant outgained
the guests 120-31 through
the air, which included
three touchdowns and an
8-of-9 passing performance
by quarterback Aden
Yates. OGHS quarterback
Zac Porter finished the
day 5-of-14 passing for 31
yards, including two picks
and zero touchdowns.
Chase Walton led the
hosts with 142 rushing
yards on 11 carries, while
See POINT | 6

OVP Sports Schedule
Tuesday, Nov. 5
College Volleyball
URG at Kentucky State, 7 p.m.
Women’s College Basketball
Wilberforce at URG, 6 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 7
College Volleyball
URG at Shawnee State, 7 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 8
Football
Wahama at Buffalo, 7:30 p.m.
Men’s College Basketball
Saunders Insurance Tipoff Classic at URG, 6 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 9
Football
Lewis County at Point Pleasant, 1:30
Hundred at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Southern at Steubenville Catholic Central, 7 p.m.
Men’s College Basketball
Saunders Insurance Tipoff Classic at URG, 1 p.m.
Women’s College Basketball
Miami-Middletown at URG, 5 p.m.

Photos by Alex Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Southern junior Paul Ramthun (4) breaks a Zack Scowden (right) tackle alongside teammate Ryan Billingsley (45)
and Eagles Zach Bixby (61) and Chase Cook. The Tornadoes rumbled to a 34-0 shutout victory on Roger Lee Adams
Memorial Field Saturday night.

Tornadoes topple Eastern in season finale, 34-0
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

RACINE, Ohio — An historic win
to complete a banner regular season.
Southern scored 27 points off of
five first half turnovers and never
looked back Saturday night during
a 34-0 pounding of visiting Eastern
in a Week 10 Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division gridiron contest
at Roger Lee Adams Memorial
Field in Meigs County.
The Tornadoes (8-2, 6-2 TVC
Hocking) were simply dominant
in their Senior Night finale, as
the hosts forced nine fumbles
and nine total turnovers while
allowing just 107 total yards as a
defensive unit. SHS scored four
straight touchdowns off of its first
four takeaways in the first half,
helping the Purple and Gold jump
out to a 27-0 halftime advantage.
The Eagles (2-8, 2-6) were
never closer the rest of the way, as
the guests had four of their seven
second half drives end with turnovers. In all, nine of Eastern’s 14
offensive possessions ended with
a giveaway — and the other five
drives resulted in punts.
It is the first win for the Tornadoes over EHS at Roger Lee Adams
Memorial Field since the turn of
the millennium, as well as the first
shutout and first two-game winning
streak during that same span.
After already securing the program’s first-ever playoff berth,
fourth-year SHS coach Kyle
Wickline was proud of the way
his kids finished the best regular

Eastern junior Daschle Facemyer (16) is tripped up by Southern freshman
Tom Ramthun during the Tornadoes 34-0 victory, Saturday night in Racine.

season in school history.
“We were very opportunistic
tonight with those turnovers.
Our defense stepped up and gave
some short field opportunities,
and we made plays and put the

ball in the end zone,” Wickline
said. “That was big for us, to get
some momentum going forward.
We were able to stay healthy and
See TORNADOES | 6

Rio volleyball drops ‘Dogs in home finale
Kerry Gibbs

URG Sports Information

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— Freshman setter/outside hitter Kayla Briley
(Marion, OH) dished out
a team-high 49 assists to
go along with nine kills in
leading the University of
Rio Grande volleyball team
to a five-set victory over
Cumberland
University,
Saturday afternoon, in MidSouth Conference action at
the Newt Oliver Arena.
The win was the second
triumph for the RedStorm
(12-15 overall, 6-11 MSC)
in less than 24 hours and
pushes them ahead of Cumberland (14-18, 5-11) for

the seventh spot in the conference standings. The top
eight teams in the league
advance to the conference
tournament later this month.
After the two squads
divided the first two sets,
Rio Grande put together
what was perhaps their
best set of the afternoon,
jumping out to a 13-6 lead
after a 7-0 run which broke
a 6-6 deadlock.
The RedStorm kept the
foot on the accelerator
and jumped out to a lead
of 21-11 before eventually
wrapping up the set with a
25-18 victory to take a 2-1
advantage in the match.
Rio Grande looked to
be cruising to a match vic-

tory in the fourth set with
a seemingly commanding
15-8 lead, but the Bulldogs
suddenly came to life and
rattled off 14 of the next 19
points to take a 22-20 lead
late in the set.
The RedStorm answered back and regained
a 23-22 advantage, but CU
rallied yet again with the
final three points to even
the match and force a fifth
and deciding set.
Junior outside hitter Betsy
Schramm (Marietta, OH)
took over in the fifth and
final set, notching six of the
team’s 10 kills and leading
the RedStorm to a match
win with a 15-8 set victory.
Rio Grande had a .197

attacking percentage as a
team compared to Cumberland’s .101 percentage. The
RedStorm hit .444 in the deciding set to end the match.
Schramm led the way for
Rio Grande with 16 kills,
while freshman defensive
specialist Chandler Brown
(Beaver, OH) dug out 12
Cumberland attacks.
Leading the way for the
Bulldogs was Mackenzie
Gass with 11 kills, while
Meghan Gass and Laura
Peavy had 16 assists and
11 digs, respectively.
Rio Grande is back in action on Tuesday night when
they travel to take on Division II foe Kentucky State.
First serve is set for 7 p.m.

