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                  <text>On this
day in
history

Wildcats
surge past
South Gallia

Storms
WEATHER s 5

OPINION s 4

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 64, Volume 70

Thursday, April 21, 2016 s 50¢

MHS National Honor Society inducts new members
Staff Report

Courtesy photo

Pictured: Front : Current Members: Cory Scarberry, Sadie Fox, Tyler Fields, Jaxon Meadows, Miranda
Gillilan, Adriahna Patterson. Second Row: Lara Perrin, Haiden English, Alexandra Houdashelt, Kelsey
Powell. Third Row: New Inductees: Luke Musser, Nikki Folmer, Jordan Roush, Jade Dudding, Abigail
Watson, Dillon Mahr, Colton Lilly, Cody Bartrum. Fourth Row: Megan King, Jake Roush, Devyn Oliver,
Courtney Jones, Layne Acree, K.J. Tracy, Jared Kennedy, Danielle Morris, Jana Robinette. Fifth Row:
Savannah Smith, Kylie Dillon, T.J. Williams, Kendra Robie, Dillyn Ohlinger, Abby Eads, Makya Milhoan,
Alexis King, Hanna Young. Sixth Row: Sky Brown, Sarah Curl, Elena Musser, Gracie Hoffman, Chase
Scarberry and Raeline Reeves.

POMEROY — Meigs High School
National Honor Society conducted its
annual induction ceremony April 14.
The ceremony took place in the
Meigs High School Larry. R. Morrison gymnasium. The 2015-16 current
charter members of the National Honor
Society include: President Sadie Fox,
Vice-President Haiden English, Secretary Kelsie Powell, Treasurer Jaxon
Meadows, and members Tyler Fields,
Miranda Gillilan, Lexie Houdashelt,
Adriahna Patterson, Lara Perrin, and
Cory Scarberry.
The students inducted into the
National Honor Society have been chosen based on their qualities of scholarship, service, leadership and character.
The induction ceremony began with
a greeting from Fox, who lit the candle
of knowledge. English led everyone
in the Pledge of Allegiance. Meadows
introduced Lara Perrin, who discussed

the characteristics of scholarship; Tyler
Fields, who discussed service; Miranda
Gillian; who discussed leadership; and
Cory Scarberry, who discussed character.
Powell introduced the current charter
members of the National Honor Society.
The following new members were
tapped: Cody M. Bartrum, Sarah Curl,
Colton Dale Lilly, Dillon A. Mahr, Nikki
Folmer, Megan King, Sky Brown, Dillyn
Paige Ohlinger, Abby Kathleen Eads,
Alexis King, Courtney Jones, Jade Dudding, Jared Michael Kennedy, Jake C.
Roush, Kendra Diane Robie, Makya
Milhoan, Raeline Noelle Reeves, Gracie
Kathryn Hoffman, Chase L. Scarberry,
Angela Danielle Morris, Savannah
Smith, Jordan Roush, Luke Musser,
Layne Acree, Kylie Dillon, Abbygale
Jane Watson, K.J. Tracy, Jana Faye Robinette, Hanna Young, Devyn Ann Oliver,
Tyler Jacob Williams and Elena Musser.
See SOCIETY | 5

Courtesy photo

Volunteers at the Syracuse Community Center happily accept
a donation from Home National Bank.

Bank donates
to local center
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

SYRACUSE — Volunteers from the Syracuse
Community Center was recognized recently by
Home National Bank for their ongoing efforts
toward improvements for the center.
“With continuing support for our community,
HNB is proud to donate $1,000 to the Syracuse
Community Center,” said Executive Vice President John Hoback. “The volunteers do so much
for their community, from hosting yards sales and
dinners to allowing the public to entertain with
weddings, parties and reunions. This is our way of
showing appreciation for all the hard work the volunteers do, the countless hours spent in continuing to keep the center looking great.”
The building served as Syracuse Elementary
School from the time it was completed in the early
1930s until 2002, when the elementary schools in
the Southern Local School District were consolidated. No longer needed for use as a school, the
building was bought by the late Robert L. Wingett,
a former student. After purchasing the property,
Wingett transferred it to the original owners, Syracuse Village, for use as a community center.
Today, the building stands a tribute to historic
preservation, philanthropy and the volunteers who
See BANK | 5

— NEWS
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Baseball: 6
Schedule: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 2
Classified: 8
Comics: 9

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

Courtesy photos

Justice Paul Pfeifer (left) discusses with Justice Terrence O’Donnell at Meigs High School as Chief Justice Maureen O’Connor (right)
answers questions of area students.

Justices confer with area students
By Dean Wright
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Students in Gallia and Meigs
counties took part in a
historic event Wednesday
as the Ohio Supreme
Court visited Meigs High
School as part of its offsite court public program.
The program features
supreme court justices
engaged in actual court
arguments that would create interpretations of law
to reverberate throughout
the state.
Justices addressed students from Meigs High
School, Southern High
School, Eastern High
School and Mid-Valley
Christian School. South
Gallia and Ohio Valley
Christian students also
attended the discussion
and case arguments. Justices had a question-andanswer session with students before arguments
were held. This was the
ﬁrst recorded visit of the
Ohio Supreme Court to
Meigs County.

INSIDE
Court examines rape DNA testing delay, see page 3.

The Ohio Supreme Court visited Meigs High School in Pomeroy Wednesday to argue cases as part of
the off-site court public program.

Chief Justice Maureen
O’Connor addressed students ﬁrst and introduced
her fellow justices. All justices gave brief introductions of themselves and

their career highlights.
One student in the
crowd asked why the
justices originally became
lawyers and what led
them to pursue careers

in law. Some justices
responded that they had
not originally considered
careers in law. One was a
See JUSTICES | 5

�NATION

2 Thursday, April 21, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Warming type
of weather we
prefer — for now
By Seth Borenstein
AP Science Writer

Manuel Balce Ceneta | AP

Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee Chair Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, right, accompanied by the committee’s
ranking member Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash. holds a bumper sticker during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington on
Wednesday. The Senate approved a wide-ranging energy bill that would promote a variety of energy sources and speed federal
approval of projects to export liquefied natural gas to Europe and Asia.

Bill to promote energy sources
By Matthew Daly

energy, help Americans save more
money and bring us one step closer to becoming a global energy
WASHINGTON — The Senate superpower,” Murkowski said.
overwhelmingly approved a farThe bill would boost renewreaching energy bill Wednesday
ables such as solar and wind
that reﬂects signiﬁcant changes
power, as well as hydropower,
in U.S. oil and natural gas produc- geothermal energy and even critition over the past decade and
cal minerals such as cobalt, berylboosts alternative energy sources lium and lithium that are used in
such as wind and solar power.
cell phones, computers and other
The bill also would speed
electronics.
federal approval of projects to
The bill also would encourage
export liqueﬁed natural gas to
so-called clean-coal technology,
Europe and Asia, where prices are including projects to capture
higher than in the U.S. following
carbon dioxide generated by coala yearlong boom in domestic gas
ﬁred power plants, and increase
production.
public-private partnerships to
With its 85-12 vote, the Senate develop advanced nuclear techbacked its ﬁrst ambitious energy
nologies.
bill in nearly a decade.
The measure now must be recSen. Lisa Murkowski, an Alaska onciled with a House-passed verRepublican and chairwoman of
sion that boosts fossil fuels such
the Senate Energy and Natural
as oil, coal and natural gas. PresiResources Committee, said the
dent Barack Obama has threatbill represented “energy modern- ened to veto the House measure.
ization” on a broad scale, reﬂectSen. Maria Cantwell of Washing almost a decade’s worth of
ington state, the senior Democrat
changes in technologies and mar- on the energy panel, called energy
kets in the energy sector.
“the lifeblood of our economy”
“Moving forward with this act
and said the Senate bill would
will help America produce more
push the nation toward “cleaner,

Associated Press

more efﬁcient, more cost-effective
and renewable energy sources.”
Congress last approved broad
energy measures in 2005 and
2007, during the George W.
Bush administration. The two
laws aimed to boost U.S. energy
independence by cutting reliance
on imported oil, boosting fuel
economy standards for cars and
imposing a mandate for ethanol in
gasoline.
Since then, the U.S. energy landscape has changed dramatically,
as improved drilling techniques,
including hydraulic fracturing,
have sparked a yearslong boom
that has pushed the United States
toward become the world’s top
producer of oil and natural gas.
Hydraulic fracturing, also known
as fracking, involves injecting
water mixed with sand and chemicals into underground rock formations, allowing oil and gas to ﬂow.
The catch-all measure would
update building codes to increase
efﬁciency, strengthen electric-grid
safety standards and reauthorize
a half-billion-dollar conservation
fund that protects parks and other
public lands.

