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                  <text>On this
day in
history

Snow
showers. High
33, low 21

Tomcats
knock Rebels
from first

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 22, Volume 70

ON THE WEB
This story first appeared Saturday on www.
mydailytribune.com.

Tuesday, February 9, 2016 s 50¢

Grace backs ‘Focus on the Future’
By Lorna Hart

lhart@civitasmedia.com

URG assistant
coach dies
in car crash
Staff Report

JACKSON
— The Ohio
State Highway
Patrol’s Jackson
post is investigating a crash
Cooper
that involved
the fatality of
one woman who was a
former Marshall University student athlete
and a University of
Rio Grande assistant
volleyball coach.
The crash occurred
on U.S. 35 near Bronx
Corner Road around
3:40 p.m. Friday.
According to OSHP
reports, Ada Ison, 83,
of Ray, allegedly failed
to yield when coming out of a private
driveway. The vehicle
Ison drove was struck
when traveling eastbound on U.S. 35 by a
Toyota Prius driven by
Emileigh Cooper, 22,
of Ray. The Prius then
crossed the median
into westbound lanes.
Cooper struck a westbound Jeep Renegade
driven by Monroe
Raber, 27, of Wellston,
head on. David Miller,
52, of Nederland,
Texas, driving a Chevrolet Venture, was
unable to stop and slid
into Raber’s vehicle.
Responders took
Cooper to Holzer
Hospital in Jackson
with life-threatening
injuries. She was
then flown to Grant
Medical Center in
Columbus before passing from her injuries.
Raber and Miller were
examined on scene
before being released
and Ison was not
harmed.
All drivers are
reported as having worn seat belts.
Intoxication was not
a factor in the collisions. The crash is
still currently under
OSHP investigation.

Reports say this
is the second
fatal crash of
2016 in Jackson
County. Troopers encourage
motorists to
remain alert
while driving
and to always wear
safety harnesses.
According to www.
rioredstorm.com,
Emileigh Cooper was
in her first season
serving as assistant
volleyball coach with
the RedStorm team.
She was a Jackson
High School graduate
and played volleyball,
basketball and softball
in her time there. She
was recruited to play
those same sports in
college. She, however,
chose to play softball
when signing with
Marshall University.
Cooper graduated
from Marshall University with a bachelor’s
degree in science and
was also working on
a nursing degree at
the University of Rio
Grande. Cooper was
also known as being a
regular instructor with
the university’s summer volleyball camp.
URG President Dr.
Michelle Johnston
posted a statement
about Cooper’s passing on the college’s
Facebook page.
“Our hearts are
heavy with the loss of
such a bright, beautiful member of the Rio
family. Emileigh has
touched so many lives
and had her sights set
on serving others as
a nurse. Our entire
campus hurts for
Emileigh’s family and
friends. As soon as
we know more about
formal arrangements,
we will hold an event
on campus to honor
her life and her many
contributions.”

OHIO VALLEY —With
an endorsement from
94th House District State
Rep. Debbie Phillips,
Sarah Grace began her
campaign for a spot on
the November ballot.
Phillips, who has
served four terms, is not
eligible to run for another
term, and encouraged
Grace to become a candidate for the position.
“I support Sarah Grace
because she has the
experience and the right
attitude to go to the state
House and get results for
our region,” Phillips said
recently.
Grace’s platform supports a legislative agenda
that would focus on beneﬁts for working, middleclass families.
In an interview,
Grace said she supports the “Focus on the
Future” Democratic economic agenda that was
announced last Wednesday. According to Grace,
these policies would help
raise families’ income,
make college affordable
and invest in clean energy
and infrastructure job.
“The proposed house
bills include many things
that will help the people
of this district,” she said,
giving several examples.
Putting Family First, a
House Bill and Senate Bill
Draft, would provide family and medical leave for
40 percent of Americans
not covered by the Medial
Leave Act, and whose
beneﬁts can be discontinued without the protection of the bill.
“Because of my personal experience, I know
how important it is for
families to have medical
leave. No one should lose
their job or home because
of a medical emergency.”
Grace recounted a time
in her life when she was
her family’s only source
of beneﬁts, but needed to
take time off due to medical reasons. Her employer
was not required to
provide that beneﬁt, and
she worried that not only
would she lose her job,
Courtesy photo

State Rep. Debbie Phillips with Sarah Grace.

Husted to headline Lincoln Day Dinner
By Lindsay Kriz

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

— SPORTS
Wrestling: 6
Basketball: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 2
Classified: 7-8
Comics: 9

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook or twitter to
share your thoughts.

See GRACE | 5

POMEROY — With the arrival
of February also comes the annual
Meigs County Republican Party’s
Lincoln Day Dinner.
This year, the event will be
Thursday, Feb. 25, with doors
opening at 5:15 p.m. and the
dinner beginning at 6 p.m.
This year, the guest speaker will
be Ohio Secretary of State Jon A.
Husted.
According to his ofﬁcial website,
Husted’s political career took off
in 2000, when he was ﬁrst elected
to public ofﬁce as a member of the
Ohio House of Representatives.
Four years later, in 2006, his
colleagues elected him Speaker
of the House, which made him
one of the youngest speakers in
the state’s history. He, along with
other members of the House of

Representatives, helped
pass a ﬁscally conservative
budget. Aspects of this
particular budget included
reform of the state tax code,
as well as an income tax
cut.
Husted
Husted also helped lead
the passage of the Ed
Choice Scholarship, which serves
as a school choice option for
those children studying in schools
that are considered to be failing.
Another creation includes the
Choose Ohio First Scholarship,
which helps to encourage students
in Ohio to study STEMM, or
science, technology, engineering,
mathematics and medicine.
He served two terms as speaker
of the House before being elected
to the Ohio Senate. Today, he
serves as Ohio’s 53rd secretary of
state, which entails responsibility
of the oversight of elections in

what is often a swing state.
In particular, he’s worked
to implement uniform rules
that included the ﬁrst ever
statewide absentee ballot
application mailing to
voters in all 88 counties in
2012 and again in 2014 as
well as setting expansive
hours for early, in-person voting.
Aside from overseeing state
elections, Husted appoints the
members of the board of elections
in all 88 counties in Ohio. Husted
is also considered the “custodian”
of business ﬁlings in the state,
which has included allowing
businesses ﬁling online.
For tickets and ticket
information for this event, call Bill
Spaun at 740-416-5995 or Sandy
Iannarelli at 740-541-0735.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.

�LOCAL

2 Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

OBITUARIES
CLARK
LETART, W.Va. — Woodrow Daniel “Dan” Clark, 70,
of Letart, died Friday, Feb. 5, 2016. A funeral service will
be 2 p.m. Tuesday, February 9, 2016, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Burial will be private.
Visitation will be 5-7 p.m. Monday at the funeral home.

BOOTH
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Darrell “Peanuts” Booth,
76, of Proctorville, died Saturday, Feb. 6, 2016 at home.
Funeral service will be 11 a.m. Wednesday Feb. 10,
2016, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville. Burial will follow in Miller Memorial Gardens,
Miller, Ohio. Visitation will be 10-11 a.m. Wednesday,
Feb. 10, 2016, at the funeral home.

COOPER
RAY, Ohio — Emileigh Jo Cooper, 22, of Ray, died
Friday, Feb. 5, 2016. Visitation will be 4-9 p.m. Friday,
Feb. 12, 2016, at the Jackson High School gymnasium. Funeral services will be noon Saturday, Feb.
13, 2016, in the high school gymnasium, with doors
opening at 11 a.m. Burial will follow at Tick Ridge
Cemetery.

Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)

KIMBLE
ASHTON, W.Va. — Curtis Cole Kimble, 64, Ashton, died Friday, Feb. 5, 2016, in St. Mary’s Medical
Center. A memorial service will be conducted at a
later date. Burial will be in Irene Kimble Chapman
Cemetery, Staten Chapel Road, Mason County.

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

CONTACT US
PUBLISHER
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@civitasmedia.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Ed Litteral, Ext. 1925
elitteral@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
Michael Johnson, Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

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

ROUSH
HARTFORD, W.Va. — Thomas Michael Roush, 66,
of Hartford, passed away Friday, Feb. 5, 2016, at his
home. Service will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 10,
2016, at Foglesong Funeral Home. Burial will follow
in Letart-Evergreen Cemetery. Visitation will be 6-8
p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home.

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Julia Schultz, Ext. 2104
jschultz@civitasmedia.com

WILLIS
GALLIPOLIS — Wanda Saunders Willis, 75, of
Gallipolis, died Sunday, Feb. 7, 2016, at Holzer Medical Center. Services will be 11 a.m. Friday, Feb. 12,
2016, at First Baptist Church. Burial will follow in
Providence Cemetery. Friends may call the church
between 3-7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 11, 2016.

