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                  <text>Spring
sports
preview

Mostly
sunny. High
71, low 46

Lady
Eagles hold
off Belpre

INSIDE

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 60, Volume 70

Thursday, April 14, 2016 s 50¢

‘Pinwheels for Prevention’
April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month

By Lorna Hart

aged to share strategies and
activities to prevent child abuse
and neglect.
POMEROY — “Building ComIn statistics published by the
munity, Building Hope” is the
U.S. Department of Health and
theme for 2016 National Child
Human Services, Administration
Abuse Prevention Month.
on Children, Youth and FamiApril was ﬁrst declared Child
lies, Children’s Bureau, it was
Abuse Prevention Month by
reported that in 2014 in the 50
presidential proclamation in
states and including the District
1983 as a time to acknowledge
of Columbia, and Puerto Rico,
the importance of families and
an estimated 646,261 children
communities working together
were victims of child abuse or
to
prevent
child
abuse.
During
Courtesy photo
neglect and 1,580 children died
the
month
and
throughout
the
Ashley Lawson and Latosha Cossin place blue pinwheels outside their
offices at the Meigs County Health Department.
year, communities are encouras a result.
lhart@civitasmedia.com

When community programs
and systems are engaged and
supportive, the report stated the
majority of child abuse cases can
be prevented and that strong,
nurturing communities that are
supportive of families can keep
harmful situations and conditions to children from occurring.
The ﬁnding that, “A community that cares about early childhood development, parental support and maternal mental health,
for instance, is more likely to
See APRIL | 5

Housing
authority
waiting list
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs Housing Authority, located in their new ofﬁces at 441 General
Hartinger Parkway, in Middleport, announced the
waiting list for the Meigs Metropolitan Housing
Authority Section 8 Housing Choice voucher program will open May 3.
The program is based on availability; Meigs
County is allowed 125 vouchers, meaning 125
households can be served. There is usually more
need in the county than availability, both in terms
of vouchers and available rentals.
According to MHA Executive Director Brenda
Leslie, the waiting list has been closed for some
time and she is happy to again accept applications.
“We have more need than vouchers,” Leslie said.
“And there is always a shortage of quality rentals
in the area.”
The process for being accepted into the program
requires meeting strict standards of need. Once
accepted, the participant is required to ﬁnd a
rental that meets HUDs housing quality standards.
There are 68 landlords in Meigs County at this
time who meet the requirements and are being
paid by the MHA each month.
Leslie has worked at the MHA since she was
hired in 1994 as an intake specialist after returning to Meigs County following the end of her
military. She was hired by Jean Trussell, executive
director at that time, and said working with the
group helped her gain the experience she needed
to assume the role as director in January 2013.
Leslie was also glad to announce the addition of
Sabra Pierce to the MHA staff. Pierce was hired
in February in a dual role as intake specialist and
family self-sufﬁciency coordinator.
The goal of FSS is to have the individual or household integrated into the community and assume the
role of homeowner with in ﬁve years of enrollment.
The program is designed to allow participants to
build savings to be used toward home ownership,
and as a teaching opportunity for renting participants to learn what it takes to maintain and care for
a property, including household budgeting.
See LIST | 5

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Business: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Baseball: 6
Schedule: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 7
Classified: 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.

Courtesy photo

The ability to identify potential severe weather features will allow students to dress accordingly, rain or shine.

Weather Service offers local class
By Mindy Kearns

fundamentals of storm structure,
identifying potential severe
weather features, information to
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — If report, how to report information,
you have an interest in weather
and basic severe weather safety.
conditions, coupled with a drive
According to Matt Gregg,
to provide community service,
of the Mason County Ofﬁce of
an upcoming SKYWARN class in
Emergency Services, and who
Mason County might be for you.
is also involved in the Mason
Sponsored by the National
County Amateur Radio Group
Weather Service, the class will be
and Amateur Radio Emergency
6:30 p.m. April 26 at the Mason
County 911 Emergency Operations Services, amateur radio plays
Center in Point Pleasant. The class a big part in the SKYWARN
program due to the back-up
will last approximately two hours
communications.
and is free of charge.
“Basically, if the phone and
According to the NWS website,
electric
are off, ham radio
SKYWARN is a volunteer program
operators still have their radio
with between 350,000 and
communications,” Gregg said.
400,000 trained severe weather
spotters. They help keep their local “Just about every NWS ofﬁce has
a ham radio station and most all
communities safe by providing
of the NWS staff are licensed ham
timely and accurate reports of
operators.”
severe weather to the NWS.
In addition to ham radio
During the training class,
operators, other volunteers
participants will learn the basics
include police and ﬁre personnel,
of thunderstorm development,
Special to Ohio Valley Publishing

dispatchers, EMS workers, public
utility workers, and concerned
private citizens, according to the
NWS. Gregg said while everyone is
invited to attend the training, ham
operators and ﬁrst responders are
especially encouraged to attend.
According to the NWS website,
since the program started in the
1970s, the information provided
by SKYWARN spotters, coupled
with Doppler radar technology,
improved satellite and other data,
has enabled the NWS to issue more
timely and accurate warnings for
tornadoes, severe thunderstorms
and ﬂash ﬂoods. This information
provides extra time that can help
save lives.
Gregg said anyone wanting
to attend the class is asked to
register by calling 304-675-9911
or emailing him at mgregg@
masoncountyoes.com.
Mindy Kearns is a freelance writer for Ohio Valley
Publishing who lives in Mason County.

�LOCAL/STATE

2 Thursday, April 14, 2016

OBITUARY

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS
MANNING KLOES

LANCASTER — Manning Kloes, 84, of Lancaster, went to be with
the Lord on Tuesday,
April 12, 2016.
Manning was born Dec.
17, 1931, in Pomeroy, to
Herman and Helen Pooler
Kloes. He graduated from
Pomeroy High School in
1949. He met the love of
his life, June Smart, and
they were married for
63 wonderful years. He
was a loving father and
grandfather who enjoyed
the outdoors and would
often take his children
and grandchildren camping and hiking. Manning
was always an active
participant in any church
he attended and had been
known to give back to the
community.

He is survived by
wife, June; children Kent
(Beth) Kloes, Lori Herron and Lynn (Duane)
Andrews; seven grandchildren; and one greatgrandchild.
Besides his parents, he
was preceded in death by
his father- and motherin-law, Paul and Frances
Smart; and brother- and
sister-in-law Robert and
May Kloes.
Calling hours will be 11
a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday,
April 16, 2016, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Middleport.
Funeral service will be 1
p.m. Burial will follow in
Riverview Cemetery.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

DEATH NOTICES
BAKER
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio — Edison Baker, 99, of
Middleport passed away Tuesday, April 12, 2016, at
the Overbrook Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in
Middleport. Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Sunday,
April 17, 2016, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home
in Middleport. Visitation will be 5-8 p.m. Saturday at
the funeral home.
BERRIDGE
KINGMAN, Ariz. — David Alan Berridge, 64, of
Kingman, formerly of Gallipolis, Ohio, died Thursday,
April 7, 2016, at his residence. Private services and
his ﬁnal resting place will be in Arizona.

Lawmakers want
medical marijuana
legal by summer
By Julie Carr Smyth
Associated Press

COLUMBUS — Medical marijuana will be
legalized in Ohio by summer, state representatives
pledged Wednesday, calling their legislative effort
more responsible and
comprehensive than any
ballot proposal.
The Ohio legislation
comes as the national
Marijuana Policy Project
pursues a medical marijuana issue for the state’s
fall ballot. Polling during
a more sweeping ballot
campaign that failed last
year made clear to the
Republican-controlled
state Legislature that the
issue wasn’t going away.
House Speaker Cliff
Rosenberger, a Clarksville
Republican, was emphatic
that taking time to study the
issue was not a stall tactic.
“This is the people’s
House and we’re responding to the good citizens
of the state of Ohio that
had expressed interest in
medical marijuana and its

purposes,” Rosenberger
said. “But we need to
ensure that we’re doing it
the right way.”
A bill expected this
week would allow
licensed doctors to prescribe edibles, patches,
plant material and oils.
State Rep. Kirk Schuring,
a Canton Republican who
chaired a medical marijuana task force, said it
will prohibit home growing — which he says is
too hard to control.
The House leaders set
an aggressive schedule for
the legislation. It would
clear the House this
month, the Senate next
month, reach Republican
Gov. John Kasich by May
31 and become law by
Aug. 31. A nine-member
Medical Marijuana Control Commission would
be appointed within 30
days of the law taking
effect and take about a
year to write rules for the
program. Dispensaries
could be up and running
in under two years, Schuring said.

Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
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.

Editor’s Note: The Meigs Briefs will only list
event information that is open to the public and will
be printed on a space-available basis.

Extra Spring Sports
Preview copies available
OHIO VALLEY — Extra copies of the Ohio Valley Publishing Spring Sports Preview are available
for 50 cents and can be obtained at any of our three
ofﬁces in Gallipolis, Pomeroy and Point Pleasant.

A Collection of Laurel and
Hardy Memorabilia
OHIO VALLEY — Bob Evans Farm presents an
exhibit at the Homestead, titled “A Fine Mess: A Collection of Laurel and Hardy Memorabilia.” Private
collector Maggie Oiler, of Thurman, began collecting
in the mid-1980s and now has lent her collection for
display. The museum is located 1084 State Route 558
in Rio Grande. Admission is free from 10 a.m. 5 p.m.
Monday through Friday through Dec 23. More info
is available bobevans.com/aboutus/the-farm or from
Clark Walker, farm manager at 1-800-994-3276 .

World Heritage Student
Exchange Program

Meigs Co. Plat Books for sale

OHIO VALLEY — World Heritage Student
Exchange Program is seeking local host families
for high school students from all over the world.
Couples, families with and without children are all
encouraged to host for 1-2 semesters. Each student
is fully insured, brings their own personal spending
money, and expects to contribute to his/her share of
household responsibilities, all in exchange for being
included in normal family activities and lifestyles.
The foundation asks you to imagine being a part of
the solution and to share your corner of America.
Contact 949 342 1777 or 1800 888 9040 email
info@world-heritage.org.

