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                  <text>Reedsville
Community
Christmas

Herd
holds off
Panthers

LOCAL s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

30°

36°

35°

Mostly cloudy and chilly today. Mostly cloudy
tonight. High 40° / Low 33°

SPORTS s 6

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 10

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 191, Volume 73

Tuesday, December 3, 2019 s 50¢

Christmas in Reedsville

Dog
tags
on sale
now
Staff Report

Kayla Hawthorne | OVP

The annual Reedsville Community Christmas Parade hosted by the Olive Twp. Volunteer Fire Department was held on Sunday afternoon in Reedsville. As part of the
parade, the Ladies Auxiliary made a gingerbread house for the Christmas parade on Sunday afternoon. Other parade participants included the first department,
community members and Santa arriving in the fire department boat. Additional photos from the event can be seen inside today’s edition or online at mydailysentinel.
com.

A bicentennial Christmas in flowers
By Lorna Hart
Special to the Sentinel

SYRACUSE — Christmas
came early to the Syracuse
Community Center when the
Meigs County Garden Clubs
presented their annual Christmas Flower Show.
As visitors entered the
venue they were greeted by
Meigs County Garden Club
members who had prepared
a display that included a tree
with handmade ornaments and
antique toys beneath it. The
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources had an adjacent display with educational materials.
This year’s theme, “A Meigs
County Bicentennial Christmas”, featured designers ﬂoral
interpretation of the 12 Bicentennial Township Markers.
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs Judge Beverly Norman
assessed the exhibits based
on rules for standard ﬂower
show practices as stated in the
OAGC Exhibitors and Judges
Handbook. This year’s winners
are as follows:
Division I: Adult Artistic

INDEX
Obituary: 2
Local: 4
News: 5
Sports: 6
TV: 7
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
Weather: 10

Class 1: Chester Courthouse,
An Old Fashion Christmas, Still
Life — 1st Lorna Hart, 2nd
Peggy Crane, 3rd Melanie Stethem, 4th Shelia Curtis; Class
2: Letart Township: Riverside
Mill Company, using driftwood
or treasured wood — 1st
Melanie Stethem, 2nd Peggy
Crane, 3rd Linda Blosser, 4th
Shelia Curtis; Class 3: Sutton
Township: Weaver Skiff Works,
Traditional Christmas Arrangement — 1st Melanie Stethem,
2nd Peggy Crane, 3rd Linda
Blosser, 4th Karen Werry; Class
4: Salisbury Township: Kerrs
Run Colored School, Luminary — 1st Melanie Stethem,
2nd Shelia Curtis, 3rd Linda
Blosser, 4th Peggy Crane; Class
5: Columbia Township: Carpenter Family, Traditional Holy
Family — 1st Peggy Crane, 2nd
Melanie Stethem, 3rd Linda
Blosser, 4th Josephine Hill;
Class 6: Invitational: Chester
Township: Chester Mound
Cemetery, Panel Design — 1st
Melanie Stethem, 2nd Linda
Blosser, 3rd Lorna Hart, 4th
Peggy Crane.
Division II: Adult Artistic,

Lorna Hart | Courtesy

Judy Rigsby, Beverly Norman and Linda Blosser are pictured at the flower show.

Invitational
Class 7: Olive Township: Kibble Family, Informal Christmas
table setting — 1st Josephine
Hill, 2nd Lorna Hart, 3rd Shelia Curtis, 4th Peggy Crane.
Division III: Junior Artistic
Class 8: Lebanon Township:
7th Regiment Ohio Cavalry,
Arrangement including Horse/
or Rocking Horse — 1st Paisley Stethem; Class 9: Salem
Township: Star Grange 778,

Arrangement including a star
— 1st Cayden Stethem, 2nd
Paisley Stethem; Class 10:
Rutland Township: Post Ofﬁce,
Creative design incorporating
Christmas Cards — 1st Cayden
Stethem.
Division IV: Adults, Wreaths
&amp; Swags
Class 11: Scipio Township:
Tippy Dye (football player)
See CHRISTMAS | 5

Recognition for ‘GIL’
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
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com and visit us on
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thoughts.

Display named to Ohio
holiday lights trail
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — Just in time for
the holiday season, TourismOhio has
launched the Holiday Lights Trail on
Ohio.org/Holidays, featuring Gallipolis in Lights.
“The Ohio Holiday Lights Trail is
a fantastic way to help travelers ﬁnd
outstanding light displays and activities to enjoy with those who mean
the most to them,” said Shari Rocchi,
Gallipolis in Lights Committee member. “We are thrilled that Gallipolis in

Beth Sergent | OVP

Visitors to Gallipolis City Park on Wednesday
night take in this year’s installment of
Gallipolis in Lights.

Lights is part of TourismOhio’s Holidays In Ohio campaign encouraging
See GIL | 5

MEIGS COUNTY —
Meigs County Auditor,
Mary T. Byer-Hill, has
announced that dog and
kennel licenses for 2020
are currently available.
The law requires that
all dogs be licensed.
Section 955.01 of the
Ohio Revised Code
states that every person
who owns, keeps or harbors a dog more than
three months of age,
shall purchase a license
for that dog before the
31st day of January of
each year.
You will have the
option to purchase a
one year, three year
or permanent tag for
your dog. The one year
dog tag will be $12
and is valid for the calendar year in which it
is issued (2020). The
State of Ohio allows
the County Auditor’s
to provide dog owners
the option of purchasing a dog tag that will
be valid for three years
as well as the option to
purchase a permanent
tag for your dog. The
cost of the three year
tag will be $36 and
$120 for the permanent
tag.
Kennel licenses will
also be available for a
person, partnership,
firm, company, or corporation professionally
engaged in the business
of breeding dogs for
sale. The cost of a kennel license will be $60
and that will include
five tags. Additional
kennel tags can be purchased for $1 each.
If you wish to purchase your tags by mail,
a printable application
is available for both
kennel license and individual dog license on
the Auditor’s website at
www.meigscountyauditor.org. When submitting your license by
mail, please include a
self addressed stamped
envelope along with
your application and
payment made payable
to the Meigs County
Auditor.
Licenses may be
purchased Monday
thru Friday from 8
a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
Meigs County Auditor’s
Office which is located
on the second floor
of the Meigs County
Courthouse. Current
year tags can also be
purchased at the Meigs
County Canine Rescue
and Adoption Center
located on Hiland Road
in Pomeroy. Please contact the Meigs County
Auditor’s Office at 9922698 if you have any
questions regarding the
purchase of your 2020
Dog License.
Information provided by the Meigs
County Auditor’s Office.

�DEATH NOTICES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Student in custody after shooting

DEATH NOTICES
COX
CENTENARY — Jacquelene Lynn Cox, 62, of the
Centenary Community, died Sunday, December 1,
2019 with her family at her bedside in the St. Mary’s
Medical Center in Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m., Thursday, December 5, 2019, in the Cremeens-King Funeral Home.
Ofﬁciating will be Rev. Mike Willet. Interment will be
in the Centenary Cemetery in Green Township, Ohio.
Friends may call after 11 a.m., Thursday at the funeral
home.
PYLES
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — Sandra Faye Pyles,
73, of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., died Saturday, November 30, 2019, at home surrounded by family.
A funeral service will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, December 4, 2019, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va., with Rev. Dee Keith ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow at Moores Chapel Cemetery in Ashton, W.Va.
The family will receive friends two hours prior to the
funeral service Wednesday at the funeral home.
HURLOW
MASON, W.Va. — Nancy Kathleen Hurlow, 73, of
Mason, West Virginia, died on Nov. 25, 2019.
Graveside funeral services will be held on
Wednesday, Dec. 4, 2019 at 12:30 p.m. at Zerkle
Cemetery. Visiting hours for family and friends will
be held on Wednesday from 10 a.m. to noon at the
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
SHILTZ
NEW HAVEN — Pamela Shiltz, 65, of New Haven,
died December 2, 2019. At her request there will be
no visitation. Services and burial will be at the convenience of the family at a later date.
ALLEN
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Robert Lowell Allen, 85, of
Gallipolis, Ohio, died Sunday, December 1, 2019, at
Abbyshire Place in Bidwell, Ohio.
A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. Friday,
December 6, 2019, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant, W.Va., with Pastor Ted Nance ofﬁciating. Military honors will be given by the West Virginia
Army Honor Guard. Burial will be at the convenience
of the family at Centenary Cemetery in Gallipolis.
Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m. Thursday at the
funeral home. There will be an Elks Memorial Service
promptly at 8 p.m.