�Page 6 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Buckeyes take short break from title quest
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind.
(AP) — Ohio State coach Urban
Meyer is already installing his
bye week game plan.
He wants players to stop
talking about the national title
quest and ignore anyone who
dares to bring it up.
No, the man with two national
championship rings, a top-five
ranking and a perfect 21-0 record since coming to Columbus
isn’t trying to downplay what the
Buckeyes are really chasing, he’s
trying to avoid this week’s one
potential pitfall: Distractions.
“We have to make sure we’re
not worried about anything
like that,” Meyer said Saturday.
“That’s the unfortunate thing
about bye weeks. You let guys go
for weekends and they start hearing stuff like that and we just have
to come back stronger and faster.”
It’s hard to fathom the Buck-

eyes (9-0, 5-0 Big Ten) playing
any better than they are now.
Since taking their first open date,
the week of Oct. 12, Ohio State has
outscored Iowa, Penn State and
Purdue by a combined 153-38.
In its latest rout, Saturday at Purdue, the Buckeyes led 28-0 after
one quarter, 42-0 at halftime and
wound up handing Purdue (1-7,
0-4) its worst home loss ever. The
56-point loss equals the school’s record, matching 56-0 defeats to Iowa
in 1922 and Chicago in 1907.
Ohio State’s dominance goes
far deeper than blowouts, though.
On Saturday, the Buckeyes
topped 600 yards in total offense
for the second straight week.
The defense limited Purdue to
just 116 total yards, forced two
turnovers, added six sacks to its
Big Ten-leading total and pitched
its second shutout of the season.
And it could have been even

worse if a 60-yard punt return for
a score hadn’t been called back
because of an illegal block.
That’s enough to get anyone
who follows college football talking — anyone, that is, outside
the Ohio Stadium locker room.
“I definitely feel like everybody’s a lot more focused,” running back Carlos Hyde said.
“We’re getting toward the end,
we have this bye week coming, let
everybody get rested and get back
fresh and then come out these last
three games and be explosive.”
So Meyer isn’t going to allow
the Buckeyes, who haven’t lost in
22 months, to let up now.
Rather, he’s going to continue to
push them hard by correcting the
flaws he found in Saturday’s victory at Purdue — even if nobody else
saw what the Buckeyes did wrong.
What’s left for Ohio State?
There’s a trip to Illinois on

Nov. 16, a home game against Indiana on Nov. 23 and, of course,
the annual showdown against
bitter rival Michigan on Nov. 30.
Win all three and the Buckeyes
will finally play in the Big Ten
championship game Dec. 7 in
Indianapolis. Win that, and the
Buckeyes head to Pasadena for
the postseason, either to play in
the Rose Bowl game or the BCS
national championship game.
While that’s what Ohio State
will be talking about, Meyer’s
message is completely different.
“We have a really focused team
right now,” tight end Jeff Heuerman said after catching five passes for a career-high 116 yards
and one TD at Purdue. “Coach
Meyer talked about it all week,
a team that’s playing with a purpose and such focus is a hard
team to beat. I think that’s where
we’re at right now.”

Browns QB Jason Campbell has bruised ribs
CLEVELAND (AP) — Jason Campbell didn’t think his ribs were broken. He
made another correct read.
The Browns, who have been shuttling
quarterbacks on and off the field all season, finally got some good news on that
front: Campbell’s ribs are only bruised.
Campbell has energized the Browns and
pushed them back into the playoff conversation. He may practice this week after his
injury in Sunday’s 24-18 win over the Baltimore Ravens. Coach Rob Chudzinski said
X-rays were negative and Campbell should
be able to play Nov. 17 at Cincinnati.
“I’m very happy that he’s OK, obviously,” Chudzinski said Monday during
a conference call. “He played really well.”
Campbell gritted it out and played
through pain, matching a career-high
with three touchdown passes as the
Browns (4-5) ended an 11-game losing
streak against the Super Bowl champions. The nine-year veteran was injured in
the first quarter when he was sacked and
had 340-pound nose tackle Haloti Ngata
land on him. Campbell was briefly replaced by Brandon Weeden, who lost his
starting job and jogged onto the field to
some boos and groans from Browns fans.
Campbell returned after missing just
four plays and led the Browns to a key
division win.
He completed 23 of 35 passes for 262
yards, did not throw an interception for the
second straight week and hit wide receiver
Davone Bess on two crucial fourth-down
plays — one for a TD, the other in the clos-

ing minutes as Cleveland used up time.
“You saw him from a leadership standpoint,” Chudzinski said. “The calmness
out there, the ability in that final drive
to make plays when that was crunch time
and in a critical part in the game and
just his presence with our younger guys.
What he’s doing is really giving us a life.”
Maybe Campbell is the long-term answer for the Browns at quarterback. They
entered the season hoping to find out
more about Weeden, and quickly learned
he couldn’t handle the pressure after going 0-4 as a starter. Brian Hoyer gave
Cleveland a lift while winning two starts,
but his season ended when he tore a knee
ligament against Buffalo on Oct. 3.
Enter Campbell, who made 71 starts
for Washington, Oakland and Chicago
before signing with the Browns as a free
agent in March.
But while some fans seem surprised by his
performances in a loss to Kansas City and
win over Baltimore, Chudzinski had faith
Campbell, the 20th starting quarterback for
the Browns since 1999, would deliver.
“Jason has played a lot more than any
of our guys,” Chudzinski said. “You see
it during the week, him knowing what
to expect in different situations and the
questions he asks. He’s been through it
and he knows it and when he gets out on
the field, he’s been there before. That’s
calmness. That’s a sense of confidence
that our guys have, and I have in him.”
The Browns, who jumped the Ravens into
second place in the AFC North, have a bye