POMEROY — The Meigs County 4-H Committee has
Plat Books for sale for $25. The books were printed in
2015. Funds support the 4-H program in the county by providing for supplies, camp and college scholarships, learning
opportunities and more. Purchases of the Plat Book can
be made by mailing $30 (for book, shipping &amp; handling)
to Meigs County 4-H Committee, PO Box 32, Pomeroy,
OH 45769, in person at the Extension Ofﬁce at 117 East
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy on Monday through Thursday from 8 a.m to 4:30 p.m., or by visiting Soil &amp; Water
Conservation or the Meigs County Recorder’s Ofﬁce in
the Meigs County Court House to obtain a copy. For questions, call 740-992-6696.

Remains soldier return to US
WARREN, Ohio (AP) — The
remains of a Pennsylvania-born
soldier declared missing during the Korean War have been
returned to his family in Ohio
after DNA testing helped with
identiﬁcation.
U.S. Army Cpl. Dennis Buckley
was 23 when he was declared
missing in action in February
1951 while serving near Wonju,
South Korea. He was declared
dead four months later, The Warren Tribune Chronicle reported.
Buckley’s unit was supporting
the Republic of Korea against units
of the Chinese People’s Volunteer
Forces on Feb. 5. He was later captured and is believed to have died
at a prisoner of war camp.

He was posthumously promoted
to corporal in May 1953.
His remains were among those
turned over decades later by the
Democratic People’s Republic of
Korea. They were cross-checked
with thousands of DNA swabs collected by military specialists.
Eleanor Stevenson, of
Youngstown, said she received a
phone call from Maj. Jerry Mourn
about two months ago asking
whether she had a relative named
Dennis Buckley. She conﬁrmed
that she was his niece, and Mourn
then explained that the Army
had Buckley’s remains. Stevenson quickly agreed to have them
transported back to Ohio.
“There was not a question,”

she said. “He has been over there
for too long. He needed to come
home.”
Although Stevenson doesn’t
remember her uncle, she said,
other relatives have served in the
Navy and Army.
“Military service always has
been very important in my family,” Stevenson said.
Buckley’s remains were ﬂown
into the Army Reserve Base
in Corapolis, Pennsylvania, on
Tuesday. A service is planned
Thursday at a funeral home in
Austintown Township, a suburb
of Youngstown, Ohio. The escort
to Ohio Western Reserve National
Cemetery will include police and
the Patriot Guard.

OHIO STATE BRIEFS

House OKs bill allowing
student religious expression

High court allows western
Ohio wind farm to proceed

COLUMBUS (AP) — An Ohio proposal that
would broaden protections for students’ religious
expression in schools has passed the House.
Among other provisions, House Bill 425 would
let students express their religious viewpoints more
freely in homework or in the classroom.
It cleared the House Wednesday on a 72-22 vote.
It next goes to the Senate.
Ohio law already bars school boards from adopting policies or rules prohibiting students from exercising or expressing their religious beliefs. But this
bill would scrap a piece of the law that lets districts
limit such expression to the lunch period or other
non-instructional time.
Republican Rep. Bill Hayes says his proposal aims
to make clear what is permitted in schools.
The American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio
opposes the measure. The Catholic Conference of
Ohio supports it.

COLUMBUS (AP) — Opponents of a planned wind
farm in western Ohio’s Champaign County have lost a
legal challenge.
A 5-2 decision by the Ohio Supreme Court on Wednesday upholds a 2013 power siting board decision allowing
Champaign Wind LLC’s “Buckeye Wind II” project to proceed. The plan included up to 56 wind turbines on 13,500
acres of private land.
The nonproﬁt Union Neighbors United, residents, the
county and other local government entities had appealed.
They argued the approval process was ﬂawed and the
project didn’t comply with required property setbacks,
noise and environmental standards.
The court’s majority found opponents failed to demonstrate the board’s action was unreasonable or unlawful.
Justices Sharon Kennedy and Paul Pfeifer dissented.
They said board calculations on setbacks and noise were
“against the manifest weight of the evidence.”

Man who sought kidney via
message on SUV gets donor
COLUMBUS (AP) — An ailing Ohio man whose
family taped bright yellow letters asking for a
kidney to the rear window of his SUV has found a
donor.
The Columbus Dispatch reports 68-year-old Neal
Raisman received a new kidney Friday at Ohio State
University’s Wexner Medical Center after suffering
with kidney disease for several years.
Raisman made the news last May when his daughter used yellow tape to write a message on his SUV
that read: “Got kidney? I need 1. PLEASE call or
text.”
Since then, Raisman says he has ﬁelded more than
100 calls.
He says a central Ohio woman called about four
months ago saying she saw the message on his
car and offered her kidney. The woman wished to
remain anonymous.

Online checkbook again tops
watchdog group’s ranking
COLUMBUS (AP) — Ohio once again tops a watchdog
group’s ranking of transparency in government spending.
An annual U.S. Public Interest Research Group report
released Wednesday cites the OhioCheckbook.com website
as exemplary. The site launched in 2014 features interactive, Google-style searches of billions in state spending.
Spending for Ohio’s ﬁve public pension funds and more
than 600 local government entities have been added since
Ohio leaped to the top of the ranking last spring.
Other states receiving A-pluses were Michigan, Indiana,
Oregon and Connecticut. California, Alaska and Idaho
received Fs.
U.S. PIRG commends Michigan for streamlining its
transparency data and West Virginia for launching a site
showing the projected and actual public beneﬁt of major
subsidy programs.
Ohio Treasurer Josh Mandel says Ohio’s site is used by
taxpayers, journalists and law enforcement.

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

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

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

Woman charged with streaming alleged rape
COLUMBUS (AP) — An
18-year-old woman who used a
social media app to livestream
the alleged rape of her 17-year-old
friend was indicted along with
another man by a grand jury on
several charges including rape and
kidnapping, an Ohio prosecutor
said Wednesday.
The case came to light when
authorities were contacted after an

out-of-state friend of the accused
woman saw the images, Franklin
County Prosecutor Ron O’Brien
said.
Marina Lonina and co-defendant
Raymond Gates, 29, were charged
with rape, kidnapping, sexual battery and pandering sexually-oriented matter involving a minor. The
alleged rape involved intercourse
by force, according to Wednesday’s

indictment, which did not mention
her age as a factor.
Lonina was also charged with
illegal use of a minor in a nudityoriented material or performance,
related to the alleged use of the
social media livestreaming app
Periscope.
Periscope, an app for smartphones, uses a video function to
allow users to stream events live.

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 14, 2016 3

50 years of
employment

Courtesy photo

Marshall Health has purchased the former Patriot Coal corporate headquarters building in Scott Depot with plans to begin offering
expanded services in Putnam County by early 2017.

Marshall Health buys Patriot Coal building
Staff Report

Courtesy photo

Eugene “Hammer” Haberstich, center, was honored recently for
his 50 years of service with NAPA Auto Parts in Gallipolis. Shown
honoring Haberstich with a plaque is manager Phil Mitchell.

Donors, scholarship
recipients honored
Staff Report

HUNTINGTON,
W.Va. — Marshall
University donors and
current recipients of
privately funded scholarships were honored at
the Scholarship Honor
Brunch in the Memorial
Student Center’s Don
Morris Room on the
Huntington campus.
Jacob Comer, an
attorney and Marshall
graduate who is now the
senior legal and chief
compliance officer at
Starr Investment Holdings, was the featured
speaker.
Dr. Ron Area, CEO of
the Marshall University
Foundation, which sponsored the event, served
as master of ceremonies.
“When I have visited with our scholarship recipients, I have
heard many times from
students that without
scholarships they could
not have afforded a
university education. It
made the difference in
attending Marshall or
not,” Area said. “Looking ahead, I believe the
underlying importance
of scholarships is that
it gives our students
an opportunity to have
a better quality of life.
I wish we could give
every student a scholarship at Marshall.”
Comer, who graduated from Marshall in
2000 with a B.B.A. in
accounting summa cum
laude, was the recipient
of several privately funded scholarships during
his undergraduate years
at Marshall. He went on
to receive a J.D. degree,
manga cum laude, from
the Washington and Lee
School of Law.
“My scholarships to
attend Marshall were
transformative. I took a
year off before attending
college—a very unusual
step — and Marshall
took a risk by granting
me a scholarship it had
offered a year earlier.”
Comer said. “I was
grateful, and strove to
repay that gesture by
focusing intensely on
my studies. I arrived
expecting a small state
college, but I left with a
sharp university education and a scholarship
to law school. The faculty, staff and especially
my friends and fellow
students contributed
to an enjoyable and
rewarding experience

Photos courtesy of Marshall
University

ABOVE, Marshall President
Jerome Gilbert addressed the
crowd with a speech titled
“Envisioning the Future.”
BELOW, Jacob Comer, an
attorney and Marshall graduate,
was the keynote speaker at the
Scholarship Honor Brunch in
the Memorial Student Center’s
Don Morris Room on the
Huntington campus.

that I wouldn’t trade for
anything. And in today’s
world, one cannot
understate the benefit
of graduating college
with almost no debt. For
that, I remain immensely grateful.”
Marshall President Jerome Gilbert
addressed the crowd
with a speech titled
“Envisioning the
Future.” He talked about
some of the aspirational
qualities that define the
scholars and donors at
Marshall. In part, Gilbert said:
“We are seekers of
truth, not people who
tolerate lies and injustice. We are lifetime
learners, not complacent graduates. We are
readers and thinkers,
not blind followers of
rhetoric. We embrace
the light, were are not
ones who hide in the
darkness. We turn the
cheek, we don’t return
violence. We surround
ourselves with diversity,
we don’t shut out people
because they are different. We find solutions,
we don’t contribute to
the problem. We love
knowledge, we are not
afraid of new ideas. We
are destined for greatness.”
“We are the sons and
daughters of Marshall.”

