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                  <text>Racine’s
Tree-Mendous
Christmas

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

21°

38°

33°

Periods of clouds and sunshine today. Patchy
clouds tonight. High 44° / Low 25°

LOCAL s 4

Today’s
weather
forecast

Meigs
bounces
Blue Angels

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 197, Volume 72

Tuesday, December 11, 2018 s 50¢

Convicted
drug dealer
resentenced
By Sarah Hawley

activity were not
supported by sufﬁcient evidence;
the right to a
fair trial and due
POMEROY —
process were
A Columbus man
violated; and
had his prison
the imposition
sentence reduced Daboni
of maximum
by eight years
possible sentences
on Monday after the
on all counts was not
Fourth District Court
clearly and convincof Appeals remanded
ingly supported by the
the case for resentencrecord. Daboni raised
ing.
the following assignJacques Goerges K.
ments of error in his
Daboni, 27, appeared
own ﬁlings: his trial
alongside public
defenders John Cornely counsel was ineffective in either waiving
and Katherine Rossor failing to ﬁnish the
Kinzie for the hearing
suppression hearing;
before Judge I.Carson
his Fourth Amendment
Crow. Prosecutor
rights were violated
James K. Stanley and
when ofﬁcers searched
Assistant Prosecutor
Jeff Adkins represented his residence without
the state at the hearing. probable cause for
arrest and without
Daboni was initially
a search warrant or
serving a 32 year prison sentence after being consent; the trial court
convicted on charges in erred and abused its
discretion by failing to
three separate criminal
ensure Daboni had a
cases in 2016. Among
full suppression hearing
the convictions were
and his constitutional
trafﬁcking in heroin,
rights were protected;
possession of heroin
and that he is actually
and engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity. innocent.
The appeals court
On appeal, Daboni
afﬁrmed the decision of
claimed eight assignments of error, with the the court and overruled
all of the assignments
Fourth District Court
of error other than the
of Appeals agreeing
merger of the charges
with Daboni on one
for which he was resenof those errors. That
tenced on Monday.
resulted in Monday’s
In following the order
resentencing hearing.
of the appeals court,
As previously reportJudge Crow sentenced
ed, the lone error the
court of appeals agreed Daboni to a total prison
with involved the merg- term of 24 years, merging the two counts
ing of one count of
which had previously
possession of heroin, a
been ordered to run
second-degree felony,
consecutively at eight
with the trafﬁcking in
years each.
heroin charge.
In a separate matter
Other errors asserted
during Monday’s hearby Daboni’ counsel in
the appeal included, the ing, Daboni, through
verdicts for engaging
See DEALER | 5
in a pattern of corrupt

shawley@
aimmediamidwest.com

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Local: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
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thoughts.

Photos by Kayla Hawthorne

Santa was in attendance for the festivities in Racine on Saturday evening, listening to the Christmas wishes of many children.

Christmas in the Park
Staff Report

RACINE — Racine
hosted its ﬁrst “TreeMendous” Christmas on
Saturday evening with
crowds of people lining
the streets for the parade
and packing the park for
activities despite the cold
temperatures.
Several ﬂoats and
vehicles were decorated
in lights as they paraded
through the Village of
Racine on Saturday
night, part of the lighted
parade.
The below freezing
temperatures did not

stop the crowd from
sharing some Christmas
cheer. Following the
parade there was the tree
lighting, pictures with
Santa and hot chocolate
to help warm up at Star
Mill Park.
Santa and The Grinch
even came into town to
celebrate Christmas.
“I was amazed at the
turnout we had. I was
afraid that since it was
so cold, it might scare
people off,” said Councilwoman Ashli Peterman.
“Everyone that showed

See CHRISTMAS | 5

The Grinch mingles through the crowd at Racine’s Tree-Mendous
Christmas.

PVH awarded Joint Commission accreditation
Staff Report

POINT PLEASANT
— Pleasant Valley Hospital announced it received
accreditation from The
Joint Commission to add
a swing bed post-acute
rehabilitation program to
its inpatient service line.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
underwent a rigorous,
onsite survey conducted
on Friday, Dec. 7. During
its review, Joint Commission inspected the facility, reviewed personnel
ﬁles and patient records,
conducted interviews
with staff, and reviewed
hospital swing bed policies and procedures.
“We were pleased the
surveyor announced
there were no deﬁciencies and no recommendations for the survey. The
results are a testimony to
the hard work of our staff
in preparing for this new
service. Earning accreditation by the country’s
toughest surveyors
assures our patients that
Pleasant Valley Hospital’s inpatient services

Pleasant Valley Hospital

are among the best in
the nation,” said Glen
Washington, FACHE,
CEO. “Achieving swing
bed accreditation allows
physicians to ‘swing’
a patient’s level of care
from an acute level to
rehabilitation level while
keeping them in a hospital setting. The purpose
of the swing bed program
is to give patients individualized care and more
time to recover and gain
strength before leaving
the hospital.”
Passing a Joint Commission survey is a
process where health
care organizations dem-

Courtesy photo

onstrate compliance
with national standards.
Successfully passing a
survey by the Joint Commission reﬂects an organization’s dedication and
commitment to meeting
standards that facilitate
a higher level of performance and patient care.
“Passing the survey is
a signiﬁcant achievement
given Joint Commission’s
high standards,” stated
Amber Findley, Chief
Nursing Ofﬁcer and
Executive Director of
Nursing Services. “This
accreditation recognizes
our standards of care go
‘the extra mile’ to assure

quality in the services we
provide for our patients
and community. We are
excited to now offer this
service to physicians and
their patients.”
The Joint Commission
is a non-proﬁt accreditation organization that
has stood as a symbol
of quality and excellence for 67 years. The
Joint Commission offers
nationally recognized
accreditation services for
hospitals throughout the
United States.
Pleasant Valley Hospital offers patients and
their families a single
resource for high quality medical care needs
with immediate access
to their tertiary hospital, Cabell Huntington
Hospital, in Huntington,
W.Va. Pleasant Valley
Hospital serves patients
in Mason, Jackson
(W.Va.), Meigs and Gallia Counties. For more
information, please call
304-675-4340.
Information provided by Pleasant
Valley Hospital.

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�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, December 11, 2018

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS BRIEFS

MARA LEE ROUSH
RAVENSWOOD —
Mara Lee Roush, 87
of Ravenswood, West
Virginia, slipped away
peacefully in her sleep
Friday, Dec. 7, 2018. She
was born in Blackwell,
Oklahoma, on April
2, 1931, to Zilpha and
James Smith Roush, who
predecease her.
She was employed at
Kaiser Aluminum and
its successor companies
just after her graduation from West Virginia
University and she spent
her entire career working in the transportation
department. Her stories
of her days at “the plant”
entertained her family
for years and she enjoyed
meeting with her coworkers well after her
retirement. Mara Lee was
a longtime member of
First United Presbyterian
Church in Ravenwood.
She was an avid bridge

player and loved to travel.
She also enjoyed every
moment she spent with
her beloved dogs over the
years.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded
in death by her sister and
brother-in-law, Gloria and
Carl McDaniel.
Survivors include her
sister, Lana Miller, nieces
and nephews with their
spouses, Luke (Kathy)
McDaniel, Melinda
Jane Thompson, Mark
(Marmett) McDaniel,
Matt (Edana) McDaniel,
Tracy (Mark) Hudson,
Angela (Dennis) Taylor
and Alissa Miller Vickers.
She also leaves behind
several great nieces and
nephews and their children.
At her request, a small
family service was held
at Anderson-McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy, Ohio.

PRATT
CHESAPEAKE — William “Bill” Earl Pratt, 45, of
Chesapeake, passed away Friday December 7, 2018 at
Cabell Huntington Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral service will be conducted 3 p.m. Wednesday, December 12, 2018, at Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville. Private family burial will be
on Pratt Family Farm, South Point. Visitation will be
held 4 to 9 p.m., Tuesday, December 11, 2018, at the
funeral home.

community. The drive
is a coordinated effort
between Dollar General
of Rutland, Friends of
Rutland Committee on
Community Improvement and Meigs County
Department of Job and
Family Services. All
contributions will beneﬁt children of households who are currently
enrolled in a beneﬁt proMIDDLEPORT —
Letters to Santa may be gram of Meigs County
dropped off in a specially Department of Job and
Family Services. Eligible
marked box at Middlehouseholds will be those
port Village Hall. Be
located in the Village
sure to include a return
address as children may of Rutland or Rutland
receive a response from Township. Toys may be
dropped off in the approSanta.
priate receptacles at Dollar General of Rutland
and Rutland Post Ofﬁce.
The ﬁnal collection date
for contributions is Monday, Dec. 17, at 4 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT — A
toy drive is taking place
at Middleport Village
Hall to beneﬁt the
Department of Job and
Family Services Angel
Tree Program. New toys
POMEROY — The
may be dropped off at
American Legion Post
Middleport Village Hall
#39 Pomeroy will be
until Dec. 18. There is
selling fruit basket this
a wrapped box in the
year, with the proceeds
lobby where toys may be to help our local vetplaced.
erans. Cost for each
RUTLAND — Friends basket is $15. You may
of Rutland is holding
place your order by calla toy drive to beneﬁt
ing Steve VanMeter 740children of the Rutland
992-2875 or John Hood
Editor’s Note: Meigs
Briefs will only list event
information that is open
to the public and will
be printed on a spaceavailable basis.

Letters to
Santa

Toy
drive

Fruit
baskets

740-992-6991. The fruit
baskets well be ready by
Dec. 16.

