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                  <text>‘Find the
good and
praise it’

Charlotte
shocks
Herd

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

37°

54°

50°

Breezy today; showers late in the afternoon
Rainy times tonight. High 60° / Low 47°

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 10

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 187, Volume 73

Tuesday, November 26, 2019 s 50¢

Deputies complete D.A.R.E. training
Staff Report

Meigs County Sheriff’s Deputies Joe Barnhart and Matt Martin

Courtesy photo

MEIGS COUNTY — Two
of Meigs County’s School
Resource Ofﬁcers recently
completed D.A.R.E. training.
D.A.R.E. stands for Drug
Abuse Resistance Education.
The training was two weeks
long with a very intense curriculum. The course is set up to
take a lot of concentration and
time. The D.A.R.E. in training
ofﬁcers spent countless hours
during the day, evenings, and
weekends preparing lesson
plans for their ﬁnal presentation. This class was a pass or
fail type of class. Attendance

was required as part of the
course in order to pass. If any
assignments were not fulﬁlled
or the purpose and objectives
of the 45-minute presentation
were not met, the student
could be deselected and would
not continue the training.
This training was paid for
through monies from the Ohio
School Safety Training Grant
provided to the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce by Meigs Local
School District. This grant is
provided per House Bill 318,
which was signed into law
in August, which appropriated $12 million for school
safety initiatives, training, and

school climate programs for
more than 1,700 Ohio public
schools. The grant was allocated to pay for the training for
the two Meigs County Sheriff
Deputies.
Eastern Local School
Resource Ofﬁcer Joseph Barnhart and Meigs Middle and
High School School Resource
Ofﬁcer Matthew Martin were
selected by Sheriff Keith O.
Wood to attend the D.A.R.E.
training in Dublin, Ohio. During this training the deputy’s
learned classroom management techniques, learning
See DEPUTIES | 5

FOR THE RECORD
Common Pleas Court
Hammons pleads guilty
George R. Hammons, 79, of Colorado, recently
pleaded guilty in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to a single count of “Commercial transactions prohibited activity”, also called money laundering, a third-degree felony.
Hammons was charged with four counts of Commercial Transactions Prohibited Activity (money
laundering), felonies of the third degree and two
counts of receiving stolen property, felonies of the
ﬁfth degree.
Hammons was alleged to have been the “middleman” in the securities scam allegedly committed
by Aaron Pitman against two individuals in Meigs
County, as well as possible other victims in the
state of Ohio, according to Stanley.
According to the plea agreement, Hammons
has agreed to testify truthfully against Pitman in
the case and will pay restitution in the amount of
$10,000 to a victim in the case. In exchange, Hammons will be placed on ﬁve years of community
control when he is sentenced in February 2020.
Zanesville man arraigned on abuse of corpse
Bruce Grant, 41, of Zanesville, appeared in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court for arraignment on a two count indictment. Grant is charged
with abuse of a corpse, a ﬁfth-degree felony, and
tampering with evidence, a third-degree felony.
Grant appeared in court without an attorney
for the arraignment, with Judge Linda Warner
appointing Michael Huff to represent Grant in
the case moving forward. She also entered a not
guilty plea until Grant can speak with his attorney,
despite Grant attempting to admit guilt during the
hearing.
Prosecutor James K. Stanley explained that
Grant is alleged to have been driving around with
a deceased woman in the front seat of his vehicle
for multiple hours. Stanley stated that the woman,
according to autopsy, died of natural causes with
what he described as a blood clot in the lung. Stanley alleged that the pair had been in a store when
the woman fell and Grant denied that she needed
medical treatment at the time. They then left, with
the woman dying approximately one hour later.
Grant did not take her for medical treatment for
six hours, alleged Stanley. He is also alleged to
have tampered with her cell phone after dropping
her off at the emergency room.
Grant remains held on a $50,000 bond in the
case.
See RECORD | 5

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3, 5
Opinion: 4
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Classifieds: 8
Coimics: 9
Weather: 10

Beth Sergent | OVP

The weather cleared up on Sunday, allowing some of those particpating in the annual Gallipolis in Lights “Tree Walk” to complete their
decorating duties. Pictured is the historic Bandstand in City Park, adorned with greenery and wreaths.

The countdown is on
Gallipolis in Lights opens Wednesday
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — The
switch hasn’t even been
ﬂipped and visitors were
ﬂocking to Gallipolis
City Park over the weekend to not only participate in the annual “tree
walk” for Gallipolis in
Lights (GIL), but to take
in what appears to be a
record year for entries,
nearing a reported 300.
Despite the less than
ideal weather on Saturday for the annual
tree walk, decorating
went on, with trees ﬁll-

ing the park, and even
being posted along First
Avenue, facing the Ohio
River.
Of course the trees are
just one part of the GIL
display which covers the
entire park; a park that
will be illuminated during the seventh annual
Gallipolis in Lights lighting ceremony from 5:307:30 p.m., this Wednesday, Nov. 27 - the actual
lighting is scheduled to
begin around 7:10 p.m.
at the Bandstand, according to the GIL Facebook
event page. The night

will include live reindeer,
ﬁreworks once again
sponsored by Holzer
Health System, reworked
displays and a surprise,
said GIL Events Organizer Shari Rocchi.
Rocchi also told Ohio
Valley Publishing those
at the lighting ceremony
are in for a “huge surprise” sponsored by Ohio
Valley Bank.
Also, as announced
earlier by Bossard
Memorial Library Director Debbie Saunders,
live reindeer will be on
display on opening night
courtesy of the library.
“Our local Gallipolis

in Lights event certainly
stirs the holiday spirit
in each of us,” Saunders
stated a few weeks ago
via her column for the
Sunday Times-Sentinel.
“I am very proud to live
in a community that
boasts such a magniﬁcent holiday light display
in the beautiful Gallipolis
City Park. On behalf
of Bossard Memorial
Library, I am excited to
share that the Library
will be providing visitors
an opportunity to see live
reindeer in the Gallipolis
City Park from 5 p.m.
See COUNTDOWN | 5

Embracing the Christmas spirit
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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thoughts.

Krodel light
show opens
Staff Report

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The annual
Christmas light display
at Krodel Park opened
Monday and will continue through Dec. 31.
The displays are “lit
up” around the park and
are reﬂecting sights of
the season off the lake.

The display, which is
under the direction of
the Main Street Point
Pleasant organization, is
free to the public though
donations are accepted to
support the light show.
The displays are assembled by workers with the
City of Point Pleasant
with the city providing
the electricty for the
duration of the show.
The display is open 5:309 p.m. each night.
Organizers have stated

Beth Sergent | OVP

See CHRISTMAS | 5

Skating “near” the lake at Krodel Park during the annual Christmas
light show going on now through Dec. 31.

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, November 26, 2019

OBITUARIES
LUCILLE I. GOINES
RUTLAND — Lucille
I. Goines, 67, of Rutland,
passed away on Nov. 21,
2019, at the Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
She was born on April 8,
1952, in Rutland, Ohio,
daughter of the late Russell and Alice Priddy.
A graveside service celebrating Lucy’s life will
be held at a later date at

the convenience of the
family.
Please visit www.
rmwilliamsfuneralservice.com to leave a
message of condolence,
encouragement, or comfort to the family.
R.M. Williams Funeral
Service, Wellston, is
honored to care for the
Goines Family.

MCCALLISTER
POINT PLEASANT — Louise “Sis” Campbell
McCallister, 96, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Saturday, November 23, 2019, at Pleasant Valley Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center in Point Pleasant.
A funeral service will be 1 p.m. Tuesday, November
26, 2019, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, with Pastor Roger Bonecutter ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow at Beale Cemetery in Apple Grove, W.Va.
The family will receive friends two hours prior to the
funeral service Tuesday at the funeral home.
SMITH
LEON — Delbert Lee Smith, 75, of Leon, W.Va.,
died November 25, 2019, in Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., following an extended illness.
Service will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, November 27,
2019, at Casto Funeral Home, Evans, W.Va., Visitation
will be from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral
home.
ROSE SR.
POINT PLEASANT — Ralph Edward Rose Sr. ,74,
of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died November 23, 2019.
There will be no visitation. Private services and
burial will be at the convenience of the family. Deal
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant is serving the family.
ANDERSON
POINT PLEASANT — Donna Louise Anderson,
85, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died on November 24,
2019.
Funeral services will be held at Deal Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant on Saturday, November 30, 2019 at
1 p.m. Burial will follow in Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Friends may visit the family at the funeral home
from 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. prior to the service.
DURST
SYRACUSE — Louise “Dimple” Durst, 84, of Syracuse, Ohio, died on Nov. 23, 2019.
Visiting hours for family and friends will be held
on Wednesday, Nov. 27, 2019, from 6-8 p.m. at the
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. A private burial will be at Suncrest Cemetery.

Daily Sentinel

Washing your turkey could spread germs
By Candice Choi

AP Food &amp; Health Writer

NEW YORK — Go
ahead and rinse your
cranberries, potatoes
and green beans. But
food experts say don’t
— repeat don’t — wash
the turkey before popping it in the oven on
Thanksgiving Day.
They say that could
spread the germs lurking on your turkey in
the kitchen sink or
nearby food. But it’s
been a challenge trying to convince cooks
to stop rinsing off raw
poultry.
“If your mother did it
and your grandmother
did it, and suddenly the
(government) says not
to wash your turkey,
you may take some
time to adjust,” said
Drusilla Banks, who
teaches food sanitation
for the University of
Illinois Extension.
Germs that can make
people sick are common in the guts of
healthy poultry and are
legally allowed to be on
raw turkey and chicken.
The assumption is

that nobody eats their
poultry rare, and that
thorough cooking will
kill the bacteria.
So it’s possible that
two common causes
of food poisoning —
salmonella and campylobacter — are on
the turkey, said Mindy
Brashears, a food safety
official at the U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
The do-not-wash raw
poultry advice from
the USDA is relatively
new and perhaps hasn’t
caught on because
it goes against the
ingrained belief that
washing makes things
clean, said Banks.
Participants in a food
safety study offered
their own rationale: “If
it’s still slimy — I’m
not sure what that is. It
just feels good to wash
it,” said one. Another
said: “My grandmother
taught me that. She
just said to wash all
your food because
there’s no telling where
it’s been before it got in
the pack.”
Benjamin Chapman,
a study author and food

safety expert at North
Carolina State University, said the instinct
to wash raw poultry
goes back at least
decades when people
relied more on visual
cues to spot problems
with poultry. TV chef
Julia Child was among
those who said washing chicken was “just
the safer thing to do”
before experts began
advising against it.
But food prep is
a juggling act, and
germs from poultry
can be spread even if
it’s not washed, especially when birds are
removed from packaging. It’s why washing
and sanitizing hands,
utensils and surfaces
are even more important.
The USDA-funded
study underscores that
point.
Researchers sprayed
raw chicken with a
harmless strain of E.
coli and watched volunteer cooks at test
kitchens. Among those
who washed their raw
chicken, about a quarter ended up spreading

the bacteria to their lettuce. But even some of
those who did not rinse
the chicken got germs
on the lettuce.
There are other
opportunities for germs
to survive and thrive
on turkeys: thawing
and cooking.
For thawing, experts
say frozen birds
shouldn’t be left out on
counters since germs
can start multiplying
on the outer parts that
defrost first. They
instead recommend
thawing in fridges,
cold water or in microwaves. You can also
cook a frozen turkey,
but it will take a lot
longer.
And to ensure a bird
is thoroughly cooked,
they say to use a thermometer to check that
the deepest and thickest parts of it have
reached 165 degrees.
Even after the meal is
cooked, you aren’t out
of the danger zone. To
keep turkey and other
leftovers safe, experts
say they should be
refrigerated after two
hours.

