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                  <text>Thanks for
one more
season of peace.

Sunny. High
around 34.
Low near 23.

Tall task
awaits Point
Pleasant.

LOCAL s 4A

WEATHER s 5A

SPORTS s 1B

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 186, Volume 64

Friday, November 21, 2014 s 50¢

Meigs certifies election results
By Donald Lambert
elambert@civitasmedia

POMEROY — The unofficial
results for the Meigs County election were released Tuesday, Nov.
4., but it took a few weeks to make
everything official. Earlier this week,
the official results were released,
with Republicans, both local and at
the state level, winning every race.
Governor and Lieutenant Governor: Kasich and Taylor (Rep):
3,612 votes; FitzGerald and Swartz
Neuhardt (Dem): 1,811 votes; Rios
and Fitrakis (Gre): 243 votes
Attorney General: Mike DeWine
(Rep): 3,930 votes; David Pepper
(Dem): 1,741 votes
Auditor of State: Dave Yost

(Rep): 3,592 votes; John Patrick
Carney (Dem): 1,670 votes; Bob
Bridges (Lib): 282
Secretary of State: Jon Husted
(Rep): 3,486 votes; Nina Turner
(Dem): 1,783 votes; Kevin Knedler
(Lib): 298 votes
Treasurer of State: Josh Mandel
(Rep): 3,685 votes; Connie Pillich
(Dem): 1,894 votes
Representative to Congress 6th
District: Bill Johnson (Rep): 3,607
votes; Jennifer Garrison (Dem):
1,873 votes; Dennis Lambert
(Gre): 219 votes
State Representative 94th District: Yolan G. Dennis (Rep): 3,282
votes; Debbie Phillips (Dem):
2,471 votes

County Commissioner: Tim Ihle
(Rep): 3,232 votes; Mick Davenport (Ind): 2,427 votes
County Auditor: Mary T. Byer
Hill (Rep): 4,348 votes
Member of State Board of Education: Robert F. Hagan: 1,721
votes; Kathleen Purdy: 1,469 votes;
Ida Ross Freeman: 812 votes
Justice of the Supreme Court
1/1/15: Sharon Kennedy: 3,044
votes; Tom Letson: 1,355 votes
Justice of the Supreme Court
1/2/15: John P. O’Donnell: 2,148
votes; Judi French: 2,144 votes
Judge of Court of Appeals: Peter
B. Abele: 3,598 votes
Judge Court of Common Pleas
Pro: L. Scott Powell: 4,623 votes

Proposed Tax Levy (Meigs
County): For the levy: 2,627 votes;
Against the levy: 3,092 votes
Proposed Tax Levy (Pomeroy
Village): For the levy: 240 votes;
Against the levy: 121 votes
Proposed Tax Levy (Racine
Village): For the levy: 146 votes;
Against the levy: 51 votes
Proposed Tax Levy 1.5 mill (Syracuse Village): For the levy: 152
votes; Against the levy: 88 votes
Proposed Tax Levy 1 mill (Syracuse Village): For the levy: 170
votes; Against the levy: 68 votes
Proposed Tax Levy (Bedford
Township): For the levy: 199 votes;
Against the levy: 174 votes
Proposed Tax Levy (Chester

Township): For the levy: 539 votes;
Against the levy: 215 votes
Proposed Tax Levy (Columbia
Township): For the levy: 248 votes;
Against the levy: 97 votes
Proposed Tax Levy (Olive
Township): For the levy: 372 votes;
Against the levy: 97 votes
Proposed Tax Levy (Salem
Township): For the levy: 159 votes;
Against the levy: 80 votes
Proposed Tax Levy (Scipio
Township): For the levy: 198 votes;
Against the levy: 96 votes
Proposed Tax Levy (Sutton
Township) For the levy: 590 votes;
Against the levy: 265 votes
Reach Donald Lambert at 740-992-2155,
Ext. 2555. or on Twitter @Donaldlambert22

Commissioners Local quilters, crocheters make lap robes
pass resolution
during meeting
By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The Meigs County Commissioners passed a resolution that takes a stance against
House Bill 515, which will “establish requirements
governing contracts for the harvesting of timber
and enforcement procedures regarding and penalties for the theft of lumber.”
At a meeting Tuesday night, Meigs residents
expressed their concern regarding the bill, citing
additional requirements and restrictions for timber removal, taking power from local officials and
law enforcement and the vagueness of the bill’s
wording. Similarly, the commissioners questioned
the bill, saying there have already been laws in
place regarding timber theft.
The bill will be presented in a hearing Dec.
2 in Columbus. According to state Rep. Debbie
Phillips’ legislative aide, John Calhoun, as of
Thursday it was understood that the hearing
is not open to the public, as previously stated
during Tuesday night’s meeting. Phillips was
invited to Tuesday night’s meeting, but was
not present.
At Thursday’s meeting, Commissioner Randy
Smith said that Phillips called the commissioner’s
office Wednesday morning to inquire about the
meeting, and her aide called Thursday to follow
up. Phillips, along with representatives Mike Duffey and Anthony DeVitis, are co-sponsors of the
bill, which was introduced by state Rep. Ross W.
McGregor.
At the end of the resolution, the commissioners
voiced their opposition to the bill and urged all
Meigs County residents to contact their state representative, senator, or any other pertinent official
to make their voices heard.
The courthouse will be closed both Thanksgiving and Friday, Nov. 28, with the commissioners
moving their weekly meeting to Tuesday, Nov. 25
at 10 a.m. Similarly, the courthouse will be closed
Christmas Day and Friday, Dec. 26. An alternative
commission meeting for that week has not yet
been determined.
See MEETING | 5A

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2A
Faith &amp; Family: 4A
Weather: 5A
— SPORTS
NFL: 1B
Soccer: 1B
— FEATURES
Television: 2B
Classified: 3B
Comics: 5B

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
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facebook to share your
thoughts.

Submitted photo

The Lovely Ladies of the Comfort Club Quilters met Wednesday with JoAnne Newsome, Drew Webster Post Auxiliary Unit 39 president,
and presented her with 30 lap robes, both quilted and crocheted, to present to veterans residing in local nursing homes. Those assisting
were Delores Will, Joane Vaughan, Gayle Thomas, Doris Grueser, Jackie Frost, Shirley Hamm, Cleo Smith and Barbara Gheen. Diana
Maxwell crocheted six lap robes and Madeline Painter presented them to the auxiliary. Newsome thanked the Lovely Ladies, and said
that thanks to them, veterans will keep extra warm this Winter. Pictured in the front row is Joanne Vaughan. Back row, from left: Gayle
Thomas, Delores Will, Doris Grueser and Jackie Frost. Absent were Shirley Hamm, Cleo Smith, Barbara Gheen.

Grande Chorale to perform ‘Disney Dazzle’
Staff report

RIO GRANDE — The University of Rio Grande’s Grande Chorale
promises a Disney Dazzle with its
annual fall concert at 8 p.m. Dec. 4
at the Berry Fine &amp; Performing Arts
Center.
The concert is free and open to the
public. As Rio Grande’s premiere musical chorus, the Grande Chorale performs throughout the year on campus,
in the community and throughout the
region.
“The Grande Chorale is always a fantastic group to hear perform,” chorale
director Sarin Williams said. “Concerts
are enjoyable, educational experiences
for Rio students, faculty, staff and area
community members alike. Expect to
leave this concert humming a tune, and
with a happy state of mind.”
The performance will include notable Disney tunes from recent blockbusters like Frozen, as well as the classics.
Songs will include: “Let it Go,” “When
You Wish Upon a Star,” “Supercalifragalisticexpialidocious,” “Under the Sea,”
“A Whole New World,” “It’s a Small
World” and more.
The Grande Chorale consists of
13 student vocalists – Rachel Ditmer
(soprano), Kyle Fannin (tenor), Aryn
Gritter (soprano), Jeff James (bass),

Submitted photo

The University of Rio Grande’s Grande Chorale will host its annual fall concert Dec. 4. Rio
Grande’s premiere musical chorus features 13 student vocalists: (back row, from left)
sound technician John Polcyn, Jeff James, Kyle Fannin, Allyson Waddell, Rachel Ditmer,
Jordan Lombardo, Patrick Williams, Matthew Rinehart, Director Sarin Williams, (front
row, from left) Aryn Gritter, Brooke Wolni, Chloe Nared, Brandi Yerian, Kristen Saber and
Kayla Trace.

Jordan Lombardo (bass), Chloe Nared
(alto), Matthew Rinehart (tenor), Kristen Saber (alto), Kayla Trace (alto),
Allyson Waddell (mezzo-soprano),
Patrick Williams (tenor), Brooke Wolni
(mezzo-soprano) and Brandi Yerian
(soprano). Pianist Barb White will

accompany the Grande Chorale, with
John Polcyn the sound technician.
“I’ve grown up on Disney music,” said
Gritter, a senior music comprehensive
major at Rio Grande, “so to have the
opportunity to perform it in Grande Chorale has been an amazing experience.”

�LOCAL

2A Friday, November 21, 2014

OBITUARY

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

LENORA LEE OFFENBERGER
COOLVILLE
— Lenora Lee
Offenberger, 63,
of Coolville, died
Wednesday, Nov.
19, 2014, at her
home.
She was born
Dec. 2, 1950, in Mason,
W.Va., to Leonard L. and
Ora (Martin) Bass.
Lenora was a member
of Belpre Church of the
Nazarene. She loved
spending time with her
grandchildren. She always
thought of others and left
an impact on everyone
she met.
She is survived by her
husband of 37 years,
Jack L. Offenberger; two
sons, Rodney A. Stewart
(Millie), of Houston,
and Scott Offenberger
(Lisa), of Parkersburg;
two daughters, Robyn
R. Stewart, of Little
Hocking, and Kelly Metz
(Dave), of Hilliard;
daughter-in-law Denise

Stewart; her
mother, Ora Bass,
of Syracuse; 10
grandchildren; one
great-grandchild;
two brothers, John
Bass, of Dexter,
and David Bass, of
Syracuse; and two sisters,
Barbara Koker (Richard),
of Pomeroy, and Cherri
Rinehart (Roy), of Mansfield.
She was preceded in
death by her father; one
niece, Chrissy; and one
nephew, Joshua.
The funeral service
will be 1 p.m. Saturday,
Nov. 22, 2014, at Belpre
Church of the Nazarene.
Burial will follow the
service at Carmel Cemetery in Racine. Visitation
will be 6-8 p.m. Friday,
Nov. 21, 2014, at Leavitt
Funeral Home in Belpre.
Online condolences
may be sent to the family
by visiting www.LeavittFuneralHome.com.

MEIGS COUNTY LOCAL BRIEFS

4-H Committee
Plat Book sales

District 18 public works
commission meeting
MARIETTA — A meeting of the District 18 Executive Committee will be 10 a.m. Dec. 11 at the Best
Western, 701 Pike Street, Marietta (formerly known
as the Holiday Inn). The purpose of this meeting
is for the Executive Committee to select projects
for Round 29 funding under the Ohio Public Works
Commission State Capital Improvement and Local
Transportation Improvement Programs (SCIP/LTIP).
If you have questions regarding this meeting, contact
Michelle Hyer at (740) 376-1025.

MCA Christmas
celebration schedule
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Community
Association is having their fourth annual Christmas
Market on Dec. 6 at the Masonic Lodge/Riverbend
Arts Council building on the corner of N. Second Ave.
and Walnut St. The Market will be open from 10 to 6.
Concessions will be sold. We do have some empty spaces and would like to invite local crafters to join us. Each
8 ft. space is $20. Let us know if you need electricity
for your display. Please contact us as soon as possible
if you are interested (Deb - 992-5877/Texanna - 9921121.) This is the day of the Middleport Christmas
celebration which includes carriage rides, the Big Bend
Community Band playing from 4-4:30 p.m., a service
by the Middleport Ministerial Association, Christmas
carols, and a parade with Santa and Mrs. Claus as the
Grand Marshals. There will be time for the kids to visit
with Santa and his Mrs. after the parade. They will be
in the same building as the Christmas Market.

Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 317-620)
Telephone: 304-752-6950
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Please call for more information on local pricing.

CONTACT US

CONTENT MANAGER:
Martha Sparks
304-752-6950
msparks@civitasmedia.com

apeake, passed away Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2014, at home.
Funeral service will be 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 22,
2014, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, by Pastor John Lee Gilkerson III. Burial
will follow in Miller Memorial Gardens in Miller,
Ohio. Visitation will be 1-2 p.m. Saturday at the
funeral home.
MCCOY
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Dorothy May “Dot”
McCoy 83, of Huntington, died Wednesday, Nov. 19,
2014, in St. Mary’s Medical Center.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m., Monday, Nov. 24,
2014, at the Community of Grace United Methodist
Church, Huntington. Burial will be in Woodmere
Memorial Park, Huntington. Friends may visit with
family from 4-7 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 23, 2014, at Chapman’s Mortuary, Huntington.

FULKS
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — Joyce M. Fulks, 78,
of Chesapeake, passed away Wednesday, Nov. 19,
2014, at St. Mary’s Medical Center in Huntington,
W.Va.
Funeral service will be 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 23,
MCDONALD
2014, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, ProctorCHESAPEAKE, Ohio — Michael R. McDonald,
ville, Ohio, by Pastor Mike Hannon.
68, of Chesapeake, passed away Thursday, Nov. 20,
Burial will follow in Rome Cemetery, Proctorville. 2014, at Cabell Huntington Hospital, Huntington,
Visitation will be 6-8 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 22, 2014,
W.Va.
at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,
Ohio, is in charge of arrangements, which are
JOHNSON
incomplete.
MASON, W.Va. — George Marcus Johnson, 65, of
Mason, went to be with the Lord on Thursday, Nov.
RHODES
20, 2014, at his residence in Mason.
LEON, W.Va. — Jerry Dale Rhodes, 64, of Leon,
Visitation will be 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. Sunday,
passed away Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2014, at Pleasant
Nov. 23, 2014. Service will be 11 a.m. Monday, Nov. Valley Hospital following an extended illness.
24, 2014. Officiating will be Pastor Sam Anderson.
Funeral service will be 1 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 22,
Foglesong-Roush Funeral Home is serving the fam2014, at Raynes Funeral Home in Buffalo, W.Va.,
ily.
with Pastor Herbert Buck officiating. Burial will follow in Craig Cemetery, Grimms Landing. The famLAMBERT
ily will receive friends one hour prior to the service
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — Herman Lambert, 78, of Ches- at the funeral home.

MEIGS COUNTY COMMUNITY CALENDAR

POMEROY — Meigs County 4-H Committee has
reduced the price of the current plat book to $10.
Funds support the 4-H program in the county by providing funds for supplies, camp and college scholarships, learning opportunities and more. To purchase
a plat book, you can stop by the Extension Office on
Monday-Thursday from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m (closed
12-12:30 for lunch) mail $15 (for book, shipping &amp;
handling) to Meigs County 4-H Committee, PO Box
32, Pomeroy, OH 45769 or visit the Meigs County
Recorder’s Office in the Court House.

