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INSIDE STORY
WEATHER
It’s comedy,
folks! ... Page A4
Partly sunny.
High near 85. Low
around 58 ... Page A2
Hometown News for Gallia & Meigs counties
SPORTS
OBITUARIES
Local sports
action... Page B1
Daniel L. Day, 29
Cloyd Ferrell, 71
J. Hardesty, 90
Carrie Heck, 82
Opha Offutt, 86
Patricia Smith, 73
Lewis Thomas, 47
Harold Watson, 88
$2.00
SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
Vol. 48, No. 15
Roderick enters guilty plea in common pleas court
By Amber Gillenwater
agillenwater@civitasmedia.com
GALLIPOLIS — A former
Gallipolis attorney charged with
multiple counts of kidnapping,
rape and abduction recently
entered a guilty plea in Gallia
County Common Pleas Court.
According to documents filed
with the Gallia County Clerk
of Courts on Tuesday, during a
hearing on April 2 before presiding judge Dale A. Crawford,
Richard C. Roderick Jr., 71, of
Gallipolis, pleaded guilty to one
count of kidnapping with sexual
motivation, one count of gross
sexual imposition, one count of
felonious assault, one count of
failing to comply with the order
or signal of a police officer, and
one count of assault.
A plea agreement filed in this
case and signed by special prosecutor Angela Canepa, of the Ohio
Attorney General’s Office, states
that, in consideration of the defendant’s guilty plea, a joint recommendation for sentencing is
being made by both the state of
Ohio and the defendant.
That recommendation stipulates that a prison term be imposed, but be suspended for five
years of community control with
a condition that the defendant be
“probated and placed in a secure
lock-down treatment facility, i.e.,
Timothy B. Moritz at the Twin
Valley Psychiatric Hospital, said
placement to be reviewed annually by the Probate Court, and
the Defendant to comply with all
treatment plans, medication prescribed, orders of the Court, etc.,
while in placement at his initial
and any/all subsequent treatment facility placements.”
Following last week’s hearing,
the court ordered that a pre-sentence investigation be completed
and then continued for sentencing at 10 a.m. May 8.
Roderick was arrested Nov.
23, 2013, by Gallipolis police following an incident that occurred
at his residence in the 200 block
of First Avenue in Gallipolis.
Reportedly, the Gallia County
911 Center received a call from
inside the home Nov. 23 and the
operator could hear what sounded like an argument in the background. Officers were then dispatched to the residence. Upon
arrival, they found the front door
of the residence open.
Based on information obtained
during the call, as well as other recent occurrences, officers believed
there was a crime of violence tak-
ing place and entered the home.
The officers located the residents in a bedroom, and the
male, identified as Roderick,
was found allegedly attempting
to tie up the female and hold her
against her will.
The suspect was arrested for
alleged kidnapping and transported to the Middleport Jail.
An initial hearing was held in
the Gallipolis Municipal Court
on Nov. 26, and the case was
subsequently bound over to the
common pleas court, where it
was heard by a grand jury.
See RODERICK | A3
Latest tragedy on US 35
sparks safety debate
Officials discuss
what can be done now
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com
Sheriff Keith Wood discusses Meigs County’s drug problem.
Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Sunday Times-Sentinel
Sheriff speaks on local drug status
By Charlene Hoeflich
choeflich@civitasmedia.com
POMEROY — The drug problem
in Meigs County, the role of the drug
task force, and the lack of opportunity for rehabilitation were topics of
discussion by Meigs County Sheriff
Keith Wood at Tuesday’s meeting of
the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce.
“Drugs are not just a Meigs County problem, it’s a community problem every place — in our neighboring counties, all across the country,”
Wood said. He went on to say that
heroin addiction is a national problem that’s being faced every day.
He talked about the recently organized Gallia-Meigs Task Force,
of their work on the drug problem,
and the lack of any way to deal with
rehabilitation.
“We just put them in jail, lock
the door, and a few days later they
may be out and then are right back
on drugs,” he said. “It’s not a battle
that can be fixed in an easy way. It’s
a continual battle.”
He said Ohio’s attorney general is
aware of the vast drug problem and
is working with the county in its efforts to get some sort of rehabilitation program in place.
As the sheriff pointed out, “it’s not
easy to look at things and say we’re
going to fix it because it’s not something that can be fixed that easy.” He
said law enforcement continues to try
to make things better but the drug
Chamber members listen intently to the sheriff’s thoughts on drug deterrents.
problem is just not an “easy fix.”
Right now, there is a special
focus on dealers who are the
key players in getting drugs out.
Wood said some headway is being
made in that direction.
As for the problem of addiction
treatment, he reported county officials are considering a new jail that
would include a rehabilitation center.
At the moment, he said the only resource for help are individual groups
and places like Woodland centers.
However, he noted that the county
is now looking at a possible grant to
help finance a new structure.
“I want to make a difference, I
want to look out for this community. I want to make a change for the
better. And right now we’ll doing
everything we can to solve the drug
problem” he said.
Also speaking at the meeting
was Eugene Triplett, Meigs County
engineer. He asked the group for
support on State Issue 1, a renewal
of the Ohio Capital Improvements
Program, which will be on the May
6 ballot.
Triplett said Issue 1 supports local
communities in vital road, bridge,
sewer, water and other infrastructure projects.
He stressed that Issue 1 is a renewal and that it will not increase taxes to
fund repayment of the bonds.
It was noted that the program has
successfully provided support for
more than 11,500 such projects that
have resulted in infrastructure improvements and job creation since
its inception in 1987. Many of those
projects have been done in Meigs
County, Triplett said.
POINT PLEASANT — Thursday’s meeting of the
Mason County Commission opened, as it always does,
with prayer, though this time a prayer was said for
John Kay who was killed in the latest fatality on U.S.
35 last week.
Kay, 46, a resident of Southside, was driving a farm
tractor along the 14.6 miles of U.S. 35 that remain two
lanes when a Gahanna, Ohio man allegedly began passing cars in a no passing zone at a fast rate of speed,
according to law enforcement, and struck Kay on his
tractor, causing the tractor to overturn.
Because of this latest tragedy on what many feel is
one of the most dangerous stretches of road in not only
Mason County but the state, County Commission President Rick Handley, representing the commission, met
with West Virginia Commissioner of Highways Paul
Mattox and members of his staff, including DOH engineers, this week. Accompanying Handley was Mason
County resident Mike Criste and daughter Maggie, a
senior at Point Pleasant High School - the Criste’s live
in the area on W.Va. 817.
Handley said the meeting was about making that
stretch of two lanes safer in light of the recent fatality.
Some of the suggestions included more signage such
as putting up a sign on each end of the two-lane stretch
telling drivers who are not familiar with the road that
they will have 14.6 miles of two lane ahead of them.
More signs were also suggested alerting motorists to
farmers and farm equipment using the road.
Another suggestion from the meeting included taking out some of the passing zones on that 14.6 mile
stretch. Handley said he’s already spoken to Mason
County Sheriff Greg Powers about increasing patrols
in this area as well.
At Thursday’s commission meeting, Handley said
the meeting in Charleston was positive, with Mattox
taking the suggestions and asking his engineers to
look into what could be implemented. Mattox and his
team were also invited down to actually view and drive
that stretch of road for themselves.
Handley stressed the top priority of the meeting was
to increase safety on that stretch. After the meeting,
Handley said he did remind Mattox Mason County
was waiting on some good news concerning the completion of U.S. 35 to four lanes, minus tolls. According to Handley, Mattox said he was ready, the permits
and right-of-ways were in place and he was waiting on
word from Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin to proceed.
With last year’s passage of Senate Bill 190, new hope
was renewed in getting U.S. 35 completed, minus tolls.
SB 190 allows the state highway commissioner to approve public road projects without legislative approval
— these projects would then be subject to financing
and construction via a private company if that company meets all the requirements contained in the law.
The new law has a provision that allows for tolling
though it doesn’t have to be utilized as part of the financing package.
New program helps clean up local roads
Staff report
POMEROY — “Meigs
County, Pick It Up!”
That’s the idea behind a
collaborative partnership
between the Meigs County
Board of Commissioners, Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District and
other agencies, to beautify
the county.
Meigs County Pick It
Up! is a locally developed
“boots on the ground” program designed to immediately reduce the amount
of visible trash and litter alongside county and
township roads.
There are approximately
505 miles of township
roads in Meigs County, as
well as approximately 261
miles of county road (according to the 2008 Meigs
County, Ohio, Highway Atlas) that, for the most part,
are never cleaned except
through the efforts of individual landowners, said
Steve Jenkins, program administrator for the Meigs
SWCD.
Meigs County Pick It
Up! addresses those issues by direct cleanup, by
empowering community
groups to do their own
cleanups, and educating
school children about litter and recycling. The
program is in cooperation
with the Meigs County
Board of Commissioners
and the Gallia-JacksonMeigs-Vinton Solid Waste
Management
District.
Staff members are using
the truck and equipment
that was formerly used for
the county recycling program that ended Dec. 31.
The Meigs County Highway Department installed
decals on the truck identifying as the Meigs County
Pick It Up! pickup truck.
Community groups are
encouraged to do their
own roadside cleanups,
and bags and pick-up service will be provided to
assist them. However,
cleanup is limited to general litter along county and
township roads.
In addition, a regular
crew of workers has been
picking up along county and
township roads that have
been identified as trouble
spots. Since Jan. 1, they
have removed 269 bags of
litter from 49 miles of county roadway, Jenkins said.
“Snow-covered
roadsides in January and February resulted in a late start,
but so far workers have
picked up along roads in
seven of 12 Meigs County
townships,” Jenkins said.
“However one crew can’t
begin to get everywhere,
so fraternal organizations
or community groups like
4H, scouts, ball teams,
Sunday School classes
and others are critical in
making this a success and
beautifying our county.
“This is also a great way
to get youngsters to take
pride and ownership in
their community,” he add-
ed. “It is also a good way
for groups to get credit for
community service.”
Jenkins stressed again
that this program is strictly for roadside litter on
county and township roads
and not for residential
cleanup or cleanup along
state highways.
See CLEAN | A3
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Page A2 LîSunday Times Sentinel
Sunday, April 13, 2014
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Today: Partly sunny, with a high near 85. South wind
7 to 15 mph.
Tonight: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 58.
Monday: A chance of showers between 1 p.m. and 4
p.m., then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after 4
p.m. Cloudy, with a high near 72. Chance of precipitation
is 30 percent.
Monday night: Showers and possibly a thunderstorm.
Low around 41. Chance of precipitation is 80 percent.
Tuesday: A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a
high near 51. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Tuesday night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 33.
Wednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 57.
Wednesday night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 38.
Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 63.
Card shower
Betty Rutt will celebrate her 81st
birthday April 23. Please send cards
to 47 Blazer Place, Gallipolis, OH
45631.
Judy Fellure is recovering from
heart surgery. Please send cards to
her at 1064 State Route 218, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
"@42=î)E@4<D
AEP (NYSE) — 50.90
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.85
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 95.00
Big Lots (NYSE) — 38.39
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 44.21
BorgWarner (NYSE) —59.27
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 13.08
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.470
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 41.78
Collins (NYSE) — 76.08
DuPont (NYSE) — 66.09
US Bank (NYSE) — 40.51
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 25.43
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 65.51
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 55.30
Kroger (NYSE) — 44.00
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 54.05
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 93.15
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.10
BBT (NYSE) — 38.65
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 25.01
Pepsico (NYSE) — 83.15
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.18
Rockwell (NYSE) — 120.80
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.46
Royal Dutch Shell — 73.33
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 32.62
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 76.50
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.51
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.10
Worthington (NYSE) — 35.70
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions April 11, 2014, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.
Events
Tuesday, April 15
GALLIPOLIS — Gallipolis Planning Commission meeting, 5:15
p.m., Gallipolis Municipal Building
meeting room, 333 Third Ave., Gallipolis. For more information, call bev
Dunkle at 441-6015 or Brett Bostic
at 441-6022.
GALLIPOLIS — The Gallia
County Board of Developmental Disabilities will meet at 4 p.m. at the administrative offices located at 77 Mill
Creek Road.
Thursday, April 17
GALLIPOLIS — American Red
Cross blood drive, noon-6 p.m., Saint
Peter’s Episcopal Church, 541 Second Ave., Gallipolis. Please bring
photo ID or donor card. Please call
(800) RED CROSS or visit redcrossblood.org for more information.
GALLIPOLIS — Gallia County
District Library Board of Trustees
meeting, 5 p.m., Bossard Library.
Friday, April 18
CHESHIRE — American Red Cross
blood drive, 8 a.m.-1 p.m., Kyger Creek
Power Plant training center, 5758 Ohio
7 North. Call (740) 367-5059 to schedule an appointment, or call 1-800-RED
CROSS or visit redcrossblood.org and
enter: KygerCreek. Bring photo ID or
donor card.
Saturday, April 19
GALLIPOLIS — Easter egg hunt
in the Gallipolis City Park. Games
will begin at 10 a.m. and the egg hunt
will start at 11 a.m. For more information, call 441-6022 or 441-6015.
Sunday, April 20
GALLIPOLIS — The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Library will be
closed in observance of Easter. Normal hours will resume April 21.
Monday, April 21
GALLIPOLIS — “Look Good, Feel
Better,” sponsored by the American
Cancer Society, will be 6 p.m. at the
Cancer Resource Center in the Holzer
Center for Cancer Care, 170 Jackson
Pike. This free program is for women
with cancer who are dealing with radiation and/or chemotherapy treatments.
Call (800) 227-2345 or(740) 441-3909
for an appointment before 10 a.m.
Friday, April 25
RIO GRANDE — Southwestern
retirees dinner, 11:30 a.m., Bob Evans Restaurant, Rio Grande. All retirees from the district of Southwestern, Centerville, Cadmus and friends
are invited to attend.
Saturday, April 26
Shrine Club benefit trail ride
The fifth annual Gallipolis Shrine
Club benefit trail ride is scheduled
for Saturday, April 26. The event begins at noon at Rio Valley Stables in
Rio Grande. It is being held in memory of J. C. Glassburn. All proceeds
will benefit the Gallipolis Shrine
Club. Concessions will be available.
For information, call (740) 245-5371
or (740) 245-5342.
Tuesday, April 29
BIDWELL — Gallia County Family Forum presents, “Communication,” a topic related to Alzheimer’s
disease and dementia, 1-2:30 p.m.,
Abbyshire Place, 311 Buckridge
Road in Bidwell.
Saturday, May 3
POMEROY — Thirty-One Bag
Bingo will begin at 5 p.m. at the
Meigs County Senior Center, 112 E.
Memorial Drive, in Pomeroy. Doors
open at 4 p.m. All proceeds will benefit Rocksprings Rehab Center for
the Alzheimer’s Foundation. Early
bird drawing available. Call (740)
992-6606 or (740) 794-1321.
Thursday, May 8
GALLIPOLIS — Gallia County
Farmer’s Market, 3-7 p.m., between
the Medical Shop and Ohio Valley
Bank on Jackson Pike.
Saturday, May 10
GALLIPOLIS — Gallia County
Farmer’s Market, 10 a.m.-1 p.m.,
State Street Side at Gallipolis City
Park.
Sunday Times-Sentinel #6:8Dî�@F?EJî�@>>F?:EJî�2=6?52C
Civitas Media, LLC
(USPS 436-840)
SWITCHBOARD: 740-446-2342
Annual local subscription price for The Gallipolis Daily Tribune is $250. Please
call for more information on local pricing. Full-price single-copy issues are $1.
CONTACT US
EDITOR:
Michael Johnson
740-992-2155
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com
ADVERTISING:
Julie Mitchell, Matt Rodgers
740-992-2155
Ext. 11, 29
Friday, April 18
POMEROY — Secretary of State Jon Husted’s re-
CLASSIFIED ADS:
740-446-2342
NEWSROOM:
Amber Gillenwater
740-446-2342
Ext. 31
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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
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Have story suggestions? Call us!
740.446.2342 or 740.992.2155
Gallia highway
department posts
summer hours
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County Highway
Department will begin
working from 6 a.m. to
4 p.m. Monday through
Thursday, beginning Monday, April 14. The schedule
will be in effect throughout
the summer construction
season.
