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OPINION s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

32°

38°

41°

Periods of snow mixing with rain, accumulating 1-3
inches today. Low clouds tonight. High 41° / Low 38°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Tornadoes
turn back
Rebels

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 10, Volume 73

Meigs Board
approves
agenda items
Staff Report

Throwback Thursday: Snowy Middleport

items, and other school
related commitments.

ROCKSPRINGS —
Following the 2019
In other business,
organizational meeting, the board:
the Meigs Local Board
Hired Patricia Hensof Education held its
ley on a purchased
regular meeting, dealservice agreement to
ing with several agenda clean, purchase cleanitems.
ing supplies and generThe board approved
al upkeep of the Central
the hiring of
Ofﬁce BuildBryan Swann The next Board ing. Monthly
as the Meigs
payment
High School meeting is
should not
scheduled for
Softball
exceed $500;
6:30 p.m. on
Coach and
Approved
Britt Dodson Wednesday, Jan. increasing
as the Meigs 23 at Meigs
the hourly
High School
substitute
Elementary
Baseball
rate to $9 per
School.
Coach.
hour as miniThe board
mum wage
accepted the resignaincreased to $8.55 on
tion of Kathy Hudson,
Jan. 1;
high school science
Accepted a donation
teacher, for retirement
from the Meigs Local
purposes, effective June Enrichment Founda1, 2019.
tion for future ﬁeld
Savannah Capehart
upgrades;
was hired as a bus monApproved the puritor/personal assistant
chase of a 2002 Ford
for the current school
F-250 for $6,500 from
year.
Christian Cremeans to
Launa Teaford was
be used as a mainteapproved as an afternance truck;
school instructor at
Approved the ﬁnanMeigs Elementary.
cial report for the
Franklin Beach and
month of December;
Danielle Bridges were
Approved the bills for
approved as substitute
payment for the month
teachers for the school
of December;
year as approved by the
Waived ﬁling of tax
Athens-Meigs Educabudget and hearings as
tional Service Center.
permitted by the Meigs
An overnight ﬁeld
County Budget Comtrip for SkillsUSA stumission;
dent Alexis Tobin was
Approved obtaining
approved at the request the Board President
of SkillsUSA advisor
Position Bond from
Tom Cremeans. The
Reed and Baur Insurtrip is to Washington
ance;
D.C. on Jan. 20-25.
Approved the CafThe board approved
eteria Report for the
the Community for
month of November as
Kids Fund as presented submitted by Christina
by Principal Travis
Musser, Food Service
Abbott and AssisSupervisor;
tant Principal Mike
Established a Meigs
Chancey. The fund will
Middle School Crossbe designated to assist
Categorical fun which
in creating pathways to will be used for student
best serve the youth in
enrichment and activithe school community
ties.
and will be used for
The next Board meethelping students with
ing is scheduled for
essential school related 6:30 p.m. on Wednesand/or basic living
day, Jan. 23 at Meigs
needs, personal care
Elementary School.

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
Business: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 7
Comics: 8
TV listings: 9

Thursday, January 17, 2019 s 50¢

Photo from the collection of Bob Graham

January 1978 brought snow to the region as seen in this photo of a snowy Second Avenue in the village of Middleport. The photo dated
Jan. 20, 1978, shows snow on the roadway and cars, as well as piles where the snow had been cleared from the entrances to businesses.
One man is even carrying a snow shovel as he walks along the sidewalk.

Evans named Southern Board President
Board member
appreciation
event held

funds are available;
Authorize the Treasurer or her designee to sign
all payroll, general fund,
permanent improvement
funds, bond fund, bond
retirement fund, federal
funds, lunch fund and stuStaff Report
dent activity funds checks
during 2019;
Superintendent to
RACINE — Denny
employ, by letter of
Evans was selected as the
intent, certiﬁed and
President of the Southern
non-certiﬁed employees,
Local Board of Education
subject to board approval
during this week’s organizational meeting.
Courtesy photo at the next regular or speBoard President Denny Evans is pictured during the Board Member cial meeting;
Brenda Johnson was
Appreciation event on Monday.
Superintendent authonamed the board’s vice
rized to accept resignapresident for 2019.
tions which have been
appointed as the OAPSE Agency, as well as the
Evans and Johnson were
submitted by employees
board president’s bond
management committee
also president and vice
in the amount of $20,000 or volunteers;
president, respectively, in member.
Superintendent authowith Reed and Baur.
The board authorized
2018.
rized to approve profesThe following standthe treasurer to establish
Johnson was also
sional meetings and other
ing authorizations were
the Board Member Serappointed as the legislaprofessional development;
approved to allow for
vice Fund not to exceed
tive liaison to the Ohio
Superintendent authothe business of the dis$5,000 for expenses
School Boards Associarized to approve voluntrict to be conducted
incurred by board memtion and as the delegate
teers;
expediently:Secure
bers in the performance
to the Ohio School
Authorize administraadvances from the County
Boards Association Annu- of their duties for the
tive ofﬁces to purchase
Auditor when funds are
2019 and 2020 ﬁscal
al Conference.
items such as certiﬁcates,
available and payable to
years.
Rich Wamsley was
plaques, and ﬂowers etc.
the school district;
The board approved
selected as the alternate
from the board service
Invest active and
to serve as the legislative the treasurer’s faithful
performance bond in the interim funds at the most account;
liaison, as well as the
productive interest rates
amount of $20,000 with
SLEA negotiations repSee PRESIDENT | 2
resentative. Johnson was Reed and Baur Insurance when active or interim

Ariel Opera House looks to spring shows
Staff Report

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CONVERSATION
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thoughts.

GALLIPOLIS — The Ohio Valley Symphony, and its home the
Ariel Opera House, are preparing
for spring performances to celebrate its 30th anniversary.
According to OVS information,
musician Elizabeth Pitcairn asked
if she could return to to perform
the 30th Anniversary concert
March 30 at 7:30 p.m. She will
reportedly bring her Red Mendelssohn Stradivarius and will be
joined by Maestro Miriam Burns
on the podium for an evening of
classic performance.
American violin virtuoso Pitcairn is passionate about youth
and education. She serves as
president and artistic director of

the Luzerne Music Center which
provides training for gifted young
musicians ages 9-18 in the Adirondack Mountains of upstate New
York.
She performs with one of the
world’s most legendary instruments, the “Red Mendelssohn”
Stradivarius violin of 1720, said
to have inspired the Academy
Award winning ﬁlm “The Red
Violin.” Pitcairn is featured on the
10th Anniversary edition of The
Red Violin DVD in a special feature called “The Auction Block.”
Named the Red Stradivarius violin
while in the possession of Joseph
Joachim, it was a gift from her
grandfather in 1990 at Christie’s
Auction in London.
Pitcairn made her debut with

orchestra at age 14 performing
the Saint-Saëns Concerto, and
has since appeared as soloist with
the Philadelphia Orchestra at the
Academy of Music and at Lincoln
Center’s Alice Tully Hall in the
year 2000 with the New York
String Orchestra in her New York
debut. She has since performed at
Carnegie Hall, Walt Disney Concert Hall, the Kimmel Center, Saratoga Performing Arts Center, and
the Fisher Center at Bard College.
She has given performances of the
Mendelssohn Violin Concerto with
the Shenzhen Symphony Orchestra of China and with conductor
Wagner Politschuk in São Paulo,
Brazil.
See ARIEL | 2

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Thursday, January 17, 2019

Ariel
From page 1

Under the baton
of Finnish conductor
Hannu Koivula, Pitcairn has performed the
Barber Concerto with
the Vaasa City Symphony, the Jönkopping
Symphony of Sweden
and given the premiere
of eminent Swedish
composer’s Hymnen
an die Nacht with the
Helsingborg Symphony.
She gave a nationally
televised broadcast of
the Bruch Violin Concerto with the Classic
FM Radio Symphony
Orchestra of Bulgaria
conducted by Maxim
Eshkenazy. She has also
concertized in Italy,
France, Germany, the
British Isles, Hungary,
Brazil, Canada, Mexico,
the U.S. Virgin Islands,
Cayman Islands, the
French West Indies,
Austria, Romania and
the Czech Republic.
She has appeared in
recital at the Cayman
Arts Festival with
pianist Glen Inanga
and with the Arkansas Philharmonic and
the North Mississippi
Symphonies conducted
by Steven Byess. She
has appeared with the
Fort Collins Symphony
conducted by Wes
Kenney, the Allentown
Symphony with Diane
Wittry, the Bucks
County Symphony,
Ridgewood Symphony
and Knickerbocker
Chamber Orchestra of
New York led by Gary
Fagin, the Marin Symphony conducted by
Alasdair Neale and the
USC and Richardson
Symphonies conducted
by Anshel Brusilow.
She performed the
Brahms Double Concerto with Ronald Leonard, under the sbaton of
Yehuda Gilad and Carlo
Ponti, Jr. She has performed the Tchaikovsky
Violin Concerto with
the San Luis Obispo
Symphony music director Michael Nowak, and
the Beethoven Violin
Concerto with Lara
Webber and the Livermore Symphony.
In 2010, on the 20th
anniversary of the auction of the Red Mendelssohn Stradivarius,
she gave a commemorative recital in Cremona,
Italy with pianist Igor
Longato, whom she
met at the International
Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow in
1998. She has toured
northern Italy with
the TOCCATA-Tahoe
Orchestra performing
Vivaldi’s Four Seasons
and in 2017, she will
tour Vienna, Salzburg
and Prague, as well as
Romania and Serbia.
Also in 2017, she will
perform The Red Violin
Chaconne with Maestro

Jung-Ho Pak and the
Cape Symphony and
record the Sibelius Violin Concerto which will
be released together
with the Mendelssohn
Violin Concerto.
Maestro Burns was on
staff with the New York
Philharmonic as one of
their Cover Conductors
from 1999-2007, having
been appointed by Kurt
Masur as a result of a
competitive audition byinvitation-only. In this
capacity, she accompanied the orchestra
on tour to the Far East
as the tour assistant
conductor to then new
Music Director, Lorin
Maazel, and for eight
years was entrusted as
an assistant conductor
on call for countless
speciﬁc, fully prepared
programs under many
guest conductors of
international repute.
Now in her sixth season as music director
and conductor of the
Tysons McLean Orchestra (Virginia), Burns
continues as music
director of The Orchestra of the Redeemer in
New York City since
1995. Recent prior
music directorships
include the Tallahassee
Symphony, where she
was designated a Paul
Harris Fellow for six
years of outstanding
contribution to the cultural life of Tallahassee,
the Kenosha Symphony
and the Lawton Philharmonic. Additionally, she
is principal conductor
and music advisor for
the popular multimedia orchestral show
RePLAY: Symphony of
Heroes, based on the
symphonic music of videogames. As such, she
conducted the world
premiere with the Sydney Symphony at the
Sydney Opera House
in Australia, followed
by performances with
the Houston Symphony,
Phoenix Symphony,
Oregon Symphony,
Grand Rapids Symphony, members of the
Toronto Symphony at
the Sony Centre, and
conducts ensuing performances with other
major orchestras as the
show is booked.
Burns has received
conducting awards
from the Aspen Music
Festival, studying with
Paul Vermel, and the
Conductors Guild,
where she was unanimously presented with
their prestigious biennial prize, the Thelma
Robinson Scholarship,
while still a student
at Mannes College of
Music (NY). Ms. Burns
also received an Artist
Diploma in Yale University’s eminent Conductor Apprentice Program
on full scholarship and
upon special invitation
of Yale faculty.
For more information,
visit arieltheatre.org.