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The Blacklist "Cape May" Game of Silence "Hurricane
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Moriarty plots to put Sherlock in motion,
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18 (WGN) Blue Bloods
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30 (SPIKE)
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34 (USA)
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Anderson Cooper 360
The Eighties (N)
CNN Tonight
Castle "Slice of Death"
NBA Basketball Playoffs Oklahoma City Thunder at Dallas Mavericks (L) NBA Basketball Playoffs G.S./Hou. (L)
Back to the Future Michael J. Fox. A teenager roars back through
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WASHINGTON — Global warming has mostly made
the weather more pleasant for Americans over the last
40 years, which may explain why much of the public
doesn’t rank climate change as big a threat as do scientists and the rest of the world, a new study suggests.
But that perceived beneﬁt of global warming — mostly milder winters — will soon be outweighed by more
oppressive summer heat, according to a study in the
journal Nature that’s dividing the scientiﬁc community.
“Americans are getting the wrong signal from yearround weather about whether they should be concerned
about climate change,” said study lead author Patrick
Egan, a public policy professor at New York University.
“They’re getting the good parts and haven’t had to pay
the price of the bad part.”
At least, not yet.
If heat-trapping gases aren’t controlled, nearly nine
out of 10 Americans will have noticeably worse weather
— not better — by the end of the century, especially in
the summer, the study found.
To try to understand America’s reluctance to tackle
climate change, Egan and Megan Mullin, an environmental policy professor at Duke University, created a
weather preference index for Americans based on past
studies that look at where people move, taking employment and other factors into account. It is essentially
calculated on where people choose to live.
And all things being equal, the average American
prefers the weather to be warmer in the winter and less
hot and humid in the summer. In other words, Miami,
San Diego and Phoenix, which topped the chart of the
new index. At the bottom are Pittsburgh, Cleveland and
Detroit.
Over the past 40 years, America’s weather has trended closer toward Miami than Pittsburgh.
“For the average American, the daily weather has
gotten better,” Mullin said. They like going coatless in
December, as many did this past year.
For 99 percent of Americans, winters have warmed
by 1 degree Fahrenheit a decade in the winter and only
a seventh of a degree a decade in the summer, the study
found.
America “may have been lulled into complacency
when it comes to the impacts of climate change,” said
Penn State climate scientist Michael Mann, who wasn’t
part of the study but called it a solid analysis. He and
other scientists said the study raises interesting points,
but climate change has other major impacts on people.
It can trigger droughts, ﬂoods and heavy rainfalls;
increase sea levels; make food and water scarce; and
spread insect-borne diseases.
Other scientists dismissed the study. Matthew
Nisbet, who studies climate communications at Northeastern University, said it was seriously ﬂawed. He said
looking at where people live is a not a good indicator of
the weather people prefer.
Nisbet and University of Oklahoma meteorology
professor Renee McPherson said politics, more than
weather, colors people’s perception of climate change,
according to studies and surveys.
Critics also noted that the study doesn’t deal with
extreme weather like this week’s downpours in Houston,
California’s four-year drought or Superstorm Sandy.
George Mason University professor Ed Maibach said
surveys show that nearly 40 percent of Americans say
extreme weather hit their community in the past year.
“People moved from New Orleans because of Katrina,
not because they thought Houston, Dallas or Oklahoma
City had better evening temperatures,” McPherson said.
Mullin and Egan said their study could not incorporate the effect of extreme weather on people’s preferences, adding that a key message is that scientists
should talk more about extreme weather than average
temperatures.
According to Kevin Trenberth, climate analysis chief
at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, hot
summers are more of a problem than the study suggests.
The ﬁres, droughts and heat waves of a record hot 2012
cost $75 billion. In an email, he added: “It is unconscionable to say the climate has improved when the only
reason is because one can use air conditioning.”
Online: Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature

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400 (HBO) Hudson, Eva Mendes. A marketing executive at an electric Game With

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�LOCAL/STATE/NATION

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel
appreciates your input to the community calendar. To make sure
items can receive proper attention,
all information should be received
by the newspaper at least ﬁve business days prior to an event. All
coming events print on a spaceavailable basis and in chronological order. Events can be emailed
to:TDSnews@civitasmedia.com.
Thursday, April 21
POMEROY —Meigs County
Retired Teachers will meet at the
Meigs Senior Center in Pomeroy
at noon for lunch. Lenora Teifheit
will speak on community health
services and Middleport Middle
School Choir will provide a music
program. For reservations call 740992-3214 by April 19. Guests are
welcome to attend.
Saturday, April 23
HARRISONVILLE — Jimmy

Howson, Country Gospel recording
artist and host of Sunday Morning Memories on WATH radio in
Athens, will be in concert at the
Harrison Presbyterian Church on
St.Rt. 143 in Harrisonville at 7
p.m. Refreshments will follow.
RUTLAND — The 16th annual
Leading Creek Stream Sweep will
take place from 9 a.m. to noon at
the Meigs Conservation Area on
New Lima Road between Rutland
and Harrisonville. Trash bags, safety vests and gloves are provided
for volunteers, and pizza will be
served afterwards. Youth or other
community groups are welcome.
For more details or registration
forms contact SWCD at 740-9924282.
Tuesday, April 26
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Community Association will
meet at 9 a.m. at the First Baptist
Church in Middleport. Please use

the Main St. entrance into the fellowship hall.
Wednesday, April 27
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Family and Children First
Council, including Meigs County
Commissioners, will be meeting
for their annual shared planning
process from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the
Ohio Valley Christian Assembly
Camp in Pomeroy.
Thursday, April 28
POMEROY – Free pond clinic
sponsored by the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District on
beginning at 6 p.m. at Buckley’s
Pond,located off Rocksprings Road,
Pomeroy, near the Arbors Nursing
Home. Clinic include topics site
selection, construction, stocking
and maintenance. Pre-registration
is required for this free clinic by
calling Meigs SWCD at 740-9924282.

Sonshine Circle honors Hart’s birthday
Staff Report

RACINE — The April
meeting of the Sonshine
Circle met at the Bethany
United Methodist Church
on April 14.
After the group signed
several cards for various
shut-ins, the meeting was
opened with devotions by
Evelyn Foreman. The secretary report was given
by Marilyn Cooper and
approved by the group.
The treasurer report was
given by Ann Zirkle and
also approved by the
group.
It was decided the

noodle-making project, a
popular fundraiser, was
going to be put on hold
once again due to lack of
volunteers for the noodlemaking process. Disposal
of the equipment was
discussed, and it was
decided the fans and noodle presses would be sold.
Anyone interested in
purchasing the aforementioned equipment may
contact Kathryn Hart.
It was decided the
group would sponsor a
dinner on Saturday following a funeral at the
American Legion facility
in Racine.

Hart announced the
school supplies donated
at the March meeting
were delivered to the
Southern Elementary
School and were very
much appreciated.
Upcoming events
planned are a yard sale/
bake sale in June and a
new stuffed animal donation. The donations are
to be brought to the June
meeting and will be given
to law enforcement ofﬁcers in the community for
distribution to distressed
children. Each member
is to bring a favorite dessert or ﬁnger food for the

June meeting.
A surprise birthday
celebration was held following the meeting for
Hart. Birthday refreshments were served to the
following; Ann Zirkle,
Evelyn Foreman, Marilyn
Cooper, Hazel McKelvey,
Louise Frank, Ruth
Simpson, Betty Profﬁtt, Letha Profﬁtt, Jan
McKee, Denise Holman,
Blondena Rainer, Martha
King and Edie Hubbard.
Other members celebrating April birthdays were
Denise Holman and
Letha Profﬁtt.

Hillary Clinton close to nomination prize
By Ken Thomas
and Julie Pace

he’ll have to perform well in the
round of primaries in PennsylvaAssociated Press
nia, Maryland, Connecticut, Rhode
Island and Delaware on Tuesday
WASHINGTON — Hillary
and in California’s huge contest on
Clinton, the nearly unstoppable
June 7.
Democrat, and Republican frontHis chief rival, Texas Sen. Ted
runner Donald Trump accelerated Cruz, has no mathematical path
Wednesday toward Northeast
to getting the nomination through
primaries on an increasingly direct primary voting. But he sees a winpath to presidential nominations
dow to snatch the nomination from
after trouncing party challengers in Trump at the convention, and his
New York.
campaign is working feverishly to
Clinton, now 81 percent of the
line up delegates who would supway toward clinching the Demoport him if Trump fails to prevail
cratic nomination that eluded her
on a ﬁrst ballot.
eight years ago, can lose every
The side-by-side GOP efforts
remaining contest and still prevail. at this late stage — with Trump
Her sweeping victory in the New
amassing primary victories while
York primary called into question
Cruz digs for the support of delthe durability of Bernie Sanders’
egates who could settle the nomirival campaign and left him with
nation — are unprecedented in
severely limited options for overrecent presidential campaigns and
taking her.
add to the deeply uncertain nature
While Trump strengthened his
of the race.
hand, he is still far from in the
Trump was rallying in Indiana
clear.
and Maryland on Wednesday while
Trump is focused heavily on
Cruz campaigned in Hershey,
clinching the Republican nominaPennsylvania, trying to brush off
tion through voters’ balloting in
his Tuesday shellacking in New
state primaries, thus avoiding a
York where he failed to pick up a
contested national convention in
single delegate. With trademark
Cleveland in July. The businesssarcasm, he played down Trump’s
man’s win in his home state keeps
win, saying the mogul hoped to
him on a path to securing the
convince people that “Pennsylvania
is a suburb of Manhattan.”
1,237 delegates he needs, though

“Donald, with a characteristic
display of humility, declared this
race is over,” Cruz said. “Manhattan has spoken. And if the rest of
the voters would quietly go home
now and allow him to give the general election to Hillary, all would be
better.”
Meanwhile, Republican leaders
gathered at an oceanside resort in
Florida for the Republican National
Committee’s spring meeting.
Trump has argued that the complicated state-by-state presidential
nomination process is “rigged”
against him.
Trump sent advisers to the meeting, including convention manager
Paul Manafort and political director Rick Wiley, to court prospective delegates. Cruz sent aides for
the same purpose.
While the messy nomination
ﬁght will be a focus of the meeting,
party leaders are painfully aware
that any new changes could fuel
Trump’s charges of an unfair system. Priebus has discouraged such
action this week.
“All they are going to hear is
that the RNC changed the rules,”
said Shak Hill, Cruz’s Virginia
campaign chairman, warning that
even the hint of rule changes at the
Florida meeting would alarm GOP
activists.

Thursday, April 21, 2016 3

High court
considers debate
over inmate’s file
By Andrew WelshHuggins
Associated Press

COLUMBUS — The
Ohio Supreme Court is
deciding whether police
departments can shield
the complete ﬁles of a
long-closed criminal
case until all chance of
appeals are exhausted,
usually because the
defendant is dead.
A public records
lawsuit contends that
the position taken by
the Columbus Police
Department and backed
by the local prosecutor
is part of a trend around
the state of agencies
refusing to release such
records.
The court, holding a
special session in Meigs
County in southern
Ohio, heard from both
sides Wednesday. A
decision isn’t expected
for months.
At issue is an attempt
by the Ohio Innocence
Project to review the
case of a man sentenced
to 38 years in prison
for killing a woman
in 2005. The project
doesn’t represent defendant Adam Saleh but
wants to review the
records, which Saleh
alleges will bolster his
claim that he didn’t do
it.
Evidence released
through public records
has resulted in numerous exonerations of
wrongfully convicted
inmates, open records
attorney Fred Gittes
argued in a ﬁling last
June.
“These exonerations
have not weakened our
system of justice; they
have strengthened it,
by providing another
device for correcting
the unavoidable missteps of a system that
can never attain perfection, but should always
strive for it,” Gittes
said.
The lawsuit argued
that changes in state
Supreme Court evidence rules have
addressed concerns
raised by older court
rulings regarding the
release of case ﬁles. The
lawsuit wants the court
to order Columbus to
make the records immediately available.
A 2000 appeals court
ruling said police aren’t
obligated to release
the ﬁles without proof
that no further appeals
are possible, “e.g., the
defendant’s death.”
Police departments
and their records divisions don’t know all
the facts behind investigative ﬁles, including
what witnesses might
have been promised
conﬁdentiality, Paula
Lloyd, an assistant
Columbus city attorney,
wrote in a court ﬁling
last July.
Open records law
“must be balanced
against the compelling
need to let police investigators do their jobs
effectively,” Lloyd said.
Because Saleh’s conviction was based in
part on the testimony
of several jailhouse
informants, Saleh
contends that a full
review of the case
could exonerate him,