The Daily Sentinel is looking for a
self-motivated news reporter
with good writing and reporting skills
to cover local community news.
Resumes may be submitted to content
manager, Michael Johnson at
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com or
can be brought to The Daily Sentinel at
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
No phone calls, please
Furniture Galleries
151 Second Avenue s Gallipolis, Ohio
740-446-0332
Semi-Annual
Drapery Sale
•
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Rio Grande, Ohio
•
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Planning
commission meeting
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallipolis Planning Commission will have a meeting beginning at 5:15 p.m.
April 15 at the Gallipolis
Municipal Building meeting room, 333 Third Ave.
Tope’s
BUCKEYE HILLS CAREER CENTER
•
area: Monday, April 14
— Eastern Ave., Maple
Shade Area, First Ave.,
Second Ave., Third Ave.,
Fourth
Ave.,
Vinton
Ave., Neil Ave., and Ohio
Ave.; Tuesday, April 15
— Ohio 7 South (down
river),
Neighborhood
Road, Green Acres, Texas
Road and Ohio 141, 218
and 588; Wednesday,
April 16 — All of Jackson
Pike, all of McCormick
Road, Ohio 160 to U.S.
35 Bypass. These areas
will have their hydrants
flushed between 8 p.m.
and 1 a.m. Residents
should be cautioned that
some temporary discoloration of the water and low
pressure may occur during these periods.
60497763
12:00 - 5:00 P.M.
Classic Car Show (Sunday)
Antique Tractor Show
Cosmetology Services
Craft Show
Greenhouse Sales
Ham Radio Demos
Health Care Checks
Lawn & Garden Equipment Demos
Numerous Business/Industry
Exhibits
Adult Education Display
Vendor Displays of Services &
Equipment
Motorcycle Show (Saturday 1:00-3:00)
Health Net Helicopter
Adult cake
decorating class
GALLIPOLIS — An
Easter basket adult cake
decorating class will be
April 14-15 and April 17
at Washington Elementary with instructor Susan
Brandeberry. Classes will
be held from 6-7:30 p.m.
each evening. On April
14, participants will learn
to make decorating icing
bags and practice icing
techniques. On April 15,
participants will learn to
make icing roses and on
April 17, participants will
bring two eight-inch cake
layers and one batch icing
to learn how to construct a
basket weave cake. Those
who are interested in the
class should contact Rashel
Fallon at the Gallia-Vinton
ESC at (740) 245-0593.
City announces
hydrant flushing
schedule
GALLIPOLIS — The
following schedule will
be used for hydrant
flushing in the Gallipolis
2014 Buckeye Hills
Ohio Valley EXPO
APRIL 26 & 27
•
•
Birthdays
MIDDLEPORT — Pauline Mayer will observe her
93rd birthday on April 16. Cards may be sent to her at
Overbrook Center, 333 Page St., Middleport, OH 45760.
MIDDLEPORT — Wendell Eblin will observe his 82nd
birthday on April 26. Cards may be sent to him at 809 S.
Second Ave., Middleport, OH 45760.
OBITUARIES:
740-446-2342
825 3rd Avenue.
Periodical postage paid in Gallipolis, Ohio
•
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gional representative will hold open office hours from
1-3 p.m. at the Meigs County District Public Library
in Pomeroy.
Ohio Army National Guard
Rockwall
Croquet & Corn Toss
Children’s Story Time & Activities
Basketball Hoop Shoot Contest
Fingerprinting of Children
Games & Bounce House for
Children
Crank-it-Up Contest
4-Wheeler Displays
Live Entertainment (local talent)
5K Run/Walk (Sunday)
10K Run (Sunday)
Save
20
$//2 02):%3 s -!3#/43
Schedule Subject to Change
%
CUSTOM MADE AND
PROFESSIONALLY
INSTALLED WINDOW
TREATMENTS
INCLUDING:
sDrapery
sCurtains
sSheers
sValances
ALSO SAVE 20% ON
$20.00 Hourly Cash Giveaway
REGISTER TO WIN THE GRAND PRIZE!
$100.00 Gift Certificate to Foodland
Drawing at 4:00 P.M. on Sunday
Career-Technical Programs
Demos and Displays
Student-Constructed
Modular Home on Display
“FABRIC BY THE YARD” AND
60491818
$50.00 Drawing at 4:00 P.M.
Saturday and Sunday
BAKED STEAK DINNER (SATURDAY) * FRIED CHICKEN DINNER (SUNDAY ) FAST FOODS DAILY
CUSTOM MADE BEDDING ENSEMBLES
www.topefurniture.com
60488835
CIRCULATION MANAGER
Jessica Chason
740-446-2342
Ext. 25
jchason@civitasmedia.com
Thursday, April 17
POMEROY — The Meigs County Retired Teachers
will meet at noon in the private meeting room of the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center. Lunch will be catered by the center. Call 992-3214 two days ahead with
the number attending. The speaker will be Beth Shaver,
director of the Meigs County Council on Aging. Members are asked to bring in paper products and personal
care products for the women’s shelter.
The entrance can be accessed via the 2 1/2 Alley
Door. On the agenda is the
approval of minutes from
the Sept. 25, 2013, meeting; Case No. 1 — Honey
Creek BBQ, conditional
use for a concession trailer
on the lot at 118 Vine St.;
any other business to be
brought before the board.
For more information, call
Bev Dunkle at 441-6015 or
Brett Bostic at 441-6022.
Library Board of
Trustees meeting
GALLIPOLIS — The
Gallia County District Library Board of Trustees
will hold a special meeting at 5 p.m. April 17 at
Bossard Memorial Library,
7 Spruce St., Gallipolis, for
the purpose of considering bids for the upcoming
building project.
Ohio AFSCME
retirees will
elect officers
BIDWELL — AFSCME
Retirees of Gallia and Jackson counties, Subchapter
102, will have its next
meeting at 11 a.m. April 18
at 4629 Ohio 850, Bidwell.
Members will nominate
and elect officers and one
trustee. The subchapter
is seeking new members
in the two-county area.
AFSCME (Ohio Council
8, OCSEA, and OAPSE),
OPERS and SERS public employee retirees and
their spouses are invited
to attend the next meeting. The group meets on
the third Friday of each
month. For more information, call (740) 245-0093.
Woodland Centers to
close for holiday
OHIO VALLEY —
Woodland Centers, Inc.,
will close clinic locations
in Gallia, Jackson and
Meigs county on Friday,
April 18 in order to observe the Easter holiday.
Normal operations will resume on Monday, April 21.
Emergency services can be
accessed by calling (740)
446-5500 in Gallia County
or (800) 252-5554 from
Jackson or Meigs county.
�Sunday, April 13, 2014
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Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&286î�
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Chamber Spring Dinner
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce is hosting their
annual Spring Dinner on Friday, April 25.
Doors will open at 6 p.m. and dinner is at
7 p.m. There will be a live auction as well
as a silent auction. Following dinner and
the auctions is the game, Member Feud,
where teams consisting of 4-5 members
will compete.
Tickets are $25. For advance tickets,
call (740) 992-5005 or contact a board
member. Tickets will be available at the
door. RSVP by Monday if possible.
Boil Advisory
RUTLAND — Water customers in the
village of Rutland are under a boil advisory until further notice.
Rotary Pancake Event
POMEROY — The Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club will stage its annual
pancake breakfast from 7-11 a.m. April
26 at the Meigs Senior Center. Proceeds
from the event will benefit “Celebrate Recovery,” a program of assistance addicts.
Tickets for the all-you-can-eat breakfast
are $5.
Cemetery Cleanups
RACINE — The village of Racine will
be completing the annual spring cleanup
of the Greenwood Cemetery during the
week of April 13. Anyone wanting to save
any decorations is asked to remove them
before April 14.
LEBANON TOWNSHIP — Lebanon
Township will be doing their spring cemetery lot cleanup. Items that people don’t
want thrown away must be removed from
gravesites by April 28.
Shade River Lodge Scholarships
CHESTER — Shade River Lodge 453
will be awarding two $250 scholarships to
eligible seniors at Eastern High School.
To qualify to apply those eligible must be
children and/or grandchildren of Shade
River Lodge members. Deadline to apply
is April 25. For more information contact
school counselor or call Delmar Pullins,
985-3669.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will conduct a
childhood immunization clinic from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. Tuesday at the
Meigs County Health Department
located at 112 E. Memorial Drive in
Pomeroy. Bring child’s shot record.
Children must be accompanied by a
parent/legal guardian. A donation is
appreciated for immunization administration, however no one will be denied
services. Bring medical cards or commercial insurance cards.
%9:@î*9:C5î�C@?E:6Cî2H2C5Dî%9:@î+?:G6CD:EJî� !
Grant will develop 3-D
visualization suite for aircraft
Staff reports
GDTnews@civitasmedia.com
ATHENS — Ohio University
has received $50,000 from the
Ohio Third Frontier Commission
to develop 3-D visualization software that will improve the development and design of new aircraft.
The technology was created by
current and former students in the
Russ College of Engineering and
Technology’s computer science
program and is being commercialized through the university’s Technology Transfer Office.
The Russ College of Engineering and Technology and the vice
president for research and creative
activity also contributed $25,000
each, for a total award of $100,000,
to support licensing of the technology and product development.
The Ohio Third Frontier’s Technology Validation and Start-up
Fund aims to increase economic
growth in Ohio through the commercialization of technologies
developed at Ohio institutions of
higher education and other nonprofit research institutions.
“This project funded by the
Ohio Third Frontier demonstrates
how academic research units such
as the Russ College of Engineering and Technology can partner
effectively with the university’s
Technology Transfer Office and
entrepreneurial ecosystem to
move innovations from the laboratories to the marketplace, for
the greater good of society,” said
Joseph Shields, Ohio University
vice president for research and
creative activity. He is also dean of
the Graduate College.
Developed by computer science
Ph.D. candidate Chad Mourning
and 2013 graduate Scott Nykl
with professor of computer science David Chelberg, the project’s
primary investigator, the software
can be used during aircraft design
and testing to give engineers a 3-D
view of the plane’s systems. This
can increase the efficiency, safety
and affordability of developing
new systems.
The 3-D visualization, which
combines existing databases with
new data coming from sensors in
the aircraft’s Global Positioning
System and other instrumentation,
shows engineers in real time how
systems that don’t usually “talk” to
each other are communicating —
or not. The result is more efficient
oversight of the systems, and ultimately, increased testing accuracy
and shorter development time.
Chelberg said the project began
as part of a National Science Foundation grant seven years ago, but
greater adoption of the original
software was stymied by its use
of C++, a computer programming
language that is widely used, but
not among engineers.
“The grant seeks to make the
software we developed available
to researchers using MATLAB, a
popular engineering tool,” he said.
“Over the past seven years, Chad
and Scott continued research into
this visualization platform during
both their master’s and doctoral
programs, with other graduate
students also contributing.”
The software, which uses 1,000
times less bandwidth than the current standard for video streaming,
already has been used for projects
in conjunction with NASA, FAA,
Airservices Australia, MIT and
Princeton, as well as Ohio University’s Avionics Engineering
Center.
According to the research team,
additional applications abound.
“In a snow emergency, municipalities could live-track the location
and state of snowplows — for example, a plow’s blade status, a map
of paths traveled, how much salt is
available — to map paths and minimize fuel costs,” Nykl said.
Other applications include
methane leak detection at hydraulic fracturing sites; wildfire management using infrared sensor
data to visualize fire paths; energy
management in smart buildings to
evaluate airflow between hot and
cold spots; or even search vehicle
visualization in the current case of
the missing Malaysian jetliner.
“This can be used in any environment where sensors are present — anything that generates
data for an operator to view in
a 3-D environment, to oversee
and operate it more efficiently,”
Mourning said.
Mourning and Nykl first began
working with simulation software
under an NSF GK-12 research project grant. In that project, they created the STEAMiE Visualization
Engine, a simulation program that
can demonstrate difficult-to-teach
science concepts to students.
Building on that work, Mourning and Nykl created a cockpit visual aid to help pilots avoid wake
vortices — invisible, horizontal
tornadoes — caused by planes
landing ahead of them. That invention took them to the 2012 National Collegiate Inventors Competition finals.
They since have started a company, Affine Technologies, to
develop and commercialize the
university’s flight testing software. The company was one of
five southeastern Ohio start-ups
to receive $20,000 in seed funding
and extensive business coaching
through Ohio University’s 2012
Innovation Engine Accelerator
program. The company now is a
client at the Innovation Center,
Ohio University’s high-tech regional business incubator.
In March, they received TechGROWTH Ohio’s 2013 Innovation
Award for outstanding student innovation.
“This is where entrepreneurship and technology commercialization are exceptionally effective
— when our students are the drivers,” said Dennis Irwin, dean of
Russ College.
(6G6?F6îD6CG:46î563F?<Dî7C:G@=@FDîE2Iî2C8F>6?ED
WASHINGTON — The
Internal Revenue Service
released the 2014 version
of “The Truth about Frivolous Tax Arguments.” The
document describes and
responds to some of the
common frivolous tax arguments made by those
who oppose compliance
with federal tax laws.
The cases cited demon-
strate how frivolous arguments are treated by the IRS
and the courts. The 2014
version includes numerous
recently decided cases that
demonstrate that the courts
continue to regard such arguments as illegitimate.
Examples of frivolous arguments include contentions
that taxpayers can refuse
to pay income taxes on reli-
gious or moral grounds by
invoking the First Amendment; that the only “employees” subject to federal
income tax are employees
of the federal government;
and that only foreign-source
income is taxable.
“Frivolous Arguments”
appeared on the IRS annual “Dirty Dozen” list
of tax scams that was re-
leased Feb. 19.
Promoters of frivolous
schemes encourage taxpayers to make unreasonable
and outlandish claims to
avoid paying the taxes they
owe. While taxpayers have
the right to contest their
tax liabilities, no one has the
right to disobey the law or
disregard their responsibility
to pay taxes. The penalty for
Roderick
From Page A1
The indictment, filed on
Dec. 5, outlines 14 charges:
three counts of kidnapping
with sexual motivation and
sexually violent predator
specifications, three counts
of rape with sexual motivation an sexually violent
predator
specifications,
two counts of abduction,
attempted rape, felonious
assault, and the possession
of criminal tools, which
the indictment describes
as “various forms of binding and/or torture material
and/or instruments.”
In addition, two counts of
the failure to comply with
Any group interested
in doing their own cleanups should call the Meigs
SWCD office at (740)
992-4282, weekdays between 8-4:30 p.m. to make
arrangements. A group
leader will be responsible
for picking up supplies, coordinating the cleanup and
keeping track of the location, number of volunteers,
and the number of bags
collected.
Other upcoming events
in Meigs County include
the 14th annual Leading Creek Stream Sweep,
which will be 9 a.m. to
noon April 26 at the Meigs
SWCD Conservation Area
on New Lima Road between Rutland and Harrisonville. In the past, the
stream sweep has been
conducted at the Rutland
Firemen’s Park and Jim
Vennari Park. This year,
the stream sweep will be at
the Conservation Area due
to ample parking, water
and restrooms on site.
portion of the submission is
based on a position the IRS
identifies as frivolous.
See ARGUMENTS | A6
First Baptist Church - Gallipolis
Easter Cantata & Service
Easter Sunday, April 20 at 10:00AM
the order or signal of a police officer were filed against
the defendant after he allegedly led Gallipolis police on a
chase Oct. 31 from the Gallia
County Courthouse parking
lot to Mill Creek Road and
back to Second Avenue. Officers, working in tandem,
reportedly slowed Roderick’s
car by braking in front of it.
He was later arrested.
The final charge listed
on the defendant’s indictment is a misdemeanor
charge that alleges that on
Oct. 31, Roderick knowingly caused or attempted
to cause physical harm to a
health care professional of
a hospital during the per-
formance of his duties.
Roderick has remained
in custody following his
initial arraignment hearing
after the court determined
that bond in this case
should not be set as “the
accused poses a substantial risk of serious physical
harm to himself and others
in the community and that
no release will reasonably
assure the safety of that
person in the community.”
