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                  <text>For election results, visit our
Facebook page or mydailysentinel.
com. Print coverage will appear in
Thursday’s paper.

Sunny.
High of 77,
low of 57

Two advance
from D-3
CC Regional

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 177, Volume 69

Wednesday, November 4, 2015 s 50¢

Pomeroy Open House a shoppers delight

Photos by Lorna Hart | Daily Sentinel

The streets of Pomeroy were filled with shoppers during Open House on Monday. When the stores opened at 9 a.m. customers found a wonderful selection of unique gifts as they strolled through the village.
Store front windows decorated for the season sparkled, and displays beckoned shoppers to come inside. Merchants were ready with a distinct selection of merchandise usually found only in larger cities.
Patrons found a variety of original clothing, shoes and jewelry. Handcrafted items, many unique and made by local artists, had a wide appeal. Holiday and home decorations for every style could be found at
many of the stores. During the Open House merchants had give aways and door prizes, delighting the winners. Many shoppers remained past closing time at 9 p.m. making final purchases. It was unanimously
considered a success by the merhants and customers seemed pleased as they loaded their cars with purchases; a good beginning to the holiday season.

‘Kids for
Christmas’
project begins

Child dies during football practice
By Lindsay Kriz

By Mindy Kearns
For the Sentinel

BEND AREA — Less than eight weeks remain
until Christmas, which means it’s getting crunch
time for members of Bend Area C.A.R.E. and the
organization’s annual “Kids for Christmas” project.
With proceeds down from C.A.R.E.’s normal
yearly fundraisers, members have been adding a
few events to ensure that all the kids on their list
enjoy a good holiday.
The next fundraiser will be “Basket Games” on
Nov. 14 at the American Legion banquet room in
New Haven. Set to start at 6 p.m., the doors will
open at 5 p.m. and a number of concessions will be
offered, including chicken and noodles, hot dogs
and sauce, chips and drinks.
A total of 20 games will be played, with three
special games. Early bird tickets are available from
C.A.R.E. members until Nov. 12, with tickets also
being sold at the door. There will be door prizes
and a 50/50 drawing in addition to the games.
According to C.A.R.E. member Leonard Koenig,
“Kids for Christmas” provides for families who
sign up for the Bend Area’s Share-A-Christmas
program who have multiple children. With
C.A.R.E. taking on the larger families, it allows the
smaller ones to be “adopted” by members of local
churches and other organizations.
Sign-ups have already been completed, and
C.A.R.E. will be providing for approximately 50
See PROJECT | 5

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Cross Country: 6
Schedule: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 7
Classified: 8
Comics: 9

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CONVERSATION
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immediately contacted
EMS at 7:19 p.m. and
performed CPR on
REEDSVILLE — The
Barber before he was
Meigs County Sheriff’s
transported to the Meigs
Ofﬁce is currently investi- Emergency Department,
gating the Nov. 2 death of where he passed away.
a 9-year-old boy.
Meigs County Coroner
Wyatt Barber was parDr. Douglas Hunter was
ticipating in a youth foot- contacted and met ofﬁball practice and players
cers at the emergency
had taken a break from
room.
running sprints when a
Eastern Local Schools
coach discovered him on Superintendent Scot
the ground unconscious,
Gheen lamented Barber’s
according to the sheriff’s passing.
ofﬁce. The practice at the
“The staff, students
time was a walk-through, and community of Eastnot a contact practice,
ern Local would like
they said.
to express our sincere
After discovering BarSee CHILD | 5
ber’s condition, coaches

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

Courtesy photo

Wyatt Barber

Donate your Soles to Mid-Valley School
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — Mid-Valley
Christian School, located at 500
North 2nd Ave., Middleport, is asking
for people to “Donate your Soles.”
The school is participating in a
shoe collection for Funds2orgs, an
organization that helps impoverished
people in developing nations start,
maintain and grow businesses.
The shoes collected by this and
other fundraisers across the country
are consolidated and shipped to onthe-ground business operators in
Haiti, Honduras, Central America
and Africa. The shoes are cleaned and
minor repairs are made, if necessary,
by the recipients. These new entrepreneurs are now enabled with the
means to provide food and housing
for their families.
According to Funds2org, in the U.S.
alone, approximately 600 million pairs
of shoes are thrown away each year.
Instead of being left to disintegrate in
a landﬁll, the donated shoes go to a
worthy cause and are recycled at the
same time.
Funds2orgs requires at least 2,500
pair of shoes to be collected to par-

Courtesy photo

Jazelynn Groyboel, Colton Edwards, Jada Walker, Coleton Drenner and Matt Hawkes help
with the shoe drive by placing shoes in bags of 25 pairs each for delivery.

ticipate and Mid- Valley Christian has
collected 500 pairs so far.
“More are arriving every day,”
school administrator Melissa Dailey
said. “We are certain we can meet
our goal. It is such a worthwhile
endeavor.”
After the shoes are donated,
students ready the shoes for pickup by place 25 pair into a bag.
When 100 bags are ﬁlled, they

will have met their goal.
The shoe collection deadline is
December 11, so now is a good time
to clean out those closets.
Anyone who has new or gently
worn, used shoes they would like to
donate can bring them to the school
or call Dailey at 740-992-6249 for
more information.
Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 Ext. 2551.

�LOCAL/NATION

2 Wednesday, November 4, 2015

OBITUARIES

DEATH NOTICES
CAROL M. OSBORNE

JAMES D. CREMEANS
SCOTTSDALE,
Ariz. — James
D. Cremeans also
known as “Jimmy
Don” by family
and friends went
home to be with
the Lord on October 28, 2015 at the age
of 77. He is left behind
by his beloved wife of 55
years as well as three loving children and four precious grandchildren.
He was born on May
21, 1938 in Huntington,
and later moved with his
family to Rutland, Ohio.
Jim was one of 12 children born into a family of
coal miners. As a young
man he worked many
odd jobs including driving a coal truck down the
Appalachian Mountains.
By high school Jim was
a star running back and
honor student as well as
excelling in other sports.
His talent in football
made him a stand out
athlete and earned him
the nickname “Mr. Football.” Eventually he was
awarded college football
scholarships where he
played for the Miami Hurricanes and West Virginia
University. After suffering
some injuries he went on
to graduate from Heidelberg University where he
received his B.S. in Economics.
From there, he worked
as a sixth grade teacher
at the same school as his
sweetheart and future
wife, Diane. At this
time, Jim developed an
avid interest in ﬁtness
and bodybuilding and
achieved the title of Mr.
Florida.
Jim moved to Scottsdale, Ariz. in 1973 with
his family. His professional career began as an
accountant with General
Motors. His passion for
success then led him to
be involved in the “Dare
to be Great” motivational program where he
presented seminars to
inspire others to reach
their highest potential.
From here, Jim launched
a career in the Life Insurance Industry and became
one of the ﬁrst designees
of the now coveted Certiﬁed Financial Planner
(CFP) designation. He
then went on attain a
place in President’s Cabinet, John Hancock’s celebration of its top agents,
and eventually on to their
Hall of Fame rewarding
again their top agents.
But Jim didn’t stop there
with professional achievements. He attained the
most highly distinguished
position within the Life

Insurance Industry,
earning a seat in
the Million Dollar Roundtable,
an exclusive club
for top producing
insurance agents.
Jim was one of the
top certiﬁed ﬁnancial
planners in the country.
Being a type A personality he worked up
until the day he died.
His expertise and depth
of knowledge in the life
insurance industry and
estate planning also led
to a passion to become
politically active. He
worked with law makers around the country
to write and challenge
legislation he knew would
have an impact on his fellow Americans.
Near the end of his life,
he faithfully and selﬂessly
served and cared for his
wife of 55 years who has
advanced Alzheimer’s.
Never complaining and
always loving.
Because of his humble
beginnings, Jim had
incredible compassion
and love for all those
around him. Born out of
a deep faith in the Lord,
Jim was a devout Christian and always willing
to give a helping hand
wherever and whenever
needed. He left a legacy
of love with his kindness,
gentleness, and generosity. He is and always will
be sorely missed by us all.
Jim is survived by his
Wife, Diane, two Sons
Todd (Judy) Cremeans
and Jamie (Tricia) Cremeans, Daughter Brigitte (Robert preceded)
Targosz, four Grandsons
Jamison, Carter, Shaw,
and Sloan Cremeans.
He is preceded in death
by his Mother Iva Cremeans and Father June
Cremeans, Brother Jay J.
Cremeans, and Brother
Roy Cremeans and Sister
Phyllis (Jim preceded)
Spangler. He is survived
by Brothers Victor
(Marge) Cremeans, Gary
Cremeans, and sisters
Glenna (Richard preceded)Fetty, Alice(Lewis preceded)Kennedy, Joanne
(Harold) Smith, Zelma
(Wendell) Kaylor, Leoma
(Marty) Woulette and
Karen (Richard) Gilkey
and Sister-in-Law Jane
Cremeans and several
Nieces and Nephews.
The service to celebrate
Jim’s life will be held Nov.
4, 2015 at 11 a.m. at the
North Phoenix Baptist
Church Chapel located
at 5757 N. Central Ave.,
Phoenix, AZ 85012 with
a reception on the premises to follow.