111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

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9 PM

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9 PM

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8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

A Walk Among the Tombstones (‘14, Act) Dan Stevens,
Liam Neeson. A private detective investigates when a drug
trafficker's wife is kidnapped and murdered. TVMA
(:55)
Godzilla (‘14, Act) Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Bryan
Cranston, Elizabeth Olsen. Godzilla has awoken once again
to regain the balance of nature offset by humanity. TV14
60 Minutes Sports Armen Inside the NFL "2015 Super
Keteyian reports on FanDuel Bowl Recap" The guys break
and DraftKings. (N)
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What Would You Do?
Limitless "Fundamentals of
Naked Portraiture" (N)
Eyewitness News
Frontline "The Fantasy
Sports Gamble" (N)
Limitless "Fundamentals of
Naked Portraiture" (N)

10 PM

10:30

Dance Moms "Mini
Dance Moms "Now You See Dance Moms: Chat "Abby's Dance Moms "Abby's New (:05) Pitch Slapped "Rise of
Dancers, Big Drama"
Abby, Now You Don't"
Replaceable" (N)
Favorites" (N)
the Underclassmen" (N)
Recovery Road "Surrender" Pretty Little Liars "New
Pretty Little Liars "Do Not Shadowhunters "Moo Shu Pretty Little Liars "Do Not
Guys, New Lies"
Disturb" (N)
to Go" (N)
Disturb"
Ink Master "Blowing
Ink Master "Better Than
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Ink Master "Ink Master
Ink Master "Ink Master:
Chunks"
Words?"
They Are"
Live"
Cupid's Ink"
Thunder
Thunder
Paradise (N) H.Danger
H.Danger
Nicky
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Law&amp;O: SVU "Snatched"
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
America's Choice (L)
America's Choice (L)
America's Choice (L)
America's Choice (L)
America's Choice
Castle "3XK"
Castle "Almost Famous"
NBA Basketball San Antonio Spurs at Miami Heat (L)
NBA Basket.
(5:00) Air Force One The president fends off deadly
The Lost World: Jurassic Park (‘97, Adv) Julianne Moore, Jeff Goldblum. A
terrorists who are holding his plane and family hostage.
research group travels to an island inhabited by dinosaurs to study their behavior. TV14
Moonshiners
Moonshiners "Caved In"
Shiners "Cherry Bounce" (N) Moonshiners (N)
Fields "Judgment Day" (N)
Married at First Sight
Fit to Fat to Fit "Alex/
The First 48 "Life Snatched" Fit to Fat to Fit "Adonis/
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"Celebrations"
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Kapreina, of Iowa, and
Junior Kapteina, of Florida.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in
death by her husband, Felix
Alkire; and her second husband Orville Phillips.
Funeral services will be
11 a.m. Thursday, Feb.
11, 2016, with Pastor
Scott Warner ofﬁciating
at Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Burial will follow at Meigs
Memory Gardens. Visiting hours will be 6-8 p.m.
Wednesday at the funeral
home.
In lieu of ﬂowers, donations in memory of Mildred may be made to Zion
Church of Christ, 37420
Zion Road, Rutland, OH
45775.

10:30

Chicago Med "Choices" (N) Chicago Fire "All Hard
Parts" (N)
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Marvel's Agent Carter "The What Would You Do?
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American Experience "The Frontline "The Fantasy
Perfect Crime" (N)
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The Siege (1998, Action) Annette Bening, Bruce Willis, Denzel Washington. TVMA Outsiders "Messengers" (N) Outsiders "Messengers"
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26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption NCAA Basketball West Virginia at Kansas (L)
NCAA Basketball UT-Arlington vs. Texas State (L)
27 (LIFE)

POMEROY — Mildred
Irene Alkire Phillips, 88, of
Pomeroy, passed away Feb.
7, 2016.
She was born Dec.
14, 1927, in Pomeroy,
the daughter of the late
Charles O. Kapteina and
Beulah Smith Kapteina.
She was a member of Zion
Church of Christ.
Mildred is survived by
her children, Roger Alkire
(Linda Laudermilt), of
Pomeroy, Marilyn Wilt,
of Lancaster, and Shirley
(Dan) Stanley, of Pomeroy;
grandchildren Chris Alkire,
Debbie Alkire, Brad Wilt,
Bart Wilt, Mark Stanley,
Gary Stanley, James Stanley and John Stanley; many
great-grandchildren; and
brothers Roy (Sherry)

The Meigs County Health Department is an equal opportunity provider.

Freedom from debt can
become a reality!

TUESDAY EVENING
6:30

MILDRED IRENE ALKIRE PHILLIPS

The Together on Diabetes grant program at the
Meigs County Health Department is seeking
estimates for the construction of two backstops
and outfield fences at the Angela Eason Memorial
Ballfields in Chester, Ohio. For project details,
contact Laura Cleland at the Meigs County
Health Department, (740)992-6626 ext. 1031
or laura.cleland@meigs-health.com.
Estimates are due February 19th by 4 pm.

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6 PM

(Amanda) Goble; Breanna
Snowden (Willie Zahran),
Maria Meadows (Brian
McClure), Amanda Meadows and Jordan Meadows;
and grandchildren Zachariah Goble, Brayden Goble,
Dawson Goble, Rilyn Holley, Kinsley Zahran and
Calob Meadows.
A memorial service will
be 3 p.m. Wednesday, Feb.
10, 2016, at the Salem Center Firehouse.
A registry is available at
www.andersonmcdaniel.
com.

See OBITUARIES | 3

800-610-0703
BROADCAST

LANGSVILLE — Angel
Meadows, 46, of Langsville,
passed away Sunday, Feb.
7, 2016, at her home. She
was born Jan. 29, 1970, in
Franklin County, the daughter of Connie Priddy and
the late Jerry McDaniel.
She was employed as
manager of Twin Oaks.
She is survived by her
husband, Kevin Meadows;
mother Connie (Rick)
Priddy; brothers Jerry
McDaniel and Steven
(Carita) McDaniel; sister
Regina Walls (Kevin Hudson); children Brandon

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�Daily Sentinel

LOCAL

FOR THE RECORD
Land Transfers
To view speciﬁc land transfer records, visit the
Recorder’s Ofﬁce at the Meigs County Courthouse
during regular hours.
Pomeroy Mayor’s Court cases —Jan. 25
Davina D. Willis, of Rutland, entered a guilty plea
for Failure to Register and agreed to pay a $75 ﬁne
and cost; Ronnie S. Nakao, of Racine, entered a guilty
plea for No Operators and agreed to pay a $100 ﬁne,
entered a guilty plea for Suspended License and
agreed to pay $50, entered a guilty plea for Failure to
Register and agreed to a $75 ﬁne and plead guilty to
another Suspended License charge and agreed to pay
a $50 ﬁne and cost; Justin T. Hankla, of Nelsonville,
entered a guilty plea for Reckless Operation and was
ﬁned $200. He also entered a guilty plea for Fictitious
Tags and agreed to pay a $75 ﬁne and cost; Katie M.
Gibbs, of Syracuse, made a plea of no contest for a
Speeding offense, and was ﬁned $30 and cost; Jennifer N. Coffman, of Stonewood, W.Va., entered a guilty
plea for Failure to Register and was ﬁne $75. She also
entered a guilty plea for a Suspended License offense
and agreed to pay $50 and cost; Tosha Alexander,
of Thurman, Ohio, entered a plea of no contest for
Driving Under Suspension, which was amended to
No Operators License, and was ﬁned $100 and cost;
Grayson C. Stewart, of Cottageville, W.Va., entered
a guilty plea for an Illegal Left Turn at Butternut
Ave. He was ﬁned $75 and cost; Blenda LaLone, of
Middleport, entered a plea of No Contest for Failure
to Appear and was ﬁned $150, plead guilty to a Disorderly Conduct offense and was ﬁned $100 and cost.
Another offense of Failure to Appear was dismissed;
Joshua A. Wells, of Parkersburg, W.Va., entered a
guilty plea for Failure to Register and was ﬁned $75,
and entered a guilty plea for Suspended License and
was ﬁned $50 and cost; Glen Zeiner, of Pomeroy,
entered a guilty plea for Failure to Register and was
ﬁned $75, and entered a guilty plea for Suspended
License and was ﬁned $50 and cost; Seleena D. Dowell, of Pomeroy, plead guilty to an OVI charge that
was amended to Physical Control of a Motor Vehicle,
and was ﬁned $700 and cost; Perry E. Livingston
III., of Pomeroy, plead guilty to OVI and was ﬁned
$700, plead guilty to Failure to Stop at a Stop Sign
and was ﬁned $75 and cost, sentenced to three days
in jail, another three days in jail, suspension upon
completion of DIP school and 90 Days License Suspension.; Charles Williamson, of Rutland, plead guilty
for Failure to Comply, and was ﬁned $150 and cost.
A Failure to Appear offense was dismissed; William
W. Starr Jr., of Coolville, plead guilty for an Illegal
Left Turn at Butternut Avenue and was ﬁned $75 and
cost; Joshua E. Doerfer, of Pomeroy, plead not guilty
to unlawful entrustment, but was found guilty and
ﬁned $150, another $150 Suspended and cost; David
N. Nakao, of Racine, had a Failure to Appear offense
dismissed.
Mayor’s Court waived appearances
Carmel E. Osborne, of Pomeroy, was ﬁned $30
and cost for Speeding; Michael W. Brown, Gallipolis, was ﬁned $270 and cost for Driving Under
Suspicion and Failure to Register; Paula VanMeter,
of Pomeroy, was ﬁned $150 and cost for Failure
to Comply; Casey L. Richardson, of Racine, was
ﬁned $30 and cost for Speeding; Larry J. Ball, of
Middleport, was ﬁned $75 and cost for Failure to
Register; Paula A. Roush, of Reedsville, was ﬁned
$30 and cost for Speeding; Tresa R. Sawyer, of Long
Bottom, was ﬁned $75 and cost for Failing to Stop
at a Stop Sign; Morgan S. Kennedy, of Pomeroy,
was ﬁned $30 and cost for Speeding; Johnathon
T. West, of Saltersville, Ky., was ﬁned $30 and
cost for Speeding; Felicia A. See, of Pomeroy, was
ﬁned $150 and cost for Failure to Appear; David P.
Tiemeyer, of Pomeroy, was ﬁned $150 and cost for
Failure to Appear; Sean N. Coppick, of Racine, was
ﬁned $75 and cost for Failure to Register; Lelah M.
Stapleton, of Pomeroy, was ﬁned $75 and cost for
Failure to Register; Lorie M. Wood, of Middleport,
was ﬁned $75 and cost for Failure to Yield Turning Left; Nathan P. Thomas, of Point Pleasant,