In consideration of the
defendant’s guilty plea last
week, the state of Ohio has
agreed to dismiss the remaining nine counts of the indictment, as well as the specifications listed in the indictment
The annual Ohio River
Sweep will also be 9 a.m.
to noon June 21 at sites
to be announced, and the
third Meigs County Cleanup Day will be 9 a.m. to
noon Sept. 13 at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.
Clean
From Page A1
filing a frivolous tax return
is $5,000. The penalty is
applied to anyone who submits a tax return or other
specified submission, if any
Thank You
I would like to thank all of you who
were able to attend the service for my
Mom, Freda Jacks. Also, thanks to the
Overbrook staff for the wonderful care
she received. My brother Bill deserves
a special thanks for the 35 years he
lived with our Mom; giving her security,
peace of mind and comfort, knowing
she was not alone. Mom always said,
“I take care of Bill” and Bill always
said,“I take care of Mom”. I would
grin. They took care of each other.
Now Mom is looking down from
heaven with a smile, knowing Bill has
a home and saying,“I take care of Bill”
- Jackie Sigman
60497752
aside from the sexual motivation specification as to count
one, kidnapping.
The defendant has also
agreed to be assessed the
costs of this action.
Roderick is being represented by defense attorney
Richard Hedges.
Easter Sunrise Service
6:30am
The FBC Easter sunrise service will be held at
the Mound Hill Cemetery (Fortification Hill)
by Pastor Mohler’s plot. In the event of rain the
service will be moved to the shelter house.
60490310
Gallia County Department of Job & Family Services is
searching for low income youth ages 16-24 and Employers
for the 2014 TANF Summer Youth Employment Program.
Gallia County Department of Job and Family Services announce availability of TANF
funding to support a TANF Summer Youth Employment Program for 2014. With these
funds the Gallia County DJFS will allow low income TANF eligible Gallia youth to gain
valuable work experience while earning a paycheck to help meet basic needs. Summer
employment programs offer the opportunity for youth to develop a work history and
have a current reference from an employer.
The types of persons that may be served are:
s 9OUTH AGES �� �� AS LONG AS THE YOUTH IS A MINOR CHILD IN A NEEDY FAMILY AND IS IN
SCHOOL �YOUTH MAY BE �� IF THEY ARE A FULL TIME STUDENT IN A HIGH SCHOOL
s 9OUTH AGES �� �� AS LONG AS THEY ARE IN A NEEDY FAMILY THAT ALSO HAS A MINOR CHILD OR
s 9OUTH AGES �� �� THAT HAVE A MINOR CHILD AND ARE CONSIDERED NEEDY�
s 4HE YOUTH SERVED MAY BE NON CUSTODIAL PARENTS AS LONG AS THEY ARE CONSIDERED
NEEDY AND HAVE A MINOR CHILD�
s �.EEDY IS DElNED AS UP TO TWO HUNDRED PERCENT OF THE &EDERAL 0OVERTY ,EVEL�
Minor Child and Families are defined in federal and state regulations. Minor child
means an individual who (1) has not attained 18 years of age or (2) has not attained
19 years of age and is a full-time student in a secondary school (or equivalent level of
vocational or technical training). Families are defined by federal regulation and state
law as follows: a minor child who resides with a parent, specified relative, legal guardian
or legal custodian (a child may be temporarily absent from the home provided certain
requirements are met), a pregnant individual with no other children, or a non-custodial
parent who lives in Gallia County, but does not reside with his/her minor child(ren).
Serving Youth in Foster Care: Youth in the temporary or permanent custody of a Public
Children Services Agency who are placed in a licensed foster care setting, that are between
the ages of 15 and 17 years of age or 18 if they are a full-time student in a high school may
be served under the TANF Summer Youth Employment Program.
All child labor laws and regulations do apply to this program. An overview of child
labor requirements can be referenced at http://www.dol.gov/dol/topic/youthlabor/
Youth are required to attend an orientation before employment. Some topics of
orientation include personal banking, filling out applications, how to write a powerful
resume, interview survival tips, work readiness skills such as dressing for success, getting
along with co-workers, communicating in a business setting, anger management, setting
career goals and OHIOMEANSJOBS.COM.
Interested youth may pick up a 2014 summer youth application at Gallia
DJFS Mon-Thurs 7AM-5PM. Applications must be submitted before May 15
to be eligible for the program.
Potential employers may call 446-3222 ext 254 for more information
60495980
�OPINION
Sunday Times-Sentinel
Stephen Colbert is a comedian
By Kathleen Parker
In selecting Stephen Colbert to replace David Letterman as host of the “Late
Show,” CBS has waged war
on America’s heartland —
or so proclaims that Palm
Beach font of heartland
mirth, Rush Limbaugh.
Don’t you believe it,
Heartlanders.
But wait, there’s more.
CBS also must be waging
war on Asian-Americans
since a Twitter activist who
calls herself Angry Asian
Woman called for an end to
“The Colbert Report” late
last month following a joke
she didn’t like.
Apparently, Colbert in
his pretend role as a loudmouthed,
conservative
blowhard (keep guessing)
made a crack about the
“Ching-Chong Ding-Dong
Foundation for Sensitivity to Orientals or Whatever” in response to the
new Washington Redskins
Original American Foundation created by team
owner Dan Snyder, who
refuses to change the Redskins mascot name. It was
satire, folks.
If you have to explain a
joke … you may be living in
post-humor America.
Oy!
May I say that? Just to
be safe, let’s go with heavens to Murgatroyd, begging forgiveness from all
Murgatroydians
extant
and, again, just to be safe,
nonextant.
Finally, no offense to
Snagglepuss.
But back to Rush, who
elaborated as follows:
“What this hire means
is a redefinition of what
is ‘funny’ and a redefinition of what is comedy,
and they’re blowing up
the 11:30 format under
the guise that the world’s
changing and people don’t
want the kind of comedy
that Carson gave us or
even Letterman.
“They don’t want that
anymore. It’s the media
planting a flag here. I think
it’s maybe the media’s last
stand, but it’s a declaration. There’s no unity in
this hire. They’ve hired a
partisan, so-called comedian to run a comedy show.”
Here’s the thing, and I
say this with all due respect, Colbert is a comedian whose shtick is to
present an exaggerated impression of a conservative
talk show host. He’s a character! Sort of like, spoiler
alert, Bill O’Reilly.
You don’t hear O’Reilly
complaining about his role
as comic foil. One, he has
a sense of humor. Two, it’s
good for him. Three, he
knows that when people
are paid millions to yack
on TV, they don’t get to
whine when someone else
making millions gets a new
gig. I wouldn’t be surprised
to see O’Reilly among Colbert’s first guests.
To put it plainly, the fellow who will be sitting in
the “Late Show” chair is
nothing like the character
on the “Repor(t),” which is
both a delightful and grievous prospect. Many will
mourn the exit of Comedy
Central’s Colbert, but millions more will celebrate
his new role. Having met
the real-life Colbert, the
lad from Charleston, S.C.,
I’m confident viewers will
find him every bit the Everyman as was all-time favorite Johnny Carson.
The one time I appeared
on “The Colbert Report,”
Colbert met me in the
Green Room beforehand
and, speaking as the polite Southerner he is, said,
“Now, I’m going to be
in character on stage, so
don’t let me put words in
your mouth.” You can’t say
I wasn’t forewarned.
In real life, Colbert, the
youngest of 11 children, is
a regular guy with an extraordinary wit who is as
heartland as they come, if
you judge “heartland” as
devoted to family and devout of spirit. He became
a funny guy in part as a result of tragedy when, at age
ten, his father and two of
his brothers died in a plane
crash. Colbert inherited his
brothers’ Bill Cosby record
collection, which he says he
listened to night after night.
From personal grief, he
blossomed into a national
treasure — wickedly funny,
charming and charismatic.
That he has made jokes at
the expense of nearly everyone is merely further
testament to his qualifications. An equal opportunity offender in a politically
correct world. What more
can one ask of a comedian?
Of all people on the planet,
Americans have always been
among the quickest to laugh,
especially at ourselves. In my
experience,
Heartlanders
have the best sense of humor
of all because they don’t take
themselves so seriously. The
degree to which one takes
oneself seriously is a fairly reliable measure of both breeding and intelligence. Thus,
Limbaugh insults his own
audience when he suggests
that they should be offended.
The notion that a fake
persona’s comedy routine
is a threat to the American
heartland bears a striking
resemblance to the sort
of literal-mindedness that
leads to inquisitions and
the Taliban.
If you can’t take a joke,
you could always change
the channel. But you’ll
miss all the fun.
Page A4
SATURDAY, APRIL 12, 2014
Thought police are on patrol
By Charles Krauthammer
Two months ago, a petition bearing more
than 110,000 signatures was delivered to
The Washington Post demanding a ban on
any article questioning global warming.
The petition arrived the day before publication of my column, which consisted of
precisely that heresy.
The column ran as usual. But I was gratified by the show of intolerance because it
perfectly illustrated my argument that the
left is entering a new phase of ideological
agitation — no longer trying to win the
debate but stopping debate altogether, banishing from public discourse any and all opposition.
The proper word for that attitude is totalitarian. It declares certain controversies over and visits serious consequences
— from social ostracism to vocational defenestration — upon those who refuse to
be silenced.
Sometimes the word comes from on
high, as when the president of the United
States declares the science of global warming to be “settled.” Anyone who disagrees
is then branded “anti-science.” And better
still, a “denier” — a brilliantly chosen calumny meant to impute to the climate skeptic the opprobrium normally reserved for
the hatemongers and crackpots who deny
the Holocaust.
Then last week, another outbreak. The
newest closing of the leftist mind is on
gay marriage. Just as the science of global
warming is settled, so, it seems, are the
moral and philosophical merits of gay marriage.
To oppose it is nothing but bigotry, akin
to racism. Opponents are to be similarly
marginalized and shunned, destroyed personally and professionally.
Like the CEO of Mozilla who resigned
under pressure just 10 days into his job
when it was disclosed that six years earlier
he had donated to California’s Proposition
8, which defined marriage as between a
man and a woman.
But why stop with Brendan Eich, the
victim of this high-tech lynching? Prop 8
passed by half a million votes. Six million
Californians joined Eich in the crime of
“privileging” traditional marriage. So did
Barack Obama. In that same year, he declared that his Christian beliefs made him
oppose gay marriage.
Yet under the new dispensation, this is
outright bigotry. By that logic, the man
whom the left so ecstatically carried to the
White House in 2008 was equally a bigot.
The whole thing is so stupid as to be
unworthy of exegesis. There is no logic.
What’s at play is sheer ideological prejudice
— and the enforcement of the new totalitarian norm that declares, unilaterally, certain issues to be closed.
To this magic circle of forced conformity,
the left would like to add certain other policies, resistance to which is deemed a “war
on women.” It’s a colorful synonym for sexism. Leveling the charge is a crude way to
cut off debate.
Thus, to oppose late-term abortion is
to make war on women’s “reproductive
health.” Similarly, to question Obamacare’s
mandate of free contraception for all.
Some oppose the regulation because of
its impingement on the free exercise of
religion. Others on the simpler (non-theological) grounds of a skewed hierarchy of
values. Under the new law, everything is
covered, but a few choice things are given
away free. To what does contraception
owe its exalted status? Why should it rank
above, say, antibiotics for a sick child, for
which that same mother must co-pay?
Say that, however, and you are accused of
denying women “access to contraception.”
Or try objecting to the new so-called Paycheck Fairness Act for women, which is little more than a full-employment act for trial
lawyers. Sex discrimination is already illegal. What these new laws do is relieve the
plaintiffs of proving intentional discrimination. To bring suit, they need only to show
that women make less in that workplace.
Like the White House, where women
make 88 cents to the men’s dollar?
That’s called “disparate impact.” Does
anyone really think Obama consciously
discriminates against female employees,
rather than the disparity being a reflection
of experience, work history, etc.? But just
to raise such questions is to betray heretical
tendencies.
The good news is that the “war on women” charge is mostly cynicism, fodder for
campaign-year demagoguery. But the trend
is growing. Oppose the current consensus
and you’re a denier, a bigot, a homophobe,
a sexist, an enemy of the people.
Long a staple of academia, the totalitarian impulse is spreading. What to do? Defend the dissenters, even if — perhaps, especially if — you disagree with their policy.
It is — it was? — the American way.
Strung along on immigration reform
By Esther Cepeda
The week’s award for truer
words were never spoken
goes to David Martin, who
served as deputy general
counsel at the Department
of Homeland Security in the
first two years of the Obama
administration.
Martin made a blunt observation to a New York
Times reporter — one that
made sense to everyone who
has seen through President
Obama’s immigration reform
gambit designed to appease
Hispanic voters.
“It would have been better for the administration
to state its enforcement intentions clearly and stand
by them, rather than being
willing to lean whichever
way seemed politically expedient at any given moment,”
Martin said. “They lost
credibility on enforcement,
despite all the deportations,
Sunday Times-Sentinel
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core criminals.
DHS’ inability to put a
priority on drug dealers,
gang members or actual terrorists while deporting redlight runners or those who
misstep after overstaying a
visa has been well-known
for years. Yet the reason the
Times article has been dissected, endlessly discussed
and used to push the agendas of national immigrant advocacy organizations is that
it puts Obama’s cynicism on
Sunday Times Sentinel
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while letting activists think
they could always get another concession if they just
blamed Obama. It was a pipe
dream to think they could
make everyone happy.”
Martin’s comments appeared in a Page One news
story about the number
of unlawfully present immigrants without criminal
backgrounds who have been
deported despite the president’s request that DHS use
discretion and focus on hard-
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Michael Johnson
Content Manager
display for all to see.
Yes, Obama did step up
deportations after he promised Latinos he’d find a way
to offer relief while he negotiated a path-to-citizenship immigration reform. Yes, he did
get miffed when activists,
journalists and community
leaders called him out on his
inability to keep his promise,
and he did scold them during
White House meetings for
publicly criticizing him.
Time and again, the president did say he could not act
unilaterally to legalize unlawfully present immigrants and
then turned around, practically on the eve of his re-election, and granted deferred
action to young people who
would have been eligible for
the DREAM Act and who,
coincidentally, were active
campaigners on Democrats’
behalf.
And yes, he is once again
responding to renewed calls
to end deportations with his
stock answers of, basically,
“I can’t do anything about
it” and “Blame the Republicans.”
Obama did ask supplicants at recent White House
meetings to shelve the anecdotes about the pain and
suffering of deportation
and families torn apart. Not
because he doesn’t care, of
course — he’s told us so often how much he cares —
but because it’s more productive to discuss strategy for
legislating permanent relief.
That at least was honest, if a
bit cold.
His presidential machinations to preserve favorability ratings among Hispanics
have been on display for
years, even if his disciples
didn’t want to see them. And
though every year Obama
has gone on speaking tours
during Hispanic Heritage
Month to make clear that he
cares about passing immigration reform, the president’s
approval rating among Latinos is at an all-time low — 52
percent, according to Gallup.
But why it was ever so
high — 75 percent just one
year earlier — is a mystery.
As he was nearing the end of
his first year in office, it was
clear that the president’s governing agenda for year two
and beyond did not put immigration on the map.
I don’t blame the president
for his inability to rally an obstructionist Republican Party
toward a compromise on one
of the most contentious issues
of our time. Even Ronald Reagan, many have noted, would
have a slim chance of passing another reform in today’s
highly polarized climate.
And most levelheaded
people wouldn’t have blamed
the president for focusing on
repairing the economy and
getting people back to work,
if he would have just said so.
Instead, he kept over-promising and under-delivering on
immigration reform.
Obama’s historic number
of deportations and immigration reform failures will
not be his enduring legacy. It
will be how foolish his most
ardent Hispanic supporters
will forever feel knowing it
took them so long to realize
that the president has been
stringing them along on the
one issue that strikes at the
heart of their dignity.
�Sunday, April 13, 2014
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Geologists link small
quakes to fracking
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Geologists in
Ohio have for the first time linked earthquakes
in a geologic formation deep under the Appalachians to hydraulic fracturing, leading the state
to issue new permit conditions Friday in certain
areas that are among the nation’s strictest.