Clinic to be
conducted

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health
Department will conduct
an Immunization Clinic
on Tuesday from 9-11
a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at
MIDDLEPORT —
112 E. Memorial Drive
The Meigs County
in Pomeroy. Please
Humane Society will
bring child(ren)’s shot
be providing straw for
records. Children must
animal bedding during
be accompanied by a
the months of Novemparent/legal guardian.
ber, December, January
A $30.00 donation is
and February. Vouchers
may be picked up at the appreciated for immunization administration;
Humane Society Thrift
Shop, 253 North Second however, no one will be
denied services because
Street, Middleport, for
of an inability to pay an
a fee of $2. Vouchers
administration fee for
are to be redeemed at
state-funded childhood
Dettwiller Lumber in
Pomeroy. There is a limit vaccines. Please bring
medical cards and/or
of one bale.
commercial insurance
cards, if applicable.
Those who are insured
via commercial insurance are responsible
for any balance their
commercial insurance
RUTLAND — The
does not cover for vacRutland Friendly
cinations. Shingles and
Gardeners Christmas
Lighting Contest will be pneumonia and vaccines
are also available as well
judged on Dec. 20 at 6
as ﬂu shots. Call for
p.m. Judging will take
eligibility determination
place on every street,
going down State Route and availability or visit
www.meigs-health.com
124 to Cooks Gap Hill
to see a list of accepted
and up New Lima Road
commercial insurances
to Joe Bolin’s. Money
and Medicaid for adults.
prizes will be awarded.

Animal
bedding

Christmas
contest

BRAY
COLUMBUS — Lucy Jeannette Bray, 78, of Columbus, formerly of Crown City, died on December 6,
2018.
A memorial gathering will be held on Wednesday,
December 12, 2018, from 5 -7 p.m. at Pfeifer Funeral
Home, Reynoldsburg, where her service will immediately follow at 7 p.m. with Pastor Aaron DeLong
ofﬁciating.
STEWART
GALLIPOLIS — Ray Calvin Stewart, 89, of Gallipolis, died on Thursday, December 6, 2018 at Holzer
Medical Center.
A private graveside service was held for Calvin at
Rife Cemetery with Pastor Alfred Holley ofﬁciating.
MIGHT
POMEROY — Tammy Kay Might, of Pomeroy, died
on Saturday, Dec. 8, 2018, at the St. Mary’s Hospital
in Huntington. Visitation will be held on Thursday,
Dec. 13, 2018, from 6-8 p.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
NEWMAN
SOUTHSIDE — Mary Virginia (Rhodes) Newman,
age 97, of Southside, died Sunday, Dec. 9 at Holzer
Senior Care of Gallipolis, Ohio.
Services will be at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home
Wednesday, Dec. 12. Visitation will be from 10-11
a.m., with the funeral service beginning at 11 a.m.
Burial will follow at Beech Hill Cemetery.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Actor Jean-Louis Trintignant is 88. Actress Rita
Moreno is 87. Pop singer David Gates (Bread) is 78.
Actress Donna Mills is 78. Former Sen. Max Baucus,
D-Mont., is 77. Former U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry is 75. Singer Brenda Lee is 74. Actress Lynda
Day George is 74. Music producer Tony Brown is 72.
Actress Teri Garr is 71. Movie director Susan Seidelman is 67. Actress Bess Armstrong is 65. Singer
Jermaine Jacksun is 64. Rock musician Mike Mesaros
(The Smithereens) is 61. Rock musician Nikki Sixx
(Motley Crue) is 60.

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 spaceavailable basis and in
chronological order.
Events can be emailed
to: TDSnews@aimmediamidwest.com.

Tuesday,
Dec. 11
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Board of
Health meeting will take
place at 5 p.m. in the
conference room of the
Meigs County Health
Department, which is
located at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy,
Ohio.
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, Acoustic
Night at the Library.
Join the group at 6 p.m.
for an informal jam session.
SUTTON TWP. —
The regular monthly
meeting of the Sutton
Township Trustees will
be held in the Racine
Village Hall Council
Chambers beginning at
6 p.m.

Wednesday,
Dec. 12
SCIPIO TWP. —

Scipio Township Trustees regular monthly
meeting is scheduled for
7 p.m. at the Harrisonville Fire House.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Health
Department will be
closed from noon to 4
p.m. for the staff Christmas party. Normal hours
will resume at 8 a.m. on
Dec. 13.
POMEROY — Thomas A. Shelton will present a message through
song at 6:30 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Church of
Christ.

Thursday,
Dec. 13
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, Gingerbread House Decorating, 6 p.m. All supplies
will be provided to create a festive cottage. All
ages welcome.
WELLSTON — The
GJMV Solid Waste
Management District
Board of Drectors
will meet 3:30 p.m. at
the district ofﬁce in
Wellston.

Friday,
Dec. 14

Saturday,
Dec. 15
POMEROY — Santa
will be at the Meigs
Musuem (144 Butternut, Pomeroy) from
noon to 4 p.m. Children
will have their picture
taken with Santa, make
a craft and receive a
treat. Come tell Santa
what you want him to
bring you for Christmas.
SALEM CENTER —
Star Grange will meet
with potluck supper at
6:30 p.m. and regular
meeting at 7:30 p.m. All
members are urged to
attend.

Monday,
Dec. 17
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, Family
Support Group, 3 p.m.
Support for those who
have family members
dealing with addiction.
Hosted by Hopewell
Health.
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, Book Club,
6 p.m. Read and discuss
“Winter Street” by Elin
Hilderbrand. Refreshments are served.

Wednesday,
Dec. 19

POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, Inspirational
Book Club, 10:30 a.m.
Read and discuss “The
Christmas Secret” by
MIDDLEPORT —
Wanda Brunstetter with The youth group of
us. Light refreshments
Ash Street Church, 398
are served.
Ash St, Middleport,

Ohio, will be presenting
a Christmas play at 6
p.m. King Herod hires
a detective to ﬁnd the
Wisemen.

Friday,
Dec. 21
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 11 a.m.
Cookbook Club. Cookie
Exchange. Bring a
dozen cookies to share
with others and take
a mixed dozen home.
Don’t forget to bring
the recipe to share.
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, Polar
Express Party, 1-3:30
p.m. Wear your pajamas to watch the Polar
Express on the big
“screen” at the library.
Crafts will be available after the showing.
Cookies and milk will
be served.

Dec. 24
and 25
MEIGS COUNTY
— All Meigs Library
locations are closed
for Christmas Eve and
Christmas Day.

Monday,
Dec. 31
MEIGS COUNTY
— All Meigs Library
locations will close at
5 p.m. for New Year’s
Eve.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155

TODAY IN HISTORY
charges of treason.
(Louis was convicted,
Today is Tuesday, Dec. and executed the following month.)
11, the 345th day of
In 1816, Indiana
2018. There are 20 days
became the 19th state.
left in the year.
In 1910, French invenToday’s Highlight in History tor Georges Claude publicly displayed his ﬁrst
On Dec. 11, 1972,
neon lamp, consisting of
Apollo 17’s lunar modtwo 38-foot-long tubes,
ule landed on the moon
with astronauts Eugene at the Paris Expo.
In 1917, British
Cernan and Harrison
Gen. Edmund Allenby
Schmitt aboard; they
became the last two men entered Jerusalem two
days after his forces
to date to step onto the
expelled the Ottoman
lunar surface.
Turks.
In 1936, Britain’s
On this date
In 1792, France’s King King Edward VIII abdicated the throne so he
Louis XVI went before
could marry American
the Convention to face
The Associated Press

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CONTACT US
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bhunt@aimmediamidwest.com

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mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com

EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

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

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divorcee Wallis Warﬁeld
Simpson; his brother,
Prince Albert, became
King George VI.
In 1937, Italy withdrew from the League
of Nations.
In 1941, Germany
and Italy declared war
on the United States;
the U.S. responded in
kind.
In 1961, a U.S.
aircraft carrier carrying Army helicopters
arrived in Saigon — the
ﬁrst direct American
military support for
South Vietnam’s battle
against Communist
guerrillas.
In 1980, President

Jimmy Carter signed
legislation creating a
$1.6 billion environmental “superfund” to pay
for cleaning up chemical
spills and toxic waste
dumps. “Magnum P.I.,”
starring Tom Selleck,
premiered on CBS.
In 1991, a jury in
West Palm Beach, Florida, acquitted William
Kennedy Smith of sexual assault and battery,
rejecting the allegations
of Patricia Bowman.
In 1997, more than
150 countries agreed at
a global warming conference in Kyoto, Japan,
to control the Earth’s
greenhouse gases.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 11, 2018 3

Scramble on to find new WH chief of staff
By Zeke Miller, Jill Colvin
and Jonathan Lemire
Associated Press

WASHINGTON —
Wanted: Top aide to
most powerful leader in
world. Chief qualiﬁcation: Willing to take the
job. Must also be prepared to tolerate regular
undermining by boss
and risk of steep legal
bills. Post-employment
prospects: Uncertain.
President Donald
Trump is scrambling to
ﬁnd a new chief of staff
after his ﬁrst choice to
replace John Kelly bailed
at the last minute and
several other potential
successors signaled they
weren’t interested in the
job.
Back to square one,
Trump is mulling over a
list of at least four potential candidates after Nick
Ayers, Vice President
Mike Pence’s chief of
staff, took himself out
of the running Sunday
and decided that he
would instead be leaving
the White House. The
announcement surprised
even senior staffers who
believed that Ayers’
ascension was a done
deal.
Trump is now soliciting input on a list of
candidates that is said
to include Ofﬁce of
Management and Budget
Director Mick Mulvaney,
Rep. Mark Meadows,
R-N.C., the chairman of
the conservative House
Freedom Caucus, and
former New Jersey Gov.
Chris Christie. And
allies are pitching Trump
on even more contenders.
But as quickly as