OPWC round 34 executive committee meeting
MARIETTA — An Executive
Committee Meeting will be held
on the District 18 Ohio Public
Works Round 34 State Capital
Improvement Program (SCIP)
and the Local Transportation
Improvement Program (LTIP)
project slate at 10 a.m. on
Wednesday, Dec. 11, at Buckeye
Hills Regional Council.
This program funds projects
such as road, bridge, culvert,
water, wastewater, solid waste,
and storm water facilities from
eligible local government entities in Athens, Belmont, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,

Muskingum, Noble, Perry, and
Washington counties in southeast Ohio.
The purpose of this meeting is
to approve the Round 34 slate of
projects for funding.
Questions regarding this
program should be directed to
Michelle Hyer, Development
Specialist, via email at mhyer@
buckeyehills.org or via phone at
740-376-1025.
To learn more about Buckeye
Hills Regional Council, visit
buckeyehills.org, call 740-3749436 or 1-800-331-2644 (toll
free), or email info@buckeye-

hills.org.
Buckeye Hills Regional Council is a council of governments
dedicated to improving the lives
of residents in southeast Ohio.
By working collaboratively with
elected ofﬁcials across Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry, and Washington counties, Buckeye Hills
connects local, state, and federal
resources to communities with
their Aging &amp; Disability, Community Development, Mapping
&amp; Data, Population Health, and
Transportation Planning divisions.

MAYNARD

Clergy training to support veterans’ mental health

PROCTORVILLE — Mason Lindsey Maynard, 101,
resident of at Wyngate at the Rivers Edge Proctorville,
Ohio, died Friday, November 22, 2019.
At his request, a graveside service for family will
be held 11 a.m. Wednesday, November 27, 2019 at
Crown City Cemetery, Crown City, Ohio with Wilbur
Van Matre ofﬁciating. There will be no visitation.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is in
charge of arrangements.

MARIETTA — As
they work to reintegrate
into civilian life, many
veterans and their family members seek help
from their faith community. An upcoming event
in Marietta can help
prepare clergy and laypeople alike to support
them and build pathways
to care and resources.
The Ohio Governor’s
Ofﬁce of Faith Based and
Community Initiatives,
the Ohio Governor’s
Ofﬁce of Veterans Affairs
and National Chaplain
Center of the Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA) invite clergy and
church leaders to attend
a free interactive train-

IN BRIEF

3 hurt in collapse
CINCINNATI (AP) — Authorities say at least three
people have been injured in Cincinnati after part of a
building under construction collapsed.
Cincinnati Fire Chief Roy Winston said three people
on the structure’s ﬁfth ﬂoor were injured when part of
the building collapsed Monday afternoon after workers on the sixth ﬂoor started pouring concrete.
Winston said one worker had minor injuries and the
other two had more serious injuries. He said all were
in stable condition.
The chief said crews were searching for any others
who might have been injured and contractors were
making sure workers were accounted for.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

ing in Marietta, Ohio.
This event will be held
on Dec. 4 from 8:30 a.m.
until 2 p.m. at Buckeye
Hills Regional Council,
1400 Pike Street, Marietta, Ohio 45750.
Rural and smaller-town
veterans have limited
choices for healthcare.
Houses of worship are an
important contact point
for veterans in many
communities. Sometimes clergy members
aren’t aware of the Veterans in their congregation
or how they might help a
veteran and their family
following deployment.
Clergy may recognize
veterans who are struggling in their return

to civilian life, but not
know how to support
them.
Training topics will
include:
*Identifying potential
conﬂicts between civilian and military cultures.
*Identifying actions
community clergy can
take to assist military
personnel and their
families with a healthy
adjustment to a civilian
culture.
*Types of common
military events that
can cause adjustment
problems for military
personnel and the psychiatric and psychological responses that often
follow from them.

*Identifying the relationship between spirituality and “meaning
making.”
*The importance of
Personal Narratives
and Past, Present and
Future Stories.
*Identifying pastoral
responses and resources for clergy and their
congregations.
This training is a collaboration of the Ohio
Governor’s Ofﬁce, the
National VA Chaplain
Center, and the Veterans Health Administration Ofﬁce of Rural
Health.
Information provided by Buckeye
Hills.

MEIGS BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs will only list event
information that is open to the public and will be
printed on a space-available basis.

Christmas Parades
and Events

Straw available
for animal bedding

The Meigs County Humane Society will be providing straw for animal bedding during the months
of November, December, January, and February.
Vouchers may be picked up at the Humane Society
Thrift Shop, 253 North Second Street, Middleport,
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Christmas
Parade will take place at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. Ohio, for a fee of $2 per bail. Vouchers are to be
30, beginning in the area of the former Dairy Queen redeemed at Dettwiller Lumber in Pomeroy. For
and ending at The Blakeslee Center on South Third more information call 992-6064.
Avenue, where there will be hot chocolate and visits
with Santa and the Grinch. For more information
visit the Middleport Business Association on Facebook.
MEIGS COUNTY — State Route 124 will close
POMEROY — The Pomeroy Christmas Parade
on Monday, Sept. 9 to allow crews to replace a
will take place at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 1, with line culvert that carries the route over Forked Run.The
up at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy baseball ﬁelds. Merclosure will be between the entrance to Forked
chants will have special shopping hours in conjuncRun State Park and Curtis Hollow Road. Durtion with the parade.
ing the work, trafﬁc will be detoured via SR-248,
REEDSVILLE — The Reedsville Christmas
SR-7, and SR-681. The project is scheduled for
Parade will take place at 2 p.m., with lineup at 1:30 completion in mid-November, weather permitting.
p.m. at the Belleville Locks and Dam. A tree lighting
MIDDLEPORT — Mill Street “Middleport
will take place at 6:30 p.m. on Monday, Dec. 2.
Hill” is closed due to a slip until further notice.
CHESTER — Chester Shade Historical AssociaTickets will be issued to those who drive through
tion Open House from 12-3 p.m. on Saturday, Dec.
the closed portion of the road.
7. Eastern Bell Choir will preform at 1 p.m., folMEIGS COUNTY — Meigs County Road 3,
lowed by light refreshments.
New Lima Road, will be closed beginning MonRACINE — The Racine Christmas Parade and
day, Oct. 28, to allow county forces to repair a
Christmas in the Park will be held at 7 p.m. on Satslip just north of T-369A, McMurray Road. This
urday, Dec. 7 with the parade beginning at Southern closing will be in effect for approximately three
High School and ending at Star Mill Park.
weeks.

Road closures

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 26, 2019 3

Esper says Trump ordered him to stop SEAL review board
AP National Security Writer

WASHINGTON —
Defense Secretary Mark
Esper declared on Monday that President Donald Trump ordered him to
stop a disciplinary review
of a Navy SEAL accused
of battleﬁeld misconduct,
an intervention that
raised questions about
America’s commitment to
international standards
for battleﬁeld ethics.
Esper, who initially
favored allowing the Navy
to proceed with a peerreview board for Chief
Petty Ofﬁcer Edward
Gallagher, which could
have resulted in him
losing his SEAL status,
said he was obliged to
follow Trump’s order.
But he also directed the
Pentagon’s legal ofﬁce
to review how service
members are educated in
the laws of armed conﬂict
and trained to wartime
behavioral standards.
“I can control what I
can control,” Esper told
reporters when asked
whether Trump sent the
right message to U.S.
troops by intervening to
stop the Gallagher review.
“The president is the
commander in chief. He
has every right, authority
and privilege to do what
he wants to do.”
Gallagher was acquitted of murder in the stabbing death of an Islamic
State militant captive but
convicted by a military
jury of posing with the
corpse while in Iraq in
2017.
In yet another twist to
the Gallagher saga, Esper
also made an extraordinary accusation against
Richard V. Spencer,
whom he ﬁred on Sunday
as the civilian leader of
the Navy.

Esper said Spencer last
week had gone behind his
back to propose a secret
deal with the White
House in which Spencer
would ﬁx the outcome
of the Gallagher review.
Esper said this was a
violation of the military
chain of command and
that Spencer acknowledged his misstep.
Through a Navy
spokesman, Spencer
declined requests for
comment on Esper’s
allegation. However, in a
resignation letter Sunday
he had said he could not
in good conscience follow
an order that he believed
would undermine the
principle of good order
and discipline in the military – suggesting that he
had been ordered to stop
the peer-review process
for Gallagher.
Trump began to get
involved in the Gallagher
case in the spring after
Bernard Kerik, a former
business partner to his
personal lawyer Rudy
Giuliani became an advocate for the family and
made appearances in conservative media.
The SEAL also
changed his defense team
to include Marc Mukasey,
a lawyer for the Trump
real estate company.
The president has
tweeted in support of
Gallagher, praising the
sailor’s service and saying
the case was “handled
very badly from the
beginning.”
Earlier this month,
Trump restored Gallagher’s rank, which had been
reduced in his military
jury conviction.
Trump also pardoned
two soldiers -- a former
Army special forces
soldier set to stand trial
next year in the killing
of a suspected Afghan

Andrew Vaughan | The Canadian Press via AP

U.S. Navy Secretary Richard Spencer fields questions at a media availability Saturday at the Halifax
International Security Forum in Halifax, Nova Scotia. U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper has fired
the Navy’s top official over his handling of the case of a SEAL accused of war crimes who President
Donald Trump has defended. Esper said Sunday he had lost confidence in Spencer and alleged
Spencer proposed a deal with the White House behind his back to resolve the SEAL’s case.

bombmaker in 2010 and
an Army ofﬁcer who had
been convicted of murder
for ordering his soldiers
to ﬁre on three unarmed
Afghan men in 2012, killing two.
Beyond the Spencer
ﬁring, the Gallagher
case has raised questions
about the appropriate
role of a U.S. president
in matters of military
justice. Esper said Trump
had a constitutional right
to intervene, but others
worry that such actions
undermine the credibility
of American claims to be
a leader in ethical and
lawful behavior on the
battleﬁeld.
“What concerns me
the most is the chilling
effect this will have on
special forces’ willingness
to report when they see
illegal behavior,” James
Stavridis, a retired Navy
admiral, said in an email
to The Associated Press.
“That is tragic because in

IN BRIEF

Stepdaughter’s
remains found
AUBURN, Ala. (AP) — An Alabama district attorney said Monday
that authorities have “good reason”
to believe human remains found in a
wooded area belong to the missing
stepdaughter of a UFC heavyweight
ﬁghter.
The remains were found on a
county road in neighboring Macon
County, Lee County District Attorney Brandon Hughes told The Associated Press.
“I can conﬁrm that human remains
have been found in Macon County
on County Road 2 and we have good
reason to believe they are that of
Aniah Blanchard,” Hughes said.
Police arrested a third person
Monday in connection with the disappearance of Blanchard, 19. She
was last seen Oct. 23 in Auburn.
Her stepfather is UFC ﬁghter Walt
Harris.
After she disappeared, Blanchard’s
black Honda CRV was found abandoned more than 50 miles away at
an apartment complex in Montgomery, Alabama. Auburn police detective Josh Mixon testiﬁed at a hearing last week that Blanchard’s blood
was found in the car and it appeared
she had suffered a life-threatening
injury.

Truck deaths
suspect pleads
LONDON (AP) — A truck driver
charged with manslaughter over the
deaths of 39 Vietnamese migrants
whose bodies were found in the back
of a vehicle he had allegedly been
driving pleaded guilty Monday to
lesser charges, as police made a new
arrest in the case.
Northern Irish trucker Maurice
Robinson, who is accused of being
part of an international people-smuggling ring, admitted plotting with others to assist illegal immigration and
acquiring criminal property.
Robinson, 25, appeared at London’s
Central Criminal Court by video link
from prison. He wasn’t asked to enter

pleas to 39 counts of manslaughter
and conspiracy to trafﬁc people, and
he faces another court hearing Dec.
13.
The bodies of 39 people were found
Oct. 23 in the English town of Grays,
east of London. Police say the victims
were all from Vietnam and were aged
between 15 and 44.
The 31 men and eight women are
believed to have paid people trafﬁckers for their clandestine transit into
England.