A state investigation of five small tremors last
month in the Youngstown area, in the Appalachian foothills, found the injection of sand and
water that accompanies hydraulic fracturing, or
fracking, in the Utica Shale may have increased
pressure on a small, unknown fault, said State
Oil & Gas Chief Rick Simmers. He called the
link “probable.”
While earlier studies had linked earthquakes
in the same region to deep-injection wells used
for disposal of fracking wastewater, this marks
the first time tremors in the region have been
tied directly to fracking, Simmers said. The five
seismic events in March couldn’t be easily felt
by people.
The oil and gas drilling boom targets widely
different rock formations around the nation, so
the Ohio findings may not have much relevance
to other areas other than perhaps influencing
public perception of fracking’s safety. The types
of quakes connected to the industry are generally small and not easily felt, but the idea of human
activity causing the earth to shake often doesn’t
sit well.
The state says the company that set off the
Ohio quakes was following rules and appeared to
be using common practices. It just got unlucky,
Simmers said.
Gerry Baker, associate executive director of
the Interstate Oil and Gas Commission, said
state regulators across the nation will study the
Ohio case for any implications for the drilling industry. A consortium of states has already begun
discussions.
Fracking involves pumping huge volumes of
water, sand and chemicals underground to split
open rocks to allow oil and gas to flow. Improved
technology has allowed energy companies to
gain access to huge stores of natural gas but has
raised widespread concerns that it might lead to
groundwater contamination — and, yes, earthquakes.
A U.S. government report released in 2012
found that two worldwide instances of shaking
can be attributed to actual extraction of oil and
gas, as opposed to wastewater disposal in the
ground — a magnitude-2.8 quake in Oklahoma
and a magnitude-2.3 quake in England. Both
were in 2011.
Later, the Canadian government tied quakes
in British Columbia’s Horn River Basin between
2009 and 2011 to fracking. Those led to stricter
regulations, which news reports indicated had
little effect on the pace or volume of drilling.
But for the region encompassing Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia, where energy companies have drilled thousands of unconventional
gas wells in recent years, it’s a first. The Utica
Shale lies beneath the better-known Marcellus
Shale, which is more easily accessible and is considered one of the world’s richest gas reserves.
Glenda Besana-Ostman, a seismologist with
the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Bureau of
Reclamation, confirmed the finding is the first
in the area to suggest a connection between the
quakes and fracking. A deep-injection wastewater well in the same region of Ohio was found to
be the likely cause of a series of quakes in 2012.
Under Ohio’s new permit conditions, all new
drilling sites within 3 miles of a known fault or
seismic activity of 2.0 magnitude or higher will
be conditioned on the installation of sensitive
seismic-monitoring equipment. Results will be
directly available to regulators, Simmers said, so
the state isn’t reliant on drilling operators providing the data voluntarily.
If seismic activity of 1.0 magnitude or greater
is felt, drilling will be paused for evaluation. If a
link is found, the operation will be halted.
“While we can never be 100 percent sure that
drilling activities are connected to a seismic
event, caution dictates that we take these new
steps to protect human health, safety and the
environment,” said James Zehringer, director of
Ohio’s natural resources department.
Ohio has also imposed an indefinite drilling
moratorium at the site of the March quakes. The
state is allowing oil and gas extraction to continue at five existing wells at the site.
Such events linked to fracking are “extremely
rare,” said Shawn Bennett, a spokesman for the
industry group Energy In Depth, who described
the new rules as safeguards that will prevent
similar future quakes in Ohio.
Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&286î��
Obituaries
DANIEL L. DAY
CROWN CITY, Ohio —
Daniel Lee “Petie” Day, 29,
of Crown City, died Tuesday, April 8, 2014, at his
residence.
He was born Oct. 2,
1984, in Gallipolis, the son
of Charles L. and Monica
Angelo Day and they survive him. He graduated
from Gallia Academy High
School and was a farmer
and laborer.
In addition to his parents, Charles L. and Monica Day, he is survived by
a sister, Monica (Travis
Thivener) Markin, of Patriot; nieces and nephews
Abagail Thivener, Travis
Thivener Jr., Jeremy Markin, Matthew Markin, Julie
Thivener, Audrey Thivener
and Russell Thivener.
He was preceded in
death by grandparents Carl
and Edith Day, Doris Jeffers and Anthony Angelo
Sr., and an uncle, Steve
Day.
A graveside service will
be 11 a.m. Monday, April
14, 2014, at St. Nick Cemetery with Pastor Ralph
Workman officiating. Pallbearers will be Tommy
Rowley, Rick Jones, Nick
Jones, Jimmy Jones, Keith
Day, Tony Angelo, Nathan
Beaver, Terry Williams,
Travis Thivener and Jethro
Tramel.
Willis Funeral Home is
assisting the family.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send
e-mail condolences.
CLOYD FERRELL
BIDWELL — Cloyd Ferrell, 71, of Bidwell, passed
away at home on April 10,
2014. He was born Jan.
8, 1943, to Thomas and
Elitha Curry Ferrell. Cloyd
attended several churches
throughout Gallia Co.
He was employed as a
bus mechanic custodian for
Gallia County Schools for
more than 30 years.
Cloyd is survived by two
sons, Danny (Diana) Ferrell and Jeff (Selina) Ferrell, both of Vinton; grandchildren Sarah Klein, of
Pomeroy, Tony (Jennifer)
Ferrell, of Bidwell, Stephanie Ferrell, of Columbus,
and Kaylieona Kemper, of
Vinton;
great-grandchildren Kurtis and Dakota
Ferrell and Heavenly Klein.
Also surviving are special friends, Sam “S.L.”
Ferrell, of Columbus, and
Dave Dean, of Vinton;
brothers Clyde Ferrell, of
Bidwell, Bernard (Pam)
Ferrell, of Columbus, and
Harvey (Gertrude) Ferrell, of Bidwell; sisters
Velma (Woodrow) Russell, of Bidwell, Phlorine
(Bill) Campbell, of Dunbar,
W.Va., and Lucinda (Kenny) White, of Columbus,
and sister-in-law Reba Ferrell, of Bidwell.
He was preceded in
death by brothers Thomas
Ferrell Jr., Samuel Ferrell
and Marvin Ferrell.
Funeral services will be
3 p.m. Sunday April 13,
2014, at Weslyan Chapel
Church at Morgan Center
with the Rev. Calvin Minnis officiating. Friends may
call the church one hour
prior to services on Sunday. Burial will follow in
Morgan Center Cemetery.
McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton chapel, is
honored to serve the Ferrell family.
Online condolences may
be sent to www.mccoymoore.com.
Death Notices
HARDESTY
GALLIPOLIS — J.
Maridell (Houck) Hardesty, 90, died Saturday, Feb.
1, 2014, in Brooksville,
Fla., after a brief illness.
A memorial service will
be 2 p.m. Saturday, April
19, 2014, in the chapel at
Ohio Valley Memorial Gardens in Gallipolis.
HECK
CHESAPEAKE — Carrie Irene Heck, 82, of
Chesapeake, passed away
Thursday, April 10, 2014 at
The Emogene Dolin Jones
Hospice House, Huntington, W.Va. Funeral service
will be conducted 2 p.m.
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
at Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville.
Burial will follow in Rome
Cemetery,
Proctorville.
Visitation will be held one
hour prior to the service
at Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville.
SMITH
CHESAPEAKE — Patricia Ann Day Smith, 73, of
Chesapeake, joined her beloved family in Heaven on
Thursday, April 10, 2014 at
St. Mary’s Medical Center,
Huntington, W.Va. Funeral
service will be conducted
2 p.m. Monday, April 14,
2014 at Hall Funeral Home
and Crematory, Proctorville, by Kathleen Hays.
Burial will follow in Miller
Memorial Gardens, Miller.
Visitation will be held 1
p.m. to 2 p.m. Monday,
April 14, 2014 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville.
THOMAS
LEON, W.Va. — Lewis
Jay Thomas, 47, of Leon,
passed away unexpectedly
Wednesday, April 9, 2014.
Funeral services will be
1:30 p.m. Sunday, April
13, 2014, at Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant.
Burial will follow in Leon
Cemetery. Friends may visit the family at the funeral
home between 6-8 p.m. Saturday, April 12, 2014. An
online registry is available
at www.dealfh.com.
OPHA WILLIAM OFFUTT
POMEROY — Opha William Offutt, 86, went home
to be with the Lord on
April 10, 2014 at his home
in Pomeroy, Ohio. Opha
was born on September
22, 1927, in Minora, West
Virginia, to Carl Jennings
Offutt and Mary Elizabeth
Jarvis Offutt.
Opha was a member of
the Trinity Church and a
World War II Army Corps
of Engineers veteran who
served in eastern Europe.
He was a Foot Mineral/Vanadium Steel retiree. Opha
loved to fish and restore
John Deere tractors. He
spent endless hours on his
John Deere tractors manicuring his lawn and enjoying the sunshine.
Opha is survived by his
wife, Marjorie Jeannine Offutt; daughter, Opal Marie
Grueser; son, Carl Thomas
Offutt; step-son, Michael
Bruce Jago; grandchildren,
Steven Thomas Offutt and
Leanne Marie Offutt; step-
grandchildren,
Michael
Bruce Jago Jr. and Lindsey
Chrystal Jago; and three
great-grandchildren.
Opha was a wonderful
husband, father and grandfather. He will be deeply
missed.
Opha was preceded in
death by his parents; his
first wife, Ruth Weber Offutt; and sister, Opal Virginia Morris.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. on Monday,
April 14, 2014, at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy with
Pastor Tom Johnson officiating. Visiting hours will
be from 6-8 p.m. on Sunday
at the funeral home, where
the Gallipolis Elks Lodge
#107 will conduct a memorial service at 7:45 p.m.
Interment will be at Riverview Cemetery.
A registry is available at
www.andersonmcdaniel.
com.
HAROLD E. WATSON
GALLIPOLIS — Harold
E. “Buddy” Watson, 88, of
Gallipolis, went to be with
the Lord on Friday, April
11, 2014. He was born
Nov.19, 1925, to the late
Golden and Gertie Clary
Watson of Gallipolis.
Harold was a veteran
World War II as private
first class in Company C
46th Armored Infantry Battalion. Sent to Europe, he
landed in LeHarve, France.
He went on to be in the 5th
Armored Division, then
into the 9th Army. Harold
served in France, Belgium,
Holland and Germany.
Harold was employed at
Gallipolis Developmental
Center as a supervisor and
retired after 35 years of
service. He also worked his
family farm raising cattle,
tobacco and hay. He also
enjoyed gardening and caring for the yard. Harold
loved to travel. Harold was
a loving husband, father
and grandfather to his family. He was a member of
Okey Chapel Church.
Harold was preceded
in death by his parents
Golden and Gertie Watson;
his sister Clarabelle Haner
Thomas; and two nephews,
Paul Haner and Raymond
Lee Haner.
Harold is survived by
his wife, Pauline Shafer
Watson, whom he married
Dec. 2, 1944; two daughters, Donna Gaye Watson
Massie, of Gallipolis (at
home), and Dorothy Louise Watson Evans Hunt, of
Logan, Ohio; five grandchildren, Phillip Massie
(Celeste Harrington), of
Gallipolis, David Massie
(Diana Harless), of Blacklick, Ohio, Elizabeth Ann
Massie, of Patriot, Eric
(Lisa) Evans, of Smyrna,
Tenn., and Karen Evans
(Nicholas Meade) of Logan; stepgrandson Matthew (Ashley) Hunt, of
Lancaster, Ohio; 13 great
grandchildren, Dylan and
Hayden Massie, of Delaware, Ohio, Jack Massie, of
Columbus, Jillian Massie,
of Gallipolis, Jonathan and
Justin Hodge, of Mount
Alto, W.Va., Jayna and Jeffery Garnes, of Patriot,
Kristin and Justin Evans,
of Smyrna, and Micaela
Kaitlyn and Christopher
Meade of Logan; three
great-great-grandchildren,
Owen Massie and Ayvah
Hurlow, of Gallipolis, and
Zayden Hodge of Mount
Alto; sister Frieda I. Ervin,
of Fort Myers, Fla.; brother
Myron Dale (Maralene)
Watson, of Reynoldsburg,
Ohio; six nephews; two
nieces; and many cousins.
Services will be 1 p.m.
Tuesday, April 15, 2014, at
Willis Funeral Home with
Pastor Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will follow
at Ridgelawn Cemetery
with military graveside
services by volunteer veterans. Friends may call the
funeral home from 6-8 p.m.
Monday, April 14, 2014.
Pallbearers will be Phillip and David Massie, Eric
Evans, Nicholas Meade,
Matthew Hunt and Justin
Hodge.
In lieu of flowers, please
consider donations in Harold’s memory to Ridgelawn
Cemetery, c/o Lona Mae
Houck, 2286 Ohio 218,
Gallipolis, OH 45631.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send
e-mail condolences.
�C62>Dî52D965î:?î72E2=î4@==686îE@FCî3FDî4C2D9
60462834
ORLAND, Calif. (AP) — It was
a busload of opportunity: young,
low-income, motivated students,
destined to become the first in their
families to go to college, journeying
from the concrete sprawl of Los Angeles to a remote redwood campus
650 miles north.
Those dreams shattered for some
Thursday in an explosive freeway collision that left 10 dead — students,
chaperones and both drivers — and
dozens hospitalized.
Desperate families awaited word
about loved ones Friday, while investigators tried to figure out why a
southbound FedEx big rig swerved
across the grassy divide of California’s key artery before sideswiping a
car and slamming into the tour bus,
which burst into a furious blaze.
The Serrato family, whose identical twin 17-year-old daughters set off
on the adventure on separate buses
Thursday, had a panicked, sleepless
night. Marisol made it to their destination, Humboldt State University, but
there was no word from Marisa, who
had been aboard the now-gutted bus.
Friday morning when a sheriff’s
deputy asked for Marisa’s dental records, a grim request made to several
families, 23-year-old brother Miguel
Serrato said his family was “getting a
little bit scared.” His mother booked
a flight north.
Humboldt alumni Michael Myvett,
29, and his fiancee, Mathison Haywood, who were chaperoning, also
were killed. Myvett was a therapist at
an autism treatment center.
“He just died,” his grandmother
Debra Loyd said, her voice breaking
with emotion in the early afternoon
Friday. “They have already confirmed it.”
Myvett’s manager Kyle Farris said
he was “extraordinary,” and that he
connected with their children “on a
level few others could, and he contributed to their wellbeing in such a
positive and profound way.”
“He will be greatly missed,” Farris
said.
A Facebook photo shows Haywood
flashing a shining diamond engagement ring on her finger and kissing
Myvett in December near the Louvre
Museum in Paris.
The bus was among three Humboldt had chartered as part of its
two-day Preview Plus program to
bring prospective students to tour
the Arcata campus, according to uni-
versity officials. Before launching the
event Friday, university Vice President Peg Blake’s voice broke as she
asked a crowded theater for a moment of silence in honor of everyone
affected by the accident.
Most survivors were injured, some
with critical burns or broken limbs.
Those who made it out said they
scrambled through a kicked-out window. One man, apparently an admissions counselor, was in flames and
later died. Those who could sprinted,
others staggered, in a desperate dash
to the opposite side of Interstate 5
before the vehicle exploded.
“We knew we were in major
trouble,” said Steven Clavijo, a high
school senior from Santa Clarita,
who was trying to nap when he felt
the bus shake before a loud boom.
After he escaped, two more explosions followed. Clavijo and other survivors watched helplessly, knowing their
peers were trapped in the inferno.
Explosions of orange flames engulfed both vehicles, and clouds of
black smoke billowed into the sky
until firefighters doused the fire,
leaving behind scorched black hulks
of metal. Bodies were draped in blankets inside the burned-out bus.
Do we have you
attention now?
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or 740.446.2342
�Page A6 LîSunday Times Sentinel
&@>6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D
Sunday, April 13, 2014
Conference will attract rural medical education leaders to Ohio
Staff reports
GDTnews@civitasmedia.com
ATHENS — Approximately
70 medical educators from
across the country will gather
April 16-18 at the Ohio University Inn in Athens for the 2014
Rural Training Tracks Conclave,
sponsored by the RTT Collaborative and the Ohio University
Heritage College of Osteopathic
Medicine.