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109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
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Daily Sentinel

OBITUARIES
MICHAEL ROSS CANAN
POMEROY
— Michael Ross
Canan, 66, of
Pomeroy, Ohio,
passed away on
Jan. 15, 2019, at
his home after
a ﬁve year hard
fought battle. He was the
son of the late William J.
and Donna J. Canan.
Mike graduated from
West Liberty High School
in 1970 and married Vicki
Brattain, his high school
sweetheart, in 1974. Mike
had a passion for justice
which led him into the
ﬁeld of law enforcement.
He attended Sinclair
Community College in
Dayton, Ohio, majoring
in law enforcement. In
1974, Mike was sworn
into the Columbus Police
Department. During his
career, he was assigned
to various positions
including street patrol,
the detective bureau in
the robbery/homicide
division, as well as the
narcotics squad where he
was appointed as a Special Deputy with the United States Marshal’s ofﬁce.
He was also trained as a
SWAT ofﬁcer.
Mike and his family
moved to Meigs County
in 1991, where they
began to restore a 150
year old farmhouse. He
began working as an
investigator for then,
Prosecutor, Steven L.
Story . After that, he
became an investigator
for Meigs County Children Services, followed
by a position as bailiff/
court security for Common Pleas Court Judge
Rick Crow. In 2000, Mike
was appointed to the
position of Commander
for Athens/Meigs Multi
County Drug Task Force.

Mike was an
avid hunter and
ﬁsherman and
loved the outdoors.
One of his favorite
hobbies was club
road racing and he
was fortunate to
have owned and driven
a professional Can-Am
race car at the Mid Ohio
Sports Car course. Mike
also was a die-hard Cleveland Browns fan.
Mike was loved and
adored by his family. He
was famous for his quick
sense of humor and the
ability to make you laugh.
He is survived by the
love of his life, Vicki
Brattain Canan; his precious daughters, Melissa
Rizer and Kelly (Issac)
Barnett; four of his greatest joys, grandchildren,
Abigail and Chloe Rizer,
and Brady and Madelyn
Barnett, with whom he
shared an extraordinary
bond; siblings, Michele
(Vern) Sloan, Cathy
(Wayne) Chadeayne and
Jeff (Rachelle) Canan;
and numerous nieces and
nephews.
Memorial services will
be held on Saturday, Jan.
19, at noon at the Anderson-McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. The
Columbus Police Department Honor Guard
will be in attendance to
honor his service. A celebration of life gathering
will follow at the EwingSchwarzel Community
Room on West Second
Avenue in Pomeroy.
Friends and family may
call at the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
from 11 a.m. to noon on
Saturday.
An online registry is
available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

WROTEN
POINT PLEASANT — Velma A. Wroten, 74, of
Point Pleasant, died Jan. 15.
Funeral services will be held at Deal Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant, Friday, Jan. 18 at 2 p.m. Friends
may visit the family at the funeral home from noon-2
p.m., prior to the service.
CRAIG
ROBERTSBURG — Betty Jane Sayre Craig, 88, of
Robertsburg, W.Va., died Monday, January 14, 2019.
Funeral Service will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday, January 19, 2019 at Raynes Funeral Home, Buffalo, W.Va.
Burial will follow in Tucker Cemetery, Grimms Landing. The family will receive friends two hours prior
to the service at the funeral home. Raynes Funeral
Home, Buffalo is in charge of arrangements.

ROBERT A. MARTIN
ALLIANCE —
Robert A. Martin,
age 72, of Alliance,
passed away Friday, January 11,
2019, at Woodlawn
Compassionate
Care Center after a
long illness.
Robert was born in
Gallipolis, Gallia County,
Ohio, Feb. 13, 1946, the
son of Osby and Leona
(Eblin) Martin.
He graduated from
Marlington High School
in 1964 and started his
career at the Timken
Company a week after
he graduated from high
school. He entered a
4-year machinist apprentice program and not
long after completion
of his apprenticeship,
accepted a salary position in the suggestion/
recreation department.
He also attended Kent
State University. He
was responsible for the
evaluation of employee
suggestions, Corporate
Cup, 11 ﬂoats for the
Hall of Fame Parade, and
employee award recognition and budgeting. He
retired from Timken after
38 years. In the fall of
2001, Bob began his second career as an adjunct
instructor at Stark State
College School of Industrial Technology where he
taught until the spring of
2014.
Survivors include his
wife, Deborah (Carr)
Martin, whom he married
Sept. 5, 1987; son, Steven
(Susan Shanklin) Martin
of Alliance; daughter,
Stephanie (Christian)
Shively of North Canton; mother of Steven
and Stephanie, Marikay
(Hagan) Martin Colbert;

sister, Patricia
Martin of Henderson, Nevada; brother, Adam Martin
of Middleport;
stepsister, Linda
Kelton (Robert)
Jones; and three
grandchildren, Samantha
Martin, Bradyn Shively
and Maya Shively.
Besides his parents and
his stepmother, Mary
(Kelton) Martin, he was
preceded in death by his
special grandmother,
Efﬁe (Logan) Eakins
and step grandfather,
Chalmer Jennings Eakins;
stepbrother, Frank Kelton; and brothers-in-law,
Chuck Hagan and Tom
Hagan.
Services were held at
11 a.m., Monday, Jan. 14,
2019, at Trinity Episcopal
Church, 1200 S. Union
Ave., Alliance with Rev.
Jerome Colegrove ofﬁciating. Friends called from
2 to 4 p.m. Sunday, Jan.
13, 2019, at CassadayTurkle-Christian Funeral
Home 75 S. Union Ave.,
Alliance and also at 10
a.m., Monday, prior to
the service at the church.
Entombment will take
place at Highland Memorial Park in Beloit.
In lieu of ﬂowers,
memorial contributions
may be made to St. Jude’s
Research Hospital, PO
Box 1000, Dept. 142
Memphis, Tennessee
38148-0142, or to Trinity
Episcopal Church 1200 S.
Union Ave., Alliance, OH
44601.
Arrangements are by
Cassaday-Turkle-Christian Funeral Home 75
S. Union Ave., Alliance,
OH 44601. Friends may
register online at www.
ctcfuneral.com.

FOWLER
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — On Monday, Jan.
14, Donald “Don” Wade Fowler, 77, of Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va. died at Holzer Senior Care, Bidwell.
A funeral service will be at 1 p.m., Saturday, Jan. 19
at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
with Pastor Darren Ellis ofﬁciating. Burial will follow at Jordan Cemetery in Gallipolis Ferry. Military
graveside rites will be given by the West Virginia
Army Honor Guard. The family will receive friends
two hours prior to the funeral service, Saturday at the
funeral home.
ENGLISH
BIDWELL — Howard English, 71, Church Street,
Bidwell, died early Wednesday, January 16, 2018
in Bidwell. Arrangements will be announced by the
Cremeens-King Funeral Home, Gallipolis.

President
From page 1

Approve the Superintendent/
Treasurer as the district purchasing agent;
Approve the Superintendent as
the Title IX hearing ofﬁcer;
To authorize the Superintendent/Treasurer to utilize the legal
services of an individual and/or
group that best serves the needs of
the district;
To authorize the Treasurer to
advance general funds to federal
accounts;
Approve participation in the
OSBA Legal Assistance Fund;
To authorize the Treasurer to
secure appropriate bonding as
stipulated in board policy 8740;
To authorize the Treasurer to
revise appropriations at the fund
level, as needed, and then submit
the modiﬁcations and/or corrections to the Board for approval at
the next possible Board meeting;
Authorize the Treasurer to advertise for bids as speciﬁed by law;
Authorize the Treasurer to pay
all bills within the limits of the
appropriations as bills are received
and after merchandise has been
received in acceptable condition,
services have been completed to
satisfaction or based upon other
requirements;
Motion to discard of sell
textbooks, library books, ﬁlms/
ﬁlmstrips, and equipment at all
schools due to age, condition and/
or beyond repair;
Approve that the Board designate The Daily Sentinel as the
ofﬁcial newspaper for the publica-

Courtesy photos

Students made posters to show their appreciation for the board members.

Authorize the Superintendent
or designee to administer all federal programs in compliance with
local, state, and federal regulations.
(Required by state and federal
regulations).
Regular meetings of the Southern Local Board of Education will
be held on the last Monday of each
month at 6:30 p.m. in the Kathryn
Board members are pictured during the Hart Community Center.
board member appreciation event.
The January regular meeting
immediately followed the organizational meeting.
tion of those notices required by
During the regular meeting,
law for the Southern Local School
board members were recognized
District;
Authorize the Superintendent to for Board Member Appreciation
Month. As part of the appreciation,
hire employees on a contingency
students made posters, wrote letbasis pending receipt of their
ters, and made cards for the board
criminal history and temporary
personnel as needed in emergency members.
situations. Such employment to be
presented for Board approval at the More on the regular meeting will appear in an
upcoming edition of The Daily Sentinel.
next regular meeting;

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Jenkins named regional officer of SkillsUSA
Buckeye Hills Career
Center announces Keyan
Jenkins, a senior Auto Service Technology student
from Oak Hill High School,
has been elected a regional
ofﬁcer of the South Central
Jenkins
Region of SkillsUSA. This
prestigious honor is only
held by 42 students in Ohio.
Jenkins has been a local ofﬁcer for two years and this year
holds the ofﬁce of president of

the Buckeye Hills Chapter.
While being a member of
SkillsUSA, he has attended
Fall Leadership Conference
twice, regional competition,
Ohio SkillsUSA championships and the National Leadership and Skills Conference
in Louisville, KY. He has
competed in Auto Service, Opening and Closing, and Occupational
Health and Safety in which he won
a gold medal at the state level.

He will travel with the rest of
the Regional and State Leadership team to Washington, D.C.
and Leesburg, Va., where he will
participate in the regional ofﬁcer
training to be held at the SkillsUSA
National Headquarters in Leesburg. While in Washington, Jenkins
will visit the Capital and a wreath
laying ceremony at the Tomb of the
Unknown Soldier.
Submitted by Buckeye Hills Career Center.

Gallia Chamber’s annual awards banquet Jan. 24
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia Chamber of Commerce has
announced local businesses and
organizations that will be honored
at its upcoming 82nd annual Meeting and Awards Ceremony, which
is anticipated to be held Jan. 24 at
Bossard Memorial Library.
The doors will open at 5:30 p.m.
at the library as the Chamber’s new
board president will be inducted
and 2018 award recipients will be
recognized with light refreshments
served. The event is by invitation
only with a networking event and
dinner to follow at the Colony Club.
The event has also long served to
acknowledge the Chamber’s heroes

of economic development.
Awardees to be recognized
include Twisted Vine Family Vineyard with the chamber’s Beautiﬁcation Award. Thomas Do-It Center
is anticipated to received the
Community Involvement Award,
Bridgeport Equipment and Tool
Sales and Rentals will receive the
Sudden Impact Award. Small Business of the Year will go to Skyline
Bowling Center and the Ray McKinniss Committee of the Year will
go to the Gallia County and Gallipolis Leo Club.
The Bud and Donna McGhee
Community Service Award is traditionally kept a secret until the
night of the ceremony every year.