COURT
EXAMINES
RAPE DNA
TESTING
DELAY
COLUMBUS
(AP) — The Ohio
Supreme Court is
considering a request
by prosecutors and
advocates for rape
victims to reinstate
charges against
a Cleveland man
accused of attacking
a woman in 1993.
The groups say
a lower court’s
dismissal of the
charges creates a
legal precedent that
could jeopardize
thousands of
unsolved rapes being
re-investigated thanks
to improved DNA
testing.
At issue is the
2013 indictment of
Demetrius Jones for
a 1993 rape based on
evidence found when
an old rape kit was
tested.
Jones’ attorneys say
investigators knew
from the beginning
that Jones was a
suspect and closed
the case after a
limited investigation.
They say prosecutors
never questioned
Jones’ mother, a key
witness for him who
died before the new
charges were brought.

according to the lawsuit.
Several justices
seemed skeptical of
Lloyd’s arguments on
behalf of Columbus
police.
“Your argument
just seems ridiculous
at this point,” Justice
Paul Pfeifer told Lloyd
Wednesday. “There’s
no end in view, they’re
always protected.”
Lloyd said it’s possible the records could
be available if a defendant was released from
prison.
Justice Maureen
O’Connor expressed
frustration with Gittes’
arguments, saying she
couldn’t pin him down
on what information —
such as a conﬁdential
witness statement —
would or wouldn’t be
released.
Gittes said he just
wants criminal case
ﬁles to be subject to the
open records law, which
includes exceptions for
the release of certain
documents.
Ohio is not alone in
restricting the release of
police records, but many
states, including Florida,
Georgia and Idaho, generally require the release
of closed ﬁles.
Saleh, 29, was convicted in the death of
aspiring model Julie
Popovich, last seen
leaving a bar near the
Ohio State University
campus in August 2005.
The skeletal remains of
the 20-year-old woman
were found three weeks
later in suburban
Westerville.
Franklin County
Prosecutor Ron O’Brien
has said that suggesting
Saleh is innocent is a
“gross misrepresentation” of the evidence
against him.

www.mydailysentinel.com

�E ditorial
4 Thursday, April 21, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Climate
change surveys
still useless
By Tom Harris
Guest Columnist

Public opinion polls are regularly cited by
politicians and activists to support government
action on climate change.
Yet these surveys rarely make meaningful
contributions to the public policy debate since
they ask about issues that do not matter, while
ignoring issues that do matter.
Gallup’s annual environmental poll, the results
of which were released throughout March, is a
case in point.
It does not matter whether Americans have
heard that “scientists recently reported that
2015 was the Earth’s warmest year on record,”
as Gallup misleadingly informed respondents
in the preamble to one of its survey questions.
While some scientists say 2015 temperatures were
exceptional, many others do not. They understand
that, due to the uncertainties in the early part of
the record, no one knows if temperatures today
are higher than in earlier decades.
But the issue is irrelevant anyways. What
difference does it make if one year exceeded the
previous warmest year by hundredths or even
tenths of a degree? Changes of that magnitude are
not noticeable in the real world and appear only
after complicated manipulation of the data.
Similarly, Gallup’s question about whether
Americans “generally believe these reports
[about 2015’s supposed record] are accurate or
not accurate” has no bearing on public policy
formulation. The accuracy of computations of
trivial changes is obviously unimportant.
Gallup asked respondents about the causes
of the supposed “record temperatures in 2015.”
Again, aside from scientists working in the ﬁeld,
who cares? The reasons for such tiny variations
are not relevant to policy discussions.
The question that does matter is:
“Will emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) from
human activities cause dangerous global warming
and other climate problems in the foreseeable
future?”
It is only future climate changes that should be
of concern to policy makers. The past is history.
We cannot change it.
And for the issue to be worthy of public debate,
let alone a billion dollars a day, the amount
now spent around the world on climate ﬁnance,
any forecast temperature rise would have to be
expected to be dangerous.
Even then, we would have to know that such
warming, if it occurs, will probably be caused by
our CO2 emissions. The issue at hand is not a
generic “human-caused climate change,” one of
the possible answers provided by Gallup in its
survey. The debate, and indeed the subject of the
Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan (CPP),
concerns one particular type of human-caused
climate change, namely that supposed caused by
our CO2 emissions.
The answer from most of the public to the
above hypothetical poll question would have to
be, “I don’t know.” How could they? Even the
world’s leading scientists don’t really know the
answer. “Climate is one of the most challenging
open problems in modern science,” according
to University of Western Ontario applied
mathematician Dr. Chris Essex, an expert in the
mathematical models that are the basis of climate
concerns. “Some knowledgeable scientists believe
that the climate problem can never be solved.”
A question that would make sense to poll
Americans on would be:
“How much are you prepared to pay in increased
taxes and other costs to reduce America’s CO2
emissions to encourage other countries to follow
suit so as to possibly avert dangerous climate
change that may someday happen?”
That is the real question. Environmental
Protection Agency Administrator Gina McCarthy
has admitted that plans such as the CPP will have
no measurable impact on global climate. She has
repeated informed Congressional hearings that the
purpose of the CPP is to set an example for the
world to follow.
But developing countries, the source of most of
today’s emissions, have indicated that they have
no intention of limiting their development for
‘climate protection’ purposes. In fact, all United
Nations climate change treaties contain an out
clause for developing nations so that they need not
make reductions if it interferes with their “ﬁrst
and overriding priorities” of development and
poverty alleviation.
Most people would pay nothing at all to support
an improbable hope that other countries follow
America to possibly avert a hypothetical future
problem. But pollsters have never asked the public
about this important issue. It’s about time they
did.
Tom Harris is executive director of the Ottawa, Canada-based
International Climate Science Coalition.

THEIR VIEW

What did you do this weekend?
People constantly ask me
about an hour and a half
where I get ideas for Deer
late. And the adventure was
In Headlines, and somejust beginning.
times it’s tough. But once in
My days are, to say the
a while, the idea just plays
least, packed. Juggling the
out right in front of you.
schedule of work, clients,
Last weekend I contracthome life and taking care of
ed a tree service to remove
Deer in my father requires a delicate
a large maple from my yard. Headlines balance of schedule that’s
There was nothing easy
pretty easy to derail if I’m
Gery L.
about the job. The tree was
not careful.
Deer
about 8 feet in diameter at
Already behind, the tree
the trunk and close to 50
crew was a bit overwhelmed
feet high. Making the task more
by the size of the tree when they
perilous was its position, wedged
arrived. Apparently they’d been
between my house and studio
told this would be a one-day job
ofﬁce building with very little
but clearly there was no way. But,
room for error.
undaunted, they got to work. I
Needless to say, I was nervous. I have to say, watching a guy wieldwas already unhappy about having ing a chainsaw while swinging
to remove the tree, as it was one
from a rope 45 feet in the air will
of my favorites on my property.
get your heart going. Sometimes
But it’s condition and proximity to it’s better not to watch.
the house left me no alternatives.
Little by little, the tree started
Friday morning, the agreed
to lose limbs here and there. In
start time for work came and went the meantime, I picked up Dad
and the crew had not yet arrived.
and lunch and we sat outside in
Shortly after, I got a call from the
the ﬁrst warm, spring air of the
contractor letting me know that he season and watch the work. Dad
was having mechanical problems
reminisced about his boyhood
with one of the trucks and didn’t
in the hills of southern Ohio and
know whether he’d make it or not. mused that these guys wouldn’t
With an incredibly short winhave known what to do without
dow of time to complete the
chainsaws. I’d probably agree, but
project, I offered my own heavy
I’m sure glad they had them.
truck to use as a container for the
Later, it was time to empty the
chipped brush, standing in for his
truck. I got dad situated in the
broken down vehicle. I also protruck and off we went. My 1967
vided a disposal site for the wood. International grain truck is no
So, we agreed on a compensatory
Porsche. It’s slow, but powerful –
trade and the crew arrived only
or it was, right up until the radia-

tor blew on my ﬁrst run. We made
it to the farm and dumped the ﬁrewood but the radiator was shot.
My brother arrived and we
patched it but that didn’t hold
because of a stuck thermostat.
Now late in the day, neither the
tree nor the truck was going to
be ﬁnished today. We’d all have to
pick up tomorrow.
Saturday morning came and the
guys were back to work. Now they
were down to the massive trunk
of the tree and I was off to get a
radiator. Fortunately, my brother
had an identical radiator in one of
his old trucks, so we pulled it and
installed it into mine.
While we were ﬁnishing the
radiator repair, a large chunk of
the tree trunk fell on the sidewalk,
crushing one full section into gravel. To top that off, on my second
run to empty the wood and chips,
the clutch went out on the truck,
stranding it and me at the farm;
enough for today.
Now, here it is Monday morning. Parts are ordered for the truck
(from Amazon, believe it or not),
the largest mass of the tree is still
in the yard, though it’s starting
to look more like ﬁrewood now,
and my work week is in full swing
again. So what did you do this
weekend?
Gery L. Deer is an independent columnist and
business writer. Deer In Headlines is distributed
by GLD Enterprises Communications, Ltd. More
at www.gerydeer.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Thursday,
April 21, the 112th day of
2016. There are 254 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On April 21, 1926,
Britain’s Queen Elizabeth
II was born in Mayfair,
London; she was the ﬁrst
child of The Duke and
Duchess of York, who
later became King George
VI and the Queen Mother.
Christened Elizabeth
Alexandra Mary, the
princess became monarch
upon the death of her
father in 1952, beginning a 64-year-old reign
surpassing that of Queen
Victoria.
On this date:
In 1649, the Maryland
Toleration Act, providing
for freedom of worship for
all Christians, was passed
by the Maryland assembly.
In 1789, John Adams
was sworn in as the ﬁrst
vice president of the
United States.
In 1816, Charlotte
Bronte, author of “Jane
Eyre,” was born in Thornton, England.