Focused upon the theme
“Common Ground,” the 2014
RTT Conclave will bring together osteopathic and allopathic
medical educators and other professionals interested in training
medical students and residents
in rural places.
Dr. Randall Longenecker, assistant dean for rural and underserved programs at the Heritage
College and executive director
of the RTT Collaborative, organized the event to bring together
diverse medical professionals
with a common goal of serving
the underserved and creating a
sustainable rural physician workforce.
“My hope is that RTT Conclave attendees truly will find
common ground and set a tone of
collaboration moving forward,”
Longenecker said. “Setting this
tone for rural medical education
may very well lead the way for
others in broader conversations
around other common concerns,
such as transforming medical
education in primary care.”
Rural training track programs
are designed to prepare primary
care physicians to practice in rural areas. Research shows that
physicians who train in rural areas and those whose training emphasizes services necessary for
working in rural areas are more
likely to go on to practice in these
regions. Approximately 75 percent of the nation’s rural counties
have primary care health professional shortage areas, and many
primary care physicians who currently practice in rural areas are
nearing retirement age.
Longenecker has assisted in
the development and implementation of multiple rural training
track residency programs over
the past 15 years.
“Rural training track programs
are creating pathways for students who are committed to primary care,” Longenecker said.
“These medical student and
residency programs are uniquely
designed to produce physicians
who are prepared for practice
in underserved, rural communities.”
Plenary speakers at the RTT
Conclave include: Dr. Andrew
Bazemore, director of the Robert Graham Center for Policy
Studies in Family Medicine and
Primary Care in Washington,
D.C., who will discuss the primary care needs of rural America and how the RTT Collaborative is building a workforce
ready to address those needs
Dr. Ted Epperly, a national expert in rural medical education
and health reform from Boise,
Idaho, will discuss the clinical
learning environment in rural
medical education. Epperly is
board president of the RTT Collaborative, board member of the
Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, and past
president of the American Academy of Family Physicians, which
represents the nation’s 110,000
family physicians.
Heritage College Executive
Dean Dr. Kenneth Johnson, who
will explore osteopathic medicine’s impact on rural medical
education and care.
“The RTT Conclave will bring
together a committed, passionate and intelligent group of individuals who are the right people
to take on the challenges of our
deficient rural pipeline, and I
am honored to be a part of the
conversation about shaping the
solution,” Bazemore said. “Athens is the perfect place to have
this discussion because the Heritage College has a track record
of producing doctors for rural
America. To meet there is not
only appropriate, but inspiring.”
The Ohio University Heritage
College of Osteopathic Medicine
is a national leader in training
primary care physicians. The
college is number one in Ohio
and 11th nationally in medical
schools that graduate physicians
who practice in underserved rural areas.
The RTT Collaborative is a
nonprofit network of medical education programs from rural areas across the country. Through
participation, programs share
expertise in developing and sustaining rural programs and work
together to solve problems and
achieve common goals.
To learn more about the RTT
Conclave, visit www.rttcollaborative.net/conclave-2014.html.
(:@î�C2?56î�2>Aî�?G6?E:@?î:?DA:C6DîJ@F?8î>:?5D
RIO GRANDE — Camp
Invention, a national educational program recognized
for fostering innovativethinking, real-world prob-
lem solving and the spirit
of invention, is coming to
University of Rio Grande
Campus the week of June
23 - 27.
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business in this
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or 740.446.2342
The weeklong day camp
experience for students
entering grades 1-6 encourages inventive young minds
through hands-on problem
solving, using science,
technology, engineering,
and mathematics in a fun
and creative atmosphere.
“We are thrilled to be
offering Camp Invention
to more children this year
interested in these focus
areas,” said Barbara Myer,
Camp Invention director
at Allen ISD and District
Advanced
Academics/
Gifted and Talented coordinator. “Selecting a camp
is an important decision for
parents and our goal is to
provide children with a cur-
riculum that allows them to
fully express their inventive
young minds by exploring
different types of technology, through real-world
problem solving challenges, building things and taking them apart, while still
having fun and developing
new skills. Every year, I am
impressed by not only the
level of thinking and time
that goes into the curriculum, but also by the level of
fun and excitement that I
see on my students’ faces.”
Camp Invention was
founded by Inductees of
the National Inventors Hall
of Fame. Programming is
developed through partnerships with the U.S. Patent
and Trademark Office and
inspired by Inductees of the
Hall of Fame and finalists
of the Collegiate Inventors
Competition. Camp Invention’s new curriculum for
2014 called “Morphed!” immerses students in handson activities, such as building original prototypes,
creating a personalized motor-powered vehicle, and
disassembling electronics
to build an insect-themed
pinball machine. Local programs are facilitated and
taught by educators who
reside and teach in those
communities.
“Camp Invention is proud
to inspire and challenge our
next generation of innova-
tors through this nationally
acclaimed educational program,” said Michael Oister,
CEO of Invent Now, the
organization responsible
for organizing more than
1,200 Camp Invention day
camps throughout the U.S.
serving 80,000 students every year. “During the past
20 years, we have helped
to ignite a passion for creativity and invention in
more than 900,000 children
while leaving them with
great camp memories and
lifelong friendships.”
For more information or
to find the nearest location
for registration, visit www.
campinvention.org.
Unclaimed funds list to
appear in Tuesday’s paper
Nirva Dube, MD, Internal Medicine, Agnes A. Enrico-Simon, MD, Family Medicine/Pediatrics,
and Christina Webb, MD, Family Medicine/Pediatrics
Announcing the Group Practice of
Pleasant Valley Hospital Primary Care
Pleasant Valley Hospital is pleased to announce the opening of Pleasant Valley Hospital
Primary Care. The group practice of physicians Nirva Dube, MD, Agnes A. Enrico-Simon, MD,
and Christina Webb, MD, is conveniently located in suite 214 of the Medical Office Building at
the Hospital. They specialize in providing personal, comprehensive and continuing health care
for people of all ages with a focus on family.
Whether you’re experiencing an acute or chronic illness or are in need of a routine
checkup, the dedicated team of medical physicians at Pleasant Valley Hospital Primary
Care is ready to care for you.
OHIO VALLEY — Ohio
Department of Commerce
Director Andre T. Porter
urges residents in Gallia and
Meigs counties to join in the
2014 Unclaimed Funds Treasure Hunt by checking the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel on
Tuesday.
By checking the newspaper advertisement, readers can find out if they are
entitled to unclaimed funds
turned over to the Ohio Division of Unclaimed Funds in
the past year.
Unclaimed funds are money or the rights to money that
have been dormant or forgotten. Some common examples
include: dormant checking
and savings accounts, forgotten rent and utility deposits,
uncashed checks, undelivered
stock certificates and uncashed insurance policies.
“The Department of Commerce Division of Unclaimed
Funds is committed to reuniting Ohioans with their
hard-earned money. Check
the Gallia County and Meigs
County lists to see if you,
your family or your friends
have unclaimed funds,” Porter said. “This money can
help Ohioans buy a tank of
gas, pay off some bills, make
a needed home repair or even
expand a business, which
means jobs for Ohioans.”
In Fiscal Year 2013, the
division paid 53,580 claims
worth approximately $69.2
million. The average claim
was for $1,292.
The Gallia County advertisement will include 407 unclaimed funds accounts worth
$260,127.76. The Meigs
County advertisement will
include 219 unclaimed funds
accounts worth $161,689.86.
The advertised accounts,
each valued at $50 or more,
were turned over to the division within the past year for
individuals whose last known
address was ineither Gallia
and Meigs counties. The advertised names will appear
in alphabetical order by the
owner’s last known city and
then in alphabetical order by
the owner’s last name. A list
of unclaimed funds accounts
is available on the Department of Commerce’s Online
Treasure Hunt website at
www.unclaimedfundstreasurehunt.ohio.gov, along with
forms for individuals and organizations to use in claiming
their money.
Gallia County information
for all accounts (includes
those being advertised and
other accounts): Total number of Gallia County accounts: 9,161
Value of Gallia County accounts: $1.042,983
Meigs County information for all accounts (includes
those being advertised and
other accounts): Total number of Meigs County accounts: 5,619
Value of Meigs County accounts: $587,829
Division Superintendent
Yaw Obeng encourages
Ohioans to visit www.unclaimedfundstreasurehunt.
ohio.gov to see if they have
funds waiting to be claimed.
Individuals without Internet
access can write to the Division of Unclaimed Funds and
provide the full name to be
researched, along with the
counties in which they might
have lived. The Division’s address is 77 S. High St., 20th
Floor, Columbus, OH, 43215.
Anyone with questions
about unclaimed funds can
call the Division toll free at
(877) 644-6823.
Arguments
From Page A3
For more information or to schedule an appointment, please call
304.675.6090.
Pleasant Valley Hospital Primary Care
2520 Valley Drive Suite 214 Point Pleasant, WV 304.675.6090
Those who promote or adopt frivolous positions also
risk a variety of other penalties. For example, taxpayers
could be responsible for an accuracy-related penalty, a
civil fraud penalty, an erroneous refund claim penalty, or
a failure to file penalty. The Tax Court may also impose a
penalty against taxpayers who make frivolous arguments
in court.
Taxpayers who rely on frivolous arguments and
schemes may also face criminal prosecution for attempting to evade or defeat tax. Similarly, taxpayers may be
convicted of a felony for willfully making and signing under penalties of perjury any return, statement or other
document that the person does not believe to be true and
correct as to every material matter.
People who promote frivolous arguments and those
who assist taxpayers in claiming tax benefits based on
frivolous arguments may be prosecuted for a criminal
felony.
�Sunday Times-Sentinel
SPORTS
SUNDAY,
APRIL 13, 2014
mdsports@civitasmedia.com
B1
Blue Angels rally past Logan, 7-5
By Craig Dunn
Special to OVP
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
Gallia Academy senior Gage Childers (4) makes a throw from
his shortstop position during the second inning of Thursday
night’s SEOAL contest against Logan in Centenary, Ohio.
Blue Devils outlast Logan
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com
CENTENARY, Ohio —
Some things are worth waiting for.
It took over three hours to
finish, but the Gallia Academy
baseball team remained unbeaten in league play Thursday night following a 9-5 victory over visiting Logan in a
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League matchup at Eastman
Ball Field in Gallia County.
The Blue Devils (5-1, 3-0
SEOAL) never trailed in the
contest, as the hosts needed
just two batters in the bottom
of the first to secure a permanent lead. Ty Warnimont
led off the frame with a triple
and scored three pitches later
after a sacrifice fly by Gage
Childers gave GAHS an early
1-0 advantage.
Gallia Academy extended
its lead in the bottom of the
second as the hosts produced
three runs on three hits and a
walk, which gave the Blue and
White a comfortable 4-0 cushion through two complete.
The Chieftains (0-5, 0-2)
responded by scoring three
runs on three hits, three
walks and an error in the
top of the third — allowing
the guests to close the gap
down to 4-3. GAHS, however, answered with a run on a
single and an error — giving
the hosts a 5-3 cushion after
three full frames.
A leadoff single by Warnimont and walks to both
Childers and Gustin Graham
loaded the bases for Gallia
Academy to start the fourth,
then Seth Wills delivered an
RBI single that plated Warnimont for a 6-3 contest. Zach
Graham followed with a sac
fly to left that plated Childers,
giving the Blue Devils a 7-3
lead through four complete.
Logan scored twice in the
sixth to close to within 7-5,
but the hosts followed with
two runs of their own in the
bottom half of the frame to reclaim a four-run cushion. LHS
left runners stranded at first
and second in the top of the
seventh as Gallia Academy
wrapped up the 9-5 decision.
There were a total of 19
walks issued in the game and
both teams left double-digit
baserunners stranded on the
bags. Gallia Academy walked
12 hitters and left 10 on base,
while the guests issued seven
free passes and stranded 13 runners. The Blue Devils outhit the
Chiefs by a 9-7 overall margin
and committed only one of the
three errors in the contest.
Anthony Sipple was the
winning pitcher of record after allowing three runs, four
hits and six walks over 2.2
innings while striking out
three. Lane Little took the
loss for Logan after surrendering four runs, five hits and
two walks over two innings
while fanning two.
Warnimont and Matt Bailey led the hosts with three
hits apiece, followed Wills,
Kole Carter and Gustin
Graham with a safety each.
Warnimont and Carter each
scored three times for the victors, while Bailey drove in a
team-best three RBIs.
Bryce McBride paced the
Chieftains with three hits and
Nick Vecchiarelli added two
safeties and a team-high two
RBIs. McBride and Little each
scored twice in the setback.
OVP Sports Schedule
CENTENARY, Ohio — A night after
getting shut out on their home field,
the Logan Lady Chiefs came oh-soclose to bouncing back with a huge victory over longtime Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League nemesis Gallipolis.
However, trailing the Purple &
White 4-1 heading to the last of the
sixth inning on their home field Thursday evening, the host Blue Angels rallied to score six runs and deal the Lady
Chiefs a crushing 7-5 softball defeat at
Gallia Academy High School.
Micah Curfman’s run-scoring double
not only broke a 4-4 tie with two outs
in the last of the sixth, but it also broke
the collective hearts of the Lady Chiefs
(1-4 overall, 0-2 SEOAL), who dropped
their fourth-straight game.
The Lady Chiefs, who were beaten
10-0 on their home field by Warren on
Wednesday, took advantage of three
Gallipolis errors to break a 1-1 deadlock with three fourth-inning runs.
Logan came very close to beating a
Gallipolis team that had defeated Warren 5-3 last week and lost to defending SEOAL champion Jackson 5-3 on
Wednesday evening.
To say that Gallipolis has been a thorn
in Logan’s softball side in recent seasons
would be an understatement. Since beating the Blue Angels 1-0 in eight innings
for the 2008 SEOAL championship,
the Lady Chiefs have lost eight-straight
games to GAHS and have not won in the
French City since 2006.
Logan pitcher Faith Freeman helped
her own cause at the plate twice on
Thursday as Logan took that 4-1 lead.
Freeman singled, took second on a
passed ball, moved to third on a single
by Lainie Nakanishi and scored on a
Gallipolis error in the second. She then
singled and scored the first of Logan’s
three runs in the fourth.
A sacrifice fly by the Blue Angels’
Madie Burns scored Alex Brumfield,
who had singled, with the tying run in
the last of the third inning.
A Freeman single, a Gallipolis miscue and a Nicole Beck single put runners on first and third in the fourth
frame. Two outs later, the Lady Chiefs
were able to score three times on two
GA errors, a fielder’s choice and a
passed ball to make it 4-1.
Freeman then came back and retired
the side in order in both the fourth and
fifth frames before the Blue Angels (54, 2-1) rallied to win it in the sixth.
Violet Pelfrey, who would earn the
pitching victory, got an infield single
to open the inning and was replaced by
pinch-runner Ashleigh Bennett. Jenna
Meadows singled Bennett to second,
then Maggie Westfall reached on a Logan error to fill the bases.
Freeman induced an infield ground
ball and Logan got a force play at the
plate for the first out, and the next
batter struck out. Two wild pitches
produced two Gallia Academy runs,
however, then a Logan outfield error
allowed Stanley to score the tying run.
Curfman then doubled to center to
score Brumfield with the lead run. A
Logan error cost the Lady Chiefs another tally, then Pelfrey singled — her
second knock of the inning — to plate
the final marker.
Lexi McBride coaxed a walk in the
top of the seventh and eventually scored
when Alyssa Zaayer singled and the ball
eluded a Gallipolis outfielder for an error, bringing the potential tying run to
the plate, but Pelfrey retired the final
two Logan batters to end the game.
Pelfrey, in earning the pitching victory, only walked one and struck out
eight in throwing 70 of 101 pitches for
strikes. All five Logan runs were unearned as the Angels committed five
errors on defense.
Curfman doubled and singled and
Pelfrey had a pair of singles for Gallipolis, with Westfall, Brumfield, Meadows
and Burns all contributing a single.
Freeman deserved a far-better fate
than taking the mound loss. She threw
73 of 103 pitches for strikes, striking
out six and walking only one, but six of
Gallia Academy’s seven runs were unearned as the result of three key Lady
Chiefs errors.