Tuesday, February 9, 2016 3

OBITUARIES
W.Va., was ﬁned $30 and cost for Speeding; Sarah
R. Roach, of Pomeroy, was ﬁned $200 and cost for
Driving Under Suspension; Amber L. Norris, of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., was ﬁned $30 and cost for
Speeding; Amanda L. Moore, of Langsville, was
ﬁned $150 and cost for Failure to Comply; Joyce
K. Harris-Circle, of Middleport, was ﬁned $75 and
cost for Failure to Register; Edward G. Hendricks,
of Syracuse, was ﬁned $75 and cost, for Failure to
Register; John E. Hedges, of Athens, was ﬁned $75
and cost for Failure to Register; Katie Fife, of New
Haven, W.Va., was ﬁned $275 in ﬁnes and cost for
Speeding, Failure to Register and Fictitious Tags;
Chandra R. Forbes, Letart, W.Va., was ﬁned $75
and cost for Failure to Register; Joshua B. Davis,
of Malta, Ohio, was ﬁned $30 and cost for Speed;
Mary B. Carlisle, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., was ﬁned
$30 and cost for Speed; Christopher W. Cogar, of
Pomeroy, was ﬁned $75 and cost for Fictitious Tags;
Kenna S. Adkins, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., was ﬁned
$30 and cost for Speed; Steve J. Blackwell, of Rutland, was ﬁned $75 and cost for Failure to Register;
Bruce W. Hoffman, of Clifton, W.Va., was ﬁned $75
and cost for Failure to Register; Adam C. Lavender,
of Pomeroy, was ﬁned $75 and cost for Failure to
Register; Kevin J. Barton, of Coolville, was ﬁned
$150 and cost for Failure to Appear; Fatema AzahraSha Niese Frazier, of Cleveland, Ohio, was ﬁned $30
and cost for Speeding; Cody J. Hysell, of Pomeroy,
was ﬁned $75 and cost for Failure to Register; Tonia
K. Price, of Gallipolis, was ﬁned $30 and cost for
Speeding; Andrea M. Vaninwagen, of Coolville, was
ﬁned $30 and cost for Speeding; Michael B. Manley,
of Racine, was ﬁned $30 and cost for Speeding;
Kelsey R. Young, of Ravenswood, W.Va., was ﬁned
$75 and cost for Failure to Register; and Gabrielle
E. Johnson, of Pomeroy, was ﬁned $100 and cost for
Assured Clear Distance Ahead and Seatbelt.

GARFIELD EDSEL PAULEY JR.
W.Va., and Linda (Roger)
Brooks, of Fort Springs,
W.Va.
In addition to his
parents, he was preceded in death by a sister,
Elizabeth Pauley; and a
brother, Robert Sylvester
Pauley.
He was a devoted and
loving husband, father
and grandfather. He loved
his family, second only to
his Lord Jesus Christ. He
will be deeply missed by
all who were blessed to
have known him.
Funeral services will be
1 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 11,
2016, at Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. Pastor
Edsel Hart will ofﬁciate.
Interment will be in Bald
Knob Cemetery. Friends
may call the funeral home
after 11 a.m. Thursday.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by visiting www.
cremeensfuneralhomes.
com.

PORTLAND — Garﬁeld Edsel Pauley Jr., 77,
Portland, passed away at
9:32 a.m. Sunday, Feb. 7,
2016, at Camden Clark
Medical Center, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Born May 30, 1938,
in Charleston, W.Va., he
was the son of the late
Garﬁeld Pauley Sr. and
Meadie Sneed Pauley
Long.
He retired after 30
years of service from
the Forked Run State
Park and was a member
of Hazel Community
Church, Long Bottom.
Surviving is his wife,
Evalena J. Fields Pauley,
whom he married June
1, 1965, in Ripley, W.Va;
daughter Patricia (Tim)
Boyce, of Ravenswood,
W.Va.; sons Curtis Price,
of Portland, and James
Pauley, of Mason, W.Va.;
ﬁve grandchildren, Eric,
Jesse, Isaiah, Abram and
Abigail; and sisters Fran
(James) Todd, of Danse,

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MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Thursday, Feb. 11
SYRACUSE — Syracuse
Village Council will meet in
regularly scheduled session
at 7 p.m. at Village Hall.
RACINE — Racine Area
Community Organization
(RACO) will be having
their spring Bags &amp; Baskets games at Syracuse
Community Center at 6
p.m. Doors open at 5 p.m.
Special games, advanced
ticket drawing, 50/50
drawing, rafﬂes, second
chance drawings, and coverall. All proceeds go into
Tuesday, Feb. 9
park maintenance. RefreshPOMEROY — Meigs
County Board of Elections ments will be served by
will meet at 8:30 a.m. in the Syracuse Community CenMeigs County Annex build- ter volunteers. For ticket
information, contact Kathing in the Board of Elecryn Hart at 740-949-2656.
tions Conference Room.
WELLSTON — The
POMEROY —The
GJMV Solid Waste ManShrove Tuesday Pancake
Supper will be 5:30 p.m. at agement District Board of
St. Paul Lutheran Church in Directors will meet at 3:30
p.m. at the district ofﬁce.
Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT — The
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
Meigs Housing Author— The Chester Township
Trustees will meet at 7 p.m. ity Board will be holding
their regular meeting at 11
in the new town hall.
POMEROY —The regu- a.m. at the Meigs Housing Authority conference
lar meeting of the Meigs
Tea Party will be 7:30 p.m. room located at 441 General Hartinger Parkway,
at the Meigs Senior CitiMiddleport.
zens Center, Pomeroy.
Editor’s Note: The Daily
Sentinel appreciates your
input to the community
calendar. To make sure
items can receive proper
attention, all information
should be received by the
newspaper at least ﬁve
business days prior to an
event. All coming events
print on a space-available
basis and in chronological order. Events can be
emailed to: TDSnews@
civitasmedia.com.

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�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Lights not
needed to learn
something new
I’ve been writing in the dark since my hand
could hold a pencil.
So when my senior English teacher in high
school asked the class one day to close our eyes
and write a sentence about what we knew about
Helen Keller, both my hands were instantly
employed.
A few minutes later, the teacher snapped back
on the lights and announced that I was the only
student who had used my left hand
to “trail” the pencil in my right. My
words were legible and formed a
fairly straight line. It was an innate
response from childhood years of
writing in the dark when I was supposed to be sleeping.
As a young girl, I’d prop up on one
Michele Z. elbow, smooth my Holly Hobby bedspread ﬂat and write in a tiny tablet,
Marcum
Contributing “trailing” my words as I progressed.
I refused to let the darkness deter
Columnist
me from creating characters and
worlds that existed in my head, for,
with my imagination, I was not alone. I was not
stupid or silly or as insigniﬁcant as I felt. I was the
amazing director of a play, and as I pretended that
all the world watched, I scripted ingenious scenes.
My need to communicate, while not as critical
as Helen Keller’s, felt as urgent as the need to
run barefoot across the ﬁrst blades of grass in the
spring. I wrote in the dark only at bedtime, but
Helen lived in silent darkness for years, unable to
communicate until the right teacher, Anne Sullivan, came along.
Helen’s communication ﬂourished when she
realized the words Anne was signing into her hand
were the names of objects, that the cool liquid
slipping through her ﬁngers had a name — water.
From that moment on, Helen wasn’t alone in
that darkness. She formed her ﬁrst sentence, not
knowing that she would publish 12 books in her
lifetime.
Sometimes it’s not immediately clear how our
new-found skills will help us. I used resources
in that high school classroom the others hadn’t
— not because they weren’t as smart as me, but
because I had developed a skill out of an intense
desire to do something I loved.
I’m still writing in the dark. I reach for a tablet and pen from my nightstand nightly. I write
because I breathe. I write because I can. I write
because I know no other feeling that’s as euphoric
as expressing my thoughts on paper.
I’m unsure if writing in the dark will lead to me
becoming a renowned author like Helen. The darkness of the unknown often seems to swallow me
like the whale did Jonah. I remain hopeful that I’ll
be propelled out of its belly, and the birth of writing opportunities will follow. But I’m prepared to
keep writing in the belly’s darkness.
I never did need lights to make my point.
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native of Meigs County and an author. Her
column appears each Tuesday.