Jabin Botsford | The Washington Post via AP

Nick Ayers, right, listens as Supreme Court Associate Justice
Neil Gorsuch waits for the arrival of the casket for former
President George H.W. Bush to lie in State at the Capitol on
Dec. 3 on Capitol Hill in Washington. President Donald Trump’s
top pick to replace John Kelly as chief of staff, Nick Ayers, is
no longer expected to fill that role, according to a White House
official. The official says that Trump and Ayers could not agree
on Ayers’ length of service.

names were being ﬂoated, candidates appeared
to be pulling themselves
from consideration,
underscoring the challenges of working for
a mercurial president
who has acknowledged
that he likes to surround
himself with chaos and
despises any suggestion
he’s being managed.
“In the best of times, it
is relentless,” said Chris
Whipple, an expert on
chiefs of staff and author
of “The Gatekeepers,” a
book on the subject. “It’s
24/7. It’s thankless. You
get all of the blame and
none of the credit for
everything that happens.
And that’s in the best of
times. We are not in the
best of times.”
Trump’s administration has set records
for staff turnover, and
the president has often
struggled to attract experienced political professionals, a challenge that
has grown more difﬁcult
with the upcoming
threat of costly Demo-

cratic oversight investigations and an uncertain
political environment.
Those who take highlevel positions in the
White House at this time
open themselves up to
potential legal exposure
and pricey lawyer bills,
said David B. Cohen, a
political science professor at The University of
Akron who co-wrote a
book on chiefs of staff.
After reports surfaced
Monday that he was
unwilling to take the job,
Meadows told Politico
Playbook: “Serving as
Chief of Staff would be
an incredible honor. The
President has a long list
of qualiﬁed candidates
and I know he’ll make
the best selection for his
administration and for
the country.”
Meanwhile, U.S.
Trade Representative
Robert Lighthizer, a
potential contender,
said he was “entirely
focused” on his current position. A person
familiar with Treasury

Secretary Steven
Mnuchin’s thinking but
not authorized to speak
publicly made clear he,
too, is happy in his current post.
While some of the
reactions may be strategic posturing, there
is also ample reason for
any aspiring chief of
staff to give pause to the
notion of taking the job.
Trump has already
burned through two
chiefs of staff — a former chairman of the
Republican National
Committee and a retired
Marine four-star general
— subjecting them to
regular humiliation and
ridicule.
Former RNC Chairman Reince Priebus’s
departure from the
White House was unceremoniously announced
by tweet. Nearly 18
months later, Trump
stepped on an orderly
succession plan for
Kelly, making a surprise
Saturday announcement
on the White House
lawn that the retired
general would be leaving by year’s end.
Ayers’ ascension and
Kelly’s departure looked
like a done deal Friday
night, according to multiple people in and close
to the administration,
with an announcement
planned for Monday.
Trump and Ayers had
discussed the job for
months, and the president had already been
steering inquiries to the
Pence staffer rather than
Kelly. These people, like
others, spoke on the
condition of anonymity
to discuss sensitive personnel matters.

Tim Ireland | AP

A person dressed as British Prime Minister Theresa May stands on
Monday at a “Brexit Fudge” pop-up shop organized by pro-Europe
activists Best for Britain outside the Houses of Parliament in
London. Members of Parliament had been scheduled to vote today
on the EU withdrawal agreement. May has delayed that vote.

Brexit deal in turmoil
as May postpones
Parliament vote
By Jill Lawless
and Danica Kirka

a leading pro-Brexit
Conservative, expressed
Associated Press
despair.
“It’s not really governing,” he said. “It’s just an
LONDON — Facing
awful muddle.”
almost certain defeat,
Monday’s turmoil sent
British Prime Minister
the pound to a 20-month
Theresa May on Monlow against the dollar of
day postponed a vote in
Parliament on her Brexit $1.2550.
It was a new blow for
deal, saying she would go
May, who became prime
back to European Union
minister after Britain’s
leaders to seek changes
to the divorce agreement. 2016 referendum decision
to leave the EU. She has
With EU ofﬁcials adamant the withdrawal deal been battling ever since
— ﬁrst to strike a divorce
is not up for renegotiadeal with the bloc, then
tion, May’s move threw
Britain’s Brexit plans into to sell it to skeptical British lawmakers.
disarray, battered the
May insisted the agreepound and intensiﬁed the
ment hammered out
country’s political crisis.
with the EU after a year
Two-and-a-half years
and a half of negotiaafter Britain voted to
tions was “the best deal
leave the EU, and with
departure just over three that is negotiable.” But
it has been scorned by
months away on March
29, the country does not lawmakers on all sides
of Britain’s debate about
know on what terms it
will leave — and whether Europe.
Derisive laughter eruptMay will still be Britain’s
ed in the House of Comleader when it does.
In an emergency state- mons when May claimed
there was “broad supment to the House of
Commons, May accepted port” for many aspects of
that the divorce deal she the deal.
Pro-Brexit lawmakers
struck last month with
say the deal keeps Britain
EU leaders was likely to
bound too closely to the
be rejected “by a signiﬁEU, while pro-EU politicant margin” if the vote
cians say it erects barwere held Tuesday as
riers between the U.K.
planned.
and its biggest trading
May said she would
partner and leaves many
defer the vote so she
details of the future relacould seek “assurances”
tionship undecided.
from the EU and bring
The main sticking
the deal back to Parliapoint is a “backstop”
ment. She did not set a
provision that aims to
new date for the vote.
guarantee an open border
Lawmakers from the
between EU member
opposition — and from
May’s Conservative Party Ireland and the U.K.’s
Northern Ireland after
— were incredulous.
Brexit. The measure
“The government has
lost control of events and would keep Britain under
EU customs rules, and is
is in complete disarray,”
supposed to last until it is
said opposition Labour
superseded by permanent
leader Jeremy Corbyn.
new trade arrangements.
Jacob Rees-Mogg,

Macron vows tax relief, hopes to quell protests
Associated Press

PARIS — President
Emmanuel Macron
broke his silence Monday on the exceptional
protests shaking France
and his presidency,
promising broad tax
relief for struggling
workers and pensioners
— and acknowledging
his own responsibility
in fueling the nation’s
anger.
Speaking with a soft
voice and gentle tone,
Macron pleaded during
a brief televised address
for a return to calm after
almost four weeks of
protests that started in
neglected provinces to
oppose fuel tax increases and progressed to
rioting in Paris.
“We are at a historic
moment for our country,” the French leader
said from the capital’s
presidential Elysee Palace. “We will not resume
the normal course of our
lives” after all that has
happened.
Protesters spent days
demanding that Macron
speak publicly about
their concerns, but it’s
unclear whether the
responses he offered will
be enough to quell the
dissatisfaction. Some
protest representatives
have said more demonstrations will be held
Saturday, following the
ones in Paris that turned
violent during the previous two weekends.
Macron declared an
“economic and social
state of emergency,”
ordering the government and parliament to
take immediate steps
to change tax rules and
other policies that hit
the wallets of working
class French people.
He responded to sev-

eral of the protesters’
demands, promising
measures that included:
-a government-funded
100-euro increase in the
minimum wage starting
at the beginning of the
new year
-the abolition of taxes
on overtime pay in 2019
-asking proﬁt-making
companies to give workers tax-free year-end
bonuses
-slashing a tax hike on
small pensions, acknowledging it was “unjust.”
“I take my share of
responsibility” for the
anger gripping France,”
Macron said, an unusual
admission for a president accused of being
out-of-touch. “I might
have hurt people with
my words.”
However, the centrist
leader insisted that the
protesters’ “malaise”
is as old as he is — 40
years — and coincides
with France struggling
in recent decades to
keep up with globalization.
And he denounced
the protest-associated
violence that led to hundreds of injuries, more
than 1,000 arrests and
the ransacking of stores
in some of Paris’ richest
neighborhoods.
Authorities will show
“no indulgence” to those
behind the vandalism
and rioting, Macron
said, adding that “no
anger justiﬁes” attacking
police or looting stores.
The president’s long
silence since the ﬁrst
protests last month
aggravated that anger.
Many protesters hoped
only to hear one thing
Monday from Macron:
“I quit.”
He showed no signs
of giving in. Instead,
he defended his political independence and
described his devotion

to serving France. No
French presidential or
parliamentary elections
are scheduled until
2022.
Grafﬁti scrawled
throughout the French
capital singles Macron
out for criticism, reﬂecting a national sense that
the former banker is
arrogant and removed
from public concerns.
But he has appeared
out determined to continue trying to make the
French economy more
competitive globally.
Before his TV speech,
Macron met with local
and national politicians
and with union and business leaders to hear their
concerns — but with no
representatives of the
scattered, leaderless protest movement.
Small business representatives lamented the
blow the demonstrations
were dealing to retail
and other companies at
the height of the Christmas shopping season.
Finance Minister
Bruno Le Maire said
new measures should
focus on helping France’s
working classes.
“We are ready to make
any gesture” that works,
he said on RTL radio.
“What is important now
is to put an end to the
crisis and ﬁnd peace
and unity in the country
again.”
Fallout from the protests so far could cost
France 0.1 percent of
gross domestic product
in the last quarter of the
year, Le Maire warned.
“That means fewer
jobs, it means less prosperity for the whole
country,” he said.
The yellow vest protests began in November
against a rise in fuel
taxes — which Macron
retreated from last week
— but mushroomed into

a plethora of sometimes
contradictory demands.
Lately, they have included Macron’s resignation.
“Macron is there
for the rich, not for all
the French,” 68-yearold retiree Jean-Pierre
Meunuer said at Saturday’s protest in Paris.
With the new demonstrations planned Saturday, some police ofﬁcers
who spent multiple
weekends on crowd and
riot patrol are calling for
their own tax-exempt
overtime pay.

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�4 Tuesday, December 11, 2018

LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Racine’s ‘Tree-Mendous’ Christmas

The Grinch and a Snowman rode in the parade on Saturday evening
in Racine.
The reindeer led this Jeep which served as a sleigh for The Grinch riding on top of it.