Top UK rabbi slams
Labour
LONDON (AP) — Britain’s most
senior Jewish religious leader stepped
into Britain’s election campaign Monday, saying the country’s main opposition leader has allowed the “poison”
of anti-Semitism to take root in his
party.
Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis,
spiritual leader of the U.K.’s Orthodox
Jews, said that “the very soul of our
nation is at stake” in the Dec. 12 election. Writing in The Times of London
newspaper, Mirvis said Labour Party
leader Jeremy Corbyn and his allies
had failed to stop anti-Jewish prejudice and “hounded” those who tried
to challenge it.
Labour’s election campaign has
been dogged by recurring allegations
that Corbyn — a longtime champion
of the Palestinians — has allowed
anti-Jewish prejudice to fester in the
left-of-center party.

Conan the
dog honored
WASHINGTON (AP) — A U.S.
military dog that played a starring
role in the raid that killed Islamic
State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi
seemed oblivious to the praise that
President Donald Trump heaped on it
Monday at the White House.
Conan, a Belgian Malinois, seemed
much more interested in the head
scratches it was getting from Mike
Pence, repeatedly looking up at the
vice president in search of more attention.

the end what separates us
from our opponents on
the battleﬁeld is our willingness to follow the rule
of law.”
Sen. Jack Reed, the
ranking Democrat on the
Senate Armed Services
Committee and an Army
veteran, accused Trump
of “inappropriate involvement” in the military
justice system.
“The White House’s
handling of this matter
erodes the basic command structure of the
military and the basic
function of the Uniform
Code of Military Justice,”
Reed said.
Carl Tobias, a law professor at the University
of Richmond School of
Law, said Trump’s action
undercut the military.
“We want to be a
standard for the world
in terms of rule of law,”
he said. “I’m concerned
that it undermines our
own military; it under-

mines our standing in the
world.”
Trump has said Gallagher was treated unfairly
by the Navy.
“I think what I’m doing
is sticking up for our
armed forces,” he said
Monday. “There’s never
been a president who is
going to stick up for them
and has like I have.”
Last week Trump
tweeted that Gallagher
must be allowed to retire
as a SEAL, regardless of
the Navy’s intention to
review his standing in the
elite force. Esper’s comments Monday revealed
that on Sunday Trump
had given the defense
secretary a direct order to
make this happen.
Even before receiving that order, however,
Esper had decided the
Gallagher process should
be stopped. He said his
rationale was that, “given
the events of the last few
days,” it was no longer

possible for Gallagher to
get a fair shake.
“As professional as they
are,” he said of the Navy
review board members,
“no matter what they
would decide, they would
be criticized from many
sides, which would further drag this issue on,
dividing the institution.
I want the SEALs and
the Navy to move beyond
this now, fully focused
on their warﬁghting mission.”
In announcing Sunday
that he had dismissed
Spencer, Esper said he
acted after learning of
Spencer’s secret plan to
“guarantee” in advance
the outcome of the review
board that was to convene
next week.
Spencer had “proposed
a deal whereby if the
president allowed the
Navy to handle the case,
he would guarantee that
Eddie Gallagher would
be restored to rank,
allowed to retain his
Trident and permitted
to retire,” Esper said
Monday.
This was “completely
contrary” to what Esper
and the rest of the Pentagon leadership had
agreed to, he said, and
contrary to Spencer’s
public position that the
Navy disciplinary process
should be allowed to play
out with no interference.
Esper said he had
previously advocated for
allowing the Navy review
to go forward. But when
Trump gave him a “verbal instruction” to stop
the process, he did so.
Esper did not say
explicitly that he disagreed with Trump’s
order.
Once Trump gave the
order, Esper said he
responded, “Roger. I got
it.”

With testimony over, work begins
on key impeachment report
By Lisa Mascaro
and Mary Clare Jalonick

wrongdoing and miscon- Ukraine in what witnesses described as an irregduct by the President
Associated Press
that we have gathered to ular foreign policy channel, Republicans argue
date is clear and hardly
it’s not clear the presiin dispute,” Schiff told
WASHINGTON —
dent directly intervened
colleagues in a letter
The witnesses have
to withhold the money
Monday. “What is left
spoken, the politics are
to Ukraine. Besides, they
to us now is to decide
largely settled. Now
say, the military aid for
whether this behavior
impeachment investigathe Eastern European
is compatible with the
tors will make the case
ofﬁce of the Presidency, ally countering Russian
for public opinion.
aggression was eventuOn Monday, hundreds and whether the Conally released.
stitutional process of
of pages from DemoTrump gave Giuliani a
impeachment is warcratic Chairman Adam
vote of conﬁdence Monranted.”
Schiff’s intelligence
day.
Republicans are not
committee were being
“Rudy is the best
compiled into an exhaus- necessarily disputing
mayor in the history of
the evidence, but insist
tive report that will
New York. In my opinbegin to outline whether the president did nothPresident Donald Trump ing wrong. While Trump ion, the strongest mayor,
the best mayor,” Trump
lawyer Rudy Giuliani
engaged in “treason,
told reporters in the
pursued the political
bribery or high crimes
Oval Ofﬁce.
investigations with
and misdemeanors” by
withholding $400 million in aid as he pushed
Ukraine to investigate
Democratic rival Joe
Biden. The report may
come as soon as next
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There are rising political stakes for all sides.
Americans remain deeply split over the impeachment question, despite
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By Robert Burns

�Opinion
4 Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Japanese
Honeysuckle
invasion
I wrote recently about invasive Japanese Honeysuckle, sounding the alarm and passing along
some suggestions from ODNR about how to get
rid of this pestilence. Since I realized
that our farm was being invaded by
Japanese Honeysuckle, an aggressive
shrub that takes over and smothers everything in its path, we have
devoted many days of hard work
to beating back this scourge. We’ve
tried many different methods, over
Steve
several years, but our efforts felt like
Boehme
“Whack-A-Mole” as new colonies
Contributing continued to appear. We have 180
columnist
acres, much of it wooded, and we
couldn’t seem to turn the tide.
I’m happy to report a breakthrough; a “weapon of mass destruction” we
recently tried, that promises to give us the upper
hand. This method was suggested to us by ODNR
Urban Forester Wendi Van Buren, but we didn’t
report in in our earlier column because we hadn’t
tried it yet and didn’t realize its potential. It
turned out to be so effective that we think we’ll be
able to wipe out the existing honeysuckle shrub
population on our farm in a matter of days!
The key to success is timing. Japanese honeysuckle is one of the last woody plants to go
dormant and drop its leaves in fall, and one of the
ﬁrst to leaf out in spring. This gives us a two to
three week window in late fall and early spring
when we can spray glyphosate on the invaders
with little or no damage to other plants. We prefer fall, because there are wildﬂowers and other
plants in the forest understory that emerge early.
For this reason, we’ll limit our glyphosate spraying
in spring to the worst infested areas only.
Our weapon of mass destruction is our brandnew Stihl backpack fogger. Similar to a backpack
leaf blower, this dandy machine has a 2-1/2 gallon
tank and an injector nozzle that mixes glyphosate
with a powerful blast of air, creating a fog that can
reach plants as far as 20 feet away. The air blast
rufﬂes the leaves, coating both the top and underside of the leaf with a ﬁne mist.
Imagine my elation as I unleashed a glyphosate
fog into dense honeysuckle thickets, the wind
at my back, hitting the tops of the tallest plants
while dousing the carpet of seedlings underneath,
as fast as I could walk. We covered many acres
along hedgerows and hillsides in a single afternoon. High-ﬁves were in order! Hiking with the
backpack sprayer was a workout, soaking us with
sweat, but so much faster and easier than any
other method we’ve tried by far.
Starting with easily available 44% glyphosate
concentrate, we simply measured one cup (16
ounces) into the sprayer tank and topped it off
with water. Setting the injector nozzle on 2 seems
to give just the right amount of coverage. It takes
about ﬁfteen minutes per tankful to empty the
tank, at a brisk walk.
A key strategy is to focus on the big, established
“mother plants” ﬁrst, because Japanese honeysuckle can’t reproduce until the plants mature and
start to have berries. Birds, attracted by the shiny
red berries, spread the invader far and wide. Berries drop under the mature plants and create a
carpet of seedlings.
Over the years, readers of this column have
admonished us for promoting the use of glyphosate in landscaping, but no one has ever presented
us with convincing proof. Experts disagree. For
our part, there is a tradeoff between the possible
harmful effects of glyphosate and the uncontrolled
spread of invasive plants like Japanese honeysuckle, thistle, multiﬂora rose, poison ivy and autumn
olive. An online search turned up no evidence that
eating glyphosate-treated berries is harmful to
birds, however our approach is to eliminate berrybearing mature plants ﬁrst to minimize the risk.
Armed with our newfound “weapon of mass
destruction”, we’ll take up the battle again next
year. I urge you to join it, in your own yard. Mark
your calendar for next November 1, and join us in
turning the tide of the honeysuckle invasion.
Steve Boehme is a landscape designer/installer specializing in
landscape “makeovers.” “Let’s Grow” is published weekly; column
archives are on the “Garden Advice” page at www.goodseedfarm.com.
For more information is available at www.goodseedfarm.com or call
GoodSeed Farm Landscapes at (937) 587-7021.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Impressionist Rich Little is 81. Singer Tina
Turner is 80. Singer Jean Terrell is 75. Pop musician John McVie is 74. Actress Marianne Muellerleile is 71. Actor Scott Jacoby is 63. Actress
Jamie Rose is 60. Country singer Linda Davis is
57. Actor Scott Adsit is 54. Blues singer-musician
Bernard Allison is 54. Country singer-musician
Steve Grisaffe is 54. Actress Kristin Bauer is 53.
Actor Peter Facinelli is 46. Actress Tammy Lynn
Michaels Etheridge is 45. DJ/record label executive DJ Khaled (KAL’-ehd) is 44.