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THEIR VIEW

How to tell if Congress is working again

There have been encourmembers, boldness is a risk.
aging signs that the RepubThis difference could lead to
lican leadership on Capitol
slim production.
Hill wants to make ConSo look to see how many
gress function again.
and which issues the two
They’ve talked about
leaders really push forward.
using conference commitWill they advance the Transtees more, allowing a more Lee H.
Paciﬁc Partnership trade
open process for rank-andHamilton deal in some version, or let
Contributing it slide until the elections
ﬁle members, enacting
separate appropriation bills Columnist
are past? Will they tackle tax
rather than using omnibus
reform? How about authobills, and letting commitrizing support for the war
tees lead on legislation rather than
against ISIS? Ryan has already
hoarding all power in the leaderremoved one key matter — immiship ofﬁces. Perhaps most imporgration reform — from the table.
tant, they’ve acknowledged that
Will other pressing issues also bite
Congress has many bad habits, and the dust?
insist that they want to restore a
The second big indicator is
healthy legislative process.
whether Congress has the political
This has to be heartening to
will to ﬁx itself. Most members
any American concerned about
say publicly that they don’t want
the level of dysfunction to which
gridlock and are dedicated to
Congress had sunk. The question
making the institution function
is, how can we tell if Congress
smoothly. The key measure of
is actually ﬁxing itself? For as
whether they really mean it is the
promising as the rhetoric might
attitude they take toward their
be, there’s a long way to go before
political adversaries. If what you
words and reality meet on Capitol hear on Capitol Hill is nothing but
Hill. Here’s what you should keep
distrust, then they’re not serious.
your eye on:
If they’re willing to negotiate and
First, differences in emphasis
compromise with one another —
separate the leaders of the two
as happened at the end of last year,
houses, Senate Majority Leader
with the passage of an omnibus
Mitch McConnell and House
spending package — then there’s
Speaker Paul Ryan. Ryan is
hope.
intent on pressing forward with
Third is what you might think of
key policy proposals that would
as the rolled-up-sleeves test. How
anchor a bold Republican legislahard are members of Congress
tive agenda. But that’s because the willing to work at addressing the
Republican majority in the House
key issues facing the country? So
is not generally believed to be at
far, the evidence is disappointing.
risk. Over in the Senate, things are The legislative schedule put out
different: control of that body next by the congressional leadership is,
year is up for grabs, and McConto be blunt, lax. On average, memnell seems to be focused on mainbers of Congress will be working
taining his party’s majority. For his about nine days a month.

They’ve given themselves four
stretches of 10 days off at a time.
They’ll be off for 52 straight days
in July, August and September,
and then another 39 days in a row
in October and November. Yes,
it’s an election year and they want
to campaign. But you cannot run
a government that is not in session. The best we can hope for is
an obvious sense of urgency when
members of Congress are in Washington. Look for it. If you don’t see
it, little will get done on Capitol
Hill.
I should say that not all the
responsibility for restoring Congress rests at the federal level. The
states, too, have a key role to play.
Will they get serious about how
they draw congressional districts,
so that politicians no longer have
the luxury of picking their voters
rather than the other way around?
Will some states continue to pursue efforts to make voting harder
— which, like gerrymandering,
has the effect of shoring up the
extremes in Congress? Will states
make the effort to modernize
their voting systems, so that the
democratic process has a chance of
working with minimal friction?
In the end, good intentions and
ﬁne rhetoric don’t accomplish
much. I hope you’ll keep an eye on
Congress and cheer for its members to act in accord with their
own advice.
If they do, Congress will take a
giant stride toward improved performance.
Lee Hamilton is a Distinguished Scholar, Indiana
University School of Global and International
Studies; and a Professor of Practice, IU School
of Public and Environmental Affairs. He was a
member of the U.S. House of Representatives
for 34 years.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Shrove (preceding Ash Wednesday)
Tuesday, Feb. 9, the 40th
day of 2016. There are
326 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Feb. 9, 1943, the
World War II battle of
Guadalcanal in the southwest Paciﬁc ended with
an Allied victory over
Japanese forces.
On this date:
In 1773, the ninth president of the United States,
William Henry Harrison,
was born in Charles City
County, Virginia.
In 1825, the House of
Representatives elected
John Quincy Adams
president after no candidate received a majority
of electoral votes.
In 1861, Jefferson Davis
was elected provisional
president of the Confederate States of America at

a congress held in Montgomery, Alabama.
In 1870, the U.S.
Weather Bureau was
established.
In 1942, the U.S. Joint
Chiefs of Staff held its
ﬁrst formal meeting to
coordinate military strategy during World War
II. Daylight-saving “War
Time” went into effect in
the United States, with
clocks turned one hour
forward.
In 1950, in a speech in
Wheeling, West Virginia,
Sen. Joseph McCarthy,
R-Wis., charged the State
Department was riddled
with Communists.
In 1964, The Beatles
made their ﬁrst live
American television
appearance on “The Ed
Sullivan Show,” broadcast
from New York by CBS.
In 1971, a magnitude 6.6 earthquake in

California’s San Fernando
Valley claimed 65 lives.
The crew of Apollo 14
returned to Earth after
man’s third landing on the
moon.
Today’s Birthdays:
Television journalist Roger Mudd is 88.
Actress Janet Suzman is
77. Nobel Prize-winning
author J.M. Coetzee is 76.
Actress-politician Sheila
James Kuehl (kyool)
(TV: “The Many Loves
of Dobie Gillis”) is 75.
Singer-songwriter Carole
King is 74. Actor Joe
Pesci is 73. Singer Barbara Lewis is 73. Author
Alice Walker is 72.
Actress Mia Farrow is 71.
Former Sen. Jim Webb,
D-Va., is 70. Singer Joe
Ely is 69. Actress Judith
Light is 67. Rhythm-andblues musician Dennis
“DT” Thomas (Kool &amp;
the Gang) is 65. Actor

Charles Shaughnessy is
61. Virginia Gov. Terry
McAuliffe is 59. Jazz
musician Steve Wilson is
55. Country singer Travis
Tritt is 53. Actress Julie
Warner is 51. Country
singer Danni Leigh is 46.
Actress Sharon Case is
45. Actor Jason George is
44. Actress Amber Valletta is 42. Actor-producer
Charlie Day is 40. Rock
singer Chad Wolf (Carolina Liar) is 40. Actor A.J.
Buckley is 39. Rock musician Richard On (O.A.R.)
is 37. Actress Ziyi Zhang
is 37. Olympic silver
and bronze medal ﬁgure
skater Irina Slutskaya is
37. Actor David Gallagher is 31. Actor Michael
B. Jordan is 29. Actress
Rose Leslie is 29. Actress
Marina Malota is 28.
Actress Camille Winbush
is 26. Actor Jimmy Bennett is 20.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 9, 2016 5

Voter registration and early voting for Meigs County residents
By Lorna Hart

ing the above times. To receive
an Absentee Ballot by mail,
registered voters may call
the Meigs County Board of
Elections at 740-992-2697 to
request an Absentee Application.
Absentee Ballots are processed prior to Election Day
according to Ohio law: scanning of the absentee ballots
can begin ten days before the
election, but the votes are not
tabulated. Totals are not available until election night, when
they become part of the “unofﬁcial count” on election night.
Valid absentee ballots that are
received after the close of polls
on Election Day through the
10th day after the election are
included in the ofﬁcial canvas
if postmarked by March 14th,
2016.
Provisional ballots are the
ballots that do not get counted
until after Election Day, but