The award is meant to honor an
individual known throughout the
community for lifetime exemplary
leadership, volunteer service to the
community and continued success
in making the region a better place
to live. Among those to receive the
award previously include the late
Chester Mike Polcyn, the late Jessie Payne, Kevin Dennis and the
late Ray McKinniss. The award has
often been considered the Chamber’s highest honor.
For more information on tickets
and how to register to attend, contact Elisha Orsbon at the Chamber
by phone at 740-446-0596, or text
at 740-339-9290, or email at eorsbon@galliacounty.org.

Thursday, January 17, 2019 3

OVBC announces
cash dividend
tral is staying open later
and will be opening our
doors on traditional
bank holidays in January and February.”
Ohio Valley Banc
Corp. is based in Gallipolis, Ohio. The primary subsidiaries of the
company are: Ohio Valley Bank and Loan Central. Ohio Valley Bank is
an FDIC-insured, state
member bank of the
Federal Reserve operating 19 ofﬁces in Ohio
and West Virginia. Loan
Central, specializing
in tax preparation and
loans, is a ﬁnance company with six ofﬁces in
southern Ohio. Ohio
Valley Banc Corp.
stock is traded on The
NASDAQ Global Market under the symbol
OVBC. The companies’
Websites are www.ovbc.
com and www.myloancentral.com.

GALLIPOLIS — On
Jan. 15, Ohio Valley
Banc Corp. [Nasdaq:
OVBC] Board of Directors declared a cash
dividend of $0.21 per
common share payable
on Feb. 10, to shareholders of record as of
the close of business on
Jan. 25.
For over nine years
(37 consecutive quarters), OVBC has maintained a consistent, regular quarterly dividend
of $0.21 per common
share.
“This dividend comes
just as our income tax
professionals at Loan
Central gear up for
another refund season,”
said OVBC President
and CEO Tom Wiseman. “The annual ﬂood
of friends and neighbors
who trust us for their
tax preparation remind
us that we are making a
positive impact on the
communities we serve.
In response, Loan Cen-

Submitted by Ohio Valley Banc
Corp.

Sears staves off liquidation, stores to remain open
who has tried and failed to turn
around the company many times
before, remains an open question.
Cutthroat competitors like Amazon,
Target and Walmart also pose challenges that the struggling retailer
has so far been unable to overcome.
“While there’s no doubt that a
shrunken Sears will be more viable
than the larger entity, which struggled to turn a proﬁt, we remain
extremely pessimistic about the
chain’s future,” said Neil Saunders,
managing director of GlobalData
Retail. “In our view, Sears exits
this process with almost as many
problems as it had when it entered
bankruptcy protection. In essence,
its hand has not changed, and the

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cards it holds are not winning
ones.”
The operator of Sears and Kmart
had 687 stores and 68,000 workers
at the time of its bankruptcy ﬁling.
At its peak in 2012, its stores numbered 4,000.
Lampert, the only one to put
out a bid for the whole company,
had sweetened his offer to more
than $5 billion over the last few
days through an afﬁliate of his
hedge fund ESL after his original
bid had been rejected by the Sears
board. That included assuming
certain liabilities like covering bills
to vendors of up to $166 million.
Details of the ﬁnal terms couldn’t
be learned.

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Wendy’s Company(NASDAQ)
$16.43
Walmart Inc(NYSE)
$96.35
Big Lots, Inc(NYSE)
$30.87
Harley-Davidson Inc(NYSE)
$37.07
PepsiCo, Inc.(NASDAQ)
$108.34
Peoples Bancorp Inc.(NASDAQ)
$31.70
Kroger Co(NYSE)
$28.70
BB&amp;T Corporation(NYSE)
$47.54
City Holding Company(NASDAQ)
$70.02
American Electric Power(NYSE)
$75.72
Ohio Valley Bank Corp(NASDAQ)
$35.58
Century Aluminum(NASDAQ)
$8.50
Rocky Brands Inc(NASDAQ)
$27.33
Apple(NASDAQ)
$154.94
The Coca-Cola Co(NYSE)
$46.92
Post Holdings
$99.55
Far Eastern New Century Corp (TPE)
$29.05
McDonald’s(NYSE)
$179.35
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LLP

NEW YORK (AP) — Sears will
live on— at least for now.
The company’s chairman and
largest shareholder, Eddie Lampert, won a bankruptcy auction for
Sears, averting liquidation of the
iconic chain, according to a source
familiar with the negotiations. The
person agreed to speak on condition of anonymity because they
were not authorized to discuss the
negotiation publicly.
Lampert, who steered the company into Chapter 11 bankruptcy
protection in October, is aiming to
keep open roughly 400 stores and
preserve tens of thousands of jobs.
But how long Sears can survive
under the 56-year-old billionaire,

AS SEEN ON

TV

For a FREE brochure call:

1-866-236-8975

�Opinion
4 Thursday, January 17, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

I’ll take a pass
on computer
passwords
The computer revolution is nearing its end.
I predict that in a few short years, the invention
that has revolutionized the ways in which we live
our lives every single day will be but
a distant memory. All the computers in the world will soon be sitting
forlornly on shelves, unused, for a
few years before eventually turning
to dust … forgotten relics of a bygone
era.
What will kill the computer revoluDavid
tion, you ask? Will it be some new
Fong
form of technology that comes along
Contributing to replace the erstwhile computer?
columnist
Will we all wake up and one day
decide it’s time to revert back to
a simpler time, like the ones before computers
existed?
No, computers are going to die because no one
will be able to remember their passwords anymore.
Computers used to be fairly simple — even for
someone like me, who thinks a ball peen hammer
is advanced technology. You sat down in front
of your computer, you turned it on and then you
went about the business of doing whatever you
needed to do on your computer (which, in my
case, consisted mostly of watching old pro wrestling videos on YouTube and bragging about my
kids on Facebook).
It’s not quite so simple these days. Seems as
though everything you need or want to do on a
computer these days ﬁrst involves typing in some
sort of password. You need a password to turn
on your computer. You need a password to check
your email. You need a password to log on to websites. I’m pretty sure you need a password to pull
the plug on the computer — and if you don’t type
it in correctly within three tries, you receive some
sort of electronic shock.
I even needed a password to log in to the program in which I am typing my column. It’s important to keep my work software secure, I imagine,
because there are hundreds of people out there
probably clamoring to sneak into the Troy Daily
News ofﬁces and write up a sports story or a
weekly column when I’m not sitting at my desk.
(Actually, judging by the email I receive, that
may not be too far from the truth — people tell
me all the time they could do a better job than
me).
You know, it’s not that I am against passwords in
and of themselves, I suppose. There are plenty of
things I do on a computer that are probably best if
kept a secret and no one in civilized society knew
about them besides me. That’s ﬁne.
It’s the process of creating passwords that has
gotten out of control over the past few years.
It used to be that you could use whatever you
wanted as your computer or email password.
Most people, I found, would simply use the name
of their cat for their computer passwords. It made
sense, I suppose — it was something easy to
remember and could be quickly entered into the
computer.
Not anymore, friends.
These days, creating a password for your email
or computer programs involves entering a series
of letters, numbers, symbols and ancient Egyptian
hieroglyphics that actually are far more complex
than our nation’s nuclear launch codes.
For starters, all passwords must now be at least
eight characters long. All of them have to have
a certain number of letters, a certain number of
numbers, at least one symbol and at least two of
the letters must be capitalized.
So if you want your password to be the name of
one of your kids, and your kid’s name was David
(congratulations on picking out a great name for
your kid, by the way), you couldn’t just make your
password “David.” You’d actually have to make it
something like d@vID!6845.
That’s all great — as I’m sure it keeps your computer secure — but that also means it keeps your
computer secure from you, because there’s no way
you can possibly remember all of that. So you have
to write down your password on a Post-It note and
leave it permanently afﬁxed to your computer —
all of which kind of undermines the whole point of
having a password in the ﬁrst place, correct?
What’s even better, though, is there are some
websites that make you reset your password every
six months — so even if you do manage to memorize your password, you’ll just have to change it
soon after you ﬁnally learn it, anyway.
Truthfully, it’s lucky we are able to use computers to accomplish anything at all, instead of just
sitting around staring blankly at our screens, trying to remember how many ampersands appear in
our login passwords.
By the way — this likely will be my ﬁnal column
for a few months — my password changes tomorrow and it’s going to take me some time to learn
the new one.
Contact David Fong at dfong@aimmediamidwest.com; follow him on
Twitter @thefong

THEIR VIEW

Sunday reunion: Irreplaceable
I walked over to a closet in my ofﬁce, blew a bit
of dust off the top shelf,
and picked up a box.
To my delight, I opened
the bulky package to ﬁnd
what I had been seeking
all week. The large box
was marked with the
word “irreplaceable” in
big, stout letters on the
outside, and “Rita’s home
movies” on the inside.
I slipped the CD into
the computer and sat
back in my chair with
anticipation. The screen
ﬂickered for a moment,
and then suddenly lit up
with the 8mm movies
chronicling some of the
special times in the lives
of the Haley family.
My sister, Rita, had
ﬁlmed many of the movies in the late 1950s
and 1960s, and they are
indeed “irreplaceable.”
The ﬁrst movie showed
Rita stepping from the
front porch of our home
in Port William walking
toward her brand new
1957 Chevrolet. The car
was sporting glossy red
paint with white trim
and large tail ﬁns like a
great swordﬁsh from the
Northern Atlantic.
Then came a formal
dance at the old Port
William High School in
honor of my parents’
25th wedding anniversary. Everyone, even the
bachelors in the family,
danced and whirled to
the Bill George Orchestra, alternating between
slow dances and picking
up the tempo with an
occasional square dance.
There were two baseball movies that par-

Kluszewski, wearticularly caught
ing number 18 on
my attention. The
his jersey with cutﬁrst was taken duroff sleeves, walked
ing a trip Rita and
out of the dugout
my mom made to
toward the stands.
Chicago to attend
He signed a few
a wedding. The
autographs, and
movie actually
Pat
even stopped to
showed very little Haley
of the wedding,
Contributing pose for pictures.
To see the players
but focused on a
columnist
walking up through
baseball game they
the stands was
attended between
amazing.
the White Sox and the
The ﬁnal movie
Washington Senators at
was one my sister had
old Comiskey Park.
ﬁlmed at one of the famThe second baseball
ily reunions, back in the
movie was taken in the
1950s, at the old Port
stands of Crosley Field
in Cincinnati. Those who William High School.
It was sweltering hot
remember Crosley Field
on that particular Sunwill know the ballpark
was an oasis, an island in day, and the family had
taken refuge underneath
the middle of an urban
setting, full of excitement the large buckeye trees,
where a slight wind blew
and wonder. Inside the
stadium you could see the and the beverages were
beautiful green grass, the cold. There were three or
four metal tubs ﬁlled with
bright lights, and smell
the aroma of hot dogs and ice, Pepsi, Coke, Hires
Root Beer, Barq’s Orange
peanuts.
The movie was unique Pop and Cream Soda;
and large containers of
because Rita was sitting
homemade tea and fresh
about 10 rows from the
lemonade. Watermelons
ﬁeld with her camera
were in another iced tub
trained on the Reds’
dugout as several players at the end of the table,
walked up from the ﬁeld, and there were 10 tables
into the stands, and head- full of every kind of food
imaginable.
ed toward their locker
Roughly 200 cousins
room that was located
on both sides of the famdown a long ramp in the
ily had shown up for the
middle of the stands.
reunion. As Rita ﬁlmed,
As the players walked
many turned their heads,
by, fans reached out to
covered their faces, or
shake their hands, offer
stuck out their tongues,
scorecards for them to
sign, and some of the fans as was the norm in the
lightly patted the players early days of home movies. Some even ran out of
on the back.
the picture when the camAlthough the ﬁlm had
era was aimed at them.
no sound, you could
Everyone played softsense a hush coming over
ball on the diamond.
the crowd. Then Ted