LANCASTER, Ohio —
Carol M. Osborne, 83, of
Lancaster, died Tuesday,
Nov. 3, 2015.
Carol was a member
of Pleasant Hill United
Methodist Church where
she enjoyed playing
the piano and teaching
Sunday School for many
years. She also loved
searching yard sales,
garage sales and ﬂea markets for great items to sell
at her antiques booth.
Carol is survived by her
husband of 57 years, Paul
Osborne; children, Phillip (Haiwen) Osborne,
Polly (Bill) Stringer, and
Sherrie (Jax) Gresham;
grandchildren, Paul
(Amy) Osborne, Amanda
Osborne, Ross Osborne,
Billy Stringer, Sammy
Stringer, Josh Romanowski, and Seth Romanowski;
seven great grandchil-

dren; sister, Mary Cundiff; and many friends.
Carol was preceded
in death by her siblings,
Betty Martin, Floyd
Diddle, Seth Diddle, and
David Diddle.
Funeral services for
Carol will be held at 2
p.m. Friday at the Frank
E. Smith Funeral Home,
405 N Columbus St, Lancaster, Ohio 43130. Burial
will follow in Pleasant
Hill Cemetery, Lancaster.
Friends may visit from
5-8 p.m. Thursday at the
funeral home and one
hour prior to the service
on Friday.
Donations can be made
in memory of Carol to
Pleasant Hill United
Methodist Church, 1596
George Rd. NE, Lancaster, Ohio 43130. Online
condolences can be made
at www.funeralhome.com.

GENEVIEVE BIRD RUSH
RACINE — Genevieve
Bird Rush, 68, of Racine,
passed away at 11:30 a.m.
on Monday, Nov. 2, 2015
at her residence. Born
June 17, 1947 in Racine,
she was the daughter of
the late Harold Bird and
Emma Lee Knighting
Bird, who survives in
Racine. Genevieve was a
homemaker and a member of Antiquity Baptist
Church and attended
the Rocksprings United
Methodist Church.
In addition to her
mother Genevieve is
survived by her husband;
Michael Rush, whom she
married on June 17, 1972
in Antiquity, her sons;
David Neal Rush, Lonnie
Michael Rush, and Samuel Jay (April Baker) Rush,
all of Racine. A grandson,

Christian Joseph Rush; a
brother Bill (Judy) Bird,
of Racine, and numerous
nieces and nephews also
survive.
In addition to her
father, Genevieve was
preceded in death by a
sister, Virginia Hope Bird
Dodson.
Funeral services will
be held at 1 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 6, 2015, at the
Cremeens Funeral Home,
Racine. Pastor Angle
Corwell will ofﬁciate.
Interment will follow in
the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call
two hours prior to the
service time on Friday at
the funeral home. Expressions of sympathy may
be sent to the family by
visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

BALL
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. — Leona Fay Ball, 89, of
New Haven, died Nov. 1, 2015. Private arrangements are under the direction of Anderson Funeral
Home in New Haven.
DRAWDY
WILLOW WOOD, Ohio — Yvonne Drawdy, 69,
of Willow Wood, Ohio died Monday, Nov. 2, 2015.
Private family services will be held. Hall Funeral
Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, is in
charge of arrangements.
FASONE
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Sharon Rose (Sanders)
Fasone, 74, passed away peacefully in her sleep
on Nov. 2, 2015. Friends may call Evans Funeral
Home, 4171 E. Livingston Ave., Columbus,
between 5-7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 6, 2015. A memorial
service will be 7 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.
NICELY
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — Tracy W. Nicely, 46,
of Chesapeake, died Saturday, Oct. 31, 2015, at
home. Funeral service will be 11 a.m. Thursday,
Nov. 5, 2015, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. Burial will follow in Miller
Memorial Gardens, Miller, Ohio. Visitation will be
10-11 a.m. Thursday at the funeral home.

Teens spend an
average of 9 hours
a day with media
By David Bauder

viewing, DVDs or
online video, the study
said.
NEW YORK —
Boys are much more
Teenagers spend
likely to play video
nearly nine hours a
games than girls. The
day absorbing media
survey found male
and despite all the new teenagers spent an
options, music and
average of 56 minutes
television remain the
a day gaming, while
favorites.
girls devoted only
Common Sense
seven minutes. Girls
Media released an
spent more time on
exhaustive survey
social media or readTuesday outlining how ing than boys.
young people spend
Half of the teenagers
screen time. One con- said they watch TV or
cern: the number of
use social media either
youngsters who feel
“a lot” or “sometimes”
comfortable multiwhile doing homeTERESA ELAINE VARIAN
tasking while doing
work, and 76 percent
homework.
said they listen to
grandchild, Taylor VarRUTLAND — Teresa
Two-thirds of teenag- music while working.
Elaine Varian, 52, of Rut- ian; father, Wallace Fetty;
ers said they listen to
Half of the teens say
brother, Mike and Gayla
land, passed away Nov.
music every day, and
that listening to music
Fetty of Gallipolis; nieces
2, 2015. She was born
58 percent said the
actually helps their
and nephews, Nikki and
on April 20, 1963, the
same about watching
work, while only 6 perdaughter of Wallace Fetty Joey Chapman, Brittany
television, the study
cent said they thought
Price, Natasha, Michael,
of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
said. By contrast, 45
it hurt.
Ryan and Kinleigh; great
and the late Leta Evelyn
percent reported using
“As a parent and
nieces Jaylyn, Kenzie,
Fetty.
social media every day educator, there’s clearKatie, Rosie and Alli.
Teresa was a 1981
and only 36 percent
ly more work to be
She was preceded in
graduate of Meigs High
said they enjoyed that done around the issue
School and received her
death by her mother,
activity “a lot”; twice
of multi-tasking,” said
associate degree from the Leta Fetty and her sister,
as many said they real- James Steyer, founder
University of Rio Grande. Cindy Fetty.
ly enjoyed their music. and CEO of Common
She later received her
Funeral services will be
Television is the
Sense Media, an orgaa Bachelor of Business
held on Thursday, Nov. 5,
favorite activity of prenization that monitors
Administration degree
2015 at 2pm at the Anderteens, with 62 percent
youthful media use
from the University of
son McDaniel Funeral
of respondents aged
and gives recommenPhoenix. She was the
Home in Pomeroy with
8 to 12 saying they
dations to parents.
Development Director at Pastors Russell Lowe and
watched every day, the
“Nearly two-thirds of
the Gallia-Meigs Commu- Rodney Walker ofﬁciatstudy said. Tweens
teens today tell us they
nity Action Agency.
ing. Burial will follow at
said they spend just
don’t think watching
She is survived by her
Letart Falls Cemetery.
under six hours a day
TV or texting while
husband of 34 years,
Visiting hours will be on
of media time.
doing homework
Robert Varian; two sons, Thursday from 12-2 p.m.
Exactly half of the
makes any difference
Joseph “JP” Varian of
at the funeral home.
time teenagers spend
to their ability to study
Gallipolis and Robert
A registry is available
with video involves
and learn, even though
“Curtis” and Ashley Varat www.andersonmcdanwatching a TV prothere’s more and more
ian of Syracuse, Ohio;
iel.com.
gram at the time it
research to the conoriginally airs. The
trary.”
rest is parceled out
More kids said their
among time-delayed
parents have talked
to them about the
content of what they
watch or listen to
rather than the time
spent on media, the
study said.
Poor children have
Civitas Media, LLC
less access to computFREE hearing tests will be given at Beltone Hearing Aid Center. The test will be given by a Licensed
(USPS 436-840)
Hearing Aid Specialist on Friday, November 7th. Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding conversaers, tablets and smarttion is invited to have a free hearing test to see if this problem can be helped.
Telephone: 740-992-2155
phones than wealthier
Bring this Coupon in for your FREE HEARING TEST, a $125.00 value.
kids, but spend more
time on devices when
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
they have one, the
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
9:00 A.M. TO 12:00 P.M. and walk-ins are always welcome.
study said.
Black teenagers
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US
spend
more time with
Providers for COLD WAR PATRIOTS, Federal Employees, BC/BS, Anthem, Humana &amp; More!!
media
than other ethNow Accepting Ohio Medicaid!
CIRCULATION MANAGER
PUBLISHER
nic groups, an average
Ed Litteral, Ext. 1925
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
of 11 hours and 13
elitteral@civitasmedia.com
bhunt@civitasmedia.com
minutes each day. LatiSPORTS EDITOR
EDITOR
nos spend just over
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
Michael Johnson, Ext. 2102
nine hours and whites
bwalters@civitasmedia.com
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com
eight hours, 48 minMason, WV 101 2nd Street 800-634-5265
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
utes, the study found.
Julia Schultz, Ext. 2104
Located Inside Mason Senior Center, Down from Rio Bravo Restaurant
jschultz@civitasmedia.com
Common Sense
Also in Gallipolis, OH 28 Cedar Street 740-446-2345
Media conducted a
Located Across from Grace United Methodist Church &amp; Holzer Apartments
survey of 2,658 young
people between Feb.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
6 and March 9. The
results have a margin of
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769.
error of plus or minus
nearly 2 percent.