dents to train in an outpatient
setting.
SCOTT DEPOT, W.Va. — Mar“This is a fantastic opportunity
shall Health has purchased the
for the School of Medicine and
former Patriot Coal corporate
our faculty practice plan to broadheadquarters building in Scott
en the clinical experiences our
Depot with plans to begin offerstudents and residents receive,”
ing expanded services in Putnam said Joseph I. Shapiro, M.D., dean
County by early 2017.
of the Marshall University Joan
Marshall Health, the faculty
C. Edwards School of Medicine.
practice plan of the Marshall Uni- “We also look forward to working
versity Joan C. Edwards School
collaboratively with our fellow
of Medicine, expects to begin
health care providers, including
the process of converting the
a number of alumni, in Putnam
51,000-square-foot, three-story
County to help meet the needs of
ofﬁce building located at 300 Cor- the region.”
porate Center Dr. into medical
Marshall Health ﬁrst began
ofﬁces this summer.
offering medical services in PutThe purchase will allow Marnam County in the early 1990s.
shall Health to merge its existCurrently, more than a dozen
ing Hurricane ofﬁces under one Marshall Health physicians see
roof and begin offering more
patients exclusively or on a rotatspecialty services in the Teays
ing basis in one of its Hurricane
Valley area, while also increasofﬁces.
ing the medical school’s capacity
“We have been looking for
for medical students and resithe right opportunity to invest

and grow in Putnam County,”
said Beth L. Hammers, executive director of Marshall Health.
“The former Patriot Coal building offered the amount of space
we needed to merge our current
practices and bring new specializations to the region.”
Preliminary plans for the new
Marshall Health facility call for
expanded primary care and specialty services under one roof,
including general internal medicine, pediatrics, women’s health,
gastroenterology, cardiology,
orthopaedics and more.
The facility, which is on a 2.48acre lot, was built in 2006 as the
headquarters for International
Coal Group Inc. and most recently served as the headquarters for
Patriot Coal. It is conveniently
located adjacent to Interstate 64,
between the Teays Valley and
Crooked Creek exits, and offers
ample parking.

Marshall to host stakeholders conference
Staff Report

than 15 years
experience
HUNTINGTON,
working in highW.Va. — The Marshall
er education. He
University Lewis College said the stakeof Business will host the holder engageinaugural Stakeholders’
ment conference
Midkiff
Engagement Conference would allow
on April 15 to provide
the college to
networking opportunistrengthen engagement
ties for the campus com- with a wide range of
munity and local busistakeholders to improve
ness professionals.
quality and impact of
The event is just one
their programs.
of many initiatives set
“The purpose of this
forth by the college’s
inaugural Stakeholders’
new director of stakeConference is to bring
holder engagement,
together a diverse group
Glen Midkiff.
of stakeholders — stuMidkiff, a three-time
dents, alumni, faculty
graduate of Marshall
and staff, employers, and
University, has more
business and commu-

nity leaders — to
identify benchmarks that will
be utilized by the
college to develop
plans for improvements,” Midkiff
said.
Midkiff said
there is still space available for any stakeholder
interested in attending
the event.
“We will also discuss a
performance dashboard
for the Lewis College of
Business. The dashboard
will help us measure our
performance, monitor
our activities, analyze
possible causes of problems and guide us to

focus on the key issues.”
The inaugural conference will take place from
8 to 11 a.m., Friday in
the Don Morris Room
on the second ﬂoor of
Marshall’s Memorial
Student Center on the
Huntington campus.
Participants can RSVP
to the Stakeholders’
Engagement Conference
by emailing midkiff2@
marshall.edu.
To learn more about
the Lewis College of
Business and their
upcoming activities to
increase engagement,
visit www.marshall.edu/
cob online.

Speaker Ryan set to blow budget deadline
By Erica Werner
and Andrew Taylor

interview, echoing the sentiments
of many conservatives in the House.
Associated Press
Boehner himself, despite his troubles
with the hard-liners in his caucus,
WASHINGTON — House Repub- met the budget deadline each of the
licans are about to blow through a
ﬁve years of his speakership.
statutory deadline to pass an annual
The situation has left numerous
budget, a major embarrassment for
House Republicans deeply frustratSpeaker Paul Ryan that raises quesed. Yet Ryan himself has managed to
tions about his stewardship of the
remain popular, as all sides continue
House despite his high proﬁle on the
to profess admiration for his comnational stage.
munication skills and his patient
A day after rampant speculation
attempts to involve lawmakers in his
forced him to call a news conferdeliberations.
ence to deny he wants to run for
“It’s extremely frustrating,” GOP
president this year, Ryan insisted
Rep.
Kevin Cramer of North Dakota
Wednesday that he hadn’t given up
said
of
the imminent budget failure.
on the House’s obligation to pass
He
praised
Ryan’s style, but added:
its annual spending blueprint, even
“It’s
admirable
in some ways but not
though the Friday deadline looks
producing
results.”
impossible to meet.
Ryan himself chaired the House
“You know me, I want to pass a
Budget
Committee for much of
budget,” said the Wisconsin RepubBoehner’s
speakership and crafted
lican, his party’s 2012 vice presidenthe
“Ryan
Budget”
that would
tial nominee. “I think we should pass
have
transformed
Medicare
into
a budget and we’re still talking with
a
voucher
program
for
millions.
It
our members on how we can get that
never
became
law,
but
he
did
cut
a
done.”
deal with Senate Democrats and the
Yet success looks unlikely as the
White House that enhanced his prosame tea party lawmakers who
ﬁle as a charismatic, policy-focused
ousted Ryan’s predecessor, John
conservative.
Boehner, rebel against a bipartisan
Ryan has repeatedly lambasted
spending deal Boehner cut with
Democrats when they didn’t get
President Barack Obama last fall
budgets done while in congressional
before leaving ofﬁce. “It’s better
control, even backing a law that
to do no budget this year than a
would have cut off lawmakers’ paybad budget,” Heritage Foundation
checks if they failed to pass a budget.
President Jim DeMint said in an

Yet the reality is that failing to
pass a budget has few real-world
consequences for lawmakers, and
GOP leaders in both the House and
Senate are instead moving ahead
with the annual spending bills that
determine agency operating budgets.
That process is just getting underway, though it too could fall prey to
divisions in the House. Democrats
are likely to oppose many of the bills
if they’re laced with conservative
policy “riders,” while conservatives
have problems with spending levels.
The budget is not the only area
where House Republicans are faltering under Ryan’s leadership. Very
little signiﬁcant legislation has been
moving, and negotiations over a bill
to address Puerto Rico’s ﬁscal crisis
have proceeded in ﬁts and starts.
It’s unclear whether a just-released
Puerto Rico bill backed by Ryan will
attract the needed support.
But Ryan has aimed his sights
higher than the nitty-gritty of legislating, putting committees to work
on developing policies on issues
from health care to national security to poverty that can serve as a
“governing agenda” for the GOP.
He’s pledged to release the proposals ahead of the GOP convention
in July, giving his Republicans a
program to run on should they
want to distance themselves from
the eventual GOP nominee.

�E ditorial
4 Thursday, April 14, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Beyond
transparency, we
need accountability
Over more than three decades in Congress, I
had the chance to question a lot of federal ofﬁcials.
Most of the time I wasn’t after anything dramatic
— I just wanted to understand who was responsible for certain decisions. How often did I get a
straight answer? Almost never.
By Lee Hamilton
It was easily one of the most frustrating aspects
of trying to ensure robust oversight of the government. Our representatives’ job, after all, is to
help make government work better.
And you can’t do that if you don’t
know whom to hold accountable for
important decisions.
Accountability is essential to
good governance. I’m not just talking about “transparency” – that is,
citizens’ ability to know what’s being
done in our name. That’s important,
Lee H.
Hamilton but equally important is holding
Contributing accountable those who made the
decision to do it: ensuring that they
Columnist
are accountable to policy-makers,
adhere to their obligations, follow
the law, and that their actions are appropriate and
responsive to the needs of the country.
This is elusive. Accountability requires that
ofﬁcials step up and take responsibility for their
decisions, and not try to shift that responsibility
to others or to some ill-deﬁned group. It requires
unambiguous performance standards, clear codes
of ethics, timely reporting, and acceptance of
responsibility, especially with regard to budget or
spending decisions.
So how do we get there?
Without clarity on who’s in charge of what and
who’s responsible for which decisions, it becomes
too easy for ofﬁcials to remain unanswerable for
their actions. Yet clear lines of authority mean
nothing unless the deciding ofﬁcials are identiﬁed
and measured against what actually takes place.
Ofﬁcials need to give a full account of what they
do and the decisions they make.
As a nation, we face a growing issue on this
front when it comes to federal contractors — that
is, the private workforce doing jobs for federal
agencies. There are very few mechanisms for holding contractors responsible for their errors, abuses
and missteps.
Accountability also requires a robust media to
tell us what’s going on in the entire system: within
the bureaucracy, in the behavior of contractors,
and among legislators who ought to be overseeing
both but often don’t.
Accountability is key to good government. All I
wanted to know in those congressional hearings
was who made the decision about the public’s
business. Is that too much to ask?
Lee Hamilton is a senior advisor for the Indiana University Center
on Representative Government; a Distinguished Scholar, IU 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.