IN BRIEF

By Gretchen Ehlke
and Ivan Moreno
Associated Press

MILWAUKEE — An
ofﬁcer shot an armed
male student Monday
morning in a classroom
at a suburban Milwaukee
high school after the
teenager pointed a gun
at ofﬁcers, a police chief
said.
A Waukesha South
High School student
informed a school
resource ofﬁcer that a
classmate had a handgun around 10:17 a.m.,
Waukesha Police Chief
Russell Jack said. He
said the resource ofﬁcer
went to the classroom to
confront the 17-year-old
and move other students
in the room to safety.
Authorities have not said
if other students were in
the classroom during the
ensuing standoff, and
Jack did not immediately respond to an email
seeking clarity.
Waukesha police and
sheriff’s deputies soon
arrived at the school and
tried to de-escalate the
situation to no avail.
“The suspect would
not remove his hands
from his pocket and continued to ignore ofﬁcers’
commands,” Jack said.
“The suspect removed
his handgun from his
waistband and pointed it
at the ofﬁcers. An ofﬁcer
was forced to discharge
his ﬁrearm, striking the
suspect.”
Jack said ofﬁcers
performed life-saving
measures on the student,

Mike De Sisti | Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel via AP

Gabriela Mauricio, right, a 14-year-old freshman, hugs her mother Meche Mauricio, after the two
were reunited outside Waukesha South High School in Waukesha on Monday. Police shot and
wounded an armed male student who is the only suspect in the incident.

who is in custody and
in stable condition. The
ofﬁcer who shot the
student is an 11-yearveteran of the Waukesha
police department, Jack
said. He did not specify
whether the ofﬁcer was
also the school resource
ofﬁcer and has not
replied to the question
via email.
No ofﬁcers or other
students were injured,
Jack said. Police have
not said whether the
student ever ﬁred his
weapon. Police said the
shooting was an isolated
incident and that they
are not seeking any
other suspects.
Andrew Oresick, 16,
told the Journal Sentinel
that he was outside his
Spanish class hanging
posters with other stu-

dents and their teacher
when they heard a commotion.
“These kids start
running out from the
classroom directly across
from us, and one of them
goes: ‘He’s got a gun,’”
Oresick recalled. He said
their Spanish teacher
immediately got them
into the classroom.
Parents gathered
outside and hugged students as they streamed
out of the school about
18 miles (30 kilometers)
west of Milwaukee.
Some students said they
took cover under desks
and teachers barricaded
doors when a drill was
announced. They told
reporters outside the
school that they knew it
wasn’t a drill when they
heard two or three gun-

shots.
“It was just really
scary,” Alexis Grady, a
senior, told the Journal
Sentinel.
School shootings have
occasionally shone a
spotlight on the response
by guards and school
resource ofﬁcers. In
2018, a deputy working
as a school resource ofﬁcer at Marjory Stoneman
Douglas High School in
Parkland, Florida, did
not enter the high school
while a shooting was
in progress; 17 people
died and the deputy was
charged for his inaction. Two months after
that shooting, a deputy
in Maryland received a
governor’s citation for
confronting an attacker
at a high school in that
state.

Impeachment report coming ahead of hearing

Lebanon gets
its military aid
WASHINGTON (AP)
— The Trump administration has quietly
released more than $100
million in military assistance to Lebanon after
months of unexplained
delay that led some lawmakers to compare it to
the aid for Ukraine at the
center of the impeachment inquiry.
The $105 million in
Foreign Military Financing funds for the Lebanese Armed Forces was
released just before the
Thanksgiving holiday and
lawmakers were notiﬁed
of the step on Monday,
according to two congressional staffers and an
administration ofﬁcial.
All three spoke on
condition of anonymity
because they were not
authorized to speak publicly to the matter.
The money had languished in limbo at the
Ofﬁce of Management
and Budget since Sep-

tember although it had
already won congressional approval and had
overwhelming support
from the Pentagon, State
Department and National
Security Council. The
White House has yet to
offer any explanation for
the delay despite repeated
queries from Congress.

Jimmy Carter
hospitalized
AMERICUS, Ga. (AP)
— A spokeswoman says
former U.S. President
Jimmy Carter has been
admitted to a south Georgia hospital for treatment
of a urinary tract infection.
Deanna Congileo, a
spokeswoman for The
Carter Center, said Monday afternoon in a statement that the 95-year-old
former president was
admitted to Phoebe Sumter Medical Center in
Americus over the weekend. She said Carter “is
feeling better and looks
forward to returning
home soon.

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109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
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By Hope Yen, Lisa Mascaro
and Mary Clare Jalonick
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The House
impeachment report on President
Donald Trump will be unveiled
Monday behind closed doors for
key lawmakers as Democrats push
ahead with the inquiry despite the
White House’s declaration it will
not participate in the ﬁrst Judiciary Committee hearing.
The Democratic majority on the
House Intelligence Committee
says the report, compiled after
weeks of testimony, will speak for
itself in laying out what Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., called
the evidence of “wrongdoing and
misconduct” by the Republican
president over his actions toward
Ukraine. It was being made available for committee members to
review ahead of a vote Tuesday
to send it to the Judiciary Committee for Wednesday’s landmark
hearing.
Late Sunday, White House
counsel Pat Cipollone denounced
the “baseless and highly partisan
inquiry.” In a letter to Judiciary
Committee Chairman Jerrold
Nadler, D-N.Y., he also declined
the invitation for the president’s
counsel to appear before his panel
Wednesday.
Cipollone, in continuing the
West Wing’s attack on the House
process, said the proceeding
“violates all past historical precedent, basic due process rights,
and fundamental fairness.” Trump
himself was scheduled to attend a
summit with NATO allies outside
London on Wednesday.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo
said Monday it’s “very unfortunate” the Judiciary Committee is
holding its hearing at the same
time that Trump is representing
the U.S. at the NATO summit.
“I regret that they’ve chosen to
hold these hearings at the same
time that the president and our
entire national security team will
be traveling to Europe, to London, to work on these important
matters,” Pompeo said.
As the impeachment inquiry
intensiﬁes, Wednesday’s hearing
will be a milestone. It is expected
to convene legal experts whose
testimony, alongside the report
from the Intelligence Committee, could lay the groundwork for
possible articles of impeachment,

which the panel is expected to
soon draw up.
Democrats are focused on
whether Trump abused his
ofﬁce by withholding military
aid approved by Congress and
a White House meeting as he
pressed Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskiy to launch
investigations into Trump’s
political rivals. The report also is
expected to include evidence of
possible obstruction of Congress
by Trump’s instructions that
ofﬁcials in his administration
defy subpoenas for documents or
testimony.
Trump maintains he did nothing wrong, and as the House
presses forward on an ambitious
schedule toward an impeachment
vote, the president and his Republican allies are aligned against the
process.
Cipollone’s letter applied only
to the Wednesday hearing, and he
demanded more information from
Democrats on how they intended
to conduct further hearings before
Trump would decide whether to
participate in them. House rules
provide the president and his
attorneys the right to cross-examine witnesses and review evidence
before the committee, but little
ability to bring forward witnesses
of their own.
Republicans, meanwhile,
wanted Schiff, the chairman who
led the inquiry report, to testify
before the Judiciary Committee, though they have no power
to compel him to do so, as they
joined the White House effort
to try to cast the Democratic-led
inquiry as skewed against the
Republican president.
“It’s easy to hide behind a
report,” said Rep. Doug Collins
of Georgia, the top Republican on
the Judiciary Committee. “But it’s
going to be another thing to actually get up and have to answer
questions.”
Schiff has said “there’s nothing for me to testify about,” that
he isn’t a “fact” witness and that
Republicans are only trying to
“mollify the president, and that’s
not a good reason to try to call
a member of Congress as a witness.”
Democrats were aiming for a
ﬁnal House vote by Christmas,
which would set the stage for a
likely Senate trial in January.
“I do believe that all evidence

certainly will be included in that
report so the Judiciary Committee
can make the necessary decisions
that they need to,” said Rep. Val
Demings, D-Fla., a member of
both the Intelligence and Judiciary committees.
Trump has previously suggested that he might be willing
to offer written testimony under
certain conditions, though aides
suggested they did not anticipate
Democrats would ever agree to
them.
Democrats had pressed Trump
to decide by Friday whether he
would take advantage of due
process protections afforded to
him under House rules adopted
in October for follow-up hearings,
including the right to request
witness testimony and to crossexamine the witnesses called by
the House.
“If you are serious about conducting a fair process going forward, and in order to protect the
rights and privileges of the President, we may consider participating in future Judiciary Committee
proceedings if you afford the
Administration the ability to do
so meaningfully,” Cipollone said
in the Sunday letter.
Collins called the hearing
Wednesday “a complete American waste of time of here.” He
wanted the witness list expanded
to include those suggested by
Republicans. “This is why this is
a problematic exercise and simply
a made-for-TV event coming on
Wednesday.”
Still, Rep. Tom McClintock,
R-Calif., a Judiciary Committee
member, said he believes Trump
would beneﬁt if he presents his
own defense. McClintock said
he doesn’t believe Trump did
anything wrong in the July 25 call
with Zelenskiy that is at the heart
of the investigation.
“He didn’t use the delicate
language of diplomacy in that
conversation, that’s true. He also
doesn’t use the smarmy talk of
politicians,” McClintock said.
To McClintock, Trump was
using “the blunt talk of a Manhattan businessman” and “was
entirely within his constitutional
authority” in his dealings with
Ukraine’s leader.
Collins appeared on “Fox
News Sunday” and Demings and
McClintock were on ABC’s “This
Week.”

�Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 3, 2019 3

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�4 Tuesday, December 3, 2019

LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Reedsville Community Christmas

The Reedsville Community Vacation Bible School (VBS) advertised for their 2020 VBS “Rocky Railroad.”

Photos by Kayla Hawthorne | OVP

Community members kicked off the Christmas Season during the parade.

Community members kicked off the Christmas Season during the parade.

Community members kicked off the Christmas Season during the parade.

The Olive Township Volunteer Fire Department hosted the Christmas Parade on Sunday afternoon.

The Olive Township Volunteer Fire Department hosted the Christmas Parade on Sunday afternoon.

The Olive Township Volunteer Fire Department hosted the Christmas Parade on Sunday afternoon.

Santa rode through the parade route in the fire department’s rescue boat.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 3, 2019 5

MEIGS BRIEFS

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs will only list event infor- Southern High School and ending at Star Mill
Park.
mation that is open to the public and will be printed
on a space-available basis.

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.

Christmas Parades and Events
CHESTER — Chester Shade Historical Association Open House from 12-3 p.m. on Saturday, Dec.
7. Eastern Bell Choir will preform at 1 p.m., followed by light refreshments.
RACINE — The Racine Christmas Parade and
Christmas in the Park will be held at 7 p.m. on
Saturday, Dec. 7 with the parade beginning at

Straw available for animals
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, Ohio, for
a fee of $2 per bail. Vouchers are to be redeemed at
Dettwiller Lumber in Pomeroy. For more information
call 992-6064.

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.

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Tuesday, Dec.
3, the 337th day of 2019.
There are 28 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On Dec. 3, 1979, 11
people were killed in a
crush of fans at Cincinnati’s Riverfront Coliseum, where the British
rock group The Who was
performing.
On this date
In 1818, Illinois was
admitted as the 21st
state.
In 1828, Andrew Jackson was elected president
of the United States by
the Electoral College.
In 1960, the Lerner
and Loewe musical
“Camelot,” starring Julie
Andrews as Guenevere,
Richard Burton as King
Arthur and Robert Goulet
as Lancelot, opened on
Broadway.
In 1964, police arrested
some 800 students at the
University of California
at Berkeley, one day after
the students stormed the
administration building
and staged a massive
sit-in.
In 1967, a surgical team
in Cape Town, South
Africa, led by Dr. Christiaan Barnard (BAHR’nard) performed the ﬁrst
human heart transplant
on Louis Washkansky,
who lived 18 days with
the donor organ, which
came from Denise Darvall, a 25-year-old bank
clerk who had died in a
trafﬁc accident.
In 1980, Bernadine
Dohrn, a former leader
of the radical Weather
Underground, surrendered to authorities in
Chicago after more than a
decade as a fugitive.
In 1984, thousands of
people died after a cloud
of methyl isocyanate gas
escaped from a pesticide
plant operated by a Union

Carbide subsidiary in
Bhopal, India.
In 1991, radicals in
Lebanon released American hostage Alann Steen,
who’d been held captive
nearly ﬁve years.
In 1992, the ﬁrst telephone text message was
sent by British engineer
Neil Papworth, who
transmitted the greeting
“Merry Christmas” from
his work computer in
Newbury, Berkshire, to
Vodafone executive Richard Jarvis’ mobile phone.
The Greek tanker Aegean
Sea spilled more than 21
million gallons of crude
oil when it ran aground
off northwestern Spain.
In 1999, Tori Murden
of the United States
became the ﬁrst woman
to row across the Atlantic Ocean alone as she
arrived at the French
Caribbean island of
Guadeloupe, 81 days
after leaving the Canary
Islands near the coast of
Africa.
In 2001, in the wake
of bombings that had
killed 26 Israelis, Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon
declared a war on terror.
Homeland Security Director Tom Ridge asked
Americans to return to a
high state of alert, citing
threats of more terrorist
attacks.
In 2002, thousands of
personnel ﬁles released
under a court order
showed that the Archdiocese of Boston went
to great lengths to hide
priests accused of abuse,
including clergy who’d
allegedly snorted cocaine
and had sex with girls
aspiring to be nuns.
Ten years ago: President Barack Obama
hosted a White Housesponsored jobs forum,
where he said he’d heard
many “exciting ideas” and
proposals and expressed
hope some could be put
into action quickly. Pope
Benedict XVI and visiting

Thursday, Dec. 5

THOUGHT FOR TODAY

POMEROY — Meigs County Retired Teachers
meeting, noon, Trinity Congregational Church,
lunch and program, guests welcome, lunch reservations call 740-992-3214, Eastern High School Bell
Choir will present a program of Christmas music.
OLIVE TWP. — The Olive Township Trustees
will hold regular meeting at 6:30 p.m. at the township building on Joppa Road.

“Facing it, always facing it, that’s the way to
get through. Face it.”
— Joseph Conrad
Polish-born English novelist (born this date in 1857, died
1924)

Russian President Dmitry
Medvedev (dih-MEE’-tree
med-VYEH’-dyev) agreed
to upgrade Vatican-Kremlin ties to full diplomatic
relations. Comcast and
GE announced joint venture plans, with Comcast
owning a 51 percent
controlling stake in NBC
Universal. British actor
Richard Todd died in Little Humby, Lincolnshire,
England, at age 90.
Five years ago: A Staten
Island, New York, grand
jury declined to indict
police ofﬁcer Daniel
Pantaleo in the July 2014
chokehold death of Eric
Garner, an unarmed black
man stopped on suspicion
of selling loose, untaxed
cigarettes. Herman
Badillo (bah-DEE’-yoh), a
Bronx politician who was
the ﬁrst person born in
Puerto Rico to become a
U.S. congressman, died at
age 85.
One year ago: President
Donald Trump made it
clear that he was closely
watching those who
turned on him in the
Russia investigation; he
tweeted that his former
lawyer, who cut a deal
with prosecutors, should
go straight to prison, but
Trump praised a key witness for having the “guts”
not to testify against him.
A casket containing the
body of former President George H.W. Bush
was ﬂown from Texas
to Washington to lie in
state at the U.S. Capitol.
At the U.N.’s annual climate summit in Poland,
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres issued a
dramatic appeal to world
leaders to take global

Friday, Dec. 6

warming seriously, calling
it “the most important
issue we face.” After a
two-year chase, a NASA
spacecraft arrived at the
ancient asteroid Bennu,
some 76 million miles
from Earth; the goal is
to grab gravel samples in
2020 for return to Earth
in 2023.
Today’s Birthdays:
Movie director Jean-Luc
Godard is 89. Singer
Jaye P. Morgan is 88.
Actor Nicolas Coster is
86. Actress Mary Alice
is 78. Rock singer Ozzy
Osbourne is 71. Rock
singer Mickey Thomas
is 70. Country musician
Paul Gregg (Restless
Heart) is 65. Actor Steven Culp is 64. Actress
Daryl Hannah is 59.
Actress Julianne Moore is
59. Olympic gold medal
ﬁgure skater Katarina
Witt is 54. Actor Brendan
Fraser is 51. Singer Montell Jordan is 51. Actor
Royale Watkins is 50.
Actor Bruno Campos is
46. Actress Holly Marie
Combs is 46. Actress
Liza Lapira is 44. Actress
Lauren Roman is 44. Poprock singer Daniel Bedingﬁeld is 40. Actress/
comedian Tiffany Haddish is 40. Actress Anna
Chlumsky (KLUHM’skee) is 39. Actress Jenna
Dewan is 39. Actor Brian
Bonsall is 38. Actress
Dascha Polanco is 37.
Pop/rock singer-songwriter Andy Grammer
is 36. Americana musician Michael Calabrese
(Lake Street Dive) is 35.
Actress Amanda Seyfried
is 34. Actor Michael Angarano is 32. Actor Jake T.
Austin is 25.

RACINE — Deer hunters and community luncheon held from 11 a.m. - 2 p.m., Friday, CarmelSutton UM Church. Soups, sandwiches, desserts,
drinks. Donations only. Takeout available.
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.

