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                  <text>100 plus
years of
bikes
OPINION s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

11°

33°

37°

Some sunshine giving way to clouds today.
Becoming rainy tonight. High 43° / Low 36°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Big
Blacks
win title

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 12, Volume 73

Suspect in custody
following escape
during transport

Tuesday, January 22, 2019 s 50¢

Marking a piece of history

By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.
com

MIDDLEPORT — A
Gallipolis man being
transported from one
jail facility to another
temporarily escaped the
custody of a sheriff’s
deputy on Monday.
William Earl Mullins,
34, of Gallipolis, was
being moved from the
Middleport Jail to be
taken to the Monroe
County Jail by a Meigs
County Sheriff’s Deputy on Monday. After
being removed from the
jail, and in the process
of being placed in the
cruiser, Mullins was
able to get away from
the deputy and ﬂee.
A perimeter was set
up and K-9 Cheri, along
with Deputy Tylun
Campbell, was brought
in to track the suspect.
Sheriff Keith Wood
stated that Cheri was
able to track the suspect from the jail to

Courtesy of Sheriff Keith Wood

William Earl Mullins is led
from a residence on Lincoln
Street by Sgt. Rick Patterson
after being taken back into
custody.

back door of a house
at 427 Lincoln Street.
Acting on fresh pursuit,
ofﬁcers then entered
the residence and located the suspect in the
upstairs of the house.
Mullins ﬂed at 12:04
p.m. and was taken into
custody at 12:39 p.m.
Wood gave credit to
Cheri for the swift resolution to the incident,
with the K-9 able to
See SUSPECT | 5

Deceased individual
identified in death
investigation
Staff Report

GALLIA COUNTY — Gallia County Sheriff
Matt Champlin reports the Gallia County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce, in conjunction with the Ohio State Highway Patrol, is jointly conducting a death investigation that reportedly occurred on U.S. 35 in Gallia
County at approximately 9:08 a.m. on Jan. 19. The
deceased has been identiﬁed as Raymond Spears,
21, of Letart, W.Va. in Mason County.
On Saturday, Champlin stated Gallia County
911 dispatchers received a call from a female stating that an occupant in the vehicle she was riding
in had been shot. Ofﬁcers from both the Ohio
State Highway Patrol and the Gallia County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce responded to the scene. Upon arrival,
ofﬁcers located a male with reported gunshot
wounds and they began immediate medical treatment. The male was subsequently transported
to Holzer Hospital where he succumbed to his
injuries.
Also on Saturday, Champlin further advised that
two individuals have been detained at this time
and that there is no risk or threat to the public as
of a result of the incident.
Monday afternoon, Champlin released an update
on the investigation with the following statement:
“The Gallia County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce received a
call just after 9 a.m. on Saturday morning regarding a male who had been shot inside of a vehicle
See DECEASED | 5

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
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com and visit us on
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thoughts.

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Shannon Scott and James Stanley unveil the first Bicentennial Marker which recognized what was called the “Kerrs Run Colored School.“

First Bicentennial Marker unveiled
POMEROY — Exactly
200 years after Meigs
County was ofﬁcially
formed, the ﬁrst of the
12 Bicentennial Markers
was unveiled on Monday
morning.
A small crowd braved
the near zero degree
temperatures to hear
about what was formerly
known as the “Kerrs Run
Colored School” and its
students.
The marker reads:
“Kerrs Run Colored
School; Late 1880s to
Early 1900s; Educated
children from ﬁrst to
eighth grade, including
James Edwin Campbell
and James McHenry
Jones, ﬁrst and third
presidents of what is now
West Virginia State University. These children,
through incredible odds,

The marker for what was known
as the “Kerrs Run Colored
School” now stands at the
nearby Water Works Park in What was formerly known as the “Kerrs Run Colored School” as it
stands today.
Pomeroy.

became some of ﬁrst educators of African Americans in West Virginia.”
Meigs County Historical Society Vice President Shannon Scott told
about Pomeroy’s First
Ward, the school and
some of its graduates.
Scott referenced the
History of the Jones Fam-

ily which was written
by John L. Jones, who
attended the school.
“No town in the state
of Ohio has produced
and sent out into the
world more outstanding
men and women as came
out of this class,” stated
Scott, quoting Jones’
book.

Among the students
were many educators,
including James Edwin
Campbell and James
McHenry Jones. Students Scott noted were
as follows: Joe Spears,
one of the leading orators of the Ohio and
See HISTORY | 5

Celebrating MLK Day
By Dean Wright
deanwright@aimmediamidwest.
com

GALLIPOLIS — The
Southeastern Ohio
NAACP once again
partnered with the University of Rio Grande
and RSVP of Ohio Valley
to hold a tribute to Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr.,
Monday, in Paint Creek
Baptist Church.
The NAACP of Southeast Ohio President
Mabel Tanner served
as mistress of ceremonies. The church’s Rev.
Christian Scott served
as pianist for the event.
Rev. Dr. D.C. Carter of
First Baptist Church in
Burlington led the event’s
invocation. Youth led the
Pledge of Allegiance. The
congregation joined in
song to sing “Lift Every
Voice and Sing.” NAACP
First Vice President Kyle
Gilliland gave a welcome
for the event.
Gallia Common Pleas
Judge Margaret Evans

Dean Wright | OVP

Gallia Prosecutor Jason Holdren discusses the need for mutual
respect in the world today.

also welcomed those in
attendance along with
URG Interim President
Dr. Catherine Clark-Eich.
Martha Cosby introduced area dignitaries
and a musical duet was
sung by Jaquar Brown
and Linae Scott.
Judy Payne introduced
the day’s speaker, Gallia
Prosecutor Jason Holdren.
“I’m humbled for the
opportunity,” said Holdren. “We set this day
aside to honor the life of

Dr. King and reﬂect upon
his accomplishments and
his life’s work. I think
a lot of the Gospel of
Luke, the sixth chapter,
King writes about what
is (found in the Bible),
saying that it’s easy to
love those that love you.
It’s pretty easy for us to
do. It’s very difﬁcult to
love the unloveable. It’s
difﬁcult to like those
who maybe are not nice
to us. So, when I think
of Dr. King, through all
of his efforts, he had

tremendous success with
nonviolence and love and
we can learn a lot from
that.”
Holdren referenced a
young man he was mentoring named Scottie
Hughes, a River Valley
High School graduate. Holdren said that
Hughes had in the past
had the opportunity to
follow him and ask questions of various individuals across the discipline
of law.
“Something that he
talked a lot about was
‘I don’t understand the
division in our country. I
don’t understand different groups lives matter.
We all matter. We are
all important.’ So, for
a senior in high school
to understand that concept,” said Holdren, “and
yet so many, as it was
already pointed out, can’t
understand that concept,
is promising.”
Holdren built part
See MLK | 3

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, January 22,2019

OBITUARIES
GEORGE WOLF
CHESTER — George
Wolf, 95, of Chester,
Ohio, passed away Mon­
day, Jan. 21, 2019, at
Kimes Nursing Center in
Athens, Ohio.
He was born Sept. 4,
1923, in Chester, Ohio,
son of the late Clarence
Clyde and Virgie V.
Fisher Wolf. He was an
Army Veteran of World
War II, a member of the
Chester United Method­
ist Church, an avid golfer
and retired from the Phil­
lip Sporn Plant.
George is survived by
a son, Gary and Patricia
Wolf; a daughter, Mary
Jo and Rick Buckley; five
grandchildren and six
great-grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he
was preceded in death by
his wife, Helen; a brother,
Clarence Jr.; an infant sis­
ter, Phyllis; and a sister,

Ruth Karr.
Graveside services
will be held at 1:30 p.m.
on Wednesday, Jan. 23,
2019, at the Meigs Coun­
ty Memory Gardens with
Rev. Sheryl Gobel offici­
ating. Military services
will be conducted by
Tuppers Plains VFW and
the Middleport American
Legion.
A gathering of friends
will be held Wednesday
from 11 a.m.-l p.m. at the
White-Schwarzel Funeral
Home in Coolville.
In lieu of flowers, dona­
tions can be made to the
Meigs Council on Aging,
designated for Meals on
Wheels, 112 East Memo­
rial Drive, P.O. Box 722,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
You are invited to sign
the online guestbook at
www.whiteschwarzelfh.
com.

WOLFORD

SAYRE

CROWN CITY — Lisa Ann Wolford, 53, of Crown
City, died Saturday, January 19, 2019 at Riverside
Methodist Hospital in Columbus.
The funeral service for Lisa Wolford will be held at
1 p.m. on Friday, January 25,2019 at Willis Funeral
Home with Pastor Alfred Holley officiating. Burial
will follow in King’s Chapel Cemetery. Friends may
call on Friday prior to the service from noon -1 p.m. at
the funeral home.

LETART, WVa. — Gary Lee Sayre, 50, of Letart,
WVa. died Saturday, Jan. 19, following a brief illness.
A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m., Wednes­
day, Jan. 23 at Main Street Baptist Church in Point
Pleasant, WVa. with Pastor Robert Grady officiating.
Burial will follow at Evergreen Cemetery in Letart.
Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m., Tuesday at Wilcoxen
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant.
JEFFREY

ELKINS
BIDWELL — Larry W. Elkins, 70, of Bidwell, died
Saturday, January 19, 2019 at Holzer Senior Care in
Gallipolis.
The funeral service for Larry Elkins will be held
at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, January 23, 2019 at Willis
Funeral Home with Pastor Heath Jenkins officiating.
Friends may call on Wednesday from 5-7 p.m. at the
funeral home. A private burial will be in Poplar Ridge
Cemetery where Larry will be honored with military
services by the Gallia County Funeral Detail.
SPEARS
LETART — Raymond Spears, 21, of Letart, died
Saturday, Jan. 19, in Gallia County.
There will be no visitation or funeral service. Pri­
vate services will be observed. Burial will take place at
a time convenient for his family.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Editor’s Note: The
Daily Sentinel appreci­
ates 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 Port­
land 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.

Tuesday,
Jan. 22
RUTLAND — Leading
Creek Conservancy Dis­
trict will hold their orga­
nizational and regular
board meeting at 4 p.m.
at their office on Corn
Hollow Road, Rutland.
POMEROY — Acoustic
Night at the Library: Join
the group at 6 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library for an
informal jam session.

Thursday,
Jan. 24
POMEROY — The
Meigs Soil &amp; Water Con­
servation District Board
of Supervisors will hold a
Special Board of Supervi­
sors meeting at 2:15 p.m.
at the district office. The
meeting is being held for

personnel matters. The
office is located at 113 E.
Memorial Drive, Suite D,
Pomeroy.

Friday,
Jan. 25
POMEROY — Pome­
roy Library, Cookbook
Club, 11 a.m. Bring a dish
and the recipe to share, as
you sample others’. This
month’s theme is “Any­
thing Goes”.
MIDDLEPORT —The
monthly Free Community
Dinner of the Middleport
Church of Christ will be
held at 5 p.m. in their
Family Life Center. This
month they are having
chili, sandwiches, and
dessert.