THEIR VIEW

An eye for beauty
It is easy to give thanks
when things are going
well. It is harder to do
so when life has dealt us
difﬁcult, demanding, and
depressing situations.
But just as a smooth sea
never made a good sailor,
the most genuine expressions of thankfulness are
created in the crucible of
adversity.
The Apostle Paul said
that it is “thankworthy”
when a person can still
express gratitude in the
face of grief and suffering. My ancestral cousin
dealt with the deaths of
his daughter and granddaughter by writing the
message below to his
bereaved son-in-law.
“We live in a land
of plenty. The all-wise
Giver of every good thing
bestows on his unworthy
subjects the necessities
and comforts of life in
abundance—and yet how
little do we appreciate
His unbounded love and
mercies. I feel at times
that I should blush at my
ingratitude.”
An ancestral uncle had
a similar attitude of gratitude and humility. “We
are in good health thanks
be to the Almighty God
for all his mercies to us

the drivers. The
poor and unworthy
rocks rose straight
sinners. We thank
up on one side and
God for having
straight down on
plenty to eat and
the other, so that a
clothes to wear. We
little jump to that
are content.”
side of the road
But it was my
would have made
great Aunt Mary
James
pressed beef of me.
who had the best
F. Burns
“On the summit
eye for spying the Contributing
we
were in three
silver lining in a
columnist
states at once—
grey cloud. She
Kentucky, Virginia,
boarded a train
and Tennessee—and I
late at night in Ohio en
was in a fourth, a state
route to a new job as an
of bliss. Six men behind
art teacher in Virginia.
me, one at my side, and
Mary soon spotted a full
the loveliest mountain
moon out the window
and cheered a blind musi- scenery all around. As far
as the eye could see, rose
cian who serenaded the
one mountain after anothhandful of passengers,
including “two girls from er. Some were above the
clouds, some below, but a
Iowa going to Cumberblue haze hovered around
land Gap to teach in a
mission school. We had a the tops of all of them.
“The road was rocky,
jolly time.”
solid sandstone in some
But things were conplaces, but with beautiful
siderably less jolly when
ﬂowers growing out of
they arrived at Cumberland Gap only to ﬁnd that the stones, and ferns that
would have set one wild
the tunnel through the
had there not been so
mountain had collapsed.
many other things to take
Riding in creaky horseyour attention.”
drawn wagons was the
Aunt Mary later
only way over the mountain. Mary embraced the became a wealthy bookseller in Kansas City. My
opportunity.
“I climbed into a wagon wife and I visited her
shortly after her 98th
with six men so I could
birthday. Her birthday
sit in front. The horses
cake, she proclaimed with
were bony and so were

a wave of her hand, had
been “a blaze of glory.”
So was she. Aunt Mary
left her sizeable fortune
to local charities, her way
of saying “thank you”
to the city which had
embraced a female entrepreneur.
After attending a lecture by “Roots” author
Alex Haley who spoke of
having a white grandfather in Ireland, I wrote
him a letter about my
1790s family letters from
Ireland. Haley replied
that “what you’ve written naturally thrills a buff
of history like me.” His
parting advice, offered
shortly before his death,
was “Find the good and
praise it.”
As we prepare for
Thanksgiving, let us
reﬂect on the good things
in our lives with a humility that makes us blush for
any residual ingratitude.
And may we embrace
our faith, family, and
friends with the zest of
an Aunt Mary and have
her appreciation for the
beauty and warmth that
surrounds us.

In 1943, during World
War II, the HMT Rohna,
a British transport ship
carrying American soldiers, was hit by a German missile off Algeria;
1,138 men were killed.
In 1950, China entered
the Korean War, launching a counteroffensive
against soldiers from the
United Nations, the U.S.
and South Korea.
In 1973, President
Richard Nixon’s personal
secretary, Rose Mary
Woods, told a federal
court that she’d accidentally caused part of the
18-1/2-minute gap in a
key Watergate tape.
In 1986, President
Ronald Reagan appointed a commission headed
by former Senator John
Tower to investigate his
National Security Council staff in the wake of
the Iran-Contra affair.
In 2007, Vice Presi-

dent Dick Cheney
experienced an irregular
heartbeat and was taken
to George Washington
University Hospital for
evaluation.
In 2008, teams of
heavily armed gunmen,
allegedly from Pakistan,
stormed luxury hotels,
a popular tourist attraction and a crowded
train station in Mumbai,
India, leaving at least
166 people dead in a
rampage lasting some
60 hours. A Missouri
mother on trial in a
landmark cyberbullying case was convicted
by a federal jury in Los
Angeles of three minor
offenses for her role in
a mean-spirited Internet
hoax that apparently
drove a 13-year-old girl,
Megan Meier, to suicide.
(However, Lori Drew’s
convictions were later
thrown out.)

James F. Burns, an Ohio native, is a
retired professor at the University
of Florida.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Indiana.
In 1883, former slave
Today is Tuesday, Nov. and abolitionist Sojourn26, the 330th day of 2019. er Truth died in Battle
Creek, Mich.
There are 35 days left in
In 1941, U.S. Secrethe year.
tary of State Cordell
Today’s Highlight in History Hull delivered a note
to Japan’s ambassador
On Nov. 26, 2000,
Florida Secretary of State to the United States,
Katherine Harris certiﬁed Kichisaburo Nomura
George W. Bush the win- (kee-chee-sah-boor-oh
noh-moo-rah), setting
ner over Al Gore in the
state’s presidential ballot- forth U.S. demands for
ing by a 537-vote margin. “lasting and extensive
peace throughout the
Paciﬁc area.” The same
On this date
day, a Japanese naval
In 1789, Americans
task force consisting of
observed a day of
six aircraft carriers left
thanksgiving set aside
the Kuril Islands, headed
by President George
Washington to mark the toward Hawaii.
In 1942, the Warner
adoption of the ConBros. motion picture
stitution of the United
“Casablanca,” starring
States.
Humphrey Bogart and
In 1842, the foundIngrid Bergman, had its
ers of the University of
world premiere at the
Notre Dame arrived at
the school’s present-day Hollywood Theater in
New York.
site near South Bend,
The Associated Press

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel appreciates
your input to the community calendar. To make
sure items can receive proper attention, all information should be received by the newspaper at
least ﬁve business days prior to an event. All coming events print on a space-available basis and
in chronological order. Events can be emailed to:
TDSnews@aimmediamidwest.com.

Tuesday, Nov. 26
POMEROY — Acoustic Night at the Library, 6
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. All skill levels and
listeners are welcome. Bring an instrument and
play along.

Nov. 26 and 27
POMEROY — Stuffed Animal Sleepover will
be held at the Pomeroy Library. Drop off your
stuffed buddy at the Pomeroy Library on Tuesday
by noon. Pick him/her up on Wednesday at 10:30
a.m. Enjoy doughnuts and Storytime while you
learn about the fun your stuffed animal got into at
the library overnight.

Wednesday, Nov. 27
POMEROY — The Meigs County Commissioners will meet at 11 a.m. for their regular weekly
meeting. The meeting has been changed due to
the Thanksgiving holiday.

Thursday, Nov. 28
MEIGS COUNTY — All Meigs Library locations
will be closed in observance of Thanksgiving Day.

Nov. 28 and 29
POMEROY — Meigs County government ofﬁces, including the Meigs County Courthouse will be
closed for the Thanksgiving holiday. Normal hours
will resume on Monday, Dec. 2.
POMEROY — Meigs County Health Department will be closed. Normal business hours
resume at 8 a.m. on Dec. 2.

Countdown
From page 1

to 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 27
during the ofﬁcial tree lighting and
opening ceremonies of Gallipolis
in Lights 2019. These reindeer will
be ‘ﬂying in’ from Pine Acres Reindeer Farm in LaRue, Ohio. While
no petting of reindeer will be permitted, visitors will be able to get
within two feet of the reindeer to
take pictures, if desired. Plan now
to join the community in celebrating this year’s Gallipolis in Lights,
an event which, just like Rudolph
in the classic holiday tune, is sure
to ‘go down in history.’”
Also, as announced by Gallia
County Convention and Visitor’s Bureau (GCCVB) Executive
Director Amanda Crouse, Ohio
Magazine representatives will be
at the lighting ceremony to present
ofﬁcials from both the city of Gallipolis and GCCVB with its Best
Hometown Award. The presentation is set for 7 p.m. at the stage
in the park. The stage will also be
home to several live acts and entertainment.
The annual tractor and wagon
rides will once again be presented
by Evans Wealth Management
at the lighting ceremony as well.
Visitors will also be able to take
advantage of free cookies and hot
chocolate the night of the lighting.
GIL runs through New Year’s
Day and has often been regarded
as the unofﬁcial start to Gallia’s
holiday season along with the
GCCVB’s annual Christmas Parade
held Dec. 7. Admission is free.

Sunday, Dec. 1

Christmas

HEMLOCK GROVE — The Coolville Community Choir, under the direction of Martha S.
Matheny, will perform its favorite Christmas song
selections from its past 40 years of performances
at 7 p.m. at Hemlock Grove Christian Church,
which is located at 38387 Hemlock Grove Rd. in
Pomeroy. Refreshments will be served following
the performance. For more information, contact
Paula Welker at 740-992-7291.

From page 1

Wednesday, Dec. 4
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Veterans
Service Commissioner will hold its ﬁnal meeting
of 2019 at 9 a.m. in their ofﬁce located at 97 North
Second Ave. in Middleport. All ﬁnal applications must be submitted at that time. There is no
November meeting.

Friday, Dec. 6
POMEROY — The Meigs County Public
Employee Retirees Inc., Chapter 74 will hold their
regular meeting at noon at the Pomeroy Community Center, 260 Mulberry Ave. A Potluck luncheon
will begin at noon in the Center main auditorium
and will be followed by a brief business meeting
which will include installation of new ofﬁcers.
District 7 Rep. Greg Ervin will provide updates of
statewide issues that may effect PERI members.
All Meigs Public Employee Retirees are urged to
bring a covered dish and join the group.

Saturday, Dec. 7
POMEROY — Local Author Event, 1 p.m. at
Pomeroy Library. Jordan and Calee Pickens will
present their new book, “Historic Tales of Meigs
County Ohio”.
MIDDLEPORT — Fish fry will be held at the
Middleport Fire Department with serving beginning at 11 a.m.
CHESTER — Chester Shade Historical Association Open House from 12-3 p.m. Eastern Bell
Choir will preform at 1 p.m., followed by light
refreshments.
NEW HAVEN — The New Haven Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary will host a Christmas craft
show from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the New Haven
Fire Station.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Farmers’ Market will host an indoor Christmas Market from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Mulberry Community Center.

Deputies
From page 1

modalities, facilitation, communication/public
speaking skills and a working knowledge of the
D.A.R.E. program. Deputy Barnhart and Deputy
Martin were both certiﬁed in the Elementary
School, Middle School, and High School curriculum, RXOTC program, as well as information
needed to present Community Presentations/
Enforcement lessons.
The plan for D.A.R.E. is to educate all Meigs
County Schools. Deputy Martin started the
D.A.R.E. program at Meigs Middle School on Nov.
13, teaching the entire sixth grade. This course
runs approximately ten weeks without breaks and
45-minute lessons per class. The deputies plan to
start courses with each school district as they are
able too.
Information and photo provided by the Meigs County Sheriff’s Office.

Tuesday, November 26, 2019 5

in the past, they open the
display earlier to allow
for those visiting family
for Thanksgiving who
cannot return for Christmas a chance to take in
the display. Visiting Krodel Park at Christmas has
become a family tradition
for many in the area, say
organizers.
Also, this year, members of the Mason County
Career Center’s FFA
chapter built a model of a
gingerbread house for the
show.
The building will be
used for volunteers who
are collecting donations
during the light show.
FFA instructor Sam Nibert said students in his
Advanced Principals of
Agriculture class partnered with the Agriculture Mechanics class to
complete the project.
Like many programs
at the career center, the
project was completed by
using a simulated workplace where everyone has
a role — such as a foreman or safety manager.
“By using a simulated
workplace, that gives the
kids a chance to have
ownership of their project,” Nibert said.
The project foreman
for the gingerbread house
was Kira Henderson,
a third year FFA member, who said that the
new building was her
grandmother’s idea. The

Photos by Beth Sergent | OVP

Nearly 300 trees were anticipated to particate in the annual “tree walk” for Gallipolis in
Lights. The opening ceremony and lighting is this Wednesday, Nov. 27 in City Park, with
entertainment beginning at 5:30 p.m.

The annual “tree walk” for Gallipolis in Lights provides several opportunities for the
community to remember loved ones, as well as promote organizations and causes, all
while supporting the free lighting display. Trees will be lined along the four corners of
Gallipolis City Park and along First Avenue facing the Ohio River.