Freeman and Nakanishi both singled
twice for the Lady Chiefs and Beck and
Zaayer each added a base rap.
Craig Dunn is the SEOAL media representative
and the sports editor of the Logan Daily News in
Logan, Ohio.
Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
Meigs freshman Cody Bartrum (11) slides into second for a stolen base, during the third inning of Marauders 4-0 loss
to Wellston, Friday night in Rocksprings.
Golden Rockets hand Meigs its first loss, 4-0
By Alex Hawley
Monday, April 14
Baseball
South Gallia at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Buffalo at Hannan, 5 p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Waterford, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Softball
South Gallia at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Hannan at Van, 5:30
Point Pleasant at Sissonville, 5:30
River Valley at Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Tennis
Athens at Gallia Academy, 4:30
Tuesday, April 15
Baseball
Southern at River Valley, 5 p.m.
East Chester at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Trimble, 5 p.m.
Softball
Southern at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Roane County at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Trimble, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg South, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Oak Hill, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
River Valley, Gallia Academy at South Gallia, 4:30
Meigs at Jackson, 4:30
Hannan, Wahama at Point Pleasant, 4:30
Eastern at Vinton County, 4 p.m.
Tennis
Marietta at Gallia Academy, 4:30
Huntington St. Joe at Point Pleasant, 4:30
Wednesday, April 16
Baseball
Warren at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Wahama at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Chapmanville at Point Pleasant, 6:30
Southern vs. White Oak at URG, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Coal Grove, 5 p.m.
Softball
Warren at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Wahama at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Southern at Roane County, 5 p.m.
Hannan at Cabell Midland JV (DH), 5:30
Eastern at Trimble, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Coal Grove, 5 p.m.
Tennis
Valley at Gallia Academy, 4:30
Point Pleasant at Huntington St. Joe, 4:30
ahawley@civitasmedia.com
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — After double-digit shutout wins in consecutive games the Marauders got a
taste of their own medicine Friday night.
After outscoring opponents 30-to-4 this season the
Meigs baseball team was stymied by Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division guest Wellston, as the Golden
Rockets claimed a 4-0 victory in Meigs County.
Wellston (5-1, 2-0 TVC Ohio) leadoff batter Jake
Waldron walked to start the game and after a pair of
WHS singles was walked home for the first run. Nick
Cox was doubled home by Dustin Downard in the
fourth inning, while Waldron and Caleb Stanley were
doubled home by Tyler Walton in the top of the fifth.
Meigs got its first two hits of the evening in the
bottom of the fifth with a Chase Whitlatch double and
a Taylor Rowe single, but WHS got out of the jam as
Waldron struck out the final two batters of the inning.
The Maroon and Gold advanced three runners into
scoring position over the final two frames but couldn’t
bring them home and Wellston took the 4-0 decision.
Waldron was the winning pitcher, as he allowed just
three hits in a complete game shutout effort. Meigs drew
seven walks but Waldron struck out 10 Marauders.
Ty Phelps suffered the loss after allowing four runs
in on three hits and four walks in four-plus innings.
Chase Whitlatch pitched three innings in relief and
allowed just two hits. Phelps struck out 10 Rockets,
while Whitlatch fanned three.
The Wellston offensive effort was paced by Downard with two hits, followde by Walton, Stanley
and Jordan Arthur with one each. Walton drove in
two runs, while Justin Rafferty and Downard each
marked one RBI. Waldron led the way with two runs
Meigs senior Bradley Helton (2) records an out on first base
during the Golden Rockets 4-0 victory over MHS on Friday.
scored, followed by Stanley and Cox with a run each.
The Marauders were led by Whitlatch with a
double, followed by Rowe and Michael Davis with a
single each. Cody Bartrum, Damon Jones and Whitlatch each stole a base in the setback.
The Maroon and Gold will look for revenge on
April 21, when they visit Wellston.
Lady Eagles stymie Southern, 2-0
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com
TUPPERS PLAINS, — I guess you
could say it was just a great night.
Eastern junior Grace Edwards
tossed a no-hitter and struck out
11 batters Thursday night, but the
exceptional Lady Eagle also got it
done on offense, hitting a homerun
and helping her team to a 2-0 victory
over Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division guest Southern.
The Lady Eagles (6-0, 3-0 TVC Hock-
ing) broke through with a Jess Coleman
double in the bottom of the second, for
the game’s first hit. Hannah Hawley
drove in Coleman with a two-out single,
giving EHS the 1-0 advantage.
After three scoreless, hitless innings
Grace Edwards hit a one-out, solo
homerun to give the Green and Gold
a little insurance. Southern (3-2, 3-1)
reached base for the first time in the
game in the top of the seventh, via error and base on balls, but failed to score
and Eastern took the 2-0 triumph.
Grace Edwards was the winning
pitcher with a complete game, no-hit,
shutout, in which she allowed just one
base on balls and struck out 11.
Despite surrendering just two
runs, three hits and a walk in seven
innings, Jordan Huddleston was the
losing pitcher of record on the night.
Edwards led the EHS offense with
a homerun and a stolen base, followed
by Coleman with a double and a run
scored and Hawley with an RBI single.
These teams will meet again on
April 25, in Racine.
�Page B2 LîSunday Times Sentinel
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Sunday, April 13, 2014
Point Pleasant doubles up Huskies, 10-5
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The
Point Pleasant baseball team picked
up its third straight win Friday night
following a 10-5 victory over visiting
Herbert Hoover in a non-conference
matchup in Mason County.
The Big Blacks (8-3) found themselves tied at two after an inning of
play, but the hosts responded with
a three-run explosion in the second
to secure a permanent lead at 5-2.
The Huskies (9-2) answered with a
run in the fourth to close to within
two runs at 5-3, but ulitmately never
came closer the rest of the way.
PPHS erupted for five runs in
the bottom of the fifth to secure a
commanding 10-3 cushion, and the
guests mustered only two more runs
in the sixth — which wrapped up the
five-run outcome.
Point Pleasant outhit HHHS by a
13-7 overall margin and committed
only one of the four errors in the
contest. The Big Blacks left seven
runners on base, while the guests
stranded five in the setback.
Austen Toler was the winning
pitcher of record after allowing five
runs, six hits and two walks over
six innings while striking out 14.
Cody Bowen suffered the loss after
surrendering five runs, six hits and
one walk over two frames without a
strikeout.
Evan Potter led the hosts with
three hits, followed by Toler, Alex
Somerville, Levi Russell and Cody
Sockwell with two safeties apiece.
Abe Stearns and Trevor Porter also
had a hit each for the victors.
Toler produced a team-high three
RBIs, while Potter and Gage Buskirk
each drove in two runs. Somerville
scored a team-best three runs and
Sockwell also scored twice.
Tommy Parrish paced Herbert
Hoover with two hits and two RBIs.
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
PPHS junior designated hitter Bruce McDermitt connects for
a hit during the first inning of the Big Blacks’ 13-6 victory over
Spring Valley, Thursday night in Point Pleasant.
Point Pleasant pounds
Timberwolves, 13-6
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — A fast start propels
the Big Blacks to victory.
The Point Pleasant baseball team marked six runs in
the opening frame of Thursday night’s 13-6 PPHS victory over non-conference
guest Spring Valley.
The Big Blacks (7-3) had
a 6-0 cushion after the first
inning of play and both
teams marked one run in
the second frame. Spring
Valley (3-5) finally found
its grove in the third inning
and marked four runs, only
to be countered by three
Point Pleasant runs in the
bottom of the inning.
Both teams marked a run
in the fourth frame, while
the Red, White and Black
secured the 13-6 win with a
two-run sixth inning.
Alex Somerville earned
the pitching victory for
PPHS after allowed seven
runs, four earned, on seven
hits and one walk. Somerville struck out eight batters in six innings of work.
Abe Stearns threw one inning on the mound in relief
and struck out two batters.
Aaron Hamm suffered
the setback after allowing six runs on four walks
and two hits in .1 inning
of work. Austin McCloud
came in a relief effort and
surrendered seven runs on
seven hits and six walks,
while striking out two.
Levi Russell paced PPHS
with three hits, followed
by Bruce McDermitt with
two. Cody Sockwell, Austen
Toler, Evan Potter and Gage
Buskirk each marked one
hit, hwile McDermitt had
a team best three runs batted in. Sockwell, Potter and
Russell each marked two
RBIs, while Buskirk, and
Jeremy Tate each had one.
Toler, Potter, Russell and
Trevor Porter each scored
two runs, while Somerville,
Matt Richardson, McDermitt, Tate and Kaleb Beckner
crossed the plate one time
apiece. Toler stole two bases
to lead PPHS, while Somerville, Buskirk and Richardson
each had one steal.
The Timberwolves were
led by Tyler Robertson
and Daniel Brandon with
two hits each, while Zach
Harvey, Sam Brodey and
Casey Kelly each marked
one hit. Robertson drove
in two runs, while Brandon
and Kelly each posted one
RBI. Brodey, Brandon, McCloud, Colby Webb, Greg
Herbert, Mason Brubeck
and Jonah Wellman each
scored a run in the game,
while Brubeck stole a base.
These teams are scheduled to meet again on May
9, in Huntington.
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By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com
BELPRE, Ohio — The comeback attempt came up just
short.
The Eastern baseball fell just short of completing a
come from behind win, as the Eagles fell to Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division host Belpre, Thursday night in
Washington County.
The host Golden Eagles marked seven runs over the
first three innings and led by six. Eastern (1-5, 0-4) rallied
to take the 9-7 lead after the top of the sixth inning but
Belpre tied the game in the bottom half of the frame. EHS
marked one run in the seventh but Belpre scored twice to
squeak out the 11-10 triumph.
Christian Speelman led the Green and Gold with four
hits, followed by Cameron Richmond with three. Matthew Durst, Tyler Morris and Tyler Barber each marked
two hits in the setback, while Brandon Coleman had one
hit in the setback.
Speelman, Richmond and Zack Scowden each scored
two runs, while Tyler Morris, Coleman, Barber and Durst
each crossed the plate one time. Speelman drove in a
team-high three runs.
Brennan Ferrell, Ryan Epperly and Hayden Plummer
each marked two hits to lead the Orange and Black.
These teams will meet again on April 23 in Tuppers
Plains.
Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
Point Pleasant catcher Rebekah Darst, left, awaits a throw to the plate as Logan’s Kelsey Ward slides in safely with
the eventual game-winning run in the seventh inning of Friday night’s softball contest in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
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By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The more things
change, the more they stay the same.
For the second time this season, the Logan softball team squeaked out a one-run decision over Point
Pleasant after claiming a 5-4 road victory Friday
night in a non-conference matchup in Mason County.
The host Lady Knights (8-4) had their four-game
winning streak snapped while also being swept by
the unbeaten Lady Wildcats (13-0), who claimed a
1-0 decision at LHS on March 28. PPHS outhit the
guests by 9-7 overall margin, but also committed
four of the five errors in the contest.
Logan claimed a brief 1-0 lead in the top of the
third, but Point countered with two runs in its half
of the third to take a 2-1 edge. Elizabeth Bateman led
off the inning with a bunt single, then Payton Fetty
walked to put two aboard with nobody out.
Karissa Cochran followed with a two-out single to
right, plating both Bateman and Fetty for a one-run
edge after three complete.
Two errors and a bunt single by Chastidy Wiley
allowed Summer Collins to score in the top of the
fifth, which tied the game at two apiece.
The Lady Wildcats took the lead for good in the
seventh as Kelsey Ward led off the inning with a
pinch-hit double. Ward later scored after a bunt by
Hannah Kolovich allowed her to reach safely, then
Wiley singled to put runners at the corners with one
away.
Aaron Ward doubled home Kolovich for a 4-2 lead,
then Sam Curry plated Wiley with a sacrifice fly to
left for a 5-2 advantage through six-and-a-half innings of play.
Point Pleasant responded with a pair of one-hits
by Rebekah Darst and Makinley Higginbotham, then
Cochran delivered a two-RBI single and advanced to
second on the throw to the plate — making it a 5-4
contest with one out.
Logan starter Hana Sedlock wrapped up her
complete-game decision by recording a strikeout an Point Pleasant second baseman Cami Hesson (4) releases
inducing a pop-up over the next plate appearances, a quick throw to first base during the sixth inning of Friday
night’s softball game against Logan in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
allowing LHS to secure the one-run triumph.
Sedlock allowed four runs, nine hits and two walks
over seven innings while striking out seven in the Megan Hammond and Michaela Cottrill with a safevictory, while Cochran took the tough-luck loss af- ty each. Cochran drove in all four RBIs for PPHS,
ter surrendering five runs, seven hits and zero walks while Fetty, Darst, Higginbotham and Bateman each
over seven frames while fanning seven. Both pitch- scored a run.
ers allowed four earned runs.
Wiley paced Logan with three hits, while Curry,
Darst and Cochran led the hosts with two hits Kiana Hill and both Wards added a safety apiece to
apiece, followed by Fetty, Higginbotham, Bateman, the winning cause.
(65D[î@R6?D6îDECF88=6Dî
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Holland leads Riverside Seniors after two weeks
CINCINNATI
(AP)
— The Reds’ season has
started a lot like the last
one ended, with a lot of
losses set up by a lot runners stranded on base.
All they can do is ride
it out.
Cincinnati has lost all
of its three series to open
the season, with its lack
of clutch hitting the main
culprit. The Reds (3-6)
have stranded 71 runners
in their nine games and are
batting only .214 with runners in scoring position.
With runners on scoring
position and two outs, it’s
.129.
And it’s the main reason
they’re taking up the rear
in the NL Central.
“Who would have said
that?” pitcher Homer Bailey said. “I don’t think anybody in here would have
expected that or could
Staff Report
MASON, W.Va. — Former Point
Pleasant mayor Russ Holland leads
the field after two weeks of play in
the first half of the 2014 Riverside
Senior Men’s Golf League currently
going on at Riverside Golf Course in
Mason County.
Holland has a total of 27 points
through the two events, which is a
half-point more than current runnerup Willis Korb (26.5). Paul Maynard
is currently third with 26 points.
See REDS | B3
Tuesday’s cold weather kept the at-
tendance down to 46 players, which
made for 12 teams and 12 points
available. There were 10 four-man
teams and two three-man squads at
the second event of the young season.
The low score of the day was recorded by the trio of Dewey Smith,
Bob Edgar and Catbird Roush,
who collectively fired a 7-under
par round of 63.
The quartet of Buford Brown,
Rick Handley, Fred Pyles and Russ
Holland were second with a 6-under par effort of 64, while Paul
Maynard, Roger Putney and Jack
Ocheltree placed third with a 4-under par effort of 66.
The closest to the pin winners
were Jim Turley on the ninth hole
and Willis Korb on No. 14.
The current top-10 standings
through two weeks are: Russ Holland
(27.0), Willis Korb (26.5), Paul Maynard (26.0), Roger Putney (24.5),
Gary Roush and Dewey Smith (24.0),
Carl Cline and Jack Fox (21.0), and
Dave Biggs, J.J. Hemsley, Robert
Brooks and Randy Simpkins (20.0).
�Sunday, April 13, 2014
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Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&286î�
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Ex-coach Tressel applies to lead Youngstown St.
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) — Former Ohio State
football coach Jim Tressel has applied to become president at Youngstown State less than a month after he
applied for the same position at Akron.
The Youngstown Vindicator reports that the head
of a firm leading Youngstown State’s search said that
Tressel applied for the post Friday.
A message seeking comment with AGB Search’s
president was not immediately returned.
Tressel coached at Youngstown State before leaving
for Ohio State where he was forced out following a
scandal that led to NCAA sanctions.
He has worked as an administrator at Akron for two
years. He applied in mid-March for the president’s job
there, saying he had 35 years of experience in higher
education.
West Virginia, Georgia
Southern to meet in 2015
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) — West Virginia will
play Georgia Southern in the 2015 football season in
Morgantown.
WVU athletic director Oliver Luck announced the
schedule addition Thursday. The Mountaineers also
will play nonconference games against Liberty and
Maryland in 2015, also in Morgantown.