Saturday,
Jan. 26
CHESTER —The
Meigs County Ikes will
hold its monthly meet­
ing following the 7 p.m.
meal at the Clubhouse on
Sugar Run Road. Dues
for calendar year is being
collected.
Louise Radford’s 90th
birthday will be cel­
ebrated on Saturday, Jan.
26 from 2-4 p.m. at the
American Legion Drew
Webster Post 39, 41765,
Pomeroy. No gifts please,
cards appreciated. Cards
may also be sent to Lou­
ise Radford, 35092 Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
Elizabeth Duffy’s 100th
birthday will be cel­
ebrated on Jan. 26 from
1-3 p.m. at the Bradford
Church of Christ.

Sunday,
Jan. 27
NEW HAVEN, WVa.

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EDITOR

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MANAGING EDITOR

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109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Dally Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

Daily Sentinel

POINT PLEASANT — Arthur Dwight Jeffrey, 89,
of Point Pleasant, died Jan. 19.
Services will be held Tuesday, Jan. 22 at 1 p.m. at
Main Street Baptist Church in Point Pleasant. Burial
will follow in Concord Cemetery in Henderson.
Friends may visit the family at the church from 11
a.m.-l p.m., prior to the service. Deal Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant is serving the family.
OLIVER
MOUNT ALTO — James Louis Oliver, 82, of
Mount Alto, died Jan. 20, at his home.
The service will be at 1 p.m., Wednesday, Jan. 23 in
the Casto Funeral Home, Evans. Burial will follow in
the Letart-Evergreen Cemetery, Letart. Visitation will
be from 11 a.m. until time of service, Wednesday at
the funeral home. Arrangements have been provided
by Casto Funeral Home, Evans.

MEIGS BRIEFS
— 90th birthday celebra­
tion for Betty Burris,
2-4 p.m., Jan. 27, New
Haven United Methodist
Church Fellowship Hall,
friends and family invited
to attend, no gifts please,
cards welcome.

Monday,
Jan. 28
MIDDLEPORT —The
Meigs County Veterans
Service Commission
will meet at 9 a.m. at
the office located at 97
North Second Avenue in
Middleport.
POMEROY — Pome­
roy Library, Book Club,
6 p.m.: Read and discuss
“The Great Alone” by
Kristin Hannah. Refresh­
ments are served.

Tuesday,
Jan. 29
SYRACUSE —Paint­
ing Class will resume on
Jan. 29 from 6-8 p.m. at
the Syracuse Community
Center. Call 740-992-2365
for more information.

Friday,
Feb. 1
POMEROY —The
regular meeting of the
Meigs County Chapter 74
Public Employee Retirees
Inc. (PERI) will be held
at 1 p.m. at the Mulberry
Community Center, 160
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Meigs County Sheriff
Keith Wood will be the
guest speaker. District
7 Representative Greg
Ervin will provide mem­
bers with information
regarding PERI issues
being discussed at the
state level. All Meigs
County Public Employee
retirees are urged to
attend.

Tuesday,
Feb. 5
POMEROY — Pome­
roy Library, 6 p.m. Family
Craft Night: Valentine
Boxes. Make a box for
your cards. All supplies
are provided.

Friday, Feb. 8
POMEROY — Pome­
roy Library, 5 p.m., Fam­
ily Movie Night: The
House with a Clock in its
Walls. Popcorn and lem­
onade will be served.
POMEROY — Pome­
roy Library, 10:30 a.m.,
Inspirational Book Club.
Read and discuss “When
the Heart Cries” by Cindy
Woodsmall with us. Light
refreshments are served.

Saturday,
Feb. 9
POMEROY — Pome­
roy Library, 1 p.m., Intro
to Essential Oils: learn
ways to incorporate oils
into your daily life. Free
and open to all.

Monday,
Feb. 11
POMEROY — Pome­
roy Library, 3 p.m. Family
Support Group. Help for
family members dealing
with addiction in loved
ones. Hosted by Hopewell
Health.

Tuesday,
Feb. 12
POMEROY — Pome­
roy Library, Acoustic
Night at the Library: Join
the group at 6 p.m. for an
informal jam session.

Friday,
Feb. 15
POMEROY — Pome­
roy Library, Cookbook
Club, 11 a.m. Bring a dish
and the recipe to share, as
you sample others’. This
month’s theme is cake.

Sunday,
Feb. 17
POMEROY — Pome­
roy Library, Family Sup­
port Group, 3 p.m.: Sup­
port for those who have
family members dealing
with addiction. Hosted by
Hopewell Health.

Monday,
Feb. 18
MEIGS COUNTY —
All Meigs Library loca­
tions will be closed in
observance of Presidents
Day.

Monday,
Feb. 25
POMEROY — Pome­
roy Library, Book Club,
6 p.m.: Read and discuss
“The Chilbury Ladies’
Choir” by Jennifer Ryan.
Refreshments are served.

Tuesday,
Feb. 26
POMEROY — Pome­
roy Library, Acoustic
Night at the Library: Join
the group at 6 p.m. for an
informal jam session.

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

Free small business classes
to be held Thursdays
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 information contact Kyle Verge at
KyleV@acenetworks.org or 740-592-3854 ext.
120. Registration is required. The classes are
held in conjunction with Ohio Means Job Meigs
County, ACEnet and the Meigs County District
Public Library.

Immunization clinic to
be conducted Tuesday
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health
Department will conduct an Immunization
Clinic on Tuesday from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m.
at 112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please
bring child(ren)’s shot records. Children must be
accompanied by a parent/legal guardian. A $30.00
donation is appreciated for immunization admin­
istration; however, no one will be denied services
because of an inability to pay an administration
fee for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please
bring medical cards and/or commercial insurance
cards, if applicable. Those who are insured via
commercial insurance are responsible for any bal­
ance their commercial insurance does not cover
for vaccinations. Pneumonia vaccines are also
available as well as flu shots. Call for eligibility
determination and availability or visit www.meigshealth.com to see a list of accepted commercial
insurances and Medicaid for adults.

IN BRIEF

Suspect in
US illegally
RENO, Nevada (AP)
— Authorities inves­
tigating four recent
Nevada killings say
murder charges are
pending against a man
suspected of being in
the U.S. illegally.
Nineteen-year-old
Wilbur MartinezGuzman was arrested
Saturday in Carson
City and is being held
on burglary and other
charges.
Authorities say they
expect to file murder
charges soon.
Carson City Sher­
iff Ken Furlong says
federal immigration
authorities told his
office Martinez-Guzman had lived in Car­
son City about a year
and was in the country
illegally.
Furlong said Monday
he didn’t know where
Martinez-Guzman is
originally from. He
doesn’t yet have an
attorney.
A 56-year-old woman
was found dead Jan.
10 in her Gardnerville
Ranchos home, and
a 74-year-old woman
was found dead in her
nearby home Jan. 13.
An elderly couple was
found dead in their

Reno home Wednes­
day.

Atlanta drops
street name
ATLANTA (AP)
— Residents in an
Atlanta neighborhood
are celebrating the
renaming of Confeder­
ate Avenue.
But the fate of Atlan­
ta’s many other CivilWar themed streets
and markers remains
undecided.
The switch from
Confederate Avenue
to “United Avenue”
is among the latest
changes amid nation­
wide debate over Civil
War-themed monu­
ments and symbols,
The Atlanta JournalConstitution reported .
The newspaper
reports that Atlanta
is home to at least 25
streets believed to be
named for military fig­
ures and leaders who
supported the Confed­
eracy during the Civil
War.
A panel in 2017 rec­
ommended that other
Atlanta streets be
renamed, just as Con­
federate Avenue was.
A city council commit­
tee is now exploring
how to carry out that
recommendation.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, January 22, 2019 3

3 groups; many videos;
many interpretations
of DC encounter

Trump offer doesn’t budge Dems

By Jeffrey Collins

WASHINGTON —
Thirty-one days into the
partial government shutdown, Democrats and
Republicans appeared
no closer to ending the
impasse than when it
began, with President
Donald Trump lashing
out at his opponents
after they dismissed a
plan he’d billed as a compromise.
Trump on Sunday
branded House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi a “radical”
and said she was acting
“irrationally.” The president also tried to fend
off criticism from the
right, as conservatives
accused him of embracing “amnesty” for immigrants in the country
illegally.
Trump offered on
Saturday to temporarily extend protections
for young immigrants
brought to the country
illegally as children and
those ﬂeeing disaster
zones in exchange for
$5.7 billion for his border wall. But Democrats
said the three-year proposal didn’t go nearly far
enough.
“No, Amnesty is not a
part of my offer,” Trump
tweeted Sunday, noting
that he’d offered temporary, three-year extensions — not permanent
relief. But he added:

the Black Hebrew Israelites taunting everyone
on the mall that day,
calling the Native AmeriA group of ﬁve black
cans who had gathered
men shouting vulgar
insults while protesting there for the Indigenous
centuries of oppression. Peoples March “Uncle
Tomahawks” and “$5
Dozens of white Catholic high school students Indians” and the high
school students “crackvisiting Washington for
ers” and worse.
a rally to end abortion.
It was an ugly encounAnd Native Americans
ter of spewed epithets
marching to end injusbut one that neverthetice for indigenous
peoples across the globe less ended with no
punches thrown or other
who have seen their
lands overrun by outside violence.
Still, the videos were
settlers.
The three groups met all over social media,
again appearing to illusfor just a few minutes
Friday at the base of the trate a nation of such
deep divisions — racial,
Lincoln Memorial, an
religious and ideological
encounter captured in
— that no one was willvideos that went viral
over the weekend — and ing to listen to the othagain cast a spotlight on ers’ point of view. Add
to that the political tena polarized nation that
sions spilling over from
doesn’t appear to agree
a government shutdown
on anything.
that has gone on for a
At ﬁrst the focus was
month and the stage was
on a short video showset for a viral moment.
ing one of the high
But in this case it didn’t
school students, Nick
tell the whole story,
Sandmann, wearing
all the parties involved
a red “Make America
agree.
Great Again” hat and
“I would caution
appearing to smirk
everyone passing judgwhile a crowd of other
teens laughed derisively ment based on a few
behind him as a 64-year- seconds of video to
watch the longer video
old Native American,
clips that are on the
Nathan Phillips, played
internet, as they show
a traditional chant on a
a much different story
drum.
Pull back further and a than is being portrayed
different view emerged, by people with agendas,”
Sandmann, a junior, said
however, in a separate
video showing members in a statement released
late Sunday.
of a group calling itself

Associated Press

By Jill Colvin
Associated Press

Associated Press

OH-70101554

things going on that we’re
seeing with lives transformed.”
Holdren invited his
From page 1
oldest daughter, Rose,
age 10, to the front of the
of his message around
Tanner’s earlier acknowl- church to share quotes
and commentary about
edgement that while the
Martin Luther King.
country had come far in
She detailed discussion
its treatment of others,
it still had much to learn once echoed by King
about how Americans
and do to accept and
had unconsciously wanlove others of different
dered away from God
backgrounds. Holdren
and become wrapped up
referenced the imporin life, whether it was
tance of sympathizing
money, jobs or other conwith addicts and those
veniences in life. King’s
who walked a road batwords, echoed through
tling chemical demons
the girl, said that money
in places such as drug
and cars were important
court, a program meant
to bring lives darkened by to maintaining life, but
substance abuse back to a one could not forget that
manageable road. He also such pursuits could not
said that if those individu- be a substitute for God,
his love and the love of
als would not choose to
adhere to such program’s humanity.
standards, they would
Dean Wright can be reached at 740likely ﬁnd themselves in
446-2342, ext. 2103.
prison.
“If we could all look
back to September 12,
2001,” said Holdren, “we
weren’t black or white.
We weren’t Republican or
Democrats. We weren’t
young or old. We were all
just the human race. We
were all looking at each
other, can I help you?
Have you talked to your
family today? That was
the one time in my life,
in 36 years, that I can
remember where every
thing that divides us
came crashing down and
we were just the human
race.”
Holdren mentioned
another battle the community was facing, one
built on suicide and overdose. He said in the last
ﬁve years in Gallia, 66
had passed to overdose
and 33 to suicide. In the
US last year, the country
lost over 70,000 to overdose.
“That’s more Americans than we lost in
the Vietnam War,” he
claimed. “…I buy into the
fact that every life does
matter…The folks we see
in the (criminal justice)
system, we see them at
their worst…There are