Kayla Hawthorne photos

Santa made his way down the parade route before greeting the children at Star Mill Park.

The Christmas tree was on display at Star Mill Park, with the tree lighting held as part of Saturday’s
event.

A car with reindeer antlers was among the parade participants.

The Southern Band performed as part of the parade and the post-parade activities.

Some floats included inflatables, trees and other Christmas decorations.

Vehicles of all types were decorated for Christmas as part of the parade.

Several Jeeps were decorated as part of the parade.

Fire trucks from the Racine Volunteer Fire Department, as well as other area departments were part
of the event.
Several Jeeps were decorated as part of the parade, including this one with an Angel on top.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 11, 2018 5

IN BRIEF

Record count reported for illness
AP Medical Writer

Acute Flaccid Myelitis cases in 2018

NEW YORK — This
year has seen a record
number of cases of a mysterious paralyzing illness
in children, U.S. health
ofﬁcials said Monday.
It’s still not clear what’s
causing the kids to lose
the ability to move their
face, neck, back, arms or
legs. The symptoms tend
to occur about a week
after the children had a
fever and respiratory illness.
No one has died from
the rare disease this year,
but it was blamed for one
death last year and it may
have caused others in the
past.
What’s more, Centers
for Disease Control and
Prevention ofﬁcials say
many children have
lasting paralysis. And
close to half the kids
diagnosed with it this
year were admitted to
hospital intensive care
units and hooked up to
machines to help them
breathe.
The condition has been
likened to polio, a dreaded paralyzing illness that
once struck tens of thousands of U.S. children a
year. Those outbreaks
ended after a polio vac-

AFM, a mysterious and rare paralyzing illness in children,
has seen a record number of reported cases this year and
it's not clear why.

Christmas
From page 1

up to be in the parade
was awesome. Then
when I got to the park,
I was stunned. It turned
out better than I had ever
imagined it would being
the ﬁrst year. My heart
was so full.”
Peterman said that the
event was the work of

1-4

From page 1

cine became available in
the 1950s. Investigators
of the current outbreak
have ruled out polio,
ﬁnding no evidence of
that virus in recent cases.
The current mystery
can be traced to 2012,
when three cases of limb
weakness were seen in
California. The ﬁrst real
wave of conﬁrmed illnesses was seen in 2014,

when 120 were reported.
Another, larger wave
occurred in 2016, when
there were 149 conﬁrmed cases. So far this
year, there have been 158
conﬁrmed cases.
In 2015 and 2017, the
counts were far lower,
and it’s not clear why.
The condition is called
acute ﬂaccid myelitis, or
AFM. Investigators have

suspected it is caused by
a virus called EV-D68.
The 2014 wave coincided
with a lot of EV-D68
infections and the virus
“remains the leading
hypothesis,” said Dr.
Ruth Lynﬁeld, a member of a 16-person AFM
Task Force that the CDC
established last month
to offer advice to disease
detectives.

many.
Council members
worked to decorate, as
well as the village workers lending a helping
hand wherever needed.
RACO provided hot
chocolate for attendees
and donated the parade
prizes, with the bake-off
prizes donated by Melanie Quillen. The tree for
the park was donated by
Shuler’s Tree Farm. Cliff
Thomas (Skye Produc-

tions) donated his DJ
equipment and played
music.
“It was a little bit of
everyone pitching in to
help make it happen,”
added Peterman.
During the activities
in Star Mill Park, Mayor
Scott Hill read Twas the
Night Before Christmas,
with Pastor Duke Holbert
reading the Christmas
story from the Bible.
Chamber Executive

Director Shelly Combs
assisted with the judging
of parade entries. The
Racine Village Police Ofﬁcers judged the bake-off.
“We deﬁnitely want
to make this an annual
event. We hope to only
improve on what we had
this year,” concluded
Peterman.

2 PM

21°

38°

33°

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)

Today
7:37 a.m.
5:07 p.m.
10:56 a.m.
9:07 p.m.

Wed.
7:37 a.m.
5:07 p.m.
11:32 a.m.
10:03 p.m.

MOON PHASES
First

Full

Last

Dec 15 Dec 22 Dec 29

New

Jan 5

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

Major
Today 2:21a
Wed. 3:13a
Thu. 4:03a
Fri.
4:50a
Sat.
5:34a
Sun. 6:16a
Mon. 6:57a

Minor
8:33a
9:25a
10:14a
11:01a
11:45a
12:07a
12:46a

Major
2:45p
3:36p
4:26p
5:12p
5:56p
6:38p
7:19p

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: What is freezing rain?

SUN &amp; MOON
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

1

Minor
8:57p
9:48p
10:37p
11:23p
---12:27p
1:08p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Dec. 11, 1992, a powerful storm
brought over 30 inches of snow to
parts of central Pennsylvania. Wind
gusts topped 85 mph in Wildwood,
N.J., and hurricane-force wind gusts
occurred in Central Park.

A: Raindrops that freeze upon contact
with the ground or other objects

Snowfall

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.

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

Waverly
42/24
Lucasville
43/25
Portsmouth
44/27

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. yesterday

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.36 +0.31
Marietta
34 17.70 -0.60
Parkersburg
36 22.31 -0.43
Belleville
35 12.84 +0.13
Racine
41 12.81 -0.11
Point Pleasant
40 25.42 +0.16
Gallipolis
50 12.34 +0.12
Huntington
50 27.63 -0.88
Ashland
52 35.48 -0.32
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.68 -0.14
Portsmouth
50 22.20 -2.20
Maysville
50 34.90 -0.40
Meldahl Dam
51 22.80 -2.40
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailyregister.com
and submit your photos
SATURDAY

49°
35°

Rain

48°
33°

Clouds and sun

Marietta
41/24

Murray City
40/22
Belpre
42/25

Athens
41/23

St. Marys
41/25

Parkersburg
40/25

Coolville
41/24

Elizabeth
42/25

Spencer
42/25

Buffalo
43/25

Ironton
43/27

Milton
43/26

Clendenin
43/24

St. Albans
44/27

Huntington
43/28

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
51/42
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
58/51
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
T-storms
70/49
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

49°
34°

Periods of rain

Wilkesville
41/24
POMEROY
Jackson
42/24
42/24
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
43/25
43/24
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
41/27
GALLIPOLIS
44/25
43/25
43/25

Ashland
43/27
Grayson
44/28

SUNDAY

Sun and clouds

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
41/22

South Shore Greenup
44/27
43/26

81

Logan
40/22

Adelphi
41/23
Chillicothe
41/24

log onto

51°
42°

Intervals of clouds
and sunshine

PRE-QUALIFY WITHOUT
AFFECTING YOUR CREDIT.

WIN
up to
$100

FRIDAY

51°
37°

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

0

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.0
Month to date/normal
0.8/0.8
Season to date/normal
1.6/1.6

Partly sunny

Periods of clouds and sunshine today. Patchy
clouds tonight. High 44° / Low 25°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.00
Month to date/normal
0.46/1.11
Year to date/normal
55.90/40.39

THURSDAY

45°
35°

HEALTH TODAY

(in inches)

WEDNESDAY

sion of evidence in the
case. Crow denied the
motion.
Following the hearing
Daboni was transported
back to NorthEast Ohio
Correctional Center following Monday’s hearing to resume serving
his sentence.

FINANCING AVAILABLE

Sentinel freelance writer Kayla
Hawthorne and managing editor
Sarah Hawley contributed to this
report.

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

Precipitation

Cornely, made an oral
motion for a new trial
in the case due to
claims of lack of probable cause and suppres-

SOURCE: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

ALMANAC
40°/20°
47°/30°
76° in 1971
0° in 1917

15+

Dealer

8 AM

High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

10-15

R.I.
Del.

TODAY

WEATHER

5-9

son, who was indicted
on sexual assault charges and pleaded no contest to a lesser charge
of unlawful restraint. A
WACO, Texas (AP)
no contest plea means
— A Texas judge on
a defendant does not
Monday accepted a
plea bargain allowing a admit guilt, but will
offer no defense.
former Baylor UniverThe deal from prossity fraternity president
ecutors allowed Anderaccused of rape to
son to receive deferred
avoid serving jail time,
prompting outrage from probation. The ex-Phi
Delta Theta president
the former Baylor student who ﬁled the com- agrees to seek counseling and pay a $400 ﬁne.
plaint and her parents.
Judge Ralph Strother Anderson will not be
forced to register as a
accepted the plea deal
for Jacob Walter Ander- sex offender.

OH-70093387

By Mike Stobbe

Frat president
avoids jail

Charleston
41/27

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
23/19

Billings
43/33

Montreal
24/14
Minneapolis
27/20

Toronto
33/24
Chicago
35/27

Denver
52/27

Detroit
36/24

New York
39/30
Washington
44/31

Kansas City
50/28

Chihuahua
69/46

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
50/28/pc
32/22/sn
52/31/s
43/32/s
42/28/s
43/33/sn
36/31/s
38/26/s
41/27/pc
45/26/pc
41/27/c
35/27/pc
42/28/s
35/25/pc
39/25/pc
62/49/s
52/27/pc
42/25/pc
36/24/pc
81/73/pc
63/48/s
41/27/pc
50/28/pc
63/42/s
55/39/s
70/49/s
47/32/s
67/51/s
27/20/pc
49/33/s
56/39/s
39/30/s
55/35/pc
59/39/s
42/29/s
73/47/pc
34/23/pc
32/17/s
41/24/s
42/22/s
51/38/s
38/29/c
58/51/s
51/42/r
44/31/s

Hi/Lo/W
53/25/pc
27/18/sn
54/39/pc
43/32/s
41/27/s
46/26/c
39/23/c
35/22/pc
46/34/pc
48/31/pc
43/20/pc
37/30/sn
43/36/pc
38/34/pc
40/34/pc
64/52/c
53/24/s
37/27/c
37/32/pc
82/71/s
69/60/c
42/31/sh
46/29/c
64/38/s
55/48/c
70/49/s
49/41/sh
74/68/pc
30/22/c
52/44/c
66/56/pc
39/29/s
57/39/c
67/50/pc
42/28/s
69/43/pc
36/30/pc
29/8/s
45/27/s
42/25/s
51/34/c
36/21/sn
59/43/pc
49/46/r
43/31/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
52/31
El Paso
61/44

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

High
Low

Global

Houston
63/48

Monterrey
66/47

78° in Key West, FL
-16° in Daniel, WY

High
Low
Miami
67/51

113° in Paraburdoo, Australia
-56° in Delyankirskiy, Russia

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

You’ll’llFeel
F Right
l At Home.