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about what’s going on in their world. We encourage you to
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740.992.2155

THEIR VIEW

Man who dominated Boston Marathon
had become an orphanage and
A Baptist in Boston — a
trade school. Clarence hated it
minister — stood up at a ban— but loved his mother to the
quet in 1924 and described
point that he later dropped out
a member of the audience
of college to move in with her
as having “grit, gumption,
and support her by working
gristle, and grace.”
as a printer, the trade he had
Other descriptors for this
learned on the island.
skinny fellow from Ohio —
James
Clarence deeply desired
who stood 5-foot 7-inches
F. Burns
tall and weighed 137 pounds
Contributing to excel in sports but had no
Columnist
aptitude for football, baseball,
— were equally enigmatic:
or boxing, the era’s major
“Stern, principled, friendly,
sports. However, he could
courageous, courteous, surly,
run—as a boy in Ohio, he “dogtrotfrosty, and cantankerous.” Clarence
ted” to school; as a printer in Boston,
DeMar deserved and earned each of
he ran the seven miles to work from
these adjectives.
And if I associated Clarence — dol- his mother’s house in Melrose. So he
decided to try the Boston Marathon
lars to donuts you’ve never heard of
in 1910—and to everyone’s surprise,
him — with Boston’s great sporting
event, the upcoming Boston DeMara- this no-name ﬁnished second. But a
thon, you’d chuckle over the misprint. doctor then discovered he had a heart
murmur, “a bad heart—you shouldn’t
Excuse me, that’s no misprint, being
a popular nickname for the great race even walk up stairs.”
But Clarence was not a quitter.
for decades, dating back to the 1920s
When he took the starting line in
when Clarence DeMar dominated
the event, winning three in a row and Hopkinton for the 1911 Marathon,
race doctors also advised him not to
ﬁve out of seven between 1922 and
run, saying he was risking his life.
1928 — and, for good measure, winGrit, gristle, and courage prevailed —
ning again for a record seventh time
Clarence won his ﬁrst Boston Marain 1930 at age 41, the oldest winner
thon and in record time. But then he
of all time, another DeMarathon
stopped racing for ﬁve years, not only
record that still stands.
due to the heart murmur but because
This small gritty, gristly runner
“striving for individual athletic glory
— graceful, yes, he “ran like a thorwas incompatible with the spirit of
oughbred,” even describing himself
his religion.”
as a “ﬁne piece of machinery” who
After serving overseas at the end
“could run down a jackrabbit” — was
of World War I, he returned to livborn in Madeira, Ohio, a tiny village
ing with his mother and working in
where my parents also grew up. My
dad’s best friend was Howard DeMar, a print shop described by journalist
Steve Flynn as “a hot, dark cellar
Clarence’s cousin and later the postwhere molten lead pots spewed
master of Madeira.
poisonous fumes.” The Boston MaraClarence DeMar’s life story mirthon was as remote as chasing jackrors his career, both infused with the
rabbits back in Ohio.
“agony and ecstasy” that epitomizes
Meanwhile, the doctor who had
competition — and the American
diagnosed DeMar’s heart murmur
spirit. His impoverished background
had himself died of a heart attack —
only worsened when his father died,
eventually forcing his mother to move “I’ve always insisted that the physito Boston with her six children when cian was listening to his own heart,
not mine,” Clarence quipped. And he
a relative offered them a rent-free
was also now a Sunday School teachplace to live.
er, lay minister, and scout master,
But the mother still couldn’t supmaking him comfortable with comport six children, sending Clarence
peting and winning. But could he?
— the oldest — to a former asylum
His Baptist minister proclaimed
on an island in Boston harbor that

it a “wonderful comeback,” Clarence himself saying it was all “a big
surprise.” He swept to victory in the
1922, 1923, and 1924 Boston Marathons and was an Olympic medalist
in the marathon at Paris in 1924, a
feat not repeated by an American
until Frank Shorter took silver nearly
a half century later.
A man who focused on his running like a laser beam and detested
distractions — he punched a tipsy
man who staggered into the street to
shake hands during one marathon—
made the Boston event his own, winning again in 1927, 1928, and 1930,
the latter just two months shy of his
42nd birthday.
Once DeMar resumed running
in 1922, he never stopped, running
nearly 100 marathons and over 1,000
road races at various distances. He
ran his last Boston Marathon at age
65 and his last road race just several
months before dying of stomach cancer at age 70 in 1958. His wife — he
had waited to age 41 to ﬁnally marry
— said that just a day or two before
his death, DeMar left his sickbed
and “crawled into the backyard and
planted a garden; he simply refused
to give up.”
I have another link to the Boston
Marathon besides my parents and
Clarence being from Madeira. My
wife and I are from that same area
and, like DeMar, later moved to Boston. And then in 2013 we had a family friend — Kris Biagiotti and her
handicapped daughter, Kayla, running in the wheelchair division — get
caught up in the Boston Marathon
bombing. Grit and gristle got them
across the line, despite shrapnel ﬂying into people next to them.
As runners from all over the world
line up to run the famous race again
this year, the spirit of a man who
advised the youth in his church
“when you get in a race, never quit,”
will be there with them.
Clarence DeMar well knew the
agony and the ecstasy of competition.
He was a true American.
James F. Burns, an Ohio native, is a professor
emeritus at the University of Florida.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Thursday,
April 14, the 105th day of
2016. There are 261 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On April 14, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln
was shot and mortally
wounded by John Wilkes
Booth during a performance of “Our American
Cousin” at Ford’s Theater
in Washington.
On this date:
In 1775, the ﬁrst American society for the aboli-

tion of slavery was formed
in Philadelphia.
In 1828, the ﬁrst edition of Noah Webster’s
“American Dictionary of
the English Language”
was published.
Today’s Birthdays:
Actor Bradford Dillman is
86. Country singer Loretta Lynn is 84. Actress
Julie Christie is 76.
Retired MLB All-Star Pete
Rose is 75. Rock musician Ritchie Blackmore
is 71. Actor John Shea is
67. Actor-turned-race car

driver Brian Forster is 56.
Actor Brad Garrett is 56.
Actor Robert Carlyle is
55. Rock singer-musician
John Bell (Widespread
Panic) is 54. Actor Robert
Clendenin is 52. Actress
Catherine Dent is 51.
Actor Lloyd Owen is 50.
Baseball Hall of Famer
Greg Maddux is 50. Rock
musician Barrett Martin
is 49. Actor Anthony
Michael Hall is 48. Actor
Adrien Brody is 43. Classical singer David Miller
is 43. Rapper DaBrat is

42. Actor Antwon Tanner is 41. Actress Sarah
Michelle Gellar is 39.
Actor-producer Rob McElhenney is 39. Roots singer
JD McPherson is 39. Rock
singer Win Butler (Arcade
Fire) is 36. Actress Claire
Coffee is 36. Actor Christian Alexander is 26.
Actor Nick Krause is 24.
Actress Vivien Cardone
is 23. Actor Graham Phillips is 23. Actress Skyler
Samuels (TV: “Scream
Queens”) is 22. Actress
Abigail Breslin is 20.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 14, 2016 5

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Sunday, April 17
SYRACUSE —Gospel/Bluegrass
Gentlemen will sing at the Syracus
Community Church on 2nd St. in Syracuse. Dennis Moore will be speaking.
Everyone is welcome to attend.

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.

Monday, April 18
LETART TOWNSHIP — The regular
meeting of the Letart Township Trustees will at 5 p.m. at the Letart Township Building.

Tuesday, April 19
MARIETTA — Natural Resources Assistance Council at Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Development District, 1400
Pike St. in Marietta, will meet at 10 a.m. to
review the Round 10B (supplemental round)
grant applications to determine eligibility
for funding of the Clean Ohio Conservation
Friday, April 15
Fund for District 18. Questions regarding
POMEROY — The Pomeroy High
this meeting should be directed to Michelle
School Reunion Class on 1959 will hold
their “Third Friday” lunch at Fox’s Pizza in Hyer mhyer@buckeyehills.org at Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development
Pomeroy at noon.
CHESTER — Chester Shade Historical District or call (740) 376-1025.
MIDDLEPORT — The public is invited to
Association’s 2016 Annual Buffet will be
6:30 p.m. at the Meigs High School cafeto- “The Art of Gardening,” presented by John
rium. Michael Gerlach will speak after din- Morgan from Bob’s Market and Jenny Ridner about the Underground Railroad. The enour from Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District at Riverbend Arts Council, 290
event is open to the public. Contact Judy
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport at 7 p.m. There will
at 740-985-9822 for more information.
be garden displays, drawings for garden-relatHARRISONVILLE — Chapter 255 of
ed items, refreshments. Admission is free.
the Order of the Eastern Star will host
Deputy Grand Matron Diane Reeves from
Wednesday, April 20
Athens for its 109th annual inspection of
POMEROY — Meigs County Master
ofﬁcers at 7:30 p.m. in the Harrisonville
Gardener invites all to their annual
Masonic Hall.
Spring Plant Exchange at the Meigs
County Senior Center. Members will
Saturday, April 16
be answering questions about planting
RACINE — Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter of the DAR will meet at 1 p.m. and care of plants. The society shares
at the Racine Public Library, 608 Tyree that this is a good way to get free plants
St., Racine. Kathy Johnson will present for your garden. For example, bring in
perennials to swap in time for blooming
an informative program about quilts
and the characteristics of different time season. For further information contact
Alice Wamsley 740-992-3928
periods.

List
From Page 1

When participants
“graduate” from the program, the goal is to be
in a ﬁnancial position to
qualify for a loan to purchase their own house.

The current MHA
board is made up of board
chairman Fred Hoffman,
vice-chairman Norman
Price and board members
John Hood, Ed Durst and
Brett Jones.
Applications for the
Section 8 Housing Choice
voucher program will
be given on Tuesdays

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

41°

62°

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.

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

0.00
1.00
1.45
11.13
11.50

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:53 a.m.
8:05 p.m.
1:16 p.m.
2:42 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Last

Apr 22 Apr 29

New

First

May 6 May 13

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

Today
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.

Major
6:55a
7:43a
8:27a
9:08a
9:47a
10:25a
11:03a

Minor
12:42a
1:31a
2:16a
2:57a
3:36a
4:14a
4:53a

Major
7:20p
8:08p
8:50p
9:30p
10:08p
10:46p
11:25p

Minor
1:08p
1:55p
2:39p
3:19p
3:57p
4:35p
5:14p

WEATHER HISTORY
The famous “Easter Blizzard” hit
Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota
on April 14, 1873. A strong gale blew
wet snow into huge drifts; many settlers were lost.