“Amnesty will be used
only on a much bigger
deal, whether on immigration or something
else.”
The criticism from
both sides underscored
Trump’s boxed in-position as he tries to win at
least some Democratic
buy-in without alienating
his base.
With hundreds of thousands of federal workers
set to face another federal pay period without
paychecks, the issue
passed to the Senate,
where Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell has
agreed to bring Trump’s
proposal to the ﬂoor this
week.
Democrats say there’s
little chance the mea-

sure will reach the
60-vote threshold usually required to advance
legislation in the Senate. Republicans have a
53-47 majority, which
means they need at least
some Democrats to vote
in favor.
McConnell has long
tried to avoid votes on
legislation that is unlikely to become law. And
the Kentucky Republican has said for weeks
that he has no interest in
“show votes” aimed only
at forcing members to
take sides after Trump
rejected the Senate’s
earlier bipartisan bill to
avert the shutdown.
What’s unclear is how
McConnell will bring
Trump’s plan forward

— or when voting will
begin. The Republican
leader is a well-known
architect of complicated
legislative maneuvers.
One question is whether
he would allow a broader immigration debate
with amendments to
Trump’s plan on the
Senate ﬂoor.
McConnell spokesman
David Popp said Sunday,
“When we have (a plan)
we will be sure to let
everyone know.”
One key Republican,
Sen. James Lankford of
Oklahoma, said that he
and other lawmakers
had been encouraging
the White House to put
an offer on the table —
any offer — to get both
sides talking.

Frigid air, high winds sweep the Northeast
By Holly Ramer

MLK

Carolyn Kaster | AP

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California speaks during a news conference Thursday on Capitol
Hill in Washington.

CONCORD, N.H. —
Falling temperatures
replaced the weekend’s
falling snow Monday
as bitter cold and gusty
winds swept across the
eastern United States.
The National Weather
Service had forecast that
temperatures would be
more than 20 degrees
below normal across the
Northeast, with wind
gusts up to 30 mph and
wind chills approaching minus 40 degrees
Fahrenheit (minus 40
degrees Celsius) in
northern New York and
Vermont.
Atop the Northeast’s
highest mountain,
the temperature fell
to minus 23 degrees
(minus 31 Celsius)
Monday morning and
dropped to minus 31
(minus 35 Celsius)
later in the afternoon,
according to the Face-

book page for Mount
Washington Observatory, in New Hampshire.
Wind chills were hovering around minus 80
(minus 62 Celsius).
In New York, Coast
Guard crews moved
quickly to rescue a
21-year-old man left
stranded on an island
in the Navensink River
after his small boat
broke down. The Coast
Guard said two members waded through
34-degree (1 Celsius)
water to bring the man
to safety. The air temperature was 7 degrees
(minus-14 Celsius)
degrees with 30 mph
wind.
The weather contributed to multiple deaths
over the long Martin
Luther King Jr. holiday
weekend.
In suburban Chicago, the temperature
was about 14 degrees
(minus-10 Celsius) Sunday when a 12-year-old

girl died after a snow
fort collapsed on her.
Police in Arlington
Heights, Illinois, said
Esther Jung had been
playing with another
girl outside Rothem
Church. Their families
began looking for them
about an hour later and
found them under the
snow. The younger girl
survived.
In Connecticut, a
utility company subcontractor died Sunday
after being struck by a
falling tree while working on a power line in
Middletown. Thousands of homes and
businesses in Connecticut remained without
power Monday afternoon as temperatures
dropped below zero in
some locations.
“This is a reminder
of the danger these
men and women face
on our behalf,” Gov.
Ned Lamont said in a
tweet. “While many

are still out there working today, please join
me in acknowledging
them and sending our
thoughts to this person’s family.”
In Kansas, a snowplow driver was killed
when the plow drove
onto the shoulder of a
road and rolled over,
throwing him under the
vehicle. It wasn’t clear
why the driver had
moved to the shoulder
from the roadway. And
in Wisconsin, the Milwaukee County Medical
Examiner’s Ofﬁce said
a 59-year-old man and
a 91-year-old man collapsed and died Sunday
in separate incidents
after removing snow.
A man in charge of
transportation at a
southwestern Michigan
school district also died
while shoveling snow.
Portage district ofﬁcials
said Mike Westbrook
died Saturday from a
heart attack.

�Opinion
4 Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

There’s no
place like
home
It seems to me that one of the most annoying things we encounter in our everyday lives is
what is usually known as an “earworm” - that is, a
catchy piece of music that continually repeats through a person’s mind
after it is no longer playing. There’s
nothing much we can do to get rid of
it and we often don’t know where it
came from. In this case, however, I’m
pretty sure what triggered this song.
Yep, it came from a nostalgia segBill
ment of a Lawrence Welk TV show
Taylor
which is a nostalgia piece of its own.
Contributing
The song? It’s “Home, Sweet Home”
columnist
with lyrics that include the lines,
“Mid pleasures and palaces though
we may roam, Be it ever so humble, there’s no
place like home.” - and it was written in 1823.
How about them apples.
Mostly when I get one of those earworms,
they’re just plain annoying, but in this case, surprisingly enough, it really hasn’t been. The reason
is that it brought up truly pleasant memories of
the various places I’ve called home starting with
the only one I ever knew until I got married.
That house was not much by most standards.
I recall we had no indoor plumbing until the city
forced the landlord to provide city water and a
toilet - no hot water, tub, wash basin and such.
After Dad managed to buy the house - which is an
interesting story in itself - we added those amenities ourselves. Heating was provided by a single
pot-bellied coal stove - our upstairs bedrooms were
unheated.
The outward appearance was unattractive to say
the least - the only time it was painted was when
I did so when I was a teenager. Regardless, this
was our family home for me and my seven brothers and sisters and we often recalled many happy
times there. The site where that house stood has
long been turned into a parking lot, but when I
have the chance, I slowly drive by as it evokes
many pleasant memories.
Home for my Sweetheart-for-Life and me when
we were ﬁrst married consisted of three rooms
and a shared bathroom in an old Victorian-style
house. It wasn’t much because we didn’t have
much, but we didn’t care. After all, we were in our
very own home - and, as with my old family home,
when the opportunity presents itself we drive by
that house and smile as we recall those happy
days.
In the intervening sixty-some years of marriage
we have lived in a variety of places - in each of
which we established a “home.” Among the more
interesting ones was what we called our “rice
paddy” home in a small village when I was stationed in Japan. Both our heating and hot water
relied on kerosene from a barrel sitting outside on
a sawhorse-like support.
We cooked using a two burner hot plate and a
roaster oven - both of which required a “step-up”
transformer because the voltage was so low. Adjacent to the site was a ﬁeld which the farmer fertilized using “human organic” material with a smell
that caused us to leave until the odor abated. But
despite these less-than-desirable conditions, it was
home and we have fond memories of the time we
spent there.
Halfway around the world we also made a home
in a small, rural German village - complete with
the view of a herd of sheep grazing on a distant
hillside. Yep, this was a totally different venue
than we had experienced before, but it was kinda
nice being away from the hustle and bustle of a
larger city. There were lots more places where we
made homes before we ﬁnally landed here - and all
have generated their own nostalgic images.
Well, we have downsized from the 2 story, 11
room, 4 bedroom place we had while our offspring
were still with us. Interestingly enough, when they
come to visit, they often drive by that house they
called home for so many years but they also reminisce about the place out in the country we rented
until we bought.
Okay, back to the “earworm.” That song has
not only survived but has been popular for close
to 200 years - the most recent recording I could
ﬁnd was in 2014. It was in a number of movies
including the musical “The King and I”, and “The
Wizard of Oz” (Remember the ﬁnal scene where
Dorothy tells her family, “there’s no place like
home”) - and there have been numerous recordings by big name artists.
Anyway, thanks to that earworm nudge, I
think I’ve ﬁgured out where “home” is for me.
Once I left my old family home and married
my Sweetheart-for-Life, “home” has been wherever she is - yep, she has made each place into a
“home” regardless of where it was. You know, that
earworm has it right, “Mid pleasures and palaces
though we may roam, Be it ever so humble, there’s
no place like home.” At least that’s how it seems
to me.

THEIR VIEW

100 plus years of bicycles
Bicycles have been a
popular mode of transportation for many years.
From the single speed,
get your pants leg caught
in the chain to the very
sophisticated bikes of
today, America has loved
the sport.
For a kid, a bicycle
was a chance at freedom.
There were so many places to go and see in the
neighborhood and a fun
way to get there. Riding
a bike to school or to the
playground or swimming
pool was a treat.
Some riders are very
serious about their bikes
and so yesterday’s single
speed bike does not
even compare to today’s
bicycles.
Before automobiles
were popular in the city,
the bicycle was a major
form of transportation for
some folks. Of course the
horse and buggy was seen
as well on the city streets.
Races were always
fun; both for the participant and the viewer.
A very special event for
bicyclists took place on
September 12, 1895. A
number of young folks in
Xenia decided to have a
bicycle race. Some of the
merchants agreed to provide prizes for those who
could ﬁnish the race.
The Friday paper
announced that “another
bicycle race” was scheduled for the next day.
There were eight entrants
for the race with the
handicaps arranged by S.
D. Kingsbury.
The following Monday
the report read: “The
bicycle road race on
Saturday around the ﬁve
mile course was quite
an excellent event. The
course for the ﬁve mile
road race was out over
Spring Hill toward New
Burlington. From there