REVENUE MANAGER:
Jeff Vaughn
304-752-6950
jvaughn@civitasmedia.com

ERRETT
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Lester Lee Errett
Sr., 92, of Point Pleasant, went to be with the Lord
on Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2014, at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Lee’s life will be remembered at 3 p.m., Saturday,
Nov. 22, 2014, at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, with
Pastor Bob Patterson officiating. Burial will follow
in Kirkland Memorial Gardens, with military honors
being rendered by the West Virginia Honor Guard
and the American Legion, Mason County Post
23. Visitation will be 1-3 p.m. Saturday the funeral
home.

FRI., NOV. 21

Rutland Vol. Fire Department will host their
POMEROY — The
annual turkey dinner
Pomeroy High School
at Meigs Elementary
Class of 1959 will be
School Sat., Nov. 22.
having their Third Fri.
Serving starts at 5 p.m.
lunch at Fox Pizza at
Tickets are only $7 and
noon.
can be purchased at the
MIDDLEPORT —
Rutland Dept. Store,
The Free Community
Quality Print, Pomeroy
Dinner at the MiddleFlower Shop and Conport Church of Christ
nies Corner, or call
will be held this Fri.,
Danny Davis at 740-508Nov. 21 at 5 p.m. this
0688.
is a week earlier due
POMEROY — The
to Thanksgiving. The
community will be serv- Meigs County “Night
of Thanksgiving” will
ing turkey, noodles,
be Sat., Nov. 22 at 6
green beans, roll and
p.m. and the Mulberry
pie. Everyone is welCommunity Center.
come. Doors open at
Music will be provided
4:30 p.m.
by the Thanksgiving
Community Choir. A
SAT., NOV. 22
traditional Thanksgiving
SYRACUSE —The
Meal will be served. The
Meigs County Garden
event is being hosted by
Clubs will be hosting
the Meigs County and
their annual Christmas
Middleport Ministerial
Flower Show from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sun., Associations and Meigs
Nov. 23 from 1-4 p.m.at County churches and is
free.
the Syracuse CommuMIDDLEPORT —
nity Center. Open judgMiddleport Church of
ing will take place at 1
Christ will hold a regisp.m. Sat.. Do you have
tration/evaluation day
a special houseplant
you would like to share? for Upward Basketball
&amp; Cheerleading sign-ups
If so, the group would
on Sat., Nov. 22 from
love to see your green
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the
thumb at work. If you
have a knack for arrang- church’s Family Life Center, corner of 5th &amp; Main
ing flowers the group
Streets. This is open to
is there to give you a
all Kindergarten (or age
chance to show your
talents. Support your
5) through 6th graders.
community. For more
For more information
information contact
call 992-2914 or see the
Pam Schatz at 740-667- Facebook page at Mid9712.
dleport Church of Christ
RUTLAND — The
Upward Sports.

Rutland Volunteer Fire Department
Annual Turkey Dinner
Saturday,
November 22

Meigs
Elementary
School

Serving starts
at 5 pm

Tickets - $7.00

Tickets available at: Rutland Department Store Quality Print - Pomeroy Flower Shop - Connie’s Corner
Or contact Danny Davis @ 740-508-0688
60548224

MON., NOV. 24

on Fri., Nov. 28 at 7:30
p.m. at the arts council
POMEROY — The
building at 290 North
regular meeting of the
Meigs Co. Library Board 2nd Ave, in Middleport.
The Big Bend Comwill be held Mon., Nov.
munity Band will play
24 at 3:30 p.m. at the
preceding the show. The
Pomeroy Library.
RACINE — Southern revue, “Dreaming of
Christmas”, will feature
Local Board of Education will meet in regular local talent new to the
session Mon., Nov. 24 at show this year and many
from previous shows. All
the High School Media
tickets will be sold at the
Center at 6:30 pm.
door. Admission is $5.
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Veterans
SUN., NOV. 30
Service Office ComRUTLAND —The
mission will meet at 9
a.m. at 117 E. Memorial Independent Holiness
Church will have their
Drive in Pomeroy.
revival Nov. 30 through
Dec. 3 with The Rev.
TUE., NOV. 25
Nelson Perdue. Sun. serPOMEROY — There
will be no Meigs Co. Tea vices are at 10:30 a.m.
and 6 p.m., with weekParty meeting on Nov.
night services at 7 p.m.
25. The next meeting
will be held on Dec. 9.
Thurs., Dec. 4
The Tea Party would like
SYRACUSE — The
to wish everyone a very
Ugly Christmas Sweater
Happy Thanksgiving.
Thirty-Ones and BasPOMEROY — The
ket Games will take
Meigs County Health
Department will conduct place Thurs., Dec. 4 at
the Syracuse Commuan Immunization Clinic
nity Center. Proceeds
on Tue., Nov. 25 from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at go towards financing
kIDs Safe Equipment
112 E. Memorial Drive
in Pomeroy. Please bring for The Meigs County
child(ren)’s shot records. Sheriff’s Office, and to
Children must be accom- finance their K-9 Mascot
panied by a parent/legal Costume. Doors open
and dinner is available
guardian. A $10 donaat 5 p.m. Games begin
tion is appreciated for
at 6 p.m., with 20 games
immunization administration; however, no one for $20. Food includes
homemade chicken and
will be denied services
because of an inability to noodles, taco in a bag,
pay an administration fee hotdogs and sauce, and
more. Basket games
for state-funded childinclude a $500 retail
hood vaccines. Please
bring medical cards and/ Longaberger coffee
or commercial insurance table.
cards, if applicable. Flu
SAT., DEC. 6
shots are available for
NEW HAVEN, W.
people aged 6 months
Va. — The New Haven
and older. Only Ohio
Medicaid via Caresource Fire Department Ladies
Auxiliary Merry Christis accepted for those
mas “Christmas Craft
aged 19 years or older.
Zostavax (shingles) vac- Show” will be 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. There will be
cine is also available.
Call for eligibility deter- a Christmas parade at
11 a.m with Santa Claus
mination.
at the station after the
parade. Door prizes will
FRI., NOV. 28
MIDDLEPORT —The be awarded to visitors.
Riverbend Arts Council For more information,
contact Shelby Duncan
will present the annual
Riverbend Talent Revue at 304-882-2814.

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�STATE/NATION

Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 21, 2014 3A

‘Heartbeat’ abortion bill gets panel’s OK
House votes to
shield execution
drugmaker
By Julie Carr Smyth

fetal heartbeat, which
can be as early as six
weeks into pregnancy.
COLUMBUS — A
Before the vote, aborbill that would impose
tion rights advocates
some of the nation’s
attacked the measure as
most stringent abortion unnecessary, dangerous
restrictions cleared an
and misogynist, and the
Ohio House committee
American Civil Liberties
Thursday after suddenly Union warned it would
re-surfacing in the lame
draw an immediate,
duck session.
costly legal challenge if
The GOP-led House
passed.
Health Committee
Meanwhile, passionpassed the so-called
ate
proponents called
heartbeat bill 11-6
abortion
murder and
after several emotional
defended
their right as
hours of testimony. The
public
servants
to prodivisive measure had
tect
human
life.
languished without a
Chairman Lynn Wachthearing since it was
mann,
a Republican
introduced more than a
year ago. A nearly identi- from Napoleon, allowed
cal bill cleared the House questioning to stray
in 2011 but was stopped into witnesses’ beliefs
on when life begins and
in the state Senate.
The legislation would whether one witness had
children of his own. He
restrict most abortions
then repeatedly gaveled
at the first detectable

Associated Press

By Julie Carr Smyth
Associated Press

COLUMBUS — The names of companies providing lethal injection drugs to the state would be shielded for at least two decades under a bill that cleared
the Ohio House on Thursday.
Over objections by some Democrats that the proposal goes against government openness and risks
more execution-related lawsuits, the Republican-led
chamber voted 61-25 in favor of it. The legislation
heads next to the state Senate, with a two-year session set to end in December.
The measure requires a drugmaker to specifically
ask for anonymity, rather than receive it automatically,
under an agreement that would allow release of the
company’s name 20 years after it last provides drugs
to the state.
The bill gives judges the ability to view information
about a vendor after consultation with Ohio’s prisons
department.
State Rep. Jim Buchy, a Greenville Republican, said
protecting drugmakers’ names was necessary. He said
the state prisons agency can’t obtain the drugs to
carry out the death penalty while companies’ names
are public.
Executions have been on hold in Ohio since death
row inmate Dennis McGuire was put to death with
the country’s first use of a two-drug combo in January. McGuire took 26 minutes to die, repeatedly gasping and snorting. In July, the execution of an Arizona
inmate using the same two drugs took two hours.
Ohio’s first choice of a pharmaceutical — compounded, or specially mixed, pentobarbital — has
been used successfully by Texas and Missouri, which
won’t reveal where their drug comes from, but Ohio
has been unable to obtain it.
The state’s next scheduled execution is Feb. 11,
when Ronald Phillips is set to die for the 1993 killing of his girlfriend’s 3-year-old daughter. The state
must determine whether it has enough drugs 30 days
beforehand.

Mayor’s ban on Arab
workers ignites uproar
By Josef Federman
Associated Press

JERUSALEM — The
mayor of a southern Israeli city sparked a national
uproar Thursday by barring Israeli Arab construction workers from jobs in
local preschools, citing
security concerns after a
rash of attacks by Palestinian assailants elsewhere in
the country.
The proposal was condemned as racist by Israeli
leaders, but it reflected
the tense mood in the
country and deepened
longstanding divisions
between the nation’s Jewish majority and Arab
minority. An opinion poll
showed solid public support for the measure.
Israel has been on edge
following a wave of Palestinian attacks that has
killed 11 people over the
past month, including
five this week in a bloody
assault on a Jerusalem
synagogue. Most of the
attacks have occurred in
Jerusalem — whose population is roughly one-third
Palestinian — with deadly
stabbings in Tel Aviv and
the West Bank as well.
Responding to the
unrest, the mayor of Ashkelon, Itamar Shimoni,
announced that Israeli
Arab laborers renovating
bomb shelters in local
kindergartens would be
barred from their jobs.
He also ordered security
stepped up at construction
sites where Arab laborers
are employed.
He said the order was a
response to the synagogue
attack Tuesday, in which
Palestinian assailants
killed four rabbis and a
Druse Arab policeman
with meat cleavers and
gunfire.
“Anyone who thinks
this is illegal can take me
to court,” Shimoni said.
“At this time, I prefer to
be taken to court and not,
God forbid, to attend the
funeral of one of the children from kindergartens.”
The workers in Ashkelon are Arab citizens of
Israel, in contrast to the

Palestinian attackers from
the West Bank and east
Jerusalem, and it appeared
unlikely the order would
last for long. Justice Minister Tzipi Livni called
it illegal and ordered the
attorney general to take
action.
“We must not generalize about an entire public
due to a small and violent
minority,” Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu said.
“The vast majority of
Israel’s Arab citizens are
law abiding and whoever
breaks the law — we will
take determined and vigorous action against him.”
Israeli leaders proudly
boast the country is the
only democracy in the
Middle East, and say
they place great importance on protecting the
civil rights of the Arab
minority, a diverse group
that includes Muslims,
Christians, Bedouins and
Druse.
But the situation for
Israel’s Arab citizens is
complicated — particularly in the current atmosphere.
Arabs, who make up
about 20 percent of Israel’s
population of 8 million,
often complain of being
treated as second-class
citizens, and suffer from a
high poverty rate, job and
housing discrimination
and poor public services.
Many openly identify with
the Palestinians, drawing
accusations that they are
disloyal.
In recent years, Foreign
Minister Avigdor Lieberman has called on Israeli
Arabs to take a loyalty oath
and proposed redrawing
Israel’s borders under any
future peace deal to place
large numbers of them on
the Palestinian side.
Tziona Koenig-Yair, the
equal employment commissioner in Israel’s Economy Ministry, said she
has seen a jump in claims
recently by Arab workers who say they have
lost their jobs on racial
grounds. She said she
planned to fight the mayor
of Ashkelon in court if his
order is not reversed.

discussion out of order.
At one point, Rep.
Nickie Antonio, a Lakewood Democrat, led a
collective deep breath in
the packed room charged
with emotion.
Women delivered
heart-wrenching testimony on both sides of
the debate.
One woman brought
gifts for committee
members from her young
daughter, Isabella, conceived when the mother
was raped as a 17-year-old
high school student.
Another recounted
roadblocks she faced in
ending a pregnancy after
the fetus was determined
to be unviable and she’d
decided on an abortion
in consultation with her
doctors, family and rabbi.
The heartbeat bill has
fiercely divided Ohio’s

anti-abortion community, with some fearing
a court challenge could
undo other abortion
restrictions already in
place. It is not supported
by Ohio Right to Life,
the state’s largest and
oldest anti-abortion
group.
Supporters hope the
bill would provoke a
legal challenge with the
potential to overturn the
U.S. Supreme Court’s
1973 Roe v. Wade ruling,
which legalized abortion
up until viability, usually
at 22 to 24 weeks.
Similar measures have
been challenged in other
states.
Ohio supporters of the
bill say different federal
court judges have different opinions, as has
been the case with gaymarriage bans.