this week, giving Campbell time to heal.
Chudzinski knew Campbell was hurting, but could tell he was willing to do
whatever it took to get the Browns their
first win over the Ravens since 2007.
“Just looking at him, there was no way he
was going to come out of that game and miss
out for his teammates,” Chudzinski said.
Also, Chudzinski said wide receiver Greg
Little sprained his right shoulder. Little had
seven catches for 122 yards and was twice
penalized for unsportsmanlike conduct.
Little was initially flagged for throwing
Ravens safety James Ihedigbo’s helmet after the two tangled in a pileup. A photo
pulled off the TV broadcast shows Ihedigbo’s hands around Little’s neck area.
Little popped to his feet and flung the
helmet, drawing the 15-yard penalty.
Chudzinski hasn’t spoken to Little
about the confrontation, but said his players need to know when to walk away.
“That’s part of the game and part of being smart and part of the control that I’m
talking about,” he said.
NOTES: Chudzinski said LB Quentin
Groves (ankle) and TE MarQueis Gray
(hamstring) won’t practice Tuesday. LB
Darius Eubanks has been cleared after
being evaluated for a head injury and
will practice along with LB Eric Martin (knee). Both were injured on special
teams. … According to STATS, the Bengals and Browns are alone in first and second place, respectively, in the AFC North
for the first time since the division was
formed in 2002.

Point

Raiders

From Page 5

From Page 5

Mitchell chipped in 88 yards on nine totes. Grant Safford
was next with 76 yards on 10 attempts, followed by Cody
McDaniel with 42 yards on four tries.
Mitchell led the Point wideouts with four catches for
87 yards, while Walton and Austen Toler each had a catch
for 13 and nine yards respectively. Jon Peterson and Brian
Gibbs also had six and five yards on one grab apiece.
Alex Swiger paced the Golden Bears with 15 rushing
yards on seven carries, followed by Dakota Price with
nine yards on four carries. Nate Bebout caught two passes
for five yards, while Colton Speece had one catch for 11
yards. Swiger and Chris Burnham also caught one pass
apiece for eight and seven yards respectively.
Point Pleasant finished the day with a 23-5 overall advantage in first downs and were penalized six times for 50
yards. Oak Glen was flagged just twice for 10 yards and
punted seven times for an average of 37 yards.
The Big Blacks will go for their second unbeaten regular season in the last three years next Saturday when they
host Lewis County on Senior Night in a Week 11 day
game at 1:30 p.m.

Kobe Woodall fumble for the touchdown. Following McDonald’s kick
the Raiders trailed 55-32.
The final score of the game came
at the 3:53 mark with a 27 yard
field goal by Vidal that put FHS
ahead 58-32.
Dayton Hardway threw for 232
yards on 16-of-41 passing with three
touchdowns and four interceptions.
Mark Wray led the RVHS receiving
core with 132 yards and two touchdowns on five receptions, followed
by Austin Bradley with 63 yards on
four receptions with a touchdown.
Tyler Twyman had six receptions for
24 yards, while Dustin Bickers had
one grab for 13 yards.
Justin Arrowood led the RVHS
run game with 16 yards on eight
attempts, followed by Tre Cray-

craft with 14 yards on five attempts, Jordan Gilliland with
eight yards on one rush, Mark
Wary with four yards on one carry, Colton Provens with two yards
on one rush and Austin Bradley
with one yard on two carries.
Mike Williams and Seann Roberts each had a sack for the RVHS
defense, while Bickers and Bradley
each had an interception.
Fairland’s Chance Short was 14-of25 through the air for 382 yards with
three scores and two interceptions.
Evan Maddox led the ground attack for FHS with 105 yards and
two scores on 15 tries, followed by
Nathan Campbell with 70 yards and
a score on 14 tries.
Kyle Sowards was the game’s leading receiver with 184 yards and three
scores on six grabs. Campbell had 89
yards on five receptions, Jacob War-

The only key player who sat out
this weekend was backup running
back Jordan Hall (knee), and the
Buckeyes didn’t miss him. Ohio
State did lose three starters during Saturday’s game — defensive
tackle Michael Bennett with a
stinger, right tackle Taylor Decker with a sprained medial collateral ligament in his left knee and
middle linebacker Curtis Grant
with a sprained ankle. Bennett
and Grant, Meyer said, should be
available for the Illinois game.
Decker’s injury is expected to
need one or two weeks to recover.
So Ohio State will spend this
week tuning up for the stretch
run — and tuning out all the idle
chatter about their title hopes.
“I have to make sure that’s not
something we discuss,” Meyer
said. “The goal of this team is to
come back faster and stronger than
when we went into the bye week.”