Some of the men were
so old they could barely
walk, let alone run, but
they played ball nevertheless. After the game, the
men played cards and
drank beer. They would
laugh and argue, but soon
return to the table for
more poker.
The kids had sack races
and lined up for games of
egg-toss. A highlight of
the afternoon was when
the older men would tie
balloons full of water on
the back of their pants
with a string. Their wives
would hand them a rolledup newspaper. Smack!
Thud! Whack!
The game was on.
The goal was to use
the newspaper to smack
the balloon causing it to
burst, and soaking the
wearer with water. The
game became particularly
amusing since most of the
men had been drinking
beer all afternoon.
Some got mad, fell
down, had difﬁculty getting up, chased their
cousins around the ﬁeld,
and hollered at their
wives to bring them
larger newspapers.
The last movie slowly
stopped, and when it was
over I stared at the screen
for the longest time.
What we would give to
spend just one more summer under those buckeye
trees in Port William,
and have the opportunity
to see all our loved ones
again.
Irreplaceable.
Pat Haley is a former Clinton
County commissioner and former
Clinton County sheriff.

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

son’s daughter, Martha,
gave birth to James MadiToday is Thursday, Jan. son Randolph, the ﬁrst
17, the 17th day of 2019. child born in the White
There are 348 days left in House.
In 1893, Hawaii’s monthe year.
archy was overthrown as
Today’s Highlight in History: a group of businessmen
and sugar planters forced
On Jan. 17, 1961,
Queen Lili’uokalani to
President Dwight D.
Eisenhower delivered his abdicate. The 19th presifarewell address in which dent of the United States,
Rutherford B. Hayes, died
he warned against “the
in Fremont, Ohio, at age
acquisition of unwarranted inﬂuence, whether 70.
In 1929, the cartoon
sought or unsought, by
character Popeye the
the military-industrial
Sailor made his debut in
complex.”
the “Thimble Theatre”
comic strip.
On this date:
In 1945, Soviet and PolIn 1806, Thomas Jeffer-

was shot by a ﬁring squad
at Utah State Prison in
the ﬁrst U.S. execution in
a decade.
“If there is one
In 1984, the U.S.
basic element in our
Supreme Court, in Sony
Constitution, it is civilian
Corp. of America v. Unicontrol of the military.”
versal City Studios, Inc.,
— President Harry S.
ruled 5-4 that the use
Truman (1884-1972).
of home video cassette
recorders to tape television programs for private
ish forces liberated Warsaw during World War II; viewing did not violate
federal copyright laws.
Swedish diplomat Raoul
In 1994, the 6.7 magWallenberg, credited with
saving tens of thousands nitude Northridge earthquake struck Southern
of Jews, disappeared in
California, killing at least
Hungary while in Soviet
60 people, according to
custody.
In 1977, convicted mur- the U.S. Geological Survey.
derer Gary Gilmore, 36,

THOUGHT
FOR TODAY

�Daily Sentinel

Thursday, January 17,2019 5

NEWS/WEATHER

Shutdown may upead State of the Union speech
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — A grand
Washington ritual became a
potential casualty of the partial
government shutdown Wednes­
day as House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi asked President Donald
Trump to postpone his Jan. 29
State of the Union speech. She
cited concerns about whether
the hobbled government can
provide adequate security, but
Republicans cast her move as a
ploy to deny Trump the stage.
In a letter to Trump, Pelosi
said that with both the Secret
Service and the Homeland
Security Department entangled
in the shutdown, the president
should speak to Congress
another time or he should
deliver the address in writing.
Homeland Security Secretary
Kirstjen Nielsen denied any­
one’s safety is compromised,
saying both agencies “are fully
prepared to support and secure
the State of the Union.”
Trump did not immediately
respond to the request and the
White House, thrown off guard
by the move, had yet to offer
any official response hours
later. But GOP allies accused
Pelosi of playing politics, with
Republican Rep. Steve Scalise
tweeting that Democrats are
“only interested in obstructing
@realDonaldTrump, not gov­
erning.”
Pelosi, who issued the cus­
tomary invitation to Trump
weeks ago, hit the president
in a vulnerable place, as he
delights in taking his message
to the public and has been
preparing for the address for
weeks.
The uncertainty surrounding
the speech also underscored
the unraveling of ceremonial
norms and niceties in Trump’s
Washington, with the shut­
down in its fourth week, the
White House and Democrats
in a stalemate and the impasse
draining the finances of hun­
dreds of thousands of federal
employees.

TODAY

FRIDAY

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SATURDAY

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HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Wed.

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

»

Index combines the effects of curV rent 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.

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24 hours ending 3 p.m. Wed. Trace
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to
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Jan 27

Feb 4

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Feb 12

SOLUNAR TABLE
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for fish and game.

Major

Today 7:54a
Fri.
8:45a
Sat.
9:39a
Sun. 10:38a
Mon. 11:40a
Tue. 12:11a
Wed.
1:18a

Minor Major

Minor

1:40a 8:22p
2:30a 9:14p
3:24a 10:10p
4:22a 11:10p
—
5:24a
6:28a 12:43p
7:33a 1:47p

2:08p
2:59p
3:55p
4:54p
5:56p
6:59p
8:01 p

WEATHER HISTORY
On Jan. 17,1817, St. Elmo's Fire
flashed during a storm in Vermont
and Massachusetts. Static electric­
ity creates the startling flashes of
light called St. Elmo's Fire during
snowstorms.

POMEROY — Free small
business classes will be
held on Thursday evenings
beginning Jan. 24, from
6-7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library. Classes will run for
six consecutive weeks. To
register or for more infor­
mation contact Kyle Verge
at KyleV@acenetworks.org
or 740-592-3854 ext. 120.
Registration is required.
The classes are held in con­
junction with Ohio Means
Job Meigs County, ACEnet
and the Meigs County Dis­
trict Public Library.

MEIGS CALENDAR
OF EVENTS
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@
aimmediamidwest.com.

Card Shower
Nancy Rose, formerly of
the Racine and Portland
areas, will celebrate her
80th birthday on Jan. 26.
Cards may be sent to her
at Overbrook Center, 333
Page Street, Room 102,
Middleport, Ohio 45760.
Louise Radford’s 90th
birthday will be celebrated
on Saturday, Jan. 26 from
2-4 p.m. at the American
Legion Drew Webster Post
39,41765, Pomeroy. No
gifts please, cards appreci­
ated. Cards may also be
sent to Louise Radford,
35092 Rocksprings Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Waverly

41/36
Centerville

POMEROY,

38/32

Elizabeth

41/37

40/36

Rio Grande
t41/37

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GALLI POLIS

South Shore Greenup

Buffalo

43/38

43/38

Ironton

&gt; 44/39

500

1i

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

44/39
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NATIONAL FORECAST

Clendenin

Milton

Ashland ¿
Grayson

unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.

43/39
' Huntington

42/38

o

41/39 O

St. Albans

43/40

a

Charleston

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precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

j 110s
100s

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. Wed.
Flood
Stage Level

12.85
16.91
21.66
12.35
12.79
24.48
12.14
27.10
35.04
12.57
21.30
34.50
21.20

90s

24-hr.
Chg.

+0.61
-0.51
-0.54
-0.59
-0.51
-0.32
-7.25
-0.08
+0.06
-0.03
-0.50
+0.20
-0.90

Spencer

41/37

41/36

OHIO RIVER

9

42/38

41/37

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AIR QUALITY

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

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Jackson

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Location

Coolvilleo

39/36

Portsmouth

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

39/36

38/35

9

WEATHER TRIVIA™

300
0 50 100150200
Primary pollutant: Particulates

38/35

Wilkesville

40/35

3QO

Not as cold with
periods of sun

Belpre

A

0

39/35

44°
Chance of a little
afternoon rain

Marietta

Athens o

Lucasville

65

Mostly sunny and
very cold

WEDNESDAY

45°
37°

39/35

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

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

Cloudy; snow
showers, windy and
colder

38/34

3

TUESDAY

18°

Murray City

McArthurc

38/33

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

I

First

Free small
business classes

21°

37/34 J

42/37

MOON PHASES
Full

37/33

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part of the United States?
7:44 a.m.
5:34 p.m.
3:08 p.m.
5:00 a.m.

space-available basis.

NATIONAL CITIES

Chillicothe

Today Fri.

Sunrise 7:45 a.m.
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Rain, some ice mixed
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Periods of snow mixing with rain, accumulating 1 -3
inches today. Low clouds tonight. High 410 / Low 38°

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-9° in 1994

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Editor's Note: Meigs Briefs will only