Prosecutors dismiss 1975 murder charges
By Mark Gillispie

dom. Ajamu finds that prospect
“mind boggling.”
Ajamu can never forget the
CLEVELAND — Kwame
moment when a judge sentenced
Ajamu was underneath his truck
him to the electric chair.
fixing a fuel pump when his childHe spent his 18th birthday on
hood friend, Ricky Jackson, called death row. His mother, a brother
and asked if Ajamu could give
and a sister died while he was in
him a ride home on Friday.
prison. His brother got to within
Ajamu, once known as Ronnie
three weeks of an execution date.
Bridgeman, Jackson and Ajamu’s
Both brothers’ sentences were
brother, Wiley Bridgeman, were
commuted to life in prison after
sentenced to death at separate
the U.S. Supreme Court struck
trials for the 1975 slaying of busi- down the death penalty in 1978.
nessman Harry Franks outside a
Jackson’s sentenced was commutcorner store in Cleveland. They
ed to life a year earlier because of
were barely old enough to shave
an error in the jury instructions.
when judges sent them to death
Bridgeman was released from
row. Ajamu was 17, Jackson was
prison in 2002 but was sent back
19 and Bridgeman was 20.
on a parole violation.
The call from Jackson on
“These last few months, I’ve
Tuesday came from a Cleveland
been 17 all over again,” Ajamu
courtroom where Eddie Vernon,
said. “I had to relive in my mind
who as a 13-year-old boy testified and heart my mother walking
at the men’s trials, had recanted
down the street the last few days
his damning testimony nearly 40 of her life with that shame. She
years later.
knew we didn’t do it, but the
“I had to scoot out from under
world didn’t.”
that truck to keep from killing
Despite spending 27 years in
myself,” Ajamu said with a laugh prison for a crime he maintains
when describing the call from
he did not commit, Ajamu says he
Jackson. “It just blew my mind!”
tries not to dwell on the negative.
Cuyahoga County prosecuHe says he figures “there’s always
tors filed a motion Thursday to
a story worse than mine.” And he
dismiss charges against the three says he forgave Vernon years ago
men. With Vernon’s testimony
because he knew such a young
in doubt, prosecutors conceded
boy could not have concocted the
on Tuesday they no longer had a
story he told at trial on his own.
case.
In 2011, Scene Magazine wrote
Ajamu got out of prison in Janu- an article about the case that
ary 2003. Jackson was at a prison called into question Vernon’s testiwork camp but is now in county
mony. But it wasn’t until a minisjail. Bridgeman is at a northwest
ter visited Vernon at a hospital in
Ohio prison. If transportation
2013 that Vernon came clean. In
issues are worked out and Bridge- an affidavit submitted by the Ohio
man is brought to Cleveland, all
Innocence Project, which represents Jackson, Vernon said he was
three could be reunited Friday,
coerced and threatened by detecbreathing the sweet air of free-

Associated Press

tives into implicating the three
men after repeating gossip he’d
heard to a police officer. Vernon
has acknowledged that he was
on a school bus parked down the
block when the shooting occurred
and did not see Jackson or the
Bridgemans kill anyone.
Vernon said detectives threatened to arrest his parents if he
did not stick to the story they
wanted him to tell. There was no
physical evidence tying the three
men to the slaying, only the boy’s
testimony.
According to court filings,
detectives had solid leads. A
16-year-old who knew Jackson
and the two brothers from the
neighborhood testified that she
saw two strange men outside the
store when she went inside to buy
chips that day. She said she hid at
the back of the store when gunshots rang out.
A police informer gave detectives a license plate number that
matched a vehicle described as
the getaway car. They questioned
the man but did not pursue
charges. The mother of another
possible suspect called police to
tell them she thought her son had
something to do with the killing
and that he’d stolen his grandfather’s .38-calliber revolver. Franks
was killed with a .38.
Attorney Terry Gilbert, who
represents Ajamu and his brother,
thanked prosecutors for dismissing the charges.
“They’re doing the right thing,”
he said. “They’re also to be congratulated for recognizing that
there was an injustice here. It’s
not often you see prosecutors rise
to the occasion to undo a wrong
that has existed for 40 years.”

Master of all mediums Nichols dead at 83
By Jake Coyle

But with a dry wit and a
classical eye, he choreographed caustic social
NEW YORK — A legcommentaries of couples
end of film, theater and
drunk with bitterness,
comedy in nearly equal
bored with regret and
measure, Mike Nichols
apprehensive in flight.
was an unquestioned
“I keep coming back to
fixture of smart, urbane
it, over and over: adultery
American culture across
and cheating,” Nichols,
a relentlessly versatile,
who was divorced three
six-decade career that on
times before marrying
stage or screen, reliably
ABC News’ Diane
coursed with crackling
Sawyer in 1988, said
intelligence.
last year. “It’s the most
Nichols won nine Tonys, interesting problem in
an Oscar, several Emmys
the theater. How else do
and a Grammy. He made
you get Oedipus? That’s
up the lanky half of his
the first cheating in the
groundbreaking comic
theater.”
duo with Elaine May. As
Meryl Streep, who
a director, he made count- stared in Nichols’ “Silkless performers — from
wood” and “Heartburn,”
Dustin Hoffman to Whoo- recalled him as “a direcpi Goldberg — into stars. tor who cried when he
To consistent acclaim, he laughed, a friend withadapted Edward Albee,
out whom, well, we can’t
Neil Simon, Tony Kushner imagine our world.”
and Arthur Miller.
Steven Spielberg
Nichols, who died
called Nichols’ passing a
Wednesday night in New
“seismic loss.”
York at 83, was a supreme
“For me, ‘The Graduorchestrator of material,
ate’ was life altering —
talent and taste. In films
both as an experience at
like “The Graduate,”
the movies as well as a
‘’Who’s Afraid of Virmaster class about how
ginia Woolf?” and “Carnal to stage a scene,” said
Knowledge,” he left not a Spielberg. “Mike had a
firm stamp of authorship. brilliant cinematic eye and
AP Film Writer

uncanny hearing for keeping scenes ironic and real.”
The Berlin-born Nichols, whose Jewish family
emigrated to the U.S. in
1939, lost his hair at age
4 from a reaction to an
inoculation for whooping
cough, and would wear
wigs the rest of his life. He
began as a stand-up, and
comedy would remain the

bedrock to his sensibility
and sense of timing.
Nichols and May developed their great improvisational rapport into a saucy,
sophisticated stage show
that took on sex, marriage,
family and other subjects
in a frank manner that
titillated and startled audiences of the late 1950s and
early ‘60s.

60528778

�FAITH &amp; FAMILY

4A Friday, November 21, 2014

Daily Sentinel

Thanks for one more season of peace
I am thankful to God for at
least one more Thanksgiving/
Christmas season of peace.
Because, as things currently
stand, while we will probably
squeeze through this season, I
not sure how many more seasons of peace we are going to
get after this one.
Now, you might criticize
me for revealing my cynical
side rather than upholding an
ever-glowing optimism about
our immediate circumstances.
Quite the contrary when it
comes down to it, for I am ever
spiritually optimistic. I am
spiritually optimistic because
I believe in God. I trust completely in His relevant Word.
His providential love and
watch-care I liberally acknowledge. I am very thankful for the
multitude of blessings He sends
my way and our way here in
the United States. I look for
better eternal things from His
hand in the days to come. God
is so good.

But, it is not God or
possible imposition of
the things of God which
sodomite marriages,
arouses the cynicism
Manchin passed it off
in me. There is that
as not being needed.
certain measure of realPeople believed him. No
ity that stirs my soul as
precautions were adminI consider the current
istered. Guess what?
Ron
social, moral, political
West Virginia is now in
Branch the sodomite marriage
and spiritual disconnect
from that which is right
business. Social disconPastor
and good in the eyes of
nects threaten the peace.
God.
West Virginia’s current
For, prevailing upon us is that governor, Earl Ray Tomblin,
pervasive attitude to view evil
vetoed the 2014 Fetal Pain Bill
as good. It is complicated fur(HB 4588) which would have
ther by that prevailing attitude prohibited late-term abortions.
of passivity which provides no His reason: It would “unduly
reasonable hindrance to the
restrict the physician-patient
Godless liberal influence of
relationship.” Guess what? The
social and moral destabilization lack of hindrance by way of his
rending our basic moral fabric. veto has allowed the abortion
Consider the politicians
millers to continue grinding
who continually snub moral
babies to death even up to
concerns. When former West
birth days. Social disconnects
Virginia governor Joe Manchin threaten the peace.
was once pressed during his
Consider further. Violence
administration concerning a
is expected for Ferguson
constitutional amendment to
because it is being planned
protect West Virginia from the and promoted. Islamic ter-

rorism finds more and more
support and activity here in
our own country because it is
being tolerated. The push for
the legalization of marijuana
continues to grow support in
our nation because it is seen as
a good thing. President Obama
threatens the social stability of
our nation with his own elitist
ideological agenda because he
is the political front person for
the current new-age moral and
social philosophy.
We carelessly continue to
cede the necessary and important strength of the family unit
to adultery, pornography and
gambling because it reduces
personal accountability. If
we keep allowing so much to
disconnect us from the practices that bring the blessing
of peace, our seasons of peace
may very well soon come to an
end.
Do you not realize that disconnects with practices that
bring the blessings of peace

A HUNGER FOR MORE
Living, as we do, in the
“Information Age,” it sadly
becomes all too clear that
obeying the call to abide in
Christ is challenging at the
very least in part because we
are beset by demands on our
time, energies and resources.
And let’s face it, not all of
the information that bombards us constantly is accurate and reliable. There is a
whole lot of “static” attempting to drown out the lovely
story of redemption and victory that the Gospel of God
paints us in the Bible.
Consider, if you will, that
despite how technologically
savvy we are, frequent users
of the Internet are universally
acquainted with something
called “spam.”
Spam, as I am sure you
know, is the junk mail of our
cybernetic world. Once you
get an email address, it’s only
a matter a time before it gets
onto the lists of all sorts of
businesses (some of which
are legitimate perhaps, but
most are not) making you the
unhappy recipient of a plague
of annoying emails that promise anything you have ever
thought of and many things
you haven’t.
You’re also under a constant onslaught of a spiritual
sort of spam in the pressures
you face to keep up with
others’ possessions, their
ambitious social schedules,
and their expectations on
what it means to be successful. All of these things are
constantly distorting the very

The Rev. Ron Branch is pastor of Faith
Baptist Church in Mason, W.Va.

TODAY IN HISTORY...

deceits that attempt to
things most deservsubstitute themselves
ing of your attention,
for truth only to place
time and passion.
us in bondage to either
The things that are
sensual urges or legalistemporary, time and
tic hatemongering.
time again, steal
Of course, these
the investment of
things aren’t really new
our best from those
Thom
things that will last
Mollohan but have been slyly
perpetuated throughout
forever.
Pastor
history, even in the earPerhaps you’re
liest days of the church.
aware of another elecAnd as early Christian leadtronic predation, similar in
some ways to spam. It makes ers wisely noted, such teachings distort the simple mesa lot of phony promises,
sage of receiving God’s grace
highly emotional appeals, or
heavy-handed threats in order by faith, the forgiveness of
sin and the promise of atoneto provoke you to some sort
ment, as well as the abiding
of action that betrays your
personal information (so that work of the Holy Spirit.
Such misleading messages
a bad guy, who is very likely
in the world today, are “phishin some other country, can
charge up your credit card or ing” for your attention, your
empty your bank account into support, and ultimately your
his or her own coffers). This soul. “… There will be false
teachers among you, who will
method, called “phishing,”
often even uses the names of secretly bring in destructive
heresies, even denying the
legitimate banking or comMaster Who bought them,
mercial institutions to pull
bringing upon themselves
the wool over people’s eyes.
It works. People fall prey to swift destruction. And many
will follow their sensuality,
it every day.
and because of them the way
But even more sinister
than this electronic phishing of truth will be blasphemed.
And in their greed they will
(as sinister as it is), and far
exploit you with false words.
more deadly, is the spiritual
phishing taking place around Their condemnation from
long ago is not idle, and their
the world. False teachings
destruction is not asleep” (2
and false teachers have for
Peter 2:1-3 ESV).
time out of mind deceitfully
I grieve somewhat over the
enticed people away from the
fact that many are snared in
truth of Christ. Even today,
the confusion wrought by
pop culture flamboyantly
thrusts misleading messages such counterfeits. On the
in front of us. Pseudo-theolo- other hand, I smile when I
gians and phony philosophers think of the power of the true
perpetually bombard us with Gospel of Jesus. Nothing can

really stand up against the
“good news” of God’s love
triumphing over human sin.
Nor can anything really resist
the reality of God’s truth
housed in Jesus’ flesh as He
confronted and conquered
subtle snares of deceit. And
certainly nothing can cover
or deny the shining glory of
God as revealed in Christ as
He conquered the dreadful
specter of death.
The peace and joy we
celebrate as God’s children
comes from our having genuinely placed our hope and
faith in Christ Jesus’ death,
burial and resurrection. They
come from knowing that God
has bridged a gap that we
couldn’t and that death has
no power over us.
“… For I delivered to you
as of first importance what
I also received: that Christ
died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures,
that He was buried, that
He was raised on the third
day in accordance with the
Scriptures. … Christ has been
raised from the dead, the
firstfruits of those who have
fallen asleep. For as by a man
came death, by a Man has
come also the resurrection of
the dead. For as in Adam all
die, so also in Christ shall all
be made alive” (1 Corinthians
15:3-4, 20-22 ESV).
Pastor Thom Mollohan leads Pathway
Community Church and may be reached
for comments or questions by email at
pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis.com.

SEARCH THE SCRIPTURE
In 1 Corinthians, as the apostle Paul
reasoned with the Corinthian church concerning the need for unity, the supremacy
of Christ in the church, and the message of
the gospel, he contrasted the “wisdom” of
the world, with the “foolishness” of God,
saying, “For the message of the cross is
foolishness to those who are perishing, but
to us who are being saved it is the power of
God,” (1 Corinthians 1:18) and “For Jews
request a sign, and Greeks seek after wisdom; but we preach Christ crucified, to the
Jews a stumbling block and to the Greeks
foolishness, but to those who are called,
both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of
God and the wisdom of God.
Because the foolishness of God is wiser
than men, and the weakness of God is
stronger than men.” (1 Corinthians 1:2225)
Though worldly men may not understand it, the gospel message, far from being
foolish, is a powerful message of hope,
salvation, love and sacrifice. It is a marvelous plan through which God has made the
redemption of sinful men possible through
the gift of His Son, Jesus Christ. In the
gospel, we see juxtaposed the experiences
of Christ, with the grace given to men, that
we might understand the enormity of the
gift God has made manifest.
Consider, for instance, that Jesus came
into the world that we might enter into
Heaven (cf. John 14:1-3). He had a home
eternal, but He was willing to come to

are calculated with incremental
effectiveness for the purpose
of reducing hindrances to the
over-all promotions for a social,
moral, political, and spiritual
new age? Our passivity is our
buy-in to it that is causing us to
go down the tubes. Those with
anti-Christ agendas want us to
go down the tubes, and, what
is most bothersome, is that we
are not doing a whole lot to
countermand it.
I know I sound Earl Pittsish. But, it would be great if
the people associated with
the Church would wake up to
realign and re-associate with
the principles and expectations
of the God of Peace. Jesus
said, “Peace I leave with you,
my peace I give unto you, not
the kind of peace as the world
gives …”
In the meantime, I do at least
give thanks for what I perceive
is one more season of peace.

earth and show us the way to be where He
was, before time began, and is today, having ascended back to the Father.
Consider, likewise, that Jesus took on
flesh that we might be born of the Spirit.
God is Spirit, and He desires us to be His
spiritual children, born not of flesh, but of
Spirit (cf. John 1:12-13). He taught that
men must be born again, of water and
the Spirit, in order to enter the Kingdom,
meaning that we must experience a spiritual birth to be Spiritual people (cf. John
3:3-8). We find this birth, this new life, in
baptism (cf. Romans 6:3-4).
Consider also that Christ accepted worldly poverty that we might be made spiritually rich. Though God, He did not live a life
of wealth, showing us that spiritual treasures are far more important than physical
treasures. Surely the man who created food
from nothing, raised the dead, gave sight
to the blind, and calmed the storm could
have had any amount of wealth He desired.
But Jesus knew that carnal wealth was but
temporary and spiritual riches were eternal; He wanted His followers to focus not
on money and homes, but on the riches of
God (cf. Matthew 6:19-21). These spiritual
riches are those that He offers to us if we
will accept them.
Consider that Jesus was rejected by
men that we might be accepted of God.
(cf. Isaiah 53:3) His countrymen turned
against Him. The spiritual leaders of the
people conspired against Him. The Roman

officials agreed to kill Him. But Jesus Himself taught His followers not to fear the one
that can kill the body, knowing that it is
God alone whose opinion matters (cf. Matthew 10:28). If all the world turns against
us, God can still save us in the end, if we be
found in Christ.
Consider finally that Jesus suffered death
upon a cross that we might be made alive.
It was Jesus who identified Himself as the
resurrection and the life, and that anyone
who believed in Him would never die, and
those that did die, if they believed, they
would live (cf. John 11:25). Jesus died, but
He rose from the dead, and He offers that
resurrection to all who will give themselves
to Him in faith and obedience.
The depths to which Jesus lowered Himself for us illustrates the heights He allows
us, in Him to reach. There is a place for you
in heaven, if you will accept it, near to the
throne of God. Jesus came that you might
go. Will you accept His sacrifice on your
behalf that you might know the wisdom
and the power of the Gospel, being blessed
with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places (cf. Ephesians 1:3)? If you would,
and have not already, then the Gospel urges
you to die to yourself, be buried with Christ
in Baptism, rise to a newness of life and
live for Him and with Him forever.
The church of Christ would be glad to help you to learn
more about how to make the choices God wants you
to make. We invite you to study with us at 234 Chapel
Drive, Gallipolis.