The hours for voting are as
follows:
�M[Zd[iZWo"�&lt;[X$�'-�
MEIGS COUNTY — The
through Friday, Feb. 19, 8 a.m.
last day for Meigs County resi- to 5 p.m.
dents to register to vote in the
�CedZWo"�&lt;[X$�((�j^hek]^�
Mar. 15, 2016 Primary ElecFriday, Feb. 26, 8 a.m. to 5
tion is Feb. 16, 2016; voter
p.m.
registration will ofﬁcially close
�CedZWo"�&lt;[X$�(/�j^hek]^�
at 9 p.m.on that date. You may Friday, Mar. 4, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
still register to vote after the
�IWjkhZWo�CWh$�+"�.�W$c$�je�
cutoff date, but you will not be 4 p.m.
eligible to vote in the Mar. 15,
�CedZWo"�CWh$�-�j^hek]^�
2016 Primary Election.
Friday, Mar. 11, 8 a.m. to 7
Absentee voting and/or
p.m.
early voting will begin on
�IWjkhZWo"�CWh$�'("�.�W$c$�
Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2016 and to 4 p.m.
will continue on a daily basis
�IkdZWo"�CWh$�')"�'�je�+�
at the Meigs County Board of p.m.
Elections in the Meigs County
�CedZWo"�CWh$�'*"�.�W$c$�
Annex on Mulberry Heights in to 2 p.m. is the last day to
Pomeroy.
vote.
The Meigs County Board
Any registered voter in the
of Elections will be closed
county may request and vote
Monday, Feb. 15 in observance an absentee voter’s ballot or
of Presidents Day, a federal
a provisional ballot beginning
February 17th in person durholiday.

lhart@civitasmedia.com

From Page 1

but also jeopardize her
beneﬁts.
“Although they did so
out of the goodness of their
hearts, they had no legal
responsibility,” she said.
“Almost everyone will
have a time in their life
when they need to take a
leave, and research shows
people are more likely to
go back to their jobs if
they have paid medical
leave. This contributes
to employee retention, a
positive for employers.”
Most food items are
already exempt from
sales tax, and HB and SB
Draft Reducing The Cost
Of Everyday Essentials
is a measure to expand
exemptions to include
items such as diapers and
over-the-counter medications.
“Sales tax can hurt the

ones who have the least,”
Grace said. “Everyday
essentials are just that,
they are not luxury or discretionary items; they are
the basics that families
need on a daily basis.”
Ohio still has a pay
gap between men and
women, and proposed
HBs 330 and 385 and SB
218, Equal Pay For Equal
Work, addresses the discrepancy. Vendors who do
business with the state or
compete for state contacts
would have to be certiﬁed that they do meet the
requirements. Gag orders
that prohibit employees
from discussing salaries
would be illegal.
“The pay gap doesn’t
just impact women, it
impacts the entire family
by reducing the overall
household income.”
On the issue of infrastructure, Grace pointed
out that it does not
always mean highways
and roads, sewer and

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

28°

30°

28°

Breezy and colder today with snow showers. A
bit of snow tonight. High 33° / Low 21°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

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

Precipitation

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.01
Month to date/normal
1.60/0.86
Year to date/normal
3.59/3.83

Snowfall

(in inches)

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

5

WEATHER TRIVIA™

SUN &amp; MOON

Q: What snowstorm was named after a
New York City mayor?
Wed.
7:26 a.m.
6:00 p.m.
8:38 a.m.
8:41 p.m.

MOON PHASES
First

Full

Feb 15 Feb 22

Last

Mar 1

Mar 8

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

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

Major
11:39a
12:42a
1:41a
2:42a
3:41a
4:39a
5:35a

Minor
5:57a
6:55a
7:55a
8:55a
9:55a
10:53a
11:48a

Major
---1:09p
2:08p
3:09p
4:08p
5:06p
6:02p

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

Minor
6:24p
7:22p
8:22p
9:22p
10:22p
11:20p
----

WEATHER HISTORY
On Feb. 9, 1934, temperatures
dropped to 11 degrees below zero in
Philadelphia and 15 degrees below
zero in New York City. The temperature in Vanderbilt, Mich., dropped to
51 degrees below zero.

Lucasville
32/20
Portsmouth
32/21

AIR QUALITY

Rather cloudy and
very cold

Logan
33/21

SATURDAY

29°
14°

300

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

Cloudy and cold; a bit
of p.m. snow

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.93 +0.46
Marietta
34 19.12 -1.52
Parkersburg
36 23.46 -0.39
Belleville
35 13.16 +0.43
Racine
41 12.17 -0.19
Point Pleasant
40 26.06 -0.99
Gallipolis
50 11.94 +0.13
Huntington
50 31.53 -2.68
Ashland
52 37.37 -1.65
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.68 +0.52
Portsmouth
50 30.50 -4.50
Maysville
50 37.10 -2.00
Meldahl Dam
51 32.50 -4.40
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Let’s Talk
About Your

27°
18°

Rather cloudy and
colder

36°
25°

Partly sunny and not
as cold

Marietta
33/21

Murray City
33/21
Belpre
33/21

Athens
33/21

St. Marys
34/21

Parkersburg
33/19

Coolville
33/21

Elizabeth
33/20

Spencer
32/21

Buffalo
32/21
Milton
32/20

Clendenin
30/20

St. Albans
32/21

Huntington
32/20

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
60/46
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
67/50
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
86/55
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

Not as cold with
periods of snow

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
32/21

Ashland
32/20
Grayson
31/20

SUNDAY

20°
4°

Wilkesville
32/20
POMEROY
Jackson
33/21
33/21
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
33/22
33/22
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
31/18
GALLIPOLIS
33/21
33/22
32/21

South Shore Greenup
32/20
31/19

35
0 50 100 150 200

New

25°
9°

McArthur
33/21

Waverly
32/20

FRIDAY

BBT (NYSE) —31.33
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 17.83
Pepsico (NYSE) —97.52
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.85
Rockwell (NYSE) — 97.39
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) —10.57
Royal Dutch Shell — 44.50
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 16.73
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 66.92
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 10.15
WesBanco (NYSE) — 28.20
Worthington (NYSE) —28.90
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Feb. 8, 2016, 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.

A: The Lindsay storm. February 1969.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Chillicothe
33/21

The 94th Ohio House District includes Meigs, parts of
Athens, Washington and Vinton counties.

AEP (NYSE) — 62.49
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 20.10
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 91.86
Big Lots (NYSE) — 37.14
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) —40.04
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 29.03
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 4.80
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.200
City Holding (NASDAQ) —43.39
Collins (NYSE) — 81.17
DuPont (NYSE) — 58.15
US Bank (NYSE) — 39.53
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 28.16
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 39.30
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 56.52
Kroger (NYSE) —36.82
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 81.13
Norfolk So (NYSE) —70.49
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.63

Adelphi
33/21

1

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.0
Month to date/normal
0.0/2.4
Season to date/normal
14.2/13.9

Today
7:27 a.m.
5:58 p.m.
7:59 a.m.
7:31 p.m.

Mostly cloudy, snow
showers; very cold

FACTS:

LOCAL STOCKS

THURSDAY

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

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

WEDNESDAY

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 Ext.
2551.

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9922155 Ext. 2551

26°
13°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

42°/35°
45°/27°
77° in 1937
-5° in 1899

policies. It’s time for our
representatives in Columbus to work together and
focus on Ohio’s future.”

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

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

water; it also means
digital roads. She believes
connections to the world
are necessary for a 21st
century economy and that
in order to compete, reliable broadband is vital.
She supports HJR 5 and
SJR 3, Better Roads For
Brighter Futures, legislation that will provide
funding to those infrastructure projects.
“Communities prosper
when Ohioans have good
paying jobs and I will
ﬁght for working families
here in the 94th District,”
said Grace. “We need to
provide working parents
with more resources to
support their families
by expanding paid family leave and ensuring
women earn equal pay
for equal work. Families
should not have to worry
about losing their job to
care for a sick relative or
bond with a new child.
Everyone should endorse
these common-sense

the ofﬁcial poll list declines
or if the voter cannot provide
identiﬁcation at the poll or the
poll list shows a request for an
absentee ballot, a provisional
ballot will be required.
“The Meigs County Board
of Elections is diligently working to take care of the voters in
Meigs County and to abide by
the Ohio elections laws,” Meigs
County Board of Elections
Director Becky Johnston said.
They also want to encourage
all registered voters in Meigs
County to vote, either by
going to the polls on Election
Day or by voting by absentee
ballot prior to Election Day.
For more information, contact
the Meigs County Board of
Elections at 740-992-2697 or
visit www.electionsonthe.net/
oh/meigs.