and immoral and Democrats
say they will discuss border
security once the government
has reopened.
Some expressed little opti­
mism.
Sen. Lindsay Graham, a
South Carolina Republican who
has been working on bipartisan
strategies, declared glumly: “I
am running out of ideas.”
Trump met a bipartisan
group of lawmakers Wednesday
that included seven Democrats.
Two people who attended the
White House meeting agreed
it was “productive,” but could
Andrew Harnik | AP
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California, center, speaks to reporters as she not say to what extent Trump
leaves an event with furloughed federal workers amid the partial government was listening or moved by the
shutdown Wednesday on Capitol Hill in Washington. Pelosi has told President conversation.
Donald Trump in a letter that he should delay his State of the Union address to
The people, who spoke on
Congress or deliver the address in writing. The speaker expressed doubts that condition of anonymity to dis­
the hobbled government can provide adequate security.
cuss the event candidly, said
it seemed at some points as if
As he weighs a response to
Pelosi left unclear what
people were talking past each
Pelosi, Trump could not go for­
would happen if Trump insisted
other. Lawmakers talked about
ward with a State of the Union
on coming despite the welcome
the shutdown’s effect on their
mat being pulled away. It takes
address in Congress without
constituents and advocated for
her blessing. Donald Ritchie,
a joint resolution of the House
“border security.” Trump and
former historian of the Senate,
and Congress to extend the
others on-and-off used the term
said that anytime a president
official invitation and set the
“wall.” It was not clear if prog­
comes to speak, it must be at
stage.
ress had been made, by those
the request of Congress. Trump
“We’ll have to have a secu­
accounts.
could opt to deliver a speech
rity evaluation, but that would
Meanwhile a group of Repub­
mean diverting resources,” she somewhere else, like the Oval
lican senators headed to the
told reporters when asked how Office, but it would not have
White House later Wednesday.
the same ritualistic heft.
she would respond if Trump
Many Republicans were
Democratic leaders did
still intended to come. “I don’t
unwilling to sign on to a letter
not ask the Secret Service if
know how that could happen.”
led by Graham and Sen. Chris
the agency would be able to
Pressure on Trump intensi­
Coons, D-Del., to re-open the
fied on the 26th day of the shut­ secure the State of the Union
government for three weeks
event before sending the letter,
down, as lawmakers from both
while talks continue.
parties scrambled for solutions. according to a senior Home­
“Does that help the presi­
land Security official, who was
At the White House, Trump
dent or does that hurt the
not authorized to speak public­
met a bipartisan group of law­
president?” asked Sen. Mike
ly. Pelosi’s office said Congress
makers, as well as a group of
Rounds, R-S.D., among those
is already familiar with the per­
Republican senators, but prog­
going to the White House. He
centage of Secret Service and
ress appeared elusive.
has not signed the letter. “If
Homeland Security employees
While his own advisers said
the president saw it as a way to
who have been furloughed and
the shutdown was proving a
be conciliatory, if he thought it
working without pay.
greater drag on the economy
would help, then perhaps it’s a
than expected, Trump showed
The Secret Service starts
good idea,” he said. “If it’s just
preparing for events like these
no signs of backing off a fight
seen as a weakening of his posi­
months in advance.
that he views as vital for his
Lawmakers struggled to find tion, then he probably wouldn’t
core supporters.
do it.”
a way out of the shutdown
On Wednesday, Trump
While Sen. Susan Collins,
Wednesday. Trump is demand­
signed legislation into law
R-Maine, said she has signed,
ing $5.7 billion to build a wall
affirming that the roughly
others said GOP support was
along the Mexican border that
800,000 federal workers who
lacking. “They’re a little short
he says is needed on humani­
have been going without pay
on the R side,” said Sen. Joe
tarian and security grounds.
will ultimately be compensated
But Pelosi is refusing money for Manchin, D-W.Va., another
for their lost wages. That was
the practice in the past.
the wall she views as ineffective leader of the effort.

By Catherine Lucey,
Jill Colvin and Lisa Mascaro

&lt;S&gt;AccuWeather

MEIGS BRIEF

50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
0s

City

Today
Hi/Lo/W

Fri.
Hi/Lo/W

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

49/34/pc
25/16/c
53/46/pc
38/33/pc
35/31/pc
29/19/c
52/35/r
28/24/s
42/37/r
51/42/pc
49/28/pc
34/22/sf
39/33/c
35/30/sn
37/32/c
63/46/c
53/32/pc
32/15/c
32/27/sn
84/66/pc
74/56/c
39/27/sn
35/26/c
63/47/r
63/39/c
62/50/r
47/38/r
77/61/pc
24/8/c
52/43/r
69/60/c
31/29/pc
54/38/pc
72/49/s
34/30/pc
69/54/pc
34/31/sn
22/13/s
50/39/pc
43/37/pc
41/30/r
45/33/r
59/48/sh
53/46/r
38/34/pc

47/27/sh
22/12/pc
60/49/pc
46/32/pc
45/28/pc
35/25/sn
48/35/c
41/24/sn
44/33/c
60/45/s
36/24/sn
29/22/sn
39/30/c
34/25/c
37/26/c
68/43/t
42/22/sn
25/14/sn
35/22/c
79/69/sh
74/58/sh
35/28/c
37/22/sn
62/42/s
55/52/c
65/50/pc
45/37/c
78/66/pc
14/2/c
50/46/c
70/60/sh
42/28/sn
61/26/r
75/54/s
44/28/pc
70/45/s
37/23/c
35/14/sn
59/40/s
55/35/s
39/32/c
38/25/c
59/49/r
53/47/r
48/32/pc

EXTREMES WEDNESDAY

I -10s

National for the 48 contiguous states

[ZD T-storms

High
75° in Fort Lauderdale, FL
Low -23° in International Falls, MN

Rain
[^] Showers
IZ3Snow

Global

Flurries

High
Low

IZZI|ce

Forecasts and graphics provided by

119° in Wilcannia, Australia
-69° in Ikki-Ambar, Russia

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

AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

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6 Thursday, January 17, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Wahama outlasts Eagles, 50-48
Eastern
junior Garrett
Barringer
(30) is
doubleteamed by
Wahama
defenders
Adam
Groves and
Jacob Lloyd
during the
second half
of Tuesday
night’s boys
basketball
contest at
Gary Clark
Court in
Mason, W.Va.

By Bryan Walters

2-6 TVC Hocking) notched
their ﬁrst home victory of the
2018-19 campaign in rather
MASON, W.Va. — For bet- dramatic fashion, as the Red
ter or for worse, sometimes and White had to rally back
from a four-point deﬁcit
those are just the breaks.
headed into the ﬁnal canto.
Visiting Eastern missed
an uncontested layup in
Down 39-35, the hosts
the ﬁnal seconds of regulabattled through ﬁve lead
tion, and the Wahama boys
changes and eventually
basketball team ultimately
secured a permanent lead
snapped a six-game losing
with 33 seconds remainskid on Tuesday night with
ing as Jacob Lloyd buried a
a thrilling 50-48 decision
3-pointer from the top of the
in a Tri-Valley Conference
key for a 50-48 edge.
Hocking Division contest at
The Eagles (7-4, 5-3)
Gary Clark Court in Mason ended up with possession
County.
and an inbounds pass to
make from in front of their
The White Falcons (2-10,

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

own bench with 7.7 seconds
remaining, and the play was
executed to near perfection.
The pass went inside to
an EHS player, who had an
open look at the goal from
the right side of the lane.
The ball, however, caromed
off the glass a bit too hard
and rolled around the left
side of the hoop before coming off in front.
A Wahama player managed to poke the ball into
the air and away from the
crowd, and the horn ultimately sounded during the
See OUTLAST | 7

Marauders
wallop Wellston,
62-32 Tuesday
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

WELLSTON, Ohio — Back-to-back-to-back, and
back to .500.
The Meigs boys basketball team evened its
season record after picking up its third straight
victory, with the Marauders rolling past Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division host Wellston by a
62-32 tally on Tuesday in Jackson County.
The teams were tied at 11 after eight minutes
of play, but Meigs (7-7, 4-3 TVC Ohio) outscored
the Golden Rockets (2-9, 1-6) by a 12-to-8 count in
the second quarter and headed into the half with a
23-19 advantage.
The Maroon and Gold doubled its total in the
third quarter alone, and headed into the ﬁnale
with a 46-28 advantage. Meigs sealed the victory
on the defensive ended, allowing just four points
over the ﬁnal eight minutes to cap off the 62-32
win.
Meigs made 26-of-59 (44 percent) ﬁeld goal
attempts, including 4-of-17 (23.5 percent) threepoint tries, while Wellston was 11-of-36 (30.5 percent) from the ﬁeld, including 4-of-17 (23.5 percent) from beyond the arc. Both teams made six
free throws, WHS in 15 attempts for 40 percent,
and MHS in 16 tries for 37.5 percent.
The Golden Rockets won the rebounding battle
See WALLOP | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, Jan. 17
Girls Basketball
South Gallia at Southern, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Wellston at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonville-York, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Rock Hill, 6 p.m.
Friday, Jan. 18
Boys Basketball
Wahama at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Belpre at Southern, 6 p.m.
Alexander at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Chesapeake at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Teays Valley Christian,
7:30
Girls Basketball
Logan at Point Pleasant, 6:30
Hannan at Calvary, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Teays Valley Christian,
6 p.m.
Wrestling
Point Pleasant, River Valley, Gallia Academy,
Wahama at WSAZ, 1 p.m.
Saturday, Jan. 19
Boys Basketball
Ravenswood at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Southern at North Adams, 6 p.m.
OVCS at South Gallia, TBA
Girls Basketball
Southern at Wahama, 2 p.m.
Waterford at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Tri-State Hoops Classic, TBA
Wrestling
Point Pleasant, River Valley, Gallia Academy,
Wahama at WSAZ, 10 a.m.
Eastern, Meigs at Athens John Deno, 10 a.m.

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

SHS junior Trey McNickle drives past SGHS senior Garrett Saunders (4), during the Tornadoes’ 68-54 victory on Tuesday in Racine, Ohio.

Tornadoes turn back South Gallia
By Alex Hawley

shots tonight when they
needed to.
“I’m not going to make
excuses and take anyRACINE, Ohio — The
thing away from their
home court advantage
win, but we’ve got some
ﬁnally paid off.
sickness, and Eli Ellis
The Southern boys
didn’t play after spraining
basketball team claimed
his ankle in the last ﬁve
its second home victory
minutes of practice last
of the season on Tuesday
night. We have to lick our
in Meigs County, with the
wounds, get ready to play
Tornadoes shooting over
Wahama on Friday and
45 percent from the ﬁeld
get healthy.”
en route to a 68-54 vicSouthern won the
tory over Tri-Valley Conrebounding battle by a
ference Hocking Division
35-to-31 tally, including
guest South Gallia.
14-to-12 on the offensive
South Gallia (9-4, 5-3
end. SHS also claimed
TVC Hocking) —which
the turnover edge, combrought a ﬁve-game
mitting 13 and forcing
winning streak into the
18. Collectively, the Torgame —led 5-3 and 7-5
nadoes earned 15 assists,
in the opening quarter,
South Gallia senior Braxton Hardy (1) releases a shot, during the nine steals and a quartet
but Southern (5-6, 4-4)
Rebels’ 68-54 setback on Tuesday in Racine, Ohio.
of blocked shots, while
claimed seven straight
the Rebels ﬁnished with
Meanwhile, The Rebels
and then hit 8-of-12 free
points and never trailed
10 assists, eight steals
throws down the stretch, connected on 17-of-50
again.
and three rejections.
sealing the 68-54 victory. (34 percent) ﬁeld goal
The Rebels tied the
Caldwell noted his
Following the triumph, attempts, including
game at 12 by the end
team’s depth as a key to
4-of-19 (21.1 percent)
11th-year Tornadoes’
of the ﬁrst quarter, but
the win, and talked about
from beyond the arc. At
the Tornadoes began the head coach Jeff Caldwell
the conﬁdence that’s been
the free throw line, the
second with a 9-0 run and was pleased to see the
building.
hosts were 12-of-20 (60
led 21-12 with 4:40 left in shots ﬁnally ﬁnding the
“I feel like we have
percent), and the guests
net on his team’s home
the half.
some guys who can come
were 16-of-26 (61.5 perA 7-to-2 Rebel run was court.
of the bench and really
“It’s deﬁnitely our best cent).
answered by an 8-to-2
do some things for us,”
South Gallia head
win on our home court,
spurt from Southern,
Caldwell said. “We have
coach Kent Wolfe spoke
giving the hosts a double- because quite frankly,
eight guys who just play
highly of the Tornadoes,
we haven’t played very
digit advantage a minvarsity, I’m getting more
but acknowledged his
well here,” Caldwell
ute from halftime. The
and more conﬁdence in
team wasn’t quite at full
said. “It was nice to see
guests, however, scored
each and every one of
strength.
the ﬁnal six points of the shots going though the
those guys, and they’re
“Credit to them, I
half, trimming the margin net tonight, that’s really
getting more conﬁdence
thought they played
what it’s been about, we
to 31-27 at the break.
in themselves out on the
really well,” Wolfe said.
just haven’t shot the ball
South Gallia made it
“I had them as one of the court. This was a big win
very well here. Tonight
a one-point game with a
for us, but it’s only one,
top leaders in the league
we shot the ball pretty
10-to-7 run at the start
we have to come back
well overall and hit some with everybody they
of the second half, but
tomorrow and get ready
foul shots. Guys are gain- had coming back, and
Southern scored 13 of
for the next one.”
the next 17 and led 51-41 ing conﬁdence and that’s I think they’re starting
While the Rebels’ ﬁveto come around a little
big.”
at the end of the third
game win streak is over,
For the game, SHS shot bit. They’re a two-edge
quarter.
sword, you guard the post Wolfe reﬂected on his
26-of-57 (45.6 percent)
The guests made it
and they’ll kick it. I know team’s success to this
from the ﬁeld, including
to within seven points,
they haven’t been hitting
4-of-14 (28.6 percent)
at 56-49, but Southern
See TURN | 10
shots, but they hit some
from three-point range.
hit back-to-back buckets