Sports Briefs
Presale tickets available
for SHS playoffs
RACINE, Ohio — Southern
High School will have presale
tickets available at the school
from 9 a.m. until 10 a.m. and
again from 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. for
Saturday night’s Division VII,
Region 25 football playoff contest against Steubenville Catholic Central. The presale tickets
cost $7 apiece and a portion of
the presale revenue will go to the
Southern General Athletic Fund.
Tickets will cost $9 apiece at the
game, which will be played at
Harding Stadium in Steubenville.
GAHS basketball
season tickets
CENTENARY, Ohio — Gallia
Academy basketball season tickets go on sale starting Monday,
Nov. 11. Superboosters may buy
tickets on November 11, while
Boosters and staff can purchase
season tickets on November 12.
The public may purchase season
tickets for home games on November 13. Tickets may be purchased at the high school office.
Cost is $66 apiece.

ner caught one 41 yard pass, Dylan
Murphy caught one 40 yard pass,
while Derrick Willis had one 28 yard
reception.
Fairland held a 24-12 first down advantage, a 554-226 total yards advantage and a 6:04 time of possession
edge. The Dragons committed 11
penalties for 105 yards, while RVHS
had eight setbacks for 90 yards.
This marks the final Ohio Valley Conference game for River
Valley as the Raiders join the TriValley Conference next season.
The Raiders joined the OVC in
2002 and have gone 8-52 in league
games, a winning percentage of
just 13.3. Fairland will travel to
Wheelersburg for the opening
round of the postseason.
This marks the final game for
RVHS seniors Austin Bradley, Jared
Mabe and Seann Roberts.

Tornadoes
From Page 5
now we can start getting ready
for what lies ahead. It was a good
night for Southern, as it’s been
most of this year.”
Eastern ran only 15 of its 53
offensive plays in SHS territory,
and all four of those possessions
resulted in turnovers — starting
with its first drive.
The Eagles forced SHS to punt
on the opening possession, and
the guests marched 48 yards in
seven plays down to the Southern 24-yard line. The following
play resulted in an interception,
the first of seven straight giveaways for Eastern. Hunter Johnson came up with the pick and
returned it to the EHS 46.
The Tornadoes followed with
a nine-play, 46-yard scoring drive
that was capped with a 12-yard
touchdown pass to Zac Beegle
from Tristen Wolfe, making it a
7-0 contest with 1:45 remaining
in the first quarter.
Both teams traded punts into
the second canto, then Eastern
had a deflected pass end up in the
hands of Southern’s Paul Ramthun — giving the hosts possession at the EHS 20 with over 10
minutes left until halftime.
The Tornadoes needed just 48
seconds to turn that takeaway
into points, as Tyler Barton
capped a two-play, 20-yard drive

with a 15-yard scamper — giving
SHS a 14-0 advantage with 9:24
left in the second period.
The hosts followed with their
third interception two plays later,
as Johnson came away with his
second pick with 8:54 remaining
at the Eastern 40-yard line. SHS
followed with a four-play, 40-yard
scoring drive that resulted in a
20-0 edge after Barton capped
things with a 12-yard run with
7:14 left until halftime.
Both teams again traded
punts, giving Eastern possession at its own 22 with 2:36 left
in the half. The Eagles fumbled
their first play back to the 11,
then coughed the ball up again
on the next play — which led
to Barton recovering the turnover at the EHS 8.
Ryan Billingsley capped an
eight-yard drive two plays later
with a two-yard scoring plunge
with 1:15 remaining, giving the
Tornadoes a sizable 27-0 cushion at the break.
Eastern mustered only two first
downs and 27 yards of total offense
in the first half, which included five
turnovers. The Eagles also had a
fourth pass picked off by Colten
Walters just before the break.
Southern, conversely, managed eight first downs and 147
yards of total offense before the
intermission, which included
135 rushing yards and three

touchdowns on 24 attempts.
Eastern did have a slim 10-9
edge in passing yards after 24
minutes of play.
The Eagles got as deep into
SHS territory as it would all night
to start the second half, as the
guests took their opening drive
down to the Tornado 13. Johnson
came away with his third and final takeaway of the night on the
next play after recovering a fumble, giving Southern possession
with 10:15 left in the third.
Eastern’s next possession also
resulted in a fumble, which was
recovered by Ramthun with
7:27 remaining in the quarter.
Neither team scored in the third
canto, allowing Southern to take
a 27-point lead into the finale.
Southern scored its final
points on the first drive of the
fourth, as the hosts marched 48
yards in five plays to secure a
34-0 lead. Wolfe capped the final scoring drive by scampering
seven yards to paydirt with 8:43
left in regulation.
Ross Keller came away with
Eastern’s lone takeaway after recovering a fumble with 5:23 remaining in the game. Southern’s
Brandon Grueser and Austin Barton also recovered EHS fumbles
in the final four minutes of play.
The Tornadoes outgained
Eastern by a 206-107 overall
margin in total yardage while

also claiming an 11-4 edge in total first downs. SHS finished the
evening with 197 rushing yards
and four touchdowns on 46 carries, while the guests mustered
97 rushing yards on 37 totes.
Tyler Barton led SHS with 152
rushing yards on 23 carries, followed by Tristen Wolfe with 26
yards on nine carries. Ryan Billingsley also had 11 rushing yards
on five attempts.
Wolfe finished the night 2-of-6
passing for nine yards, including
a touchdown pass and no interceptions. Beegle had a TD catch
of 12 yards, while Dennis Teaford hauled in the other pass for
negative three yards.
SHS was penalized six times
for 70 yards and lost only one of
its four fumbles in the contest.
Billingsley also had six punts for
an average of 33.7 yards.
Dylan Bresciani led EHS with
44 rushing yards on six attempts,
followed by Zack Scowden with
23 yards on 17 tries. Zach Browning also had 17 rushing yards on
10 carries in the setback.
Chase Cook finished the night
1-of-5 passing for 10 yards, including two interceptions. Bresciani was also 0-for-4 passing
with two interceptions. Daschle
Facemyer had the lone Eagle
catch for 10 yards.
Eastern was flagged eight times
for 50 yards and lost five of its nine