Bengals sign DE Sam Montgomery
CINCINNATI (AP) — The Bengals added to their
defensive line depth on Friday by signing free agent
Sam Montgomery, an end who was Houston’s thirdround pick last year.
Montgomery was listed as a linebacker by the Texans. He was inactive for the first seven games and was
waived on Oct. 22. Oakland signed him to the practice
squad in December.
The 6-foot-3, 262-pound lineman played three seasons at LSU, getting 19 sacks during his career. He
helped the Tigers reach the 2011 national title game,
won by Alabama.
Pitino, ex-teammate sought mercy for Farmer
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — University of Louisville
basketball coach Rick Pitino asked a federal judge to
show mercy when sentencing ex-Kentucky Agriculture
Commissioner Richie Farmer and allow him to “become a productive citizen again” after the basketball
star’s fall from grace.
Pitino’s letter is among 29 dispatches sent to U.S.
District Judge Gregory Van Tatenhove before Farmer’s
sentencing in January for abusing public office. Farmer is serving a 27 month sentence.
Van Tatenhove unsealed the letters Thursday evening.
Among the family and friends writing letters was
former Kentucky basketball star and current University of Florida assistant coach John Pelphrey. Pitino
coached both men at Kentucky from 1989 through
1992.
Farmer and Pelphrey were part of a Wildcats team
that earned the school its first postseason trip after a
two-year ban for NCAA infractions.
Review: UNC athlete literacy findings flawed
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) — Three outside experts
hired by the University of North Carolina say research
data from a reading specialist doesn’t support claims
of low athlete literacy levels at the school.
The university hired Georgia State, Minnesota and
Virginia professors to review Mary Willingham’s findings. Willingham told CNN in January that her research of 183 football or basketball players from 200412 found 60 percent reading at fourth- to eighth-grade
Reds
From Page B2
have even conceived it in
their mind. We just need to
be better.”
It’s reminiscent of the
last week of the 2013
season, when Cincinnati
couldn’t hit and couldn’t
win. The Reds lost their
last six games, including
the wild-card playoff in
Pittsburgh. They failed to
score more than three runs
in any of those games during the slide, which cost
manager Dusty Baker his
job.
They’re at it again under
Bryan Price, who was promoted from pitching coach.
The Reds have scored 27
runs, the third-fewest in
the National League. Their
.234 team batting average
ranks 11th in the league.
“We’re running our guys
out there,” Price said. “The
core guys, these are the
guys that when the season
is over, they’re going to
have their numbers.”
For now, they’re trying
to get healthy and get it
together.
The Reds opened the
season with eight players
on the disabled list, the
most in the majors. Catcher Devin Mesoraco was
the only missing regular,
and Brayan Pena has done
well as his fill-in, batting
.353. But leadoff hitter
Billy Hamilton is batting
.192, Joey Votto .250 with
only one RBI, Jay Bruce
.188 with a team-high eight
RBIs, Zack Cozart .038.
While the everyday
lineup has been spared,
the injuries have been felt
deeply in a bullpen which
has been missing closer Aroldis Chapman, alternate
closer Jonathan Broxton
and left-handed setup man
Sean Marshall. Broxton returned this week.
levels and roughly 10 percent below a third-grade level.
In a report released Friday, one expert estimated
about 7 percent of athletes from Willingham’s research
read at fourth- to eighth-grade levels. The school says
the data included scores for 176 athletes, including
baseball and volleyball players.
Willingham has stood by her findings and said in a statement Friday she needed time before making “a full response.”
Penn State’s John Urschel wins Sullivan Award
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Penn State offensive line-
man John Urschel won the Sullivan Award on Friday
night as the country’s top amateur athlete.
The football star edged fellow Florida track and
field athlete Cory Ann McGee and Nebraska volleyball
player Kelsey Robinson for the award presented by the
Amateur Athletic Union
The 6-foot-3, 315-pound guard was an all-Big Ten selection and third-team AP All-American. He has a Master’s degree in math and won the William V. Campbell
Trophy as college football’s top scholar-athlete.
Swimmer Missy Franklin won the award last year.
SUNDAY EVENING
BROADCAST
3
(WSAZ)
4
(WTAP)
6
(WSYX)
7
(WOUB)
8
(WCHS)
10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
6 PM
WSAZ News
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Inside
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6:30
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Newsnight
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6 PM
6:30
SUNDAY, APRIL 13
7 PM
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Dateline NBC
American Dream Builders
"Modern Modulars" (N)
Dateline NBC
American Dream Builders
"Modern Modulars" (N)
America's Funniest Home Once Upon a Time "The
Videos (N)
Jolly Roger" (N)
Antiques Rd. "Kansas City Call the Midwife Julienne
(Hour Two)" A beauty book and Trixie help a pregnant
by Madam C.J. Walker.
prison inmate. (N)
America's Funniest Home Once Upon a Time "The
Videos (N)
Jolly Roger" (N)
60 Minutes
The Amazing Race "The
Gladiators Are Here" (N)
Bob's
American
The
Family Guy
Burgers (N) Dad (N)
Simpsons (N) (N)
Secrets of Selfridges H.G. Call the Midwife Julienne
Selfridge changed the way and Trixie help a pregnant
Londoners shopped.
prison inmate. (N)
60 Minutes
The Amazing Race "The
Gladiators Are Here" (N)
7 PM
7:30
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8:30
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9:30
10:30
Resurrection "Home" (N)
Crisis "Designated Allies"
(N)
Crisis "Designated Allies"
(N)
Revenge "Allegiance" (N)
Masterpiece Classic "Mr.
Selfridge" (N)
The Bletchley Circle "Blood
on Their Hands" 1/2 (N)
Resurrection "Home" (N)
Revenge "Allegiance" (N)
The Good Wife "A Material
World" (N)
Cosmos: Odyssey "Deeper,
Deeper, Deeper, Still" (N)
Masterpiece Classic "Mr.
Selfridge" (N)
The Mentalist "Silver Wings
of Time" (N)
Eyewitness News 5 at 10
p.m.
The Bletchley Circle "Blood
on Their Hands" 1/2 (N)
Believe "Sinking" (N)
The Good Wife "A Material The Mentalist "Silver Wings
World" (N)
of Time" (N)
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
Funniest Home Videos
18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
24 (FXSP) Champions Tennis PowerShares Series
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
Baseball Tonight (L)
26 (ESPN2) (5:30) 30 for 30
SportsCenter
27 (LIFE)
29
(FAM)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39
(AMC)
40 (DISC)
42
(A&E)
52 (ANPL)
57
(OXY)
58
60
61
(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)
62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM
400 (HBO)
450 (MAX)
500 (SHOW)
The Devil's Advocate (‘97, Susp) Al Pacino, Charlize Theron, Keanu Reeves. TVMA
WPT Poker
Best of Pride Fight. (N)
Edge MD (N) Dumbest
MLB Baseball Boston Red Sox vs. New York Yankees Site: Yankee Stadium (L)
NHRA Drag Racing Nationals Site: Zmax Dragway -- Concord, N.C.
(5:00) Foreclosed (2013,
Death Clique A friendship rivalry between three high
Drop Dead Diva "Cheers & Death Clique (‘14, Dra)
Drama) TVPG
school girls escalates to a girl’s death. TV14
Jeers" (N)
Barbara Alyn Woods. TV14
Despicable Me A criminal mastermind uses three Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs An inventor
A Bug's Life (‘98,
orphans in his grand scheme to steal the moon. TVPG
accidentally launches a food-making machine into the at... Ani) Dave Foley. TVG
Bar Rescue "Grandpa Got Bar Rescue "Twin vs. Twin" Bar Rescue "Grown Some Bar Rescue "Taxed Out in Catch a
Catch a
Run Over by His Grandkids"
Meatballs!"
Texas"
Contractor Contractor
Hathaway
Thunder.
Sam & Cat
Sam & Cat Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Law&O.:SVU "Alternate"
Law&O.:SVU "Blinded"
Law&O.:SVU "Paternity"
Law&O.:SVU "Confession" Law&O.:SVU "Loophole"
(5:45)
You, Me and Dupree Owen Wilson. TVPG
Wedding Crashers (‘05, Com) Vince Vaughn, Owen Wilson. TV14 Movie
CNN Newsroom
CNN Special Report
Anthony Bourdain (N)
Anthony "Punjab, India" (N) Inside Man "Celebrity" (N)
(5:15)
Dreamgirls (‘06, Mus) Jamie Foxx. TV14
The Help (2011, Drama) Viola Davis, Octavia L. Spencer, Emma Stone. TV14
Forrest Gump (‘94, Comedy/Drama) Sally Field, Gary Sinise, Tom Hanks. A simple TURN "Who by Fire" (N)
Mad Men "Time Zones"
(SP) (N)
man finds himself in extraordinary situations throughout the course of his life. TV14
Amish Mafia "End of Days" Naked "Damned in Africa" Naked "Paradise Lost"
Naked "Mayan Misery" (N) Naked "The Pain Forest" (N)
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck Dy
Duck Dynasty "Aloha,
Duck
Duck
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
"Samurai Si" Robertsons!"
Dynasty
Dynasty
(2:00) To Be Announced
River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters (N)
Rocky Mt. Hunters (N)
Snapped "Jodi Arias"
Snapped "Kalila Taylor"
Snapped "Joann Helfrich" Snapped "Marjorie Orbin" Snapped "Alice Trappler"
(N)
CSI "Death Pool 100"
CSI: Miami "Going Under" CSI:Miami "Death Eminent" CSI "Curse of the Coffin"
CSI: Miami "Darkroom"
Maid in Manhattan (‘02, Com) Jennifer Lopez. TV14 Divas "On Brie's Bad Side" Divas "Inhale, Exhale" (N) E&J (N)
Chrisley (N)
(:10) Hot In
(:50) Gilligan (:20) Gilligan (:55) Gilligan's Island
(:25) Gilligan Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Life Below Zero
Life Below Zero "The
Life Below Zero "Hell and Inside the Hunt This special goes inside the public
"Checkmate"
Chase"
High Water"
manhunt for the Boston Bombers. (N)
(4:00) IndyCar Auto Racing Mecum Prime "Kissimmee" NHL Top 10 NHL Live!
NHL Hockey Dallas Stars vs. Phoenix Coyotes (L)
(5:00) Barrett-Jackson "Palm Beach" (N)
WPT Poker Alpha8 Florida UFC Road to Octagon (N)
Pawn "The Pawn "Hole Pawn Stars Pawn "Bad Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn "Head No Man's Land "Last Legs"
King's Bling" in One"
to the Bone" "Just Shoe It"
"Whodunit?" Games"
(N)
Housewives Atlanta
Atlanta Social (N)
Atlanta "Final Curtain Call" (SF) (N)
Married to Medicine (N)
Atlanta
(4:30)
Lean on Me TVPG
Daddy's Little Girls (‘07, Rom) Idris Elba, Gabrielle Union. TVPG
UNCF "2014" (N)
House Hunt. House
House Hunt. House
Life (N)
Life (N)
Bargain Hunt Bargain Hunt Alaska (N)
Alaska (N)
(3:00) Pirates
Raiders of the Lost Ark Harrison Ford. An archaeologist and a Indiana Jones & the Temple of Doom Indiana Jones
of the Cari... woman from his past search for the Ark of the Covenant in Egypt. TV14
searches for a village's lost magic stone & stumbles upon...
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
BROADCAST
3
(WSAZ)
4
(WTAP)
6
(WSYX)
7
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8
(WCHS)
10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WPBY)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE
10 PM
Pacific Rim (2013, Action) Charlie Hunnam, Rinko Kikuchi, Idris Game of Thrones "The Lion
and the Rose" (N)
Transporter Elba. A former pilot and trainee are paired up to operate a weapon and
2 TV14
save the world. TVMA
(:10)
Admission (2013, Comedy) Paul Rudd, Gloria
(:05) Broken City (‘12, Cri) Russell Crowe, Catherine ZetaReuben, Tina Fey. A Princeton admissions officer believes Jones, Mark Wahlberg. After being framed by the Mayor,
to have found the child she gave up for adoption. TVPG
an ex-cop seeks revenge and redemption. TV14
(:55) The Cold Light of Day A man's family House of
Shameless "Lazarus"
Nurse Jackie CalifornicaLies
is kidnapped while on a trip and he is
"Sink or
tion "Levon"
confronted by those responsible. TVPG
"Joshua"
Swim" (N)
(N)
(5:15)
(:45)
MONDAY EVENING
The fill-in relievers have
struggled.
Cincinnati’s
starting rotation ranks
third in the NL with a 3.05
ERA, the bullpen only 11th
at 5.14.
While they get healthy,
the Reds have lost a lot of
opportunities. Six of their
first nine games have been
against the St. Louis Cardinals, the defending NL
champions. They hoped
to make some inroads, but
dropped four of the six.
“Well, 2-4 doesn’t sound
that great to me, to be honest with you,” Price said.
“Even with our disabled
list as it is, I don’t think
anyone here has felt like
we’re a lesser team going
into this series. Other people would argue that it’s the
defending National League
champions and we have
some injuries.
“I’d have hoped certainly
to do better than we have
in these first six games. It’s
not a great feeling of relief
or that there was any success.”
The combination of
struggling lineup and
creaky bullpen has led to
a lot of close losses. The
Reds are 2-3 in one-run decisions, 0-2 in two-run decisions. Last year, Cincinnati was 27-22 in one-run
games.
There’s a recent precedent that provides hope.
The Reds also started
the 2012 season with a
3-6 mark. They went on to
lose eight of their first 12
games with an offense that
could barely score. Cincinnati was held to two runs
or less in seven of its first
12 games.
The Reds broke out and
went on to win 97 games.
They lost a five-game series to eventual World Series champion San Francisco in the opening round of
the playoffs.
10 PM
Believe "Sinking" (N)
6 PM
6:30
WSAZ News
3
WTAP News
at Six
ABC 6 News
at 6
Moyers and
Company
NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Nightly
Business
Report
Eyewitness ABC World
News at 6
News
10TV News CBS Evening
at 6 p.m.
News
The Big Bang Two and a
Theory
Half Men
BBC World Nightly
News:
Business
America
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening
6:00 p.m.
News
6 PM
6:30
10:30
Silicon "The Veep "The
Cap Table" Choice" (N)
(N)
The Internship (2013,
Comedy) Owen Wilson, Rose
Byrne, Vince Vaughn. TVPG
Years of Living
Dangerously (N)
MONDAY, APRIL 14
7 PM
7:30
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
Judge Judy Entertainment Tonight
Jeopardy!
Wheel of
Fortune
Modern
The Big Bang
Family
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
13 News at Inside
7:00 p.m.
Edition
7 PM
7:30
8 PM
8:30
9 PM
9:30
Voice "The Playoffs Continue" The top 20 artists perform
in front of the coaches and two will be eliminated. (N)
Voice "The Playoffs Continue" The top 20 artists perform
in front of the coaches and two will be eliminated. (N)
Dancing With the Stars (N)
Antiques Roadshow
Antiques Roadshow
"Kansas City (Hour Three)" "Minneapolis (Hour One)"
(N)
Dancing With the Stars (N)
2 Broke Girls Friends Lives
(N)
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Bones "The Cold in the
Case" (N)
Antiques Roadshow
"Kansas City (Hour Three)"
(N)
2 Broke Girls Friends Lives
(N)
(N)
8 PM
8:30
Mike &
Mom (N)
Molly (N)
The Following "The
Reaping" (N)
Antiques Roadshow
"Minneapolis (Hour One)"
Mike &
Molly (N)
9 PM
Mom (N)
9:30
10 PM
10:30
The Blacklist
The Blacklist
Castle "The Good, the Bad
and the Baby"
Independent Lens "The
Trials of Muhammad Ali" (N)
Castle "The Good, the Bad
and the Baby"
Person of Interest
"Razgovor (In Cyrillic)"
Eyewitness News
Independent Lens "The
Trials of Muhammad Ali" (N)
Person of Interest
"Razgovor (In Cyrillic)"
10 PM
10:30
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
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18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
Pre-game
MLB Baseball Pittsburgh Pirates vs. Cincinnati Reds Site: Great American Ball Park (L)
Postgame
Beer $ (N)
24 (FXSP) Shots (N)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
MLB Baseball Atlanta Braves vs. Philadelphia Phillies Site: Citizens Bank Park (L)
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26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption SportsCenter
WNBA Draft (L)
NBA Coast Live look-ins to games across the country.