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, January 17, 2019 7

Blue Devils burn Portsmouth, 62-44

By Bryan Walters

while establishing a 14-10 ﬁrst
quarter cushion.
The Trojans (6-7, 2-4) managed to trim the lead down
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio — A
to 14-12 early in the second,
productive road trip.
The Gallia Academy boys bas- but Logan Blouir provided six
ketball team returned to its win- points during a 17-10 surge that
allowed GAHS to secure a 31-23
ning ways with a wire-to-wire
edge headed into the intermisvictory over host Portsmouth
sion.
on Tuesday night following a
Cory Call poured in 11 points
62-44 decision in an Ohio Valley
and Blouir added eight markers
Conference matchup in Scioto
during a 23-12 third quarter run
County.
that extended the lead out to
The visiting Blue Devils
54-35, and PHS won the fourth
(7-4, 4-2 OVC) jumped out to
frame by a slim 9-8 margin to
a quick 6-0 advantage, then
wrap up the 18-point outcome.
Blaine Carter added six points
The guests netted 28 total
towards the end of the frame

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Outlast

Wahama countered
with consecutive baskets
from Jacob Warth over
the next 90 seconds to
From page 6
reclaim a 47-46 edge, but
a Ryan Dill basket at the
scramble for possession
1:48 mark gave Eastern
— allowing the White
its ﬁnal lead at 48-47.
Falcons to wrap up the
More than a minute
two-point triumph.
went by before either
The White Falcons
team scored again, and
held the lead in the ﬁrst
Lloyd’s eventual gamehalf for 10:39 and never
winner from behind the
trailed by more than a
single possession before arc came off of a Warth
the break. The hosts also offensive rebound and
kick-out.
led by as many as ﬁve
The White Falcons
points twice in the ﬁrst
ended up claiming a
quarter and secured the
29-21 advantage on the
largest lead of the night
with a 29-23 advantage at boards, including a 9-7
edge on the offensive
the break.
glass. Eastern committed
The Green and Gold
only seven of the 24 turn— who never led in
overs in the contest.
the opening frame and
Both teams shot over
trailed 14-13 after eight
40 percent from the ﬁeld,
minutes of play — tied
the contest at 33-all, then but Wahama’s outside
touch proved to be a
closed the third period
bit more signiﬁcant by
with a 6-2 surge that
provided the guests with night’s end. The Red
and White nailed 7-of-13
their largest lead of the
trifectas for 53 percent,
night at 39-35.
Lloyd hit back-to-back while Eastern made only
2-of-9 attempts from
trifectas to start the
behind the arc for 22
fourth for a 41-39 edge
at the 6:18 mark, but the percent.
WHS coach Ron
Eagles answered with
Bradley noted that his
a 7-2 spurt that Garrett
Barringer capped with a team was due for a
break, but he was also
basket at the 3:50 mark
more passionate about
for a 46-43 lead.

(740) 446-2342 or fax to (740) 446-3008

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

ﬁeld goals — including a lone
trifecta from Justin McClelland that built a permanent
lead — and also went 5-of-8
at the free throw line for 63
percent.
Call poured in a game-high
22 points, followed by Blouir
with 14 points and Carter with
10 markers. McClelland was
next with nine points and Bailey
Walker tacked on three points,
while Caleb Henry and Ben Cox
completed the winning tally
with two points apiece.
Portsmouth made 17 total
ﬁeld goals — including ﬁve
3-pointers — and also went

the fact that his troops
put together a complete
effort — which ultimately led to this ﬁnal
outcome.
“We’ve felt that we
were getting closer to
putting it all together
over the last few games,
and tonight was honestly a nice step in
that direction. We just
needed to put together
four quarters and we
did that tonight. Our
kids just played their
guts out,” Bradley said.
“We learned how to win
tonight, and that was the
most important thing in
all of this. We got one in
front of a pretty ﬁred up
home crowd and we have
some momentum going
forward. I am proud of
their collective efforts all
game long.”
Things weren’t as easy
for EHS coach David
Kight to digest afterwards, but it wasn’t as
much about the ending
as was the beginning.
And as he noted, it just
kind of extended from
there.
“We thought we could
press them early in the
game, and we ended
up giving up some easy
points there. That one

(740) 992-2155 or fax to (740) 992-2157

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

� EHGURRP DSW LQ FRXQWU\
IUHVKO\ SDLQWHG ZLWK
DSSOLDQFHV �� PLQXWHV IURP
WRZQ ������� 1R 3HWV
������������ RU
������������

the White Falcons with
seven rebounds apiece,
with Warth also hauling
in six caroms.
The Eagles made
20-of-49 shot attempts
for 41 percent and also
went 6-of-12 at the charity stripe for 50 percent.
Colton Reynolds led
Eastern with 10 points,
followed by Dill, Barringer and Sharp Facemyer
with nine markers apiece.
Blaise Facemyer was
next with ﬁve points and
Isaiah Fish chipped in
four points, while Mason
Dishong completed the
scoring with two markers.
Barringer hauled in a
team-high six rebounds.
Dishong and Blaise
Facemyer also had four
boards apiece in the setback.
Wahama returns to
action Friday night when
it travels to South Gallia
for a TVC Hocking contest at 6 p.m.
The Eagles return to
the hardwood Friday
night when they travel
to Federal Hocking for a
TVC Hocking contest at
6 p.m.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

(304) 675-1333 or fax to (304) 675-5234

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
HEUMFHBMT!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN

The 2018 AFR for the Village of Middleport is available to view
in the office of the Fiscal Officer, 659 Pearl Street, Middleport,
OH.

AIM MEDIA MIDWEST NEWSPAPERS

LEGAL NOTICE
The Annual Financial Report for 2018 for Rutland Township is
complete and available for review by contacting Fiscal Officer
at PO Box 203, Rutland, Ohio 45775.
Opal Dyer, Fiscal Officer
1/17/19 TDS

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From page 6

by a 32-to-25 tally, but
committed 31 turnovers, 15 more than
the Marauders. Meigs
ﬁnished with team totals
of 16 assists, 21 steals
and two rejections, with
WHS earning seven
steals and a trio of
blocks.
The Marauder offense
was led by Cooper Darst
with 16 points, followed
by Weston Baer and
Coulter Cleland with 13
points apiece, with Cleland recording six assists
and ﬁve rebounds. Zach
Bartrum and Nick Lilly
had ﬁve points apiece,
with Lilly grabbing ﬁve
rebounds.
Austin Mahr contributed four points to the
winning total, while Ty
Bartrum, Wyatt Hoover
and Bobby Musser added
two points each. Zach
Bartrum led the MHS
defense with six steals,
while Lilly and Musser
blocked a shot apiece.
Zane Ervin led the
hosts with eight points,
six of which came from
beyond the arc. Rylan
Molihan was next with
six points, followed by
Jase Arthur and Josh
Bodey with ﬁve each.
Jordan Carey, R.J.
Kemp, and Donnie Watters had two points
apiece, with Watters
grabbing a game-best
seven rebounds for the
hosts. Hunter Smith and
Cole Broaddus scored a
point apiece to round out
the WHS tally.
MHS also defeated
Wellston on Dec. 7 in
Rocksprings by a 56-37
ﬁnal.
The Marauders return
to Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium next, as
they host Alexander on
Friday.

Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

is on me and I’ll take
responsibility for that,”
Kight said. “Wahama’s
zone gave us some ﬁts
outside and we were
never able to sustain a
run or get any kind of
momentum. We used so
much energy just getting
out of the six-point halftime deﬁcit that we really
didn’t have much left
from there.
“We just didn’t make
the plays that we needed
to make when we needed them, all game long.
It’s a tough loss, but we
still have a lot of season
left to play. Our league
hopes may have just
gotten a little tougher
though.”
Wahama netted 18-of41 ﬁeld goal attempts for
44 percent and also went
7-of-10 at the free throw
line for 70 percent.
Lloyd hit six trifectas
— three in each half —
and paced the hosts with
a game-high 24 points,
followed by Abram Pauley with nine markers.
Warth and Adam Groves
were next with seven
points apiece, Jonathan
Frye completed the winning tally with three
points.
Groves and Pauley led

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5-of-11 at the charity stripe for
45 percent.
Amppe Johnson, Myguel
McKinley and Miles Shipp
paced the Trojans with nine
points each, followed by Danny
Lattimore with eight points and
Dean Roe with seven markers.
Brendan Clack wrapped up the
scoring with two points.
Gallia Academy — which is
now 4-2 in road contests, including two straight victories —
hosts Chesapeake on Friday in
an OVC contest at 6 p.m.

Wallop

Please email cover letter, resume and references to
Matt Rodgers E-mail address: mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com

�COMICS

8 Thursday, January 17, 2019

BLONDIE

Daily Sentinel

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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�SPORTS/TV

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, January 17, 2019 9

Asbury holds on late to top RedStorm men
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The
adage that “close only counts
in horseshoes and hand grenades” is one that University
of Rio Grande men’s basketball
head coach Ken French is all
too familiar with.
On Tuesday night at the
Newt Oliver Arena, French’s
RedStorm almost ended their
extended losing slide.
Almost.
Asbury University erased
a nine-point ﬁrst half deﬁcit
and then held on to defeat Rio
Grande, 84-79, in River States
Conference play.
The Eagles improved to 12-7
overall and 6-3 in league play,
moving to within one game of
a tie with Brescia University
for the top spot in the RSC
West Division.