fumbles. Cook also had five punts
for an average of 26 yards.
It was the final football game
for EHS seniors Zach Browning,
Chase Cook, Tyler Barber, Zack
Scowden, Cody Rayburn, Austin
Fitzgerald, Roger Bunce and Wyatt
Westfall in the Green and White.
As for Southern and its 14
seniors — Zac Beegle, Hunter
Johnson, Brandon Moodispaugh,
Trenton Deem, Tyler Barton,
Dennis Teaford, Colten Walters,
Josh Justis, Travis Kimes, Casey
Pickens, Austin Barton, Wyatt
Jarrell, Brandon Grueser and
Chris Yeater — it’s now time to
focus on the second season.
The fifth-seeded Tornadoes
will make their playoff debut
at 7 p.m. Saturday night when
they travel to Steubenville to
face fourth-seeded Steubenville
Catholic Central (8-2) in a Division VII, Region 25 quarterfinal
at Harding Stadium.
“We’ve been crunching numbers and looking at scenarios
now for the past few weeks. The
good thing is that through all
of this the kids and the coaches
have never lost focus on the upcoming opponent,” Wickline
said. “This experience has been
a great thing for everyone in this
community, and now we just
get to go play football and make
some history — now that we
know where we are headed.”

�Tuesday, November 5, 2013

LEGALS
The Bedford Township trustees agreed to amend the
December 13, 2010 resolution
as following:
“Any resident or nonresident of
Bedford Township who avail
themselves for fire protection
services (fire or auto
incidents), the cost for these
services will be passed on to
that person or persons, OAG
2008-001; Pursuat to ORC
505.84. Bedford Township will
pursue all legal means to collect any nonpayment for the
services rendered.”
10/22, 10/29, 11/5
PROBATE COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
L.SCOTT POWELL, JUDGE
IN RE: CHANGE OF NAME
OF CHRISTINA ANN MCDONALD
TO: CHRISTINA ANN ROZZETTI CASE NO. 20136021
NOTICE OF HEARING ON
CHANGE OF NAME
The applicant has filed an Application for Change of Name
in the Probate Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, requesting the
change of name of Christina
Ann McDonald to Christina
Ann Rozzetti.
The hearing on the application
will be heard on the 5th day of
December , 2013, at 9:00

PROBATE COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
L.SCOTT POWELL, JUDGE
IN RE: CHANGE OF NAME
OF CHRISTINA ANN MCDONALD
TO: CHRISTINA ANN ROZZETTI CASE NO. 20136021
NOTICE OF HEARING ON
CHANGE OF
NAME
LEGALS
The applicant has filed an Application for Change of Name
in the Probate Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, requesting the
change of name of Christina
Ann McDonald to Christina
Ann Rozzetti.
The hearing on the application
will be heard on the 5th day of
December , 2013, at 9:00

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
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.

Court of Meigs County, Ohio,
located at Courthouse, 100
East Second Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769.
Ann McDonald
Address: P.O. Box 333, Tuppers Plains, OH 4578
11/5

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�Page 8 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Marcus Smart leads AP preseason All-America team
A lot of people were shocked
when Marcus Smart announced
he would return to Oklahoma
State for his sophomore season.
Nobody should be surprised
the Cowboys point guard was
a unanimous selection to The
Associated Press’ preseason AllAmerica team.
Smart was on every ballot from
the 65-member national media
panel Monday, a no-brainer since
he was expected to be among
the first players chosen if he had
declared for the NBA draft. The
last unanimous preseason AllAmerica was Ohio State’s Jared
Sullinger in 2011-12.
After averaging 15.4 points,
5.8 rebounds, 4.2 assists and 3.0
steals last season in winning the
Big 12 player of year award, it
was how the Cowboys fared in
the NCAA tournament that had
a lot to do with his coming back.
“I felt like we had a lot more
to accomplish,” Smart said of
the loss to Oregon in Oklahoma
State’s opening game of the NCAA

tournament. “We were a lot better
team than that. That’s just not the
way we wanted to go out. It helped
me a little bit to get motivated to
come back this year.”
Smart was joined on the preseason All-America team by
seniors Doug McDermott of
Creighton and Russ Smith of
Louisville, sophomore Mitch
McGary of Michigan and freshman Andrew Wiggins of Kansas.
The 6-foot-4 Smart, who also
won the Wayman Tisdale Award
as the country’s top freshman, said
he’s also coming back to improve
on his 1.3-to-1 assist-turnover ratio
and his 40 percent shooting from
the field, including just 29 percent
from 3-point range.
Still, he said the decision to
pass up millions of dollars and return to Stillwater was “the most
difficult thing in my life.”
McDermott, the Missouri Valley Conference player of the year
last season after averaging 23.2
points and 7.7 rebounds, was on
all but two ballots. He enters the

season with a chance at joining an
exclusive group. A two-time firstteam All-America, McDermott
could become just the 11th player
to be a three-time postseason selection and the first since Patrick
Ewing of Georgetown and Tisdale at Oklahoma from 1983-85.
The 6-8 forward is one four
returning starters for the Bluejays and coach Greg McDermott,
Doug’s father. Creighton moves
to the Big East this season.
“I’m looking at this season as
an opportunity to embrace a new
challenge,” he said. “We know
it’s much more physical and
there are a lot more athletes than
we’re used to. We’ve prepared
ourselves pretty well. We know
it’s going to be a grind and we’re
looking forward to that.”
The 6-foot Smith, who received
52 votes, averaged 18.7 points
and 2.9 assists in helping the Cardinals win the national championship. He won’t have the graduated
Peyton Siva with him in the backcourt but coach Rick Pitino will