AEP (NYSE) - 65.79
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 22.51
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) 112.21
Big Lots (NYSE) - 46.19
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 47.06
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 36.75
Century Alum (NASDAQ) - 7.17
Champion (NASDAQ) - 0.15
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 47.95
Collins (NYSE) - 92.8
DuPont (NYSE) - 64.8
US Bank (NYSE) - 41.1
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 30.99
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 46.83
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 61.79
Kroger (NYSE) - 37.86
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 79.8
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 81.14
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 21.91

SATURDAY

Mostly sunny and
nice

Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Lucasville
70/46
Very High

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

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

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

Level
12.99
23.24
24.50
12.63
12.94
25.95
11.92
27.18
34.45
12.03
25.80
34.10
24.30

Portsmouth
71/46

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.40
+3.32
+2.22
-0.14
-0.03
+1.38
-0.12
+1.11
+0.53
+0.20
+5.50
+0.30
+1.20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9922155 Ext.2551.

BBT (NYSE) - 34.21
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 20.07
Pepsico (NYSE) - 104.12
Premier (NASDAQ) - 15.75
Rockwell (NYSE) - 115.55
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) - 13.43
Royal Dutch Shell - 51.32
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 16.44
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 69.16
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 11.02
WesBanco (NYSE) - 31
Worthington (NYSE) - 37.24
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
april 13, 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.

MONDAY

75°
44°
Nice with plenty of
sunshine

Partly sunny and
pleasantly warm

69°
43°

74°
49°

Rather cloudy and not
as warm

Marietta
68/45

Murray City
67/41
Belpre
70/43

Athens
68/41

St. Marys
69/43

Parkersburg
68/43

Coolville
69/42

Elizabeth
70/45

Spencer
70/44

Buffalo
71/45
Milton
72/46

Clendenin
73/44

St. Albans
73/46

Huntington
73/47

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
59/45
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
62/50
20s
10s
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
73/54
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

WEDNESDAY

Mostly cloudy

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
73/47

Ashland
73/48
Grayson
73/49

TUESDAY

77°
47°

Wilkesville
69/45
POMEROY
Jackson
70/45
69/44
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
71/43
70/45
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
65/44
GALLIPOLIS
71/46
71/40
70/45

South Shore Greenup
72/47
70/45

37

Logan
67/41

McArthur
67/40

Very High

Primary: oak, poplar, other
Mold: 223

Pleasant with plenty
of sunshine

Adelphi
67/44
Chillicothe
68/45

SUNDAY

72°
41°

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

Waverly
68/44

Pollen: 67

Low

MOON PHASES
Full

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Primary: ascospores
Fri.
6:52 a.m.
8:06 p.m.
2:14 p.m.
3:24 a.m.

FRIDAY

0

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

resources for families in
need of their services.
For more information
on resources provided
by the MCHD, visit
www.meigs-health.com
or call 740-992-6626; or
by MCJFS Children’s
Services by visiting
www.meigsdjfs.net/
Meigscs.htm or calling
740-992-2117 or 1-800992-2608.

LOCAL STOCKS

EXTENDED FORECAST

63°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

(in inches)

foster nurturing families
and healthy children,
and are encouraged to
get involved and play a
role in preventing child
abuse and neglect and
promoting child and
family well-being.”
As a community,
Meigs County has many
resources available

to educate and assist
residents. The Meigs
Health Department has
programs to encourage
breastfeeding, to provide
safe sleep for infants and
VegieU, which encourages healthy eating.
Meigs County Jobs and
Family Services provides
lists of approved child
care as well as training
for child care providers.
They also offer activities
and ﬁnancial assistance,
along with many other

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9922155 Ext. 2551.

Mostly sunny and pleasant today. Clear tonight.
High 71° / Low 46°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

From Page 1

72°
43°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

63°
36°
67°
44°
90° in 1906
26° in 1990

April

between 9 and 11 a.m.
until further notice.
Should anyone have any
questions regarding this
program or others offered
by the MHA, call 740992-2733 during business
hours (8 a.m. and 4 p.m.)
Tuesday through Friday.

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

Courtesy photo

“Pinwheels for Prevention” at the Pomeroy McDonalds in support of Child Abuse Prevention
Month.

Charleston
71/45

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
62/44
Montreal
48/28

Billings
62/40

Minneapolis
71/48
Chicago
58/39

Denver
75/46

Toronto
48/30

Washington
64/43

New York
58/42

Kansas City
72/50

Fri.
Hi/Lo/W
71/43/pc
52/36/pc
58/49/c
53/43/s
62/37/s
50/33/r
60/38/pc
50/40/s
69/43/s
62/43/c
50/31/sh
65/46/s
72/46/s
65/43/s
68/44/s
79/60/pc
59/34/t
75/55/s
64/42/s
85/70/sh
80/62/pc
70/46/s
74/52/pc
70/57/pc
72/57/pc
75/58/s
73/49/s
84/71/t
71/55/s
70/48/pc
76/64/pc
61/44/s
76/53/pc
81/66/t
64/42/s
80/58/pc
69/42/s
53/34/s
65/41/s
64/38/s
76/54/pc
56/44/sh
67/55/s
61/45/c
64/42/s

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

88° in Tampa, FL
14° in Willow City, ND

Global

Houston
78/59

Monterrey
86/64

Today
Hi/Lo/W
76/51/s
50/36/pc
61/48/c
53/41/s
62/37/s
62/40/t
55/38/c
48/38/s
71/45/s
66/44/pc
70/40/pc
58/39/s
67/46/s
56/40/s
66/43/s
76/55/pc
75/46/pc
71/47/s
56/35/s
84/72/sh
78/59/c
65/42/s
72/50/s
78/57/pc
74/55/c
73/54/pc
71/49/pc
84/72/pc
71/48/s
70/51/c
77/64/r
58/42/s
73/50/pc
84/66/t
62/40/s
88/63/s
63/40/s
51/32/s
65/43/pc
62/38/s
70/52/pc
53/39/sh
62/50/pc
59/45/c
64/43/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
Atlanta
61/48

El Paso
86/58
Chihuahua
88/50

Detroit
56/35

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

High
Low
Miami
84/72

118° in Dori, Burkina Faso
-20° in Arviat, Canada

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

60647073

Thursday, April 14
WELLSTON — Gallia-JacksonMeigs-Vinton Solid Waste Management
District Board of Directors plans a 3:30
p.m. meeting at 1056 S New Hampshire
Ave., Wellston.
SYRACUSE — Wildwood Garden
Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Syracuse Community Center.

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 14, 2016 s Page 6

Eastern breezes past Belpre, 10-0
By Alex Hawley

on a Cameron Richmond RBI.
Eastern loaded the bases with no outs
in the bottom of the ﬁfth, and Kaleb
TUPPERS PLAINS — Top-notch
Hill scored on a sac-ﬂy by Swatzel to
defense, and the offense wasn’t bad
make the lead 6-0. Three straight walks
either.
allowed two more Eagles to score, and
The Eastern baseball team allowed
the lead was 8-0 with the bases loaded
just two hits to Tri-Valley Conference
an one out. Cameron Richmond came
Hocking Division guest Belpre, on
through with a double to left ﬁeld, platTuesday night in Meigs County, as the
ing two runs and allowing EHS to seal
host Eagles claimed a 10-0 victory in
the 10-0 mercy rule win.
ﬁve innings.
Cameron Richmond struck out seven
Eastern (6-4, 5-2 TVC Hocking) took and earned the pitching victory for
advantage of two BHS (4-7, 4-5) errors EHS, allowing two hits and two walks
in the ﬁrst inning, scoring three runs on in a complete game shutout effort.
one hit and one walk.
Bailey Sprague struck out four and
Another Belpre error led to an EHS
suffered the loss for the Orange and
run in the second inning, as Dillon
Black, allowing 10 runs on four walks
Swatzel reached on a BHS mishap and
and nine free passes in 4.1 innings. Stilt
then scored on a Owen Arix double.
pitched the ﬁnal two batters and surrenAfter
a
scoreless
third
frame,
EHS
dered one hit and one walk.
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
Eastern senior Cameron Richmond hits a two-run double in the bottom of the fifth inning, capping off added one run in the bottom of the
the Eagles’ 10-0 victory over Belpre, on Tuesday night in Tuppers Plains.
See EASTERN | 10
fourth, when Ethen Richmond scored
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

White Falcons,
Tornadoes
compete in meet
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

NELSONVILLE — The Wahama White Falcons
and Southern Tornadoes were among the seven
schools, with Wahama’s Wesley Jones stealing
some of the show, as part of Tuesday’s track and
ﬁeld meet at Nelsonville-York High School.
Fairﬁeld Union and Fairﬁeld Christian dominated the team points, while Wahama’s boys were
fourth with 84.
Southern’s boys were seventh with 52 points,
while the Lady Tornadoes tallied 32 and the Lady
White Falcons 20.
The meet was held at Nelsonville-York High
School’s historic Boston Field.
For the boys, the senior Jones swept the sprint
events (100m and 200m dashes), running the
100m in 11.43 seconds — and the 200m in 23
ticks ﬂat.
Jones was also part of the winning Wahama
sprint relay squads (4x200m and 4x100m relays).
Jones joined ﬁrst leg Brady Bumgarner, second
leg Nolan Pierce and anchor leg Austin Juelfs
to run 1:37 in the 4x200m — and 46.27 in the
4x100m.
Individually, the senior Juelfs was third in the
long jump with a leap of 18-feet, six and onequarter inches.
The White Falcons’ 4x800m relay quartet of
sophomores Isaiah Pauley and Matt Wood and
juniors Mason Hildreth and Travis Kearns claimed
third in nine minutes and 12 seconds.
See FALCONS | 10

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, April 14
Baseball
Wahama at South Gallia,
5 p.m.
River Valley at Meigs, 5
p.m.
Rock Hill at Gallia
Academy, 5 p.m.
Miller at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Huntington St. Joseph at
Hannan, 5:30
Southern at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Softball
Wahama at South Gallia,
5 p.m.
River Valley at Meigs, 5
p.m.
Rock Hill at Gallia
Academy, 5 p.m.
Miller at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Southern at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Wahama, Ohio Valley
Christian at Point Pleasant
Paul Wood Memorial, 4
p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 4
p.m.
Tennis
Gallia Academy at
Jackson, 4:30
Point Pleasant at
Hurricane, 4:30
College Softball
Rio Grande at Shawnee
State (DH), 1 p.m.
Friday, April 15
Baseball

Eastern at Southern, 5
p.m.
Warren at Gallia Academy,
5 p.m.
Waterford at South Gallia,
5 p.m.
Wood County Christian at
Hannan, 5:30
River Valley at Vinton
County, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at
Huntington Tournament,
TBA
Softball
Eastern at Southern, 5
p.m.
Warren at Gallia Academy,
5 p.m.
Waterford at South Gallia,
5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Nitro, 6
p.m.
River Valley at Vinton
County, 5 p.m.
Hannan at Huntington St.
Joseph (DH), 5 p.m.
Track and Field
South Gallia at Ohio
University, 4 p.m.
Tennis
Nitro at Point Pleasant,
4:30
College Baseball
Rio Grande at Point Park
(DH), 1 p.m.
College Track and Field
Rio Grande at Ball State
Invitational

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern junior Jess Coleman pitches during the Lady Eagles’ 6-5 victory over Belpre, on Tuesday night in Tuppers Plains.