The RedStorm suffered a
seventh straight loss, falling
to 7-13 overall and 1-6 in the
RSC.
Exactly half of Rio’s 20
games have been decided by
seven points or less and only
three of those 10 contests have
resulted in RedStorm wins.
Tuesday’s loss, in some ways,
didn’t add up numerically.
Rio Grande shot 68 percent
in the ﬁrst half (15-for-22),
yet still trailed, 43-39, at the
intermission. The RedStorm
ﬁnished a 54.9 percent (28-for51) - its second-best shooting
performance of the season - for
the game.
Rio also committed just 10
turnovers, tying its singlegame low mark for the season.
If there was one category
in which the RedStorm hurt
themselves it was free throw
shooting, where they ﬁnished

just 17-for-26 (65.4%). Those
ﬁgures included an 11-for-18
performance at the charity
stripe in the second half.
The game’s turning point,
though, came late in the opening half when Asbury used a
12-0 run over a span of just
two minutes to erase a 29-20
Rio lead.
The RedStorm regained onepoint leads three more times
inside the ﬁnal 3-1/2 minutes
of the opening period, including 38-37 after a pair of free
throws by freshman Gunner
Short (Catlettsburg, KY) with
1:24 remaining before the
break, but the Eagles scored
six of the ﬁnal seven points in
advance of the intermission
and never trailed again.
Asbury’s lead reached as
many as 15 points after a
bucket by Clif Conley made it
61-46 with 12:49 remaining,

but Rio Grande hung around
and methodically chipped away
at the deﬁcit.
A steal and layup by sophomore Kyle Lamotte (Mason,
OH) got the RedStorm within
79-75 with 29.3 seconds left,
but the Eagles did just enough
at the foul line (3-for-6) and a
Rio turnover helped seal the
win.
Conley was a one-man
wrecking ball for Asbury, scoring a career-high 37 points in
the win. He ﬁnished 12-for-15
from the ﬂoor, including 5-for5 from three-point range, and
scored 16 of his team’s ﬁrst 18
points in the second half en
route to building the 15-point
lead.
Trenton Thompson had 20
points and a game-high 11
rebounds before fouling out
late in the winning effort,
while Siah Holiﬁeld added 11

points.
Short led a quartet of
double-digit scorers for the
RedStorm with 18 points,
while junior Cameron Schreiter (Mason, OH) had 16
points and a game-high nine
rebounds.
Freshman Joshua Anthony
(Newnan, GA) and senior Earl
Russell (Warrington, England)
ﬁnished with 15 and 10 points,
respectively, in a losing cause.
Schreiter, Russell, Short and
junior Hadith Tiggs (Mayﬁeld
Heights, OH) shared team
honors three assists each.
Rio Grande returns to action
Thursday night when it opens
a ﬁve-game road swing at Midway University.
Tip time is slated for 7:30
p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director at the University of Rio Grande.

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

QB Tate Martell says he is
leaving Ohio State for Miami

The 76-year-old Brennaman joined the Reds’ radio
team in 1974 and soon became known for his signoff line after each win: “And this one belongs to
the Reds.” He and former Reds pitcher Joe Nuxhall
shared the booth for 31 seasons from 1974-2004.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Quarterback Tate
He received the Ford C. Frick Award in 2000 at
Martell says he is transferring from Ohio State to
the Baseball Hall of Fame, the fourth Reds announcMiami.
er to receive the broadcasting award along with Red
Martell announced on Twitter early Wednesday:
Barber, Al Helfer and Russ Hodges.
“I’m a Hurricane.”
Brennaman also has worked NCAA Tournament
Martell had entered his name into the NCAA
games, including 11 Final Fours. His son, Thom,
transfer portal last week and was free to be
also is a Reds broadcaster.
approached by schools about a potential move.
On Tuesday, longtime Pittsburgh Pirates announcMartell, who will be a third-year sophomore, sat
behind record-setting Buckeyes quarterback Dwayne er Steve Blass said this season will be his last. This
will be his 34th year as a color analyst.
Haskins Jr. last season. Martell appeared to be the
heir apparent when Haskins left early for the NFL
draft, but Ohio State lured Georgia transfer Justin
Fields to compete for the starting spot.
By heading to Miami, Martell will join former
high school teammates Brevin Jordan and Bubba
Bolden. Martell posted a picture with his tweet of
IRVING, Texas (AP) — Former Texas A&amp;M
himself and the two other players from Bishop Gor- coach R.C. Slocum, Arkansas State athletic director
man in Las Vegas, saying, “right back like we never Terry Mohajir and retired Gen. Ray Odierno have
left… .”
been added to College Football Playoff selection
Bolden said last week he was transferring from
committee.
USC to Miami. Jordan played with the Hurricanes
CFP Executive Director Bill Hancock also
last season.
announced Wednesday that Oregon athletic director
Rob Mullens will serve as committee chairman for
another season.
The new committee members replace three whose
terms have ended: former Southern Mississippi
coach Jeff Bower, former Central Michigan coach
Herb Deromedi and former Vanderbilt coach Bobby
CINCINNATI (AP) — Reds play-by-play broadJohnson.
caster Marty Brennaman will retire after the 2019
Slocum was inducted into the Hall of Fame in
season, his 46th in Cincinnati.
2012. He went 123-47-2 at A&amp;M from 1989-2002.
The team made the announcement Wednesday.

Jay LaPrete | AP

Columbus Blue Jackets’ Joonas Korpisalo, left, makes a save as
teammate David Savard, right, and New Jersey Devils’ Pavel Zacha
fight for position during the first period Tuesday in Columbus,
Ohio. The Blue Jackets won 4-1.

Former Texas A&amp;M coach
added to CFP committee

Korpisalo stops 29
shots, Blue Jackets
beat Devils 4-1
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — The Columbus
Blue Jackets extended
their win streak to four
games and stayed in the
thick of the battle at the
top of the tough Metropolitan Division. The
team’s productive top line
is a big reason why.
Pierre-Luc Dubois,
Artemi Panarin and Cam
Atkinson each had a goal
and an assist on Tuesday
night as the Blue Jackets
beat the New Jersey Devils 4-1.
All three have recorded
points in the past four
games, with Atkinson
scoring in each of the
past three. He’s got a
team-leading 27 goals and
will be on his way to the
NHL All-Star Game at the
end of the month.
“When everybody contributes like that, it’s hard
to beat us,” said Dubois,
who has ﬁve points in the
four-game stretch.
Boone Jenner also
scored and Joonas Korpisalo had 29 saves for
the Blue Jackets, who
have won 11 of the last
14 games while sparring
with Washington and
Pittsburgh atop the division.
Korpisalo has started
three of the last four
games ahead of star Sergei Bobrovsky and won
each time. The 24-yearold Finn could soon ﬁnd
himself the team’s No.1
goalie as Bobrovsky
has refused to sign a
contract extension with
Columbus and may be
traded before the deadline next month.
“Korpi has earned the
time, just through his
play,” Columbus coach
John Tortorella said.
“Korpi deserved to play
tonight.”
Blake Coleman scored
and Keith Kinkaid had
30 saves for the Devils,
who saw a two-game winning streak end as they
struggle to stay out of the
Metro basement.
“It’s beyond frustrating,” Devils veteran winger Brian Boyle said. “You

try to get some traction
going. We work extremely
hard. It’s been months of
not (getting) the results
we wanted.”
Coach Hynes said some
players lacked effort on
the second night of a
back-to-back. New Jersey
got a wild 8-5 win over
Chicago on Monday
night.
“It was just some individuals who were not
ready to go and compete
at the level we need them
to compete at,” Hynes
said. “I wouldn’t necessarily say it was the whole
team.”
The Blue Jackets
grabbed the lead early
and didn’t let up.
Atkinson tipped in
a pass from Dubois 45
seconds into the game.
Less than two minutes
later, Josh Anderson, off a
faceoff from the right circle, fed Jenner, who beat
Kinkaid from the slot.
Late in the ﬁrst, David
Savard grabbed a face off
and slid a beautiful pass
from the left corner to the
doorstep, setting up Panarin for an easy tip-in and
a 3-0 Columbus lead.
Early in the second,
Dubois snapped in a shot
from the left circle for
the Blue Jackets’ fourth
power-play goal in four
games.
Coleman redirected a
shot by Mirco Mueller
late in the second period
to ruin Korpisalo’s shutout.
“I’m pretty comfortable,” Korpisalo said.
“The way we play right
now it’s pretty easy to
play behind them. Like
today, I don’t think there
were any dangerous
shots. They just clear
the pucks in front of me,
block shots and it makes
me conﬁdent to play
behind them.”
NOTES: Columbus
coach John Tortorella
coached his 285th game
with the team, passing
Ken Hitchcock for the
franchise record. He is
the franchise’s leader in
wins (156-102-26).

Reds’ Marty Brennaman
will retire after 2019

THURSDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

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The Titan Games "Trials
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With Infinite Hope The life, Soldier On Women readjust
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Fam "Freddy S.W.A.T. "Gasoline Drum"
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Murder on the Home Front Together a
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PREMIUM

Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St. Last Man St.
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Bring It! "Three's a Crowd" Bring It! "The Ultimate
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(:05) The Rap Game "Rhyme
Captain's Battle"
Titans"
Allowed?" (N)
or Treason" (N)
(4:00) Dirty
Just Go With It (‘11, Com) Jennifer Aniston, Adam Sandler. A plastic
Bruce Almighty (2003, Comedy/Drama) Morgan
Dancing
surgeon convinces his assistant to pose as his soon-to-be ex-wife. TV14
Freeman, Jennifer Aniston, Jim Carrey. TV14
Mom
The Hangover Part II Bradley Cooper. Two years after the Las Vegas Lip Sync
The Hangover Part II (‘11, Com) Zach
bachelor party, the guys head to Thailand for Stu's wedding. TVMA
Galifianakis, Bradley Cooper. TVMA
Battle (N)
Loud House Loud House Loud House H.Danger
SpongeBob SpongeBob Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows
NCIS "Bait"
NCIS "Iced"
NCIS "Untouchable"
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Family Guy Family Guy Seinfeld
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(5:00)
Cast Away (2000, Drama) Helen Hunt, Nick
Colombiana (‘11, Act) Zoe Saldana. A young woman becomes an Sherlock
Searcy, Tom Hanks. TVPG
assassin to find the mobster that killed her parents in Bogotá. TV14
Holmes: A...
Off Grid Alaska
Building Off Grid
Building Off Grid (N)
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SpearfishCanyon
HomicideSquadAtlanta
The First 48 "Knock at the The First 48 "The Grudge" HomicideSquadAtlanta
60 Days In "It's About to
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The Secret Life of the Zoo Secret-Zoo "Black Rhinos" Crikey! It's the Irwins
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America's
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Drunk to Drive"
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NHL Hockey Chicago Blackhawks at New York Rangers (L)
(:45) NHL Overtime (L)
Dew Tour
TurningPoint "Post-season" NFL Films
Tip-Off
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American Pickers "The
American Pickers "Double American Pickers "One of American Pickers "Picking (:05) American Pickers
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Bubble Trouble"
Everything"
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(5:00) Listing Million Dollar List "The Good Fight"
Top Chef "Carne!" (N)
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Backyard Envy (N)
(4:25) Barbershop: The ...
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Herbie: Fully Loaded Maggie
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(:35)