Racine 740-949-2210
Syracuse 740-992-6333
Middleport 740-691-5131

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Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close
a loan quickly. Please come see us for all your bank needs, we
promise to make you feel right at home.

�Sports
6 Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Hannan rolls past Defenders, 65-47
Coleman, Beaver both reach 1,000-point plateau
By Bryan Walters

50-27 advantage headed into
the fourth.
Beaver’s big moment came
at the 3:03 mark as the senior
ASHTON, W.Va. — A winhit a step-back 3-pointer from
win situation from a win-lose
the right wing for a 45-26 deﬁscenario.
Hannan senior Dalton Cole- cit, making Beaver the ninth
man and Ohio Valley Christian boy in OVCS history to reach
quadruple digits in a career.
senior Justin Beaver both
A little over a minute later
reached the 1,000-point career
plateau during a 65-47 Hannan — at the 1:41 mark to be exact
— Coleman hit his milestone
victory in a non-conference
boys basketball contest Friday on an 18-foot jumper from the
right elbow, allowing Hannight in Mason County.
nan to increase its lead out
Both seniors accomplished
the career feat during a pivotal to 50-27 before entering the
third quarter that saw the host ﬁnale.
Coleman — who entered
Wildcats (1-1) turn a 10-point
halftime cushion into a sizable the night needing 25 points

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Hannan senior Dalton Coleman (13) and Ohio Valley Christian senior Justin
Beaver (14) both reached the 1,000-point career plateau on Friday night during
the Wildcats’ 65-47 victory over the Defenders in a non-conference matchup in
Ashton, W.Va. Joining the record-setting duo are HHS coach Shawn Coleman,
left, and OVCS coach Steve Rice.

to reach the 1,000 mark —
scored 13 points during that
21-8 third quarter surge, and
became the eighth Wildcat in
school history to reach quadruple digits in the process.
The Defenders (1-5) never
led in the contest and trailed
for all but 35 seconds in regulation. Coleman broke a 2-all
tie with a jumper at the 6:03
mark that gave HHS a permanent lead at 4-2 en route to a
19-8 ﬁrst quarter advantage.
A pair of Beaver free throws
capped an 8-2 run to start
the second frame, making it a
See HANNAN | 7

Marauders
halted by Oak
Hill, 70-55
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — A slow start teamed
with an opponent that just can’t miss makes for a
long Saturday.
The Meigs boys basketball team tallied just
four points in the opening quarter its non-conference bout with Oak Hill at Rio Grande’s Newt
Oliver Coaches Classic, with the Oaks shooting
over 55 percent from the ﬁeld on their way to a
70-55 victory.
Meigs (2-2) trailed by a 19-4 count at the end
of the opening period, with Oak Hill outscoring
the Marauders 17-to-16 in the second quarter to
make the margin 36-20 at halftime.
The Maroon and Gold doubled their ﬁrst half
total in the third quarter, but OHHS matched the
Marauders’ effort and took a 56-40 lead into the
ﬁnale.
Meigs tallied 15 points over the ﬁnal eight
minutes, but the Oaks sealed the 70-55 win with
16 points, a dozen of which came from the free
throw line.
For the game, Meigs shot 19-of-54 (35.2 percent) from the ﬁeld, including 2-of-15 (13.3
percent) from beyond the arc, while Oak Hill was
20-of-36 (55.6 percent) from the ﬁeld, including
4-of-9 (44.4 percent) from deep.
OHHS was 26-of-38 (68.4 percent) from the
free throw line in the game, while MHS was
15-of-27 (.6 percent).
The Oaks won the rebounding battle by a
37-to-26 clip, despite a 13-to-7 deﬁcit on the
offensive end. Collectively, the Marauders had
ﬁve assists, four steals and six turnovers, while
OHHS marked 11 assists, two steals, six blocked
shots and 11 turnovers.
Weston Baer paced MHS with 26 points on
eight two-pointers, a pair of triples, and a quartet
of free throws. Coulter Cleland was next with
eight points, ﬁve rebounds and two assists. Zach
Bartrum chipped in with six points, while Nick
Lilly recorded ﬁve points and ﬁve boards in the
setback.
Wyatt Hoover scored four points for the
Maroon and Gold, Cole Betzing added three, Ty
Bartrum came up with two, while Bobby Musser
ﬁnished with one. Baer, Lilly, Betzing and Zach
Bartrum each had a steal for the MHS defense.
Chase Hammond led Oak Hill with a doubledouble of 21 points and 13 rebounds. Mason
Darby also had a double-double for the Oaks,
posting 14 points and 11 rebounds, to go with a
See MARAUDERS | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Dec. 11
Boys Basketball
South Gallia at Eastern,
6 p.m.
River Valley at Point
Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Rock Hill at Gallia
Academy, 6 p.m.
Waterford at Wahama, 6
p.m.
Southern at Federal
Hocking, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Marietta, 6 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Point Pleasant at Ripley,
7 p.m.
Wrestling
Athens at River Valley,
5:30

Wednesday, Dec. 12
Wrestling
Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Thursday, Dec. 13
Girls Basketball
Meigs at River Valley, 6
p.m.
Belpre at Wahama, 6 p.m.
South Point at Gallia
Academy, 6 p.m.
Miller at South Gallia, 6
p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Winfield,
7 p.m.
Wrestling
Independence, Hoover at
Point Pleasant, 5:30

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Meigs senior Kassidy Betzing (center) drives through the Gallia Academy defense, during the Lady Marauders’ 60-25 victory on Saturday
in Rocksprings, Ohio.

Meigs bounces Blue Angels, 60-25
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
— There just wasn’t
much the Lady Marauders tried that didn’t
work.
The Meigs girls basketball team defeated nonconference guest Gallia
Academy by a 60-25 tally
on Saturday in Larry R.
Morrison Gymnasium,
with the Maroon and
Gold leading wire-towire.
Meigs (5-1) — which
didn’t commit a turnover
in the ﬁrst 14 minutes
of play — held Gallia
Academy (3-2) scoreless
for over three minutes to
start the game, getting
out to an 11-0 lead.
The Lady Marauders
led 20-4 by the end of the
ﬁrst quarter, and then hit
three consecutive threepointers to open the
second. The Maroon and
Gold led by as many as
33 points in the period
and took a 44-13 edge
into the break.
The hosts began the
second half with a 9-0
run and led by a gamehigh 40 points with four
minutes left in the third
quarter. The Blue Angels
scored the ﬁnal eight
points of the period,
trimming the margin to
53-21 headed into the
ﬁnale.
The hosts capped off
their 60-25 victory with a
7-to-4 fourth quarter run.
Following the win,
third-year MHS head
coach Jarrod Kasun
noted his team may

be ﬁnally healthy, and
the gameplan was well
executed.
“It was nice to have a
full compliment of players,” Kasun said. “We’ve
been suffering from some
sickness, and this time
we had our full varsity
eight, everybody felt
pretty good. We thought
we could pressure them,
we did, we hit some early
shoots too, that always
helps loosen you up.
Defense has been our
calling card the last few
years.”
First-year GAHS
head coach Jordan Deel
acknowledged that his
team didn’t do what it
took to win the game
from the onset, but that
things looked better after
the half.
“They came out and
we didn’t match their
intensity or their effort,
and they got a huge lead
on us,” Deel said. “In
the second half we did
much better at being
aggressive, but at the
same time you have to
play four quarters. That’s
what it takes against
good teams like Meigs.
They did a great job
today, had some seniors
step up and make some
shots for them.”
In the win, Meigs shot
24-of-64 (37.5 percent)
from the ﬁeld, including
7-of-22 (31.8 percent)
from three-point range.
Meanwhile, GAHS was
10-of-38 (26.3 percent)
from the ﬁeld, including
2-of-9 (22.2 percent)
from deep. At the free
throw line, the Lady

Meigs senior Alyssa Smith (20) launches a three-pointer, during
the Lady Marauders’ 60-25 victory on Saturday in Rocksprings,
Ohio.