Gil
From page 1

visitors to travel Ohio and sharing what makes our
state special.”
Gallipolis is one of many distinctive light displays across the state where visitors can enjoy
millions of twinkling holiday lights. Travelers can
browse the Ohio Holiday Lights Trail online or
download and print a map to share or take along
in the car.
Located within roughly 600 miles of 60 percent
of the U.S. population, Ohio receives an average
of 20 million visits in November and December,
many from people visiting Ohio for the holidays.
“The holidays are a popular time to visit Ohio,
and millions of dazzling lights are a big part of
the attraction” said Matt MacLaren, director of
TourismOhio. “The Holiday Lights Trail and Holidays in Ohio web page are both designed to help
Ohioans and visitors make new memories while
experiencing Ohio’s seasonal attractions.”
The Ohio Holiday Lights Trail is a part of TourismOhio’s #HolidaysInOhio campaign, encouraging travelers and visitors to make new memories
while experiencing Ohio’s seasonal attractions and
events. Learn more about Ohio’s captivating lights
displays, festive events, seasonal spirits and more
provided on Ohio.org/Holidays.
For more travel inspiration, follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/GallipolisInLights/ or you may contact the Gallia County
Convention and Visitors Bureau at (800) 765-6482
or info@visitgallia.com.

Christmas

Division V: Senior
Horticulture
Class 15: Broadleaf
From page 1
Evergreen — 1st Linda
Blosser, 2nd Linda
Blosser; Class 16 A: NarIndoor Wreath — 1st
row Leaf Evergreen —
Josephine Hill, 2nd
1st Josephine Hill, 2nd
Linda Blosser, 3rd
Peggy Crane, 3rd Shelia
Judy Rigsby, 4th Karen
Werry; Outdoor Wreath Curtis, 4th Peggy Crane;
— 1st Riona Nally; Class Class 16 B — 1st Peggy
Crane, 2nd Shelia Cur12: Bedford Township
tis, 3rd Peggy Crane, 4th
Nelson Story (LonePeggy Crane;
some Dove) Swag or
Class 17: Berried
Wall Hanging, Indoor
— 1st Melanie Stethem, Branch — 1st Shelia
Curtis, 2nd Peggy
2nd Josephine Hill, 3rd
Lorna Hart; Outdoor — Crane, 3rd Shelia Curtis,
4th Shelia Curtis;
1st Linda Blosser, 2nd
Class 19: Cactus —
Melanie Stethem, 3rd
1st Lorna Hart; Class
Shelia Curtis, 4th Judy
21: House Plant, Foliage
Rigsby.
— 1st Lorna Hart, 2nd
Division V: Wrap the
Lorna Hart.
Packages
Top Awards for Adult
Adult: Class 13:
Best of Show and
Package for an adult,
wrapped in brown paper, Reserve Best of Show
Lorna Hart | Courtesy
went to Melanie Stetmust include some live
Melanie Stethem received Best of Show honors.
hem, and Linda Blosser
plant material — 1st
received the award for
Josephine Hill, 2nd
Linda Blosser, 3rd Mela- Creativity.
POMEROY FIREMANS
Junior Awards went
nie Stethem, 4th Debbie
to Paisley Stethem for
Mohler. Juniors: Class
Best of Show. Cayden
14: Package for a child,
The Pomeroy Firemans Association is sponsoring a fund raising program to raise
wrapped in brown paper, Stethem received both
money. These funds will be used to improve service to our community.
Reserve Best of Show
must include some live
Department representatives will be contacting all homes in the area over the
and Creativity for his
plant material — 1st
coming weeks asking for a donation of $20. Department representatives will be
going door to door and will carry identiﬁcation or an ID badge.
entries.
Cayden Stethem, 2nd
The Pomeroy Firemans Associationwishes to THANK everyone for their donation
Paisley Stethem, 3rd
by giving a complimentary certiﬁcate for a 8x10 color portrait to be taken at the
Lorna Hart is a freelance writer for
Paisley Stethem, 4th
station.
The Daily Sentinel.
Cayden Stethem.

Information submitted by the Gallia County Convention and Visitors
Bureau on behalf of TourismOhio.

Roger Abbott
wants to say

THANK
YOU!

SUPPORT
ASSOCIATION

OH-70162194

OH-70161835

to the voters of Meigs Local School
District for your continued support

Your conﬁdence is
very much appreciated!
PAID FOR BY THE CANDIDATE

�Sports
6 Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Daily Sentinel

RedStorm men shoot down Eagles
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

Courtesy photo by Justyce Stout

Rio Grande’s Hadith Tiggs drives past Reinhardt’s Blake MacIntyre during
Saturday morning’s 69-62 win over the Eagles as part of the 2019 NAIA DII
Showcase at the MeadowView Marriott Conference Center and Resort.

KINGSPORT, Tenn. — The
University of Rio Grande men’s
basketball team erased an early
nine-point deﬁcit and coughed
up a nine-point lead of its own
before ﬁnally pulling away for
good.
Three different players
scored in a 7-0 run that gave
the RedStorm a lead they
would never relinquish in
an eventual 69-62 win over
Reinhardt (Ga.) University,
Saturday morning, as part of
the 2019 NAIA DII Showcase
at the MeadowView Marriott
Conference Center and Resort.
Rio Grande, which won for
the fourth time in ﬁve games,

improved to 6-3 overall.
Reinhardt suffered a second
straight loss, falling to 3-7
overall.
The Eagles bolted to a
16-7 lead out of the gate, but
watched as Rio Grande rallied
to take a 32-31 halftime lead.
The RedStorm then snapped
the fourth tie of the contest
with a 9-0 run and took a 44-35
advantage following a jumper
in the lane by sophomore Gunner Short (Catlettsburg, KY)
with 17:20 remaining in the
contest.
An 11-2 spurt by the Eagles,
capped by a Jamison Syphore
three-pointer with 13:09 left,
tied the game again at 46-all,
but Rio Grande took the lead
once and for all two posses-

sions later on a layup by junior
Kyle Lamotte (Mason, OH).
A subsequent bucket by
senior Greg Wallace (Montego
Bay, Jamaica) and a pair of free
throws by junior Bobby Anderson (Catlettsburg, KY) extended the RedStorm’s cushion to
53-46 with 11:04 remaining
and the lead was no less than
four points the rest of the way.
Rio’s biggest lead of the day
came with 23 seconds left to
play when a pair of free throws
by Short made it 68-58.
The RedStorm did the bulk
of its damage at the free throw
line, connecting on 29 of their
38 attempts in the game.
The Eagles went just 8-for-14
See EAGLES | 7

Rio women
fall short
to Union

By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

KINGSPORT, Tenn. — When a women’s division was added to the NAIA DII Showcase in
2016, the University of Rio Grande and Union
(Ky.) College played a wild, foul-ﬁlled affair that
produced 82 combined free throw attempts.
Saturday afternoon, the RedStorm and the Bulldogs got together again with similar results - lots
of free throws, lots of points…and a Union win.
UC’s Brooke Hammonds went 16-for-24 at the
charity stripe, ﬁnishing with a game-high 32
points, 19 rebounds and ﬁve steals to lead the
‘Dogs in a 91-86 win over Rio Grande at the MeadowView Marriott Conference Center and Resort.
Union improved to 6-3 with the victory.
Rio Grande slipped to 5-5 with a fourth straight
loss.
The RedStorm actually ﬁnished with two more
ﬁeld goals than the Bulldogs (29-27) and a whopping edge in rebounding (53-34), but head coach
David Smalley’s club was done in at the free throw
line where UC ﬁnished 31-for-45 and Rio went
19-for-30.
Hammonds, who also had a team-high three
assists, was a one-woman wrecking crew and
helped UC open up a 15-point second quarter lead.
Rio, as it has done in each loss during the current slide, rallied and sliced the deﬁcit to four,
40-36, by halftime.
The comeback came full circle when freshman Reagan Willingham (Ashville, OH) canned
a three-pointer with 1:13 remaining in the third
quarter to give the RedStorm a 58-57 advantage.
The pendulum - in a contest that featured nine
ties and 13 lead changes - swung back and forth
throughout the bulk of the ﬁnal quarter.
Rio’s ﬁnal lead of the day came at 81-79 after a
free throw by junior Chyna Chambers (Columbus,
OH) with 3:23 left to play, but the Bulldogs countered with a 9-1 run of their own - including ﬁve
points by Hammonds - to take an 88-82 lead with
28 seconds remaining.
Senior Sydney Holden (Wheelersburg, OH) hit
a three-pointer with 12 seconds left to get the RedStorm within three, but they’d get no closer in the
waning seconds.
Hammonds went 3-for-4 at the free throw line in
the ﬁnal 10 seconds to seal the victory.
The Bulldogs also got 15 points from Haley Tye,
14 from LeAsia Linton and 13 from Chariss Wilson in the winning effort.
See RIO | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Dec. 3
Boys Basketball
South Gallia at OVCS, 7
p.m.
Belpre at Meigs, 7:30
Southern at NelsonvilleYork, 7:30
River Valley at Symmes
Valley, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Scott at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca, 7
p.m.
Wednesday, Dec. 4
Swimming
River Valley at Shawnee

State, TBA
Thursday, Dec. 5
Boys Basketball
Ohio Valley Christian at
Sugar Creek, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Southern at South Gallia,
6 p.m.
Coal Grove at Gallia
Academy, 7:30
Athens at River Valley, 7
p.m.
Belpre at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Miller, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at
Sugar Creek, 6 p.m.