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AP Television Writer

�LOCAL/NATION

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 4, 2015 3

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Briefs will only list event
information that is open to the public.

George Washington’s Historic
Marker Rededication
HOCKINGPORT — The Athens County Historical
Society and Museum, the Daughters of the American
Revolution and the Sons of the American Revolution
are partnering to rededicate the Historic Marker commemorating George Washington’s visit to the conﬂuence of the Hocking and Ohio rivers in November
of 1774. Set and dedicated by the Daughters of the
American Revolution in 1932, on the bicentennial of
Washington’s birth, the marker was run over and damaged several years ago. Recently restored at SEWAH
Studios in Marietta, the marker will be rededicated
on Sunday, November 8th at noon at the Hockingport
United Methodist Church at the intersection of Grand
and Pavilion Streets in Hockingport. A reception will
follow in the Fellowship Hall next to the church. All
are welcome to attend.

Southern Ohio Council of
Governments meetings

compliance, investigative services and residential
administration of waivers and supportive living in
order to provide individualized, personal support to
people with developmental disabilities. SOCOG is a
government entity created under Chapter 167 of the
Ohio Revised Code, representing 15 county boards of
development disabilities.

Upward Basketball
and Cheerleading
Middleport Church of Christ is getting ready to
start their 11th season of Upward basketball and
cheerleading. This is open to all children age 5 years
through 6th grade. The Upward experience consists
of: 1 practice and 1 game per week, unique substitution system ensures every young athlete plays and
quality game day uniform. Evaluations and uniform
ﬁtting will take place in the Middleport Church of
Christ’s Family Life Center at the corner of 5th &amp;
Main Streets on Saturday, Nov. 7 from 9 a.m. to
1 p.m. and on Tuesday, Nov. 10 from 6-8 p.m. All
children wanting to play need to attend one of these
dates. You may stop in anytime during those times.
The cost is $75 which covers their complete uniform.
The church does have some partial scholarships available for those who need assistance. One hour games
are played on Saturdays beginning Jan. 16, 2016. If
you have any questions you may contact the church at
740-992-2914 Monday-Friday 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. or
check out their Facebook page: Middleport Church of
Christ Upward Sports.

The Southern Ohio Council of Governments
(SOCOG) will hold its next board meeting on Thursday, Nov. 5, 2015 at 10 a.m. in Room A of the Ross
County Service Center at 475 Western Avenue, Chillicothe, Ohio, 45601. Board meetings usually are held
the ﬁrst Thursday of the month. For more information, call 740-775-5030, ext. 103. SOCOG provides
administrative support for the County Boards of
Developmental Disabilities in Adams, Athens, Brown,
Clinton, Fayette, Gallia, Highland, Jackson, Lawrence,
POMEROY — “Fit Together Fitness” exercise
Meigs, Pickaway, Pike, Ross, Scioto and Vinton counclasses will be 6:30-7:30 p.m. at the Mulberry Comties. It’s primary focus is quality assurance, provider

‘Fit Together Fitness’
exercise class dates

munity Center located at 260 Mulberry Ave. Runs on
Tuesdays for six consecutive weeks beginning Nov.
10. The cost of a class is a donation of non-perishable
food items. For more information, contact Paulette at
740-992-6097.

Frank
card shower
RACINE — Louise Frank will celebrate her 80th
birthday with an open house Nov. 7 from 2-4 p.m. at
the Carmel Sutton Fellowship Hall. No gifts please,
but cards may be sent to Louise Frank at 49074 Mckenzie Ridge Road, Racine, 45771.

Meigs County Retired
Teachers scholarship
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs County Retired Teachers Association is looking for candidates for a scholarship. Applicants must be a college junior or senior
education major whose home residence is Meigs
County. A GPA of 2.5 or higher is also required. Questions or applications can be obtained by calling Becky
740-992-7096 or Charlene at 740-444-5498.

Eastern Music
Boosters Craft Show
REEDSVILLE — The 28th Annual Eastern Music
Boosters Craft Show will be held Saturday, Nov. 14
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Eastern Elementary School.
The Craft show will feature performances by the Eastern Choir, Handbells, Marching Band and Concert
Band. Crafters may call Angie at 740-985-3690 or
Jenny at 740-985-3479 for an application.

Cop accused of shooting man in back goes on trial
By Michael Rubinkam

Deborah Curcillo barred
authorities from publicly
releasing the video, sayHARRISBURG, Pa. — ing it would jeopardize
Video played Tuesday at
Mearkle’s right to a fair
a police ofﬁcer’s murder
trial. Lawyers for PA
trial shows the 15-year
Media Group, which
veteran shocking a ﬂeepublishes Pennlive.com
ing suspect with a stun
in Harrisburg, ﬁled a
gun, then shooting him
motion last week asking
twice in the back as he
for release of the video
lay face down in the snow as soon as it was shown
and appeared to reach
at trial. The court on
for something with his
Tuesday ordered that
hands.
the video not be released
Ofﬁcer Lisa Mearkle
publicly until there is a
was charged with thirdverdict in the case.
degree murder for
In opening statements
shooting 59-year-old
earlier, prosecutor Johnny
David Kassick after he
Baer said Mearkle “took
ﬂed from a Feb. 2 trafﬁc
David’s life without justistop in Hummelstown, a
ﬁcation. Took it unnecesHarrisburg suburb. The
sarily.”
shooting was captured by
Defense attorney
a camera attached to her
Brian Perry said Kassick
stun gun.
ignored commands, and
The video shows KasMearkle thought he was
sick’s hands repeatedly
disappearing underneath reaching for a weapon.
“You don’t shoot to
his body as Mearkle
wound.
You shoot to
screams at him to keep
stop
the
threat. He was a
them where she can see
threat,”
Perry
said.
them, a key point of
The
encounter
began as
contention between the
Mearkle
attempted
to pull
defense, which says Mearover
Kassick
for
expired
kle ﬁred in self-defense,
inspection and emissions
and the prosecution,
which called the shooting stickers.
Her “cop bells” went
unjustiﬁed.
off
when she turned on
“Show your hands!”
her
lights and sirens and
she’s heard yelling on the
Kassick failed to pull
video, which was played
over, even going around
twice for the jury. Kassick’s family cried quietly a car stopped at a red
light, Perry told jurors.
in the courtroom gallery
Mearkle, who had an
as the deadly sequence
played out in high deﬁni- intern riding along, followed Kassick a short
tion.
distance to his sister’s
Mearkle, 37, adminishouse, where he had been
tered CPR after shootliving. Kassick parked in
ing Kassick, but he died
the driveway, got out of
at the scene. He was
the car and ﬂed to the
unarmed.
backyard.
She is expected to tes“It’s not an inspection
tify in her own defense
sticker now,” Perry told
when the trial resumes
the jury.
Wednesday.
He said Mearkle
Dauphin County Judge

Associated Press

ordered Kassick to stop,
get on the ground and
show her his hands 23
separate times, but he
made the “conscious decision” to ignore her.
“If he complies, he’s
alive,” he said.
Prosecutors interpreted
the video differently,
saying it did not show
Kassick posing a threat.
Even if Mearkle believed
she was in danger, that
belief was “unreasonable
in light of the circumstances,” Baer said.

“This ofﬁcer used
deadly force to subdue a
suspect without justiﬁcation,” he said.
Mearkle shocked Kassick four times before
reaching for her handgun,
but the video shows him
moving his hands even
as he was being jolted.
The stun gun would have
caused pain, but did not
incapacitate Kassick,
because he was wearing a heavy coat and the
electrical probes did not
make direct contact with

the skin, testiﬁed Bryan
Chiles of TASER International Inc., the manufacturer.
Derry Township
police Chief Patrick M.
O’Rourke, who took
command of the scene
shortly after the shooting,
testiﬁed that when he got
there, he saw Mearkle
“feverishly attempting
life-saving measures” on
Kassick.
It’s unknown why
Kassick ﬂed, but he had
problems with substance

abuse and police recovered a syringe near his
body that might have
been his. Prosecutors
have said alcohol and
unspeciﬁed drugs were
found in his system.
Mearkle was suspended
without pay after her
arrest. She remains on
electronic monitoring
while out on bail.
In addition to thirddegree murder, she’s
charged with voluntary
manslaughter and involuntary manslaughter.