Today is Friday, Nov. 21, the
325th day of 2014. There are 40
days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
On Nov. 21, 1864, a letter was
signed by President Abraham
Lincoln expressing condolences
to Lydia Bixby, a widow in Boston
whose five sons supposedly died
while fighting in the Civil War. (As
it turned out, only two of Mrs. Bixby’s sons had been killed in battle;
also, historians are not certain that
Lincoln actually wrote the letter.)
On this date:
In 1789, North Carolina became
the 12th state to ratify the U.S.
Constitution.
In 1861, Judah Benjamin, who
had been acting Confederate Secretary of War, was formally named to
the post.
In 1922, Rebecca L. Felton of
Georgia was sworn in as the first
woman to serve in the U.S. Senate.
In 1934, the Cole Porter musical
“Anything Goes,” starring Ethel
Merman as Reno Sweeney, opened
on Broadway.
In 1942, the Alaska Highway,
also known as the Alcan Highway,
was formally opened at Soldier’s
Summit in the Yukon Territory.
In 1964, the upper level of New
York’s Verrazano Narrows Bridge,
connecting Brooklyn and Staten
Island, was opened.
In 1969, the Senate voted down
the Supreme Court nomination of
Clement F. Haynsworth, 55-45, the
first such rejection since 1930.
In 1973, President Richard
Nixon’s attorney, J. Fred Buzhardt,
revealed the existence of an
18-1/2-minute gap in one of the
White House tape recordings related to Watergate.
In 1974, bombs exploded at a
pair of pubs in Birmingham, England, killing 21 people. (Six suspects were convicted of the attack,
but the convictions of the so-called
“Birmingham Six” were overturned
in 1991.)
Today’s Birthdays: Actor Joseph
Campanella is 90. Country singer
Jean Shepard is 81. Actor Laurence
Luckinbill is 80. Actress Marlo
Thomas is 77. Actor Rick Lenz is
75. Singer Dr. John is 74. Actress
Juliet Mills is 73. Basketball Hall
of Famer Earl Monroe is 70. Television producer Marcy Carsey is 70.
Actress Goldie Hawn is 69. Movie
director Andrew Davis is 68. Rock
musician Lonnie Jordan (War) is
66. Singer Livingston Taylor is 64.
Actress-singer Lorna Luft is 62.
Actress Cherry Jones is 58. Rock
musician Brian Ritchie (The Violent
Femmes) is 54. Gospel singer Steven Curtis Chapman is 52. Actress
Nicollette Sheridan is 51. Singeractress Bjork (byork) is 49. Pro
and College Football Hall of Famer
Troy Aikman is 48. Rhythm-andblues singer Chauncey Hannibal
(BLACKstreet) is 46. Rock musician Alex James (Blur) is 46. MLB
All-Star player Ken Griffey Jr. is
45. TV personality Rib Hillis is 44.
Rapper Pretty Lou (Lost Boyz) is
43. Football player-turned-talk show
host Michael Strahan is 43. Country
singer Kelsi Osborn (SHeDAISY)
is 40. Singer-actress Lindsey Haun
is 30. Actress Jena Malone is 30.
Pop singer Carly Rae Jepsen is 29.
Actor-singer Sam Palladio is 27.

�Daily Sentinel

LOCAL/NATION

Friday, November 21, 2014 5A

Defying GOP, Obama to spare 5M from deportation
By Julie Pace

hold around the country.
Obama will be fighting
against his own diminished
WASHINGTON —
standing with the public as
Defying Republicans
he appeals for support on
and bypassing Congress,
actions that test the limit
President Barack Obama
of his presidential powers.
prepared to invoke his
The president’s broadest
executive authority Thurs- decree was expected to
day night to spare nearly 5 apply to about 4.1 million
million people in the U.S.
parents who are in the
illegally from deportation. country illegally but whose
Millions more will remain children are U.S. citizens
in limbo.
or permanent residents.
Obama’s action marks
If the parents have been
the most sweeping change
in the U.S. for at least five
to the nation’s immigration
years, they could apply for
policy in three decades
protection from deportaand comes after years
tion and then for work perof stalled efforts toward
broader federal legislation. mits, according to people
Republicans vowed a fierce briefed in advance on the
fight to stop the measures, president’s actions.
Obama was also expectweighing options that
ed
to broaden a 2012 direcincluded lawsuits, a govtive
that deferred deportaernment shutdown and
tion
for some young immieven impeachment.
grants
who entered the
“The president will
country
illegally. Obama
come to regret the chapter
will expand eligibility to
history writes if he does
people who arrived in
move forward,” declared
Sen. Mitch McConnell, the the U.S. as minors before
Kentucky Republican who 2010, instead of the curis soon to become the Sen- rent cutoff of 2007, and
will lift the requirement
ate majority leader.
that applicants be under 31
The president was to
make his case to the Amer- to be eligible. The expansion is expected to affect
ican people in an evening
about 300,000 people.
address Thursday night,
The president has said
then travel to Las Vegas
repeatedly he would prefer
on Friday for the first in
that Congress take action.
a series of rallies he will

AP White House Correspondent

Seeing no progress on
that, he said Wednesday in
a video the White House
posted on Facebook:
“What I’m going to be laying out is the things that
I can do with my lawful
authority as president to
make the system better.”
Despite the sweeping
scope of the president’s
actions, more than half of
the 11 million immigrants
living in the U.S. illegally
will be granted no specific protections. However,
Obama’s orders aim to
decrease the likelihood
that many of them will
be deported by ordering
the Department of Homeland Security to focus its
enforcement on those who
have criminal histories or
who recently crossed the
border.
People briefed on the
plan discussed the details
on the condition of anonymity because they were not
authorized to do so by name
ahead of Obama’s address.
White House officials
insist Obama’s actions are
within his legal authority,
citing similar moves from
Democratic and Republican presidents dating back
to Dwight Eisenhower.
Many Republicans disagree, contending he is

Meeting

bills, including 196 entries totaling
$434,922.71 and Co. General, totaling $14,498.65. Appropriation of
From Page 1A
funds, after certified by the auditor,
was approved in the total amount of
Chris Shank, director of Meigs
$12,906.92 into the health insurance
County Job and Family Services, was
and Meigs Highway Department funds.
approved to re-enter into a contract
Lastly, the commissioners approved
with Hupp’s Landscaping for snow
appropriation adjustment funds of
removal, effective November 2014
$4,600 into Meigs Soil and Water
through May 2015 and close the agency
accounts, $1,500 into medical, sheriff
to the public Dec. 5 for the staff’s
accounts, $6,200 into contact services,
annual in-service training, and to dissheriff, $3,000 into construction repair,
miss the staff for the remainder of the
sheriff and $45,000 into housing, sheriff
day once it’s complete, at approximately
accounts.
2:30 p.m.
The commissioners approved last
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 992-2155 ext. 2555 or on Twitter
week’s minutes, and the payment of
@JournalistKriz.

IMMIGRATION NUMBERS
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack
Obama’s administrative actions will cover
as many as 5 million immigrants living in
the country illegally. Rough estimates of
those affected:
4.1 million: Parents of U.S. citizens and
legal permanent residents who have lived
in the United States for at least 5 years
Homeland Security Secretary Jeh
Johnson told immigration enforcement
employees Thursday that the government
estimates that there are roughly 4.1
million people in this category, and
they will qualify for protection from
deportation. Not all of those people
are expected to sign up, and some may
already be participating in previously
announced protection programs.
290,000: Immigrants who came to the
U.S. as children before 2010
The Migration Policy Institute, an
immigration think tank in Washington,
estimates that as many as 290,000
people could qualify under liberalized
requirements for the Deferred Action for
Childhood Arrivals program, originally
launched in 2012. DACA previously had

risking a serious constitutional confrontation.
The president’s decision
to act on his own follows
months of partisan rancor

been limited to immigrants under 31.
610,000: Young immigrants already
protected from deportation
According to statistics from U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services,
which oversees immigration benefits
for the Homeland Security Department,
about 610,000 young immigrants are
already shielded from deportation.
Hundreds of thousands more people are
believed to be eligible for the program.
Johnson told staffers at USCIS, Customs
and Border Protection and Immigration
and Customs Enforcement that millions
of other immigrants not specifically
included in the deportation protection
programs wouldn’t be priorities for
immigration enforcement.
Under Obama’s immigration overhaul
plan, authorities will now focus
enforcement efforts on those immigrants
with serious criminal histories, including
those who pose a national security or
public safety threat or are adult members
of a gang. Other priorities include people
caught crossing the border illegally or
ordered out of the country this year, and
those with three or more misdemeanors
or “significant” misdemeanors.

on Capitol Hill over more
comprehensive legislation.
While the Senate passed
a bill last year that would
have allowed nearly every-

one in the country illegally
to pursue a pathway to citizenship, the Republicanled House never took up
the measure.

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 57.23
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.28
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 112.93
Big Lots (NYSE) — 50.32
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 53.07
BorgWarner (NYSE) —57.68
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 27.27
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.250
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 44.17
Collins (NYSE) — 84.37
DuPont (NYSE) — 71.43
US Bank (NYSE) — 43.91
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.85
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 69.36
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 60.12
Kroger (NYSE) — 58.22
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 80.08
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 115.38
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.82

BBT (NYSE) — 37.73
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 24.45
Pepsico (NYSE) — 98.06
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.60
Rockwell (NYSE) — 110.36
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.68
Royal Dutch Shell — 71.00
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 36.45
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 84.58
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.57
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.93
Worthington (NYSE) — 37.44
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Nov. 20, 2014, 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.

For the best local weather coverage, visit www.mydailysentinel.com

60546081

�CHURCH DIRECTORY

6A Friday, November 21, 2014

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS COUNTY CHURCH DIRECTORY

Liberty Assembly of God
Dudding Lane, Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant. Sunday
services, 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
***
BAPTIST
Pageville Freewill Baptist Church
Pastor: Floyd Ross. Sunday school,
9:30-10:30 a.m.; worship, 10:3011 a.m.; Wednesday preaching, 6
p.m.
Carpenter Independent Baptist
Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; preaching
service, 10:30 a.m.; evening service,
7 p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
Cheshire Baptist Church
Pastor: Jon Mollohan. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.; contemporary service, 6:30
p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 6:30
p.m. Call: 740-367-7801.
Hope Baptist Church (Southern)
570 Grant Street, Middleport.
Pastor: Gary Ellis. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m. and 6
p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Rutland First Baptist Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptist
East Main Street, Pomeroy. Pastor:
Jon Brocket. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: David
Brainard. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 9:45 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
First Baptist Church
Sixth
and
Palmer
Street,
Middleport. Pastor: Billy Zuspan.
Sunday school, 9:15 a.m.; worship,
10:15 a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday,
7 p.m.
Racine First Baptist
Pastor: Ryan Eaton. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:40 a.m. and
6 p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; evening, 6:30 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 6:30 p.m.
Mount Union Baptist
Pastor: Randy Smith. Sunday
school, 9:45 a.m.; evening, 6:30
p.m.; Wednesday services, 6:30
p.m.
Old Bethel Free Will Baptist
Church
28601 Ohio 7, Middleport. Sunday
service, 10 a.m.; Tuesday and
Saturday services, 6 p.m.
Hillside Baptist Church
Ohio 143 just off of Ohio 7.
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday unified service. Worship,
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Victory Baptist Independent
525
North
Second
Street,
Middleport. Pastor: James E.
Keesee. Worship, 10 a.m. and 7
p.m.; Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Faith Baptist Church
Railroad Street, Mason. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.
and 6 p.m.; Wednesday services, 7
p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
Pomeroy. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 11:30 a.m.
Mount Moriah Baptist
Fourth
and
Main
Street,
Middleport. Pastor: Rev. Michael
A. Thompson, Sr. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45 a.m.
Antiquity Baptist
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:45 a.m.; Sunday evening, 6 p.m.
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Salem Street, Rutland. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11:30
a.m. and 6 p.m.; Youth meeting,
Sunday, 7 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Second Baptist Church
Ravenswood, W.Va. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.; evening,
7 p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.