still be calling the shots.
“I realized how much I loved
playing with my teammates
and how much fun it is to win,”
Smith said of returning for his
senior year, “and this is part of
the purpose of being a national
champion. Obviously, I wasn’t
a clear cut first-round pick, so
coming back was mainly because
of coach, my teammates, the
Louisville campus, the community, graduating.”
Wiggins, just the second freshman to earn preseason honors
since the team was first selected
for the 1986-87 season, averaged
23.4 points and 11.2 rebounds as a
senior at Huntington (W.Va.) Prep
School. He was on 42 ballots and
joins Harrison Barnes of North
Carolina in 2010-11 as the only
freshmen to earn preseason honors.
Wiggins is a member of an outstanding freshman class at Kansas
and there aren’t many people who
expect him to be a sophomore in
Lawrence. The national magazine
covers, the constant attention and

comparisons to the like of LeBron
James haven’t been a problem for
the 6-8 Wiggins, whose father
Mitchell played at Florida State
and in the NBA.
“It kind of grew on me over the
years to where I’m used to it,”
Wiggins said of the attention. “I
just think of it as a blessing. A lot
of people don’t get an opportunity to be showcased like that.”
McGary, who averaged 7.5
points and 6.3 rebounds, caught
the country’s attention during
the Wolverines’ run to the NCAA
title game when he averaged
14.3 points and 10.7 rebounds.
The 6-10 McGary, who received
34 votes, has been slowed by a
lower back condition heading
into this season.
“Right now I’m day to day —
doing stuff on the court, light
shooting, limited in what I can do,
what they’re allowing me to do,”
McGary said last week. “There’s
no target date or anything.”
Ohio State guard Aaron Craft
was sixth in the voting with 14.

AP sources: Incognito
The good, bad and ugly of 2013
sent racist texts

Barry Wilner

ning and his minions. Even with
coach John Fox now sidelined for
a heart procedure, the Broncos will
be formidable.
“I’m truly jealous of the weapons that Peyton gets to throw to,”
said his boss, Hall of Fame quarterback John Elway.
San Diego (4-4) and Oakland
(3-5) have been more competitive
than predicted.
Residing in the NFC West are
the conference’s top two teams
thus far, the Seahawks and 49ers.
All anyone needs to know about
Seattle is how it responded after falling behind winless Tampa
Bay 21-0 Sunday. Clearly, the Seahawks (7-1) weren’t ready. Just
as clearly, they were good enough
and resourceful enough to rally.
And no team has a bigger
home-field edge; Seattle has won
12 straight home games.
The 49ers (6-2), winners of five
straight, are beginning to find the
balance that got them to last season’s Super Bowl.
Arizona (4-4) has shown marked
improvement, particularly on defense, under first-year coach Bruce

The Associated Press

With much to celebrate and lament, here’s a look at the NFL
halfway through the 2013 season.
GOOD
Start out West with the league’s
two best divisions.
What Kansas City has achieved
after going 2-14 and getting the top
draft pick a season ago is remarkable and historic. Yes, the Chiefs’
superb defense is carrying a mediocre offense, but to criticize anything
Andy Reid and his staff have done
in going 9-0 is misguided.
“We’re not going to apologize
for any wins,” Chiefs quarterback Alex Smith said. “You keep
your nose down, you do what
you’ve been doing.”
Denver (7-1) was expected to
be dominant and, in stark contrast
to KC, it has been on offense. Peyton Manning’s record-tying seventouchdown explosion in the opener
— matched, incredibly, by Philadelphia’s Nick Foles, on Sunday — put
the league on notice when it comes
to the capabilities of a healthy Man-

Arians, the 2012 Coach of the Year
as an interim in Indianapolis.
Ah, Indianapolis. Its comeback
Sunday night can, in part, be contributed to Texans coach Gary Kubiak’s collapse at halftime, prompting his hospitalization and leaving
Houston distracted and uninspired.
Still, the Colts (6-2) are making a
habit of such rallies and are beating
the big boys, with wins over Seattle,
San Francisco and Denver.
Individual kudos on offense go
to Manning as he challenges all
kinds of passing records; Philip
Rivers for his revival in San Diego; Saints tight end Jimmy Graham, whose 10 TD receptions,
built on speed, power and guile,
make him a nearly unstoppable
force; and wideouts Calvin Johnson, Wes Welker and A.J. Green.
Plus some love for the behemoths
in the trenches, who have stood
out so far: the not-so-regular Joes,
tackles Staley in San Francisco,
Thomas in Cleveland; guards
Evan Mathis in Philadelphia and
Chris Myers in Houston; center
Manny Ramirez in Denver; and
all those fill-ins on Seattle’s O-line.