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Marshall linebacker Omari Cobb (31) wraps up a Florida International ball carrier during the third quarter of Saturday afternoon’s regular
season finale at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington, W.Va.

Herd holds off Panthers, 30-27
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
— The Herd needed
some extra time to win
this battle, but they ultimately came up short in
the divisional war.
The Marshall football
team needed overtime to
wrap up Senior Day in a
stylish form following a
30-27 victory over visiting Florida International
in the Conference USA
East Division ﬁnale for
both programs Saturday
at Joan C. Edwards Stadium.
The Thundering Herd
(8-4, 6-2 CUSA East)
held a comfortable 17-7
lead entering the fourth
quarter, but the Panthers
(6-6, 3-5) countered with
a touchdown, a takeaway
and another touchdown
over an 18-second span
early in the ﬁnale — giving the guests a 21-17
cushion.
The hosts, however,
rallied with an 8-play,
75-yard drive that ended
when Xavier Gaines
hauled in an 18-yard pass
from Isaiah Green with
2:16 left in regulation
— giving the Green and
White a 24-21 edge.
FIU countered in the
rain-soaked conditions
by marching 48 yards in
a dozen plays, with Jose
Borregales capping things
with a game-tying 41-yard
ﬁeld goal with 21 seconds
remaining — forcing
overtime with a 24-all
contest.
Marshall won the overtime coin toss and elected

Marshall quarterback Isaiah Green (17) celebrates a touchdown
during the third quarter of Saturday afternoon’s regular season
finale against FIU at Joan C. Edwards Stadium in Huntington, W.Va.

to play defense, a move
that somewhat paid off
when the Panthers were
limited to a Borregales
35-yard ﬁeld goal that
gave the guests their ﬁnal
lead of the day at 27-24.
The Herd, however,
needed just two plays to
wrap up the victory as
Brenden Knox rumbled
24 yards down to the
one on the ﬁrst offensive
snap, then Knox sealed
the deal with a 1-yard
scoring run on the next
play — giving MU a
30-27 triumph.
The win momentarily
kept Marshall’s hopes for
winning the CUSA East
Division alive, but Flor-

ida Atlantic ultimately
crushed those aspirations
hours later by defeating
Southern Miss (34-17) to
clinch the East Division
crown outright.
The Herd — who ﬁnished tied for second with
Western Kentucky in the
CUSA East standings —
now awaits a bowl invitation to ﬁnd out who and
where their ﬁnal gridiron
contest of 2019 will be
played.
Florida Atlantic, on
the other hand, will host
Alabama Birmingham in
the Conference USA title
game Saturday. Marshall
was the only CUSA team
to defeat the Owls this

fall, doing so by a 36-31
margin in Boca Raton
back on Oct. 19.
After completing his
10th full regular season
as Marshall head coach,
Doc Holliday was very
pleased that his seniors
were able to taste victory
one last time in front of
18,596 supportive fans —
particularly against such
a competitive group like
Florida International.
I’m really proud of our
players and team. We
knew that it was going to
be a ﬁght. FIU has some
players, as we all know.
I thought our guys kept
ﬁghting,” Holliday said.
“In a game like that, you
win it, you lose it … you
just hope, at the end of
the day, that you step up
and ﬁnd a way to win. I’m
so proud of our seniors.
We have a great group.
I love this team. Our
seniors are special.”
Both teams struggled
with the elements during
a scoreless ﬁrst period,
but the hosts ended the
scoring drought early
in the second as Justin
Rohrwasser nailed a
38-yard ﬁeld goal with
13:52 remaining for a 3-0
edge.
The Panthers countered with a 5-play,
75-yard drive that Napoleon Maxwell capped
with a 1-yard run at the
11:29 mark, giving the
guests their only lead of
the ﬁrst half at 7-3.
MU answered with a
score of its own on the
ensuing possession as
See HERD | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Alabama out of
top 5 for first
time in 4 years

Hodges, Devlin sync up
PITTSBURGH (AP)
— James Washington
knew what was coming.
It’s why the Pittsburgh
Steelers wide receiver
didn’t hesitate when
he saw the Cleveland
Browns jump offside
early in the second quarter on Sunday.
At the snap, Washington ditched his intended
route and raced upﬁeld.
Call it the byproduct of
spending plenty of practice time catching passes
from rookie quarterback
Devlin Hodges.
“You just go deep and
hope he throws it your
way,” Washington said.
And Hodges did, lofting a rainbow down
the left sideline that
Washington caught for a
31-yard gain that provided the spark Pittsburgh’s
sputtering offense needed to come to life.
Washington and Hodges — newfound hunting
buddies — were in the
middle of it all. An acrobatic 30-yard touchdown
grab by Washington late
in the ﬁrst half tied the
game. A 44-yard strike
early in the third quarter set up Benny Snell’s
1-yard score that put the
Steelers ahead to stay in
a 20-13 victory that kept
them in the thick of the
AFC playoff chase.
Washington ﬁnished
with four catches for a
career-best 111 yards,
displaying the kind of
game-breaking ability
that led the Pittsburgh
to take him in the second round of the 2018
draft. After a season
and a half of progressing in ﬁts and starts,

By Ralph D. Russo
Associated Press

Alabama dropped to No. 9 in The Associated Press
college football poll, snapping the Crimson Tide’s
record streak of 68 appearances in the top ﬁve.
The top four teams in the AP Top 25 presented by
Regions Bank were unchanged, with LSU at No. 1,
followed by Ohio State, Clemson and Georgia.
The Buckeyes gained on LSU after their blowout
victory at Michigan, receiving 19 ﬁrst-place votes.
The Tigers had 40, down 10 from last week. Clemson
received three ﬁrst-place votes.
Utah moved up to No. 5, followed by Oklahoma,
Florida and Baylor.
The Crimson Tide lost to Auburn in a wild Iron
Bowl on Saturday to give it two regular-season losses
for the ﬁrst time since 2010. The four-spot drop by
Alabama broke a string of top-ﬁve appearances that
began Nov. 8, 2015.
The week before the Tide’s run started it had been
seventh, and it had been as low as 12th earlier that
season. Alabama passed the old record for consecutive top-ﬁve appearances of 55 by Miami (Oct. 8,
2000-Oct. 26, 2003) last season.
Poll points
Alabama could still ﬁnish ranked in the top ﬁve
with a victory in its bowl game, but it would need
some losses by teams ahead of it to make that big
of a jump. There will be one more regular-season
Top 25 after next weekend’s conference championship games and then the ﬁnal poll after all the
bowls and national championship game have been
played.
The last time the Crimson Tide ﬁnished a season
outside the top ﬁve was 2013, when it lost the Iron
Bowl on the famous Kick-Six and then dropped the
Sugar Bowl to Oklahoma.

Herd

his only score on the
game-winner — led
the rushing attack with
146 yards on 33 carries.
From page 6
Gaines followed with 33
yards on ﬁve attempts,
Xavier Gaines took a
while Sheldon Evans
‘Statue of Liberty’ handoff and rumbled 20 yards added 26 yards on six
totes.
to the house. The 9-play,
Green ended the day
75-yard drive ended at the
9-of-20 passing for 90
7:21 mark and allowed
yards. Obi Obialo led the
the hosts to take a 10-7
wideouts with 31 yards
cushion into the break.
The Herd secured their on ﬁve catches, with four
others hauling in a pass
largest lead of the game
midway through the third apiece.
Omari Cobb led MU
frame as Green plunged
with 10 tackles, followed
in from a yard out, capby Steven Gilmore and
ping a 12-play, 50-yard
Tavante Beckett with
drive that resulted in
eight stops apiece. Becka 17-7 advantage with
seven minutes remaining. ett came away with a
fourth quarter intercepFIU strung together
tion and Sam Burton
a 13-play, 75-yard drive
recorded the Herd’s lone
that ended with a 9-yard
sack.
Anthony Jones touchJones paced the FIU
down run just six seconds
rushing attack with 52
into the fourth quarter,
yards on 17 carries. Mortrimming the deﬁcit
gan completed 21-of-37
down to 17-14.
passes for 236 yards,
Marshall mishandled
the ﬁrst snap of its ensu- including a touchdown
ing drive, which resulted and a pick. Gaiter hauled
in a lost fumble that gave in a team-high nine passes for 107 yards.
the Panthers possession
Sage Lewis led the
at the MU 22.
Panther defense with 17
Tony Gaiter hauled in
tackles. Alex Jean-Bapa 22-yard scoring pass
tiste recovered a fumble,
from James Morgan on
the very next play, allow- while Jason Mercier had
ing FIU to secure a 21-17 the only full sack for a
unit that produced three
edge with 14:42 left in
in the setback.
regulation.
Marshall is now 6-2
The Green and White
all-time against Florida
claimed a 23-17 advanInternational and will
tage in ﬁrst downs, but
likely be appearing in
Florida International
its third straight bowl
outgained the hosts by a
322-290 overall margin in season, as well as its
total offense. Both teams seventh bowl appearance under Holliday in a
committed a turnover
decade.
apiece, but FIU was the
only team to score points
Bryan Walters can be reached at
off of the takeaways.
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
Knox — who provided