In 1836, an army of Texans led by Sam Houston
defeated the Mexicans
at San Jacinto, assuring
Texas independence.
In 1910, author Samuel
Langhorne Clemens, better known as Mark Twain,
died in Redding, Connecticut, at age 74.
In 1930, ﬁre broke out
inside the overcrowded
Ohio Penitentiary in
Columbus, killing 332
inmates.
In 1940, the quiz show
that asked the “$64 question,” ”Take It or Leave
It,” premiered on CBS
Radio.
In 1955, the Jerome
Lawrence-Robert Lee
play “Inherit the Wind,”
inspired by the Scopes
trial of 1925, opened at
the National Theatre in
New York.
In 1960, Brazil inaugurated its new capital,
Brasilia, transferring the
seat of national government from Rio de Janeiro.
In 1976, clinical trials
of the swine ﬂu vaccine
began in Washington, D.C.
In 1986, a rediscovered

vault in Chicago’s Lexington Hotel that was linked
to Al Capone was opened
during a widely watched
live TV special hosted
by Geraldo Rivera; aside
from a few bottles and a
sign, the vault turned out
to be empty.
In 1996, oddsmaker
Jimmy “The Greek” Snyder died in Las Vegas at
age 77.
Ten years ago: Nouri
al-Maliki was nominated
by the Shiites as Iraq’s
prime minister after
outgoing Prime Minister
Ibrahim al-Jaafari gave up
his bid for another term.
Chinese President Hu Jintao (hoo jin-tow) wrapped
up his U.S. tour with a
visit to Yale University in
New Haven, Connecticut.
Miss Kentucky Tara Elizabeth Conner was crowned
Miss USA during the pageant in Baltimore.
Today’s Birthdays:
Britain’s Queen Elizabeth
II is 90. Actress-comedianwriter Elaine May is 84.
Actor Charles Grodin is
81. Actor Reni Santoni
is 78. Anti-death penalty

activist Sister Helen
Prejean is 77. Singermusician Iggy Pop is 69.
Actress Patti LuPone is
67. Actor Tony Danza is
65. Actor James Morrison
is 62. Actress Andie MacDowell is 58. Rock singer
Robert Smith (The Cure)
is 57. Rock musician
Michael Timmins (Cowboy Junkies) is 57. Actor
John Cameron Mitchell is
53. Rapper Michael Franti
(Spearhead) is 50. Actor
Toby Stephens is 47. Rock
singer-musician Glen Hansard (The Frames) is 46.
Actor Rob Riggle is 46.
Comedian Nicole Sullivan
is 46. Football playerturned-actor Brian White
is 43. Olympic gold medal
pairs ﬁgure skater Jamie
Sale is 39. Rock musician
David Brenner (Theory of
a Deadman) is 38. Actor
James McAvoy is 37. NFL
quarterback Tony Romo
is 36. Actor Terrence
J is 34. Actress Gugu
Mbatha-Raw is 33. Actor
Christoph (cq) Sanders
is 28. Rock singer Sydney
Sierota (Echosmith) is 19.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

your goals,” O’Connor
said.
Justice Terrence
From Page 1
O’Donnell emphasized
that being an attorney
teacher, another a
and a justice often
police ofﬁcer and
means an individual
another a military
needs strong verbal
service member, as
and written communiwell as registered
cation skills. He said
nurse. Justices
being a justice is an
encouraged students
intellectual pursuit
to take advantage
and that being on
of opportunities no
one’s toes is integral
matter where they
to a position on the
may arise. A common Ohio Supreme Court.
theme emerged that
Sometimes oral skill
the want and desire to may be integral to
winning a favorable
help individuals and
affect lives was shared decision for a client.
Not all law work is
among the justices.
Problems needed solv- adversarial, many
ing, attorneys, judges attorneys work with
and justices are often contracts or help
the arbiters of the fate oversee estates of the
those who have died.
of everyday people,
“The notion of
they said.
going
to law school
“Remember, the
is
something
that
only person who can
will give you an abilshut a door for your
ity to think logically,
future is yourself by
an ability to analyze
doing something at
clearly and to express
this age, something
yourself,” O’Donnell
in college, something said. “Those are skills
later on that is going
that will serve in any
to preclude you from
endeavor that you get
moving and attaining into for a career.”

Society
From Page 1

Lexie Houdashelt led the pledge to
induct new members and a reception
was held to honor new members and
their families following the ceremony.

Bank
From Page 1

not only saw what the
building once was, but
what it could be.
The center houses
cultural artifacts and
provides a venue for recreational and educational
activities for the commu-

8 AM

2 PM

71°

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.

83°
55°
70°
46°
89° in 1976
25° in 1926

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
1.00
2.23
11.13
12.28

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
6:43 a.m.
8:12 p.m.
7:50 p.m.
6:38 a.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Full

Last

Apr 22 Apr 29

First

May 6 May 13

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

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

Major
---12:27p
1:13p
2:02p
2:53p
3:47p
4:41p

Minor
5:54p
6:38p
7:24p
8:13p
9:05p
9:59p
10:54p

WEATHER HISTORY
Several hundred people died when
ﬂooding reached the Mississippi
Delta in Louisiana on April 21, 1927.
The ﬂood forced 500,000 residents
from their homes.

SATURDAY

Moderate

High

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

High

0 50 100 150 200

Chillicothe
71/56

300

Portsmouth
75/57

500

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 12.18 -0.18
Marietta
34 17.00 -0.14
Parkersburg
36 21.66 -0.20
Belleville
35 12.43 +0.10
Racine
41 12.85 -0.32
Point Pleasant
40 24.49 -0.34
Gallipolis
50 12.23 none
Huntington
50 25.98 -0.35
Ashland
52 34.06 -0.34
Lloyd Greenup 54 11.96 -0.35
Portsmouth
50 19.40 -0.70
Maysville
50 33.90 +0.30
Meldahl Dam
51 19.30 -0.30
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

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.

BBT (NYSE) - 35.21
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 20.30
Pepsico (NYSE) - 102.44
Premier (NASDAQ) - 15.96
Rockwell (NYSE) - 115.62
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) - 13.17
Royal Dutch Shell - 52.54
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 18.65
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 69.22
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 11.12
WesBanco (NYSE) - 32.85
Worthington (NYSE) - 37.38
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
April 20, 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.

Ashland
78/59
Grayson
77/58

SUNDAY

MONDAY

77°
52°

TUESDAY

80°
56°

Partly sunny and
pleasant

Considerable
cloudiness

73°
55°
Considerable
cloudiness

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
76/58

Murray City
72/55
Belpre
76/58

Athens
74/56

St. Marys
76/59

Parkersburg
75/56

Coolville
74/57

Elizabeth
77/58

Spencer
78/58

Buffalo
77/58

Ironton
78/59

WEDNESDAY

78°
48°

Cloudy and warm

Wilkesville
74/56
POMEROY
Jackson
75/57
74/56
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
76/58
75/57
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
70/56
GALLIPOLIS
76/58
77/58
75/57

South Shore Greenup
77/59
74/56

Primary pollutant:

Logan
72/56

McArthur
73/55

Lucasville
74/58
Very High

Sunshine

Adelphi
72/57

Very High

Primary: mulberry, oak, other
Mold: 414
Moderate

Plat Books for sale

70°
45°

Cloudy with a couple
of showers

Waverly
72/57

Pollen: 518

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Fri.
6:42 a.m. Environmental Services
8:13 p.m.
8:45 p.m. AIR QUALITY
7:09 a.m. 0

New

Minor
5:33a
6:16a
7:02a
7:50a
8:41a
9:35a
10:29a

POLLEN &amp; MOLD

Low

SOLUNAR TABLE
Major
11:44a
12:05a
12:50a
1:39a
2:30a
3:22a
4:16a

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

Primary: cladosporium

MOON PHASES

FRIDAY

3

Low

MIDDLEPORT — Middleport Village will have curbside collection of large, unwanted items now through
April 22. From the village limits (Dairy Queen down to
2nd Street), items like carpet, furniture, bicycles and
scrap lumber may be placed on the curb for removal. Not
accepted are hazardous materials, electronics, chemicals
and liquids. Residents are asked to call the village garage
at 740-992-5711. with questions about clean-up days or
for assistance moving large items.

AEP (NYSE) - 63.70
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 24.35
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) 114.65
Big Lots (NYSE) - 46.96
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 47.04
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 38.59
Century Alum (NASDAQ) - 8.52
Champion (NASDAQ) - 0.131
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 49.06
Collins (NYSE) - 93.99
DuPont (NYSE) - 64.73
US Bank (NYSE) - 42.73
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 31.15
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 46.94
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 64.23
Kroger (NYSE) - 36.95
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 78.16
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 83.16
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 22.30

EXTENDED FORECAST

67°

HEALTH TODAY

Middleport village curbside
collection April 18-22

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9922155 Ext. 2551.

A shower and t-storm around today. A few showers,
a t-storm early tonight. High 76° / Low 58°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

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.

LOCAL STOCKS

72°
50°
61°

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

Dean Wright can be reached at
(740 446-2342, Ext. 2103.

election headquarters for
Syracuse and Minersville.
A traditional Election
Day dinner brings in not
only precinct voters, but
many people from other
parts of the county who
come on election day
“just for the chicken and
noodles.”

8 PM

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

guard the legal system
and that encompasses
considering criminal
cases as well as others.
One student asked
judges if they had
ever felt like walking
away from their position. Justices replied
that this was the kind
of job from which
one does not walk
away. Sure, they are
frustrated some days,
however, the public
needs them and that
is not something to be
taken lightly.
Justices visited
Meigs County’s ﬁrst
court house after
having a lunch with
participating attorneys and the Meigs
Bar Association. The
old Meigs County
courthouse rests in
Chester and is the
oldest standing courthouse in Ohio and the
Northwest Territory,
according to volunteers with courthouse
preservation.