Beth Sergent | OVP

Soldiers guard Fort Randolph at Krodel Park.

previous structure was
falling apart, according
to Henderson, and volunteers requested the FFA
students, asking if they
could build a new one.
Henderson said the project took a few weeks to
complete.
As the foreman, her job
was to make sure all the
decorations were together
and ensure the size of the
building was big enough
and could ﬁt a couple
people inside.
The Mason County
Career Center FFA Chapter President Crimson
Cochran said it was nice
to have the opportunity
to do something for the
community that was
needed.
“Every one of these
(members), including

myself, put in every bit
of effort they have to
do things for their community,” Cochran said.
“I’m really proud of my
chapter.”
The chapter Vice President Clairy Keefer said
the project brought the
team together and made
them excited for what the
year has to offer.
Nibert said the project
took knowledge from
many trades at the center.
“There are several
trades when you look at
the vocational center,”
Nibert said. “There was
electrical, graphic design,
drafting, and carpentry.
That’s what the vocational
center, or the career center, is about — trades.”
Point Pleasant Mayor
Brian Billings said the

Main Street Point Pleasant organization is looking for volunteers to collect donations during the
light shows. If you wish
to volunteer, contact the
Main Street Point Pleasant ofﬁce, 304-675-3844.
Also, many of those in
Gallipolis are counting
down to the annual lighting ceremony for Gallipolis in Lights in Gallipolis
City Park 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.
on Wednesday, Nov. 27,
with reindeer, ﬁreworks,
reworked displays and a
surprise, said GIL Events
Organizer Shari Rocchi.
More on the opening
night of Gallipolis in
Lights in an upcoming
edition.

Prosecutor Stanley
stated that Simpson is
alleged to have committed numerous rapes
From page 1
against a minor when she
was between the ages of
Simpson arraigned
7 and 15. Stanley said
on rape charges
Joshua A. Simpson, 37, the victim reported the
of Long Bottom, remains alleged acts when she
was 16. Stanley stated
held on a $500,000
that Simpson is charged
bond following a recent
with the offenses that
arraignment in Meigs
the victim could recall
County Common Pleas
enough speciﬁcs to prove
Court.
the charges, although, he
Simpson was indicted
alleged there were more
earlier this month on
occurrences than those
seven counts of rape,
each a ﬁrst-degree felony charged.
Simpson remains in
and one count of sexual
custody as the case probattery, a third-degree
ceeds. Attorney Britt
felony. The grand jury
Wiseman was appointed
also returned a sexually
violent predator speciﬁca- to represent Simpson.
tion on the charges.
A not guilty plea was
Probate Court
entered on his behalf in
POMEROY — Marthe case.
riage licenses were

recently issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to
the following couples:
Dillon Andrew Weppler
and Jordyn Marie Miner,
both of Shade;
Raymond Eugene Patterson and Deanna Marie
Paciﬁco, both of Georgetown, Kentucky;
Kenneth Lyndon Black
II and Melissa Gail Ferrell, both of Chester,
South Carolina;
William Dewayne Doczi
and Markie Lee Hurd,
both of Middleport;
Austin Richard Hill and
Sara Rose Klein, both of
Syracuse;
Christopher William
Sheehan and Stephanie
Morine Jacobs, both of
Rutland;
Deryl Edward Wilson
Jr. and Erica Dawn Lavender, both of Pomeroy;

Kyle John Zachary
Rifﬂe and Sylvia AnneMarie Richards, both of
Middleport;
Jacob Tyler Dunn and
Madeline Nicole Brookover, both of Parkersburg,
West Virginia;
Colten Shevez Bell of
Hartford, West Virginia,
and Hannah Danielle Cremeans of Pomeroy;
Tanner Mathew Thorla
and Bailee Nicole Floyd,
both of Racine;
Colton James Heater
and Miranda Caitlin
Combs, both of Pomeroy;
Cameron Bailey Tackett
and Jill Marie Olejniczak,
both of Albany;
Kevin Ray Klein of
Racine and Angela Dawn
Powell of Long Bottom;
Daniel Lee Miller and
Morgan Edith Paynter,
both of Pomeroy.

Record

Beth Sergent and Kayla Hawthorne
contributed to this article.

�Sports
6 Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Brown, Hubbard lead Oklahoma State over WVU

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

West Virginia wide receiver George Campbell catches a touchdown pass behind
a pair of NC State defenders, during the non-confernece game on Sept. 14 in
Morgantown, W.Va.

MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP) — Here’s something else
to add to the conversation for
Chuba Hubbard’s Heisman Trophy chances: The nation’s rushing leader is a solid receiver,
too.
Hubbard set career highs
with seven catches for 88 yards
Saturday in No. 22 Oklahoma
State’s 20-13 win over West
Virginia.
Oh, and the sophomore also
surpassed 100 yards rushing
for the ninth consecutive game
to push his total to 1,832 yards.
“In the second half, we just
started riding Chuba,” said
Oklahoma State coach Mike
Gundy.
Hubbard and quarterback
Dru Brown, who threw two
touchdown passes in his ﬁrst
start, generated just enough

offense for the Cowboys (8-3,
5-3 Big 12, No. 21 CFP), who
won their fourth straight.
Hubbard entered the game
with 82 receiving yards all
season and Gundy had emphasized earlier in the week he
didn’t throw to Hubbard that
often out of fear of injury.
But Gundy said West Virginia took away Hubbard’s effectiveness on the ground early.
“It forced us into throwing
the ball to him some, more so
than him running,” Gundy said.
“It worked out good for us.”
Hubbard ran 46 yards with a
screen pass to set up Oklahoma
State’s ﬁrst touchdown.
“Chuba, he’s the real deal,”
said West Virginia coach Neal
Brown. “I knew coming in he’s
a great player. I leave the game,
he’s a great player.”

Hubbard said it doesn’t matter how he gets the ball.
“I just try my best to get ﬁrst
downs and score,” he said. “I
was just trying to do my job
and make something happen.”
Hubbard ran 26 times for 106
yards, far below his 173-yard
average, but he ran for 47 yards
on two key second-half drives
that helped Oklahoma State
take control.
Dru Brown marched Oklahoma State the length of the
ﬁeld early in the fourth quarter,
hitting Dillon Stoner with a
2-yard scoring pass for a 17-13
lead.
“I was really proud of Dru,
the way he took care of the ball
and didn’t turn it over,” Gundy
said.
See WVU | 7

Lady Raiders
win opener at
Jackson, 40-23
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

JACKSON, Ohio — No use waiting, might as
well get the ﬁrst one out of the way.
The River Valley girls basketball team already
has its ﬁrst victory the 2019-20 season, as the
Lady Raiders defeated non-conference host Jackson by a 40-23 count on Friday in the Apple City.
The Ironladies (0-1) led 3-0 in the game, but
were held scoreless for the rest of the period, and
River Valley (1-0) took a 7-3 advantage into the
second quarter.
RVHS — which didn’t relinquish its lead in any
of the ﬁnal three quarters — added one point to
its edge in the second stanza, and went into halftime with a 13-8 advantage.
The Lady Raiders doubled their host in the
third quarter, going on a 12-to-6 run to make their
lead 25-14 with eight minutes to play.
RVHS saved its best for last, scoring 15 points
in the ﬁnal quarter to seal the 40-23 victory.
For the game, River Valley shot 16-of-46 (42.8
percent) from the ﬁeld, including 4-of-18 (22.2
percent) from three-point range. Meanwhile, Jackson was 10-of-46 (21.7 percent) from the ﬁeld,
including 1-of-20 (5.0 percent) from beyond the
arc. Both teams attempted ﬁve free throws, with
the Lady Raiders making four for 80 percent, and
the Ironladies sinking two for 40 percent.
Both teams also had 22 defensive rebounds,
with the hosts earning a 10-to-8 edge on the
offensive glass. The Silver and Black collected 12
steals, 10 assists and six blocked shots in the win,
while JHS ﬁnished with 11 steals, ﬁve assists and
two rejections.
Payton Crabtree led the Lady Raiders with 15
points, including nine from beyond the arc. Hannah Jacks was next with 10 points, to go with
a team-best seven rebounds. Lauren Twyman
ﬁnished with seven points and four assists in the
win, making the team’s other trifecta.
Kasey Birchﬁeld claimed three points for the
Silver and Black, Morissa Barcus and Savannah
Reese came up with two points apiece, while
Sierra Sommerville scored one.
Jacks led the RVHS defense with three steals
and two blocks. Twyman added two blocks and
two steals, while Crabtree came up with a trio of
steals.
Katelyn Webb led Jackson with 11 points, eight
rebounds, ﬁve steals and four assists. Taylor Evans
scored nine points, to go with seven rebounds and
two blocks, Lauren Elliott added two points, while
Olivia Kennedy earned one marker.
After their home opener against Gallia Academy
on Monday, the Lady Raiders will return to action
at South Gallia on Saturday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Nov. 26
Girls Basketball
Oak Hill at Gallia
Academy, 6 p.m.
Boys Basketball
Oak Hill at Gallia
Academy, 7:30
College Football
Ohio at Akron, 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 27
Girls Basketball
Meigs at Southern, 6
p.m.

Friday, Nov. 29
Boys Basketball
Athens at Gallia Academy,
7 p.m.
Eastern at River Valley, 7
p.m.
Southern at Meigs, 7 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 30
Girls Basketball
River Valley at South
Gallia, 6 p.m.
College Football
FIU at Marshall, noon

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Marshall linebacker Omari Cobb (31) joins Domenick Murphy (40) in bringing down a Cincinnati running back during a Sept. 29 football
game at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington, W.Va.

Charlotte shocks Thundering Herd
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

CHARLOTTE, N.C. —
Now it’s a game of ifs.
The Marshall football
team lost control of its
divisional title hopes
on Saturday following
a 24-13 setback to host
Charlotte in a Conference USA East Division
matchup at Richardson
Stadium.
The Thundering Herd
(7-4, 5-2 CUSA East)
entered the day tied with
Florida Atlantic atop the
East Division standings
with identical 5-1 records,
but the Green and White
did hold the tiebreaker
after beating the Owls in
Boca Raton earlier this fall.
The 49ers (6-5, 4-3),
however, overcame a
10-point deﬁcit in the
ﬁrst half and tacked on
a pair of fourth quarter
touchdowns en route to
not only snapping Marshall’s 5-game winning
streak, but also becoming
bowl-eligible for the ﬁrst
time in program history.
The loss pushes MU
one game behind FAU in
the standings after the
Owls claimed a 40-26
victory at UTSA on Saturday.
Marshall, however, is
still in contention to show
up in the Conference USA
championship game if it
can defeat Florida International next weekend
at Joan C. Edwards Stadium, plus have Southern
Miss knock off Florida
Atlantic in Boca Raton —
again creating a tie in the
East Division standings.