First Baptist Church of Mason,
W.Va.
W.Va. Route 652 and Anderson
Street. Pastor: Robert Grady.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; morning
church, 11 a.m.; evening, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
***
CATHOLIC

Sacred Heart Catholic Church
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Pastor: Rev. Tim Kozak. (740)
992-5898. Saturday confessional
4:45-5:15 p.m.; mass, 5:30 p.m.;
Sunday confessional, 8:45-9:15
a.m.; Sunday mass, 9:30 a.m.; daily
mass, 8:30 a.m.
***
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Westside Church of Christ
33226 Children’s Home Road,
Pomeroy. (740) 992-3847. Sunday
traditional worship, 10 a.m.;
Bible study following worship;
Contemporary Worship Service, 6
p.m.; Wednesday meeting, 6 p.m.;
Bible study, 7 p.m.
Hemlock Grove Christian Church
Pastor Diana Carsey Kinder,
Church school (all ages), 9:15 a.m.;
church service, 10 a.m.; Wednesday
Bible study, 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Church of Christ
212 West Main Street. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 6 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of Christ
Fifth and Main Street. Pastor:
David
Hopkins.
Children’s
Director: Doug Shamblin. Teen
Director: Dodger Vaughan. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; blended worship,
8:45 a.m.; contemporary worship
11 a.m.; Sunday evening 7 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Keno Church of Christ
Pastor: Jeffrey Wallace. First and
Third Sunday. Worship, 9:30 a.m.;
Sunday school, 10:30 a.m.
Bearwallow Ridge Church of
Christ
Pastor: Bruce Terry. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m. and
6:30 p.m.; Wednesday services,
6:30 p.m.
Zion Church of Christ
Harrisonville Road, Pomeroy.
Pastor: Roger Watson. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Tuppers Plains Church of Christ
Worship
service,
9
a.m.;
communion, 10 a.m.; Sunday
school, 10:15 a.m.; youth, 5:50
p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
Bradbury Church of Christ
39558 Bradbury Road, Middleport.
Minister: Justin Roush. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.
Rutland Church of Christ
Minister: David Wiseman. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship and
communion, 10:30 a.m.
Bradford Church of Christ
Ohio 124 and Bradbury Road.
Minister: Russ Moore. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 8 a.m.
and 10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening
service, 6 p.m.; Wednesday adult
Bible study and youth meeting,
6:30 p.m.
Hickory Hills Church of Christ
Tuppers Plains. Pastor: Mike
Moore. Bible class, 9 a.m.; Sunday
worship, 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible class, 7 p.m.
Reedsville Church of Christ
Pastor: Jack Colgrove. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship service,
10:30 a.m.; Wednesday Bible
study, 6:30 p.m.
Dexter Church of Christ
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday
worship, 10:30 a.m.
***
CHRISTIAN UNION
Hartford Church of Christ in
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va. Pastor: Mike
Puckett. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
***
CHURCH OF GOD
Mount Moriah Church of God
Mile Hill Road, Racine. Pastor:
James Satterfield. Sunday school,
9:45 a.m.; evening service, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of God
Pastor: Larry Shreffler. Sunday
worship, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Syracuse First Church of God
Apple and Second Streets. Pastor:
Rev. David Russell. Sunday school

and worship, 10 a.m.; evening
services, 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 6:30 p.m.
Church of God of Prophecy
O.J. White Road off Ohio 160.
Pastor: P.J. Chapman. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
***
CONGREGATIONAL

Trinity Church
201 E. Second St., Pomeroy.
Worship, 10:25 a.m. Pastor Randy
Smith.
***
EPISCOPAL
Grace Episcopal Church
326 East Main Street, Pomeroy.
Father Thomas J. Fehr. Holy
Eucharist, 11 a.m.
***
HOLINESS
Independent Holiness Church
626 Brick Street, Rutland. Sunday
School, 9:30 a.m.; Worship Service,
10:30 a.m.; Evening Service, 6
p.m.; Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Community Church
Main Street, Rutland. Pastor: Steve
Tomek. Sunday worship, 10 a.m.;
Sunday services, 7 p.m.
Danville Holiness Church
31057 Ohio 325, Langsville.
Pastor: Brian Bailey. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; Sunday worship, 10:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday prayer
service, 7 p.m.
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Road. Pastor: Charles
McKenzie. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Rose of Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Creek Road, Rutland.
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday worship,
7 p.m.; Wednesday prayer meeting,
7 p.m.
Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
One half mile off of Ohio 325.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.; Wednesday
service, 7 p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl Street, Middleport. Pastor:
Doug Cox. Sunday: worship service,
10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening service,
6 p.m.; Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
***
LATTER-DAY SAINTS
Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints
Ohio 160. (740) 446-6247 or (740)
446-7486. Sunday school, 10:2011 a.m.; relief society/priesthood,
11:05 a.m.-12 p.m.; sacrament
service, 9-10-15 a.m.; homecoming
meeting first Thursday, 7 p.m.
***
LUTHERAN
Saint John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove. Pastor Linea Warmke.
Worship, 9 a.m.; Sunday school, 10
a.m.
Our Savior Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Streets,
Ravenswood, W.Va. Pastor: David
Russell. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m.
Saint Paul Lutheran Church
Corner Syracuse and Second Street,
Pomeroy. Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m.
***
UNITED METHODIST
Graham United Methodist
Pastor: Richard Nease. Worship,
11 a.m.
Bechtel United Methodist
New Haven. Pastor: Richard Nease.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; Tuesday
prayer meeting and Bible study,
6:30 p.m.
Mount Olive United Methodist
Off of 124 behind Wilkesville.
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Thursday services,
7 p.m.
Alfred
Pastor: Gene Goodwin. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.
and 6:30 p.m.
Chester
Pastor: Angel Crowell. Worship, 9
a.m.; Sunday school, 10 a.m.
Joppa
Pastor: Denzil Null. Worship, 9:30
a.m.; Sunday school, 10:30 a.m.
Long Bottom
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m.
Reedsville
Pastor: Gene Goodwin. Worship,
9:30 a.m.; Sunday school, 10:30
a.m.; first Sunday of the month, 7
p.m.
Tuppers Plains Saint Paul
Pastor: Jenni Dunham. Sunday

school, 9 a.m.; worship, 10:15 a.m.;
Bible study, Tuesday 10 a.m.
Asbury
Syracuse. Pastor: Wesley Thoene.
Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.; worship,
11 a.m.; Wednesday services, 7:30
p.m.
Flatwoods
Pastor: Angel Crowell. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11:15
a.m.
Forest Run
Pastor: Wesley Thoene. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 9 a.m.
Heath
339 S. 3rd Ave., Middleport. Pastor:
Steve Martin. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
Asbury Syracuse
Pastor: Wesley Thoene. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.
Pearl Chapel
Sunday school, 9 a.m.; worship, 10
a.m.
New Beginnings
Pomeroy. Pastor: Aletha Botts.
Worship, 10 a.m.; Sunday school,
11:15 a.m. Alive at Five worship,
5 p.m.; book studies, 6:30 p.m.;
youth group, Tuesday 6-7:30 p.m.
Rocksprings
Pastor: Angel Crowell. Sunday
school, 9 a.m.; worship, 8 and 10
a.m.
Rutland
Pastor: Mark Brookins. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.; Thursday services, 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: John Chapman. Sunday
school, 10:15 a.m.; worship, 9:15
a.m.; Bible study, Monday 7 p.m.
Snowville
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; worship,
9 a.m.
Bethany
Pastor: Arland King. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 9 a.m.;
Wednesday services, 10 a.m.
Carmel-Sutton
Carmel and Bashan Roads, Racine.
Pastor: Arland King. Sunday
school, 9:45 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, noon and
7 p.m.
Morning Star
Pastor: Arland King. Sunday
school, 11 a.m.; worship, 10 a.m.
East Letart
Pastor: Bill Marshall. Sunday
school, 9 a.m.; worship, 10 a.m.;
First Sunday evening service, 7
p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Racine
Pastor: Rev. William Marshall.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11
a.m.; Tuesday Bible study, 7 p.m.
Coolville
United
Methodist
Church
Main and Fifth Street. Pastor:
Helen Kline. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; worship, 9 a.m.; Tuesday
services, 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Road 468C. Pastor:
Phillip Bell. Sunday school, 9 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.
Hockingport Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m.
Torch Church
County Road 63. Sunday school,
9:30 am.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
***
FREE METHODIST

Laurel Cliff
Laurel Cliff Road. Pastor: Bill
O’Brien. Sunday school, 9:30;
morning worship, 10:30; evening
worship, 6 p.m.; Wednesday Bible
Study, 7 p.m.
***
NAZARENE
Point Rock Church of the
Nazarene
Route 689, Albany. Pastor: Rev.
Lloyd Grimm. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; worship service, 11 a.m.;
evening service, 6 p.m.; Wednesday
prayer meeting, 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene
Pastor: Daniel Fulton. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m. and 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Reedsville Fellowship
Pastor: Russell Carson. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
Pastor:
Shannon
Hutchison.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m., worship,
10:30 a.m. and life groups 6 p.m.;
Wednesday prayer caravan and
youth, 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: William Justis. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30

a.m. and 6 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 6 p.m.
Chester Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Daniel Fulton. Sunday
worship, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday School,
10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening
worship, 6:30 p.m. every second
and fourth Sunday of the month.
Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Ann Forbes. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.;
Sunday evening, 6 p.m.
***
NON-DENOMINATIONAL

Common Ground Missions
Pastor: Dennis Moore and Rick
Little. Sunday, 10 a.m.
Team Jesus Ministries
333 Mechanic Street, Pomeroy.
Pastor: Eddie Baer. Sunday worship,
10:30 a.m.
New Hope Church
Old American Legion Hall, Fourth
Ave., Middleport. Sunday, 5 p.m.
Syracuse Community Church
2480 Second Street, Syracuse.
Pastor: Joe Gwinn. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; Sunday evening, 6:30 p.m.
A New Beginning
(Full Gospel Church). Harrisonville.
Pastors: Bob and Kay Marshall.
Thursday, 7 p.m.
Amazing Grace Community
Church
Ohio 681, Tuppers Plains. Pastor:
Wayne Dunlap. Sunday worship,
10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
Bible study, 7 p.m.
Oasis Christian Fellowship
(Non-denominational fellowship).
Meeting in the Meigs Middle
School cafeteria. Pastor: Christ
Stewart. Sunday, 10 a.m.-12 p.m.
Community of Christ
Portland-Racine Road. Pastors:
Dean Holben, Janice Danner,
and Denny Evans. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Bethel Worship Center
39782 Ohio 7 (two miles south of
Tuppers Plains). Pastor: Rob Barber;
praise and worship led by Otis
and Ivy Crockron; Youth Pastor:
Kris Butcher. (740) 667-6793.
Sunday 10 a.m.; teen ministry, 6:30
Wednesday. Affiliated with SOMA
Family of Ministries, Chillicothe.
Bethelwc.org.
Ash Street Church
398 Ash Street, Middleport. Pastor:
Mark Morrow. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; morning worship, 10:30 a.m.
and 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday service,
6:30 p.m.; youth service, 6:30 p.m.
Agape Life Center
(Full Gospel church). 603 Second
Ave., Mason. Pastors: John and
Patty Wade. (304) 773-5017.
Sunday 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday, 7
p.m.
Abundant Grace
923
South
Third
Street,
Middleport. Pastor: Teresa Davis.
Sunday service, 10 a.m.; Wednesday
service, 7 p.m.
Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Pastor: Steve Reed.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday,
7 p.m.; Friday fellowship service,
7 p.m.
Harrisonville Community Church
Pastor: Theron Durham. Sunday,
9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday,
7 p.m.
Middleport Community Church
575 Pearl Street, Middleport.
Pastor: Sam Anderson. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; evening, 7:30 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7:30 p.m.
Faith Valley Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road. Pastor: Rev.
Emmett Rawson. Sunday evening,
7 p.m.; Thursday service, 7 p.m.
Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman Street, Syracuse.
Pastor: Rev. Roy Thompson.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; evening,
6 p.m.; Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Dyesville Community Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Morse Chapel Church
Worship, 5 p.m.
Faith Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:45 a.m. and 7:30
p.m.; Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy.
Pastor: Roy Hunter. Sunday school,
10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday
evening, 7:30 p.m.
South Bethel Community Church
Silver Ridge. Pastor: Linda
Damewood. Sunday school, 9 a.m.;
worship, 10 a.m. Second and fourth
Sundays; Bible study, Wednesday,
6:30 p.m.
Carleton
Interdenominational
Church

Kingsbury. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship service, 10:30 a.m.;
evening service, 6 p.m.
Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob on County Road 31.
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
7 p.m.
Fairview Bible Church
Letart, W.Va., Route 1. Pastor:
Brian May. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 7 p.m.; Wednesday
Bible study, 7 p.m.
Faith Fellowship Crusade for
Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens.
Friday, 7 p.m.
Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy. Pastor: Rev. Blackwood.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7:30 p.m.
Stiversville Community Church
Pastor: Bryan and Missy Dailey.
Sunday school, 11 a.m.; worship,
11 a.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Rejoicing Life Church
500
North
Second
Ave.,
Middleport. Pastor: Mike Foreman.
Pastor
Emeritus:
Lawrence
Foreman. Worship, 10 a.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Clifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton, W.Va. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; worship, 7 p.m.; Wednesday
service, 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Church of the Living
Savior
Route 338, Antiquity. Pastor: Jesse
Morris. Saturday, 2 p.m.
Salem Community Church
Lieving Road, West Columbia,
W.Va. (304) 675-2288. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday evening,
7 p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
Hobson Christian Fellowship
Church
Pastor: Herschel White. Sunday 7
p.m. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Restoration Christian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road, Athens. Pastor:
Lonnie Coats. Sunday worship, 10
a.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
House of Healing Ministries
(Full Gospel) Ohio 124, Langsville.
Pastors: Robert and Roberta
Musser. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Hysell Run Community Church
33099 Hysell Run Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio; Pastors Larry and Cheryl
Lemley. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.;
morning worship 10:30 a.m.;
Sunday evening service, 7 p.m.;
Sunday night youth service, 7
p.m. ages 10 through high school;
Thursday Bible study, 7 p.m.;
fourth Sunday night is singing and
communion.
Endtime House of Prayer
Ohio 681, Snowville; Pastor Robert
Vance. Sunday School 10 a.m.,
Worship 11 a.m.; Bible Study,
Thursday 6 p.m.
***
PENTECOSTAL
Pentecostal Assembly
Tornado Road, Racine. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; evening, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
***
PRESBYTERIAN
Harrisonville
Presbyterian
Church
Pastor: Rev. David Faulkner.
Sunday worship 9 a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
Pastor: Jim Snyder. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; worship service, 11 a.m.
Pastor Jim Snyder. (740) 645-5034.
***
UNITED BRETHREN
Eden United Brethren in Christ
Ohio 124, between Reedsville
and Hockingport. Pastor Peter
Martindale. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.; Wednesday
service, 7 p.m.
Mouth Hermon United Brethren
in Christ Church
36411 Wickham Road. Pastor:
Ricky Hull. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7
p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
***
WESLEYAN
White’s Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road. Pastor: Rev.
Charles Martindale. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

60532492

FELLOWSHIP APOSTOLIC

Church of Jesus Christ Apostolic
Van Zandt and Ward Road. Pastor:
James Miller. Sunday school, 10:30
a.m.; evening, 7:30 p.m.
River Valley Apostolic Worship
Center
873 South Third Ave., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Michael Bradford.
Sunday, 10:30 a.m.; Tuesday, 6:30
p.m.; Wednesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
Emmanuel Apostolic Tabernacle,
Inc.
Loop Road off New Lima Road,
Rutland. Pastor: Marty R. Hutton.
Sunday services, 10 a.m. and 7:30
p.m.; Thursday, 7 p.m.
***
ASSEMBLY OF GOD