Washington appears to
have developed a rapport with Hodges that
he couldn’t ﬁnd with
Ben Roethlisberger or
former college teammate
Mason Rudolph, who
was benched last week
in favor of the player
known universally as
“Duck.”
Maybe spending time
together in the woods
helps.
Washington and Hodges went duck hunting
last week with Hodges
— a champion duck caller on the side — luring
them in and Washington
— who grew up around
farms in Texas — taking
them out. They plan to
do it again on Tuesday
to celebrate Pittsburgh’s
sixth win in its past
seven games.
“I tell him I’m a better
shooter than he is, so
you call them in and I’ll
shoot ‘em,” Washington
said. “That’s kind of how
it works.”
Hodges admitted the
outings with Washington
makes things “a little
more comfortable” on
the ﬁeld, though he
stressed there’s no need
for the rest of his teammates to put on their
camo if they want to create a vibe with him.
“We all have our different types,” Hodges said.
“So I’m just trying to ﬁt
in with those guys and
doing whatever it takes
to build that relationship.
It makes it a lot more
calm in the game.”
Hodges certainly
looked calm while
completing 14 of 21
passes for 212 yards

Rio
From page 6

Sophomore Avery Harper
(Seaman, OH) had 17 points
and a career-high 16 rebounds
to pace Rio Grande in the loss,

with a touchdown and
an interception. He will
get another start on
Sunday when the Steelers visit Arizona (3-8-1)
and is building a pretty
compelling case to be
given the nod the rest
of the way. The Steelers are 3-1 when he
makes an appearance,
the only loss coming to
Baltimore back on Oct. 6
when wide receiver JuJu
Smith-Schuster fumbled
in overtime.
Hodges wasn’t perfect. He fumbled out of
bounds while attempting
to scramble early in the
fourth quarter and threw
a pick when he tried to
go deep to Diontae Johnson with the Steelers
protecting a seven-point
lead with 7:30 to go.
Still, he wasn’t fazed by
the stakes.
“Duck stayed calm the
entire time,” Washington
said. “You never saw him
get uptight or anything.
He held his composure
as well as everyone else.
Everyone kept working
and I feel like that’s why
we were able to come
out on top.”
What’s working
The pass rush remains
dominant, with outside
linebackers T.J. Watt and
Bud Dupree leading the
way. They’ve combined
for 20½ of Pittsburgh’s
43 sacks, adding 2½ to
that total against the
Browns.
What needs help
The offense committed four procedure
penalties, be they false
starts or illegal shifts.

while Chambers had 17 points
of her own to go along with ﬁve
assists and two steals.
Freshman Lexi Woods
(Waverly, OH) had 11 points
for the RedStorm, while Holden
ﬁnished with 10 points, 10
rebounds, ﬁve assists and two
steals.

BROADCAST

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE

Part of that is the growing pains that come
with having an inexperienced quarterback.
But the Steelers lack the
kind of explosiveness
at the skill positions to
easily overcome even
the most minor of setbacks.
Stock up
The Steelers drafted
Benny Snell in the fourth
round in April because
of his no-frills running
style. It’s starting to
translate to the NFL.
Snell has run for 161
yards and a touchdown
over the past two games,
his ever-churning legs
frequently making it difﬁcult for the ﬁrst defender to bring him down.
Stock down
Rookie wide receiver
Diontae Johnson has
been a pleasant surprise
for most of the season,
but he gave up on his
route when Hodges overthrew him in the fourth
quarter on Sunday. The
decision to pull up let
Cleveland’s Terrance
Mitchell put together
a 28-yard interception
return that nearly cost
the Steelers dearly.
Injured
The Steelers escaped
their highly anticipated
rematch with Cleveland
relatively unscathed.
Reinforcements could be
on the way this week with
Smith-Schuster (knee)
and James Conner (shoulder) possibly nearing
their respective returns
after missing each of the
past two games.

Rio Grande returns to action
Sunday afternoon when it closes
out the weekend event against
the University of MichiganDearborn.
Tipoff is set for 4:15 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director at the University of Rio Grande.

TUESDAY EVENING

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

WSAZ News
3 (N)
WTAP News
(N)
ABC 6 News
at 6pm (N)
Arthur

NBC Nightly
News (N)
NBC Nightly
News (N)
ABC World
News (N)
Newswatch

Wheel "Safe
Travels!" (N)
Wheel "Safe
Travels!" (N)
Columbus

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

Jeopardy!
(N)
Jeopardy!
(N)
Ent. Tonight
(N)
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy Ent. Tonight
News (N)
News (N)
(N)
(N)
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel "Safe
(N)
News (N)
(N)
Travels!" (N)
America
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
Says
News (N)
Theory
Theory
BBC World Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inNews:
Business
depth analysis of current
events. (N)
America
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition (N)

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

How the
How to (N)
Grinch Stole
How the
How to (N)
Grinch Stole
Brad Paisley Thinks He's
Special (N)
AgingBackwards3 A plan to
keep your minds sharp and
bodies active.
Brad Paisley Thinks He's
Special (N)
NCIS "Silent Service"

The Voice "Live Top 10
Making It "Ordinary Home
Eliminations" (N)
to Extraordinary Home" (N)
The Voice "Live Top 10
Making It "Ordinary Home
Eliminations" (N)
to Extraordinary Home" (N)
CMA Country Christmas Country's biggest stars celebrate
the holidays. (N)
Rick Steves' European Christmas A colorful montage of
the holiday's rich history in places such as Bath, Paris and
Oslo.
CMA Country Christmas Country's biggest stars celebrate
the holidays. (N)
FBI "What Lies Beneath"
NCIS: New Orleans "In the
Blood"
Empire "Remember the
Eyewitness News at 10:00
The Resident "Out for
Blood" (N)
Music" (N)
p.m. (N)
8 Days: To the Moon and Back Go inside the Apollo 11 Earth's Sacred Wonders (N)
spacecraft in this stunning recreation of the first moon
landing.
NCIS "Silent Service"
FBI "What Lies Beneath"
NCIS: New Orleans "In the
Blood"

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Die Hard II: Die Harder (‘90, Act) Bruce Willis. TVMA
Die Hard II: Die Harder TVMA
18 (WGN) BlueBlood "Under the Gun"
NCAA Basketball La Salle vs. Villanova
NCAA Basketball Illinois State at TCU
24 (ROOT) Red Bull 2016 Joyride
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
FballPlayoff NCAA Basketball ACC/ Big-10 Challenge Mich./L.ville (L) NCAA Basketb. ACC/ Big-10 Challenge (L)
26 (ESPN2) Daily Wager (L)
NCAA Basketball ACC/ Big-10 Challenge Ia./Syr. (L)
NCAA Basketball ACC/ Big-10 Challenge Fla. S./Ind. (L)
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)

Eagles

58
60
61

(WE)

From page 6

62 (NGEO)

at the charity stripe.
Short was Rio’s only double-digit scorer, ﬁnishing
with a game-high 23 points. He ﬁnished 16-for-20 at
the free throw line.
Freshman Shiloah Blevins (South Webster, OH)
narrowly missed a double-double effort, scoring nine
points and yanking down a game-high nine rebounds.
Reinhardt got 18 points, eight rebounds and three
steals from Dwayne Wilson, while Josh Daniels had
11 points and four assists and Blake MacIntyre added
11 points of his own in a losing cause.
Rio Grande returns to action on Sunday when it
closes out the holiday weekend event against Lourdes
(Ohio) University.
Tipoff is set for 11 a.m.