DAVIE, Fla. (AP) — Suspended Miami Dolphins guard
Richie Incognito sent text messages to teammate Jonathan Martin that were racist and threatening, two people
familiar with the situation said Monday.
The people spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the Dolphins and NFL
haven’t disclosed the nature of the misconduct that led
to Incognito’s suspension.
Martin, a tackle, remained absent from practice Monday one week after he suddenly left the team. Also missing was Incognito, suspended indefinitely late Sunday by
Miami for his treatment of Martin.
The team and NFL continued their investigation into
allegations by Martin’s representatives that he was bullied, and Dolphins coach Joe Philbin said it was Miami
owner Stephen Ross who asked league commissioner
Roger Goodell for assistance with that probe. The NFL
Players Association also planned to look into the matter.
“Since April 10, 2012, when the players first came here
and I was the head coach, every decision I’ve made, everything we’ve done in this facility has been done with
one thing in mind,” Philbin said Monday. “That’s to help
our players and our organization reach their full potential.
Any type of conduct, behavior that detracts from that objective is not acceptable and is not tolerated.”
The 319-pound Incognito, a ninth-year pro, is
white. The 312-pound Martin, who is in his second
NFL season, is black.

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PBS NewsHour TVG

!)!*% (13.1) 7:00 p.m.
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�Tuesday, November 5, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2013

COMICS/ENTERTAINMENT

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s HOROSCOPE
ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday,
2013
Nov. 5, 2014:
This year you have an opportunity
to break patterns, if you so choose.
Be honest with yourself about what
no longer works in your life, and learn
to let go. Unexpected events during
the next 12 months will keep you on
your toes. If you are single, you could
meet someone in the most unusual
way. You won’t need to try out any
dating services. You will know when
you have met the right person. If you
are attached, the two of you evolve
to a new level of understanding. You
also enjoy greater freedom together,
as unexpected events seem to loosen
both of you up. SAGITTARIUS always
encourages you to take risks, especially with money!
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Someone you look up to
could start acting too nice. You might
wonder what to do with this situation. You can’t change it, so accept it
with a touch of skepticism. Try not to
get frustrated when dealing with this
individual. Tonight: Let the good times
rock and roll.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You could be taken aback
by circumstances involving a partner
or family member. You might see that
someone is being quite deceptive
with this person, but there is little you
can do. You can mention it, but it is
unlikely that the other party will listen.
Tonight: Let your hair down.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Others let you know that
they are in charge. Take the hint, and
don’t make a big deal out of it. There
are some circumstances that are easier to deal with than others. Let this
person have his or her way. Tonight:
It could be a more interesting evening
than you might think.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
As well-intentioned as your
efforts might be, they likely won’t
be able to turn a situation around.
Perhaps you need to release some
anger or frustration at the moment.
Clear your mind, and then approach
the situation again later. Tonight:
Squeeze in some exercise.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Your tone changes when
dealing with others. Creativity swirls
around you, and it adds an unpredictable element to your plans. News
from a distance could be surprising.
Curb a tendency to spend when

angry. You only will cause yourself a
problem. Tonight: Enjoy the moment.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Tension builds as you rarely
have witnessed before. You’ll want
to honor a chance to head in a new
direction. Your way of handling a
problem could lead to anger, even if
you don’t see those results right now.
Tonight: Someone makes a demand;
it is your call whether to respond.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Reach out to others.
Please do not stand on ceremony.
You will be a lot happier as a result. A
partner could shock you with what he
or she shares. Strong feelings might
be sitting right below the surface.
Do you need to have a discussion?
Tonight: Join a friend or two.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Be aware of how possessive you might sound. Change
directions, and know full well that you
are going to get a strong reaction.
Be aware of the costs of proceeding
as you have in the past. Tonight: Go
over your budget carefully.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
You feel energized and
ready to handle any problem. You
might not choose to discuss a family issue, as you still feel emotional.
Someone could become angry as a
result of you holding back. This issue
is none of this person’s business.
Tonight: Whatever makes you happy.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You could feel as if you
are adjusting well to the unexpected
situations that are occurring around
you. You will handle any anger that
heads in your direction. Your instincts
will guide you through today’s maze.
Tonight: Postpone a long-distance
call for now.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
You might want to come
to a conclusion with a situation that
you feel has been on the back burner
for too long. Understanding evolves
when you ask a friend to play devil’s
advocate for you. Tonight: Hang with
your friends.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Tension builds between you
and a supervisor. Just in case you
have forgotten, you will be reminded
who has the last word. A loved one
could become angry, as this person
feels as if he or she is not getting
enough special time. Tonight: Out
late.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Final nine at WSOP in Vegas begin run for $8.4M crown
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Nine card
players from five countries have
returned to Las Vegas in search of
life-changing riches at the World
Series of Poker main event.
Some finalists hope the prize
money will allow them to turn
poker into a hobbyist’s pastime.
Others hope to fatten their bankroll for future games.
J.C. Tran, the chip leader going into the final table, plans to
retire as a professional grinder if
he wins and turn his attention to
raising his two young children.
Five Americans, plus finalists
from France, the Netherlands, Is-

rael and Canada, topped a field of
6,352 entrants at the no-limit Texas Hold ‘em main event in July.
They return to the table Monday
evening at the Rio All-Suite Hotel
&amp; Casino to settle the title over
two days of play. A champion will
be crowned Tuesday night or early Wednesday morning.
The finale will play out nearly live on ESPN, airing with
just enough of a delay to satisfy Nevada gambling regulators that the players don’t have
any way to tell what their opponents are holding.
Fans will pack the 1,600-seat

theater where magicians Penn and
Teller regularly perform. The nine
finalists are expected to don hoodies and sunglasses and take their
seats on stage after making grand
entrances like prizefighters.
The no-limit Texas Hold ‘em
played at the main event is a
game familiar to most casual poker players. But raise the stakes,
give elite players four months to
prepare and stage the game in
front of hundreds of spectators
and television cameras, and it
becomes a different animal.
Chips mean everything and
nothing in poker tournaments.