with orders. Nothacross to a road
ing but rain will
south of the OSSO
change the above
Home and the
plan.”
race was to end
Charles Schilon Home Avenue.
ling, a 14-year old
The race would not
St. Louis boy, rode
continue into town
his bicycle 400
because that would Joan
miles to Xenia to
have been more
Baxter
than ﬁve miles. The Contributing visit relatives. He
was arrested once
time prize was won columnist
for “speeding withby Harry Seifert in
out a bell.”
14:10. The ﬁrst boy
City ordinances deterin was Fran Merrick at
mine the use of bicycles
13:15.”
in the city. In 1909
At that time, cycling
bicycles were not allowed
could be rather dangerous. One young man was on sidewalks. Each bike
speeding down a hill and was to be equipped with
a lighted lamp during
collided with a horsethe hours of one hour
drawn buggy. He had
after sunset and one hour
to send his bike in to be
before sunrise. Bicycle
repaired but he survived
speed limit in the city or
the accident.
Four young men under- Xenia was set at 8 miles
per hour.
took a 40 mile trip via
More recently August
Centerville, Lytle and
10, 1962 Gazette
Waynesville. One of the
reported “Selective Bike
fellows could not ﬁnish
Enforcement Proposed by
and so took the train
Commission”. Previously
home from Waynesville.
city ofﬁcials had ordered
Apparently organized
the police department to
bike races were held
enforce the trafﬁc rules
often. In August 1895 a
regarding bicycles. Citabike race was open to all
Greene County residents tions were to be issued to
under the age of 17. This youngsters riding bikes
on sidewalks, improperly
was to take place on
parking bikes or violatLabor Day and a medal
ing other sections of the
was awarded to the winordinance.
ner.
An ordinance had been
During the “gay ninepassed 12 years previties” apparently proper
ously stating “It is unlawattire when riding a bike
ful to operate a bicycle
was important. An 1895
upon the sidewalks of any
report included: “Leon
street or public way in
Trader will positively
the city.” This new “crackappear on his bicycle
down” had been implethis evening attired in
mented to the dismay
his new pair of knickerof parents and children
bockers. His route will
alike.
be as follows: Leave the
Several parents
Trader grocery promptly
at 7:30, go west on Main appeared with their children at the Council meetSt. to Detroit St. thence
south on Detroit to Home ing. Speaking against the
ruling, Marshall Massie,
Ave. from Home Ave. to
an attorney, cited that in
the main building at the
the past two years, 14
OSSO Home, arriving
bicycles riders had been
there at 8 o’clock. Leave
the Home promptly at 10 injured when struck by a

car, but in that same period not one pedestrian had
been hit by a bicyclist.
Massie continued “As
of 2 o’clock this afternoon
there were 1,928 bicycles
registered in the city.
What you are saying is to
put 1,928 people in the
street to be killed.”
There was considerable
discussion from many
folks who were concerned
about bicycles on sidewalks in the downtown
area. Most agreed that it
would be acceptable to
allow children to ride on
sidewalks in residential
areas.
In the long run, the
Council decided that the
police would limit their
enforcement of the bike
ordinances to the downtown area, two blocks in
any direction from the
intersection of Main and
Detroit. Children riding
in these areas would be
counseled by the police
on the proper manner of
being on a sidewalk with
pedestrians. They would
be encouraged to “walk”
their bikes in the downtown area.
By 1991, the love of
bicycles manifested itself
once more in the county
when on October 12 the
ﬁrst recognized bike path
was dedicated during
the Street Fair in Yellow
Springs. The Rails to
Trails program had begun
in Greene County.
1995 saw the bike hub
opened which linked
several bicycle trails.
This provided ample auto
parking and a place to
rest for those traveling on
the bike trails throughout
the county.
2018 saw new paths for
bikes through the downtown Xenia area.
Joan Baxter is a Greene County,
Ohio resident and long-time
historical columnist.

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Tuesday, Jan.
22, the 22nd day of 2019.
There are 343 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On Jan. 22, 1973, the
U.S. Supreme Court, in
its Roe v. Wade decision,
legalized abortions using
a trimester approach.

Former President Lyndon Queen Victoria died at
age 81 after a reign of 63
B. Johnson died at his
years; she was succeeded
Texas ranch at age 64.
by her eldest son, Edward
VII.
On this date
In 1907, the Richard
In 1498, during his
Strauss opera “Salome”
third voyage to the
made its American debut
Western Hemisphere,
at the Metropolitan
Christopher Columbus
arrived at the present-day Opera in New York; its
racy content sparked
Caribbean island of St.
outrage and forced canVincent.
cellation of additional
In 1901, Britain’s

performances.
In 1917, President
Woodrow Wilson, in an
address to Congress,
pleaded for an end to the
war in Europe, calling
for “peace without victory.” (By April, however,
America also was at war.)
In 1944, during World
War II, Allied forces
began landing at Anzio,
Italy.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Deceased

Suspect

From page 1

From page 1

Tuesday, January 22,2019 5

Harris opens presidential bid
prosecutor in asserting: “My entire
career has been focused on keeping
people safe. It is probably one of the
things that motivates me more than
anything else.”
Harris launched her presidential bid
as the nation observes what would have
been the 90th birthday of the slain civil
rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
The timing was a clear signal that the
California senator— who has joked that
she had a “stroller’s-eye view” of the
civil rights movement because her par­
ents wheeled her and her sister Maya
to protests — sees herself as another
leader in that fight.
The opening hours of Harris’ cam­
paign included a number of cultural
touchstones aside from her decision to
announce her bid on the Martin Luther
King Jr. holiday. Staffers said her tim­
ing, and the design and color of her
campaign logo, were a nod to Shirley
Chisholm, the New York congresswom­
an who sought the Democratic Party’s
presidential nomination 47 years ago
this week. Upon returning to Washing­
ton, Harris spoke to reporters at How­
ard University, the historically black
college that she attended as an under­
graduate and on Monday described as
“one of the most important aspects of
my life.”

By Juana Summers
Associated Press

on U.S. 35 near the roadside rest.
When officers arrived on the
scene, they located Mr. Spears
who had been shot multiple times.
Mr. Spears was transported to
Holzer Medical Center where he
later succumbed to his injuries.
Two individuals were detained at
the scene as a part of the inves­
tigation and this investigation
is still ongoing. As a part of this
investigation, we have learned
that prior to this incident occur­
ring, the parties may have been
in Mason County, West Virginia.
Additionally, our investigation has
led us to believe that one of the
occupants of the vehicle may have
discharged multiple rounds from
a firearm while in Mason County.
We are following up on this infor­
mation and working with Sheriff
Greg Powers and the Mason
County Sheriff’s Department
with regards to this information.
We are asking that if anyone in
Mason County heard or observed
anything consistent with this
information, please contact the
Gallia County Sheriff’s Office at
740-446-1221 or via our tip line at
740-446-6555.”

accurately track the suspect to the
residence. Wood added that “inclement
weather” also assisted with the track­
ing.
Law enforcement officers from
Racine, Syracuse, Middleport, Pome­
roy, Ohio State Highway Patrol and
the Meigs County Sheriff’s Office were
part of the search. Mullins was checked
out by Meigs County EMS and cleared.
Mullins was transported to an out-ofcounty facility after being taken back
into custody.
Wood stated that an investigation
will be conducted into the specific
details surrounding the incident and
the practices used in transporting indi­
viduals.
Mullins currently has felony charges
of escape, tampering with drugs, van­
dalism and theft, as well as several mis­
demeanor charges according to Meigs
County Court records. New charges
are expected in relation to the incident
from Monday.
A search warrant was being obtained
on Monday afternoon for the residence
where Mullins was located, stated
Wood.
Sarah Hawley is the managing editor of The Daily
Sentinel.

the Jones Family; Ollie
Wilson, teacher, ora­
tor; John R. Jefferson,
teacher and principal
From page 1
of Parkersburg schools
Kanawha Valleys; James for 25 years; Edward
McHenry Jones, teacher, Morton, teacher and
preacher, author, orator, scholar; Miss Bertha
Morton, teacher; Irene
at the time of his death
Chilron Moats, teacher,
the third President of
West Virginia Collegaite, scholar, advisory board
now West Virginia State of the state of West
College; James E. Camp­ Virginia in 1929; C. E.
bell, teacher, poet, ora­
Jones, scholar, teacher
tor and first President of for 32 years in West Vir­
West Virginia Collegiate; ginia; Harry Hagelwood,
Flemming B. Jones,
scholar, teacher, princi­
principal of Wheeling
pal in Huntington, West
School, teacher, banker,
Virginia.
first (African American)
“Time would fail me
to cite more of the boys
in the U.S. to secure a
charter for a national
and girls who came
out from the rocks and
bank; Calvin Morton,
merchant; John L. Jones, hills of the first ward
of Pomeroy. It has
writer of the history of

been an honor to have
this opportunity to
remember these people,
through incredible odds
became part of 30,000
African American teach­
ers by 1900. These men
and women until now
have gone unrecognized
and their accomplish­
ments and successes
unknown to genera­
tions,” stated Scott.
In addition to the
school, there was a
church, fire department
and homes in the First
Ward which was the
home to many African
Americans in the area.
Scott concluded by
reading the Prologue to
James Edwin Campbell’s
book.
The second marker is

History

TODAY
8 AM

# AccuWeather

8 PM

WEDNESDAY

11°

37°

33°

ALMANAC

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Mon.

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™
190/40

Precipitation (in inches)

Snowfall (in inches)
24 hours ending 3 p.m. Mon. Trace
Month to date/normal
0.5/4.4
Season to date/normal 2.1/9.0

Wed.

7:42 a.m.
5:38 p.m.
7:39 p.m.
8:55 a.m.

7:42 a.m.
5:39 p.m.
8:52 p.m.
9:37 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Last New First Full

|#fQ
Jan 27 Feb 4 Feb 12 Feb 19

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

Major Minor Major Minor

Today 12:11a 6:28a 12:43p 6:59p
Wed. 1:18a
7:33a 1:47p 8:01 p
2:21a 8:35a 2:48p 9:02p
Thu.
3:21a 9:34a 3:46p 9:59p
Fri.
4:16a 10:28a 4:41 p 10:53p
Sat.
5:07a 11:19a 5:32p 11:44p
Sun.
Mon. 5:55a 12:07p 6:19p

WEATHER HISTORY
A record 17.4-inch snowfall on
Jan. 22,1902, in Buffalo, N.Y., was
dwarfed by 30 inches in Philadelphia,
Pa., on Jan. 8,1996.

Very cold with
considerable
cloudiness

I 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.

Murray City

9

Athens 9

40/35

McArthur^

38/34
Waverly

Wilkesville

0

41/35

r

9

° POMEROY,

Jackson

Elizabeth

42/35

41/36

Lucasville

43/35

42/37

TM

9

o

Centerville
Portsmouth

38/37

o Ripley

AIR QUALITY

44/34
Buffalo

42/36 1,45/39

45/36

Ironton

■Y ■

0 50 100150200
300
Primary pollutant: Particulates

J45/39

500

46/39

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

Grayson

unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.

9 45/39

NATIONAL FORECAST
1110s

OHIO RIVER

100s

Clendenin

Milton

Ashland a

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

46/37
1

Huntington

45/39

9

45/33 9

St. Albans

46/36
9

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

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

Level

O 45/36
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

’S'

24-hr.
Chg.

12.78 +0.28
23.66 +2.54
26.04 +3.82
12.56 -0.36
13.09 +0.67
30.10 +4.53
12.32 +0.09
33.20 +6.67
38.25 +3.52
12.85 +0.35
37.50+11.80
38.20 +3.00
33.80 +8.10

'-±a

Charleston

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. Mon.
Flood
Stage

Spencer

o
/South Shore Greenup

49

9

45/36

43/37
s^UBqjiB-i :v

-&gt;

25°
Clouds and sun; snow
at night

NATIONAL CITIES

39/34

40/35

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

Location

Cloudy, snow showers
possible; chilly

9

Chillicothe

37°

*

«£££ 1go

20°

Colder with times of
clouds and sun

MONDAY

28°

38/35

days with subzero(F) temperatures?