If FAU defeats the
Golden Eagles, the Owls
clinch the CUSA East
title outright … regardless
of Marshall’s outcome.
There were three turnovers on the opening six
drives of the game, but
neither squad was able to
do anything with those
takeaways in the rainsoaked conditions.
Marshall did come up
with the ﬁrst big play
of the game as Darius
Hodge blocked a UNCC
punt that was picked up
and returned 16 yards by
Joseph Early — giving
the guests a 7-0 advantage with 3:02 remaining
in the ﬁrst quarter.
Justin Rohrwasser
added a 31-yard ﬁeld goal
at the 11:11 mark of the
second canto, capping a
10-play, 86-yard drive that
extended the lead out to
10-0.
The Green and Gold
got themselves in the
scoring column with 4:25
left in the half as Chris
Reynolds rumbled 15
yards, ending an 8-play,
86-yard drive that cut the
deﬁcit down to 10-7.
Charlotte tied the
game with its opening
possession of the second
half as Jonathan Cruz
nailed a 23-yarder at
the 9:46 mark, but Marshall countered with a
12-play, 60-yard drive that
resulted in a successful
Rohrwasser 23-yarder for
a 13-10 edge with 4:02
left in the third.
UNCC threw an interception on its next drive,
but the hosts forced a
punt before taking over

possession again at its
own 23-yard line with
14:47 remaining.
The 49ers covered 77
yards in seven plays and
needed only three minutes to take a permanent
lead as Victor Tucker
plunged in from ﬁve yards
out — making it a 17-13
contest with 10:47 left in
the fourth.
After a pair of 3-andouts, MU took over possession at its own 13.
Two plays later, Nafees
Lyon intercepted a deep
Isaiah Green pass before
going down at the Charlotte 38.
Eleven plays and 62
yards later, the 49ers
extended their lead to
double digits as Tucker
hauled in a 25-yard pass
from Reynolds on fourth
down — making it a
24-13 contest with just 48
seconds left in regulation.
That nail-in-the-cofﬁn
touchdown ended up
being the only points
scored off of ﬁve turnovers in the game. Marshall ﬁnished the losing
effort plus-1 in turnover
differential.
Charlotte claimed a
26-13 advantage in ﬁrst
downs and outgained the
guests by a sizable 422230 margin in total yards
of offense, including a
256-144 discrepancy in
rushing yards.
The Herd did not
produce an offensive
touchdown and ended up
2-for-2 in red zone opportunities, both of which
resulted in Rohrwasser
ﬁeld goals. MU was also
just 2-of-11 on third down

conversions.
Brenden Knox led the
Marshall ground attack
with 92 yards on 22 carries. Green added 18
yards on seven rushes
and also completed 6-of17 passes for 86 yards to
go along with two picks.
Armani Levias led the
guests with two catches
for 17 yards. Knox also
hauled in one pass for 40
yards.
Tavante Beckett paced
the Herd defense with 15
tackles, forced a fumble
and had a fumble recovery. Chris Jackson and
Nazeeh Johnson also
picked off a pass apiece in
the setback.
Reynolds led Charlotte
with 145 rushing yards
on 25 carries, followed
by Benny LeMay with
100 rushing yards on 21
attempts.
Reynolds completed
9-of-21 passes for 166
yards to go along with a
touchdown and two interceptions. Tucker caught
ﬁve passes for 166 yards
and a score, plus drew
four different pass interference ﬂags against MU.
Jeff Gemmell led Charlotte with 10 tackles and
joined Alex Highsmith
with a sack each in the
win. Marquill Osborne
joined Lyon with a defensive interception apiece.
Marshall completes
league and regular season
play Saturday when it
hosts Florida International in a CUSA East
matchup at noon.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Duke solidifies No. 1 in AP Top 25

Ohio State gains
on LSU; Oregon
drops to 14

By Dave Skretta
Associated Press

Duke coach Mike
Krzyzewski set the
record for wins coaching
a No. 1 team when his
top-ranked Blue Devils
knocked off California
and Georgetown on
back-to-back nights to
win the 2K Empire Classic.
He will have a chance
to add to his 218-34
mark this week.
That’s because the
Blue Devils (6-0) solidified their tight grip on
the No. 1 spot in The
Associated Press men’s
basketball poll Monday.
They received 53 firstplace votes from the
65-member media panel
that regularly covers college basketball, easily
out-distancing secondplace Louisville.
“There’s really no
words. You can’t put that
feeling into words,” said
Duke sophomore Tre
Jones, when asked about
his Hall of Fame coach.
“No one knows that feeling unless you do play
for him.”
Of course, Krzyzewski
would rather dwell on
the progress of his team
— which faces Stephen
F. Austin on Tuesday
night and Winthrop on
Friday — than another
record on his resume.
“We felt starting practice that we could be
good defensively with
Tre there and depth.

By Ralph D. Russo
Associated Press

No. 2 Ohio State gained some ground on No. 1
LSU in The Associated Press college football poll
and Oregon dropped out of the top 10 after being
upset by Arizona State.
The Tigers remained No. 1 for the fifth straight
week in the AP Top 25 presented by Regions Bank,
receiving 50 first-places votes. The Buckeyes got
nine first-place votes, up from five last week. No.
3 Clemson received three first-place votes. No. 4
Georgia and No. 5 Alabama also held their spots.
Ohio State is coming off a 28-17 victory over
Penn State that dropped the Nittany Lions three
spots to No. 12.
Oregon dropped eight spots to No. 14 after losing
31-28 at Arizona State. That allowed Utah to move
up a spot to No. 6 and Oklahoma to No. 7. Florida,
Minnesota and Michigan round out the top 10.
Poll points
Alabama has now been ranked for 209 consecutive weeks, starting with the 2008 preseason poll,
tying Florida (Sept. 9, 1990-Oct. 5, 2002) for the
third-longest streak in poll history. Nebraska has
the longest streak at 348 weeks (21 years, Oct. 12,
1981-Sept. 22, 2002) and Florida State is second
with 211 weeks (12 years, Sept. 24, 1989-Nov. 11,
2001).
The Tide should tie Bobby Bowden’s Seminoles
this season and surpass them in next year’s preseason poll. There are typically 16 polls in a season,
counting preseason and final. At that rate, Alabama
would pass the record Nebraska set under coach
Tom Osborne in Week 5 of the 2029 season.
FYI, Nick Saban would be about a month shy of his
78th birthday.
In

— No. 24 Navy jumped into the rankings, knocking out American Athletic Conference rival SMU.
— No. 25 Southern California finished its regular
season by beating rival UCLA and jumping back
into the rankings. The Trojans have had two previous one-week stays in the poll this season.

Out
— Texas A&amp;M fell out after a brief return to the
AP Top 25. The Aggies lost for the fourth time, this
time to Georgia. All of A&amp;M’s losses have come
against teams ranked in the current top 16. It gets
no easier for the Aggies next week. They will face
No. 1 LSU and become the first team in the history
of the AP poll, which dates to 1936, to face a No. 1
three times in one season. Playing the No. 1 team
twice in one season has happened 30 times previously, and that’s including seven teams that played
one of those games in the postseason.
Texas A&amp;M lost to No. 1 Clemson 24-10 in September and to No. 1 Alabama 47-28 in October.

WVU

for the sixth time in
seven games and their
bowl hopes are over.
A defense that looked
From page 6
impressive against HubWest Virginia (4-7, 2-6) bard in the first half
didn’t have as much luck gave him just enough
room to break free after
inside the red zone.
halftime and the offense
The Mountaineers
couldn’t convert on three was limited to 128 yards
and three points after
plays from the 1-yard
halftime.
line in the second quarter and they twice had
to settle for short field
Family first
goals.
Gundy stayed behind
Leddie Brown conin Stillwater, Oklahoma,
verted a fourth-and-1
on Friday night to watch
from the Oklahoma State his son, Gunnar, win a
18 with 2:37 left in the
state semifinal playoff
game. But Jarret Doege
game. Gunnar Gundy is
threw three incomplea senior quarterback at
tions, the Mountaineers
Stillwater High School.
turned the ball over on
“Those are special
downs and Oklahoma
times for me,” Gundy
State ran out the clock.
said. “I’ve missed a lot
“Just too many missed of his games. It’s just not
opportunities. That sums something I could pass
it up,” Neal Brown said.
up on.”
“Credit them. They made
Mike Gundy flew to
enough plays at the end
West Virginia afterward
of the game.”
to join his players and
Doege finished 28 of
coaches.
38 for 307 yards in his
“I bet half the guys
second start since taking didn’t even know I wasn’t
over for Austin Kendall,
there,” he said. “And if
including a 34-yard scor- they can’t take care of
ing toss in the second
themselves for about
quarter to his roommate, seven or eight hours, we
George Campbell. Seven got serious issues.”
of Campbell’s 19 receptions this season have
Poll implications
gone for touchdowns.
The Cowboys could
move up a spot or two
in The Associated Press
The takeaway
poll that comes out on
Oklahoma State: The
Cowboys were outgained Sunday.
333-285 but managed
to make the most of it.
Up next
Dru Brown, a graduate
Oklahoma State plays
transfer from Hawaii,
No. 8 Oklahoma in the
completed 22 of 29 pass- Bedlam game next Sates for 196 yards in place urday in Stillwater, Oklaof the injured Spencer
homa.
Sanders.
West Virginia finishes
West Virginia: The
its season at TCU on
Mountaineers lost
Friday.

Tuesday, November 26, 2019 7

We’ve really devoted
most of our practice time
to defense,” Krzyzewski
said. “As a result, I think
we’ve gotten tougher.
We’ve also spent a lot
of time in rebounding.
We’re finding ourselves
offensively.
“We’re going to continue to try to find out
about ourselves.”
The Cardinals avoided
Akron’s upset bid Sunday to remain No. 2
in the poll, receiving
seven first-place votes.
Michigan State was third
with four No. 1 votes
and Kansas was fourth,
setting up a showdown
between the two heavyweights if they advance
to the finals of the Maui
Invitational.
“I think this is my
fourth time with Kansas. We’ve kind of been
around and kind of got
a feel with what works
from that standpoint,”
Jayhawks coach Bill
Self said of the Hawaii
tournament, “but that
doesn’t have anything
to do with works during
the game.”
Maryland jumped
North Carolina to round
out the top five, while
Virginia received the
only other first-place
vote and was seventh.
Gonzaga, Kentucky and
Ohio State filled out the
top 10.
The reigning national
champion Cavaliers
needed a late comeback
to beat Arizona State in

the Hall of Fame Tip-Off
Tournament on Sunday
night. They wound up
leaning on freshman
Casey Morsell and their
stingy defense to counter a 19-0 run by the Sun
Devils and escape with a
48-45 victory.
“It’s always a battle of
wills and styles,” Virginia coach Tony Bennett
said. “We’ll keep trying
to become more efficient
offensively, but we can
never give ground defensively. That’s our statement.”
Rising
Baylor was the biggest
mover after knocking off
then-No. 17 Villanova
behind 22 points from
Jared Butler at the Myrtle Beach Invitational.
The Bears moved up
five spots to No. 19 this
week.
Tennessee climbed
three spots to No. 17
after routing Alabama
State.

with two losses. They
lost to Florida State and
UConn but have won
their last three.
Moving out
Texas dropped out
of the poll after losing to Georgetown in
the 2K Empire Classic
semifinals, though the
Longhorns rebounded
to breeze past Cal in the
consolation game.
Next up
The Seminoles were
the first team out of
the Top 25, a mere two
points behind Xavier.
Then came a wide gulf
before St. Mary’s, Oklahoma and Butler — the
latter of whom could
meet in the Hall of Fame
Classic if they reach
the championship game
Tuesday night.