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attention now?
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�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Daily Sentinel

OUR VIEW

It’s time to
rethink Daylight
Saving Time
In the words of no one — ever: It sure is nice
that it’s dark by 5 p.m.
Welcome to daylight saving time, that annual
event that had much of this nation and many European countries turning back the clocks an hour
this weekend.
While it was a nice break for those who wanted
an extra hour to sleep in Sunday morning, that’s
where any real beneﬁts end. Despite that, and
the risks created by altering the natural circadian
rhythms of the body, this unpopular tradition continues still.
Daylight saving time has its beginnings in
Europe in 1916 as a way to save electricity during
wartime. It made the morning lighter although it
plunged people into nighttime darkness earlier in
the late fall and winter. The United States joined
the movement in 1918, but it proved so unpopular that a year later it stopped being a national
requirement although some states and larger cities
continued the practice. It became a short-lived
national mandate again during World War II.
What followed until the mid-1960s was a
confusing adaptation of rules that allowed local
governments to set their own rules for whether
to observe daylight saving time and even when
to start and stop it. A national committee studying time changes in 1965 detailed how the lax
laws allowed there to be seven different times in
a 35-mile drive from Ohio into West Virginia. The
laws were reﬁned between 1966 and 1975 and
have stayed mostly the same, except for a change
in the length of daylight saving time enacted by
Congress in 2007.
But why?
Supporters cite several standard reasons for continuation of the time change, chief among them
to beneﬁt farmers, to save energy and to improve
safety.
Yet the farm industry has said repeatedly that it
ﬁnds little advantage in having the mornings start
earlier. The daily tasks remain the same for farmers, and switching the time frame for the work to
be completed has few beneﬁts if any to most.
The energy savings is minimal. The U.S. Department of Energy estimates the time changes save
just 0.03 of a percent in the nation’s energy use —
and most of that is actually during the summer.
There is also little to back the belief the time
change makes things safer. To the contrary, a New
England Journal of Medicine study found trafﬁc
accidents are likelier to increase because of the
sleep deprivation that change in the body’s alarm
clock brings. Other studies have said daylight saving time can be linked to an increase in suicide
and health problems such as heart attacks.
Those who are especially sensitive to disruptions in their body’s natural rhythms can have
increased problems in mental alertness, agility and
memory.
The practice is a relic that has not kept up with
societal or technological changes. It’s time to end
a disruptive and unnecessary tradition.

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

Visit us at

www.mydailysentinel.com

THEIR VIEW

Increasing access to prenatal care

Each year, more than
that women who become
one million babies are born
pregnant outside of the narto mothers who did not
row annual open enrollment
receive adequate prenatal
period are unable to enroll
care.
in or change their healthThese babies are three
care plan to accommodate
times more likely to be
their needs, which may have
low birth weight and ﬁve
changed due to their pregSherrod
times more likely to die as Brown
nancy.
infants. This is a particular Contributing
Women don’t time their
problem in Ohio, which
pregnancies around arbitrary
Columnist
ranks 45th in the nation
insurance open-enrollment
when it comes to infant
periods, and these deadlines
mortality. And maternal mortalshould not keep Ohio mothers-toity rates are also three-to-four
be from getting the care they need.
times higher for women who don’t
Major life changes that are conreceive prenatal care.
sidered “qualifying life events”
Because of the health law, we’ve
entitle Americans to a “special
made major strides in improving
enrollment period” (SEP) in the
care for women—particularly by
insurance marketplaces. This
increasing access to maternity
allows people to change their
care. The Affordable Care Act
coverage in accordance with these
requires private health insurance
major events, like marriage or
plans to include maternity coverdivorce or the birth of a child.
age as an “Essential Health BenHowever, pregnancy itself is not
eﬁt.”
a qualifying event for a special
But there is still more that we
enrollment period in the insurance
need to do to ensure all women
marketplace.
have access to quality, timely
This prevents some expectmaternity care.
ing mothers from gaining timely
Under current law, pregnancy
access to quality prenatal and
is not considered a “qualifying life
maternity care—and we know that
event” for health insurance offered this care is essential to the wellin the marketplaces. That means
being of both mothers and infants.

That’s why I introduced the
Healthy Maternity and Obstetric
Medicine – or Healthy MOM
– Act, which would ensure that
all women can access affordable
health coverage during their pregnancies.
This bill would create a special
enrollment period in the insurance
marketplaces for pregnant women,
allowing them to enroll in or
change their health care plan when
they become pregnant.
It would also establish a similar
special enrollment period for the
Federal Employees Health Beneﬁts program, ensure access to
comprehensive maternity care for
dependents, and protect current
income eligibility standards for
pregnant women who are eligible
for Medicaid.
It is absurd that only women
whose pregnancies happen to
begin during open enrollment can
choose an insurance plan that ﬁts
their changing health care needs.
We need to make sure every
woman in Ohio has access to the
care she needs for a healthy pregnancy.
Sherrod Brown is a United States Senator from
Ohio.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Wednesday,
Nov. 4, the 308th day of
2015. There are 57 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Nov. 4, 1955,
Baseball Hall of Fame
pitcher Cy Young died in
Newcomerstown, Ohio, at
age 88.
On this date:
In 1884, Democrat Grover Cleveland was elected
to his ﬁrst term as president, defeating Republican James G. Blaine.
In 1922, the entrance
to King Tutankhamen’s
tomb was discovered in
Egypt.
In 1924, President
Calvin Coolidge, who’d
succeeded the late President Warren G. Harding,
was elected to a full term
of ofﬁce; Nellie T. Ross
of Wyoming was elected
the nation’s ﬁrst female
governor to serve out the
remaining term of her
late husband, William B.
Ross.
In 1939, the United
States modiﬁed its neutrality stance in World
War II, allowing “cash
and carry” purchases of
arms by belligerents, a
policy favoring Britain
and France.
In 1942, during World
War II, Axis forces
retreated from El Alamein
in North Africa in a major

victory for British forces
commanded by Lt. Gen.
Bernard Montgomery.
In 1952, Republican
Dwight D. Eisenhower
was elected president,
defeating Democrat Adlai
Stevenson. The highly
secretive National Security Agency came into
existence.
In 1964, comedian
Lenny Bruce was convicted by a three-judge panel
in New York of obscenity
charges stemming from
his performances at the
Cafe Au Go Go in Greenwich Village. (Bruce
received a posthumous
pardon in 2003 from New
York Gov. George Pataki.)
In 1979, the Iran hostage crisis began as militants stormed the United
States Embassy in Tehran, seizing its occupants;
for some of them, it was
the start of 444 days of
captivity.
In 1980, Republican
Ronald Reagan won
the White House as he
defeated President Jimmy
Carter by a strong margin.
In 1991, Ronald Reagan
opened his presidential
library in Simi Valley,
Calif.; in attendance were
President George H.W.
Bush and former Presidents Jimmy Carter, Gerald R. Ford and Richard
Nixon — the ﬁrst-ever

gathering of ﬁve past and
present U.S. chief executives.
In 1995, Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin
was assassinated by a
right-wing Israeli minutes
after attending a festive
peace rally. Retired professor Morris Schwartz of
“Tuesdays with Morrie”
fame died in Newton,
Massachusetts, at age 78.
In 2008, Democrat
Barack Obama was
elected the ﬁrst black
president of the United
States, defeating Republican John McCain.
Ten years ago: Violent
anti-U.S. protests broke
out in Mar Del Plata,
Argentina, where President George W. Bush was
promoting free trade at the
Summit of the Americas.
Jewish Defense League
activist Earl Krugel,
imprisoned for his role in
a bomb plot, died after
being assaulted in a federal
prison in Phoenix; he was
62. Actress Sheree North,
73, died in Los Angeles.
Five years ago: Australian airline Qantas
grounded all six of its
Airbus A380 superjumbo
jets after one of them
blew out an engine over
Indonesia; the plane
made a safe emergency
return to Singapore with
469 people aboard. An
AeroCaribbean ATR 72

crashed in a mountainous
area of Cuba, killing all 68
people on board. Hall of
Fame baseball team manager Sparky Anderson
died in Thousand Oaks,
Calif., at age 76.
Today’s Birthdays:
Actress Doris Roberts is
85. Actress Loretta Swit
is 78. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Harry Elston
(Friends of Distinction) is
77. Blues singer Delbert
McClinton is 75. Former
ﬁrst lady Laura Bush is
69. Actress Ivonne Coll
(TV: “Jane the Virgin”) is
68. Actress Markie Post is
65. Rock singer-musician
Chris Difford (Squeeze)
is 61. Country singer Kim
Forester (The Forester
Sisters) is 55. Actresscomedian Kathy Grifﬁn is
55. Actor Ralph Macchio
is 54. “Survivor” host Jeff
Probst is 54. Actor Matthew McConaughey is
46. Rapper-producer Sean
“Puffy” Combs is 46. Talk
show host Bethenny Frankel is 45. Actor Anthony
Ruivivar is 45. Soul/jazz
singer Gregory Porter
is 44. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Shawn Rivera
(Az Yet) is 44. Celebrity
chef Curtis Stone is 40.
Actress Heather Tom is
40. Rhythm-and-blues/
gospel singer George
Huff is 35. Actress Emme
Rylan is 35. Actress Gillian Zinser is 30.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Marshall to honor
vets with free concert
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
— Marshall University’s
School of Music and
Theatre will honor U.S.
military veterans with a
free concert at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 11, in
Smith Recital Hall on
Marshall’s Huntington
campus.
“This Veterans Day
Concert is a salute to veterans of our armed forces
through music of the
early big bands and other