Marauders were 5-of-9
(55.6 percent) and the
Blue Angels were 3-of-6
(50 percent).
The hosts enjoyed a
39-to-27 rebounding
advantage, including
20-to-10 on the offensive
end. Collectively, the
Lady Marauders had 16
assists, 15 steals, one
blocked shot and nine
turnovers. Gallia Academy recorded team totals
of eight assists, ﬁve
steals, two rejections and
22 turnovers.
MHS senior Madison Fields hit a pair of
three-pointers and led
the Maroon and Gold
with a double-double
effort of 14 points and 12
rebounds. Becca Pullins
scored 12 points on a

quartet of triples, while
Mallory Hawley ﬁnished
with 11 points and seven
rebounds. Fields and
Hawley tied for a gamehigh with ﬁve assists
each, while Hawley led
the MHS defense with
four steals and a rejection.
Kassidy Betzing scored
eight points for the
victors, Alyssa Smith
added seven, while Jerrica Smith came up with
four. Taylor Swartz and
Marissa Noble capped off
the winning total with
two points apiece.
GAHS was led by
sophomore Maddy
Petro, who marked teamhighs of nine points,
See MEIGS | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 11, 2018 7

Blue Devils 4th at Logan Invite

Eagles finish
8th at Warren

By Bryan Walters

third place positions.
Senior Lane Pullins posted a
5-0 record en route to winning
the 182-pound title, while junior
LOGAN, Ohio — The Gallia
Logan Grifﬁth did the same at
Academy wrestling team came
220 pounds. Both Pullins and
away with two individual chamGrifﬁth also scored a pair of pinpions and eight top-six ﬁnishes
fall wins in the process.
on Saturday at the 2018 Logan
Freshmen Garytt Schwall and
Invitational held on the campus
of Logan High School in Hocking Brayden Easton earned runner-up
honors at 106 pounds and 170
County.
pounds, respectively. Easton went
The Blue Devils amassed 163
4-1 overall with three pinfall wins,
points as a group, which ended
up being good enough for a fourth while Schwall ended the day 3-2
overall with two pinfalls.
place ﬁnish in the 14-team ﬁeld.
Freshman Grant Bryan was
Fairﬁeld Union won the annual
fourth at 132 pounds with a 2-2
event with a tally of 257 points,
overall mark, while senior Jonawith Groveport-Madison (231)
than Shephard was ﬁfth at 285
and Nelsonville-York (181.5)
pounds with two pinfalls and a 2-2
rounding out the runner-up and

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

VINCENT, Ohio — A pair of silver medals and an
eighth-place overall ﬁnish.
With a two runner-up ﬁnishers, the Eastern wrestling team claimed eighth out of 12 teams in the Hickory Grove Market Invitational on Saturday at Warren
High School.
New Lexington won the event with a total of 412,
a full 194 ahead of second place Maysville. Jackson
was third at 212, followed by the host Warriors at 200,
Morgan at 161 and Athens at 111. Waterford was seventh with a score of 110.5, 6.5 ahead of the Eagles.
Rounding out the ﬁeld were Fort Frye with 97,
Marietta with 73, Belpre with 63 and Federal Hocking
with 38.
Leading Eastern with second place ﬁnishes were
junior Daniel Harris and sophomore Steven Fitzgerald. Both Eagles were 4-1, Harris in the 160-pound
weight class, and Fitzgerald at 220.
Also going 4-1 for EHS was 152-pound senior Dillon Aeiker, who wound up with ﬁfth place in the division. Harris, Fitzgerald and Aeiker each improve to
8-2 on the season.
Ryan Ross was 1-4 en route to a ﬁfth place mark at
120 pounds for the Eagles, while Blake Newland took
sixth at 152 with a 2-3 mark. Nick Little was 2-3 for a
seventh place ﬁnish at 220 pounds, while Ethan Kline
came in 8th at 285 pounds with a 1-4 record.
The Eagles are scheduled to return to action on
Wednesday at Trimble.

Hannan

about his accomplishment. And, as he noted,
he was also very proud
that it came in a vicFrom page 6
tory — particularly his
father’s ﬁrst.
21-16 contest with 5:09
“First and foremost, I
remaining in the half.
want to thank God and
The guests, however,
my family for always
were never closer as
being there for me. My
Hannan closed the half
friends, my teammates,
on an 8-3 run to secure
my coaches and the coma 29-19 cushion at the
munity, they are all a
break.
part of this moment. A
The Wildcats — who
owned a 26-15 rebound- lot of people have helped
me get to this point in
ing edge at the break,
my career,” Coleman
including a 13-9 lead
said. “It means a lot to
on the offensive boards
me because I’m join— hit ﬁve of their ﬁrst
ing a lot of really good
ten shot attempts and
basketball players up on
10-of-17 overall during
that banner. More importhat pivotal 21-8 third
tantly, I’m glad it came
quarter surge.
in a win … especially
OVCS was never
my dad’s ﬁrst victory as
closer than 10 points in
the second half and came coach. It’s been a pretty
special night for us, for
no closer in the fourth
than 58-43 with 3:05 left. sure.”
Conversely, Beaver
Hannan led by as many
acknowledged the disapas 25 points (52-27)
pointment in reaching
with 6:27 remaining in
a personal milestone
regulation.
in defeat … but the
The win was the ﬁrst
senior was still upbeat
for new HHS coach
in discussing a boyhood
Shawn Coleman, who
dream coming true.
coincidentally became
Beaver — the fourth
one of the proudest
papas in the building on member of Ohio Valley
Christian’s 2015 OCSAA
Friday night after having his son Dalton join a state championship
pretty elite group of play- team to reach quadruple
digits in a career — is
ers in Wildcat history.
In discussing the mile- also ready to move on
stone, the younger Cole- to the rest of the regular
season.
man was very humble

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Carr leads Raiders
past Steelers 24-21
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Coach Jon Gruden ran
off the ﬁeld high-ﬁving Oakland fans on the way to
the locker room.
In a season with very little to celebrate, the Raiders
had plenty to feel good about Sunday.
Derek Carr threw a 6-yard touchdown pass to Derek
Carrier with 21 seconds left before Chris Boswell
slipped on a potential game-tying 40-yard ﬁeld goal
attempt on the ﬁnal play of the Raiders’ 24-21 victory
over the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Carr threw two touchdown passes to overcome
fourth-quarter deﬁcits and the Raiders (3-10) then
survived after allowing a 48-yard hook-and-lateral pass
play that set up the ﬁnal ﬁeld goal try.
“The character of this team is impressive,” Gruden
said. “No matter what anybody says or saw today, the
character in there is special.”
Carr threw for 322 yards, including a 3-yard TD
to Lee Smith that put Oakland up 17-14 with 5:20 to
play. His second TD to Carrier capped his 16th career
fourth-quarter game-winning drive.

record.
Sophomore C.J. Berkley went
1-3 overall at 126 pounds, good
enough for sixth place. Junior
Bronson Carter was also sixth at
152 pounds with a 2-3 mark. Carter scored two pinfalls and Berkley
also notched one pinfall win.
Fairﬁeld Union led the event
with four divisional champions,
followed by Nelsonville-York with
three. GAHS and Adena were next
with two champions apiece, while
Columbus Academy, Crooksville
and Groveport-Madison each landed a single weight class champion.
Visit baumspage.com for complete results of the 2018 Logan
Invitational held Saturday at
Logan High School.

“It means a lot to me
because there are some
really good players
on the board already,
and there have been
some really good players that didn’t make it
to this point. Joining
the list of people who
reached 1,000 points is
something I’ve always
dreamed of doing, but
I’m kind of at loss for
words now that I’ve
made it. It’s just an
honor to be up there,”
Beaver said. “It would
have been better if it
would have come in a
win, but it’s still a great
honor. There are a lot of
people to thank, but I’m
also glad this is over so
that we can just get back
to playing basketball.”
The Wildcats outrebounded OVCS by a
51-38 overall margin,
including a slim 20-19
edge on the offensive
glass. Both teams committed 21 turnovers
apiece in the contest.
The hosts connected
on 28-of-76 ﬁeld goal
attempts for 37 percent,
which included a 3-of-25
effort from behind the
arc for 12 percent.
Coleman led Hannan with a game-high
25 points, followed by
Chandler Starkey with
eight points. Logan
Barker and Casey

TUESDAY EVENING

Meigs

involved in, even though
we were on the losing
end of it,” Kasun said. “It
was such a great game,
From page 6
they hit big shots, we hit
big shots, no team really
eight rebounds and two
lost that game, Vinton
blocked shots. Hunter
just won it. We’ve been
Copley knocked down
playing well and as long
one three-pointer and
as we keep going on an
ﬁnished with seven
markers, Koren Truance upward path I’m happy.”
After back-to-back
added four points, while
losses, Deel is looking
Junon Ohmara earned
for his team to get back
three points with a trito its winning ways with
fecta. Arianna Jordan
better offensive execucompleted the guests’
tion, as well as turning
tally with two markers.
defensive stops into fast
Copley, Truance and
Abby Cremeans had two break opportunities.
“What we need to do
assists apiece to lead the
better moving forward is
Blue and White, with
execution on our offenCremeans coming up
sive side,” Deel said. “On
with a team-best two
defense we need to work
steals.
Meigs — which began on boxing out, rebounding and getting the ball
the week with its only
out.”
loss of the year, a 67-63
After the Lady
decision at Vinton
County — has won all-5 Marauders host Alexander on Monday, MHS
of its other games by
will head to River Valley
double digits. Kasun
on Thursday. Following
talked about the game
their trip to Coal Grove
with VCHS not being a
true setback for the Lady on Monday, the Blue
Marauders, because both Angels will be home on
Thursday to welcome
teams played great basSouth Point.
ketball.
“That game at VinAlex Hawley can be reached at
ton was one of the best
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.
game’s I’ve ever been

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Marauders
From page 6

game-best ﬁve assists.
Drew Hanning scored
13 points in the win,
Keaton Potter added
10, while Noah Donley
ﬁnished with six. Jordan
Morgan, Caden Harden
and Luke Stewart round-

Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

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Bryan Walters can be reached at
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TUESDAY, DECEMBER 11
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ed out the winning tally
with three, two and one
respectively.
Hanning and Darby
paced the OHHS
defense, each earning
two steals and a block.
The Marauders continue non-league play on
Tuesday at Marietta.