Today

SUNDAY

39/34

The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local

WEATHER TRIVIA

38/35

Adelphi

Q: What major U.S. city has the most

SUN &amp; MOON

location to be announced
at a later date.

o oo

11°

A morning flurry;
cloudy, colder

a

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of cur-

SATURDAY

25°

20°

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24 hours ending 3 p.m. Mon. Trace
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Some sunshine giving way to clouds today.
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Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Shannon Scott, far right, gave a brief history of the school and some of it's students during the
unveiling on Monday morning.

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WASHINGTON — Kamala Har­
ris, a first-term senator and former
California attorney general known for
her rigorous questioning of President
Donald Trump’s nominees, entered the
Democratic presidential race on Mon­
day. Harris would be the first woman
to hold the presidency and the second
African-American.
Harris, 54, who grew up in Oak­
land, California, is one of the earliest
high-profile Democrats to join what is
expected to be a crowded field. She
made her long anticipated announce­
ment on ABC’s “Good Morning Amer­
ica.”
“I am running for president of the
United States,” she said. “And I’m very
excited about it.”
She portrayed herself as a fighter
for justice, decency and equality in a
video distributed by her campaign as
she announced her bid. “They’re the
values we as Americans cherish, and
they’re all on the line now,” Harris
says in the video . “The future of our
country depends on you and millions of
others lifting our voices to fight for our
American values.”
On ABC, she cited her years as a

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�Sports
6 Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Big Blacks win WSAZ title
By Bryan Walters

both a runner-up and a third
place performance at the event.
Saint Joseph Academy (PA)
was the overall runner-up with
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — A
thoroughly consistent weekend. 213 points to go along with a
tournament-best ﬁve weight
The Point Pleasant wrestling
class champions. Huntington
program came away with 11
was third with 194.5 points and
placers and a pair of individual
Johnson Central (KY) was fourth
champions while rolling to a
17½-point victory over a 69-team overall with 176.5 points.
River Valley (73.5), Gallia
ﬁeld Friday and Saturday at the
2019 WSAZ Invitational held at Academy (68) and Wahama
(33.5) also took part in the
Big Sandy Superstore Arena in
two-day tournament, but the
Cabell County.
local squads earned respective
The Big Blacks varsity lineup
ﬁnishes of 25th, 26th and 37th
posted a winning tally of 230.5
points, which included nine top- overall. The Raiders had a trio
of a placers, while the White Falsix ﬁnishes and a trio of weight
cons also had one grappler score
class ﬁnalists. The Point Pleasant ‘B’ squad also ended up 19th a top-eight effort.
Point Pleasant’s primary team
overall with 42.5 points and had

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant junior Logan Southall locks in a hold on an opponent during
a match at the 2018 Jason Eades Memorial Duals held Dec. 8, 2018, at
Point Pleasant High School in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

received a individual crowns
from Isaac Short at 106 pounds
and Derek Raike at 120 pounds.
Both champions posted identical
5-0 records with three pinfalls in
their respective divisions.
Mitchell Freeman was the 138pound runner-up after going 5-1
overall with four pinfalls, while
Christopher Smith was third
at 113 pounds with a 4-1 mark
that included a pinfall win and
a technical fall. Logan Southall
also placed third at 160 pounds
with a 6-1 record, including two
pinfalls and a technical fall.
George Smith (132), Wyatt
Wilson (145) and Jacob Muncy
(285) all ﬁnished ﬁfth in their
See WSAZ | 7

Patriots beat
Chiefs in
OT, 37-31
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — It’s the dead of
winter, meaning the weather in New England can
be brutal. And that the Patriots are headed to the
Super Bowl.
It took them overtime and more of Tom Brady’s
brilliance to get there — for the third straight
year. While the folks back home dealt with a frigid
storm, Brady blew through Kansas City’s exhausted defense on a 75-yard drive to Rex Burkhead’s
2-yard touchdown run in a 37-31 victory Sunday
for the AFC championship.
The drive, during which New England (13-5)
had three third-down conversions, was reminiscent of when the Patriots beat Atlanta in the only
Super Bowl to go to OT two years ago.
“Overtime, on the road against a great team,”
Brady said. “They had no quit. Neither did we. We
played our best football at the end. I don’t know,
man, I’m tired. That was a hell of a game.”
Awaiting them in Atlanta are the Los Angeles
Rams, who won 26-23 in overtime in New Orleans
for the NFC championship. The Rams (15-3) last
made the Super Bowl in 2002 while based in St.
Louis, losing to the Patriots.
New England beneﬁted from two critical replay
reviews and made its ninth Super Bowl with
Brady at quarterback and Bill Belichick as coach.
“This is crazy,” said Brady, who was 30 of 46 for
348 yards. “What a game.”
It’s the ﬁrst time both conference title games
went to OT. The last time both visitors won conference championship matches was 2012; New
England was 3-5 on the road this season.
“We knew what our record was, but we didn’t let
that dictate us,” said defensive end Trey Flowers,
who led a staunch charge on Patrick Mahomes.
“Whatever happened in the regular season happened. We came out and did it when it counted.”
Several times, the Patriots appeared to have it
won, only to see Kansas City (13-5) come back in
spectacular fashion.
Brady, at 41 already the oldest quarterback to
have played in a Super Bowl, drove New England
65 yards in 1:24 to Burkhead’s go-ahead 4-yard
touchdown with 39 seconds left in regulation.
That was enough, though, for his far younger
counterpart, the 23-year-old All-Pro Mahomes,
to take the Chiefs 48 yards to Harrison Butker’s
39-yard ﬁeld goal with 8 seconds left to force overtime.
See PATRIOTS | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Jan. 22
Boys Basketball
Point Pleasant at Eastern,
6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at
Wahama, 6 p.m.
Jackson at River Valley,
6 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 6
p.m.
Gallia Academy at Rock
Hill, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Belpre, 6
p.m.
Hannan at Ohio Valley
Christian, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Sissonville at Point
Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Hannan at Ohio Valley
Christian, 6 p.m.

Wednesday, Jan. 23
Wrestling
Quad at Point Pleasant,
6 p.m.
South Gallia, Federal
Hocking at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Swimming
River Valley at Shawnee
State, 5 p.m.
Thursday, Jan. 24
Girls Basketball
Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Coal Grove at Gallia
Academy, 6 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at River
Valley, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Miller, 6
p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Southern at Wellston, 6
p.m.

David J. Phillip | AP

Los Angeles Rams players celebrate after overtime of the NFL football NFC championship game Sunday against the New Orleans Saints
in New Orleans.

Zuerlein’s 57-yard FG send Rams to Super Bowl
NEW ORLEANS (AP)
— A big comeback. A
blown call. And, ﬁnally,
a booming kick that sent
the Los Angeles Rams to
the Super Bowl.
After rallying from an
early 13-0 deﬁcit, the
Rams stunned the New
Orleans Saints with Greg
Zuerlein’s 57-yard ﬁeld
goal in overtime for a
26-23 victory in the NFC
championship game
Sunday — an outcome
that might not have
been possible without an
egregious mistake by the
ofﬁcials in the closing
minutes of regulation.
Los Angeles cornerback
Nickell Robey-Coleman
committed a blatant
interference penalty with
a helmet-to-helmet hit
on Tommylee Lewis well
before the pass arrived
inside the 5, forcing the
Saints to settle for Wil
Lutz’s 31-yard ﬁeld goal
that made it 23-20 with
1:41 left in regulation.
“Came to the sideline,
looked at the football
gods and was like, ‘Thank
you,’” Robey-Coleman
said. “I got away with one
tonight.”
After the no-call, Jared
Goff had enough time to
lead the Rams down the
ﬁeld for Zuerlein’s tying
ﬁeld goal, a 48-yarder
with 15 seconds remaining.
New Orleans won the
coin toss and got the ball
ﬁrst in overtime. But,
with Dante Fowler Jr. in
his face and striking his
arm, Drew Brees ﬂuttered
up a pass that was picked
off by John Johnson III,
who was able to hang on
to the interception while

stumbling backward.
Johnson hopped up and
celebrated by doing the
“Choppa Style” dance
popularized by New
Orleans rapper Choppa,
whose namesake song
had become a Saints’ rallying cry and was even
performed during the
halftime show.
The Rams weren’t able
to do much offensively,
but it didn’t matter. Zuerlein booted through the
winning ﬁeld goal from
just inside midﬁeld with
plenty of room to spare.
The NFL said it the longest game-winning kick
in playoff history.
“It’s unbelievable,
man. I can’t put it into
words,” said Goff, who at
24 became the youngest
quarterback to win an
NFC title. “The defense
played the way they did
to force it to overtime.
The defense gets a
pick and Greg makes a
57-yarder to win it. That
was good from about 70.
Unbelievable.”
The Superdome, which
had been in uproar all
afternoon, suddenly
turned eerily silent. It
was the ﬁrst home playoff
loss for the Saints with
Brees and coach Sean
Payton, who and been
6-0 in those games since
their pairing began in
2006.
This one really hurt.
If the pass interference
penalty had been called,
the Saints could’ve run
most of the time off the
clock to set up a winning
ﬁeld goal from chip-shot
range. A replay was
shown over and over on
the Superdome’s giant

video boards, prompting
some fans to toss trash
on the ﬁeld.
“Being that it happened
right there in front of
the person who would
be the one to make the
call, and everyone in the
stands saw it, everyone
watching at home on TV
saw it, that makes it even
more difﬁcult to take,”
Brees said. “Because of
this, I’m sure there will
be a lot of talk about
reviewing penalties,
perhaps game-changing
penalties.”
The Rams (15-3) and
their 32-year-old coach,
Sean McVay, capped a
remarkable rise since
moving back to Los
Angeles three years ago.
The team will be appearing in its ﬁrst Super Bowl
since the 2001 season,
when the “Greatest Show
on Turf” was still in St.
Louis.
The team hasn’t won
an NFL title in Los
Angeles since 1951, well
before the Super Bowl
era. The team moved to
St. Louis in 1995, only to
return to Southern California two decades later.
“Shoot, I don’t even
know what day it is,”
McVay said. “All I know
is we’re NFC champs,
baby!”
It was another bitter
end for the Saints, who
lost the previous season
in the divisional round on
the “Minnesota Miracle”
— the Vikings’ long
touchdown pass on the
ﬁnal play of the game.
This time, New Orleans
(14-4) couldn’t hang on
to the lead or overcome
that ofﬁciating mistake.