Throughout the school year, the 20152016 National Honor Society members
participated in monthly Lutheran
mobile food pantries, volunteered at
Meigs Elementary School Fall Fun Festival and Arbors at Pomeroy’s Fall Festival, and helped hunt Easter eggs with
kindergartners.

nity. The facility is busy
almost daily with yoga
or painting classes, club
meetings and fundraising
events. A speciﬁc room
on the second ﬂoor is
designated for WJOS-TV,
the Emergency Planning
Commission (Blue Med
Response System).
The building also
serves Meigs County as

TODAY

WEATHER

“I think one of the
other motivators (to
enter law) for all of
us is that lawyers help
people solve problems
that they could not
solve themselves,”
O’Connor said. “If
people did not have
problems, we wouldn’t
have jobs. People
get themselves in
situations sometimes
unwittingly and sometimes for a variety of
reasons. I’m not just
talking about criminal
issues. Nobody really
wants to go to court,
but sometimes they
have to go to court to
solve their problems
and they can’t negotiate without help and
that’s one of the things
lawyers do. Lawyers
help navigate the legal
system to preserve
(citizens’) rights when
people are in danger
of losing property or
liberty or interest. One
of the attractive things
about judges is that
you solve problems for
people.”
Justices told students it is their job to

Milton
79/58
Huntington
79/57

St. Albans
81/58

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Winnipeg
Seattle
90s
48/29
72/55
80s
70s
Billings
60s
75/51
50s
Minneapolis
40s
68/42
30s
20s
San Francisco
Denver
10s
69/58
Kansas City
64/40
0s
69/48
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
79/56
T-storms
Rain
El Paso
85/58
Showers
Snow
Houston
Chihuahua
Flurries
76/61
87/53
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Monterrey
Stationary Front
90/61

Clendenin
81/61
Charleston
79/57

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

Toronto
59/52

Montreal
69/50

Detroit
68/52
Chicago
69/44

New York
72/59

Washington
77/64

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

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W
74/50/s
53/41/s
80/62/c
65/57/pc
74/58/pc
75/51/s
85/58/s
69/52/s
79/57/c
81/61/c
62/37/s
69/44/c
70/56/t
69/55/sh
70/56/t
76/56/r
64/40/s
68/49/sh
68/52/t
83/71/s
76/61/t
70/54/t
69/48/pc
92/67/s
75/57/c
79/56/s
71/60/t
83/73/pc
68/42/sh
72/59/t
81/67/t
72/59/pc
73/48/pc
83/65/pc
74/61/pc
96/67/s
71/58/sh
68/45/s
80/61/sh
76/61/pc
74/55/t
81/56/s
69/58/pc
72/55/c
77/64/pc

Hi/Lo/W
75/55/pc
54/41/pc
75/59/t
70/55/t
76/54/t
79/51/s
76/47/pc
68/51/c
71/53/sh
77/57/t
71/43/s
54/39/pc
70/50/pc
63/41/sh
70/45/sh
79/54/s
73/49/s
68/46/s
64/40/pc
84/72/s
81/58/pc
68/48/pc
70/45/s
86/61/pc
79/55/pc
71/56/c
72/55/pc
81/70/pc
62/44/pc
76/54/pc
80/65/c
76/56/t
76/49/s
84/66/t
79/56/t
95/66/s
67/45/sh
65/46/c
79/57/t
81/56/t
71/49/pc
81/52/pc
65/54/r
64/52/sh
79/59/t

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
80/62

High
Low

92° in Thermal, CA
18° in Bailey, CO

Global
High
114° in Kaedi, Mauritania
Low -31° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
83/73

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

60647073

Justices

Thursday, April 21, 2016 5

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 21, 2016 s Page 6

Wildcats surge past South Gallia, 13-2
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

MERCERVILLE — A
memorable night for the
Wildcats.
The Hannan baseball team
picked up its ﬁrst road win
of the 2016 campaign while
also earning the program’s
ﬁrst-ever victory over host
South Gallia Tuesday night
following a 13-2 victory in
six innings of a non-conference matchup in Gallia
County.
The Wildcats (3-6) never
trailed in the contest as the
guests broke away from an
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports early one-all tie by plating
Hannan senior Cole Poore swings at a pitch during the fourth inning of Tuesday night’s three runs in the top of the
third for a 4-1 edge, but the
non-conference baseball contest against South Gallia in Mercerville, Ohio.

Rebels (0-12) countered with
a run in the home half that
frame for a 4-2 game through
three complete.
HHS, however, came up
with nine unanswered runs
over the next three innings
for an 11-run edge, then
retired the Red and Gold in
order in the bottom of the
sixth to complete the mercyrule triumph.
The Wildcats outhit the
Rebels by a sizable 14-6 overall margin and neither squad
committed an error in the
contest. The Blue and Gold
stranded 10 runners on base,
while the hosts left four on
the bags.
After having eight play-

ers produce at least one hit
while all nine batters reached
base safely throughout the
course of the game, secondyear HHS coach Tad Greathouse was most pleased with
his troops’ offensive output.
Greathouse also noted that
Ryan Gerlach was dominant
on the mound, as was the
defensive effort — making
Tuesday night one of the
more-complete victories that
the Wildcats have enjoyed in
quite sometime.
“It was a good night for us.
Just to make a long road trip
and come out and compete
against a public school, that’s
something that we can’t say
See WILDCATS | 7

Southern
sweeps Lady
Buckeyes
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

NELSONVILLE — One kept winning. The
other did not.
The Southern softball team picked up its third
straight victory following a doubleheader sweep
of host Nelsonville-York on Saturday by counts of
12-0 and 18-8 in a pair of non-conference contests
in Athens County.
The Lady Tornadoes (7-6) produced 30 runs
and 22 hits while committing only two errors over
the course of 10 innings, which resulted in a pair
of ﬁve-inning mercy-rule triumphs for the guests.
The Lady Buckeyes (0-10), conversely, mustered
only 11 hits and committed six errors in the setbacks.
SHS outhit the hosts by a 7-3 overall margin and
committed no errors in the opener, as well as scoring at least once in each of its ﬁve innings at the
plate.
Southern claimed an early 1-0 edge after Ali
Deem singled home Haley Hill, then Deem scored
on a Paige VanMeter groundout for a 2-0 lead after
one inning of play.

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

See SOUTHERN | 7

Point Pleasant second baseman Abe Stearns tags out Wayne’s Jeremiah Milum (14) in the first inning of Tuesday night’s baseball game
at Point Pleasant High School.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, April 21
Baseball
Point Pleasant at Wahama,
7 p.m.
Fairland at Gallia Academy,
5 p.m.
Eastern at Wellston, 5 p.m.
Softball
Fairland at Gallia Academy,
5 p.m.
Eastern at Wellston, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Eastern at Chillicothe, 5
p.m.
Friday, April 22
Baseball
Southern at South Gallia,
5 p.m.
Vinton County at Eastern,
5 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at Meigs,
5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Shady
Spring, 7 p.m.
Hannan at Wood County
Christian, 5:30
Wahama at Waterford, 5
p.m.
River Valley at Alexander,
5 p.m.
Softball
Southern at South Gallia,
5 p.m.
Logan at Point Pleasant,
5:30
Jackson at Gallia
Academy, 5 p.m.
Vinton County at Eastern,
5 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at Meigs,
5 p.m.
Calhoun County at
Hannan (DH), 5 p.m.
Wahama at Waterford, 5
p.m.
River Valley at Alexander,
5 p.m.

Track and Field
River Valley at Fairland
Invite, 5:30
Point Pleasant at Winfield
Dick Dunlap Invitational,
5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at
Chillicothe Invitational, 5
p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at
Doddridge County, 4 p.m.
Wahama at Cline
Stansberry Invitational in
West Union, 4 p.m.
College Softball
Rio Grande at WVIT (DH),
3 p.m.
College Track and Field
Rio Grande at Wilmington
College Invitational
Saturday, April 23
Baseball
Meigs at Warren (DH), 11
a.m.
Wahama at Williamstown
(DH), noon
Softball
South Gallia, Wellston,
Belpre at Gallia Academy
Tournament, 10 a.m.
Greenbrier East at Point
Pleasant (DH), 1 p.m.
Meigs at Warren (DH), 11
a.m.
Eastern at Valley of
Thunder, 10 a.m.
Tennis
Point Pleasant, South
Charleston, Logan, Lincoln
County at Schoenbaum,
10 a.m.
College Baseball
Rio Grande at WVIT (DH),
1 p.m.
College Softball
Rio Grande at Alice Lloyd
(DH), 1 p.m.

Big Blacks edge Wayne in thriller
By Paul Boggs

consecutive singles.
Austin allowed, in seven full
innings pitched, three earned runs
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. —
on three hits and three walks with
James Littlepage, putting it blunt- three strikeouts.
ly, came up big.
He faced four Pioneers apiece in
Actually, it was more like a
the second, fourth and sixth stanwalkoff in the grandest of fashions. zas, and saw the minimum three in
That’s because Littlepage’s
the third and ﬁfth.
grand-slam walkoff home run, in
King came in with the Big Blacks
the eighth inning no less, lifted
down 6-2, but managed to record
host Point Pleasant past the Wayne three consecutive outs, including
Pioneers 7-6 in Tuesday night’s
a “K”.
baseball tilt.
Richardson actually acquitted
After rallying from a 2-0 deﬁcit
himself at the plate, hitting the
to forge a 2-2 tie and ultimately an game-tying two-run home run in
eighth inning, the Big Blacks batthe sixth off Wayne starter Cody
tled back from an astounding 6-2
Noe.
deﬁcit — thanks to Wayne scoring
Noe went the ﬁrst six innings,
on a leadoff walk combined with
scattering ﬁve hits with no walks
ﬁve consecutive singles.
and three strikeouts.
The Big Blacks, against Wayne
He faced four Big Blacks apiece
relief pitcher Dakota McCloud,
in the ﬁrst and third, and retired
completed an improbable comethe side 1-2-3 in the second, fourth
back in the bottom half — with
and ﬁfth.
none of its ﬁve runs being earned.
Wayne actually outhit Point
Chris Lush, Derek King and
Pleasant 12-8, but stranded seven
Matt Richardson reached base on
runners compared to Point Pleasback-to-back-to-back inﬁeld errors
ant’s three — and making the three
by the Pioneers with one out.
costly errors in the eighth.
Cody Sockwell singled to score
The Pioneers posted their initial
Lush and trim the deﬁcit to 6-3,
run in the game’s opening at-bat,
setting up a pitch to Littlepage,
when Cody Stiltner singled to
who blasted McCloud’s offering
lead off, advanced to second on a
over the left-centerﬁeld fence for a sacriﬁce bunt by Isaiah Thompson
grand slam home run.
— and scored on an RBI-single by
With the thrilling win, Point
Jeremiah Milum.
Pleasant pushed its record to over
In the third, Milum led off by
the .500 mark at 10-9.
being hit by a pitch, then scored on
It also made a pitching winan RBI-single by Cayden Ross.
ner out of King, who entered
Ross and McCloud paced the
in the eighth after Richardson
Pioneers with three hits apiece,
— who relieved starter Tristan including McCloud’s seventhAustin in the eighth — gave up inning double, but was stranded in
three earned runs on the five
scoring position all three times.

pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Milum and Stiltner singled
twice, but both were caught stealing once.
Thompson drew walks on his
ﬁnal three at-bats, including a
leadoff walk against Austin in the
eighth.
Singles by Milum, Noe, Ross,
Luke Cassidy and McCloud combined for the four runs, with Noe,
Cassidy and McCloud collecting
the RBIs.
But McCloud couldn’t close the
deal on the mound, earning only
one out before the three straight
errors and Littlepage’s grand slam.
Prior to the sixth, the only Big
Black baserunners were Richardson on a two-out single in the
ﬁrst — and Austin and Lush with
singles in the third.
In the sixth — and with PPHS
trailing 2-0 — Lush singled with
one out, before King reached on a
6-4 ﬁelder’s choice.
One batter later, Richardson
stunned the Pioneers with his
homer to tie it at 2-2.
In the seventh against McCloud,
Trey Tucker was hit by a pitch
and Austin singled, but the inning
ended on a 4-6 ﬁelder’s choice.
The game ended, however, in the
grandest of fashions — thanks to
Littlepage.
The Big Blacks, which hosted
Ritchie County on Wednesday,
travel to Mason County rival Wahama today (Thursday, April 21).
Point Pleasant has handed
Wahama one of its only two losses
this season.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2106

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 21, 2016 7

Lady Chiefs double up Blue Angels
By Paul Boggs

SEOAL) won at Gallia Academy
6-1 on April 8, thus starting
the Blue Angels’ slide that has
LOGAN — Unfortunately for
dropped them to 5-11.
the Blue Angels, a lost lead on
The Blue Angels, at 0-5 in the
Tuesday resulted in another loss. SEOAL with their league ﬁnale
That’s because Gallia Acadeon Friday against visiting Jackmy, after Jenna Meadows’ three- son, suffered their seventh conrun home run, allowed the ﬁnal secutive setback with the loss at
six runs of the game and lost to Logan — and their ninth in the
the host Logan Lady Chiefs 6-3 past 10 games.
in a Southeastern Ohio Athletic
Logan’s Lainie Nakanishi was
League softball tilt.
the complete-game winning
The Blue Angels — with
pitcher, allowing only six hits
two out and none on in the
with no walks.
third inning— got back-to-back
Despite only one strikeout, of
singles from Allie Jo Clagg and
her 72 total pitches, 48 went for
Hunter Copley, before Meadows strikes.
sent a shot over the 190-foot
Allie Young pitched the dissign in left ﬁeld.
tance for the Blue Angels, allowBut, as Newfound Glory once ing 10 runs and a walk in six
sang, it was all downhill from
innings — with ﬁve of the six
here.
runs being earned.
The Lady Chiefs erased that
Of her 81 pitches, 56 went for
3-0 deﬁcit by scoring once in the strikes.
third and again in the fourth,
Frasure ﬁnished a perfect
before Payton Frasure answered 3-for-3 for Logan, and was one
Meadows’ home run with a two- hit shy of the cycle with a home
run, double and single.
run blast of her own — putting
She had four runs batted in,
Logan ahead 4-3 in the ﬁfth.
including in the third and sixth
Logan then added a pair of
in addition to her two-run home
insurance runs in the sixth,
run.
doubling
up
the
Blue
Angels
and
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
In the third, Logan made
Gallia Academy junior Shelby Long fires to first base for a 5-3 ground-out, completing the season sweep.
it 3-1 — when Lexi McBride
The Lady Chiefs (4-10, 3-2
during the Blue Angels’ SEOAL tilt with Warren, on Friday in Centenary.
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

reached on an error, and then
scored when Frasure doubled off
the fence in centerﬁeld.
Her ﬁnal RBI came on a sacriﬁce ﬂy in the sixth to make it
6-3.
McBride singled twice, including in the ﬁfth before Frasure’s
shot.
Logan trimmed its deﬁcit to
3-2 in the fourth, when Kellie
Arnett hit a leadoff double to left.
She was replaced by pinch
runner Shawnshea McClelland, who moved to third on a
groundout and then scored a
ball hit by Hannah Schrader.
Nakanishi, Schrader and
Sierra Heilman had singles for
Logan in the sixth, as Addy
Rooker made it 5-3 with an RBIgroundout.
Copley plated a pair of singles
to lead Gallia Academy, as
Clagg, Shelby Long and Makenzie Barr also singled.
Gallia Academy returned
home, and returned to Ohio
Valley Conference action, on
Wednesday against South Point
and today (Thursday, April 21)
against Fairland.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2106

URG softball cracks Top 25 for first time Wildcats
By Randy Payton

which currently sits one game in back
For Ohio Valley Publishing
of Rio Grande in the KIAC standings
at 13-1 in league play, received three
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — For the
points in the balloting and was among
ﬁrst time in program history, the Uni- the others receiving votes for the secversity of Rio Grande softball team
ond straight week.
ﬁnds itself ranked among the top 25
Oklahoma City is the No. 1-ranked
teams in the country.
team for the third-straight week and
The RedStorm are ranked 24th in
for the 31st time in school history
the latest NAIA coaches’ poll released after tallying 529 total points and 18
Tuesday evening by the national
ﬁrst-place votes. The Stars have accuofﬁce.
mulated the most wins in the NAIA
Head coach Chris Hammond’s
team, which narrowly missed making this year (48) and own the best win
percentage (.980).
the list last week, tallied 121 points
Defending national champion
in the balloting by a panel of head
Auburn
Montgomery (Ala.) moved
coaches representing each of the
up
one
spot
this week to No. 2 with
conferences and the Association of
502
points.
The
Warhawks acquired
Independent Institutions.
the
ﬁnal
ﬁrst-place
vote, while St.
Rio Grande, which had a scheduled
Gregory’s
was
pushed
down to the
Tuesday home date against the Unithird
position.
versity of Pikeville cancelled by the
No. 4 Campbellsville (Ky.), curBears, are 32-7 overall and 15-1 in the
Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Con- rently on a 28-game win streak, is in
the top ﬁve for the ﬁfth time in the
ference. The RedStorm have won 10
straight outings and 14 of their last 15 last six editions, while Saint Xavier
(Ill.) captured the No. 5 slot for the
heading into Friday’s KIAC twinbill
against West Virginia University-Tech. second-straight week.
A week removed from the largIndiana University-Southeast,

est drop within the Top 25, No. 19
Oregon Tech enjoyed the biggest
improvement. The Hustlin’ Owls are
up ﬁve spots after 6-1 record in their
last seven games. No. 25 Grand View
(Iowa) tumbled down the farthest this
week, sliding south six positions.
In addition to Rio Grande, the newcomers to this week’s poll included
No. 21 Central Methodist (Mo.) and
No. 23 Lindenwood-Belleville (Ill.).
Both Central Methodist and the Lynx
were recognized earlier this year in
the Top 25.
Eighteen of 19 conferences are
represented in the poll this week. The
Southern States Athletic Conference
leads all leagues with three schools
represented: Auburn Montgomery,
No. 8 William Carey and No. 13
Martin Methodist (Tenn.). Overall,
six conferences send multiple schools
into the Top 25.
Through six polls this year (including Preseason), there have been 39
different ranked teams.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at
the University of Rio Grande.

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

PPGSL Registrations in April
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The Point Pleasant Girls
Softball League will be holding multiple registration sessions at a pair of locations.
Signups at the Point Pleasant Junior/Senior High School
Commons Area will be held from 6:30 p.m. until 8 p.m. on
Thursday, April 21; Monday, April 25; and Tuesday, April 26.
Signups will also be held at The Fields from 10 a.m. until
noon on the Saturdays of April 23 and April 30.

The tournament will cost $240 per team, or $60 a
player. Cost includes free food and and beverages (Pepsi
products and water). Each team must have a handicap
of at least 40 with only one player below 8.
Club house credit for the top-three teams will be
awarded, along with Closest to the Pin, Longest Drive
and other cash prizes. Checks should be made payable
to Meigs football.
For more information, contact Tonya Cox at 740-6454479 or the Riverside Golf Course at 304-773-5354.

Wahama HOF
golf tournament

Southern football
golf scramble

MASON, W.Va. — The Wahama Athletic Hall of Fame
golf tournament will be held on Saturday, April 23, at
Riverside Golf Course. For team reservations or more
information, contact Bobby Greene at the clubhouse at
304-773-5354.

MASON, W.Va. — The Southern football team will
hold a golf scramble on Saturday, May 21, at the Riverside Golf Course in Mason County. The format will be a
four-man scramble, bring your own team.
Each squad must have a team handicap of 40+ and
only one player can be under 10. Price is $60 per person and includes golf, cart, lunch and beverages. Prizes
include club house credit for the top three teams, among
other cash prizes.
The tournament will begin with a shotgun start at
8:30 a.m. For more information, contact Southern football coach Mike Chancey at 740-591-8644.

Meigs football golf scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The Meigs Marauder football team
will host a golf scramble on Saturday, April 30, at the
Riverside Golf Course. Registration for the tournament
will begin at 8 a.m. and a shot gun start will take place
at 9 a.m.