Project

$100 voucher to a Meigs County
grocery store.
Businesses are sponsoring the
From Page 1
baskets to be given away during the
games. They range in price from $49
children this year. The number is
to slightly over $100, Koenig said.
down from the 70 kids C.A.R.E. has
Some sponsorships remain and are
sponsored in the past, but Koenig
available to any business or individual
said ﬁnances are not allowing for a
wanting to help.
higher number this year.
The “Kids for Christmas” project
C.A.R.E.’s largest yearly fundraiser is one of C.A.R.E.’s top priorities,
is the catﬁsh tournament held in early but Koenig said there are other
summer. Koenig said the number of
needs taken on by C.A.R.E., which
ﬁshermen was down this year, and
stands for “community assistance and
relief for everyone.” Serving people
the normal $10,000 raised from the
primarily from West Columbia to
event fell to between $7,000 and
Letart, the organization helps people
$8,000.
whose houses have been destroyed
The organization spends about
by ﬁre, those who fall victim to
$150 on each child, according to
unforeseen illnesses, as well as other
Koenig. Members will be shopping
cases.
Nov. 8 and wrapping the gifts Nov.
Anyone wanting to assist C.A.R.E.
15.
by
sponsoring a basket or buying
Although the basket games will
tickets
to the basket games can
come too late to help with buying the
contact
Koenig at 740-591-2431, or
children’s gifts, Koenig said proceeds
Carolyn
Koenig at 740-444-2664.
will help provide the families with
food vouchers. He stated C.A.R.E.
Mindy Kearns is a freelance writer for Ohio Valley
Publishing and lives in Mason County.
normally gives each family with a

early 20th cendirector for the
tury jazz music,”
Noteables jazz
said Dr. Martin
ensemble.
Saunders, director
The concert,
of jazz studies at
which will feature
Marshall.
the Jazz I performPrior to teachers at Marshall,
Saunders
ing at Marshall,
will be free and
Saunders spent
open
to
the public. Donaseven years in the Air
tions
to
the music proForce band program at
gram
will
be accepted.
Offutt Air Force Base in
To learn more about
Omaha, Nebraska. There,
the music program at
he performed primarily
Marshall, visit www.maras the lead trumpeter
and later became musical shall.edu/music.

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Community
Calendar will only list event information that is open to the public.

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 4

OLIVE TOWNSHIP — Olive Township Trustees will meet at 6:30 p.m. at
the township garage on Joppa Road.
TUPPERS PLAINS — Breast and
cervical cancer screenings and education will be provided by the Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic
Medicine’s (OU-HCOM) Community
Health Programs, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
clinic will be held on the Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine
Community Health Programs’ Mobile
Health Van parked at the St. Paul
United Methodist Church on Route 7
in TuppersPlains Free Pap tests, pelvic
and breast examinations, breast health
education, and appointments for mammograms will be provided to uninsured
and underinsured women. Appointments are required and interested
persons should call 1-800-844-2654 or
740-593-2432 to schedule.
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP — The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet at 7 p.m.
at the Harrisonville Firehouse.

SATURDAY NOV. 7

of God, Mount Hill Road in Racine, for
a white elephant auction, free soup and
sandwiches.
POMEROY — Dr. Michael Pangio
will conduct a seminar 10 a.m. to 2
p.m.on the topic “Biblical Model of
a Leader”at Hysell Run Community
Church, Hysell Run Road, Pomeroy.
Seminar is free and lunch is provided
free. Call 740-742-3171 to register.

Child
From Page 1

condolences to the
family of Wyatt Barber
during this unfortunate

POMEROY — Dr. Michael Pango,
Apostle of Hysell Run Community
Church, Hysell Run Road, Pomeroy,
will be ministering at the church at
10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. Everyone is
invited for fellowship.
TUPPERS PLAINS — VFW Post
9053 Ladies Auxiliary will host a turkey dinner from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Menu includes turkey, mashed potatoes, green beans, cole slaw, dessert
and drink. A suggested donation of
$10 is appreciated. Carry out dinners
available.
TUPPERS PLAINS — Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer will have their
regular meeting at 7 p.m. at the district
ofﬁce.

WEATHER

2 PM

AEP (NYSE) — 56.75
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.71
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 108.71
Big Lots (NYSE) — 47.47
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 44.30
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 42.81
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 4.28
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.210
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 48.55
Collins (NYSE) —88.11
DuPont (NYSE) — 64.01
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.70
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 29.60
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 49.89
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 65.78
Kroger (NYSE) — 37.76
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 99.38
Norfolk So (NYSE) —80.68
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.89

73°

65°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

76°
46°
62°
40°
85° in 1961
22° in 1951
(in inches)

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

0.00
0.07
0.34
41.46
36.18

Today
6:58 a.m.
5:25 p.m.
12:20 a.m.
1:56 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Thu.
7:00 a.m.
5:24 p.m.
1:16 a.m.
2:28 p.m.

MOON PHASES
New

First

Full

Nov 11 Nov 19 Nov 25

Dec 3

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

Today
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.

Major
6:09a
6:51a
7:30a
8:07a
8:44a
9:23a
10:04a

Minor
12:20p
12:40a
1:19a
1:57a
2:34a
3:12a
3:52a

0

Chillicothe
74/56

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

0

Lucasville
77/57

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Major
6:31p
7:12p
7:51p
8:28p
9:06p
9:45p
10:26p

Minor
---1:02p
1:40p
2:18p
2:55p
3:34p
4:15p

WEATHER HISTORY
Until a cold wave on Nov. 4, 1991,
sent temperatures down to 3 below
zero, Minneapolis had never had subzero cold so early. However, this city
has endured January mornings with
temperatures of 40 below zero.

Portsmouth
77/57

AIR QUALITY
57
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

Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam

Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51

Level
13.05
16.61
21.34
12.60
13.12
24.57
12.38
26.02
34.57
12.80
17.50
34.20
16.60

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.44
+0.40
-0.14
-0.28
+0.06
+0.04
-0.17
-0.15
-0.01
none
-1.00
-0.30
-0.90

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Cooler with a blend of
sun and clouds

60°
44°

Partly sunny

Times of clouds and
sun

Marietta
76/55

Murray City
75/55
Belpre
76/55

Athens
75/55

St. Marys
76/57

Parkersburg
77/54

Coolville
75/55

Elizabeth
77/57

Spencer
76/56

Buffalo
77/57
Milton
77/59

Clendenin
76/56

St. Albans
78/58

Huntington
76/56

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
50/45
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
66/49
20s
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
68/50
-10s
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

TUESDAY

60°
45°
Cloudy

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
77/56

Ashland
77/57
Grayson
77/58

MONDAY

57°
35°

Wilkesville
76/56
POMEROY
Jackson
76/56
76/56
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
76/56
77/57
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
73/58
GALLIPOLIS
77/57
77/56
76/57

South Shore Greenup
77/58
76/56

300

Cloudy and warm
with a thunderstorm

Logan
75/54

BBT (NYSE) —37.78
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.04
Pepsico (NYSE) — 100.92
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.35
Rockwell (NYSE) — 110.14
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 12.75
Royal Dutch Shell — 54.74
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 23.95
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 58.13
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.43
WesBanco (NYSE) — 32.99
Worthington (NYSE) — 32.05
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Nov. 3, 2015, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

SUNDAY

58°
38°

McArthur
75/55

Waverly
75/57

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

0 50 100 150 200

Last

Warm with clouds
and sun

SATURDAY

73°
49°

Adelphi
75/55

Q: During what month is the noon sun
lowest in the sky?

SUN &amp; MOON

FRIDAY

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

A: December in the Northern Hemisphere.

Precipitation

THURSDAY

Fog in the morning; otherwise, sunshine today.
Patchy clouds tonight. High 77° / Low 57°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

75°
63°
57°

Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-9922155 EXT. 2555.

LOCAL STOCKS

TUESDAY, NOV. 10

8 AM

ing this difﬁcult time.”
An investigation
is ongoing. Funeral
arrangements have not
been released to the
Daily Sentinel.

SUNDAY NOV. 8

RACINE — Come out and have fun
BEDFORD — The Bedford Township
at 5:30 p.m. with Mount Moriah Church Trustees will meet at 7 p.m. at the town hall.