Payton said he talked
to the NFL ofﬁce after
the game and was told
that Robey-Coleman
should have been ﬂagged.
“Not only was it interference, it was helmet to
helmet,” the coach said.
“I don’t know if there was
ever a more obvious pass
interference.”
The Saints were on the
verge of blowing out the
Rams, scoring on their
ﬁrst three possessions
and taking advantage
of an interception when
Todd Gurley let a pass
slip through his hands.
Then a fake punt early
in the second quarter
gave Los Angeles its
initial ﬁrst down of the
game. Sparked by that
gutsy call, the Rams ﬁnally came to life offensively
and drove into position
for the ﬁrst of four ﬁeld
goals by Zuerlein.
Gurley made it 13-10
at halftime on a 6-yard
touchdown run just
before the intermission.
New Orleans restored
its double-digit lead
on Brees’ 2-yard scoring pass to third-string
quarterback Taysom Hill,
the ﬁrst TD catch of the
super sub’s career. Goff
countered with a 1-yard
touchdown toss to Tyler
Higbee, setting up a wild
fourth quarter.
Zuerlein tied the score
at 20-all with a 24-yard
ﬁeld goal after McVay
passed on a shot at the
go-ahead touchdown
with fourth-and-goal from
inside the 1. A delay of
game while lining up
for the kick scuttled any
thoughts of leaving the
offense on the ﬁeld.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

WSAZ

went 6-3 with four pinfall wins.
Antonio Serevicz
was the lone White
From page 6
Falcon to place over
the weekend after
respective weight
ﬁnishing ﬁfth at 220
classes. Both Smith
pounds. Serevicz went
and Muncy went 6-2
6-2 overall with two
overall with a pinfall
pinfall victories.
apiece, while Wilson
The Blue Devils did
was 5-2 with a pinfall
not have a single grapvictory.
pler ﬁnish the weekend
Zac Samson was
on the podium, but
also sixth for the Big
senior Lane Pullins did
Blacks after going 4-3
notch his 100th career
overall with two pinvictory with a pinfall
falls at 152 pounds.
Point’s ‘B’ team man- win (3:09) over Jacob
aged second and third Davis of Musselman
at 182 pounds. Pullins
place ﬁnishes at 106
pounds as Parker Hen- ﬁnished the weekend
derson and Mackandle 4-2 overall with three
pinfalls.
Freeman both went
With half of the
4-1 on the weekend.
Short, Henderson and 14 divisional titles
acquired by St. Joseph
Freeman also allowed
Academy and PPHS,
PPHS to ﬁnish one,
only Saint Albans
two and three in the
joined that duo with
lightest division of
multiple crowns after
weight classes.
Jacob Edwards came winning two. East
Fairmont, Cabell
away with the RaidMidland, Huntington,
ers’ top effort of the
weekend after placing Greenbrier West and
Johnson Central also
fourth at 126 pounds.
Edwards went went 6-2 came away with a
overall and landed two weight class champion
apiece.
pinfalls to go along
Visit wvmat.com for
with a technical fall.
complete results of the
Will Hash (145)
2019 WSAZ Invitationand Eric Weber (182)
both ﬁnished sixth for al held at Big Sandy
Superstore Arena.
RVHS in their respective weight classes.
Hash was 6-2 with two Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
pinfalls, while Weber

Patriots

28-24 edge that New
England took up most
of the remaining time
From page 6
overcoming. The Patriots were helped by
an offside call on lineIt was a sizzling
backer Dee Ford that
offensive showing in
the fourth quarter after negated an interception which would have
defense had been in
charge most of the way. clinched a KC victory.
Butker’s ﬁeld goal
Indeed, the Chiefs were
blanked in the opening sent it to overtime.
“We put ourselves
half for the ﬁrst time all
in position to win the
season.
game, that’s what makes
And they never saw
it so tough,” Reid said.
the ball in overtime,
“If it’s a rout, you chalk
which along with the
it up to experience.
two replay decisions
But this one right here,
might call into play
where you’re in it to
NFL rules and ofﬁciatwin it, that’s a tough
ing.
deal. We gave ourselves
“I thought if we got
every opportunity to do
the chance,” Mahomes
it, and they got us in
said, “we’d score.”
Mahomes ﬁnished 16 overtime.”
The Chiefs hadn’t
of 31 for 295 yards and
been blanked in any half
three touchdowns.
New England became this season, but they
barely were a presence
the third franchise to
reach three Super Bowls in the ﬁrst 30 minutes,
in a row. And Belichick when they had the ball
now has 30 postseason for 8:53. Mahomes was
victories, more than Bill sacked three times for
43 yards; Kansas City’s
Walsh and Don Shula
combined. That Hall of record-setting attack
Fame coaching duo also ran only 16 plays and
gained a mere 32 yards.
won ﬁve Super Bowls;
The zero disapBelichick shoots for No.
peared quickly in the
6 in two weeks.
third quarter. Finally
An apparent muff
given solid protection,
by the usually reliable
Mahomes unleashed a
Julian Edelman on a
54-yard completion to
fourth-quarter punt
Sammy Watkins over
return was overturned
All-Pro cornerback Steby a lengthy video
phon Gilmore. He then
review, prompting rauhit another All-Pro,
cous booing and some
tight end Travis Kelce,
demonstrative arguing
on a slant to make it
from the usually laid14-7 — and awaken the
back Andy Reid. Edelman deﬁnitely touched slumbering crowd.
But one of several bad
his next try when
decisions further damBrady’s pass deﬂected
off his hands directly to aged Kansas City when
safety Daniel Sorensen. Tyreek Hill, the All-Pro
ﬂex player, retreated
His 22-yard return
deep in Chiefs territory
set up Kansas City at
returning a punt. Eventhe Patriots 23, and
tually, KC had to punt
Damien Williams, who
scored three times, had and the Patriots had
excellent ﬁeld position,
no defender near him
setting up a 47-yard
down the left sideline
for the score that made ﬁeld goal by Stephen
it 21-17, KC’s ﬁrst lead. Gostkowski.
Not one to be shy
Back came Brady,
about innovation,
engineering a 75-yard
Mahomes completely
march on which Chris
sidearmed a throw to
Hogan’s diving oneWatkins for 10 yards
handed catch on third
down appeared to touch on a third down, then
a dump-off to Williams
the ground. Reid chalcovered 33. Kelce drew
lenged — and lost.
Minutes later, rookie a pass interference call
on J.C. Jackson in the
Sony Michel scored
from the 10, his second end zone, and Mahomes
threw a strike to WilTD of the night.
liams for the score.
With 3½ minutes
Although the Chiefs
remaining, there was
plenty of time for more were on their heels
points. Williams’ 2-yard much of the night, they
were down only 17-14.
run gave the Chiefs a

Tuesday, January 22, 2019 7

Meigs, Eastern wrestle at Invite
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

THE PLAINS, Ohio — Rounding out the top-10.
The Meigs and Eastern wrestling teams ﬁnished ninth and
10th respectively at the John Deno
Invitational on Saturday at Athens
High School.
The host Bulldogs won the
16-team event with a score of 397,
just four points ahead of runner-up
Simon Kenton. The Marauders’
total of 73 was 9.5 behind eighthplace Logan and two ahead of the
10th-place Eagles, who were seven
ahead of Wellston in 11th.

sixth-place ﬁnishes with two wins
apiece in the 145 and 152 weight
classes respectively.
Ethan Kline at 220 and Ryan
Ross at 120 both ﬁnished eighth
for the Eagles, winning two matches and one match respectively. Nick
Little also claimed a victory in the
220 class for Eastern, but ﬁnished
outside the top-8.
EHS is slated to return to action
at home on Wednesday, while
Meigs is scheduled to be off until
the Tri-Valley Conference meet at
Vinton County on Feb. 16.

Leading the way for Meigs,
William Smith was fourth at 182
pounds with a 3-2 record, and
Tucker Smith was 5th in the 145
class, going 4-1. Jarod Koenig at
106 and Lane Shuler at 152 both
placed eighth, with Shuler picking
up a victory for the Maroon and
Gold.
Finishing outside the top-8, but
picking up three and two wins
respectively for Meigs, were Brandon Justis at 285 and Drake Hall
at 220.
Leading the Eagles, Steven
Fitzgerald went 2-2 and ﬁnished
third at 195 pounds. Blake Newland and Daniel Harris picked up

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

Lady Dragons slip past Meigs
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

PROCTORVILLE,
Ohio — The main event
bout certainly ﬁt the bill.
In the ﬁnale of the TriState Hoops Throwdown
on Saturday at Fairland
High School, the host
Lady Dragons rallied
back from a ﬁve-point
fourth quarter deﬁcit to
take a 47-43 victory over
non-conference guest
Meigs.
The Lady Marauders
(9-7) — falling in three
consecutive games — led
the Lady Dragons (11-3)

by a narrow 7-6 clip after
eight minutes of play.
Meigs added another
point to its lead in the
second quarter, outscoring FHS 10-to-9 in the
stanza to make the margin 17-15 at the midway
through the contest.
The MHS lead grew
to 28-23 after an 11-to-8
third quarter, but Fairland took advantage of
three Lady Marauders
fouling out and roared
back to take the 47-43
win with a 24-to-15 run
in the ﬁnal eight minutes.
Meigs — which was

9-of-14 (64.3 percent)
from the free throw line
— was led by Becca Pullins with 16 points, 12 of
which came from threepoint range. Next for
the guests was Marissa
Noble with eight points,
followed by Kassidy
Betizng with seven, Mallory Hawley with six and
Madison Fields with ﬁve.
Taylor Swartz rounded
out the MHS tally with
one marker.
Fairland — hitting
19-of-31 (61.3 percent)
foul shots —was led
by Allie Marshall with
12 points and Kelsie

Warnock with 11. Jenna
Stone scored eight points
in the win, Harley Lyons
added six, while Emma
Marshall and Britany
Thompson posted three
apiece. Miaa Howard and
Jessica King chipped in
with two points each for
the victors.
After hosting Eastern
on Monday, the Lady
Marauders will get back
to work in the Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division on Thursday at
Alexander.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Patriots sweep Hannan, 80-55
HURRICANE, W.Va. — Left feeling a bit cluttered.
Robert Clutter poured in a gamehigh 32 points while helping host
Calvary Baptist Academy claim a
season sweep of the Hannan boys
basketball team on Friday night
with an 80-55 decision in a nonconference matchup in Putnam
County.
The Patriots (14-4) received 14
points from Clutter in the opening
frame that pushed the hosts out
to a 24-14 ﬁrst quarter advantage,
then the Red and Blue followed
with a 15-9 run that extended the
lead out to 39-23 halftime edge.

The visiting Wildcats (3-9)
received seven points from Casey
Lowery in the third frame, but
CBA made a 22-14 charge and
increased its lead to 61-37 entering
the ﬁnale. Calvary closed regulation with a small 19-18 spurt to
wrap up the 25-point outcome.
Lowery led HHS with 20 points,
followed by Dalton Coleman with
11 points and Chandler Starkey
with nine markers. Chase Nelson
was next with six points and
Andrew Gillispie added three
markers.
Ryan Hall, Caleb Gussler and
Devrick Burris completed the scor-

ing with two points each.
Isaac Massie followed Clutter with 18 points, while Scotty
Parsons and Jordan Ruby respectively added 11 and eight markers.
Lawson Blake was next with ﬁve
points, while Luke Pauley and Rodger Clutter rounded out the winning tally with three points apiece.
Calvary won the previous
matchup with the Wildcats with an
80-39 decision on Dec. 4, 2018, in
Ashton.
Hannan returns to action Tuesday when it travels to Ohio Valley
Christian for a non-conference
matchup at 7:30 p.m.