Southern

ed six on base in Game 1, while
the hosts left three on the bags.
Deem, VanMeter and Haley
From Page 6
Hill each had two hits, followed
by Cleland with a safety. Deem
The guests added a run in
and Haley Hill scored three
the second and four more in
the third for a 7-0 cushion, then runs apiece, while VanMeter
knocked in a game-high four
tacked on two more scores in
RBIs.
the fourth before plating three
Southern also led wire-toruns in the ﬁfth for the 12-run
wire in the ﬁnale, as the guests
triumph.
Sydney Cleland was the win- established a 5-0 edge before
the Lady Buckeyes plated a run
ning pitcher of record after
allowing three hits and striking in the bottom half of the third
for a 5-1 contest through three
out three over ﬁve innings of
complete.
work. Frazier took the loss for
SHS followed by sending
NYHS, which committed two
10 batters to the plate in the
errors in the opener.
The Lady Tornadoes strand- fourth, which led to six runs on

ﬁve hits and two walks — giving the guests an 11-1 edge.
Nelsonville-York countered by
scoring twice in the home half
of the fourth for an eight-run
deﬁcit.
Southern answered by sending a dozen hitters to the plate
in the ﬁfth, which yielded seven
runs on ﬁve hits, two walks and
two errors for an 18-3 lead.
The hosts sent nine batters
to the plate in the ﬁfth and
scored ﬁve runs with one out,
but the Purple and Gold came
up with consecutive outs to
wrap up the 10-run decision.
Southern outhit the hosts
by a 15-8 overall margin and

From Page 6

we always do because a lot of our games are
against Christian programs,” Greathouse said.
“We got some good pitching from Ryan and
the defense was solid behind him, and we
were able to score some runs for him.
“Honestly, we’re just happy to be at a point
where we believe that we can compete with
public schools … and this win is a big step in
the right direction for us. The kids are starting to see that the hard work is paying off.”
Gerlach allowed only two earned runs, six
hits and zero walks over six innings of work.
Gerlach also struck out a dozen in the winning decision.
Hannan took an early lead in the top of the
ﬁrst as Isaiah Burgess lifted a sacriﬁce ﬂy to
centerﬁeld, allowing Dalton Coleman to tag
up and score from third for a 1-0 edge.
SGHS tied the game in the home half of
the ﬁrst as Cuyler Mills doubled home Colton
Coughenour for a one-all contest after one full
frame. The hosts, however, were never closer
the rest of the way.
After a scoreless second, the Wildcats came
up big in the top of the third as Gerlach and
Burgess led things off with back-to-back singles. Corey Hudnall followed with a doubled
that plated Gerlach, giving the guests a permanent lead at 2-1.
Nick Hughes laid down a sacriﬁce bunt that
allowed Burgess to score for a 3-1 contest,
then Hudnall came plateward after a two-out
single by Matt Qualls made it a 4-1 game.
The Rebels, however, cut their deﬁcit in half
as Coughenour delivered a one-out triple and
later scored on a two-out single by Mills, making it a 4-2 contest through three complete.
The Wildcats added two runs in the fourth
for a 6-2 advantage, then tacked on three runs
in the ﬁfth and four runs in the sixth to wrap
up the 11-run triumph.
Gerlach led Hannan with four hits, followed
by Coleman, Poore and Burgess with two
safeties apiece. Hudnall, Hughes, Qualls and
Junior Morehart also had a hit each in the
triumph.
Poore led HHS with three RBIs and Hudnall
drove in two RBIs. Gerlach, Burgess, Hughes
and Qualls also knocked in a run apiece.
Coleman scored a team-best three runs,
while Gerlach and Burgess each crossed
home plate twice. Poore, Hudnall, Morehart,
Hughes, Qualls and Ryan Davis also scored a
run apiece for the victors.
Coughenour paced the hosts with three hits
and two runs scored, followed by Mills with
two safeties and two RBIs. Austin Stapleton
also had a hit in the setback.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

committed only two of the six
errors in the contest. The Lady
Tornadoes left six runners on
base, while the Orange and
Brown stranded ﬁve on the
bags.
Abby Cummins was the winning pitcher of record after
allowing eight runs, eight
hits and three walks over ﬁve
innings while striking out
three. Kelley took the loss for
NYHS after surrendering 18
runs, 15 hits and ﬁve walks
over ﬁve innings while fanning
seven.
Deem had a game-high ﬁve
hits and four runs scored for
Southern, followed by VanMe-

ter and Haley Hill with three
safeties apiece. Hannah Hill
was next with two hits, while
Sierra Cleland and Josie Cundiff each added a hit to the winning cause.
Both Hills scored three runs
apiece, while VanMeter, Cummins and Brandy Porter also
scored two times each.
Kelley and Frazier paced
NYHS with two hits apiece,
followed by Dupler, Campbell,
Tami and Hembree with a
safety each. Campbell and Tami
also scored twice apiece in the
setback.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, April 21, 2016

Help Wanted General

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800-537-9528

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For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
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apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
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Financing with $2300 down
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Call for maps,
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Help Wanted General

Want To Buy

Qualified Instructors
needed For Local college.
Please Submit Resume to
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college.edu
ResCare, Inc
now hiring LPNs
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Apply online at
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search by location

We Pay Top Dollar $$
Running or Driving Cars
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740-577-8501
Apartments/Townhouses

Now taking new
customers

MOWING
WEEDEATING
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SIDEWALKS
POWERWASHING
Call 740-517-6331
for estimates

60647516

Notices
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.

Industrial Cleaners
Needed in Buffalo, WV.
Full-time Positions Available.
Days/Evenings. Must pass
background check
and drug test.
304-768-6309.
Need Dependable &amp;
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740-645-2984.

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740-446-7444

Apartments/Townhouses

Miscellaneous

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

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

Lawn Care
Lease

Lawn Care Service, Mowing,
Trimming, Free estimates.
Call 740-339-2813.

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

Help Wanted General

Overbrook Center,
a privately owned 100 bed Skilled Nursing Facility
at 333 Page St., Middleport, OH
currently has opportunities available for
RN's, LPN's and STNA's
to join our outstanding team of professional caregivers.
We appreciate our employees
Come and experience the Overbrook Difference!
Applications available on site Mon.-Fri. 8:30AM-5:00PM or
submit your resume to michelle@overbrookcenter.com
EOE. We are a participant of the Drug Free Workplace Program.

Help Wanted General

Miscellaneous

WANTED: Buckeye Community Services
Is opening a new home In Galla County and needs full-time and
part-time workers to assist an individual with developmental
disabilities. All shifts available. High school degree/GED, valid
drivers license and three years good driving experience
required. $10.25/hr after training.
Send resume to; Buckeve Community services, P.O. Box 604,
Jackson, OH 45640; or emall: beyecserv@yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants: 4/26/16. Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

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Send Resumes to: Blind Box A C/O GDT 825 3rd Ave
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Help Wanted General

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Miscellaneous

For Lease:
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nice one bedroom apt., in
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deposit &amp; references required,
no pets, $400.00 per mo. Call
740-441-7875 or
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 Independently resolve customer support issues and escalate
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RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
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renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
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Help Wanted General

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1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments
no pets. Deposit and
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740-992-0165

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, April 21, 2016 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

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�10 Thursday, April 21, 2016

Daily Sentinel

John R. Kasich, Governor
Jacqueline T. Williams, Director

Meigs County
Unclaimed Funds Accounts 2016
IF YOU FIND YOUR NAME, PLEASE READ CAREFULLY AND FILL OUT COMPLETELY
IMPORTANT FILING INFORMATION
Box 1 – Listed Name:
Check yes or no if your name is listed in paper. If no, list name that was
listed. Print address and county as listed in the paper.
Box 2 – Claimant Name:
Print your name and provide copy of your current driver’s license or other
cree, etc.
Box 3 – Deceased Owner Listed
If you are claiming for a deceased owner and an estate is open, circle
OPEN, then print name of the estate administrator or executrix. Only the
current Administrator or Executrix may claim for an estate; payments are
made to an Estate in care of the Administrator or Executrix.
If estate is closed, circle CLOSED ………
If estate was never opened, circle NEVER OPENED……..

Box 4 – Social Security Number or FEIN
If the property is in the name of an individual, claimant must provide SSN
on the claim form and a copy of social security card or documented proof
with owners name and social security number.
If the property is in the name of a business, claimant must provide proof
of the business’s FEIN in the form of a recent tax document or other
documentation. In addition to the proof of FEIN the following is required:
A resolution or agreement indicating the claimant’s authority to claim the
property on behalf of the business, or
requested upon review of the claim.
Box 5-6 Claimant Address
Print current mailing address
Box 7 &amp; 8
Current contact phone number where you can be reachHG.

obituary, documentation of SSN of the owner if it’s not on the death

THIS FORM MUST BE NOTARIZED
1

Was your name the listed name? Yes

or No

If No, Print the Listed name:

2

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Print address and county as listed in the ad:
3 Are you the original owner? Yes or No (circle one).
If not, your relationship to the owner: ________________________________________________
Status of estate: ___________________________________________________________________

5

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State

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The following must be included with this form: (We may require/request additional information on ANY claim submitted)
o ����&amp;OHDU�FRS\�RI�'U LYHU¶V�/LFHQVH�RU �RWKHU�YDOLG�SKRWR�LGHQWLILFDWLRQ
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Documented proof of Social Security Number
o
If the owner is deceased: copy of Death Certificate and Obituary
Î

o

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Open Estate: Copy of Letters of Administration
Closed Estate: Release from Administration
Never Opened:

4HE UNDERSIGNED CLAIMANT CERTIFIES THAT HE�SHE IS THE PROPER CLAIMANT IN THE FOREGOING CLAIM THAT HE�SHE READ THE FOREGOING CLAIM AND KNOWS THE CONTENTS
THEREOF� THAT THE SAME IS TRUE AND CORRECT TO HIS�HER KNOWLEDGE THAT THE INFORMATION AND DOCUMENTATION ARE UNALTERED AND NOT FRAUDULENT� AND THAT THE CLAIM IS
VALID AND UNPAID� 4HE CLAIMANT UNDERSTANDS THAT PRESENTATION OF A FRAUDULENT CLAIM MAY RESULT IN CRIMINAL PROCEEDINGS� 4HE CLAIMANT FURTHER DECLARES THAT
UPON PAYMENT OF THIS CLAIM HE�SHE WILL INDEMNIFY AND HOLD HARMLESS THE 3TATE OF /HIO $IVISION OF 5NCLAIMED &amp;UNDS� OFFICERS AND EMPLOYEES FROM
ANY DAMAGES CLAIMS OR LOSSES OF ANY KIND RESULTING FROM PAYMENT OF THE ABOVE CLAIM� "Y SIGNING THIS CLAIM FORM YOU ARE GIVING THE /HIO $IVISION OF
5NCLAIMED &amp;UNDS PERMISSION TO ACCESS CONFIDENTIAL PERSONAL INFORMATION IN ORDER TO PROCESS OUR CLAIM FOR PAYMENT�

Privacy Notice: The social security number (SSN) is required for IRS tax reporting purposes. It may also be the only proof to determine ownership. The
SSN is confidential and protected by access rules in Ohio Revised Code 1347.15.