Lady Eagles hold off Belpre, 6-5
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS — A win is a
win, no matter how pretty it is.
The Eastern softball team survived a late rally by Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division guest
Belpre, on Tuesday night in Meigs
County, as the host Lady Eagles
held on for a 6-5 victory.
Belpre (6-2, 6-2 TVC Hocking)
began the game with a bang, as
Lauryn Simmons hit a lead-off
home run in the top of the ﬁrst
inning. However, Eastern (8-1, 7-0)
took the lead in the bottom of the
ﬁrst, as EHS sophomore Sidney
Cook blasted a two-run home run
to right ﬁeld.
The host Lady Eagles added on
to their lead in the bottom of the
second inning, ﬁrst when Emmalea
Durst doubled home Allison Barber, and again when Hannah Bailey
singled home Durst and Abbie
Hawley.
After back-to-back scoreless
frames, EHS pushed the lead to
6-1 in the bottom of the ﬁfth, when
Cook singled and later scored.
BHS — which had been held
scoreless since Simmons’ ﬁrstinning blast — got back in the
game with two runs on two hits
and two walks in the top of the
sixth inning. Belpre’s Katie Osburn
doubled home two more runs in
the top of the seventh, but the
Orange and Black couldn’t bring
the tying run home, giving Eastern
the 6-5 win.
“It’s a big win to stay on top,”

second-year EHS head coach Bryan
Durst said. “We came out of the
gate real sharp and we really hit
the ball well, but then we kind of
went to sleep a little bit. As our
season goes along we need to play
a complete game. That’s what it’s
going to take to win this league.”
Eastern junior Jess Coleman
earned the pitching victory, allowing ﬁve runs, three earned, on
six hits and four walks. Coleman
pitched a complete game and
struck out eight batters.
“Jess Coleman never feels any
pressure,” Coach Durst said of
his junior pitcher. “She just goes
out and preforms. She gives our
defense a chance to work and I
think defensively we’re growing.
Defensively, we’re not where we
want to be, but it seemed like to
me that tonight we had conﬁdence.
We acted like we were going to win
this game and fortunately we got
out of here with one.”
Madison Harman suffered the
setback in the circle for Belpre,
allowing ﬁve runs on eight hits in
four innings. Osburn pitched the
ﬁnal two frames and surrendered
one run on three hits and three
walks. Harman recorded six strikeouts, while Osburn had three.
Cook led the Green and Gold at
the plate, with a home run, a single, two runs scored and two stolen
bases in three at-bats. Durst went
2-for-3 with a double, a single, one
run scored and one RBI, Katlyn
Barber was 2-for-3 with two singles
and one stolen base, while Bailey
was 2-for-4 with two singles, one

run scored and two RBI.
Coleman doubled once in two
at-bats for EHS, Hawley singled
once and scored once in two atbats, while Mollie Maxon was
1-for-4 with a single. Allison Barber
scored once as a courtesy runner
for EHS, while Mackenzie Brooks
and Taylynn Rockhold each stole
one base in the win.
Olivia Shutts led the Orange
and Black with two doubles and
two runs scored in four at-bats,
while Simmons was 1-for-4 with a
home run, two runs scored and one
RBI. Osburn was 1-for-3 with one
double, one run scored, two RBI
and one stolen base, Bri Elkins was
1-for-4 with a single, one RBI and
one stolen base, while Alex Williams singled once in two at-bats.
Elizabeth Adams had one RBI in
the loss, while Kaitlin Richards
stole one base.
For the game, Eastern had two
errors and eight runners left on
base, while Belpre had one error
and six runners left on base. This
is the ﬁrst time this season that
Belpre has allowed more than ﬁve
runs in a game. This marks Eastern’s 24th consecutive TVC Hocking victory.
The Green and Gold will look
to sweep BHS on April 29, when
these teams meet in Washington
County.
Eastern resumes league play
on Thursday, when Miller visits
Tuppers Plains.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 14, 2016 7

Red Devils slip past Point Pleasant, 4-3
By Alex Hawley

with one out in the bottom of
the frame, as Matt Richardson
singled home Chris Lush.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Over the next three innings,
— In baseball, you may not be Point Pleasant advanced two
able to win a game on defense, runners to third base, but neibut you sure can lose a game
ther managed to score. The Big
on defense.
Blacks ﬁnally tied the game in
The Point Pleasant baseball
the bottom of the ﬁfth, when
team committed six errors on
Abe Stearns drove in Kaleb
Tuesday night, allowing nonBeckner.
conference guest Ravenswood
Point Pleasant took a 3-2
to esacpe Mason County with a lead in the bottom of the sixth
4-3 win.
frame, as Austin Richardson
The Red Devils (8-3) comdrove in Alec Smith with a twobined one hit with two walks
out single.
and one PPHS (8-7) error, to
The PPHS lead was shortscore two runs in the top of the lived, however, as Ravenswood
ﬁrst inning. However, the Big
scored two runs on two hits
and two errors in the top of the
Blacks cut the deﬁcit in half

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

seventh inning. The Big Blacks
were retired in order in the
bottom of the seventh, as RHS
took the 4-3 win.
Nathan Curtis earned the
pitching victory for Ravenswood, allowing three runs,
two earned, on eight hits and
one walk. Curtis struck out ﬁve
in a complete game effort.
Jordan Cunningham earned
a no-decision the mound for
PPHS, allowing three runs,
two earned, on two walks and
three hits in 6.1 innings. Matt
Richardson suffered the loss,
allowing one unearned run on
one hit in .2 innings of relief.
Cunningham struck out four in
the setback.

Lush led the PPHS offense
with one double, one single and
one run scored in four at-bats,
while Matt Richardson was
2-for-3 with two singles and
one RBI. Stearns and Austin
Richardson both singled once
and drove in one run for the
Big Blacks, Derek King and
Justice Chapman both doubled
once, while Beckner and Smith
each scored one run.
Chase Swain led the Red
Devils, going 3-for-4 with one
double, two singles, one run
scored and one RBI. Zachery Miller singled once and
scored once for RHS, Nicholas Taylor added two runs
scored, while Lakin Tucker

chipped in with an RBI.
Stearns and Garrett Litchﬁeld each stole one base for the
Big Blacks, while Miller and
Blake Bennett each had a steal
for the victors.
PPHS committed six errors
and left six runners on base in
the loss, while Ravenswood had
one error and seven runners
stranded.
The Big Blacks will look for
redemption on April 25, when
they invade Jackson County.
PPHS is scheduled to visit
Wayne on Wednesday, and will
return to the diamond on Friday at Huntington.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2100.

GAHS falls at Jackson
By Bryan Walters

in the triumph. Jackson stranded eight runners on base, while
GAHS left ﬁve on the bags.
JACKSON — Those selfHunter Sexton was the wininﬂicted wounds don’t help.
ning pitcher of record after
Gallia Academy committed
allowing one earned run, two
four errors and surrendered six hits and three walks over ﬁve
unearned runs Tuesday night
innings while striking out 11.
during an 11-1 setback to host Anthony Sipple took the loss
Jackson in a Southeastern Ohio after surrendering eight runs
Athletic League baseball con(three earned), ﬁve hits and
test at Sparky Haller Field in
three walks over 2.2 innings
the Apple City.
while fanning two.
The Blue Devils (5-5, 1-2
Eric Ward led Gallia AcadSEOAL) trailed 3-0 through
emy with two hits, while Kole
two innings of play, but the
Carter provided the other
guests showed signs of life in
safety. This was both the Blue
the top of the third as a twoDevils’ ﬁrst double-digit loss
out wild pitch allowed John
and ﬁrst mercy-rule setback of
Stout to score from third base
the season.
— making it a two-run contest.
Lukas White paced JHS
The Ironmen (3-0 SEOAL),
with three hits and four RBIs,
however, sent nine batters to
followed by Billy Cooper and
the plate in the home half of
Collin Massie with two safeties
the third, which resulted in ﬁve apiece. Neal, Arthur and Tyler
runs on three hits, three errors Storms also had a hit each in
and a walk.
the triumph.
JHS increased its 8-1 advanCooper scored three runs and
tage with two runs in the ﬁfth, also drove in two RBIs, while
then completed the mercy-rule Josh Blackburn also scored
decision in the sixth after
three times for Jackson.
Kendall Neal advanced to third
Warren defeated Logan by a
on a single by Shawn Arthur
6-3 count in the other SEOAL
and then scored on a throwing
baseball contest. The Warriors
error during the play.
are now in sole possession of
The Ironmen — who currentsecond place at 2-1, while the
ly sit alone atop the SEOAL
Chieftains fell to fourth at 0-3.
standings — outhit the guests
by a sizable 10-3 overall margin Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446and did not commit any errors 2342, ext. 2101.

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

South Gallia third baseman Jacob Brumfield (15) makes a throw to first base during the second inning of an April 1
TVC Hocking baseball contest against Wahama in Mason, W.Va.