TUESDAY EVENING
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Done to Deserve This?"
Covers the Bullet Hole"
at First (N)
Maleficent (2014, Adventure) Elle Fanning, Sharlto Good Trouble "Allies" (N)
A Bug's Life (1998, Animated) Voices of Kevin
Copley, Angelina Jolie. TVPG
Spacey, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Dave Foley. TVG
Mom
Mom
Friends
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The Shawshank Redemption ('94, Dra) Morgan Freeman, Tim Robbins. A
banker is wrongly convicted of a double murder and is sent to prison for life. TV14
Loud House Loud House Bixler High Private Eye Jace Norman.
SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob The Office
The Office
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam WWE Super Smackdown
Temptation Island (N)
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
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OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Cuomo Prime Time
CNN Tonight
(5:30)
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Movie
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Harris, Sean Connery. TVMA
assassin to find the mobster that killed her parents in Bogotá. TV14
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Garage Rehab: Revisited
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Bad Chad Customs (N)
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Remini: Scientology "Star Remini: Scientology
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and the Aftermath (N)
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NFL Films (N) Face to Face NCAA Basketball Villanova at Butler (L)
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Ready Player One (2018, Action) Letitia Wright,
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Jessica Chastain. A former athlete runs an illegal gambling operation for Monday
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"365"
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(4:45)

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Lady Cats avenge Calvary, 28-22
By Bryan Walters

County.
Neither squad managed
to reach double digits in
HURRICANE, W.Va. — a single quarter of play,
but the visiting Lady Cats
Getting even.
(6-6) received four points
The Hannan girls basketball returned its record from Bailey Coleman
to .500 and also salvaged while establishing an 8-5
advantage after one quara season split on Friday
night with a 28-22 victory ter of action.
Julie Frazier poured in
over host Calvary Baptist
Academy in a non-confer- ﬁve points during a small
8-7 second quarter spurt
ence contest in Putnam

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

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

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

that gave the Blue and
White a 16-12 halftime
edge, then HHS made a
small 9-5 run in the third
frame to secure a 25-17
edge headed into the
ﬁnale.
The Lady Patriots (106) closed regulation with
a small 5-3 run, but Hannan ultimately held on for
the six-point triumph.
The Lady Cats were

able to avenge a 48-31
setback to CBA back on
Dec. 4, 2018, in Ashton.
Hannan netted nine
total ﬁeld goals — including six trifectas — and
also went 4-of-12 at the
free throw line for 33
percent.
Frazier and Halie Johnson paced the Lady Cats
with nine points apiece,
followed by Coleman with

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

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

VILLAGE OF SYRACUSE
STATE ROUTE 124 WATERLINE REPLACEMENT
MEIGS COUNTY

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

LEGAL NOTICE- INVITATION TO BID

Apartments/Townhouses

Sealed Bids will be received for furnishing all labor, materials
and equipment necessary to complete a project known as Village of Syracuse State Route 124 Waterline Replacement at
the Village of Syracuse (the “OWNER”), 2581 3rd Street, Syracuse, Ohio 45779 until 11:00 A.M. local time on February
04, 2019, and at said time and place, publicly opened and read
aloud. Bids may be mailed or delivered in advance to the Syracuse Village office at the above address.
A digital copy of the Bid Documents containing the Bid Requirements and Contract Documents (including all bid sheets,
plans, specifications, and any addenda) can be obtained from
IBI Group, 5085 Tile Plant Rd., New Lexington, Ohio 43764
with a non-refundable payment of $100 each. Paper copies of
these documents may be requested for an additional
non-refundable cost of $100. Checks should be made payable
to IBI Group. This legal ad will be available for viewing at Builders Exchange and Dodge Data &amp; Analytics.
Each Bidder is required to furnish with its submission of the
fully completed Bid Documents, a Bid Security in accordance
with Section 153.54 of the Ohio Revised Code. Bid security furnished in Bond form (Bid Guarantee and Contract and Performance Bond as provided in Section 153.57.1 of the Ohio Revised Code), must be issued by a Surety Company or Corporation licensed in the State of Ohio to provide said surety. Those
Bidders that elect to submit bid guaranty in the form of a certified check, cashier’s check, or letter of credit pursuant to Chapter 1305 of the Ohio Revised Code and in accordance with Section 153.54 (C) of the Ohio Revised Code. Any such letter of
credit shall be revocable only at the option of the beneficiary
OWNER. The amount of the certified check, cashier’s check, or
letter of credit shall be equal to ten (10) percent of the Bid and
the Successful Bidder will be required to submit a bond in the
form provided in 153.57 of the Ohio Revised Code in conjunction with the execution of the Contract.
Each proposal must contain the full name of the party or parties
submitting the Bidding Documents and all persons interested
therein. Each bidder must submit evidence of its experiences
on projects of similar size and complexity. The OWNER intends
that this Project be completed no later than the time period as
set forth in Article 4 of the Standard Form of Agreement Between OWNER and CONTRACTOR on the Basis of a Stipulated Price.
Each Bidder must insure that all employees and applicants for
employment are not discriminated against because of race,
color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap, ancestry, or age.

Ellm View Apts.
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Equal Housing Opportunity

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Houses For Rent

FAMILY AND CHILDREN FIRST COUNCIL
MEIGS COUNTY
COMBINED STATEMENT OF RECEIPTS, DISBURSEMENTS
AND CHANGES IN FUND BALANCES (CASH BASIS)
ALL GOVERNMENTAL FUND TYPES
FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2018
Totals
(Memorandum
Only)

$38,440

$60,054

$98,494

Total Cash Receipts

38,440

60,054

98,494

Cash Disbursements
Current:
Audit
Contractual - Client services
Miscellaneous

0
39,200
1,576

73,995

0
113,195
1,576

Total Cash Disbursements

40,777

73,995

114,772

Total Cash Receipts Over/(Under) Cash Disbursements

(2,337)

(13,941)

(16,278)

Net Change in Fund Cash Balances

(2,337)

(13,941)

(16,278)

Fund Cash Balances, January 1

48,105

1,208

49,313

Fund Cash Balances, December 31
Restricted
Unassigned (Deficit)

0
45,769

(12,733)
0

(12,733)
45,769

$45,769

($12,733)

$33,035

Fund Cash Balances, December 31

The Village of Syracuse reserves the right to waive any informalities or irregularities. The Village of Syracuse reserves the
right to reject any or all bids or to increase or decrease or omit
any item or times and/or award the bid to the lowest and best
bidder.
1/15/19, 1/22/19, 1/29/19 TDS

IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Wells Fargo Bank, NA
Plaintiff,
vs.
Julie A. Gilkey, et al.
Defendants.

Case No. 18-CV-071

Judge D. Dean Evans
LEGAL NOTICE
Julie A. Gilkey, whose last known address is 34179 Laurel
Woods Road, Pomeroy, OH 45769, William R. Gilkey, whose
last known address is 34179 Laurel Woods Road, Pomeroy,
OH 45769, will take notice that on September 27, 2018, Wells
Fargo Bank, NA filed its Complaint in the Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio, Case No. 18-CV-071. The object
of, and demand for relief in, the Complaint is to foreclose the
lien of Plaintiff's mortgage recorded upon the real estate described below and in which Plaintiff alleges that the foregoing
defendant has or claims to have an interest:
Parcel number(s): 14-00498.003
Property address: 34179 Laurel Woods Road, Pomeroy,
OH 45769
The defendant named above is required to answer the Complaint within twenty-eight (28) days after the last publication of
this legal notice. This legal notice will be published once a
week for three successive weeks.

OH-70102984

TDS

Has an opening for a results oriented

Salesperson
Capable of developing multi-media campaigns for advertisers. You must
be a problem solver, goal oriented, have a positive attitude, and have the
ability to multi-task in a demanding, deadline-oriented environment. Must
have reliable transportation and clean driving record. We seek success
driven individuals looking to build a future with a growing organization with
publications in Gallipolis, OH, Pomeroy, OH and Point Pleasant, WV.
OH-70095179

The ENGINEER’s estimate for this project is $152,000

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

Bidders must comply with the prevailing wage rates on Public
Improvements in Meigs County as determined by the Ohio Department of Commerce, Division of Labor and Worker Safety –
Wage and Hour.
This procurement is subject to the EPA policy of encouraging
the participation of small business in rural areas (SBRAs).

2 BR house, $550 plus Deposit, you pay water, gas and
electric. Recently renovated.
One small pet may be ok. Ph
(740) 245-2389, Avail Feb. 1.

Melissa N. Hamble fka Melissa N. Meinhart
Manley Deas Kochalski LLC
P. O. Box 165028
Columbus, OH 43216-5028
614-220-5611
mnm@manleydeas.com
1/8/19, 1/15/19, 1/22/19

All CONTRACTORs and subcontractors involved with the project shall to the extent practicable, use Ohio products, materials,
services and labor in the implementation of their project. DOMESTIC STEEL USE REQUIREMENTS AS SPECIFIED IN
SECTION 143.011 OF THE (OHIO) REVISED CODE APPPLY
TO THIS PROJECT. COPIES OF SECTION 153.011 OF THE
(OHIO) REVISED CODE CAN BE OBTAINED FROM ANY OF
THE OFFICES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES.
Additionally, CONTRACTOR compliance with the equal employment opportunity requirements of Ohio Administrative Code
Chapter 123, the Governor’s Executive Order of 1972, and
Governor’s Executive Order 84-9 shall be required.

Apartments/Townhouses
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Sutton Township, in accordance with ORC Section 117.38, has
just completed the filing of the annual financial report with the
Auditor of the State of Ohio and the report is now available for
inspection at the office of the Fiscal Officer, 405 Main Street,
Racine, Ohio 45771 by appointment by calling (740) 949-1550.
The Report will also be available at the monthly meeting of
Sutton Township Trustees to be held on Tuesday, February 12,
2019 at 6:00 p.m. at the Racine Village Hall, Council Chambers.
1/22/19 TDS

Cash Receipts
Intergovernmental

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

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

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Special
Revenue

four markers. MaKeena
Smith and Sydney Facemyer completed the scoring with three and two
points, respectively.
Hannan returns to
action Tuesday when it
travels to Ohio Valley
Christian for a non-conference matchup at 6 p.m.

XXX�NZEBJMZTFOUJOFM�DPN�t�HEUDMBTTJöFET!BJNNFEJBNJEXFTU�DPN
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Apartments/Townhouses

General

eight points and Pammie
Ochs with two markers.
The Lady Patriots
made nine total ﬁeld
goals — including a trio
of 3-pointers — and also
went 1-of-4 at the charity
stripe for 25 percent.
Ashlynn Bowles paced
the hosts with eight
points, followed by Kaitly
Richards with ﬁve points
and Sydney Neely with

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

Check out our
&amp;ODVVLÀ�HGV
online!