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 21, 2014 s Page 1B

McCarron returns from shoulder problem
CINCINNATI (AP) — One of
AJ McCarron’s early throws in
practice was so far off the mark
that it deflected off the wall of
the University of Cincinnati’s
bubble-covered field.
Didn’t dent his mood at all.
The fifth-round draft pick
hadn’t done anything with the
Cincinnati Bengals until this
week, when he returned from a
sore passing shoulder that sidelined him since the start of training camp. McCarron spent the
last few months strengthening
his right shoulder and waiting
to be declared ready.
He finally got to practice with
the team on Wednesday.
“I had a smile on my face the
whole day,” McCarron said on
Thursday. “I could have messed

up the whole practice. I was just
having fun. I felt like a kid again
out playing the game in the
backyard. I was just excited to
play football.”
McCarron led Alabama to
national titles in 2011 and 2012.
He went 36-4 as the Crimson
Tide’s starter and set school
records for touchdown passes,
yards passing and completion
percentage. The Bengals took
him with the 164th overall pick,
looking to develop him into a
reliable backup to Andy Dalton.
The sore shoulder sidelined
him at the start of training
camp. The Bengals put him on
a strengthening program that
involved throwing from short
distances at the outset and
building up to longer throws as

the shoulder allowed. He was
finally cleared to join practice
this week.
The Bengals moved their
practices on Wednesday and
Thursday to Cincinnati’s covered field — the Bengals are
the most northern NFL team
without one of their own. It
took McCarron a little while to
settle in and start completing
his throws.
“I haven’t thrown to receivers,” he said. “Getting the timing with the guys at first was different at first. That was the first
time I had thrown in shoulder
pads since (the Sugar Bowl).
That’s almost a year.
“I completed the first one,
sailed the next two. I could have
messed up 100 times, I was just

so happy to be playing football.”
The question is how the Bengals will handle him for the rest
of the season.
Dalton has been one of the
NFL’s most durable quarterbacks, missing only half of a
game due to injury during his
four seasons. Veteran Jason
Campbell is the backup. The
Bengals envisioned McCarron
growing into the backup role,
but the injury has prevented him
from making much progress.
If Dalton continues to struggle
in big games — he’s 0-3 in the
playoffs and 2-6 in prime time
games — the Bengals could
make a switch at quarterback in a
couple of years, which would provide an opening for McCarron.
The Bengals have a three-week

roster exemption for McCarron.
They’ll have to decide whether to
add him to the active roster for
the rest of the regular season —
and bump someone off the roster
— or leave him on an injury list
the rest of the way.
The Bengals (6-3-1) lead the
AFC North heading into their
game on Sunday at Houston
(5-5).
“I just want to go out and
have fun and then be ready to go
whenever they need me, whether
they call on me this year or next
year,” McCarron said. “The old
saying you don’t realize what
you have until it’s taken away?
It really is true. Being out that
long, it felt like it was taken away.
Being back, I felt like a kid again.
I was having fun.”

Scott Morrissey
records URG
milestone victory
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— Last Friday’s win
over Talladega (AL) in
the semifinal round of
the KIAC/GCAC Men’s
Soccer Tournament
did more than get the
top-ranked University
of Rio Grande into the
tourney title game.
It also got veteran
head coach Scott Morrissey the 400th win of
his career.
Morrissey, whose
RedStorm went on
to defeat then-No. 20
Point park University
in the championship
game one day later, has
been busy this week
preparing his squad for
its meeting with Baker
(Kan.) University in the
opening round of the
NAIA National Championship Tournament on
Saturday, at 1 p.m., at
Evan E. Davis Field.
But while last
Friday’s victory did
represent a milestone,
it’s not served as distraction to Morrissey’s
focus on the Wildcats.
“When you reach
this point, everybody
is good. Anybody can
beat you at any time,”
Morrissey said. “Our
guys have worked hard
all season and they’re
continuing to work
hard. Our goal is to win
a championship and be
a great representative
of our school.”
Rio Grande is making
its 14th straight appearance in the national
tournament, the
second-longest active
streak in the NAIA.

The RedStorm have
reached the national
semifinals four times
during Morrissey’s
tenure and advanced to
the national title game
twice (2003 and 2008),
winning the crown in
2003.
Rio is the top-seeded
team in the tourney and
has been at the top of
the coaches’ Top 25 poll
for each of the past five
weeks, extending its
stretch of consecutive
appearances in the poll
to 86.
Morrissey, whose
career mark currently
stands at 401-113-30,
won four American
Mideast Conference
Coach of Year awards
(1998, 2001-03) and
was named the NAIA
National Coach of the
Year in 2001, and 2003.
He was also named
Mid-South Conference
Coach of the Year on
three occasions (2010,
2012, 2013).
“The 400 wins are
nice, but it’s not all
about me,” he said.
“It’s the culmination
of having some incredibly good players over
the years and the same
assistant coach (Tony
Daniels) for the past 23
years. The players and
Tony are just as much a
part of it as anybody.”
Morrissey, who
starred in both soccer and basketball at
Tiffin University, was
a two-time NAIA AllAmerican (1987-88) in
soccer. He was the MidOhio Conference Player
of the Year as a senior
See VICTORY | 4B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Friday, Nov. 21
Boys Basketball
Ohio Valley Christian at Kingsway, TBA
Men’s college basketball
Rio Grande vs. Washington Adventist at WVU
Tech, 2 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 22
Football
Point Pleasant at Martinsburg, 1:30
Boys Basketball
Ohio Valley Christian at Kingsway, TBA
Men’s college basketball
Rio Grande vs. Barber-Scotia at WVU Tech, 3
p.m.
Women’s college basketball
Rio Grande at WVU Tech, 5 p.m.

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Jon Peterson (1), Dakota Swann (bottom) and Tanner Hill (88) gang up for a sack of Andrew King (2) during Saturday’s Class AAA playoff
game against Jefferson at OVB Field in Point Pleasant.

Tall task awaits Big Blacks in Martinsburg
By Bryan Walters

old buddy — that his kids
are worthy of being in
this position.
POINT PLEASANT,
“Dave Walker and I go
W.Va. — You can call it a back to 1982 when we
matchup of David versus both started at Glenville
Goliath. Then again, you State. We were good
could just as easily say it friends and played all four
is a battle between David years of college together,
and David.
and he’s one of those guys
A pair of college team- that you just can’t help
mates and their respecbut like him,” Darst said
tive gridiron programs
with a respectful smile
will go head-to-head for
the entire time. “He’s
the first time Saturday
going to try and put the
afternoon when fifthbiggest whuppin’ on us
seeded Point Pleasant
that he can during the
travels to Cobourn Field
game, but afterwards
to face fourth-seeded
he’s going to slap you on
Martinsburg in a Class
the back and talk about
AAA quarterfinal playoff everything but football.
game in Berkeley County.
“I expect him to try and
The visiting Big Blacks do the best coaching job
(10-0) are tasked with
he’s ever done. He’s not
the dubious challenge
only trying to prove a lot
of upending MHS coach
of things to the state of
Dave Walker and his
West Virginia in chasing
four-time defending state a five-peat, but he also
champion Bulldogs (10-1) wants to prove a lot to
in their backyard while
me. His kids are playing
also trying to snap the
100 percent all of the
state’s longest postseatime and I expect Saturson winning streak at 17 day to be no different. I’m
games.
also expecting that it will
To make matters worse, make our kids raise their
PPHS — which currently games up too.”
owns the state record for
The Big Blacks will be
consecutive games won
making their second road
in the regular season at
trip in the last three AAA
23 — is a little banged up postseasons and are also
collectively and will also
set to make program hisbe without its top offentory Saturday when they
sive threat.
appear in their second
Yet, despite not havconsecutive Week 13
ing the services of junior contest. PPHS — which
Cody Mitchell because
owns a 6-11 alltime mark
of a broken collarbone
in playoff games — is
and also being the small- looking for its third state
est school in Class AAA, semifinal berth (1979,
eighth-year Point Pleas2011) and has never won
ant coach Dave Darst
a postseason game on the
sees Saturday as an
road.
opportunity to show the
In fact, the last team
rest of the state — and an to beat Point Pleasant

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Dylan Lunsford boots a second half kickoff during Saturday’s Class
AAA playoff game against Jefferson at OVB Field in Point Pleasant.

on the road was Morgantown, which happened in
the opening round of the
2012 playoffs. It’s also the
only time in the last four
years that PPHS hasn’t
won a postseason contest.
The Big Blacks are
27-15 overall in road contests under Darst, which
includes an impressive
17-2 mark in the last four
years with this senior
class. Darst also owns a
63-20 alltime record as
head coach at PPHS, as
well as a 5-6 mark in playoff contests.
“Our kids are excited
about this one and are
looking forward to the
road trip. We’ve done
pretty well on these overnight trips and we try to
have some fun by doing
some different things.
It’s not all business with

us because we love our
kids and we want them
to enjoy the whole experience. It’s a reward for
all of the hard work that
they’ve put in this year,”
Darst said. “We want
them to be able to have
good memories of this
years after they graduate,
but we also don’t want
them to just go over and
say we are here. We want
to prove that football is
just as good here on the
Ohio River as it is in the
panhandle.
“We’re going to line
up and play hard for 48
minutes just like anyone
else does. We might be
the small school in AAA,
but I also think that gives
us a little bit of a chip on
our shoulder to play with
See TASK | 4B

�SPORTS

2B Friday, November 21, 2014

Daily Sentinel

Trufant, Falcons face big test against Gordon
FLOWERY BRANCH,
Ga. (AP) — Cornerback
Desmond Trufant knows
the Atlanta Falcons’
secondary faces a major

challenge as Josh Gordon
returns this week for
Cleveland.
With Gordon’s 10-game
suspension lifted, the

Falcons must prepare for
an elite receiver who last
year led the NFL in total
yards and yards per catch.
Trufant and his team-

Holzer is proud to
announce that
Feguens Bataille, MD,
Pain Management
physician, has joined
our team of highly
skilled professionals.

mates are having a tough
time scouting Gordon.
There’s no film of the second-year star playing in
the new offense designed
by first-year coordinator
Kyle Shanahan.
“You have to look at
the scheme and the concepts that they do and
what role he can play,”
Trufant said on Thursday.
“There’s a lot of film from
last year that shows what
he’s capable of, which is
a lot.”
Trufant, a first-round
pick in 2013, is the best
player in Atlanta’s defensive backfield. He’s likely
to draw the most assignments against Gordon.
But even without Gordon, the Browns (6-4)
lead the NFL with over
70 percent of their catches going for first downs.
Overall, with quarterback Brian Hoyer at the
helm, Cleveland has the
fourth-most catches for
20 yards or more despite
leading wideouts Andrew
Hawkins and Miles Austin ranking 28th and 47th
in receptions.

“Those numbers aren’t
all that important, especially this week,” Trufant
said. “With Josh back,
their other receivers
are going to have more
chances to make plays.
We know they’ll be ready
to play with him coming
back to prove himself
again.”
The Falcons (4-6) will
counter with a defense
that ranks last in the
league against the pass,
second-fewest in sacks
and fourth-worst in thirddown percentage. Even
so, coach Mike Smith is
encouraged that the secondary has shown recent
improvement.
Strong safety Kemal
Ishmael had a pick in
each of the consecutive
wins at Tampa Bay and
Carolina. Free safety
Dwight Lowery had one
in the end zone on the
Buccaneers’ final drive.
Trufant intercepted Panthers quarterback Cam
Newton early in the third
quarter.
“You win the turnover
battle in this league and

you’re going to win 80
percent of the time,”
Smith said. “We’ve
improved over the last
four or five weeks as a
defense.”
Atlanta is without cornerback Robert Alford,
who broke his wrist last
week, so Robert McClain
moves into a starting
spot opposite Trufant.
Josh Wilson will take
over McClain’s role as the
nickel back.
“We want to hold
them to zero explosives
because they’re one of
the most explosive teams
in the NFL,” McClain
said. “We’ve got to keep
the ball in front of us and
don’t let it go over our
heads. If we do that, we’ll
be fine.”
That won’t be easy,
particularly against the
6-foot-3, 225-pound Gordon.
“He’s obviously going
to be a mismatch on a
couple of guys,” Ishmael
said. “He’s a big receiver.
That’s what you have to
deal with in this league.”

NFL sends domestic
violence video to schools
Dr. Bataille received his Doctor of Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh School
of Medicine in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He completed an internship in Internal
Medicine at The Christ Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio, and completed his Residency in
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center,
Presbyterian Hospital in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Dr. Bataille also completed Interventional Pain Management Fellowship with
Regional Anesthesia Training at the University of Cincinnati in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Dr. Bataille is Board Certified by the American Board of Physical Medicine and
Rehabilitation, and is seeing patients at Holzer Gallipolis, located at 100 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis, OH.

To learn more about Holzer providers or to Find a Doctor,
scan the QR Code, or go online at www.holzer.org/physicians.

NEW YORK (AP) —
The NFL sent a 17-minute video Wednesday to
high school and college
coaches nationwide to
encourage them to be
aware of and act against
domestic violence and
abuse.
Entitled “NFL Call To
Coaches — Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault
Awareness,” the video
includes strong messages
from Seahawks coach
Pete Carroll and Steelers
coach Mike Tomlin; NFL
football operations executive Troy Vincent; Texas
A&amp;M coach Kevin Sumlin; former player and
coach Joe Ehrmann; and
Mike Rowe, the coach at

60545243

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NCAA Hockey Umass Lowell vs. Notre Dame (L)
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(5:00) America's Pre-game Football (N) Football Pre NCAA Football University of Texas at El Paso vs. Rice (L)
American Pickers "The Mad American Pickers "For a
The Curse of Oak Island
The Curse of Oak Island
The Curse of Oak Island
Catter"
Few Dollars More"
"Once In, Forever In"
"Return to the Money Pit" "The Eight-Pointed Star"
(:10) Housewives Atlanta
(:15) Watch What Happens (:15) Atlanta Beverly (N) /(:55) Beverly Hills
(:55) Vanderpump Rules
The Real (N)
Any Given Sunday (1999, Sport) Jamie Foxx, Cameron Diaz, Al Pacino. TV14
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Love/List "Character Flaws" Love It or List It
Love/List "Close-Knit Clan" LoveList "Change Of Heart" H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:00)
Monster Ark
Haven "Reflections" (N)
WWE Smackdown! WWE superstars do battle in
Z Nation "Sisters of Mercy"
Carlos Leon. TV14
elaborate, long-running rivalries. (N)
(N)

6

PM

6:30

Olive Kitteridge "A
400 (HBO) Different Road" Pt. 3 of 4

7

PM

7:30

Olive Kitteridge "Security"
Olive goes to New York to
visit Christopher.
(5:30)
Man of Steel ('13, Act) Amy Adams, Henry
450 (MAX) Cavill. An alien raised as a human confronts members of
his race who have come to claim Earth. TV14
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Scary MoVie ('13, Com) Ashley Tisdale. A
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happy couple with a newborn realize their
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8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

Rocori High School in
Minnesota.
“We recognize the
incredible influence
coaches can have on
their players and how
football can be used as
an educational tool to
affect change,” Deana
Garner, the NFL’s director of player engagement
and education, said. “To
truly change a culture
and behavior, and instill a
personal accountability in
living a life of character,
you need to affect people
when they are young.”
The video is being distributed to high school
football coaches by USA
Football, the national governing body for the sport;
the National Federation
of State High School
Associations (NFHS),
who will distribute it to
high schools and coaches
of a variety of sports; the
American Football Coaches Association (AFCA)
to its network of coaches;
and the High School Player Development program
(HSPD) to its network of
high school coaches.
Rowe’s portion of the
video is most powerful.
The coach at the Cold
Springs, Minnesota,
school regularly engages
in conversations with his
players about character
building and life skills.
He leads his players
through an exercise in
which they take turns
reading actual police
reports of incidents of
domestic violence or
sexual assault. As the
reality of these scenarios
sinks in, each player takes
a pledge that: “This will
not be me.”
“I am a football coach,
but I am an educator
first,” Rowe said. “You
have an opportunity for
the three to four hours of
a day you have with a kid
to make a difference.
“All those things, those
situations, happen all
the time in our society.
You have to understand
we have to respect all
women, it starts with
you. You can control the
hallways, you can control
what happens at a party
or a dance.