Rebels fall just short at Lancers
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

STEWART — Unfortunately for the Rebels,
it was a classic case of oh so close, yet oh so
far away.
The winless South Gallia High School
baseball team nearly knocked off host Federal
Hocking on Tuesday, but some shaky sixthinning defense doomed the young Rebels en
route to a 7-5 Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division loss.
In actually leading the Lancers 2-1 after
two-and-a-half, and 5-4 entering the bottom of
the fourth, South Gallia had its eye on ending
its lengthy losing streak — both overall and in
the TVC-Hocking.
But Federal Hocking forced the 5-5 tie in the
fourth, then scored twice in the sixth when
the Rebel defense committed two costly errors
that could have had it out of the inning.
Trailing 7-5 in the seventh, the Rebels loaded the bases with two outs, but Lancer pitcher
Chase Reed struck out Joey Woodall to end
the game.
With the loss, South Gallia falls to 0-6 —
both overall and in the league.
In fact, Tuesday’s tilt saw the Rebels score
a season-high for runs in a game (ﬁve) — and
equal their run total through their ﬁrst ﬁve.
South Gallia had already lost to Wahama
(24-0), Waterford (13-1), Eastern (25-2),
Southern (17-0) and Belpre (13-2) by lopsided
scores.
Another near-miss, or even better an elusive
victory, might not come around again until
the Lancers make the return trip in two weeks
(Friday, April 29).
The win was Federal Hocking’s ﬁrst in 11
games (1-10), and nine in the TVC-Hocking
(1-8).
Both teams had seven hits, and South Gallia’s defense had only committed one error
until the decisive sixth.
That’s when the Lancers pushed ahead,
despite committing a whopping seven errors
until then.
As Rebel pitcher Kyler Mills worked a solid
six innings, his defense didn’t do him any
favors late.
In the sixth, Federal Hocking’s Matthew
Bobo reached on a leadoff error, as Deakin
Dickerson — with the Lancers employing a
hit-and-run situation — lifted a ball into right
ﬁeld that could have resulted in a double play.
But the ball was dropped, allowing Bobo
and Dickerson to reach second and third.
Bobo scored on Randall Torrence’s groundout for the 6-5 lead, and Dickerson sprinted
home on a wild pitch to make it 7-5.
Torrence went 2-for-4 with three RBIs, as all
three RBIs came against two-strike counts.
Mills, Brandon Rutt and Colten Bowers
walked to load the bases for the Rebels in the
seventh, but on Reed’s 119th pitch in going
the complete game — he recorded the gameinning strikeout.
Reed struck out nine Rebels, offsetting
seven hits and ﬁve walks.
Mills matched Reed by striking out seven
and only walking one in going the distance.
Reed helped himself by going 2-for-3 and
being hit by a Mills pitch.

Colton Coughenour was 3-for-4 to pace
South Gallia, as Johnny Sheets was 2-for-4 and
Mills 1-for-3 with a third-inning RBI-double.
That put the Rebels up 2-1, as Devon Maxey’s ﬁrst-inning RBI-single for Federal Hocking marked the game’s initial point.
Torrence’s two RBI-singles tied the game
twice — at 2-2 in the third and ﬁnally 5-5 in
the fourth.
Izak Luther also had a hit and a walk for the
Rebels, as Austin Stapleton’s RBI-groundout
gave South Gallia its ﬁnal lead at 5-4.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2106

THURSDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

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6:30

THURSDAY, APRIL 14
7

PM

7:30

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Masterpiece Mystery! Sherlock and
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Watson follow the trail of top-secret
government experiments.
Grey's Anatomy "There's a Grey's A. "It's Alright, Ma The Catch "The Princess
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The Lucky One Upon his return from Iraq, a marine
The Notebook ('04, Romance) Rachel McAdams, Gena Rowlands, Ryan Gosling.
searches for a woman whose photo kept him alive. TV14
A man tells the story of a woman who is torn between her fiancé and her first love. TV14
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
Lip Sync
(3:30)
Ender's Game ('13, Sci-Fi) Asa Butterfield. A boy leads the fight
Lip Sync
National Tr... against a genocidal alien race bent on taking over Earth. TVPG
Battle
Battle
Battle (N)
Battle
H.Danger
H.Danger
Thunder
Thunder
Dr. Seuss' Horton Hears a Who! Jim Carrey. TVG
Full House
Full House
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Savior" Law&amp;O: SVU "Shattered"
WWE Smackdown!
Modern Fam Modern Fam
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls The Big Bang The Big Bang 2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Democratic Debate (L)
Castle "Almost Famous"
Castle "Murder Most Fowl"
50 First Dates ('04, Rom) Adam Sandler. TV14
The Break Up TVMA
(4:30)
Lethal
Lethal Weapon 4 (1998, Action) Danny Glover, Chris Rock, Mel Gibson. Two Los
The Hunt for Red
Weapon 3 TVMA
Angeles detectives wage war against a merciless Chinese slave-smuggling ring. TVMA
October Sean Connery. TV14
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Naked "Lord of the Rats"
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Naked &amp; Afraid "Yucatan"
The First 48 "Jacked/ Fallen The First 48 "Senior Year" The First 48 "Bloody
The First 48 "Bloodline" (N) 60 Days In "Pod Drama"
Idol"
Valentine/ Storm Warning"
(N)
RivMon "Russian Killer"
River Monsters: Unhooked Catch/ River Monster (N)
(:05) River Monsters (N)
(:05) Finding Bigfoot
House Party 2: The Pajama Jam A young man throws a
Big Momma's House A male FBI agent goes undercover
(:15)
Big Momma's
house party in an effort to raise tuition money for university. as an oversized, irritable grandmother named Big Momma. House TVPG
House "Euphoria" Pt. 2 of 2 House "Forever"
Mary Mary
Mary Mary (N)
Sisters "She Said, She Said"
The Kardashians
E! News (N)
CliprSqd "Personal Foul"
Kardash "Mother Armenia" The Kardashians
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Ray
(:50) Ray
(:25) Ray "Ray Home Alone" Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Primal Survivor: Ultimate Life Below Zero
Life Below Zero "On the
Life Below Zero "Pride and Primal Survivor: Ultimate
Guide "Cannibal Legend"
"Aftermath"
Edge"
Power" (N)
Guide "Savage Jungle" (N)
Auctions
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs
NHL Hockey
UFC Tonight
MLB Whiparound (L)
UFC's Road to the Octagon UFC 161
Pawn Stars Alone "Making the Cut" (N) Vikings "Death All 'Round"
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars (:05) Pawn
Stars
(N)
Southern Charm
Real Wives Dallas
The Real Housewives
Wives "An Intimates Affair" Beverly Hills
Martin
(:35) Martin (:05) Payne
(:45) Payne
(:20) House of Payne
Chasing Destiny
C.Desti. "Two Left Feet"
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Mas.Flip "Double Trouble" H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
(5:00)
Spawn ('97, Act)
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe Four siblings The Chronicles of Narnia:
John Leguizamo. TV14
find a wardrobe leading to a bewitched land of talking animals. TVPG
The Lion, the Witch &amp; th...

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

Step Up All In (2014, Drama) Alyson Stoner, Briana
400 (HBO) Evigan, Ryan Guzman. A dance crew heads to Las Vegas to
compete in a career-defining dance competition. TV14
(:10) Black Sea ('14, Thril) Jodie Whittaker, Jude Law. A
450 (MAX) submarine crew goes after a sunken treasure, but the men
begin to turn on each other. TVMA
Black Snake Moan ('06, Dra) Christina Ricci,
500 (SHOW) Samuel L. Jackson. An old blues musician decides to save a
young woman he finds beaten and left for dead. TV14

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

Get Hard Will Ferrell. A millionaire
(:45) HBO
First Look (N)
convicted of fraud hires his friend to prep
him for his time in San Quentin. TVMA
(:05)
The Maze Runner ('14, Sci-Fi) Dylan O'Brien. A
group of boys with no memories of their past lives are
trapped inside an enormous maze. TV14
Dice "Elvis" Billions "The Conversation"
House of
Lies
Axe learns that Chuck has
new evidence against him.

10

PM

10:30

TogetherGirls
ness "For the "Homeward
Bound"
Kids"
The Hobbit: The
Battle of the Five Armies
Martin Freeman. TVPG
Dice "Elvis"
House of
Lies

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, April 14, 2016

Help Wanted General

Wanted

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Daily Sentinel

SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
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800-537-9528

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
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1-800-214-0452
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twolfe@civitasmedia.com or
apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

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740-577-8501
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1-740-286-5789
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
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renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
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no pets, $400.00 per mo. Call
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740-446-3936
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no pets. Deposit and
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740-992-0165
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1 bedroom apt, no pet,
deposit and reference
required.
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list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
2-Bedromm House in City, Gas
Heat - Central Air $525
sec.dep. $525/mo References
required 740-645-8545
Lease
For Lease:
Commercial space, first floor,
downtown Gallipolis,approx.
1500 sq. feet, suitable for
retail or office space. $550.00
per mo., references required.
740-441-7875 or
740-446-3936

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Call 740-339-2813.
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Finding Senior Housing can be
complex, but it doesn’t have to be.

Large Trailer Lot in the country. Mt. Alto area $125 a
month. (304) 895-3568

– Joan Lunden

The Family Gourmet Feast

Call: (800) 953-5178
A Place for Mom is the nation’s largest senior living referral information service.
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, April 14, 2016 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

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By Norm Feuti

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�SPORTS

10 Thursday, April 14, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Lady Tornadoes whip Waterford, 14-3
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

WATERFORD — Thorough,
from start to ﬁnish.
The Southern softball team
pounded out 18 hits and led
wire-to-wire through ﬁve
innings Tuesday night during
a 14-3 mercy-rule victory over
host Waterford in a Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division matchup in Washington
County.
The Lady Tornadoes (4-5,
4-3 TVC Hocking) had seven
different players produce multihit performances while also
collectively coming up with at
least one safety in each of their
ﬁve plate appearances.