TODAY

time,” he said. “The
school has put in place
grief counseling services to assist the students and staff in need.
Please know that our
thoughts and prayers
are with the family dur-

Charleston
78/56

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
46/35

Billings
42/27

Montreal
55/39
Toronto
62/50

Minneapolis
68/59
Chicago
70/57

Detroit
72/57

New York
70/57
Washington
73/57

Kansas City
71/58

Denver
65/34

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W
59/37/t
32/26/pc
72/62/c
69/56/s
72/50/pc
42/27/sf
49/30/pc
61/51/s
78/56/s
65/55/r
56/30/sh
70/57/pc
74/58/pc
74/58/s
74/56/s
76/65/c
65/34/pc
69/58/pc
72/57/s
88/76/pc
77/67/pc
72/58/pc
71/58/pc
57/43/pc
75/61/pc
68/50/s
77/62/pc
87/78/t
68/59/pc
76/62/pc
79/67/pc
70/57/s
73/62/c
88/72/pc
75/54/s
68/50/pc
74/55/s
60/42/s
65/60/r
71/56/c
75/59/pc
48/34/sn
66/49/s
50/45/pc
73/57/s

Hi/Lo/W
52/32/c
37/31/r
74/65/sh
70/62/c
70/57/c
44/29/pc
48/33/c
68/58/c
77/61/pc
74/62/c
41/26/sn
71/53/pc
75/63/pc
73/62/pc
74/63/pc
74/53/t
45/28/r
69/43/t
73/62/pc
88/76/pc
82/67/c
73/61/pc
70/42/t
61/45/s
77/63/t
72/52/s
76/66/pc
86/77/pc
66/40/r
78/66/pc
82/72/c
70/62/c
73/45/r
88/70/pc
74/63/c
67/50/s
72/60/pc
61/50/c
75/61/c
72/60/r
75/56/t
48/33/c
64/49/pc
52/45/c
72/62/c

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
72/62

High
Low

El Paso
73/48
Chihuahua
81/41

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

93° in Jacksonville, FL
19° in Kremmling, CO

Global
High 105° in Fitzroy Crossing, Australia
Low -55° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
77/67
Monterrey
88/70

GOALS

Miami
87/78

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

Staff Report

Wednesday, November 4, 2015 5

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 4, 2015 s Page 6

NASCAR Two advance from D-3 CC Regional
needs
consistency
By Alex Hawley

freshman Jenny Seas
(18:45.0).
Jessica Cook, a sophoPICKERINGTON, Ohio more who ﬁnished ﬁfth
— Thirteen entered, but overall, paced the Lady
only two advanced.
Eagles with a time of
Six Tornadoes, six
19:45.9, followed by 19th
Lady Eagles and one
place ﬁnisher, junior
Lady Rebel took part in
Laura Pullins (20:52.4).
the Division III Regional Taylor Parker was 39th
cross country meet on
with a time of 21:43.2,
Saturday at Pickerington Ally Durst came in 55th
High School North, with with a time of 27:17.9,
Southern’s Conner Wolfe while Kaitlyn Hawk
and Eastern’s Jessica
(22:20.5) rounded out
Cook both qualifying for
the EHS team total with
the state meet.
a 57th place ﬁnish. EastThe girls team competi- ern’s tie-breaker was posttion was won by Garaway ed by Rhiannon Morris,
with a total of 56, folwho ﬁnished 87th with a
lowed by Fredricktown
time of 23:32.9.
with a 79 and Northmor
Cook became the ﬁrst
with a 102. Fariﬁeld
Lady Eagle cross country
Christian (130) took the runner to earn All-Ohio
fourth and ﬁnal qualifying honors last season, ﬁnishspot, topping Eastern in
ing 21st at the state meet.
a tie-breaker. Garaway
She ﬁnished eighth in last
senior Rachel Wentworth year’s regional.
Photo courtesy of BettyAnn Wolfe
Southern sophomore Conner Wolfe (2511) runs beside Belpre paced the ﬁeld of 124
South Gallia senior
senior Cray Sistrunk (2240) during the OHSAA Division III Regional with a time of 18:40.3,
cross country meet on Saturday in Pickerington.
See D-3 | 10
followed by Peebles
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

CHARLOTTE, N.C.
(AP) — When Matt
Kenseth steered Joey
Logano into the wall,
the crowd roared its
approval as a veteran
driver delivered oldschool payback.
The thunderous ovation continued at every
replay.
This is NASCAR’s
version of the “wild
West,” as one driver put
it, and it is riddled with
inconsistencies.
Three races ago, Joey
Logano wrecked Matt
Kenseth, ending his title
hopes, and NASCAR
chalked it up as “quintessential” racing. Then
defending champion
Kevin Harvick sparked a
wreck at Talladega that
kept his repeat bid alive.
NASCAR shrugged it
off, saying it couldn’t
ﬁnd any evidence Harvick meant to do it.
On Sunday, Kenseth
delivered a serious
blow to Logano’s run
toward a championship by pile-driving
him into the wall at
Martinsville. NASCAR
ofﬁcials? They will
probably punish Kenseth harshly— and that
puts them on a very
slippery slope.
It was NASCAR that
ushered in this “Boys,
have at it” era, and
it was NASCAR that
didn’t park Jeff Gordon
in 2012 when he deliberately wrecked championship contender Clint
Bowyer. With Logano
now last in the eightdriver Chase ﬁeld with
two races remaining to
qualify for the ﬁnale,
why should it be any
different for Kenseth?
“What Matt Kenseth
did was so far beyond
the ‘Boys, have at it’
excuse that it doesn’t
belong in the same conversation,” Fox analyst
Larry McReynolds said
Monday. “If NASCAR
doesn’t drop the hammer hard on him, shame
on them.”
Sure, Kenseth’s act
had massive playoff implications for
Logano. He had been
carrying the grudge for
two weeks and everyone
expected him to act. It’s
how the game is played,
Kenseth lives by a
driver code and he said
he’d have lost respect in
the garage had he not
retaliated.
“Growing up, Terry
Labonte, Ricky Rudd,

those are guys you
just did not mess with
because you knew
they would retaliate.
Matt Kenseth is in that
same category,” said
former teammate Jamie
McMurray. “Matt races
everyone fair and he
races hard. If he thinks
that there could have
been better decisions
made (by Logano), then
so be it.”
Then so be it, too,
for Danica Patrick. She
chased David Gilliland
up the track Sunday to
wreck him as payback
for an earlier incident.
Again, the crowd
cheered.
Yet no one is calling
for Patrick to be suspended, and few seem
even the least bit bothered by her act.
So beside the obvious
championship implications, what is the difference?
Kyle Busch has been
wondering just that.
He was parked for a
Sprint Cup race in 2011
for deliberately wrecking Ron Hornaday Jr.
in a Truck Series race.
Carl Edwards avoided
suspension in 2010 for
returning a wrecked
car to the track to crash
Brad Keselowski.
When NASCAR
turned its back on the
Harvick incident at Talladega, Busch griped
that it was because
ofﬁcials would never
punish the reigning
series champion. After
his teammate wrecked
Logano, Busch said he
had no idea what punishment might come
because it changes on a
case-by-case basis.
“I think it all depends
on whose name is above
the door on whether or
not you’re allowed to
do it,” Busch said. “It’s
boys being boys right
now. You’ve got to be
consistent. I deﬁnitely
feel NASCAR is very
consistent in being
inconsistent on calls. I
think it’s BS.”
It can’t be one way for
some drivers and another way for the rest.
Harvick knew his
engine was failing but
failed to get out of
the way at Talladega
because it would have
likely eliminated him
from the playoffs.
Denny Hamlin and
Kenseth minced no
See NASCAR | 10

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, November 4
Volleyball
Charleston Catholic at Wahama, 5 p.m.
CCHS-Wahama winner vs Buffalo at Wahama,
6:30
Eastern vs Waterford at Lancaster HS, 6 p.m.
Friday, November 6
Football
Point Pleasant at Princeton, 7:30
Wahama at Buffalo, 7:30
River Valley at Zane Trace, 7:30
South Gallia at Danville, 7:30
Saturday, November 7
Cross Country
OHSAA State Championships at National Trail
Raceway, 10 a.m.

D-2 season ends at regionals
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

PICKERINGTON, Ohio — An
unlucky 13 on Halloween.
Gallia Academy, River Valley
and Meigs combined to send
13 athletes to the Division II
regional cross country championships held Saturday at Pickerington High School North,
but all of that baker’s dozen had
their respective seasons come to
an end after failing to qualify for
the 2015 state meet next weekend at National Trail Raceway in
Hebron.
RVHS sent one boys team and
a total of eight runners to the
regional level, the most of any of
the local programs, but the Raiders did not advance after placing
11th overall in the 16-team race
with 273 points.
Sheridan won the D-2 boys
regional title with 34 points,
while Unioto (77), Athens (153)
and Indian Valley (166) also
advanced to state after ﬁnishing in the top four team spots.
David Magda of Unioto defeated
the 129-competitor ﬁeld with a
winning mark of 16:04.2.
Garrett Young led the Raiders with a 51st place effort of
17:52.8, followed closely by
Jacob Kemper in 52nd with
a mark of 17:53.1. Nathaniel
Abbott (18:18.2) and Chance
Gillman (18:19.9) also had
respective ﬁnishes of 75th and
77th.
George Rickett rounded out
the RVHS tally by placing 89th
with a time of 18:33.9. Caleb
McKnight (19:37.6) and Ben
Moody (20:23.8) also ﬁnished
121st and 128th, respectively,
for the Raiders.
The Blue Devils had two
entrants in the regional meet
and Meigs had one boy competing. GAHS junior Kaleb Crisenberry led all the local boys by
ﬁnishing 42nd with a time of
17:41.8, while Marauder senior
Jacob Swindell (17:41.9) was
43rd and Gallia Academy sophomore Kyle Greenlee (17:44.3)
placed 44th overall.
Only three local girls competed in the D-2 race, with the
top two efforts coming from the
Blue Angels. Junior Mesa Polcyn
was 22nd overall with a time of
20:15.5, while classmate Mary
Watts was 29th with a mark of
20:28.8.
RVHS sophomore Kenzie
Baker was also 50th out of 122
competitors with a time of
21:12.8.
Unioto won the girls regional
crown with 73 points, while
Minerva (102), Sheridan (118)
and Athens (131) also advanced