Tourney time
Kansas and Michigan
State are heavy favorites
to reach the Maui Invitational title game, while
Wisconsin and Auburn
Falling
highlight the Legends
Villanova’s loss
Classic in New York.
dropped coach Jay
The most intriguing
Wright’s team five spots
in the poll, while Xavier tournament could be
fell seven spots to No. 25 the Battle 4 Atlantis in
after losing to Florida in the Bahamas, where the
Tar Heels are joined by
the Charleston Classic
title game Sunday night. Gonzaga, No. 11 Oregon
and No. 13 Seton Hall.
Unranked Michigan,
Moving in
which also received
The Gators were the
votes for the AP Top
only newcomers to the
poll this week, and they 25, is also in the field at
Imperial Arena beginjoined Villanova as the
ning Wednesday.
only teams in the poll

Browns rout Dolphins 41-24
CLEVELAND (AP) — The
distractions didn’t bother the
Browns. The Dolphins didn’t get
in their way either.
Jarvis Landry caught two
touchdown passes against his
former team and Cleveland won
its third straight Sunday, 41-24
over the Miami Dolphins in the
Browns’ first game since losing
star defensive end Myles Garrett

to a season-ending suspension.
Landry couldn’t wait to get
back at the Dolphins (2-9), who
had him for four seasons before
they decided not to give him a
long-term contract extension and
traded him to Cleveland in 2018.
He got his revenge, finishing with
10 catches for 148 yards.
“It didn’t mean extra, but it was
fun,” Landry said, flashing a smile

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while speaking at his locker alongside teammate Odell Beckham Jr.
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College Behind Bars "Every College Behind Bars "Home
Single Word Matters" (N)
Is a Work in Progress" (N)

The Conners Bless This
Mess (N)
(N)
NCIS "IRL" (N)

Mixed-ish
Black-ish (N) Emergence "American
Chestnut" (N)
(N)
FBI "Salvation" (N)
NCIS: New Orleans
"Convicted" (N)
The Resident "Peking Duck Empire "Do You Remember Eyewitness News at 10:00
Day" (N)
Me" (N)
p.m.
Finding Your Roots "The
College Behind Bars "Every College Behind Bars "Home
Pioneers"
Single Word Matters" (N)
Is a Work in Progress" (N)
NCIS "IRL" (N)

8 PM

FBI "Salvation" (N)

8:30

9 PM

9:30

NCIS: New Orleans
"Convicted" (N)

10 PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Blue Blood "Moonlighting"
24 (ROOT) Pirates Ball Pirates (N)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) (5:00) NCAA Basketball
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (PARMT)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St.
NCAA Basketball Fairleigh Dickinson at Notre Dame (L)
NCAA Basketball Stephen F Austin at Duke (L)
FballPlayoff "Top 25" (L)
NCAA Basketball Maui Invitational Semifinal (L)
Scoreboard Basket.
Scoreboard NCAA Basketball Legends Classic Championship (L)
NCAA Basketball Hall of Fame Classic (L)
My Christmas Inn (2018, Drama) Rob Mayes, Jackée
Snowed-Inn Christmas (2017, Romance) Andrew Walker, (:05) The Magical Christmas
Harry, Tia Mowry-Hardrict. TVPG
Tasha Smith, Bethany Joy Lenz. TVPG
Shoes TVPG
(4:40) +++ Iron Man (‘08, Act) Gwyneth (:45) ++++ Captain America: The Winter Soldier (‘14, Act) Scarlett Johansson, Sebastian Stan, Chris
Paltrow, Robert Downey Jr.. TVPG
Evans. Captain America faces a new and powerful enemy as he struggles to unravel a conspiracy. TV14
Two and a
Two and a
Two and a
++ Grown Ups (‘10, Com) Adam Sandler. Five good friends and former Ink Master: Grudge Match
teammates reunite after their basketball coach passes away. TVPG
"TKO" (N)
Half Men
Half Men
Half Men
Loud House Loud House Loud House Loud House Loud House Loud House +++ Shrek Forever After (‘10, Ani) Mike Myers. TVPG
SVU "Send in the Clowns" Law&amp;Order: SVU "Man Up" Law&amp;O: SVU "Man Down" The Purge (N)
Treadstone (N)
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Misery (N)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(5:30) ++ Batman &amp; Robin George Clooney. TV14
+++ Batman Begins (‘05, Act) Michael Caine, Christian Bale. TV14
Movie
(5:00) ++ Christmas With +++ Elf (2003, Comedy) James Caan, Bob Newhart, Will +++ Elf (2003, Comedy) James Caan, Bob Newhart, Will
the Kranks Tim Allen. TVPG Ferrell. TVPG
Ferrell. TVPG
Moonshiners
Moonshiners: Cuts (N)
Moonshiners: Cuts (N)
Moonshiners "Tim's Temptation" (N)
The First 48 "Down on
The First 48 "Monster"
The First 48 "Score to
The First 48 "Knock Knock" The First 48: Squad Tales Bourbon/ Deadly Trap"
Settle/ In Her Arms"
Tulsa "M.I.A." (N)
North Woods Law
Woods Law "Frozen Over" North Woods Law: Uncuffed "Hunting Havoc" (N)
Northwest Law
Chicago P.D. "Chasing
Chicago P.D. "Anthem"
Chicago P.D. "Sisterhood" Chicago P.D. "Profiles"
Chicago P.D. "Breaking
Monsters"
Point"
Law &amp; Order "Paradigm"
Law &amp; Order
Law&amp;O. "The Brotherhood" Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order "Gunplay"
+++ Pretty Woman (‘90, Rom) Julia Roberts, Richard Gere. TV14
(:45) +++ Pretty Woman (‘90, Rom) Julia Roberts, Richard Gere. TV14
(:25) Andy Griffith Show
A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Ray
(:45) Ray
(:20) Ray "Captain Nemo"
(:55) 2½ Men Two 1/2 Men
Life Below Zero "Strength Life Below Zero "New
Life Below Zero: Ice
Life Below Zero "Ultimate Running Wild "Rob Riggle
in Numbers"
Horizons"
Breakers "Left Behind" (N) Sacrifice" (N)
in Iceland" (N)
Glory Road Glory Road NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Dallas Stars at Chicago Blackhawks Site: United Center (L)
(:45) Overtime
NFL Films (N) Magnify "Shot in the Dark"
NCAA Basketball Central Michigan at DePaul (L)
Boxing Premier Champions
(5:00) The Curse of Oak
The Curse of Oak Island
Curse of Oak Island "The The Curse of Oak Island
(:05) Kings of Pain "Fairy of
Island "The Torch Is Passed" "Core Values"
Eye of the Swamp" (N)
"The Lucky Thirteen" (N)
Death" (N)
Below Deck
The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives (N)
The Real Housewives (N)
The Real Housewives
Good Deeds (2012, Comedy/Drama) Thandie Newton, Gabrielle Union, Tyler Perry. TV14 The Single Mom's Club (‘14, Com/Dra) Amy Smart. TV14
Home Town
Home Town
Home Town
Fixer to Fabulous (N)
Home Town
(4:40) +++ Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part +++ Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Harry, Ron and
(:50)
1 (‘10, Adv) Emma Watson, Daniel Radcliffe. TVPG
Hermione return to Hogwarts to find the last of the horcruxes. TVPG
Futurama

6 PM

6:30

His Dark Materials
"Armour"

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

++ War of the Worlds (‘05, Act) Dakota Fanning, Tom

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Real Sports With Bryant
Lindsey Vonn: The Final
Cruise. A man struggles to protect his children when aliens Gumbel (N)
Season This film chronicles
invade Earth wanting to destroy it. TVMA
Lindsey Vonn's career. (N)
(:10) ++ The Adjustment Bureau (‘11, Rom) Emily Blunt, +++ In Bruges Colin Farrell. Two hitmen (:50) Little Shop of Horrors A man cares for
Florence Kastriner, Matt Damon. Mysterious forces keep a become stuck in Bruges after a job and start an unusual man-eating plant that brings
politician and a ballerina from having an affair. TVPG
to think of life in a new light. TVMA
him fame and good fortune. TV14
(:20) ++ The Happytime Murders (‘18, Act) Melissa
Shameless "Which
Inside the NFL "2019: Week Ray Donovan "A Good Man
12" (N)
is Hard to Find"
McCarthy. Detectives investigate the murders of puppets America?"
who starred in a children's TV program. TVMA

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Kim hits 25-foot putt to capture LPGA finale, $1.5M prize
NAPLES, Fla. (AP) —
With the richest prize in
women’s golf history riding on the outcome, Sei
Young Kim delivered the
ultimate money putt.
Even if she didn’t even
know the score.
Kim was tied for the
lead going to the ﬁnal
hole Sunday at the CME
Group Tour Championship. The nerves were
obvious as she missed
each of four straight putts
from 12 feet or closer.
Moments later, the
26-year-old South Korean
took her place in LPGA
Tour history.
Kim made the putt of

her life, a 25-footer for
birdie that broke sharply
to the right and into the
cup for a 2-under 70, a
one-shot victory over
hard-charging Charley
Hull and a $1.5 million
payoff.
“It means a lot to me
just knowing that I won
the biggest purse in
women’s golf history,”
said Kim, whose wire-towire win was her third of
the year. “That itself is an
incredible honor.”
Hull made her earn it.
Six shots behind going
to the back nine at Tiburon Golf Club, Hull birdied ﬁve of her last seven

(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

holes, including the last
three. Her 12-foot birdie
on the 18th gave her a 66
and a share of the lead.
This was right after
Danielle Kang made a
30-foot eagle putt on
the par-5 17th and came
inches short of a closing
birdie to tie.
Kim was fully aware of
the pressure she felt.
“I was really nervous
while walking through
hole 18,” she said. “I was
like: ‘OK, not a big deal.
Try to play like a practice
round,’ thinking that
would make me comfortable. Even then, I was
really nervous.”

(740) 992-2155 or fax to (740) 992-2157

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

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money to any of the 60
players who qualiﬁed for
the season ﬁnale. That’s
$500,000 more than the
previous record prize,
$1 million at the U.S.
Women’s Open.
Kim ﬁnished at
18-under 270 and was
No. 2 on the LPGA
money list behind Jin
Young Ko, who tied for
11th and still had no
complaints about her season. Besides the money
title, Ko won LPGA
player of the year and the
Vare Trophy for the lowest scoring average. She
won four times this year,
including two majors.

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Notices
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make it? We would have
gone to a playoff and that
wouldn’t have been good
for me. So, wow!”
Wow, indeed.
Kim won for the 10th
time in her LPGA career,
joining Se Ri Pak (25),
Inbee Park (19) and Jiyai
Shin (11) as South Korean players with at least 10
victories.
This was memorable
for the ﬁnish — and the
prize.
Instead of a $500,000
ﬁrst-place check and a
$1 million bonus to a
season points race, CME
Globe wanted to award
$1.5 million in ofﬁcial

ANNOUNCEMENTS

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE
EMAIL DERRICK MORRISON AT
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com
or call 740-446-2342 ext: 2097
STOP BY OUR LOCAL OFFICE FOR
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510 Main St. Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
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She just was oblivious
to her competition.
All day, Kim thought
it was Nelly Korda, who
started one shot behind
and fell back with a pair
of costly drives to the left.
From the top of a crown
at the back of the green,
Kim ﬁgured a two-putt
would be enough.
The crowd cheered.
She pumped her ﬁst and
fought back tears.
Only later, she said, did
she realize what it meant.
“After I made it, I saw
the leaderboard,” she
said. “I didn’t know that
Charley ﬁnished at 17
(under). What if I didn’t

825 3rd Ave.
Gallipolis , Oh 45631
740-446-2342

Ready to Take on Your Next Challenge?
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CLASSIFIEDS

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, November 26, 2019 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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By Hilary Price

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Today’s Solution

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�SPORTS/WEATHER

10 Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Winnipeg Blue Bombers win title

Hodges leads Steelers
over winless Bengals
CINCINNATI (AP) — Devlin “Duck” Hodges
took over for struggling Mason Rudolph and
threw a 79-yard touchdown pass Sunday, sparking the depleted Pittsburgh Steelers to a 16-10
victory that kept the Cincinnati Bengals the only
winless team in the NFL.
Hodges connected with James Washington on
the game-turning play in the third quarter, leaving Pittsburgh (6-5) with a quarterback decision
as it moves forward without Ben Roethlisberger.
The Steelers’ defense has steadied them
through the transition, and it had a major impact
in Pittsburgh’s 10th straight win over the hapless Bengals (0-11), who set franchise records for
worst start and longest losing streak.
Tyler Boyd made a catch and was stripped
by Devin Bush at the Steelers 8-yard line in the
fourth quarter, preserving the lead. Bud Dupree
sacked Ryan Finley and forced a fumble that he
recovered with 2:38 left, closing it out.
What’s left of the Steelers’ offense — hollowed
out by injuries and a suspension — struggled in
the ﬁrst half and prompted coach Mike Tomlin to
switch from Rudolph to Hodges, who provided an
immediate boost. His touchdown pass to Washington gave the Steelers a 10-7 lead and got thousands
of Terrible Towels twirling at Paul Brown Stadium.
Hodges ﬁlled in for one game after Rudolph
suffered a concussion and directed a 24-17 win
over the Chargers on Oct. 13. Tomlin went back
to Rudolph as soon as he was healthy.
Now, he’s got a big decision as the Steelers try
to stay in the playoff chase.
Hodges ran an offense missing three stars after
a 21-7 loss to Cleveland that ended with ugliness — Myles Garrett clubbing Rudolph with
the QB’s own helmet. Steelers center Maurkice
Pouncey served the ﬁrst of his two-game suspension Sunday for kicking and punching Garrett in
the melee.
Also, receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster was out
with a concussion and running back James Conner had a shoulder injury from the Cleveland
game. The Steelers got what they needed out of
what was left, with Hodges leading the way. He
went 5 of 11 or 118 yards with two sacks. Rookie
Benny Snell Jr. returned from a knee injury and
ran for 98 yards.
If the Bengals were going to end that long losing streak against their Ohio River rival, this was
their chance. Instead, they saw another one slip
away in the end, just like all the others.
The Bengals repeatedly dodged disaster in the
ﬁrst half and led 7-3, only their third halftime
lead this season. They fumbled the opening kickoff but recovered. Finley was sacked and fumbled
on Cincinnati’s second possession, but Giovani
Bernard fell on the ball. Finley later was sacked
just in front of the goal line, avoiding a safety.
Finley was 12 of 26 for 192 yards, including a
15-yard touchdown pass to Boyd.