�SPORTS

10 Thursday, January 17, 2019

Bulldogs sweep
River Valley, 63-44

Daily Sentinel

Eagles soar past Rio Grande women
By Randy Payton

By Bryan Walters

for 38 percent, includbwalters@aimmediamidwest.
ing a 7-of-12 effort from
com
3-point range for 58
percent. The Silver and
Black was also 7-of-9 at
THE PLAINS, Ohio
the free throw line for
— A 24-10 second
quarter surge ultimately 78 percent.
Layne Fitch paced
allowed host Athens
River Valley with 12
to pull away for a compoints, followed by Jorfortable 63-44 victory
dan Lambert with 10
over the River Valley
boys basketball team on points and Brandon Call
with nine markers.
Tuesday night in a TriRory Twyman was
Valley Conference Ohio
next with eight points,
Division matchup at
McAfee Gymnasium in with Chase Caldwell
and Alden Smith each
Athens County.
contributing two markThe visiting Raiders
ers. Matt Mollohan
(2-10, 0-7 TVC Ohio)
completed the tally with
were in a competitive
a single point.
battle early on after
The Bulldogs netted
falling behind by a slim
28-of-53 shot attempts
18-15 margin through
for 53 percent, includeight minutes, but the
ing a 4-of-17 effort
Bulldogs (9-3, 7-0)
from behind the arc for
countered by hitting
24 percent. The hosts
11-of-17 shot attempts
also made all three
during that pivotal
of their free throw
second period run —
allowing the Green and attempts.
Logan Maxﬁeld led
Gold to secure a 42-25
AHS with a game-high
cushion at the break.
16 points, followed by
AHS simply cruised
from there as the hosts Justin Hynes with 12
points and Brayden
made a small 11-10
Whiting with 10 markthird quarter spurt to
ers.
take a 53-35 lead into
Isaiah Butcher was
the ﬁnale, then closed
next with eight points
regulation with a 10-9
and Elijah Williams
run to wrap up the
added six points, while
19-point outcome.
Brayden Markins
The Bulldogs also
claimed a season sweep chipped in four markers.
after posting a 69-28
Eli Chubb and
decision in Bidwell back
Andrew Stephens were
on Dec. 7, 2018.
Athens outrebounded next with three points
each, and Josh Mace
the guests by a 20-18
completed the winning
overall margin, but
RVHS did win the battle total with two points.
River Valley returns
on the offensive glass
to action on Tuesday
by a slim 7-6 mark.
when it hosts Jackson
River Valley also comin a non-conference conmitted 25 turnovers in
test at 6 p.m.
the setback, 10 more
than the hosts.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
The Raiders were
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
15-of-39 from the ﬁeld

For Ohio Valley Publishing

RIO GRANDE, Ohio —
University of Rio Grande
women’s basketball head
coach David Smalley may
not have the look of the
stereotypical mad scientist, but the veteran bench
boss of the RedStorm is
being forced to re-invent
his team after season-ending knee injuries wiped
out 60 percent of its normal starting lineup.
Tuesday night’s initial
experiment against visiting Asbury University
was far from a success.
The Eagles took advantage of 23 Rio Grande
turnovers and rolled to
an 86-69 victory over the
RedStorm in River States
Conference action at the
Newt Oliver Arena.
Asbury won for just the
ﬁfth time in 19 outings
and just the second time
in nine RSC contests.
Rio Grande, which
added junior guard Sydney Holden (Wheelersburg, OH) to its list of
wounded warriors in last
Thursday’s loss to WVUTech, fell for the second
straight time, slipping to
13-6 overall and 4-3 in
league play.
The RedStorm’s 23
turnovers - which tied
the team’s second-highest
single-game mark of the
season - fueled Asbury’s

Courtesy photo

Rio Grande’s Natalie Seeberg works through the Asbury defense to
get off a shot in the second half of Tuesday night’s game against
the Eagles at the Newt Oliver Arena. The RedStorm suffered an
86-69 loss.

whopping 29-8 edge in
points off of turnovers.
The Eagles also helped
their own cause with a
season-high 13 threepoint goals. Seven different players connected
on at least one shot from
behind the arc.
Rio Grande trailed
19-13 with just over a
minute remaining in the
opening quarter, but went
on an 11-0 run over the
next 3-1/2 minutes to take
a 24-19 advantage following a bucket by freshman
Avery Harper (Seaman,
OH) with 7:51 left before
the intermission.
However, Asbury
responded with a 21-4
run of its own in a span
of just over ﬁve minutes

to open up a doubledigit advantage and never
looked back.
The Eagles led by 12
points at halftime and by
as many as 25 points on
two different occasions
late in the third quarter.
Rio Grande scored
the ﬁnal 12 points of the
third period and the ﬁrst
two points of the ﬁnal
stanza to pull within 11
points, 67-56, after a
bucket by senior Chelsy
Slone (Gallipolis, OH),
but got no closer the rest
of the way.
All ﬁve Asbury starters
reached double ﬁgures,
with Autumn Herriford’s
22-point effort leading the
way. She also had seven
rebounds, six steals, ﬁve

assists and two blocked
shots in the winning
effort.
Kelsey Johnson added
21 points for the Eagles,
while Ashlee Rose had 12
points and a game-high
10 rebounds and Sarah
King ﬁnished with 11
points and a game-best
six assists.
Sarah Dennison also
had 11 points for Asbury,
which shot 50.8 percent
overall (31-for-61) and
committed just 12 turnovers.
Senior Jaida Carter
(New Philadelphia, OH)
led Rio Grande with a
game-high 23 points,
while senior Whitney
Gilkeson (Marietta,
OH) added a career-best
12 points off the bench
thanks to four three-point
goals.
Harper totaled 10
points in a losing cause
for the RedStorm, which
shot just 35 percent for
the game (24-for-68), and
senior Megan Liedtke
(Beverly, OH) pulled
down a team-high nine
rebounds.
Rio Grande returns
to action on Thursday
night when it begins a
ﬁve-game road swing at
Midway University.
Tipoff is set for 5:30
p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Bane scores 26 points in TCU win over WVU
Horned Frogs returned
home with their biggest
margin of victory in a Big
12 game.
And for West Virginia,
which like TCU is in its
seventh Big 12 season, it
was their most-lopsided
conference loss during
that time.
Bane scored 26 points
to lead six TCU players in double ﬁgures as
the Frogs won 98-67 on
Tuesday night, sending
West Virginia to its ﬁrst
0-5 conference record in
23 years.
“We didn’t compete,”
Mountaineers coach Bob
Huggins said. “We got
down, and we kind of
settled to lose, instead of
competing.”
TCU (13-3, 2-2 Big 12)
missed seven of its ﬁrst
eight shots before runs of
13-0 and 11-0 in the ﬁrst
half on way to a 20-point
halftime lead. The
Horned Frogs, coming off
losses last week at Kansas
and Oklahoma, led by as
many as 35 points after
halftime.
“Wow,” Bane responded
when told about it being
the biggest Big 12 win
for the Frogs. “It shows
where the program’s
headed. The ceiling’s
high for this program.”
“You’ve got to win your
home games, and you
want to split on the road,
is the best formula for a
Big 12 championship,”
said TCU coach Jaime

Dixon, in his third season
at his alma mater. “We
went 0-2, but we played at
two of the tougher places,
tough venues, best teams.
Both games we could
have won.”
West Virginia (8-9, 0-5)
appears to be going in the
opposite direction.
The last time the
Mountaineers lost their
ﬁrst ﬁve conference
games was in their inaugural Big East season
in 1995-96, which was
11 years before Huggins
became their coach.
“We’re just not any
good,” Huggins said. “We
miss shots and throw the
ball around.”
Alex Robinson had 14
points and 10 assists for
TCU. JD Miller added
13 points for TCU, while
Kouat Noi and Lat Mayen
each had 12. Kevin Samuel scored 10 points.
James Bolden led West
Virginia with 15 points,
and Wesley Harris had
13.
Bane’s jumper after his
offensive rebound just less
than ﬁve minutes into the
game made it 6-5 and put
the Frogs ahead to stay,
and their next basket was
Bane’s putback slam after
Miller missed a breakaway layup.

never had a chance in this
one after TCU had its
ﬁrst big run.
TCU: The Frogs played
their fourth consecutive
game without point guard
Jaylen Fisher because of
swelling in his right knee,
and it’s unclear when —
or if — he will play again
this season. Robinson had
10 of TCU’s 20 assists.

Together let’s minimize the risk. The most impor tant thing

Turn

you can do is have regular colorectal cancer screenings,

From page 6

such as a colonoscopy, beginning at age 50.

point in the campaign.
“We’ve had a nice little
run,” Wolfe said. “It’s not
the end of the world, we’ll
comeback and get after it
again tomorrow. On the
bright side, we’ve won
nine games, after only
winning seven last year.
Here at the turn, we’ve
won ﬁve league games,
and we only won four all
of last year.”
SHS senior Jensen
Anderson sank seven ﬁeld
goals en route to a teamhigh 18 points. Weston
Thorla and Brayden Cun-

ningham both scored
10 points, with Thorla
earning a team-best ﬁve
assists, while Austin
Baker, Cole Steele and
Arrow Drummer added
seven points apiece, with
Baker grabbing seven
rebounds.
Coltin Parker scored
ﬁve points for the hosts,
while Trey McNickle came
up with four points and
seven rebounds. McNickle
led the Purple and Gold
on defense with four
steals, while Cunningham
added three rejections.
South Gallia senior
Braxton Hardy ﬁnished
with a game-high 23
points, sinking 10-of-11
free throws. C.J. Mayse

posted a double-double
of 13 points and 10
rebounds, while leading
the Rebel defense with
two steals and two blocks.
Nick Hicks scored eight
points for the guests,
while Garrett Saunders
and Kyle Northup had ﬁve
each, with Northup dishing out a team-high four
assists.
These teams are slated
to battle again on Feb. 5 in
Mercerville. Both Southern and South Gallia are
home on Friday, with the
Tornadoes welcoming Belpre and the Rebels hosting
Wahama.

FORT WORTH, Texas
(AP) — Desmond Bane
and TCU quickly got over
the sting of consecutive
tough road losses to Top
25 teams that knocked
them out of the poll. The

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Mohamed Alsharedi, MD

Oncology &amp; General Hematology

John Thomas, MD
General Surgery

Jessica Wilson, DO
Family Medicine

Debbie Mitchell, RN
Nurse Navigator

More Mountaineers
West Virginia used 14
different players in the
game.
“If I had more, I would
have played them, I think.
I’m just looking for somebody to go out and compete,” Huggins said.
Aschieris acension
Owen Aschieris was
a member of the TCU
women’s basketball practice team last season,
before walking on to
the men’s team this season. He was awarded a
scholarship Monday. The
6-foot-1 guard had played
in ﬁve games, but hadn’t
scored until Tuesday
night. He was 4-for-4 on
free throws, going to the
line after both of West
Virginia’s technical fouls
in the ﬁnal four minutes.

Up next
West Virginia has two
home games in three
Big picture
days. The Mountaineers
West Virginia: The
Mountaineers had won 12 host No. 7 Kansas on Saturday, then play Baylor
of the previous 13 meetnext Monday night.
ings against TCU, but

Colorectal cancer is the second leading cause of cancer
related deaths among men and women in the United States.

=]\Īh]b\�;WbYZf�[cf�hĪcgZ�lcī�`ciZ&amp;
For more information or to schedule your colorectal
cancer screening, please call 304.675.1666.

Pleasant Valley
Hospital
OH-70099773

304.675.1666 | pvalley.org

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

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