“Your honor defines
you as a man … your
virtue defines you as a
man … and your dignity
defines you as a man.”
The video is the latest
step in the NFL’s attempts
to deal with domestic
violence and abuse issues
that drew headlines in
the cases of Ray Rice and
Adrian Peterson. University administrators are
among those consulted
by the league on revisions
to its personal conduct
policy and other policies.
Educational programming at league and youth
football events is planned,
including a December
summit for 50 high
school football coaches
that will take place at the
Pop Warner Super Bowl
in Orlando.
More long-term plans
will focus on expanding existing educational
programming and awareness efforts, including
age-appropriate character
development; healthy
relationship education, as
well as dating/domestic
violence, child abuse, and
sexual assault education
for those who play, coach,
or manage the game in
college, high school and
youth football programs.
“I think that since
the beginning of time
sport has been an awesome vehicle for societal
change and awareness,”
Tomlin said. “I have
never been afraid to
openly discuss things that
could be highly sensitive
or emotionally charged.
When you have that
attitude, you provide an
opportunity for yourself
to grow and maybe learn
something.
“We need to do what
is right. I think that is
a good approach in life
to take, not only with
domestic violence, but
many things involving
children or nuclear families. I think we all should
embrace this platform we
have, the responsibility
we have with being leaders in our community, in
our cities, and obviously
hopefully evoke positive
change.”

10:30

The Legend of Hercules ('14, Act) Kellan (:45)
Real Time With Bill Maher
Lutz. Hercules must fight his way back to
Pacquiao/
(N)
the kingdom he is destined to save. TV14
Algieri
16 Blocks ('06, Thril) Bruce Willis. An (:45)
Identity Thief A man travels to
alcoholic cop mistakenly receives the task of Miami from Denver to confront the woman
transporting a witness to court. TV14
who has stolen his identity. TVMA
The Affair
Lost Songs: The Basement Tapes
(:50) Lost
Continued
Songs
Videos

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LEGALS
PUBLIC NOTICE
JD Drilling Co, P.O. Box 369,
Racine,_Ohio 45771, (740)
949-2512 is applying to permit
a well for the injection of brine
water produced in association
with oil and natural gas.
The location of the proposed
injection well is the Showalter
#1,Sec. 18, Chester Township,
Meigs County, Ohio. The proposed well will inject into the _
Ohio Shale Formation at a
depth of 2958 to 3314 feet.
The average injection is estimated to be 1000 barrels per
day. The maximum injection
pressure is estimated to be
680 psi. Further information
can be obtained by contacting
JD Drilling Co or the Division of
Oil and Gas Resources Management. The address of the
Division is: Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Division of
Oil and Gas Resources
Management, 2045 Morse
Road, Building F-2, Columbus,
Ohio 43229-6693, (614) 2656922. For full consideration, all
comments and objections must
be-received. by the Division, in
writing, within fifteen calendar
days of the last date of this
published legal notice.

DON’T LOSE ALL OF
YOUR EARNED MONEY
TO A LONG TERM
NURSING HOME STAY…
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TRENT CLELAND!

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740-591-8044

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60542651

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Miscellaneous

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PUBLIC NOTICE
JD Drilling Co, P.O. Box 369,
Racine,_Ohio 45771, (740)
949-2512 is applying to permit
a well for the injection of brine
water produced in association
with oil and natural gas.
The location of the proposed
injection well is the Showalter
#1,Sec. 18, Chester Township,
Meigs County, Ohio. The proposed well will inject into the _
Ohio Shale Formation at a
depth of 2958 to 3314 feet.
The average injection is estimated to be 1000 barrels per
day. The maximum injection
pressure is estimated to be
680 psi. Further information
can be obtained by contacting
JD Drilling Co or the Division of
Oil and Gas Resources Management. The address of the
Division is: Ohio Department of
Natural Resources,
LEGALSDivision of
Oil and Gas Resources
Management, 2045 Morse
Road, Building F-2, Columbus,
Ohio 43229-6693, (614) 2656922. For full consideration, all
comments and objections must
be-received. by the Division, in
writing, within fifteen calendar
days of the last date of this
published legal notice.
Notices

GUN SHOW

MARIETTA
Washington Co Fairgrounds
922 Front St
November 22nd &amp; 23rd
Adm $5
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740-667-0412
Longenberger Sale - Sat. Nov.
22. 2014 - 10am to 5pm @
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Pleasant WV)
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any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with
parents or legal custodians,
pregnant women and people
securing custody of children
under 18.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in
violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that
all dwellings advertised in this
newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis. To
complain of discrimination call
HUD toll-free at 1-800-6699777. The toll-free telephone
number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

Miscellaneous

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paced, competitive, decisive, persistent, eager, bold, forceful,
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people? Are you good at multi-tasking? Do you work well with
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these questions, you may be the person we are seeking. Civitas Media is looking for Business Development Representative to sell online and print advertising for our Newspapers.
These are full time salary positions with a generous commission program. Benefits include Health insurance, 401K, vacation, etc. If interested-send resume to Julia Schultz @
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Civitas Media LLC is a growing company offering excellent
compensation and opportunities for advancement to motivated
individuals. Civitas Media has publications in NC, SC, TN, KY,
VA, WV, OH, IL, MO, GA, OK, IN and PA.
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BASEMENT
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Other Services
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Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Help Wanted General

Need help with your rent?
the Housing Authority of the
County of Jackson is accepting applications for rental assistance in the Jackson,
Roane, Gilmer and Calhoun
County areas. You can go to
your local DHHR office or stop
by one of our offices to fill out
an application. Should you
have any questions, please
contact us at 304-372-2343.

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Help Wanted General

MENTION CODE: MB

800-416-5406

Applicator
Operate fertilizer or crop protectant application equipment.
CDL required. Includes warehouse duties. Agricultural
background helpful Forklift
Certification preferred but not
required. Able to pass background check, drug screen and
MVR check. To apply please
visit our website at www.southernstates.com and apply to requisition #2517. EOE M/F/D/V
Engineering/Drafting Position: qualification MUST have
degree in engineering/drafting
at least 3 years experience
with Auto Cad. Position is a 40
hour plus overtime. Pay rate is
based on level of degree and
experience. After 90 days
health insurance and life insurance is offered. One week
paid vacation after 1 year of
employment and 4 paid holidays. Please send resume to
70764 State Route 124 Vinton
OH 45686 SERIOUS APPLICANTS ONLY.
Position for detailer/light mechanic work. Ask for Dave. 740446-4400
The Village of Middleport is
looking for a team-oriented individual for water
treatment/distribution,
wastewater treatment/collections and other duties as assigned. CDL preferred. Duties include testing &amp; sampling
water &amp; wastewater, reading
water meters, installation &amp; repairing of water meters, operation of some heavy equipment.
Full benefits available, applications will be accepted until 4:00
pm on 11/28/14. 659 Pearl St,
Middleport, OH 45760. EEO
Employer, Drug Free Work
Place.
Tig welder needed with 2
years' experience. Must be
able to interpret diagrams and
assembly of prints, use various small hand tools and
power tools. Works well with
others and under supervision.
have basic mechanical ability.
Traveling required. Health Insurance available after 90
days. Send resume and copy
of certificates to:
Steelial construction and Metal Fabrication
70764 St. Rt. 124
Vinton, OH 45686
740-669-5300
Business &amp; Trade School

Pleasant Valley Hospital currently has
an opening for a full-time Surgical
First Assistant in the Operating
Room. One year surgery
experience required.
Apply at Pleasant Valley Hospital, 2520 Valley Dr.,
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550, or fax to (304) 675-6975
or apply on-line at www.pvalley.org.
EOE: M/F/D/V

60549233

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
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Commercial
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Houses For Sale
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�SPORTS

4B Friday, November 21, 2014

Daily Sentinel

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

Playoff tickets
on sale at PPJSHS
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Presale tickets for
Saturday’s Class AAA playoff game between Point
Pleasant and Martinsburg will be on sale at the high
school Wednesday and Thursday during school hours,
as well as until noon Friday. Tickets are $5 for students and $7 for adults. All tickets at the gate will be
$7. The only passes accepted are WVSSAC coaches
passes. No county passes will be accepted. Also, no
pass outs will be permitted. If you leave, you must pay
to re-enter. Also, there will be a fan bus for the first
50 fans to sign up for the ride to Martinsburg. The
bus will leave at 6 a.m. Saturday and the cost is $50
apiece, which will include your individual game ticket.
The fan bus is first come, first serve.

Victory
From Page 1B

and is now a member of their Tiffin’s
Athletic Hall of
Fame.
Morrissey, who
graduated from
Roger Bacon High
School in Cincinnati, Ohio, also
serves as Assistant
Director of Athletics and Director of
Compliance at Rio
Grande.
Clearly, running
his win total to 406
by season’s end
would be a nice
way to close out the
2014 campaign.
“We’ve still got
some work to do,”
he said. “We’ve
shown some of
instances of being a
good team this year,
but I still don’t know
that we’ve put everything together from
start to finish in a
game this season.
That’s what we’re
working toward.”
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

GAHS Foundation
Game at Oak Hill

land Civic Center and is for both boys and girls in grades
4-6, all in separate divisions. For more information, contact Dave at (740) 590-0438 or Ken at (740) 416-8901.

OAK HILL, Ohio — The Foundation basketball game
between Gallia Academy and Oak Hill has been moved to
Tuesday, Nov. 25, at OHHS. The girls contest will be played
at 6 p.m. and the boys will tipoff at 7:30 p.m. All tickets are $5
and no passes will be honored. All proceeds will be donated.

Wahama co-ed
Volleyball Tournament

Pomeroy/Middleport
holiday hoops tourney
RUTLAND, Ohio — The Middleport and Pomeroy
youth leagues will be holding their annual basketball
tournament from Thursday, Dec. 18, through, Tuesday,
Dec. 23, and resume play on Friday, Dec. 26, through
Tuesday, Dec. 30. The tourney will be held at the Rut-

Task

points offensively while
allowing 11.2 points as
a defensive unit. The
From Page 1B
Bulldogs lone loss this
year, however, came in a
— and I like that we
Week 4 setback to visithave the chip going in. ing Tuscarora (VA) by a
It’s not always the size 40-21 count.
of the dog, but the size
MHS has forced 30
of the fight in the dog.” takeaways this fall and
The Black, Red and
is plus-17 overall in
White enter Saturday
turnover differential,
with averages of 50.9
and the hosts have also
points per game offenoutscored the opposisively while allowing
tion by a 320-64 margin
just 7.2 points per
before halftime. The
game as a defensive
Bulldogs have also
unit. Point has posted
outgained opponents
four shutouts and has
by nearly 2,000 yards
yet to allow more than
(3,801-1,854) in total
20 points in any one
offense.
contest this fall while
“They are the fourclaiming a plus-15
time defending state
margin in turnover dif- champions and they do
ferential.
everything perfect. They
Those are impressive are the kind of football
numbers indeed, but
team that got our kids’
the Bulldogs have more attention the second we
than their fair share of turned the game film
digits that truly stand
on, and our kids perked
out — most notably
right up,” Darst said.
their postseason record “We are still preparing
at home. Martinsburg’s the same way as we
last playoff loss at home always do and we have
came during a 26-21
a pretty good idea on
decision to Hurricane
how they are going to
in the opening round of attack us, and we have
the 2005 campaign.
an idea on how we are
Martinsburg enters
going to have to stop
the weekend with a sev- it. The question we are
en-game winning streak left asking is do we have
what we need to stop it?
and is averaging 43.3

I guess come Saturday
afternoon, we’ll know
more about that.
“Our kids are excited
about having the chance
to play them. We’ve
billed it as we are playing for a state title and
we know the significance of playing them.
We’ve never played
Martinsburg and we
just picked up our first
win against an eastern
panhandle team last
week. We’ve come up
with a game plan that
best suits who we have
available this weekend
and we’ll go over there
and see what we can do
with it.”
Martinsburg has a balanced offensive attack,
as the running game
averages 210 yards a
game while the passing
game yields another 135
yards per outing. MHS
has five backs with at
least 29 carries and each
has 175 or more yards
rushing on the season.
Trey Boyd leads the
rushing attack with 108
carries for 814 yards
and 17 touchdowns,
while Deamonte Lindsay
is next with 97 totes for
673 yards and 12 scores.
Carter Walburn has also
churned out 330 yards

MASON, W.Va. — The Wahama boys basketball team is
hosting a co-ed volleyball tournament on Saturday, November 22 at the WHS gym. The cost for a team is $120 with a
maximum of eight players, four men and four women, on a
team. The double-elimination tournament will feature games
to 25, win by two, and matches will be best two-of-three.
Players cannot play on multiple teams and all players must
sign a release form. To register, or for more information contact coach Ron Bradley by email at rbradley@k12.wv.us or by
phone at (304)-377-9295.

and eight TDs on 86
tries.
Walburn has also
paced a steady passing
game, completing 73-of125 attempts for 1,439
yards — which includes
16 touchdowns and six
interceptions. Dylan
Brewer leads the wideouts with 28 catches
for 662 yards and six
scores, while Issac
Brown has 21 receptions
for 252 yards and four
scores.
Fisher Boeckmann
has 50 successful extra
points and two made
field goals, while Matt
Berlo is a perfect 4-of-4
on PAT kicks and 3-of-5
on long distance field
goals. Walburn and
Berlo have also split the
punting duties this season, with each averaging
more than 34 yards per
boot.
Martinsburg also
has one other number
that stands out over
Point Pleasant, and that
comes in the form of
enrollment figures. MHS
is currently the thirdlargest school in West
Virginia with 1,746 kids
in the top-four grades,
while Point Pleasant is
last in AAA with 782
kids.

“Why I love my career in advertising...
Every day brings a different challenge and opportunity.
Helping these businesses with their goals to achieve additional business gives me
a feeling of accomplishment.