Charleston
32/20

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
-1/-13
Montreal
24/16

Billings
61/40

Toronto
38/27

Minneapolis
15/-2
Chicago
24/8

Detroit
37/20

New York
37/31
Washington
37/31

Kansas City
32/18

Denver
52/34

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

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
60/31/s
30/21/pc
39/24/sf
41/32/sn
38/28/sn
61/40/s
49/29/pc
33/23/sf
32/20/sn
44/23/pc
47/36/s
24/8/sn
32/16/sf
35/21/sf
34/19/sf
62/35/s
52/34/s
19/7/pc
37/20/sf
78/65/s
64/38/s
29/12/sf
32/18/pc
70/45/s
49/27/s
86/55/s
32/18/sf
68/52/pc
15/-2/s
32/19/sf
55/40/s
37/31/sn
53/30/s
59/39/pc
37/32/sn
83/52/s
37/22/sf
29/16/sf
46/27/pc
46/28/c
28/15/c
38/25/s
67/50/s
60/46/pc
37/31/sn

Hi/Lo/W
63/32/s
32/27/sf
40/25/pc
38/25/pc
37/20/sf
61/38/pc
48/31/pc
37/24/sf
25/12/sf
39/18/pc
56/33/pc
17/8/pc
23/10/sf
27/13/sf
25/12/sf
71/50/s
60/32/s
20/10/sn
27/11/sf
79/67/s
71/50/s
19/9/pc
37/21/s
70/45/s
52/34/s
84/55/s
26/15/c
65/46/pc
12/-1/s
32/21/pc
58/43/s
40/25/sf
69/38/s
58/36/s
41/23/sf
84/52/s
27/13/sf
34/19/sf
41/21/s
41/20/pc
31/20/pc
43/27/pc
65/49/pc
58/48/c
39/23/sf

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

El Paso
66/34
Chihuahua
65/29

High
Low

Atlanta
39/24

88° in Oceanside, CA
-15° in Gunnison, CO

Global
Houston
64/38
Monterrey
72/37

GOALS

Miami
68/52

High
Low

115° in Shark Bay, Australia
-64° in Delyankirskiy, Russia

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

Grace

are included in the ofﬁcial
canvas if certiﬁed as valid.
According to the Ohio Board
of Elections, before a provisional ballot can be included
in the ofﬁcial count of an election, the board of elections
must conﬁrm the voter’s eligibility to cast the ballot, as well
as the validity of the ballot
that was cast.
Reasons a provisional ballot
may be required: If you are an
Ohio voter who moved from
one Ohio precinct to another
Ohio precinct and did not
submit your change of address
to election ofﬁcials by the
twenty-ninth day before the
election; when the voter has
requested an absentee ballot
but has no identiﬁcation or
refuses to provide identiﬁcation; if the voter’s right to vote
is challenged.
On Election Day, if the voters name does not appear on

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 9, 2016 s Page 6

Blue Devils 2nd, Raiders 4th at ‘Peake
By Paul Boggs

tured the team championship
with 333.5 points, while Jackson was third with 141.5.
CHESAPEAKE — The GalSheldon Clark and host
lia Academy Blue Devils and
Chesapeake tied for ﬁfth with
River Valley Raiders acquit111, while Vinton County
ted themselves quite well on
was sixth with 108.
Saturday, competing in the
All of the 10 remaining
annual Phil Davis Memoteams scored 77.5 points or
rial Wrestling Invitational at
fewer.
Chesapeake High School.
The only other Ohio school
Of the 16 teams which
in
the bottom half of the ﬁeld
earned points, the Blue Devwas
Fairland, which was
ils were the team runners-up
ninth
with 70 points.
, while River Valley ﬁnished
Weight-class
winners for
fourth.
the
Blue
Devils
included
Eastern also competed at
Kyle
Greenlee
at
113 pounds,
Chesapeake, and scored 10.5
Jared
Stevens
at
120,
Ryan
points.
Terry
at
170
and
Justin
ReynThe Blue Devils amassed
olds
at
182.
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports 252.5 points, while the RaidGallia Academy’s runnerGallia Academy senior Ryan Terry locks in a hold during a 170-pound match at the 2015 ers racked up 129.5.
Johnson Central (Ky.) cap- ups included Caleb Greenlee
Coach’s Corner Classic held December 29 at GAHS in Centenary, Ohio.
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

at 106, Kaleb Crisenberry at
152 and Hunter Jacks at 160.
Morgan Stanley was third
for the Blue Devils at 126, as
was Anthony Sipple at 195.
Lane Pullins at 145 and Trey
Rossiter at 220 were sixth.
The Raiders recorded a
pair of second-place ﬁnishers
— Jacob Edwards at 113 and
Jeremiah Dobbins at 132.
Eric Weber was third for
the Silver and Black at 170,
while River Valley’s remaining top-six placers included
Grant Gilmore (5th at 145
pounds), George Williams
(6th at 152), Noah Jenkins
(6th at 160), Tyler Ward (5th
at 195) and Robert Drummond (6th at 285).

See DEVILS | 10

The Marauders
able to handle
Wahama, 63-34
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRINGS —
The Marauders went
on the defensive.
The Meigs boys
basketball team limited visiting Wahama
to just nine first half
points Saturday night
while picking up a
63-34 victory in a nonconference matchup
at Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium in Meigs
County.
The Marauders (163) picked up their second consecutive decision while improving
to 9-0 in non-conference tilts this winter,
as the hosts received
a pair of trifectas from
both Kaileb Sheets
and Luke Musser as
part of a 17-4 lead
after eight minutes of
play.
Sheets hit two more
trifectas in the second
canto as MHS went
on an 18-5 surge to
close out the half with
a 35-9 cushion at the
break. The Marauders followed with four
more three-pointers
in the third stanza as
part of a 14-8 run that
led to a 48-17 lead
headed into the finale.
The White Falcons
(7-9) — who have
dropped three straight
decisions — received
seven point from Noah
Litchfield as part of a
17-15 spurt down the

stretch to wrap up the
29-point outcome.
The Maroon and
Gold netted 11 of
their 23 field goals
from behind the arc
and also went 7-of-9
at the free throw line
for 77 percent. Sheets
led the hosts with a
game-high 19 points,
followed by Colton
Lilly with 12 points
and Musser with nine
markers.
Jared Kennedy and
Tyler Fields respectively added seven and
six points to the winning cause, while T.J.
Williams contributed
five markers. Zach
Helton and Jaxon
Meadows wrapped up
the Meigs’ tally with
four points and two
points.
The Red and White
made four of their 14
field goals from threepoint territory and
also went 2-of-6 at the
free throw line for 33
percent. Ryan Thomas
paced the guests with
12 points, followed
by Litchfield with 11
markers.
Travis Kearns was
next with four points
and Nolan Pierce
chipped in three markers. Mason Hicks
and Mason Hildreth
rounded out the White
Falcon tally with two
points apiece.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, February 9
Boys Basketball
Wahama at South Gallia, 7:30
Miller at Southern, 7:30
Fairland at Gallia Academy, 7:30
Calvary at Ohio Valley Christian, 7:30
Meigs at Vinton County, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood, 7:30
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 7:30
River Valley at Wellston, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Calvary at Ohio Valley Christian, 6 p.m.
Buffalo at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Wahama, 7:30
Men’s College Basketball
Rio Grande at Asbury, 8 p.m.
Women’s College Basketball
Rio Grande at Asbury, 6 p.m.
Wednesday, February 10
Girls Basketball
GA/Athens winner vs Warren at Logan HS, 6:15
River Valley/Wellston at Athens HS, 8 p.m.

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

South Gallia’s Kane Hutchinson drives between Trimble defenders Bryce Guthrie (22) and Tyler Sayre (13) during Saturday night’s boys
basketball game.

Tomcats knock Rebels from 1st place
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

MERCERVILLE — Unfortunately for the Rebels, a Howie-Caldwell
coached club got defensive on Saturday night.
As a result, it’s the Trimble
Tomcats — and for now not South
Gallia — tied atop the top-heavy
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division.
By limiting the Rebels to only
10 points apiece in each of the
opening three quarters, the Tomcats took an early lead and never
looked back in defeating host
South Gallia 61-51 in a boys basketball makeup matchup.
Aside from their early 2-0 and
4-2 leads, along with the game’s
only ties at 2-2 and 4-4, the Rebels
fell further behind and eventually
had to play catch-up against the
highly-touted Tomcats.
Trimble led for all but the opening two minutes and four seconds,
as the Rebels fell behind by as
much as 17 points three times in
the ﬁnal 3:05 of the third quarter.
The Rebels rallied with a
21-point fourth-quarter outburst,
and sliced the deﬁcit down to
50-40 with 5:50 remaining.
However, by being outscored
18-10 in both the ﬁrst and third
quarters, those 17-point holes were
simply too much for the Rebels to
dig out of.
Now, South Gallia will have to
dig itself out from a one-game deﬁcit in the TVC-Hocking.
Trimble, at 16-3 overall, took a
full-game lead (12-2 TVC-Hocking) over the Rebels (11-3 TVCHocking) for the league lead.

“It wasn’t the prettiest game that
I’ve coached or that we’ve played
for a long time. But I do know that
we’re going back to Glouster with
a big win,” said Caldwell. “South
Gallia is very difﬁcult to play
against because they’ve went to
that 1-3-1 (zone).”
Waterford remains at 11-2 in
the division, as South Gallia — in
order to earn at least a share of
the TVC-Hocking championship
— needs to defeat Wahama on
Tuesday night and win at Trimble
on Friday night.
Plus, the Rebels — which fell
to 15-4 — now need Waterford
to lose at least once in their ﬁnal
three league games.
For the Tomcats, and their legendary coach Caldwell, Saturday’s
success simply can be attributed to
their defense.
Trimble changed its defenses
throughout, and frustrated the
Rebels into turnovers and many
missed yet contested shots.
“Offense looks pretty and everything, but it’s defense that wins big
games like this one. We went from
a man-to-man press to a zone press
and switched some things up,”
said Caldwell. “I think it confused
them (Rebels) especially, when
(Joseph) Ehman was out of the
game. He’s a nice player and when
he got in foul trouble, that was a
big key.”
Indeed, Joseph Ehman’s on-court
absence impacted the Rebels’
offense.
Ehman, averaging 24 points per
game entering Saturday night,
only amounted a three-point goal
from the top of the key with 2:37
left in the opening quarter.