6 PM

Lowery were next with
seven points apiece,
while Andrew Gillispie
added six markers.
Matthew Qualls and
Devrick Burris were
next with four points
apiece, while Chase Nelson and Issac Colecchia
completed the winning
tally with two markers
each.
Coleman and Lowery
paced the hosts with
eight rebounds apiece,
while Gillispie and
Nelson hauled in seven
caroms each.
The Defenders netted
18-of-62 shot attempts
for 29 percent, including a 2-of-19 effort from
behind the arc for 11
percent.
Beaver led the guests
with 20 points, followed
by Mark Oliver with
a double-double effort
of 17 points and 20
rebounds.
Bryce Gruber was
next with ﬁve points,
with Joel Daugherty
and Conner Walter each
chipping in two points.
Jeremiah Swab completed the OVCS tally with
one point.
Beaver and Maciah
Swab also hauled in six
rebounds apiece in the
setback.

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Secrets (‘07, Adv) Nicolas Cage. TV14
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8:30

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�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Daily Sentinel

RedStorm Chargers get win over Bengals
rallies past
Wilberforce
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

WILBERFORCE, Ohio — Jaida Carter scored 20
of her game-high 24 points in the second half and
Jimi Howell had 12 of her 18 points after halftime,
leading the University of Rio Grande’s 72-69 comefrom-behind win over Wilberforce University, Saturday afternoon, in non-conference women’s basketball
action at the Alumni Multiplex.
Rio Grande improved to 9-2 with the win.
Wilbeforce dropped to 4-7 with a second straight
loss.
Carter, a senior from New Philadelphia, Ohio, also
ﬁnished with a career-high 16 rebounds - 13 of which
came after the intermission - and a game-high ﬁve
steals for the RedStorm.
Rio Grande trailed throughout the game until Carter fueled a 15-0 run which turned a 47-35 third quarter deﬁcit into a 50-47 lead in the waning seconds of
the period.
Howell, a sophomore from Barberton, Ohio, had
eight of her points in the ﬁnal quarter to help the RedStorm maintain its advantage.
She and Carter combined for all but three of Rio’s
20 fourth quarter points.
Howell scored on a short jumper in the lane with
24 seconds remaining to give the RedStorm its 72-69
lead but, after both teams traded turnovers, it took a
missed three-pointer by Wilberforce’s Jamee Denman
with two seconds left and a rebound by Carter as time
expired to nail down the win.
Rio Grande got the victory despite shooting just 38
percent overall (23-for-60), 15.8 percent from threepoint range (3-for-19) and committing 23 turnovers.
Sophomore Chyna Chambers (Columbus, OH)
also hit double-digits for the RedStorm by scoring 16
points. She also had a game-high four assists.
Wilberforce shot 36 percent overall (25-for-69),
committed 16 turnovers of its own and was outrebounded, 51-36.
Malika Wildon had 13 points to lead 11 different
scorers for the Bulldogs, while Allayah Hughes ﬁnished with 12 points and a team-high seven rebounds.
Rio Grande returns to action next Saturday when
Point Park University visits the Newt Oliver Arena for
a River States Conference contest. Tipoff is set for 2
p.m.

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

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CARSON, Calif. (AP) — The
Los Angeles Chargers had every
reason to be susceptible to a trap
game against Cincinnati.
The Chargers were coming off
an emotional, come-from-behind
victory against Pittsburgh last
Sunday and a key AFC West
showdown at Kansas City was
fast approaching.
Sunday’s 26-21 victory over
the Bengals was not one of Los

By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— During his days as
the head coach of the
men’s basketball coach
at Rio Grande college,
Newt Oliver saw plenty
of offensive exploits
from the legendary Bevo
Francis and his teammates.
On Saturday, in the
annual event which
bears Oliver’s name and
honors his promotion of
college basketball, the
current version of the
RedStorm enjoyed its
biggest offensive showing of the season.
Five players reached
double ﬁgures and head
coach Ken French’s
squad connected on a
season-high 16 threepoint goals in a 114-52
rout of Ohio State
University-Mansﬁeld as
part of the 13th Annual
Newt Oliver Coaches
Classic at the Newt Oliver Arena.
Rio Grande snapped
a two-game losing slide
with the win, improving

to 5-6 on the season.
OSU-Mansﬁeld, which
dressed just ﬁve players
for the contest, dropped
to 0-11 with the loss.
The Mavericks didn’t
become the RedStorm’s
opponent until just four
days earlier when EastWest University abruptly
backed out of the event.
The 114-point outburst was Rio’s largest
since a 114-78 win over
Ohio University-Lancaster on Dec. 20, 2016.
The 16 three-pointers
were the most in a single
game for the RedStorm
since connecting on 17
in a 117-114 triumph
over Point Park University on Jan. 2, 2016.
Rio Grande bolted to a
20-1 lead out of the gate
and shot 60.5 percent
from the ﬁeld (23-for-38)
en route to a 59-18 halftime lead.
The Mavericks scored
the ﬁrst bucket of the
second half, but got no
closer the rest of way as
the RedStorm followed
with 15 consecutive
points to open up a
74-20 advantage after a

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

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downs on their ﬁrst two drives
and then got four ﬁeld goals from
Michael Badgley — including
a team-record 59-yarder — to
deal the Bengals (5-8) their ﬁfth
straight loss.
“We did enough to win. Shoot,
they all count the same. We found
a way to win, in a different way,”
said Philip Rivers, who was 19
of 29 for 220 yards and a touchdown.

Three-point barrage sends Rio past Mavericks

AIM MEDIA MIDWEST NEWSPAPERS

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CLASSIFIEDS

Angeles’ best-played games of the
season, but it does improve the
record to 10-3 going into Thursday night’s game against the 11-2
Chiefs for the division lead.
“Everyone wanted to talk about
Pittsburgh and if it wasn’t Pittsburgh then it was Kansas City.
This team was dangerous and we
got out of there with a win,” Chargers coach Anthony Lynn said.
The Chargers scored touch-

layup by freshman Joshua Anthony (Newnan,
GA) with 16:31 remaining.
The lead was no less
than 52 points for the
remainder of the game
and reached its pinnacle - 67 points - after
a jumper by sophomore
Adjin Maksumic (Konjic,
Bosnia-Herzegovina)
made it 114-47 with 1:30
left in the game.
Maksumic ﬁnished
with a career-high 15
points and 11 rebounds,
while sophomores Bobby
Anderson (Catlettsburg,
KY) and Trey Kelley
(Minford, OH) hit ﬁve
three-pointers each and
ﬁnished with 15 points.
Anderson’s point total and his six assists - both
represented career-best
marks.
Freshman Gunner
Short (Catlettsburg,
KY) and Anthony ﬁnished with 14 and 12
points, respectively,
while freshman Markus
Geldenhuys (Pretoria,
South Africa) had a
game- and career-high
13 rebounds in the win-

ning effort.
Sophomore Raul
Timoner (Alaior, Spain)
also ﬁnished with a
career-high seven assists
and senior Earl Russell
(Warrington, England)
had 10 rebounds.
The RedStorm ﬁnished with a 64-26
rebounding edge.
OSU-Mansﬁeld shot
just 18.2 percent in the
ﬁrst half (6-for-33) and
28.8 percent (19-for-66)
for the game.
Ja’Shawn Campbell
had 14 points to lead
the Mavericks, while
Marcus Jackson and
Ja’Quan Campbell
added 13 points each.
Jackson had a team-high
seven rebounds, while
Ja’Quan Campbell had
three assists and three
steals.
Rio Grande will
return to action next
Saturday when it hosts
Point Park University in
River States Conference
action. Tipoff is set for
4 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

(304) 675-1333 or fax to (304) 675-5234

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The following matters are the subject of this public notice by the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. The complete public
notice, including any additional instructions for submitting
comments, requesting information, a public hearing, or filing an
appeal may be obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk, Ohio
EPA, 50 W. Town St. P.O. Box 1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-3037 email: HClerk@epa.ohio.gov
Final Approval of Plans and Specifications
Tupper Plains/Chester Water District
39561 Bar 30 Rd, Reedsville, OH 45772
Facility Description: Community Water System
ID #: 1249172
Date of Action: 11/30/2018
This final action not preceded by proposed action and is
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12/11/18 TDS