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Gallia Academy junior Mesa Polcyn sprints toward the finish line during a September 8 race
See D-2 | 10 at the 2015 Skyline Bowling CC Invitational held in Centenary, Ohio.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 4, 2015 7

Wahama ladies advance in Monday’s sectionals
By Donald Lambert
elambert@civitasmedia.com

MASON, W.Va. — The Lady Falcons are inching close to
their ﬁrst sectional title.
The Wahama volleyball team dropped their ﬁrst match
against top-seeded Buffalo, but the Red and White defeated
Hannan and St. Joseph to advance in the Region I, Section
IV tournament on Monday night in Mason County.
The Lady Falcons (12-19) came close to toppling the
Lady Bison, but were able to take out the Lady Wildcats
and the Lady Irish.
Emmalee Broyles gave Wahama a 4-0 lead early in the
ﬁrst set. Buffalo fought back to take the 11-6 advantage.
Rebekah Roach’s ﬁve consecutive service points gave the
home squad a 15-13 edge. The Lady Bison offense regained
control and took Game 1 25-19.
Buffalo’s momentum carried over into the second set.
Brooke Slaubaugh and Kayla Willbond got the Lady Bison
out to an early 9-3 lead. Madison VanMeter had three service points during the set, but it wasn’t enough to overcome
Buffalo. The Lady Bison took Game 2 25-13.
The Lady Falcons adjusted heading into the Game 3 and
took an 11-4 lead early in the set. Roach’s ﬁve straight service points gave the Red and White a 10-point advantage.
The Lady Bison couldn’t ﬁnd an answer as Wahama easily
took the third set 25-12.
The Lady Bison charged out to an early 10-5 lead in the
fourth set. Roach’s four points got the Lady Falcons back
to within four of their opponents. Kassidy Shamblen’s four
service points at the end aided in Buffalo’s 25-17 win in
Game 4.
Donald Lambert | OVP Sports
The Red and White struggled early on in their next
Wahama senior Olivia Hill (20) sends the ball over the net during the Lady Falcons’ loss to Buffalo on Monday in the Region I, Section
match against Hannan. Lanie Craig got the Lady Wildcats
IV tournament in Mason, W.Va.
up 5-0 early in the ﬁrst set. Elizabeth Mullins’ four points
got the Lady Falcons to within three points. Wahama rallied
and took Game 1 25-21.
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The Lady Falcons took control early in Game 2 with a 9-3
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Olivia Hill had 14 points, followed by VanMeter and Fisher
with 13 points each. Billups had 11 points and Mullins conWEDNESDAY EVENING
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4
tributed 10 points for the Lady Falcons.
BROADCAST
6
PM
6:30
7
PM
7:30
8
PM
8:30
9
PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
“With our girls, you never know who is going to show
NBC
Wheel
Jeopardy!
WSAZ
News
Nightly
of
MysteryLaura
"The
Mystery
Law
&amp;
Order:
S.V.U.
Chicago
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(N)
up,” Wahama coach Matt VanMeter said. “By the third
3 (WSAZ)
3
News
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of the Maternal Instinct" (N) "Patrimonial Burden" (N)
game with St. Joe, we were just gassed. The girls came back
Jeopardy!
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MysteryLaura "The Mystery Law &amp; Order: S.V.U.
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at Six
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pulled it out.”
The 49th Annual CMA Awards Celebrating the biggest artists in country music, live
ABC 6 News ABC World Entertainm- Access
6 (WSYX)
ent Tonight Hollywood from the Bridgestone Arena. (N)
at 6:00 p.m. News
Wahama will face Charleston Catholic on Wednesday
Arthur
Newswatch PBS NewsHour Providing in- Earth's Natural Wonders
Nova "Making North
The Brain With David
night at 5 p.m at Wahama High School. The winner of that
depth analysis of current
"Extreme Wonders" (N)
America: Origins" (N)
Eagleman "How Do I
match will move on to face Buffalo immediately after for the 7 (WOUB)
Decide?" (N)
events.
sectional championship.
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm- The 49th Annual CMA Awards Celebrating the biggest artists in country music, live

Are You Still
832.60 Paying Too Much
For Your Medications?
75.56

TM

60554222

8

Donald Lambert can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2106.

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)

Browns preparing
Manziel to start
CLEVELAND (AP) —
Johnny Manziel is preparing
to start against unbeaten
Cincinnati on Thursday
night because Josh MCown
is still struggling with a
painful rib injury.
McCown took several
hard hits in Sunday’s 34-20
loss to Arizona, and the
36-year-old quarterback said
Tuesday that it’s been difﬁcult to breathe or sleep since
the game.
McCown would not rule
himself out against the
Bengals, but he didn’t sound
optimistic his injury would
be signiﬁcantly better by
kickoff.
McCown would not disclose whether his ribs were
broken, but his difﬁculty
with breathing and lingering
soreness from hits he took
two weeks ago in St. Louis
indicate he’s probably dealing with more than bruising.
The quick turnaround will
make it even more challenging for him to be ready for
the AFC North-leading Bengals (7-0).
Manziel took the majority of snaps in practice with
Cleveland’s starting offense
last week when McCown
was limited by a sore right

shoulder and ribs.
Manziel, who won his
only start earlier this season
when McCown was out with
a concussion, remains under
investigation by the NFL for
a recent domestic dispute.
The league is looking at
whether Manziel violated its
personal conduct policy. A
spokesman said the review
is ongoing.
Manziel started against
the Bengals last season and
was roughed up in a 30-0
loss. He completed 10 of
18 passes for 80 yards and
was sacked three times.
The 2012 Heisman Trophy
winner was also taunted by
several Cincinnati’s players,
who mimicked his “money”
sign, a ﬁnger-rubbing
gesture Manziel has since
dropped.
McCown believes Manziel
is ready to go if called upon.
“He was here last year,
so he’s been through two
weeks of preparation for this
team and on a short week as
well,” he said. “So he’s drawing from those experiences,
and just like any work week
we’ll work well together to
make sure we’re both prepared and ready to go.”

News at 6
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17 Again A man wishes he had made different life
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The Scorpion King In ancient times, a warrior sets
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out to stop an evil king from taking over the land. TV14
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Full House Full House Full House Full House
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(5:00) Kill Bill Vol. 2 An assassin continues her quest for
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Jackie Chan's First
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Kong cop helps a woman who is being harassed by a gang. Strike Jackie Chan. TV14
Bush People "Rocky Seas" Bush "Sink or Swim"
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The First 48 "Trust No One/ The First 48 "Deadly Secret/ The First 48 "Dead Wrong" The First 48 "Deadly
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8 Wednesday, November 4, 2015

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up to 30% off
317 State Route 7 South
Gallipolis, Oh 45632
740-446-7444

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

Yard / Garage Sale
9am- 4pm
11-4-15 thru 11-7-15
Eureka 13622 State Rt. 7 S.

Country home Meigs or Gallia
740-416-3130

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

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

Want To Buy

Rentals
2 bdrm mobile home on farm.
$450.00 mo. includes water
540-729-1331

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coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

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2 bedroom 2 bath mobile
home with carport overlooking
Ohio River.New
furniture and appliances.
$550.00 month
must see to appreciate.
614-595-7773
or 740-645-5953
Help Wanted General

Administrative Assistant position in Kitts Hill, OH, but will be
relocating to Patriot, OH in 6-12 months.
As an Administrative Assistant you will be responsible for
providing administrative support to ensure efficient operation of
the office. You will support managers/supervisors and
employees through a variety of tasks related to organization and
communication. You will communicate via phone and email
ensuring that all administration tasks are completed accurately
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Responsibilities
 Answer and direct phone calls
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memos, letters, faxes and forms
 Assist in the preparation of regularly scheduled
reports
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Requirements
 Proven secretarial or administrative
experience
 Excellent time management skills and ability to
multi-task
 Excellent written and verbal communication
skills
 Strong organizational skills
 High school diploma or equivalent, pass
BI/BCI background checks, drug screening
 Proficiency in MS Word
If you would like to join our team, please send your resume to
The Children's Center of Ohio, LLC., 55 Allison Road, Patriot,
OH 45658. You may also apply in person or call 740-379-9083.
We are looking to hire immediately.