He picked up his second foul
only four minutes and 14 seconds
in — and his critical third only 51
seconds into the second quarter
after sitting for the ﬁnal 3:46 of
the ﬁrst.
In the third frame, however,
Ehman picked up fouls four and
ﬁve with 5:26 remaining.
He was whistled for a technical
foul, which also counts as a personal foul, and thus had fouled out
with over 13 minutes still to play.
“Without Joseph (Ehman) in
there, it’s hard for us to score.
When you lose a 24-points per
game player, it’s going to impact
how you play,” said SGHS head
coach Larry Howell.
Indeed it did, as the Rebels
combined for only 11 of their 20
total ﬁeld goals over the ﬁrst three
periods.
Without Ehman in the lineup,
the turnovers mounted, while it
also affected South Gallia around
the basket defensively.
“We put three things on the
(locker-room) board before the
game: value the basketball, play
good defense and rebound. We
gave up 10 offensive rebounds in
the ﬁrst half and had 13 turnovers
(in the ﬁrst half),” said Howell. “When you give up offense
rebounds and turn the ball over,
you’re not going to beat a good
championship-caliber team like
Trimble. We really emphasized,
after we broke their initial pressure, we needed to be aggressive and ﬁnish. But we missed
some makable shots and gave up
easy shots to them on offensive
rebounds.”
See TOMCATS | 10

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Daily Sentinel

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Help Wanted General

Tuesday, February 9, 2016 7

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Benefit Package including
Vacation and Sick Time.
Background check and drug
screen required. Please apply
in person at 170 Pinecrest
Drive in Gallipolis.
EEO
Help Wanted
Meigs Industries, Inc.
is seeking crew leaders.
Duties include direct
assistance, training,
instruction and supervision
working with adults with
developmental disabilities.
Must have a high school
diploma or equivalent; must be
21 years old; meet acceptable
background checks; have a
valid Ohio Driverҋs License;
good driving record; and proof
of insurance.Please
send resume to Meigs
Industries, Inc., P.O. Box 307,
1310 Carleton St.,
Syracuse, Ohio 45779
by February 18, 2016.
Ohio Valley Home Health, Inc.
hiring Home Health Aides.
Competitive Wages &amp;
Benefits including health
insurance. Apply at 1480
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis or
2097 East State Street
Athens; email resume to
aburgett@ovhh.org, visit
www.ovhh.org for application
or phone 740-249-4236 or
740-441-1393 for more
information.
Sales Position
We are now accepting
applications for a fulltime sales
person. Apply in person at
French City Homes
Gallipolis OH 740-446-9340

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

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

Waters Edge Apartments
2070 St. Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio 45771
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
1BR Apartment designed for those who are
62 or older or disabled - regardless of age
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�2Q�6LWH�/DXQGU\��&amp;RPPXQLW\�5RRP
740-992-6419
TDD#711
+8'�9RXFKHU�DFFHSWHG
7KLV�LQVWLWXWLRQ�LV�DQ�(TXDO�+RXVLQJ�2SSRUWXQLW\
Provider and Employer.
60637556

60637751

�SPORTS

8 Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Eagles breeze past Green

Dominant D lifts Denver
SANTA CLARA, Calif.
(AP) — With his proliﬁc
passing and complete control of the game at the
line of scrimmage, Peyton
Manning helped usher in
the NFL’s wide-open era of
high-scoring offenses and
pass-happy game plans.
Manning’s possible farewell game in Super Bowl
50 was a throwback to
the 1970s when his father
Archie was running away
from dominant defenses
such as the Steel Curtain
and Doomsday.
Von Miller forced fumbles
that set up both of Denver’s
touchdowns, led a defense
that harassed MVP Cam
Newton and helped carry
Manning to his second

By Alex Hawley

man posted six points, Ross Keller and
ahawley@civitasmedia.com
Corbett Catlett each added ﬁve, while
Cameron Richmond rounded out the
TUPPERS PLAINS — Start strong and Eagle scoring with three points.
never look back.
For the game, Eastern shot 17-of-31 from
The Eastern boys basketball team led
the free throw line, equaling 54.8 percent.
by 12 points through eight minutes of
Tanner Kimbler led the Bobcats with
play Saturday night at ‘The Nest’, and
15 points, followed by Zach Garrett and
the Eagles cruised to a 67-51 victory over Hunter Lewis with 11 each. Tayte Carver
non-conference guest Green.
scored nine points, Aaron Johnson added
The Eagles (6-13) led 19-7 by the confour, while Alex Hughes rounded out the
clusion of the ﬁrst quarter and pushed the Green total with one marker.
lead to 29-16 by halftime. Eastern outGHS shot 12-of-17 from the charity
scored the Bobcats by a 16-15 clip in the
stripe, equaling 70.6 percent.
third quarter, making the EHS advantage
The Eagles have now won ﬁve of their
45-31 with eight minutes remaining.
last six home games. Eastern will return
The hosts scored 22 points and sank
to action on Tuesday at Federal Hocking,
10-of-14 free throws in the ﬁnal quarter,
where the Green and Gold will go for the
capping off the 67-51 victory in style.
season sweep of the Lancers. EHS won
EHS junior Jett Facemyer led the East- its ﬁrst meeting with FHHS by a 57-45
ern offense with 24 points, followed by
count, in Tuppers Plains.
seniors Chase Curtis and Dillon Swatzel
with 13 and 12 respectively. Austin Cole- Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.
Help Wanted General

Apartments/Townhouses

Rentals

WANTED:
Workers needed for a
non-profit agency to serve
two individuals with
developmental disabilities in
their home in Gallipolis.
Full-time and part-time
positions available. High
school degree/GED, valid
driver's license and three
years good driving experience
required. $10.25/ hr after
training. Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, Oh
45640; or email:
bevecserv@yahoo.com
Deadline for applications:
2/12/16.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

Beautiful Country Setting
Very Spacious 1 Bdrm cottage
surrounded by 30 acres of
woods newly built,
new appliances,Hard wood
floors,Central Heat &amp; air,
Double shower for two. Two
Decks Must see to appreciate
$500/mo. Call 740-645-5953 or
614-595-7773

Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Beautiful 1BR apartment in the
country freshly painted very
clean W/D hook up nice
country setting only 10 mins.
from town. Must see to
appreciate. Water/Trash pd.
$399/mo 740-645-5953 or
614-595-7773

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

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

Want To Buy
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

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

For Sale By Owner
Card &amp; Gift Shop for Sale
Owner retiring after 42yrs
Est 1973
Ohio River Plaza
Gallipolis,Oh
740-592-1649
or
740-590-8455
Houses For Sale
Beautiful 3 Bdrm 2 1/2 bath
home Gallipolis - 4 car Garage
asking $110,000.00 Seller
pays closing cost. 740-9783287.

Call

Miscellaneous
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Super Nice, New, 2BR,
Appliances Included, must see
Racine, OH, 740-247-3008

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

Daily Sentinel

Dig
Up
Buried
Treasure
In
Classified
When it
comes to
bargains,
“C” marks
the spot.
What will
you find
in the
classified?
Bicycle,
dogs, coats,
cars, etc.

Super Bowl title with a
24-10 victory over the Carolina Panthers on Sunday.
“Whenever you’re doing
something for your buddies, it means a little bit
more,” Miller said. “As
human beings, we’re selfish but when you’re doing
something for somebody
else, that’s when the magic
happens.”
For so many years,
Manning’s career was
deﬁned by his gaudy
regular season numbers
that weren’t enough come
playoff time. A lack of help
from teammates or the
inability to thrive against
stellar defenses from teams
such as New England and
Seattle left Manning with

just one Super Bowl title in
his ﬁrst 13 playoff trips.
So perhaps it was ﬁtting that after carrying
teammates for most of his
career, he was carried over
the ﬁnish line in this game
by Miller and the coordinator Wade Phillips’ “Orange
Rush” defense.
“I certainly knew that
(with) this defense,
this team would have a
chance,” Manning said.
“Our defense has just been,
from the get-go, they’ve
been nothing but awesome.
Being hurt and struggling
early in the season wasn’t a
lot of fun so I was grateful
to get back healthy and to
try and play my part these
last couple of weeks.”