Tuesday, December 3, 2019 7

(E!)
(TVL)

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

The Christmas Gift (2015, Drama) Rick Fox, Michelle
You Light Up My Christmas (2019) Kim Fields. TVG
(:05) A Christmas Wish (‘’)
Trachtenberg. TVPG
Hilarie Burton. TVPG
(5:50)
Home Alone (1990, Comedy) Joe Pesci,
(:20)
Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (‘92, Com) Macaulay Culkin. A boy finds
Daniel Stern, Macaulay Culkin. TVPG
himself all alone in New York City and sets out to foil two bumbling burglars. TVPG
Two and a
Wedding Crashers (‘05, Com) Vince Vaughn, Owen Wilson. Two womanizers
Two and a
Ink Master: Grudge Match
Half Men
Half Men
"All Bark and No Bite" (N)
sneak into weddings to take advantage of the romantic tinge in the air. TV14
Loud House Loud House SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
(:55) SVU "Manipulated"
SVU "American Disgrace"
SVU "Zero Tolerance"
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
(5:00)
Mission: Impossible II TV14
NBA Basketball Dallas Mavericks at New Orleans Pelicans (L)
NBA Basket. Por./L.A. C. (L)
(5:30)
Fred Claus (2007, Comedy) Vince Vaughn,
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation (‘89,
(:15) National Lampoon's
Miranda Richardson, Paul Giamatti. TVPG
Com) Beverly D'Angelo, Randy Quaid, Chevy Chase. TVPG Christmas Vacation TVPG
Moonshiners
Moonshiners
Moonshiners: Cuts (N)
Moonshiners "Tickle's Big Run" (N)
The First 48: Squad Tales - Garth Brooks: The Road I'm On Get an intimate look at Garth Brooks: The Road I'm On Get an intimate look at
Tulsa "Monster"
Garth Brooks' life and career. Pt. 1 of 2
Garth Brooks' life and career. Pt. 2 of 2 (N)
Woods Law "Manhunt"
North Woods Law
North Woods Law: Uncuffed "Bait and Switch" (N)
North Woods Law
Chicago P.D. "Chin Check" Chicago P.D. "Now Is
Chicago P.D. "Thirty
Chicago P.D.
Chicago P.D. "The Price We
Always Temporary"
Balloons"
Pay"
"Conventions"
Law &amp; Order "Fixed"
Law &amp; Order "Mammon"
Law&amp;Order "Ain't No Love" Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order
(5:00)
Couples Retreat TV14
Couples Retreat (‘09, Com) Jason Bateman, Vince Vaughn. TV14
Divas "Hawaiian Punch" (N)
(:25) Andy Griffith Show
A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Ray
(:45) Ray
(:20) Everybody Loves Ray (:55) 2½ Men Two 1/2 Men
Life Below Zero (N)
Life Below Zero
Life Below Zero "Ahead of Life Below Zero: Ice
Running Wild "Michelle
"Homeward Bound"
the Game"
Breakers "Cut and Run" (N)
Rodriguez" (N)
One Night (N)
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Tampa Bay Lightning at Nashville Predators (L)
(:45) Overtime
NFL Films (N) NCAA Basketball St. Peter's at St. John's (L)
NCAA Basketball Oral Roberts at Creighton (L)
Hoops Extra
The Curse of Oak Island
The Curse of Oak Island
Curse of Oak Island "The The Curse of Oak Island
(:05) Kings of Pain "World
"Core Values"
"The Eye of the Swamp"
Lucky Thirteen" (N)
of Hurt" (N)
"Tunnel Visions" (N)
The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives (N)
The Real Housewives (N)
Watch (N)
Housewives
Movie
Training Day (‘01, Thril) Ethan Hawke, Denzel Washington. TVMA
Good Deeds (‘12, Com/Dra) Tyler Perry. TV14
Home Town
Home Town
Home Town
Fixer to Fabulous (N)
Home Town
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix Daniel Radcliffe. After using magic
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (‘09, Adv)
outside of school, Harry faces trial and may be expelled from Hogwarts. TVPG
Michael Gambon, Bonnie Wright, Daniel Radcliffe. TVPG

6 PM

6:30

(:10) His Dark Materials

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Sucker Punch (‘11, Fant) Vanessa Hudgens,
Real Sports With Bryant
24/7: Kelly Slater A
"The Lost Boy"
revealing look inside the
Emily Browning. When a girl is institutionalized by her
Gumbel
surfer's life. (N)
abusive stepfather, she retreats into fantasy. TV14
(:05)
The Meg (2018, Action) Ruby Rose, Bingbing Li,
Idiocracy Luke Wilson. A man frozen (:25) A Fish Called Wanda Four people
Jason Statham. After a research vessel is attacked, a
by the military wakes up 500 years in the
team up to commit robbery, then try to
prehistoric shark is found in the ocean's depths. TV14
future to a 'dumbed down' U.S.A. TVMA
double-cross each other for the jewels.
(5:00)
The Fast and the Ray Donovan "Family
Shameless "A Little
Inside the NFL "2019 Week Ray Donovan "Family
Gallagher Goes a Long Way" 13" (N)
Pictures"
Furious (‘01, Act) Michelle Pictures"
Rodriguez, Vin Diesel. TV14
(:10)

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8 Tuesday, December 3, 2019

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, December 3, 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

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By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

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�SPORTS/WEATHER

10 Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Buckeyes bully Michigan for win
By Jim Naveau

ments at halftime,” Day
said.
Young said he wasn’t
disappointed to go
without a sack after
being double and
tripled team much of
the day.
“If you put your best
on the ﬁeld you can’t be
mad. A lot of other people stepped up. Everybody on the defense
stepped up,” he said.
When Day was asked
which of his three possible Heisman Trophy
candidates – Fields,
Dobbins or Young –
should be ranked highest, he went with the
diplomatic answer.
“All three of them
played great today. All
three of them deserve
to be in New York in my
opinion,” he said.
Ohio State has scored
118 points against
Michigan in the last
two seasons – 56 this
season and 62 last year.
The Buckeyes rolled
up 577 yards on Saturday and gained 567
yards last year against
Michigan. OSU has
scored at least two
touchdowns in each of
the last seven quarters
it has played against
Michigan.
Michigan won the
coin toss and made the
aggressive move and
went on offense ﬁrst.
The Wolverines then
marched 75 yards on
seven plays, the last 22
yards coming on an end
around by Giles Jackson. A missed extrapoint kick left Michigan
with 6-0 lead just over
three minutes into the
game.
That was the only
lead Michigan would
have, though.

in the OSU-Michigan
rivalry.
“Ever since I took
ANN ARBOR, Mich. the job it’s been on
my mind. I know what
– The numbers keep
growing, much to Ohio this game means to
the people of Ohio, to
State’s delight and
Buckeye Nation. And
much to Michigan’s
coming after one of
dismay.
the greatest coaches in
Ohio State’s 56-27
college football going
win over Michigan on
Saturday was the Buck- 7-0 (against Michigan),
eyes’ eighth in a row in those are big shoes to
ﬁll,” he said.
the Big Ten’s preemi“I tried not to worry
nent football rivalry.
It was their 15th win about that, our staff
tried not to worry
in the last 16 years
against the Wolverines about that and just
focus on right now.
and their 17th in the
last 19 years since that Anytime I started to
day in 2001 when Ohio think ‘What if? What
State made good on Jim if?’ I just got right
Tressel’s promise on the back into my work and
just focused on trying
day after he was hired
to put a good game
that they would make
the fans proud of them plan together and stay
focused on the task at
on the football ﬁeld in
Ann Arbor in 310 days. hand.”
Justin Fields passed
And it was Michigan
for 302 yards and four
coach Jim Harbaugh’s
touchdowns and J.K.
ﬁfth loss to Ohio State
in his ﬁfth season at his Dobbins gained 211
yards on 31 carries and
alma mater.
scored four touchdowns
Harbaugh was hired
to lead the offense on
to return Michigan to
Saturday.
college football’s elite.
Defensively, OSU
But in addition to not
regrouped at halfbeating Ohio State,
Harbaugh’s teams have time and shut down
not even won a Big Ten Michican’s pass heavy
offense. The WolverEast division title.
ines’ quarterback Shea
The baton of beatPatterson, who was 14
ing Michigan has been
of 19 for 250 yards and
passed from Tressel to
a touchdown in the ﬁrst
Urban Meyer to Ryan
Day without ever being half, was 4 of 24 for 55
yards did not ﬁnd the
dropped. Michigan’s
end zone in the ﬁnal
only win since 2003
two quarters.
was in OSU’s susThat defensive effort
pension-riddled 2011
season with an interim came without a sack
from Chase Young, who
coach, Luke Fickell,
who never expected to came into the game
ﬁnd himself in that situ- with 16.5 of them in
the nine games he had
ation.
Day talked about the played.
“Our defensive staff
responsibility he felt to
win this game after Sat- put together unbelievable defensive adjusturday’s latest chapter

jnaveau@limanews.com

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

30°

36°

35°

Mostly cloudy and chilly today. Mostly cloudy
tonight. High 40° / Low 33°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

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.