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Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, December 11, 2018 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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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Browns hand Panthers fifth loss in row
CLEVELAND (AP)
— Baker Mayﬁeld took
the snap in victory formation and dropped to
one knee. The cocky
rookie quarterback
urged the crowd to make
more noise, and when
the clock hit zeroes, the
stadium’s sound system
blasted “Danger Zone.”
The Browns have
become hazardous to
your playoff health.
Mayﬁeld outplayed
Cam Newton, Jarvis
Landry caught a touchdown pass and ran for
another score and the
Cleveland Browns damaged Carolina’s postseason hopes with a 26-20
win Sunday over the
Panthers, who dropped
their ﬁfth straight.
Mayﬁeld bravely threw
a 51-yard TD pass into
trafﬁc to Landry, who
had a 3-yard scoring run
and added a long run —
on a similar call — early
in the fourth quarter to
set up a go-ahead touchdown.
Playing the spoiler
role down the stretch,
the Browns (5-7-1) kept
their faint playoff hopes
alive while improving to
3-2 under interim coach
Gregg Williams, who
needed just ﬁve games
to match former Browns
coach Hue Jackson’s
win total over two-plus
seasons.
“Everybody loves winning,” said defensive end
Myles Garrett. “It’s different for us because of
the negatives we’ve been
through, but that’s all in
the past.”
Mayﬁeld ﬁnished 18
of 22 for 238 yards, continuing his bounce back
after throwing three
interceptions in the ﬁrst
half last week at Houston. The brash No. 1
overall pick continues to
develop and the Browns
are growing with him.
Mayﬁeld was asked
if he woke up feeling
as dangerous as he did
three weeks ago before
beating Atlanta.
“I think you know the
answer to that one,” he
said, drawing laughter.
Landry felt that way,
too.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant senior George Smith locks in a hold on a Saint
Albans grappler during a 138-pound match Saturday at the 2018
Jason Eades Memorial Duals held at Point Pleasant High School in
Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Point wins
Jason Eades
Memorial
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va — It wasn’t perfect, but
it was about as close to perfect as you might ever see.
The Point Pleasant wrestling team posted a 105-7
record individually while also allowing just 36 total
points through eight competitions en route to winning the 2018 Jason Eades Memorial Duals tournament this past weekend in Mason County.
The host Big Blacks scored at least 63 points as a
team in each of their eight head-to-head bouts, which
included a trio of 80-point shutouts against Liberty
Raleigh (82-0), North Marion (80-0) and Nicholas
County (83-0).
Point’s closest win was a 63-9 decision over Cabell
Midland, and the Red and Black also claimed sizable
victories over Grafton (67-9), Oak Hill (67-6), Riverside (68-6) and Saint Albans (64-6).
The Big Blacks had nine different grapplers complete the weekend unbeaten in 14 separate weight
classes, including 8-0 ﬁnishes by MacKandle Freeman
(106), Isaac Short (113), Derek Raike (126), Justin
Bartee (132), Mitchell Freeman (145), Wyatt Wilson
(152), Zac Samson (160) and Juan Marquez (195).
George Smith also went perfect at the two-day
event with a 7-0 mark at 138 pounds.
Chris Smith (120), Logan Southall (170) and
Dakota Moses (220) each had 7-1 records in their
respective divisions, while Nazar Abbas (182) and
Wyatt Stanley (285) ended the weekend with identical
6-2 marks.
Saint Albans was the overall runner-up in the
24-team event, while Riverside, Cabell Midland and
Musselman rounded out the top ﬁve positions. It was
the second time in three years that Point Pleasant
won the team title in the 13th annual event.
River Valley ended the weekend with a 5-3 overall
mark and placed 10th overall, while Wahama and
Point Pleasant Black respectively ﬁnished 20th and
21st overall.
The Raiders posted a collective 58-54 overall record
in their eight head-to-head events, which included
wins over Bishop Fenwick (69-11), Grafton (42-36),
Shady Spring (38-33), Wahama (66-18) and defending
champion Greenbrier East (39-27).
The Silver and Black dropped team decisions
to Saint Albans (52-30), Wirt County (40-33) and
George Washington (45-28).
Nathan Cadle (138), Will Hash (152) and Eric
Weber (182) led the Raiders with identical 7-1 marks,
followed by Jake Edwards (126) and Ryan Weber with
matching records of 6-2.
Aiden Greene went 5-3 overall at 170 pounds, while
Joe Burns was 3-1 at 120 pounds before ending the
weekend early with an injury.
Levi Roberts (113), Alex Williams (195) and Chris
Goheen (285) also had 4-4 marks in their respective
weight classes.
Trevor Hunt (145) posted a perfect 8-0 mark for the
White Falcons, while Antonio Serevicz (220) went 6-0
before ending the weekend early with an injury.
The PPHS Black squad ended the weekend with
a 4-5 team mark. Parker Henderson (106) and Riley
Oliver (145) each ﬁnished the weekend with unblemished 9-0 records.

David Richard | AP

Cleveland Browns wide receiver Jarvis Landry (80) rushes during the second half Sunday against
the Carolina Panthers in Cleveland.

“I guess waking up
feeling dangerous is
contagious,” he said.
“We pulled together as a
team.”
There were no smiles
or laughs in Carolina’s
locker room as the
Panthers (6-7) suffered
a loss that could haunt
them for months and
will increase the heat on
coach Ron Rivera.
Newton passed for
265 yards, but overthrew Jarius Wright on
4th-and-goal at the 3
with 2:35 left. Carolina
got the ball back, but
Newton, who has been
playing with a sore right
shoulder, badly missed
Devin Funchess and was
intercepted by Damarious Randall with 57 seconds left.
Following the game, a
glum Newton didn’t offer
any excuses.
“We’re done with the
cliche sayings, it just
comes down to doing
our jobs,” Newton said.
“I’m not talking about
nobody but myself.”
Carolina came in just a
half-game out of the second wild-card spot in the
NFC, but with only three
games left, including two
against New Orleans,
the Panthers are going
to need help to make the
postseason.
Christian McCaffrey
had two TD runs for
Carolina and ﬁnished
with 101 total yards.

By Bryan Walters
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio
— Just a bit too late.
The Gallia Academy
boys basketball team
overcame a 19-point
halftime deﬁcit and tied
things up with less than
15 seconds remaining,
but an Elijahjuan Burke
basket with four seconds
left ultimately allowed
visiting Africentric to
claim a thrilling 63-61
decision on Saturday at
the 2018 Buckeye Elite
National Showcase being
held at Portsmouth High
School in Scioto County.
The host Blue Devils
(2-1) built early leads of
4-0, 9-4 and 13-6 in the
opening frame, but the
Nubians (1-1) answered
with a trio of trifectas
during an 11-4 surge that
knotted the game up at
17-all through eight minutes of play.
Africentric did a considerable amount of its
damage in the second

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canto as the Purple and
White drained another
ﬁve trifectas as part of a
24-5 charge that gave the
guests a commanding
41-22 intermission edge
— the largest lead of the
game.
GAHS, however,
responded by going
inside to big-man Zach
Loveday, who provided
eight points during a
17-8 run that allowed the
Blue and White to close
to within 49-39.
After a 9-6 run pulled
the deﬁcit to 55-48, the
hosts followed with six
consecutive points to
close to within 55-54.
Loveday — who had
18 fourth quarter points
— capped a small 7-6
spurt that tied the game
at 61 following an oldfashioned 3-point play
late in regulation.
Out of a timeout,
Africentric dribbled
the length of ﬂoor and
made a pass to Burke on
the right wing. Burke
worked his way around a

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and pretended to warm
themselves around a
camp ﬁre.
“It was cold outside,”
Landry said, smiling.
Fast start
On Cleveland’s ﬁrst
play, Mayﬁeld unloaded
a pass that traveled more
than 60 yards in the air
to wide receiver Breshad
Perriman for a 66-yard
pickup. Two plays later,
Landry scored on his
short run.
Home sweet home
The Browns improved
to 4-2-1 at FirstEnergy
Stadium, clinching their
ﬁrst winning home
season since going 7-1
under coach Romeo
Crennel in 2007.
“That’s pretty cool
because the Dawg
Pound has always been
loyal to us,” said guard
Joel Bitonio, who has
spent all ﬁve of his NFL
seasons with the team.
“We want every team
to say, ‘We don’t want
to go to Cleveland to
play.’”
Newton’s law
With his ﬁrst completion, Newton eclipsed
3,000 yards passing for
the eighth straight season. He came in needing 1 yard to reach the
plateau and surpassed it
on a 25-yarder to Curtis
Samuel on Carolina’s
second snap.

Africentric fends off Blue Devils, 63-61

Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

and submit your photos

“It stinks,” McCaffrey
said. “A lot of people are
against us right now, but
I’ll ﬁght for every one of
these guys. That’s exactly what I’m going to do
and I know a lot of guys
will do as well. We lost.
We’ve lost a few in a row.
It’s kind of us against the
world right now.”
Browns rookie Nick
Chubb scored on a
1-yard run to give the
Browns a 23-20 lead
with 13:05 left. The
score came one play
after Landry took an
inside handoff and
weaved his way down
ﬁeld. Greg Joseph
clanged the extra point
off the left upright, keeping the Panthers within
three.
Newton drove the
Panthers to the 3 before
throwing two straight
incompletions, ending
Carolina’s best chance
to take the lead.
Mayﬁeld’s 51-yard TD
pass to Landry tied it
14-all with 8:27 left in
the second quarter.
Rolling left out of
the pocket to buy some
time, Mayﬁeld stepped
up and conﬁdently delivered a perfect strike to
Landry, who was well
covered on the play by
safety Eric Reid, his
former LSU teammate.
As fans celebrated,
Landry and several
teammates sat down in
the end zone’s corner

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defender and ended up
getting to the basket via
the baseline.
Burke made a quick
ball fake before going up
with the eventual gamewinning basket, forcing
GAHS to take a timeout.
Out of the break, the
ball made its way to midcourt and into the hands
of Loveday — who hit
a streaking Cory Call in
stride.
Call released a 35-footer from the left wing
area just before the buzzer, but the shot bounced
just short and wide right
of the basket — allowing
the Nubians to hold on
for their initial win of
the season.
The Blue Devils —
who won the second half
by a sizable 39-22 margin — ﬁnished the night
with 17 turnovers, six
more than the guests.
Gallia Academy connected on 21-of-33 shot
attempts for 63 percent,
including a 2-of-7 effort
from 3-point range for
29 percent.
Loveday led the hosts
with a game-high 35
points and 10 rebounds,
followed by Call with 13
points — seven of which
came during the third
stanza.
Justin McClelland was
next with seven points,
while Logan Blouir and
Caleb Henry respectively rounded things
out with ﬁve points and

one point.
GAHS was 17-of-23
at the free throw line
for 74 percent. Loveday
and Call each had two
blocks, while Call had
two steals and Blouir
added two assists.
Africentric went
21-of-47 from the ﬂoor
for 45 percent, including a 9-of-17 effort from
behind the arc for 53
percent. The guests
were also 12-of-16 at
the charity stripe for 75
percent.
Anthony Bowman
paced the Nubians with
28 points, with all but
four of those coming in
the ﬁrst half. Bowman
also went scoreless in
the fourth quarter.
Burke — who scored
all 14 of Africentric’s
fourth quarter points —
was next with 17 markers, all of which came in
the second half.
Calijha’won Davis and
Hervon Jacobs were
next with eight markers
apiece, while Dorian
Holloway completed the
winning tally with two
points.
The Blue Devils make
their home debut on
Tuesday when they host
Rock Hill in the Ohio
Valley Conference opener for both programs.
Tip-off is scheduled for
approximately 7 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

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