Help Wanted General

Employment Opportunity
Civitas Media is looking for a Customer Service Specialist in the
Pomeroy area.This is full time hourly position, with Benefits
include Health insurance, 401K, vacation, etc. If interested-send
resume to Julia Schultz at jschultz@civitasmedia.com.
Civitas Media LLC is a growing company offering excellent
compensation and opportunities for advancement to motivated
individuals.
 Prior customer service experience preferred
 Self-motivated and able to work independently
 Excellent communication skills
 Professional, articulate voice
 Ability to multi-task in several computer applications while
holding a conversation with a customer
 Type 30 words per minute
 Enjoy working in a fast-paced environment
while maintaining a professional attitude
 Answer customer inquiries and provide
appropriate technical and/or product related
information
 Contact customers to follow up on customer
issues or order information
 Independently resolve customer support issues
and escalate when necessary
 Document all contacts, actions, and responses
in customer database
 Maintain working knowledge of products and
services
 Strong mathematical skills
 Excellent written and verbal communication
skills
 Strong organizational, problem solving and
analytical skills
 Commitment to excellence and high standards
with close attention to detail
 Ability to work independently and as a part of
a team
 Ability to work well under pressure and diffuse
difficult situations
 Ability to handle multiple projects
Civitas Media has publications in NC, SC, TN, KY, VA, WV, OH,
IL, MO, GA, OK, IN and PA.
EOE

Getting your daily Newspaper
has never been EZ er

@ $8.17 per month with the
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Mail or bring this offer to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, OH, 45769 or call 740-992-2155

60637576

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, February 9, 2016 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

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By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

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by Dave Green

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2/09

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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Buckeyes outlast Southern, 60-55
By Bryan Walters

the Brown and Orange to secure a
31-19 cushion at the break.
Dylan Smith and Crenson RogNELSONVILLE — The second ers each scored seven points as
quarter made all the difference.
Southern made an 18-11 third
Host Nelsonville-York used a 22-10 quarter run to close to within
charge before halftime to ultimately
42-37, but both teams netted 18
come away with a 60-55 victory over points apiece down the stretch to
the Southern boys basketball team
wrap up the ﬁve-point outcome.
Saturday night during a non-conferThe Purple and Gold connected
ence matchup in Athens County.
on 19-of-56 ﬁeld goal attempts for
The Tornadoes (3-17) dropped
34 percent, including a 6-of-17
their fourth straight decision, but
effort from behind the arc for 35
the guests showed some early grit percent. The guests committed 14
after ending the opening eight min- turnovers and also went 11-of-17 at
utes of play tied at nine.
the free throw line for 65 percent.
The Buckeyes (6-14), however,
Smith led SHS with 17 points,
received seven points from Aron
followed by Rogers with 15 points
Davis and Noah Andrews hit two
and Tylar Blevins with 13 markers.
trifectas as part of that 12-point
Blevins and Rogers also hauled in
team-highs of ﬁve rebounds apiece.
second period swing that allowed
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Tomcats

gave them a solid 1-2-3
inside-outside punch.
Jenkins, on 11 ﬁeld
From Page 6
goals and 2-of-4 free
throws, poured in 24
The Tomcats’ trio of
points to pace all scorers.
Justice Jenkins, Randy
Hixon and Bryce Guthrie
Hixon hit all ﬁve of

Blake Johnson was next with
four points, while Kody Greene
and Trey Pickens rounded out the
Tornado tally with three points
each. Blevins also had team-highs
of four assists and four steals.
Hunter Edwards paced NYHS
with a game-high 18 points, followed by Davis with 17 points and
Andrews with 13 markers. Ronnie
Wend and Jonathan Richards also
chipped in ﬁve and three points,
respectively, to the winning cause.
Christian Berry and Jakob
Talbert wrapped up the Buckeye
total with two points apiece. The
hosts were 14-of-26 at the charity
stripe for 54 percent.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

the Tomcats’ threepoint goals, and tacked
on 2-of-2 third-quarter
free throws towards 19
points.
Guthrie, on ﬁve ﬁeld
goals and a pair of ﬁrst-

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2016 Faith &amp; Family

quarter free throws, garnered 12.
“We needed to guard
Hixon, and we had to
keep Jenkins and Guthrie
off the offensive glass,”
said Howell. “But they
did all three. We didn’t
do a good job of ﬁnding
Hixon, and we didn’t do
a good job of ﬁnishing
defensive possessions by
boxing Jenkins and Guthrie out.”
Tyler Sayre scored four
points on two ﬁeld goals,
while Cody Jones rounded out the Tomcats with
a third-quarter bucket.
The Tomcats took the
lead for good at 7-4 on an
old-fashioned three-point
play by Jenkins — the
highlight of 10 unanswered markers, in which
South Gallia went three
minutes and 48 seconds
without a point.
That 12-4 deﬁcit
stayed at 18-10 after the
ﬁrst quarter, and 29-20
at halftime, as the Rebels got no closer than
four points after falling
behind 10-4.
With Trimble leading 36-26 with 4:50
remaining in the third, it
ﬁnished the canto on an

Devils

Grifﬁth of Johnson Central
3-2 at 170, while Weber won
the third-place match in that
From Page 6
weight class with a secondperiod pinfall of Jackson’s
Eastern’s only placer
Deandre Keels.
among the top six was freshReynolds also recorded a
man Dillon Aeiker in the 1133-2 decision for the champound weight class.
pionship at 182, defeating
Speaking of 113 pounds,
Ashland’s Jay Layne.
Kyle Greenlee defeated
River Valley returns to
Edwards with a 16-8 major
action for a multi-team match
decision in the championship
at Jackson tonight (Tuesday,
match.
Feb. 9), while Meigs, Eastern
The Raiders’ Dobbins lost
and River Valley will be at Nelto Jackson’s only weight-class
sonville-York on Saturday (Feb.
champion — Kyle Kirby — in
13) for the Tri-Valley Conferthe 132-pound class with a
ence championship meet.
20-3 technical fall.
Gallia Academy is set to
At 120 pounds, Stevens
host a triangular match on
shut out Matt Mills of ShelThursday night.
don Clark with a 9-0 major
decision.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106
Terry decisioned Sam

11-4 run, including seven
straight in only a minute
and 45 seconds.
The Tomcats’ largest
lead swelled to 17 three
times — at 43-26, 45-28
and 47-30.
South Gallia got going
in the fourth quarter
by beginning to turn
the Tomcats over, but it
wasn’t until the ﬁnal 15
seconds that the Rebels
ﬁnally got to within
single digits (60-51).
“We could have quit
when we got down 17.
But I was really excited
and impressed with the
way Caleb Henry played
defensively. He really
came in and picked us
up with his energy. And
he’s always done that,”
said Howell. “He’s more
mature than a freshman.
He comes in, brings
energy and he’s all about
the team.”
Landon Hutchinson
had six ﬁeld goals for
12 points to pace the
Rebels, while Darren
Drenner dropped in 11
on ﬁve ﬁeld goals and a
ﬁrst-quarter free throw.
Dominick Johnson
scored eight on two
ﬁeld goals and 4-of-4

foul shots, while Kane
Hutchinson had seven,
including the squad’s
other trey.
Caleb Henry had six
fourth-quarter points
on two ﬁeld goals and
2-of-4 freebies, while
Corey Rhodes registered
two ﬁeld goals for four
points.
Howell said Saturday night’s setback is a
learning lesson, but also
emphasized that the Rebels can quickly rebound
and still stake their claim
to the TVC-Hocking title.
The Rebels return
home, and return to
TVC-Hocking action, on
Tuesday night against
Wahama for Senior
Night.
“You can’t play like
we did tonight and beat
teams like Trimble,” said
Howell. “We’ve got to
learn from it and hopefully next week, we can
go up there (Trimble)
and avenge this loss and
cheer for the opponents
playing Waterford. Hopefully, we can still win
this thing (TVC-Hocking
Division championship).”
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

MEIGS COUNTY
Visitors Guide 2016

Faith and Family is a project designed to reach
out to people in need and at the same time
reach out to the community with a message
of hope. We want to form a stronger alliance
with the church community and do more
meaningful job of helping local churches
spread their message to people who are
looking for answers and inspiration. We need
your help to do this.
We will publish an inspirational full color magazine that we have entitled Faith and
Family. This publication, with your help, will list all our churches and carry a message
of hope. As your local newspaper we want to use our resources to help get your
message to those in need. The magazine will carry profiles of local churches and
testimonials from local readers who have experienced a change in life as the result
of their faith and beliefs. These stories can be a powerful influence in raising the
consciousness of the reader looking for answers and in need of a church to help heal.
This publication will also increase the strength and unity among the local church
community.

Boating, hiking &amp; outdoor recreation!

Call you
represe r local
ntative

Festivals concerts &amp; the arts !
History, heritage, culture &amp; community!

TODAY
!

Deadline:
February 12th, 2016
Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

Point Pleasant
Register

Pomeroy
Daily Sentinel

740-446-2342
www.mydailytribune.com

304-675-1333
www.mydailyregister.com

740-992-2155
www.mydailysentinel.com
60633487

Deadline for ad space is February 17th
60633524

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