Precipitation

38°/36°
50°/32°
78° in 1982
11° in 1946

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Mon.
0.05
Month to date/normal
0.41/0.22
Year to date/normal
43.95/39.50

Snowfall

(in inches)

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

2

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Mon.
0.0
Month to date/normal
0.0/0.1
Season to date/normal
1.0/0.9

WEATHER TRIVIA™

SUN &amp; MOON

Q: What is the record low temperature
for the lower 48 states in December?

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

MOON PHASES
Full

First

Dec 4

Last

New

Dec 11 Dec 18 Dec 25

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

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

Major
5:01a
5:45a
6:26a
7:04a
7:40a
8:17a
8:56a

Minor
11:12a
11:56a
12:17a
12:54a
1:30a
2:06a
2:44a

Major
5:23p
6:07p
6:47p
7:24p
8:01p
8:39p
9:19p

Minor
11:34p
---12:36p
1:14p
1:51p
2:28p
3:07p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Dec. 3, 1886, a storm dropped
more than a foot of snow from
central Alabama to the western Carolinas. Rome, Ga., received 25 inches,
and Asheville, N.C., had 33 inches.

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

A: -59(F) at West Yellowstone, Mont.,
on Dec. 19, 1924

Today
Wed.
7:29 a.m. 7:30 a.m.
5:07 p.m. 5:07 p.m.
1:00 p.m. 1:28 p.m.
11:54 p.m.
none

Chilly with a blend of
sun and clouds

THURSDAY

Adelphi
37/31

AIR QUALITY
300

Waverly
38/33
Lucasville
39/33
Portsmouth
40/33

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 12.41 -0.02
Marietta
34 17.37 +0.96
Parkersburg
36 21.80 +0.06
Belleville
35 13.02 +0.01
Racine
41 13.09 -0.02
Point Pleasant
40 25.45 +0.23
Gallipolis
50 13.39 +0.83
Huntington
50 26.27 +0.73
Ashland
52 34.41 +0.45
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.41 +0.05
Portsmouth
50 21.00 +3.10
Maysville
50 34.20 none
Meldahl Dam
51 21.60 +2.80
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

Cloudy

45°
28°

62°
41°

Increasing cloudiness; Cloudy, rain possible
rain at night
in the afternoon

Marietta
38/32

Murray City
37/30
Belpre
39/33

Athens
38/32

St. Marys
38/32

Parkersburg
39/31

Coolville
38/31

Elizabeth
40/32

Spencer
37/31

Buffalo
39/32

Ironton
39/33

Milton
39/31

Clendenin
39/32

St. Albans
40/33

Huntington
40/33

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
52/47
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
61/51
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
70/56
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

55°
47°

Chilly with plenty of
sunshine

Wilkesville
39/31
POMEROY
Jackson
39/31
39/32
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
39/32
40/33
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
39/32
GALLIPOLIS
40/33
39/32
40/33

Ashland
39/33
Grayson
40/32

SUNDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
38/31

South Shore Greenup
40/33
39/32

36
0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
38/32

SATURDAY

49°
24°

Mostly sunny and
chilly

Logan
37/30

CINCINNATI (AP) — Back from a three-week
exile, Andy Dalton had more of a swagger in practice,
as though he was out to prove something.
“He had a chip on his shoulder all week,” running
back Joe Mixon said.
Dalton returned from one of the lowest points of
his nine-year career and got a long-awaited victory
Sunday for the coach who benched him, throwing a
touchdown pass during a 22-6 victory over the New
York Jets.
The Bengals (1-11) ended the longest losing streak
in their history and ﬁnally shed their distinction as
the NFL’s lone winless team. He got coach Zac Taylor his ﬁrst win and set two franchise career passing
records along the way.
The only thing he wouldn’t do is gloat.
“This one’s very satisfying, with everything I’ve
gone through this year,” Dalton said. “To be the
record-breaker today, being the ﬁrst one after not
playing the last three weeks, this one means a lot.”
Taylor benched Dalton after the eighth loss, deciding it was time to look toward next year and see if
Ryan Finley ﬁt in their plans. With the rookie struggling and the season careening toward 0-16, Taylor
reversed course and went back to Dalton, who made
the difference in front of the smallest crowd in Paul
Brown Stadium’s 20-year history.
“He did a great job pumping everybody up,” said
Tyler Boyd, who caught the touchdown pass. “He won
the game for us.”
Carlos Dunlap and Sam Hubbard dunked Taylor
with ice water in the ﬁnal seconds on a cold, gray,
December day when he got the inaugural win, courtesy of the quarterback he’d benched. Dalton got a game
ball as a thank you.
“For him to come back and lead us and get this win,
it says a lot about his character,” Taylor said.
Dalton also set a couple of franchise passing marks
in front of 39,804 fans, the smallest home crowd since
the ﬁnal game of the 1995 season at Cinergy Field.
Dalton put Cincinnati ahead to stay with a 17-yard
pass to Boyd that made him the Bengals’ career leader
in touchdown passes, moving ahead of Ken Anderson
with 198. He also passed Anderson for the franchise’s
career completion mark. Dalton ﬁnished 22 of 37 for
243 yards with no interceptions and one sack.
Joe Mixon had a 5-yard touchdown run against the
league’s stingiest run defense as the Bengals put up
their second-most points this season, trailing a 26-23
loss to Arizona.
Nothing good happened for the Jets (4-8), who had
their three-game winning streak snapped and became
the ﬁrst team to lose to two teams that were 0-7 or
worse in the same season. Miami was 0-7 when it beat
the Jets on Nov. 3.

FRIDAY

47°
30°

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

0

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

WEDNESDAY

47°
30°

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

OSU responded with
a 9-play, 75-yard touchdown drive on its ﬁrst
possession of the game.
Dobbins was responsible for every yard the
Buckeyes gained on
the drive, including a
34-yard run on his ﬁrst
carry, a 28-yard catch
and a 5-yard touchdown
run.
Ohio State led 28-16
at halftime and never
led its lead get below
15 points after scoring two touchdowns to
go up 42-16 late in the
third quarter.
Maybe nothing better
illustrates how important Ohio State considers this rivalry than
defensive end Jonathon
Cooper’s decision to
play on Saturday.
Cooper, who
announced his plans
to call this a redshirt
season and return next
season, had one remaining game he could
play before he hit the
redshirt limit of four
games this season.
He could have spent
it last week against
Penn State, he could
have waited for the
Big Ten championship
game against Wisconsin this Saturday in
Indianapolis. He could
have gambled that Ohio
State will reach the College Football Playoff
and used it there.
But he chose to play
against Michigan. “It
was tough. I was debating if I wanted to come
back for Penn State, the
Team Up North or the
Big Ten championship.
But I felt something
inside that this should
be the one and I’m very
happy with the decision
I made,” Cooper said.

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Dalton returns and
leads Bengals to 1st
win, 22-6 over Jets

Charleston
40/32

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
30/22

Billings
43/29

Montreal
32/22

Toronto
36/31

Minneapolis
35/28
Chicago
41/30

New York
39/31

Detroit
38/32

Denver
48/25

Washington
48/35

Kansas City
52/31

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
52/34/s
22/11/s
51/37/s
44/36/s
48/32/s
43/29/pc
41/31/pc
37/28/sn
40/32/c
52/33/pc
43/28/s
41/30/s
40/31/pc
38/32/c
38/32/c
66/39/s
48/25/s
45/30/s
38/32/c
84/72/pc
70/46/s
40/31/pc
52/31/s
61/48/pc
58/35/s
70/56/pc
45/34/pc
70/54/s
35/28/pc
50/34/pc
62/45/s
39/31/s
60/33/s
63/46/s
43/33/s
72/57/pc
37/30/c
33/19/sn
51/34/s
51/32/s
50/34/s
40/28/pc
61/51/c
52/47/pc
48/35/s

Hi/Lo/W
49/35/c
15/6/pc
59/39/s
46/37/pc
48/33/pc
42/26/pc
43/29/c
41/33/pc
46/30/pc
58/34/s
44/29/pc
42/27/pc
45/29/pc
40/32/sf
42/30/pc
65/47/pc
45/27/c
46/28/s
39/29/c
84/73/sh
72/52/pc
44/27/s
54/32/s
55/45/r
63/39/s
61/53/r
50/32/s
75/56/s
36/23/s
56/33/s
68/48/s
41/33/pc
61/42/pc
68/44/s
45/34/c
70/52/r
39/29/sf
38/25/pc
57/36/s
52/34/s
52/32/s
39/31/r
58/49/sh
51/42/r
51/36/pc

EXTREMES MONDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
51/37

High
Low

El Paso
64/42
Chihuahua
71/46

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

85° in Marathon, FL
-22° in Cotton, MN

Global
High
Low

Houston
70/46
Monterrey
76/52

Miami
70/54

111° in West Roebuck, Australia
-58° 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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