Southern sent eight batters
to the plate in the top of the
ﬁrst, which resulted in four hits
and a walk while establishing
an early 4-0 advantage.
The Lady Wildcats (3-5, 2-5)
countered with a run in their
half of the ﬁrst, but the hosts
were ultimately never closer
than their three-run deﬁcit
after an inning of play.
SHS sent 11 batters to the
plate in the top of the third,
which yielded seven runs on
six hits, an error and a walk —
giving the Purple and Gold a
commanding 11-1 lead midway
through three.
WHS answered with a run
in the fourth to close to within

nine, but the Lady Tornadoes
sent eight more batters to the
plate in the top half of the ﬁfth.
The guests plated three runs on
ﬁve hits to secure a 14-2 edge
headed into the ﬁnale.
A two-out single and three
consecutive errors allowed
Waterford to score a run for a
14-3 contest, but SHS closed
the door on things in the next
at-bat with a unassisted out at
ﬁrst base.
Southern outhit the hosts by
a sizable 18-5 overall margin
and committed four of the six
errors in the contest. Both
programs also left six runners
stranded on the bags.
Sydney Cleland was the

winning pitcher of record
after allowing three runs (two
earned), ﬁve hits and one walk
over ﬁve innings of work. Emma
Baldwin suffered the setback
after surrendering 14 runs, 18
hits and two walks over seven
frames while fanning two.
Hannah Hill, Paige VanMeter
and Sabra Bailey led the guests
with three hits apiece, followed
by Haley Hill, Lauren Lavender, Ali Deem and Savannah
Bailey with two safeties each.
Katie Barton also added a hit
for the victors.
VanMeter drove in a teambest ﬁve RBIs, while Hannah
Hill knocked in three runs and
Savannah Bailey drove in two

RBIs. Lavender and Sabra Bailey also drove in a run apiece.
Deem and Hannah Hill each
scored three runs, while Lavender and VanMeter both crossed
home plate twice. Barton,
Haley Hill, Brandy Porter and
Sabra Bailey also added a run
each to the winning cause.
Jordan Taylor led Waterford
with two hits, while Baldwin,
Paige McCutcheon and Katie
Wagner also had a hit apiece.
Wagner and Madison Ohse
each drove in one RBI, while
Taylor, Baldwin and McCutcheon all scored a run in the
setback.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

Wildcats OSU’s Holmes hopes to introduce himself
scratch
Southern
By Jim Naveau

jnaveau@civitasmedia.com

By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

WATERFORD — The Tornadoes
dug a hole they just couldn’t get out of.
The Southern baseball team allowed
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
host Waterford to score seven runs in
the ﬁrst two innings, and the Wildcats
cruised to a 8-3 win, on Tuesday night
in Washington County.
Waterford (7-3, 7-1 TVC Hocking)
combined four hits with one error and
one walk to take a 4-0 lead after one
inning of play. Southern (3-7, 3-4) cut
the deﬁcit in half in the top of the second inning, as Billy Harmon doubled
home Clayton Wood and later came
around to score.
WHS expanded the lead to 7-2 after
scoring three runs on four hits and
one error in the bottom of the second
inning. SHS junior Trey Pickens doubled home Logan Drummer in the top
of the third inning, as the Tornadoes cut
the deﬁcit to 7-3.
The Green and White were held
scoreless for three straight frames, but
they added one run in the sixth inning
after a pair of Southern errors. The Tornadoes had just one base runner in the
ﬁnal four innings, as Waterford capped
off the 8-3 win.
Alex Branham earned the pitching
victory for the hosts, striking out four,
while allowing three runs, two earned,
on ﬁve hits and three walks in a complete game effort.
Wood suffered the loss on the mound
for the Purple and Gold, striking out
seven, while giving up eight runs, two
earned, on 11 hits and one walk in six
innings.
Pickens led the SHS offense, going
2-for-3 with one double, one single and
one RBI, while Harmon was 1-for-3 with
one double, one RBI, one run scored
and one stolen base. Wood singled once
and scored once in the setback, while
Dylan Smith singled once and Drummer scored once.
Waterford’s offense was led by Braden
Bellville and Clay Hayes, both of whom
went 3-for-4 with three singles, one run
scored and one RBI. Cameron Bosner
went 2-for-2 with one double, one single, one run scored and one RBI, Isaac
Huffman was 2-for-4 with two singles
and two runs scored, Noah Huffman
was 1-for-3 with a single and one RBI,
while Bryce Hilverding scored twice
and Riley Burns had two RBI.
Southern had four errors and four
runners left on base in the setback,
while Waterford had one error and six
runners left on base.
The Tornadoes will look for redemption on April 29, when these teams are
scheduled to meet at Star Mill Park.
The Purple and Gold return to the
diamond on Thursday, when Belpre
hosts SHS in a TVC Hocking showdown. Southern defeated the Golden
Eagles 11-2 on April 5, in Racine.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Falcons
From Page 6

Finishing just ahead of them
in 9:10 was the Southern foursome — of freshman Larry
Dunn, senior Joe Morris and
sophomores Jason Counts and
Connor Wolfe.
Dunn was third in the

COLUMBUS — Ohio State defensive end Jalyn
Holmes says he knows who he is and what kind of football player he is.
But OSU fans, and more importantly the Buckeyes’
coaches, are still in the process of deﬁning who he is as a
football player.
The former 4-star recruit from Norfolk, Va., knows
there is a reason for that. His abilities have been on
display only in short bursts in his ﬁrst two seasons in
Columbus.
“I showed people I can play. But not for long,” Holmes
said. “This year I feel like I can show people I’m established.”
He had 13 tackles and one sack in 11 games last season as the fourth man in a four-man rotation at defensive
end with Joey Bosa, Tyquan Lewis and Sam Hubbard.
He had 11 tackles in nine games as a freshman.
“You get a lot of doubters but I feel like this is the year
everybody could get to know me,” he said.
Lewis, who had a breakout season with eight sacks a
year ago, will be the starter at one defensive end position
after he recovers from off-season surgery. Hubbard, who
had 5 ½ sacks last season, will start at the other end.
Holmes – one of many OSU players trying to make a
good impression this spring with 16 starting positions
open — might be the ﬁrst player to rotate in at either
end.
“I know who I am. Sam knows who he is. Tyquan
knows who he is. I feel like we can show the world who
we really are,” Holmes said.
One person they’re not is Joey Bosa, expected to be a
high ﬁrst-round pick in the NFL draft.
Holmes has heard that name once or twice or maybe a
couple thousand times since the end of last season.
“I get that so much – on campus, at home, everybody,”
Holmes said about ﬁelding questions about how to
replace Bosa.
“You can’t really replace him. I’m Jalyn. Sam is Sam.
Tyquan knows who he is. We just have to go hard every
day. We’re going to make a name for ourselves and ﬁll
our own shoes,” he said.
He could ﬁnd himself playing behind another Bosa,
though, when freshman Nick Bosa, the younger brother
of Joey arrives for fall practice.
The 5-star defensive lineman had surgery for a torn
ACL late in his senior season but is reportedly ahead of
schedule in rehabbing the injury.
The younger Bosa is listed as a defensive end but Ohio
State defensive line coach Larry Johnson said he could
also play defensive tackle, depending on where he is
needed most.
“He can do both, so we’re going to see where the best
ﬁt is for him. We’ll put the best 11 guys on the ﬁeld and
if he’s part of that best 11, we’re going to go for it,” Johnson said.
Whether a player with two or three years at OSU has
a breakout year or Bosa is the immediate star everyone
predicts him to be, Johnson is conﬁdent they will do the
job they’re asked to do and not try to live up to the standard set by Joey Bosa.
“My philosophy is you don’t try to replace them. If you
can ﬁnd a guy to raise his game to the next level, get a
guy to raise the bar a little bit, you’re good,” he said. “I
think the talent is there, they want to be really good. As
a coach I’m trying to get them to raise their game.”

Reach Jim Naveau at 567-242-0414 or on Twitter at @Lima_Naveau.

Eastern

Don Speck | Civitas Media

Replacing Joey Bosa is a goal, but not necessarily an obsession, for Ohio State
this spring.

single, one run scored and one RBI.
Austin Coleman scored twice and
drove in one run for the Green and
From Page 6
Gold, Ethen Richmond scored twice
and stole one base, while Nate Durst,
Hill led EHS at the plate with one
Josh Brewer and Jesse Morris each
double, one single, two runs scored and
scored one run.
one RBI in three at-bats. Cameron RichDavis and Stilt each singled once in
mond was 1-for-3 with a double and three
two at-bats for the Orange and Black.
RBI, Arix was 1-for-2 with a double and
two RBI, while Swatzel was 1-for-3 with a
Belpre had three errors and left

1,600m run in 5:04.
Southern senior Joe Beegle
was second in both the discus
and shot put, throwing 128-feet
and one-inch in the disc and
45-feet and three-inches in the
shot.
The Lady Tornadoes’ top
ﬁnisher was junior Kamryn
Smith, who leapt 13-feet and 11
and one-quarter inch for third

in the long jump.
The White Falcons’ top
ﬁnisher was sophomore Lizzy
Mullins, who won the 100m
dash in 13.27.
Fairﬁeld Union swept the
team championships, amassing 179.5 points in the boys
division, which was 56 points
better than runner-up and host
Nelsonville-York (123.5).

three runners on base in the setback,
while EHS left three on base and had
zero errors.
EHS will look for the season sweep
on April 29, when these teams meet in
Belpre.
The Green and Gold return to the
diamond on Thursday, when Miller visits Tuppers Plains.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Fairﬁeld Christian was third
with 85.5, edging out Wahama
by a point-and-a-half.
Federal Hocking was ﬁfth with
57.5 points, followed by Alexander (56) and Southern (52).
The Lady Lancers only had
a dozen points for the girls
chase, with Wahama (20) in
sixth and Southern (32) in
ﬁfth.

Fairﬁeld Union again dominated the ladies’ standings,
amounting 164 points.
Fairﬁeld Christian (127),
Alexander (124) and Nelsonville-York (121) were all separated by six points.
A complete list of results can be
found on www.baumspage.com.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2106

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