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Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, November 4, 2015 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
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CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

By Hilary Price

11/04

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By Bil and Jeff Keane

11/04

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�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Daily Sentinel

KIAC honors
RedStorm trio
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

FLORENCE, Ky. — The University of Rio
Grande made a clean sweep of the Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference’s weekly volleyball
awards on Monday, with Aleah Pelphrey, Kayla
Briley and Chandler Brown earning Attacker of
the Week, Setter of the Week and Defender of the
Week honors, respectively.
Pelphrey, a 6-0 sophomore from Piketon, Ohio,
put up 34 kills in four matches and 14 sets for an
average of 2.43 kills per set. She hit .244 for the
week, which included a 4-0 record overall and 3-0
in the KIAC for Rio Grande.
She had ﬁve kills in a win at Asbury, nine kills
and seven digs in a win at Point Park and 10 kills
each versus Glenville State and Midway at home.
Pelphrey also chipped in 14 digs and four blocks
on the week.
She is currently ranked 10th in the KIAC with
a hitting percentage of .235 and 11th in total
kills with 265. Her kill total leads the Rio Grande
team, which is 23-7 overall and 7-4 KIAC after ﬁve
straight victories.
Briley, a 6-0 junior from Marion, Ohio, totaled
113 assists in four matches for an average of 8.07
assists per set. She also amassed 46 digs for 3.29
per set and nine total blocks.
In a pair of big, KIAC road wins at Asbury and
Point Park, Briley had double-doubles of 30 assists
and 10 digs and 20 assists and 19 digs, respectively. She also had 29 assists and eight digs versus
Glenville State and 34 assists, nine digs and six
blocks versus Midway.
Briley leads the KIAC with 9.3 assists per set,
and she is third overall with 942 assists. She ranks
11th in the conference with 3.3 digs per set.
Brown, a junior from Stockdale, Ohio, averaged
5.21 digs per set, while also serving at a .938
percentage and accumulating a .980 reception percentage for the week.
Brown had 11 digs and zero reception errors in
24 attempts in a win at Asbury. She had a weekhigh 26 digs in victory at Point Park. She followed
that up with 16 digs versus Glenville State and 20
versus Midway.
Brown currently leads the KIAC with 5.9 digs
per set and is second overall in the conference
with 599 digs.
Rio Grande visits Alice Lloyd and also the St.
Andrews tri-match this weekend Nov. 6-7 to end
the regular season.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the University of
Rio Grande.

Donald Lambert | OVP Sports

Hannan senior Anna Taylor blocks a tipped ball during the Lady Wildcats’ loss to Wahama in the Region I Section IV tournament on
Monday in Mason, W.Va.

Hannan ladies fall in sectionals
By Donald Lambert

the Lady Irish. Madison
Staggs hit four straight
service points to give the
MASON, W.Va. — It
Lady Wildcats a 23-22
was a rough ﬁnal outing
lead. St. Joe stopped the
for the Lady Wildcats.
rally and won the ﬁrst set
The Hannan volleyball 25-23.
team’s 2015 season came
Steadman got the Lady
to an end on Monday
Irish out to a 11-7 lead
night after being defeated early in the second set.
in consecutive matches
Lanie Craig’s two service
in the Region I, Section
points got the Lady WildIV tournament held at
cats within one point of
Wahama High School in
the Lady Irish. Desiree
Mason County.
Disu’s ﬁve service points
The Lady Wildcats
(6-17) fell in consecutive got the Black and Gold
back on track. The Lady
games to St. Joseph and
Irish took Game 2 25-13.
host Wahama.
The Blue and White’s
Hannan started off well
offensive
struggles conagainst the Lady Irish in
tinued
in
Game 3. Disu
Game 1 when Makayla
took
control
of the set
Hoffman gave the Blue
and White a 6-5 lead. St. with eight straight service points to put Hannan
Joe took a 14-11 lead off
in a 21-11 hole in the
six service points from
middle of the set. St. Joe
Tati Schrader and Kathﬁnished the match with a
leen Steadman. Senior
Anna Taylor got Hannan 25-13 win in the third set.
Craig got Hannan off
back to within three of

elambert@civitasmedia.com

to a hot start with six
service points in Game 1
against Wahama. Elizabeth Mullins gave the
Lady Falcons a 15-14 lead
in the middle of the set.
The Red and White held
on for a 25-21 win.
Wahama senior Olivia
Hill gave the home team a
9-3 advantage early in the
second set. Jessica Dalton
got the Lady Wildcats
back to within two points
of Wahama. Hannah Billups got the Lady Falcons
back up 15-9. Wahama
took Game 2 25-20.
The Red and White
continued to pour on
the offense in Game 3.
Emmalee Broyles, Maddy
VanMeter and Rebekah
Roach’s efforts put Hannan in a 15-7 hole. Sophomore Kassidee Bush
kickstarted the Hannan
offense with ﬁve consecutive service points to cut

the deﬁcit to three points.
Billups ended the rally
with eight straight service points. Wahama won
the third set 25-13.
Craig led the Lady
Wildcats with 11 service
points, followed by Hoffman with 10 points.
Bush had eight service
points, while Taylor and
Staggs had eight and
seven points respectively.
Cassie Meadows contributed two points for
Hannan.
“We played really well.
I’m proud of them,” Hannan coach Lauren Hensley
said. “We played hard. I feel
bad because it’s the seniors’
last game. I’m really proud
of how they did.”
This was the ﬁnal game
for seniors Craig, Taylor,
Meadows, Shelbee Myers
and Clarissa Crank.
Donald Lambert can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2106.

Cardale Jones must move the ball for top-ranked OSU
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— Now that Cardale Jones is
starting at quarterback again
for Ohio State, it will be his
role to keep the ball moving not
only down the ﬁeld, but into
the end zone.
Jones started the ﬁrst seven
games but was replaced by J.T.
Barrett for the last game at Rut-

D-3
From Page 6

Kelsey Corbin, who qualiﬁed for the regional tournament as an individual,

gers on Oct. 24, in part because
Barrett does better in the red
zone.
But now that Barrett is suspended for the home game this
week against Minnesota after
being cited Saturday night
for operating a vehicle while
impaired, the top-ranked Buckeyes (8-0, 4-0 Big Ten) will

ﬁnished 80th with a time
of 23:13.8.
The boys team competition was won by
Fredricktown with a
total of 90, followed by
Leesburg Fairﬁeld with a

turn again to Jones, for at least
one game. Jones is 10-0 as a
starter the past two seasons.
Offensive coordinator Ed
Warinner is well aware of Jones’
struggles in the red zone and
the fact the Barrett in the two
games prior to Rutgers was
inserted anytime Ohio State got
near the opponent’s goal line.

91, Columbus Academy
with a 109 and Garaway
with a 145. Fisher Catholic senior Aaron Wood
paced the ﬁeld of 125
with a time of 16:10.3,
followed by Mount Gilead

The Buckeyes have 15 touchdowns and a ﬁeld goal in 18
trips inside the red zone the
past three games after going 12
for 16 (six touchdowns) in the
ﬁrst ﬁve games.
Warinner doesn’t expect the
recent success to change even
though the quarterback has.
“We feel like we have a good

junior Austin Hallabrin
(16:22.5).
Conner Wolfe, a sophomore who ﬁnished 15th
overall, led the Tornadoes
with a time of 16:52.9.
Larry Dunn (17:50.5)
claimed 37th overall,
Tylar Blevins (18:45.2)
was 81st, Lucas Hunter
(19:39.6) was 99th,
while Dimitrius Lamm

answer for the red zone right
now, and we’ve kind of evolved
into what we’re going to do
there, and we know what we
can do,” he said. “(Jones) practices as part of that all through
the last few weeks, even though
J.T. has primarily done it. We’ll
use the things that play to his
strengths.”

(20:03.7), a senior,
claimed 107th in his ﬁnal
race in the Purple and
Gold. Southern’s potential tie-breaking runner
was Ryan McCabe, who
was 122nd with a time of
21:32.0.
The Tornadoes ﬁnished
11th overall with a score
of 177. Conner Wolfe is
the ﬁrst SHS runner to

qualify for the state meet
since his older brother
Kody, who made it to
state in 2010, 2011 and
2012.
Complete results of the Division
III Regional cross country meet at
Pickerington High School North
can be found on the web at www.
baumspage.com
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

60576582

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to do, it seems like he’s promoting this
words in their accusations of Harvick,
type of racing, so that’s tough to crown a
and both suffered for Harvick’s act. Har- true champion when things go like this.
vick responded by saying he simply did
“It’s a no-holds-barred wild, wild
what he had to do.
West. Sure, when people crown the
After Sunday’s race, with Logano
statement that a driver’s doing what
steaming, Hamlin wondered if the
he’s got to do and they became OK with
stakes are so high in the current knock- that statement, you’re just opening up
out Chase for the Sprint Cup champion- Pandora’s box. Everyone is just doing
ship format that the line between right
what they have to do I guess. It’s a bad
and wrong has been blurred — and
statement. It’s an ugly statement.”
NASCAR has no idea how to clear it up.
Payback has always been accepted
“The structure in which we have
and appreciated. It’s time for France to
around us is not very strong as far as an
decide if that is quintessential NASCAR
authority ﬁgure saying, ‘No, you cannot
or not.

From Page 6

to state with top four
www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

efforts. Michelle Hostettler of West Holmes was

the regional champion
with a mark of 18:49.5.
It is the second straight
postseason in which
nobody from the Ohio
Valley Publishing area has
qualiﬁed for the Division
II state meet.

Complete results of the
2015 D-2 regional cross
country meets at Pickerington are available on
the web at baumspage.
com
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

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