They have no direct tie to the
amount of money won or lost;
each player already staked
$10,000 to enter the tournament in July.
A player must lose all his chips
to be eliminated from the tournament, and must win all the chips
in play to claim the top prize of
$8.4 million and the glory that
comes with joining the names
of past winners, including Phil
Hellmuth, Johnny Chan, Doyle
Brunson and Chris Moneymaker.
The top seven finalists will get
at least $1 million in total prize
money. The ninth place finisher

will get no more money than the
payout of $733,224 each player
received in July.
As the tournament progresses,
minimum bets creep higher every two hours, tightening the
pressure on players who continually find their chips weren’t
worth as much as before.
Tran, 36, is the best-known of
the finalists. Six of his competitors are in their 20s, with a 32and 38-year-old rounding out the
pack. Only one of the finalists,
Las Vegas club host Jay Farber,
doesn’t consider himself a seasoned professional.

Mucho Macho Man wins Johnson takes Cup lead with Texas win
Breeders’ Cup Classic
ARCADIA, Calif. (AP) — Gary Stevens had never won
the $5 million Breeders’ Cup Classic in his long career.
Kathy Ritvo came close a year ago with Mucho Macho
Man only to settle for second.
The veteran jockey and the trainer who got another
chance at life after a heart transplant in 2008 teamed up
with the hard-knocking horse to win by a whisker Saturday.
Mucho Macho Man edged Will Take Charge in a photo finish decided by a nose, making Ritvo the first female trainer
to win North America’s richest race at a Breeders’ Cup that
began tragically with the death of a horse in the first race.
“I didn’t know the photo was as close as it was,” said
Stevens, who was 0-for-14 in the Classic.
Stevens capped his comeback at 50 in stellar fashion, surviving a photo finish in the Classic after winning the $2 million Distaff with Beholder on Friday for a sweep of the biggest
races at the two-day world championships at Santa Anita.
Ritvo became the fifth female trainer to win a Breeders’
Cup race and got to celebrate a year after seeing Mucho Macho Man finish second by a half-length to winner Fort Larned.
“Thrilling,” she said.
First, though, Ritvo had to sweat out the results.
Mucho Macho Man stretched his neck to hold off Will
Take Charge, trained by 78-year-old Hall of Famer D.
Wayne Lukas.
“I was just hoping he got it,” Ritvo said. “When I saw Gary
shake his stick, I was confident. He ran a fantastic race.”
Game On Dude, the 8-5 favorite who was 5-0 this year, finished ninth on his home track for trainer Bob Baffert and coowner Joe Torre, the retired Dodgers and Yankees manager.
Baffert had an up-and-down day. His filly, Secret Compass, broke her leg in the opening Juvenile Fillies race and
had to be euthanized. Then he won two races before Game
On Dude lost as the favorite for the second straight year.
“When I saw him going real fast on the backstretch,
I knew I was in trouble,” he said. “Then when Mike
(Smith) asked him, there was nothing there. You always
feel bad when you get beat, but I feel worse for the horse.”
Fort Larned wound up fourth.
Mucho Macho Man ran 1 ¼ miles in 2:00.72 and paid
$10, $4.60 and $3.60 as the 4-1 second choice. The victory likely earned him champion older male honors and
may get him consideration for Horse of the Year honors,
which Game On Dude could have wrapped up with a win.

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) — Jimmie Johnson is the leader again in the Chase for the Sprint
Cup title after a dominating victory Sunday at
Texas Motor Speedway.
The five-time Cup champion knows all too well
that his seven-point lead over Matt Kenseth is far
from overwhelming with two races left in the season.
Johnson also left the Lone Star State last November with a victory and seven-point lead — and lost
the championship to Brad Keselowski.
“I hope history doesn’t repeat itself,” Johnson said.
“That is the perfect example of this thing isn’t over
until it’s over. Last year we had eight great races and
two bad ones and didn’t get the championship. …
There are two very important races left.”
Kenseth and Johnson were tied in points when
they got to Texas, though Kenseth was considered
the leader based on his seven wins.
Johnson led 255 of 334 laps for his sixth win
this season while becoming only the second
three-time Cup winner at the high-banked 1½mile Texas track. The No. 48 Chevrolet finished
more than 4 seconds ahead of Hendrick Motorsports teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr.
“The 48 was in another class and nobody had anything for them,” said Earnhardt, who had his fifth
runner-up finish this season and has been top 10 in
six of the last seven Chase races.
Joey Logano finished third, ahead of Kenseth while
Kasey Kahne, another Hendrick driver, was fifth.
Johnson got his 66th career victory, including a record 24 wins in Chase races.
But he and crew chief Chad Knaus are now in their
third season since winning their fifth consecutive
championship.
“I’ve been watching a lot of MMA fighting lately,
and you’ll fall into a rhythm and think that somebody’s got a fight won, and it doesn’t end that way,”
Johnson said. “It’s how this is going to be. Matt didn’t
Stephen M. Dowell | Orlando Sentinel | MCT
have maybe the best day, but he still finished fourth. Jimmie Johnson celebrates after winning the Coke Zero
This thing is going to the last lap at Homestead. It’s 400 at Daytona International Speedway on Saturday,
going to come down to mistake.”
July 6, in Daytona Beach, Fla.

fever
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