�������Claimant Signature

Date

Claimant Signature

Date

�����������Notary Stamp
�������Subscribed and sworn to before me ______________________Day of________________
�������State of _________ County____________________ My Commission Expires _______________
�������Notary Public Signature ____________________________________

For a complete list of owners, visit www.com.ohio.gov/unfd
CHESTER
Bryan Thelma P,RR 1
DEXTER
Huffman Michael E,28392 Star Hall
LANGSVILLE
Cochran Romona,30016 Hoffman Rd
Gilbert Samantha,29102 Nelson Rd
Graham Lisa A,28110 SR 124
Janey Angela,32210 SR 124
Janey Dorothy,32145 SR 124
McGhee Michael,32415 Painter Rdg
Schoolcraft Jerry D,30976 Will Vance
Swick Edna,30996 SR 325
Swick Robert,30996 SR 325
Weber Richard L II,3645 Carpenter Hill
LONG BOTTOM
Bartee Margie,38711 TR 404
Hawk Robin,33941 Bashan Rd
Johnson Dana,36073 TR 275
Wells Frank O,52763 SR 248
Wells Shirley L,Po Box 35
MIDDLEPORT
Batey Andrew E,Box 214
Bigelow Dorothy,545 Park St
Blake John E,Box 185
Brown Helen J,161 1/2 N 5th Ave
Buzzard Kelly,825 Beech St
Cadle William M,764 Brownell Ave
Calvert Ronnie L,12 Railroad St
Chambers Richard E,288 Cole St
Dailey Don L,348 Lincoln St
Eynon Ruby,623 Mill St
Fisher Frances D,Po Box 395
Glass Robert J,Po Box 50
Greene Michael E,156 S 3rd St
Halley Megan K,248 7th St
Haning Ronald A,29161 Lagoon Rd
Haptonstall Lennie,484 Main St
Hawk Stacy A,648 Grant St
Hawley Jack,287 Coal St
Herdman Bubby,34682 Swick Rd
Herdman David,37710 Leading Creek
Hoschar Naloma,545 Park St
Houser Frank,Po Box 215
Kimes Brian,913 Gen Hartinger Pkwy

Kimes Mark,646 Art Lewis St
Klein James H Dds,459 Broadway St
Lambert Vickie L,Po Box 261
Laudermilt Vincent Sr,187 Ash St
Lewis Raymond,480 Pearl
Marshall Rebecca A,271 N Front Ave
Morey Trystan,1118 N Park Ave
Morris Jesse,369 Hooker St
Rawson Emmett G,36750 SR 124
Richmond Tiffany D,37655 Leading Creek
Riggs Alma L,Po Box 104
Rose Penny A,464 S 4th Ave
Rupe Perry O,227 Rutherford Rd
Sayre Betty J,443 S 6th Ave
Shavorinsky Joe,813 High St
Smith Paul,40 Custer St
Stubbs Helen A,410 Rutland St
Tannehill Carol J,315 S 4th Ave
Tyree Gregory M,247 Mulberry St
Vaughan Ruby,700 N 2nd Ave
Wamsley Jackie A,Po Box 127
Wigal Stephanie A,341 S Second Ave
Wilson Caroline,3 Peach Cir
Wolfe Joseph,515 Grant St
POMEROY
Amoriya Elizabeth,33450 Myres Rd
Arnott Shawn,511 Mulberry Hts
Autherson Rebecca J,106 Maple Pl
Averion R A Md,618 E Main St
Baker Norma Jane,Po Box 90
Barringer Matthew,300 Mulberry Ave
Bass Avanell,208 Mulberry Ave
Bass Gene,208 Mulberry Ave
Bay Racheal,245 Union St
Bowen Robert E,34164 SR 7
Brown Anne,210 W Main St
Brown Lynn,220 W Main St
Brown Sayre Lynn,c/o Harold D Brown Dds
Cleland Megan,35475 SR 7
Cole David L,Route 2
Cole Raymond L,Rte 2
Connolly Colin,236 E Main St
Cook Nathan,37880 Wickham Rd
Crabtree Hazel,307 The Maples
Craft Robert L,40266 SR 692
Dill Charles R,1 1/2 Fisher St
Dillard Rosanna,6 Liberty Ln
Eagle Sherry,325 Wright St
Etheredge Brad,
Ewing Funeral Home,108 Mulberry Ave
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings,33550 Cotterill Rd
Fyffe Lawrence K,42788 SR 681

Grace Episcopal Church Pomeroy,326 E
Main St
Graham Martha,108 Mulberry Ave
Greene Dorothy,405 W Main St
Grueser Walter M,300 Riverview Dr
Hill John R,34248 Crew Rd
Hite Melissa,36719 Rocksprings Rd
James Charles E,204 Spring Ave
Jeffers Mary A,300 Mulberry Ave
Kautz Alice J,35701 SR 7
Kautz William,34286 Crew Rd
Kautz William,41425 Staracher Rd
Korn Bracy A,302 Wright St
Lehew Patricia L,149 Mulberry Ave
Lowe Wanda J,36759 Rocksprings
Marks Auto Sales,808 W Main St
McKee Ralph Herbet,Main St
Meigs County Treasurer,Second St
Mulford Christine A,45061 Baum Add
Murphy Robert E Est,41190 Laurel Cliff
Pullins Stephanie,33270 SR 833
Ramsey Morgan,245 Union Ave
Ramsey William Jr,245 Union Ave
Rankin Eric,40225 SR 692
Rankin Rhonda,40225 SR 692
Ratliff Juanita E,234 Union Ave
Reed Elizabeth Estate,141 Mulberry Ave
Riverview Chiropractic Ce,Po Box 368
Rizer Milisa K,738 E Main St
Rizer Wanda M,738 E Main St
Roberts Lee A,39082 SR 143
Sauvage Amondal,38711 Gold Rdg
Sauvage Carl,38711 Gold Rdg
Sauvage Carl Sr,38711 Gold Rdg
Sauvage James,38711 Gold Rdg
Shank Christopher T,39449 St 143
Smith Eileen D,100 E Memorial Dr
Smith Eugene R,109 W 2nd St
Smith Kenneth,Po Box 53
Smith Marie Harrie Estate,242 Mulberry Ave
Smith Nancy L,Rfd 3
Smith Tabitha L,160 W Locust St
Starcher Joshua A,43755 Pomeroy Pike
Stclair Ola,36759 Rocksprings
Stewart Gertrude M,33910 Hysell Run
Stultz Mark A,1633 Lincoln
Welsh Catherine L Est,106 Ebenezer St
Wilson Angela,1998 Martin St
Wilson Jonathan,1998 Martin St
Wilson Michael N,1998 Martin St
Wood Wanda Jean Est,39694 Landaker Rd
Wyant Lois,37938 Kingsbury Rd
Young Allen,1739 Chester Rd
Young Eva,36410 Rocksprings Rd

PORTLAND
Barton Harry,30237 Barringer Rdg
Boso Teresa,30243 Barringer Rdg
Boso Tommy,30243 Barringer Rdg
Dailey Annette D,31043 Barringer Rdg
Dowell Roger,54435 New Portland
Johnson Mary L,55590 SR 124
Perry Devon,991 Walnut Hill
RACINE
Allen Michele D,28619 Tackerville
Brown Shannon,32491 Court St
Crouso Betty,Po Box 816
Dickens Frances Est,28619 Tackerville
Directors Of Pentecostal,Po Box 427
Drummer Aaron M,31190 Roy Jones Rd
First United Methodist Church,Po Box 457
Fitzgerald Lance,52610 Tornado Rd
Garretson Gregory P II,Po Box 52100
Handley Misty D,45743 SR 124
Hill Raberta C,Po Box 31
Jd Drilling Co,Po Box 369
Johnson Hunter,31190 Roy Jones Rd
Maynard Lillian L,25495 Apple Grove Dorcas
McClain Kimberly K,46896 SR 124
Miller Myron,43431 Dutchtown Rd
Myron Miller Estate,43431 Dutchtown Rd
Nease D S,29550 CR 28
Oconnor Elson,Rd 1
Parsons Velma,45890 SR 124
Porter Thomas J,49302 Manual Rd
Salser Diana,Po Box 22
Sands Douglas C,29165 Oak Grove Rd
Simpson Melanie A,47808 Tornado Rd
Smith Brent M,47533 TR 100
Turley Kasey A,Po Box 404
Ward Mary,3138 SR 124
West Nellie Jean,49801 Tornado Rd
White Elzie,52610 SR 124
Wolfe Anthony T,49239 E Letart Rd
Wolfe Gary J,48196 Tr 31
Wolfe Lawrence,Po Box 365
REEDSVILLE
Bowie Anthony,39160 Success Rd
Casto Christie A,40328 Christy Rd
Cowdery Jeffrey,Po Box 126
Cowdery Tammy,Po Box 126
Crites Elmer E,50140 Pine Tree Dr
Hawk Charles W,67093 SR 124
Hess Gary,52900 SR 681

Hess Pamela,52900 SR 681
Husk Rena M,54925 Hudson Rd
Newland Patrick,49467 Owl Hollow
Rood Foster,Po Box 83
Rood Tracy,Po Box 83
Smith Brandon,38610 TR 1026
Smith Timmy L II,54522 Number Nine Rd
Spurlock Mathew D,41156 Tiffany Cemetery
Vineyard Mary Estate,51158 Rice Run Rd
Willison Susanne,38735 SR 681
RUTLAND
Anderson Jessica N,34274 SR 124
Baker Michelle,31760 Lasher Rd
Ball Ellen,34140 CR 16
Dalton Belinda L,37510 Smith Run
Fink Eugene M,Po Box 133
Grate Anthony,Po Box 195
Hopper Billy,235 Salem St
Hudson Kevin H,Po Box 123
Knapp Robert V,34377 New Lima Rd
Miller Steve,34773 Sidehill Rd
Mozingo Bertina M,33085 Romine Rd
Paul Charles II,33625 Whites Hill
Price Cathy,76 Locust St
Searles Kathy L,42 N Main St
Smith Don R,Po Box 299
Stearns Roger W,35490 Loop Rd
Swanson Johnny,36821 Price Hollow
Walker Terrie,34719 Whites Hill
Walker Thomas,34719 Whites Hill
SYRACUSE
Brufke James,Po Box 102
Chevalier Martha,c/o Vickie L Bias
Coates Mary Jean Tr,1263 Bridgeman St
Crow Cathy,1304 College Rd
Greer Grace,Box 231
Hoschar Betty L,Po Box 554
Hoschar Mikayla R,Po Box 554
Matson Norman S,Po Box 851
Miller Amy,Po Box 705
Miller Hayden,Po Box 705
Vanreeth Gloria,Po Box 254
TUPPERS PLAINS
Roberts Diana,Po Box 136
Zumbach Beulah,Po Box 35
60651137

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