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

CALGARY, Alberta
(AP) — Andrew Harris
made Grey Cup history
to help end his hometown
Winnipeg Blue Bombers’
title drought.
Harris became the ﬁrst
player to be honored as
both the Grey Cup MVP
and top Canadian, running for 134 yards and a
touchdown and catching
a scoring pass in the Blue
Bombers’ 33-12 victory
over the Hamilton TigerCats on Sunday night.
The Blue Bombers won
their 10th title and ﬁrst
since 1990, becoming the
ﬁrst third-place team to
reach and win the Canadian Football League championship since Edmonton
in 2005.
Harris, the 32-year-old
Winnipeg native who
also won a title with the
B.C. Lions in 2011, is
the ﬁrst Canadian to be
selected Grey Cup MVP
since Russ Jackson of the
Ottawa Rough Riders in
1969.

ST. SIMONS ISLAND,
Ga. (AP) — Tyler Duncan made a 12-foot putt
on the second hole of a
playoff with Webb Simpson on Sunday in the
RSM Classic for his ﬁrst
PGA Tour title.
Playing two groups
ahead of Simpson in
windy conditions on Sea
Island’s Seaside Course,
Duncan birdied three of
the last four holes in regulation for a 5-under 65.
He two-putted the par-5
15h for a birdie, made
a 6-footer on the par-3
17th and a 25-footer on
the par-4 18th.
“I’m just so happy to

54°

50°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

(in inches)

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

0.00
1.29
2.85
41.78
38.69

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Wed.
7:23 a.m.
5:08 p.m.
8:19 a.m.
6:14 p.m.

MOON PHASES
New

Nov 26

First

Dec 4

Full

Last

Dec 11 Dec 18

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

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

Major
10:52a
11:16a
12:15p
1:20a
2:21a
3:18a
4:12a

Minor
4:38a
5:34a
6:33a
7:34a
8:34a
9:31a
10:24a

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

0

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Major
11:19p
---12:47p
1:48p
2:47p
3:43p
4:36p

Minor
5:05p
6:02p
7:01p
8:01p
9:00p
9:56p
10:47p

WEATHER HISTORY
The Great Appalachian Storm of 1950
continued on Nov. 26, killing 34 in
New York. Toronto had its greatest
one-day snowfall of 12 inches, followed by a warm-up to 50 degrees
with rain.

A: Mist composed of ice crystals
instead of water droplets

Today
7:22 a.m.
5:09 p.m.
7:11 a.m.
5:28 p.m.

Showers around in
the morning; cloudy

THURSDAY

AIR QUALITY

Adelphi
58/49

0 50 100 150 200

300

Chillicothe
58/49

got after it. They should
be extremely proud of
that fact.”
Dane Evans threw a
4-yard touchdown pass
to Bralon Addison in the
third quarter for Hamilton. The Tiger-Cats,
a CFL-best 15-3 in the
regular season, won their
last championship in
1999.
“It hurts real bad. I’m
not going to lie,” Evans
said. “It just sucks, man.
Honestly, it is just terrible. Not the way we
would have pictured
it. Not the way that we
wanted it and it’s all
because of us. We had a
great game plan but we
just didn’t execute.”
Hamilton lost Brandon Banks, the speedy
receiver honored this
week at the league’s Most
Outstanding Player, to
a leg injury in the third
quarter.
Winnipeg was third in
the West at 11-7 in the
regular season.

Waverly
58/50
Lucasville
59/51
Portsmouth
60/50

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 13.01 -0.22
Marietta
34 16.92 +0.52
Parkersburg
36 21.89 +0.48
Belleville
35 12.97 +0.26
Racine
41 13.14 +0.09
Point Pleasant
40 24.89 -0.52
Gallipolis
50 13.03 +0.10
Huntington
50 26.12 +0.72
Ashland
52 34.68 +0.53
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.76 +0.16
Portsmouth
50 18.10 +2.10
Maysville
50 34.40 +0.30
Meldahl Dam
51 17.10 +2.00
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

SATURDAY

52°
49°

Chilly with variable
clouds

Cloudy with a touch
of rain

MONDAY

55°
32°

45°
23°

Mostly cloudy with a Mostly cloudy, chance
chance of rain
of a little rain

Marietta
59/44

Murray City
57/46
Belpre
60/45

Athens
58/46

St. Marys
60/45

Parkersburg
61/46

Coolville
59/45

Elizabeth
61/46

Spencer
61/47

Buffalo
61/48

Ironton
60/50

Milton
62/49

St. Albans
63/50

Huntington
62/49

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
90s
Seattle
45/35
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
San Francisco
0s
56/46
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
66/50
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

SUNDAY

46°
37°

Wilkesville
58/47
POMEROY
Jackson
60/46
59/48
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
60/46
60/48
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
57/51
GALLIPOLIS
60/47
61/48
60/47

Ashland
60/51
Grayson
60/51

“I felt like it was going
to go my way, but that’s
what great players do,
they birdie the last two
holes like he did,” Simpson said. “So, tough to
ﬁnish that way, but all in
all, a great week.”
The 30-year-old Duncan regained his PGA
Tour card with a 12thplace ﬁnish in the Korn
Ferry Tour Finals after
ﬁnishing 163rd in the
FedEx Cup standings.
He shot a 61 on Friday,
then made 18 pars in a
70 on Saturday that left
him four strokes behind
third-round leader Brendon Todd.

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
57/47

South Shore Greenup
60/51
58/49

46

Cooler with partial
sunshine

Logan
58/47

really well given the conditions.”
They played the 18th
twice in the playoff,
matching pars on the
ﬁrst extra hole.
“I was deﬁnitely nervous, yeah,” Duncan
said.” I’ve been working
really hard on controlling my emotions and
breathing and all that
stuff and it paid off
down the stretch here,
especially this playoff.
I was just able to keep
calm and trust what I
was doing.”
Simpson has four topseven ﬁnishes in eight
starts in the event.

FRIDAY

44°
33°

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

0

Q: What is Arctic mist?

SUN &amp; MOON

WEDNESDAY

Breezy today; showers late in the afternoon.
Rainy times tonight. High 60° / Low 47°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

be here playing and to
come out here and win
is just unbelievable,”
Duncan said.
Simpson birdied 15
and 16 and closed with
two pars, making a
5-footer on 18 to match
Duncan at 19-under 263.
“It played really
tough all day,” Simpson
said. “It was blowing
it seemed like a solid
20 and gusts here and
there, and the pins were
tough. They did a good
job of setup, but they
didn’t make it easy for
us. It was especially
hard starting out the
way we did, so I played

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

58°
35°
53°
34°
74° in 1946
7° in 1950

even for myself I’ve been
counted out and disrespected. It was a Blue
Bomber-style game and
that’s how we wanted to
do it.”
Zach Collaros, the
former University of
Cincinnati quarterback
who spent time with Saskatchewan and Toronto
this season before
landing in Winnipeg in
October, completed 17 of
23 passes for 170 yards.
Streveler was 3 for 3 for
39 yards.
Justin Medlock tied the
Grey Cup record with six
ﬁeld goals and salvaged a
single on his lone miss.
Defensive end Willie
Jefferson had three of
Winnipeg’s six sacks and
forced two fumbles.
“To be playing such
a big game, the biggest
game of the year and to
play their best football,
is very impressive,” Winnipeg coach Mike O’Shea
said. “They certainly
rose to the occasion and

Duncan rallies to win PGA Tour’s RSM Classic

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

“That sounds good, but
the only trophy I want
is the big silver one,”
Harris said. “It’s surreal,
it’s amazing, it’s a dream
come true. I’m so proud
to be a Winnipegger.”
With the temperature
in the mid-30s with little
wind, Harris opened the
scoring in the ﬁrst quarter with a 15-yard run and
caught an 18-yard touchdown pass from backup
Chris Streveler in the
second quarter. Harris
ﬁnished with six catches
for 35 yards.
Harris served a twogame suspension for a
positive drug test this
season, but still led the
CFL in rushing for the
third straight season.
“I just wanted to
prove it to my teammates and deliver for
my teammates,” Harris
said. “Everything else is
whatever. We just wanted
to win this game. We’ve
been underdogs (and)
counted out all year and

64°
35°
37°

Daily Sentinel

Clendenin
63/48
Charleston
64/48

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
29/18

Billings
31/18

Minneapolis
38/28
Chicago
48/45

Denver
26/7

Toronto
49/37
Detroit
50/45

Kansas City
56/32

Montreal
45/31

New York
58/45
Washington
61/49

City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
40/21/s
21/17/c
66/56/pc
60/50/s
61/44/s
31/18/c
40/31/pc
56/40/s
64/48/pc
63/49/s
20/2/sn
48/45/r
59/51/pc
56/48/pc
57/49/pc
76/41/pc
26/7/sn
43/30/r
50/45/c
87/76/pc
82/62/c
55/50/sh
56/32/c
52/37/s
69/42/t
66/50/s
60/55/r
81/68/s
38/28/c
64/59/pc
77/67/t
58/45/s
72/30/pc
76/54/s
60/43/s
61/41/s
57/43/pc
49/33/pc
65/47/s
64/47/s
61/44/sh
35/23/pc
56/46/r
45/35/c
61/49/s

Hi/Lo/W
44/34/sh
28/24/sn
70/45/r
59/46/sh
60/42/sh
31/21/c
43/22/sn
53/45/sh
66/35/sh
64/43/r
21/12/c
45/29/c
58/31/sh
60/35/r
59/33/r
57/42/c
27/12/c
36/24/pc
54/34/r
85/73/sh
68/54/c
51/30/c
43/26/pc
52/37/r
56/38/pc
59/45/r
59/34/c
84/70/pc
31/19/sn
61/35/pc
76/59/t
56/43/sh
50/34/pc
80/57/s
58/43/sh
66/49/pc
61/34/r
46/39/sh
68/46/c
62/44/sh
49/32/pc
37/28/sn
53/41/sh
44/29/pc
60/45/sh

EXTREMES MONDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
66/56

El Paso
63/40

High
Low

90° in Carrizo Springs, TX
-1° in Gothic, CO

Global
Chihuahua
73/48

Houston
82/62
Monterrey
91/64

Miami
81/68

High
Low

108° in Camooweal, Australia
-63° in Verkhoyansk, Russia

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

OH-70107872

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