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

Working for a newspaper company like Civitas Media gives me great
opportunities to sell more than just traditional newspaper advertising.
We now can offer web, video, mobile and magazines.
Team work...My co-workers are the best and when a problem or challenge
arises we come together as a team to work out a plan. I have a lot of
people behind me giving me the training and encouragement I need to be
successful in advertising sales.”

Do your part!
Recycle this
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To begin your career in advertising
or advertising sales management
either locally or at locations in
eleven other states,
please contact Greg Sweet at
gsweet@civitasmedia.com

Houses For Sale

Apartments/Townhouses

Brick House, 3BR, 2BA, 1500
sq ft, 0.6 acre lot. Gallipolis
Ferry area. Asking $85K , No
Land Contracts, 304-675-8019

Apartments available Now. Riverbend Apts. New Haven,
WV. Now accepting applicatons for HUD-subsidized,
One bedroom Apts. Utilities included. Based on 30% of adjusted income. Call 304-8823121. Available for Senior and
Disabled people.

Apartments/Townhouses
2 Bdrm newly remodeled W/D Hook-up $350/mo plus
deposit 304-638-4163
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

Efficiency/Studio $375 mo,
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newer appl, lam floor, water,
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Application req. 727-237-6942
FIRST MONTH FREE
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$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
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304-882-3017

Apartments/Townhouses
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.

60511677
60511677

Houses For Rent
For Rent Vinton Area, 3 bedroom 2 bath, non-smoker, no
pets, $600/month, call after 6
p.m. 740-446-6689

Houses For Rent
2-Bdrm 1 bath, All Electric
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stove. Near grocery, hospital,
Ideal place for 1 &amp; 2 Adults.
one sm. pet allowed, Pet Fee
$550/mo $400 deposit water
included- references Sorry NO
SMOKERS. 304) 657-6378 W/D available at this time.
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, 3 Car Garage. Beautiful single family log
home on 3 acres in Letart
Falls. Includes appliances,
$1200 + utilities. References &amp;
security deposit required. 614540-0858
7 Rm. house with 2 baths
$650/mo + Deposit also a 5
Rm. house 1bath $450/mo +
Deposit. NO
Drugs,Alcohol,Smoking or Pets
allowed. 740-245-5064.

Numbers can make
a difference on the
gridiron, particularly
this time of year. But,
despite being less than
100 percent, Darst
believes the pressure is
squarely on the shoulders of his opponent —
and not his troops.
“We don’t feel like the
pressure is on us, even
though we are an undefeated football team,”
Darst said. “We feel
like we can just let it go
and let the kids play. I
don’t think that we will
play tight, I think that
we will be ready to go
out and play against an
opponent of that caliber.
We’re going to get after
it and see what we can
get done.”
The 12th man will
also play a part in the
final outcome, but don’t
expect the home crowd
to be the only ones
getting behind their
football team come Saturday.
“I was impressed
when we went to Morgantown two years ago
and played. We probably
had a bigger crowd than
they did. Our fans follow us and they love our
football team. We have
smart fans and they
know what we are going
up against, but they
don’t care — they just
like watching us play,”
Darst said. “I know they
are coming, hoping to
see us pull off something
and that’s great. I really
am proud of our community and the support
they always give us.”
Kickoff is scheduled
for 1:30 p.m. Saturday.

Lease
One bedroom, unfurnished,
2nd floor, recently re-decorated, apt., 2nd ave., Gallipolis.
No pets. Lease application,
with references. Security deposit. $425/mo. Call 4417875, 446-3936 or 446-4425.
Rentals
3-Bdrm / 2 bath Mobile Home
$500/mo &amp; $500 deposit 740367-0547
Mobile homes for rent in the
Spring Valley area. $450480/month plus deposit.
740-446-4400
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Sales

Stereo/TV/Electronics

For Sale 2 Beagle Hounds 7
months old- Starting to run rabbits 740-245-5943

Joe's TV Repair on most
makes &amp; Models. House Calls
304-675-1724

Pets

Want To Buy

3-Bichon puppies, 1-female,2males $350. Call Joyce 740508-6425/740-416-4475.

Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
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

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

Manufactured Homes
Used single wides
3 to choose from
starting at $1500.
freedomhomesohio.com
740-446-3093

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Friday, November 21, 2014 5B

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
1

9
1

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

By Hilary Price

7
2
4 3 8

9
7 2
5

3

2
3 7 1
8
8
4
6

Difficulty Level

Hank Ketcham’s

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By Dave Green

�BUCKEYES

BuckEyes

6B Friday, November 21, 2014

An inside look at

Daily Sentinel

vs

Some fans just
lack perspective

Ohio State got a verbal commitment
from 4-star offensive lineman Matt
Burrell (Woodbridge, Va.) on Monday,
raising its 2015 recruiting class to 21
players. Burrell’s decision came down to
OSU and LSU.
The Buckeyes also received a verbal
commitment from junior defensive
end Jonathon Cooper (Gahanna
Lincoln) last week, giving them four
commitments in their 2016 recruiting
class.
The 6-foot, 3-inch, 215-pound Cooper,
rated either a 4-star or a 3-star by most
recruiting evaluators, also had offers
from Michigan State, Indiana, Illinois,
Kentucky and Notre Dame.
Jerome Baker (Cleveland
Benedictine), a senior linebacker who
recently switched his commitment to
OSU from Florida, had two sacks in
Benedictine’s 56-16 regional semifinal
playoff game against Youngstown
Mooney last week.
Jamel Dean (Cocoa, Fla.), a 2015
commitment who would play defensive
back at Ohio State, showed some
offensive skills when he scored four
touchdowns three different ways in
his team’s 67-0 win over Avon Park in
a Florida high school playoff game. He
scored on runs of 37 yards and 50 yards,
on a 62-yard catch and on a 40-yard
punt return.

Don Speck | The Lima News.

The improvement of Ohio State’s offensive line, including guards Pat Elflein (65) and Billy Price (54) and
center Jacoby Boren (50), has been a key factor in the Buckeyes’ success this season.

Ohio State-Indiana matchups
&lt; QUARTERBACKS
J.T. Barrett
needs
one more
touchdown
pass to tie Troy
Smith’s OSU
season record of 30, set in
2006. The redshirt freshman’s
29 touchdown passes are 10
more than any other Big Ten
quarterback this season.
Indiana freshman
quarterback Zander Diamont
has struggled since becoming
the starter after Nate Sudfeld
suffered a season-ending
shoulder injury. Indiana
has had only one passing
touchdown in its last 14
quarters and has averaged 70
yards a game in the air with
Diamont at QB.
Advantage: Ohio State

Say What?
“I honestly
give that zero
thought. Zero.”

— Ohio State
offensive coordinator
Tom Herman
about who will play
quarterback in 2016.

&lt; RUNNING BACKS
For years
Urban Meyer
heard how
he’d never
had a 1,000yard runner.
If Ezekiel Elliott gets 46 more
yards, Meyer will have had two
in the last two seasons.
Indiana’s Tevin Coleman
(1,678 yards, 12 TDs) has been
productive even without the
threat of a passing game.
He ran for 307 yards against
Rutgers in a 45-23 loss last
Saturday, including runs of 68
and 67 yards.
Advantage: Indiana

Buckeye Brain Busters
1. What was 1970s Ohio State running
back Champ Henson’s real name?
2. What was 1955 Ohio State Heisman
Trophy winner Hopalong Cassady’s real
name?
3. What was 1980s Ohio State
linebacker Pepper Johnson’s real name?
4. What was 1960s Ohio State running
back Bo Rein’s real name?

&lt; RECEIVERS

Big-play
receiver Devin
Smith’s went
from a 6-catch
night against
Michigan State
to no catches at Minnesota
last Saturday. In his OSU

5. What was 1980s Ohio State
defensive back Sonny Gordon’s real
name?
Answers: 1. Harold Henson; 2. Howard
Cassady; 3. Thomas Johnson; 4. Robert
Rein; 5. Denman Preston Gordon.

vs

8

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Indiana at
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BIG TEN STANDINGS
East Division
Big Ten
Ohio State
6
0
Michigan State 5
1
Maryland
3
3
Michigan
3
3
Penn State
2
4
Rutgers
2
4
Indiana
0
6
West Division
Big Ten
Wisconsin
5
1
Nebraska
4
2
Minnesota
4
2
Iowa
4
2
Northwestern 2
4
Illinois
1
5
Purdue
1
5

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Overall
9
1
8
2
6
4
5
5
6
4
6
4
3
7
Overall
8
2
8
2
7
3
7
3
4
6
4
6
3
7

career, Smith has caught
touchdown passes in 20
games but also has had one
catch or none in 16 games.
Cleveland Glenville graduate
Shane Wynn (43 catches,
568 yards, 3 TDs) is the one
bright spot among Indiana’s
receivers. The Hoosiers
have had only seven passing
touchdowns this season.
Advantage: Ohio State
&lt; OFFENSIVE LINE
With four
new starters
this season,
Ohio State
is averaging
509.8 yards
total offense per game, just
two yards fewer than last
year’s school-record 511.9
yards. OSU has allowed only 12
sacks in its last eight games.
Guards Collin Rahrig and Dan
Feeney and tackle Jason Spriggs
lead Indiana’s line, which has
helped the Hoosiers’ running
game rank 10th nationally
(264.3 yards a game).
Advantage: Ohio State
&lt; DEFENSIVE LINE
Joey Bosa’s 11.5 sacks leads
the Big Ten by
three over the
next best total.
Michael Bennett
has stood out
in the last two
games with three tackles for a
loss and a sack.
For Indiana, Bobby
Richardson leads the way with
5.5 sacks and 7.5 tackles for
losses, but the Hoosiers have
struggled to put pressure on
opposing quarterbacks.
Advantage: Ohio State.
&lt; LINEBACKERS
Ohio State’s linebackers
will be tested for the third

straight week
by a 1,000yard running
back when
they take on
IU’s Coleman.
Minnesota’s David Cobb and
Michigan State’s Jeremy
Langford both went over 100
yards against OSU.
T.J. Simmon is tied for the
lead in tackles for Indiana with
58. Forisse Hardin has 5.5
tackles for losses.
Advantage: Ohio State
&lt; DEFENSIVE BACKS
Senior
cornerback
Doran Grant (3
interceptions)
is playing at
an All-Big Ten
level, according to Meyer. The
other cornerback, Eli Apple, is
beginning to look like the player
OSU hoped he would be when it
recruited him.
The Hoosiers have allowed
a Big Ten-worst 20 passing
touchdowns. Indiana safety
Mark Murphy is the son of 12year NFL veteran Mark Murphy.
Advantage: Ohio State
&lt; SPECIAL TEAMS
OSU is not
ready to give up
on Jalin Marshall
as a punt
returner despite
his difficulties
with fumbles. Kickoff man Kyle
Clinton should be much busier
than the punter Cameron
Johnston or field goal kicker
Sean Nuernberger this week.
Indiana kicker Griffin Oakes
has hit 8 of 12 field goal
attempts and two of his misses
have been from 50 yards
or more. Punter Erich Toth
averages 39.8 yards per punt.
Advantage: Ohio State

OSU SCHEDULE

2014 OSU LEADERS

Aug. 30 ...................... Navy, W 34-17
Sept. 6 ............Virginia Tech, L 21-35
Sept. 13 ..............Kent State, W 66-0
Sept. 27 .............Cincinnati, W 50-28
Oct. 4 ................ Maryland, W 52-24
Oct. 18 ....................Rutgers, W 56-17
Oct. 25 .........at Penn State, W 31-24
Nov. 1 ……………………Illinois, W 55-14
Nov. 8 ....at Michigan State, W 49-37
Nov. 15 ..........at Minnesota, W 31-24
Nov. 22 …………………Indiana, TBA
Nov. 29 ………………..Michigan, TBA
Dec. 6 ...........Big Ten Championship

Passing
J.T. Barrett ..............................2,356
Rushing
Ezekiel Elliott ............................ 954
J.T. Barrett ..................................771
Curtis Samuel .............................314
Receiving
Michael Thomas.........................583
Devin Smith ................................564
Dontre Wilson.............................300
Field Goals
Sean Nuernberger ..................10/15
Punts
Cameron Johnston ................... 42.4
Tackles
Joshua Perry ................................ 85
Sacks
Joey Bosa .................................. 11.5
Darron Lee .................................. 3.5

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COLUMBUS – Technology
changes but the lunatic fringe
of sports fans never changes.
After Ohio State tight
end Ryan Hamby dropped a
pass in the end
zone that could
have been the
winning touchdown when the
Buckeyes lost to
Texas in 2005,
he received sevJim
eral anonymous
Naveau
vicious emails,
Columnist
including one
that contained a
death threat.
When Ohio State’s Jalin
Marshall fumbled twice in
Ohio State’s 31-24 win over
Minnesota last Saturday, a
few fans lit up Twitter with
harsh, personal commentary
on him and his performance
in that game.
Email is yesterday’s news.
A total loss of perspective by
a few people is still in vogue.
Angry tweets, emails or
just a derisive comment while
walking across campus are
nothing new.
“It kind of comes with the
territory, right?” OSU receivers coach Zach Smith said.
“People are going to praise
you for doing well, they’re
going to be critical when you
do something that’s not positive.
“You could also not be
at Ohio State, not getting
praise for a great game and
that wouldn’t be as much
fun, either. So it’s something
you’ve got to learn to deal
with,” he said.
Marshall’s only public comment on the situation came
on Twitter, where he posted
this message on Sunday:
“Appreciate all the Buckeye
fans that support us no matter
what!”
Sunday, Marshall heard from
former OSU receiver Corey
Brown, who also was the
target of a fair amount social
media criticism at times.
During interviews Monday,
his teammates backed him up.
Or as cornerback Eli Apple
put it, they “hugged him up.”
Offensive lineman Pat Elflein said, “Some of that stuff,
especially coming from Ohio
State fans, that’s unacceptable.”
It will still be unacceptable
the next time it happens.
Unfortunately, it won’t be
surprising.
Contact Jim Naveau at 419-993-2087 or
on Twitter at @Lima_Naveau.

WEEKEND SCHEDULE
BIG TEN
Indiana at Ohio State, noon
Penn State at Illinois, noon
Minnesota at Nebraska, noon
Rutgers at Michigan State, noon
Northwestern at Purdue, noon
Wisconsin at Iowa, 3:30 p.m.
Maryland at Michigan, 3:30 p.m.
OTHERS
Wash. State at Az. State, 1 p.m.
Colorado at Oregon, 3:30 p.m.
Boston Coll. At Fla. State, 3:30 p.m.
Louisville at Notre Dame, 3:30 p.m.
Ole Miss at Arkansas, 3:30 p.m.
W. Carolina at Alabama, 4 p.m.
Samford at Auburn, 7 p.m.
Okla. State at Baylor, 7:30 p.m.
Vanderbilt at Miss. State, 7:30 p.m.
USC at UCLA, 8 p.m.

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60531017

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