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, January 22, 2019 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

"Y $AVE 'REEN

By Hilary Price

ª$IFFICULTY ,EVEL

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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

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jobmatchohio.com

�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Daily Sentinel

Tennessee moves to No. 1 in AP Top 25
By John Marshall

Associated Press

Top-ranked Duke went
down early in the week.
No. 2 Michigan and No.
4 Virginia, the last of
Division I’s unbeaten
teams, both fell over the
weekend. In all, six top10 teams lost.
Tennessee kept rolling
amid chaos across the
AP Top 25.
The Vols are the new
No. 1 in The Associated
Press men’s college basketball poll on Monday,
climbing three spots to
earn their ﬁrst top ranking since the 2007-08
season.
Tennessee received
48 of 64 ﬁrst-place votes
from a media panel in
the poll released Monday, well ahead of No.
2 Duke with 11. No. 3
Virginia received three
ﬁrst-place votes and No.
6 Michigan State two.
Gonzaga and Michigan
rounded out the top ﬁve.
“The guys playing
right now built this
thing,” Tennessee coach
Rick Barnes said.
Expectations followed
the Vols into the 2018-19
season. With its top six
scorers back from a team
that shared the SEC
title, Tennessee had its
highest preseason ranking at No. 6 and was eyeing a deep NCAA Tournament run in Barnes’
fourth season.
The Vols have lived
up to the forecast so far,
bouncing back from an
overtime loss to thenNo. 2 Kansas to win 12
straight games. Tennessee knocked Gonzaga
from atop the AP Top
25 with Barnes’ ﬁrst
win over a No. 1 team in
early December and won
its two games last week,
rolling over Arkansas
and holding off Alabama.
The only other time
Tennessee (16-1, 5-0)

By Eddie Pells
Associated Press

Gerry Broome | AP

Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski reacts during the second half Saturday against Virginia in Durham,
N.C. Duke won 72-70.

was No. 1, it lost the
next night to Vanderbilt
— the Vols’ opponent on
Wednesday.
“Tennessee basketball
hasn’t been ranked No.
1 in a long time,” Vols
guard Jordan Bone said.
“That’s a good feeling,
but we can’t be so locked
in on that. We have to
continue to stay hungry.
We can’t be so focused
on that. It’s so ﬂeeting.
It can change really
quick.”
The changes in the
AP Top 25 came quickly
after a wild week.
Duke started by losing
to Syracuse in overtime
at Cameron Indoor Stadium. The Blue Devils
played without a sick
Cam Reddish and lost
point guard Tre Jones to
a shoulder injury in the
ﬁrst half.
Reddish returned
against Virginia on Saturday and Duke responded with a superb game,
knocking Virginia from
the unbeaten ranks with
a 72-70 victory despite
playing without Jones.
Michigan lost to Wisconsin by 10, also on
Saturday, leaving the
1976 Indiana Hoosiers
as the last Division I

team to go undefeated.
No. 7 Kansas, No. 8
Texas Tech and No. 9
Virginia Tech also lost.
The Jayhawks fell two
spots after losing to
West Virginia. The Red
Raiders dropped six
spots to No. 14 after
losses to Iowa State and
Baylor. The Hokies were
down one to No. 10 following a loss to Virginia.
In all, 13 ranked teams
lost last week.
Kentucky rising
Kentucky saw a steady
slide down the AP Top
25 after opening the season with a blowout loss
to Duke. The preseason
No. 2, the Wildcats were
down to No. 19 just a
month ago, but started
climbing again.
Kentucky is up to No.
8 after beating No. 14
Auburn and Georgia this
week, with games against
No. 22 Mississippi State
and No. 9 Kansas coming
up.

nova each moved up four
spots.
Florida State after
stretching its losing
streak to three games
with losses to Pittsburgh
and Boston College, falling out of the poll from
No. 11.
Moving in
Louisville moved into
the AP Top 25 for the
ﬁrst time this season at
No. 23 following wins
over Boston College and
Georgia Tech.
Iowa State’s wins over
Texas Tech and Oklahoma State put the Cyclones
back in at No. 24 after
they dropped out from
No. 20 last week.
LSU beat then-No. 19
Mississippi and South
Carolina last week to
return to the poll at No.
25.

Moving out
Oklahoma joined
Florida State in dropping
out of the poll following
losses to Kansas State
and Texas. The Sooners
Rising and falling
were No. 20 last week.
No. 13 Maryland
Indiana, No. 25 last
moved up six spots after
week, did not receive a
beating Wisconsin and
single vote after lopsided
Ohio State.
losses to Nebraska and
Kentucky, No. 17
Houston and No. 18 Villa- Purdue.

Shiffrin shows she’s ready to take over from Vonn
CORTINA
D’AMPEZZO, Italy (AP)
— A passing of the torch
moment. A generational
transformation marked by
a veteran’s tears and the
unbridled joy of youth.
Call it what you want,
it seemed like destiny
played a role when Mikaela Shiffrin won what
could very well turn out
to be Lindsey Vonn’s last
race.
In the space of about
a half hour on Sunday,
Vonn broke down emotionally after she failed to
ﬁnish a World Cup superG on knees so worn down
that she describes them
as “bone on bone,” then
Shiffrin came down nine
racers later and won her
ﬁrst speed race at the premier stop on the women’s
circuit.
Shortly after the normally reserved Shiffrin
unleashed an unusual
hands-over-her-head celebration, Vonn announced
that she was considering
moving up her retirement.
“As a fan of ski racing
and as an American, if
Lindsey’s not there it’s
awesome to see another
American girl on top,”
said retired U.S. racer
Daron Rahlves, who was
in attendance. “But I
know it’s burning inside
for Lindsey.”
After collecting herself,
the 34-year-old Vonn
went over and embraced
the 23-year-old Shiffrin,
who was standing in the
leader’s box.
“I just told her, ‘Congratulations and awesome skiing. It was a
well-earned victory
today,’” Vonn said.
Not too long ago,

Pats vs Rams
in a meeting of
Past vs Future

Andrea Solero | ANSA via AP

United States’ Lindsey Vonn hugs a US team staffer in the finish
area of an alpine ski, women’s World Cup super-G on Sunday in
Cortina D’Ampezzo, Italy.

it was a moment that
Shiffrin could only have
dreamed of.
“When I was younger
she was someone I
looked up to like crazy,”
Shiffrin said. “I was
doing book reports on
her. I was one of those
fans.”
Lately, Shiffrin has
had a front-row seat to
observe Vonn’s perseverance.
At Shiffrin’s ﬁrst world
championships in Schladming, Austria, she
watched as Vonn tumbled
head ﬁrst into one of the
ugliest and most damaging crashes of her career
— the one that eventu-

ally kept Vonn out of the
2014 Sochi Olympics.
Shiffrin, by then an
Olympic champion like
her idol, was also there
when Vonn, 33 at the
time, won a bronze in
the downhill at last year’s
Pyeongchang Games,
becoming the oldest
female medalist in Olympic history for Alpine
skiing.
“The speed that she
has is just in her — more
speed than everyone else
— it lives in her bones,”
Shiffrin said. “Managing
that with the injuries
that she’s had and the
mentality she always has
to push 1,000 percent …

I’ve always been watching that.”
While Vonn returned
this weekend from a left
knee injury — she hyperextended it and sprained
a ligament in November
— her right knee is permanently damaged from
previous crashes . She
has also suffered fractures near her left knee,
broken her ankle, sliced
her right thumb, had a
concussion and more.
Vonn was planning on
retiring in December
but her results this past
weekend — her best ﬁnish in three races was
ninth — prompted her
to consider leaving the
sport earlier.
“There’s only so much
I can handle and I might
have reached my maximum,” Vonn said Sunday.
U.S. team spokeswoman Megan Harrod
said Monday that Vonn
“is going to take the next
couple/few days to think
about how she will proceed and process everything, and then decide
about how she will move
forward based on that.”
Vonn has 82 World
Cup victories — best
all-time among women
— and four fewer than
record-holder Ingemar
Stenmark, who raced in
the 1970s and 80s.
“She took Alpine racing to the next level,”
said Tina Weirather, the
Liechtenstein racer who
is the daughter of two
skiing champions and
who ﬁnished second Sunday. “Her mentality was
something we had never
seen before. She was
never afraid to say that
she’s the best and she
wants to be best.”

It all began in 2002, back when the Rams were
in St. Louis and the Patriots were a plucky underdog standing in the way of a potential dynasty.
So much has changed.
This hasn’t: Bill Belichick and Tom Brady.
The duo, every bit as formidable now as when
they won that ﬁrst title, face the Rams, now back
in Los Angeles, in a Super Bowl rematch of sorts
that pits the NFL’s past against its future.
At 32, Sean McVay is the youngest Super Bowl
coach. At 66, Bill Belichick has an NFL-record 30
playoff wins.
At 24, Jared Goff is the youngest quarterback to
win the NFC championship. At 41, Brady will be
the oldest quarterback to start a Super Bowl.
The Rams (15-3) are back in the Super Bowl for
the ﬁrst time since that meeting against the Patriots — and for the ﬁrst time as the “Los Angeles
Rams” since 1980, when they fell to the Steelers.
The Patriots (13-5) are back for the third straight
time, the fourth in ﬁve years and the ninth since
Belichick got the dynasty on track in the 2002 win
over St. Louis.
The Rams duo of McVay and Goff has spent the
past two seasons heralding the coming of a new
age of football — one in which McVay’s reimagined offense has dealt a blow to the old, increasingly dated adage that teams ultimately must win
championships with defense. The Rams have
cracked 30 points in 13 of their 18 games this season. A generation ago, that would’ve been novel;
now, it’s normal.
But to ofﬁcially usher the NFL into a new era,
the Rams will have to get past New England,
which is a 1-point underdog for the game in Atlanta, set for Feb. 3 — exactly 17 years to the date of
the last Super Bowl showdown.
Is Brady up to it?
Well, on Sunday, he drove the Patriots down
the ﬁeld for three straight touchdowns — two in
the fourth quarter and once in overtime — for a
37-31 victory over the Chiefs, the only team that
outgained Los Angeles this season.
It put an end to the dream of a rematch between
two teams of the future — Rams vs. Chiefs —
who delivered a wildly entertaining, defenseoptional touchdown-fest in a 54-51 Rams victory
in November.
Instead, we get a “rematch” of that 2002 Super
Bowl, won by the Patriots 20-17.
The Rams came into that game as a franchise on
the edge of a dynasty.
They were one season removed from their ﬁrst
Super Bowl win, led by quarterback Kurt Warner
and known as “The Greatest Show on Turf” for
the fake grass they burned up at their seven-yearold home in St. Louis. They had amassed what
was then unheard of — 500-plus points in three
straight seasons — and were a two-touchdown
favorite against Belichick and Brady, who was in
his second year and best known as the sixth-round
draft pick Belichick stuck with after Drew Bledsoe
got injured.
New England used ball control and defense to
shut down Warner and the Rams. The task ﬁgures to not be all that different this time around,
though Brady is showing he’s perfectly capable of
matching opponents touchdown-for-touchdown.
Sunday’s win adds to a Week 6 victory over Kansas City by the score of 43-40. The Patriots ranked
ﬁfth in overall offense this season, only 28 yards a
game behind LA.
Theirs is an offense built on Brady, his mastery
of diagnosing defenses at the line of scrimmage
and his ability to use interchangeable parts on his
offense over the years. (Receiver Julian Edelman
and tight end Rob Gronkowski have stood out
most recently.) And stability.
Offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels has interviewed for jobs virtually every year since returning
to Foxborough after short stints in Denver and St.
Louis. He was out the door for Indy last year, but
changed his mind and returned once again to the
sideline with Belichick.

Patriots the early
pick in Las Vegas
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Oddsmakers made the
Super Bowl essentially a tossup in opening lines
Sunday, though bettors quickly turned the New
England Patriots into a slight favorite in what is
expected to be the most heavily bet — at least
legally — title game ever.
Early bets moved the line at many books so the
Patriots were either one- or two-point favorites.
The over-under was 58 at some books, 58.5 at others.
Bettors pounced on early lines at the Westgate
Las Vegas Superbook and William Hill chain that
opened with the game as a tossup or the Rams a
1-point favorite. The early bets moved the line at
most books in favor of the Patriots.
The Station Casinos chain opened the Patriots
as a one-point pick, and it went to two points in
early betting. Oddsmakers adjust betting lines to
try and balance their action on both sides.
The rare disagreement among bookmakers
came after two overtime conference championship
games that drew heavy action in this city’s sports
books.

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