27 (LIFE)
29
(FAM)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39
(AMC)
40 (DISC)
42
(A&E)
52 (ANPL)
57
(OXY)
58
60
61
(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)
62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM
400 (HBO)
450 (MAX)
500 (SHOW)
Bring It! "Battle in
Bring It! "The Wig is Off"
Bring It! "'Baby' Doll Don't Bring It! "Sunjai in
Bring It! "Street Battle"
Memphis"
Mean 'Baby'"
Stilettos"
The Middle The Middle Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs An inventor
A Bug's Life An ant searches for bugs who will
"Signals"
accidentally launches a food-making machine into the at... help save his colony and fight the grasshoppers. TVG
Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Grand Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops "In
Cops "Coast Cops "Coast
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
Thef Auto"
New Jersey" to Coast"
to Coast"
SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Sam & Cat Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
NCIS: LA "Vengeance"
NCIS: Los Angeles
WWE Monday Night Raw
Seinf. 2/2
Seinf. 1/2
Seinf. 2/2
Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang BamsBad (N)
(5:00) Sit.Room Situation
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
CNN Special Report
Castle
Castle "Murder, He Wrote" Castle
Dallas (N)
Dallas
(4:00)
Jerry Maguire
Forrest Gump (‘94, Comedy/Drama) Sally Field, Gary Sinise, Tom Hanks. A simple
Forrest Gump (‘94,
Tom Cruise. TVMA
man finds himself in extraordinary situations throughout the course of his life. TV14
Com/Dra) Tom Hanks. TV14
Lords of the Car Hoards
FastLoud "Jacked-Up Jeep" Fast N' Loud
Fast N' Loud (N)
Lords of the Car Hoards (N)
The First 48 "Hot Lot/ Blind Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck
Duck
Duck
Bates Motel "Presumed
Faith"
"Jerky Boys" "Samurai Si" "Fowl Play" Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Innocent" (N)
River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters: Lost
RivMon "American Killers" River Monsters
Rocky Mt. Hunters
My Best Friend's Wedding A woman tries to break up her
Can't Hardly Wait A student believes that he finally
My Best Friend's
best friend's wedding so she can marry him herself. TV14 has a chance to win the heart of the girl he loves. TV14
Wedding Julia Roberts. TV14
CSI "Collateral Damage"
CSI: Miami "Dissolved"
CSI: Miami "Out of Time" CSI "Hostile Takeover"
CSI: Miami "Bolt Action"
Total Divas "Inhale, Exhale" E! News
Fabulist (N) Fashion Police (N)
Fashion Police
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
Gilligan
(:35) Gilligan (:10) Gilligan (:50) Ray
(:25) Loves Ray "Wallpaper" Loves Ray
Loves Ray
None of the The Numbers The Whale That Ate Jaws Cosmos: Odyssey "Hiding in Cosmos: Odyssey "Deeper, None of the None of the
Above
Game
the Light"
Deeper, Deeper Still" (N)
Above (N)
Above (N)
(5:30) FB Talk NHL Top 10 Racing Spartan Race
UCI Cycling Paris-Roubaix World Tour
America's Pre-game (L)
UFC FB (N) Insider
UFC's Road to the Octagon Boxing Golden Boy Rios vs. Cancio (L)
Swamp People "Devil at the Swamp People "Gator
Swamp People "Hexed"
Swamp People "Rumble in Down East Dickering "Risky
Door"
Ghost Town"
the Swamp" (N)
Business"
Housewives "Crossroads" The Real Housewives
H.Wives "Cold Shoulders" The Real Housewives (N)
Southern Charm (N)
106 & Park (N)
He's Mine Not Yours (‘11, Com) Gabrielle Dennis, Andrew Alexander. TV14
StayTogether ChocSun2
Love It or List It, Too
LoveList "Change Of Heart" Love It or List It
Love It or List It (N)
House Hunt. House
(5:30) Indiana Jones & the Temple of Doom Indiana
Metal
Metal
Warehouse 13 "Endless
Warehouse 13 "The Truth
Jones searches for a village's lost magic stone & stumble... Hurlant (N) Hurlant (N) Terror" (SP) (N)
Hurts"
6 PM
6:30
7 PM
7:30
Pitch Perfect (‘12, Comedy) Brittany Snow, Rebel
Wilson, Anna Kendrick. A freshman joins her university's
all-girls singing group and takes on their male rivals. TVPG
(5:00)
The Godfather (‘72, Dra) Al Pacino, James
Caan, Marlon Brando. A Mafia boss's innocent bookish son
gets involved in the family business after a mob hit. TV14
(:15)
Dark Skies (2013, Horror) Josh Hamilton,
Dakota Goyo, Keri Russell. A series of terrifying events
disrupts a peaceful suburban family's life. TV14
8 PM
8:30
(:45) Making
9 PM
9:30
10 PM
10:30
Man of Steel (‘13, Act) Amy Adams, Henry Cavill.
Silicon
An alien raised as a human confronts members of his race
Valley
who have come to claim Earth. TV14
The Conjuring (‘13, Hor) Vera Farmiga, Patrick
The Shining (‘80,
Wilson. A family is haunted and terrorized by a dark
Hor) Danny Lloyd, Jack
paranormal presence in their farmhouse. TVMA
Nicholson. TVMA
Years of Living
Nurse Jackie Californica- Nurse Jackie CalifornicaDangerously
"Sink or
tion "Levon" "Sink or
tion "Levon"
Swim"
Swim"
One Last
Hug (N)
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Page B4 LîSunday Times Sentinel
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Saturday, April 19 – 10:00 a.m.
16000 Canaanville Road, Athens, OH
DIRECTIONS: Take Rt. 50 east of Athens approximately 4 miles to Rt. 690
north, turn right immediately onto Canaanville Road, then left at Athens County
Engineer’s Office, watch for signs.
VEHICLE: 1992 GMC 3500 Truck w/auto crane on utility bed w/94,833 miles, 1990
Chevrolet Cheyenne C3500 Truck w/boom on utility bed w/42,063 miles, 1984 Ford
F350 Truck w/86,095 miles, 1984 International Bus,
TRACTOR & EQUIPMENT: Massey Ferguson 390 Tractor, 3-88 Massey Ferguson
383 Tractors (2-w/boom arm ditching heads & extra blades), Case 78 End Loader,
Case 73 End Loader W-18, Case 75 End Loader W-18, Case loader 4 cyl HD diesel
engine, Electric Crane, Hyster Roller, Woods & Bush Hog 3 pt. mount side mowers,
Lift & Bucket, Myers Snow Plow Blade, Brush Hog 6-way blade, disk, Fairmont
Hydraulic post pounder & puller, 5-Fuel Tanks w/pumps for back of Pickups,
Brush Bandit Model 100 Chipper, 11 hp. B & S motor, Yale 2 Ton chain hoist,
miscellaneous mowers and equipment, assortment of tires, several culvert pieces,
TOOLS: WinPower Generator Model G-15C180, Coats 30-40A Tire Machine,
Commercial Tire Machine, assortment of miscellaneous tires, Steel Cage for split
rim tires, Tire Balancer, Mohawk 1000 Pressure Washer, Mig Master 250 welder,
Lincoln LN-25 welder, Craftsman drill press, air compressor, floor jack, salamander
heater, kerosene heater, bolt bin, floor jack, steel toolbox, Master Mechanic tool box,
3-Husqvarna (51, 257, 262) & 1-Homelite chain saws, 2-fluid retractable hose reels,
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS: 100+ rocks of large cut sandstone from bridge
abatements, 4x4 electric light board, steel lockers & cabinet, desks, chairs,
miscellaneous electronic items, miscellaneous light fixtures, miscellaneous 55
gallon barrel stands, microwave, van bench seat, and numerous other items.
Statements made on day of auction take precedence over previously written material.
TERMS: Purchaser assumes responsibility for items when “SOLD” or upon delivery to
purchaser. All purchases are to be paid in full on day of auction and prior to removal from
premises. Payment by Credit Card, Cash or Check w/positive I.D. Checks over $1000
must have bank authorization of funds available. 4% buyers premium on all sales with a
4% discount for cash or check payment. All sales are final. Food will be available.
Athens County Engineer’s Office by Jeff Maiden
SHERIDAN’S SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE, LLC
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60496781
Sunday, April 13, 2014
Help Wanted General
Houses For Sale
Apartments/Townhouses
Big Country 99 is accepting
applications for an office assistant. Accounts receivable,
computer skills and general office duties. Applications may
be picked up at Big Country 99
studio at 303 8th Street, Point
Pleasant, WV.
Nice 2yr old 3BR House, Appliances, 2 1/2 BA, large detached Garage, Concrete
drive, privacy fence. Gallipolis
area. No Closing Cost, No
down payment if qualified
$110,000 740-446-9966
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Gallipolis Office Assistant with
strong writing,organizational
and research skills. This position requires critical thinking,
factual analysis,attention to detail and friendly customer service. Please send a resume
with references to Gallipolis
Daily Tribune c/o Box 321- 825
3rd Ave. Gallipolis,Ohio 45631.
Warehouse/Delivery Person
Needed, Full Time Position,
Apply in Person,
LifeStyle Furniture, 856 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, 9:30-5:00
Monday Thru Friday.
No Phone Calls Please
Land (Acreage)
2 Acres with a 3 Bdrm / 2 bath
mobile home, No Land Contract. Call 740-256-1087
Gallia Co. 22 acres in Vinton
$34,900 or 51 acres off SR218
$66,500! Meigs Co. Danville 9
acres $14,900 - more @
www.brunerland.com or call
740-441-1492, we gladly finance!
3 bedroom, Gallipolis City
area, No Pets, Deposit Required, 740-853-1101
Two houses for rent. 2 bedrooms have all appliances.
Must have deposit and first
months months rent. Located
on Crab Creek. Call (304)5326707 or (304)675-2897
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Sales
Apartments/Townhouses
EDUCATION
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
REAL ESTATE SALES
Houses For Sale
708 Walnut St, Racine.
$79,000. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath,
Garage, All kitchen appliances,
Washer and dryer. Sale by
owner. Open House - Friday,
Apr. 18th, 12 to 3 and Saturday, Apr. 19th, 10 to 2. 740949-3344.
IF YOU HAVE A ROCKING
CHAIR. WE HAVE THE
FRONT PORCH FOR YOU!
THE BEST VIEW IS FROM
THE FRONT PORCH LOOKING IN. BRICK HOME. NEW
METAL ROOF. LIVING
ROOM. LARGE FAMILY
ROOM, KITCHEN/DINING
AREA, BIRCH CABINETS.
APPLIANCES, 3 BEDROOMS.
1 1/2 BATHS. ONE CAR GARAGE. FULL BASEMENT.
CORNER LOT, CENTRAL AIR
AND HEAT,SECURITY SYSTEM, CABLE READY. IN
GALLIPOLIS CITY LIMITS.
PRICED TO SELL. QUALIFIED BUYERS ONLY. ALL
YOU HAVE TO DO IS BRING
YOUR ROCKING CHAIR AND
MOVE IN. MUST SEE TO APPRECIATE! CONTACT 1-740446-7874.
Houses For Rent
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 & 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570
Call
RESORT PROPERTY
ANIMALS
Livestock
Clean 2BR, 2 Bath,
Downtown Gallipolis,
NO PETS-NO SMOKING,
$600 mo. 740-446-9209
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 & 3 BR apts
$425 mo & up
sec dep $300 & up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Angus Bulls and Heifers High
EPD's over 40 yrs. Performance selection, Top bloodlines,
several show heifers, Priced
reasonably, Call 740)418-0633
see www.slaterunangus.com
AGRICULTURE
AUTOMOTIVE
Pleasant Valley Apartments is
now taking applications for 2,
3, & 4 Bedroom HUD Subsidized Apartments. Applications
are taken Monday through
Thursday 9:00 am-1:00pm. Office is located at 1151 Evergreen Drive, Point Pleasant,
WV. (304) 675-5806.
Autos for Sale
Auto For Sale Cavaliers, Saturns, Trucks, Hondas, SUVs,
Vans, Focus's, 740-446-7278
or 740-645-2287
Tractor Trailers
2002 30' FT.NOMAD TRAVEL
TRAILER with expando room.
Sleeps 8 Queen size bed,
bunk beds, Lg refrigerator, Excellent condition, fully
equipped. $6900/firm
740-992-4103
Professional Services
AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET
J & C TREE SERVICE
30 yrs experience, insured
No job too big or small
Free Estimates
MERCHANDSE FOR SALE
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Miscellaneous
Auctions
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new & rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528
Want To Buy
Auction Alert!
May 3rd 10:00AM Farm Sale
2362 East Bethel Church Road. Tractors, Farm Equipment, & Much More!!!
This auction represents the farm equipment of the Evans Cattle Company owned by
the Late Merrill and Charla Evans of Gallipolis, Ohio. The heirs of the farm have
decided to disburse & liquidate the majority of the farm machinery and equipment
and we are proud and honored to bring this great sale to the public. Don’t miss out
on this one!! Watch for sale bills spread throughout the region and check out
www.auctionzip.com for full listing, pictures, and updates!
Call Josh 740-645-6665 with any questions.
60495931
Notices
5¢ Coupon for Alumn. Cans
Paying Top Prices for
Copper, Brass, Aluminum, &
or Copper
Aluminum Cans.
Autos, Appliances,
s. Cash for Junk Au
Tin,
Iron.
n, S
Sheet Metal, & Scrap
p Ir
L & L SCRAP ME
METALS
ET
RECYCLING,
RE
ECYCLING, IN
INC
NC
Open Mon. thru Fri. 8 to 4
128
12
28 Texas Road, Gallipolis, OH
740-446-7300
We Offer
Off C
Commercia
i l&
We
Commercial
crap Container
Conta
Industrial Scrap
Service
Present this coupon for 5¢ per pound more�
at time of Sale. One coupon per customer.�
Expires on )-(%-1)
60488345
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842
We will pick up your Scap
Metal, broken down Cars, old
Stove, Dryer, & Washer, call
740-669-4240, 614-989-7341
�Sunday, April 13, 2014
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Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&286î��
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By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com
MERCERVILLE, Ohio — The
Eastern girls and River Valley boys
came away with top honors Tuesday night at the first-ever track
and field meet held at South Gallia
High School in Gallia County.
The Lady Eagles (87) beat out
River Valley (73) by 14 points
for the girls championship, while
the Raiders (97) bested runnerup Meigs (77) by 20 points to
capture the boys crown. Eastern,
River Valley and Meigs joined
host SGHS as the four teams at
the quad meet.
The Lady Eagles won nine
of the 16 events held, which included wins in both the 4x200m
(1:57.75) and 4x400m (4:24.24)
relays. EHS also won all four field
events held, as Kelsey Johnson
won the long jump (14-0), Maddie Rigsby won the high jump (52), Katie Keller won the shot put
(33-2) and Cassidy Cleland won
the discus (114-3.75).
Keri Lawrence won the 100m
hurdles with a mark of 16.87 seconds, while Taylor Palmer won
the 3200m run with a time of
12:47.72. Johnson had the other
EHS victory in the 300m hurdles
with a mark of 52.84 seconds.
The Lady Raiders scored five
victories in the 16 events, which
included wins in both the 4x100m
(52.96) and 4x800m (11:49.91)
relays. Ramsey Warren won both
the 100m (13.28) and 200m
(28.62) dashes, while Rachel Haddad captured first in the 800m run
with a mark of 2:46.34.
The Lady Marauders won two
titles as Gracie Hoffman won the
1600m run (5:49.73) and Kiera
McCourt captured first in the
400m dash (1:13.99). Meigs finished third at the quad with 66
points, while the Lady Rebels
were fourth with 18 points.
Both the Raiders and Marauders came away with seven event
championships on the boys side,
while Eastern scored the other
two crowns. The Eagles finished
third in the boys quad with 49
points, while the Rebels were
fourth with 18 points.
RVHS won both the 4x100m
(46.83) and 4x200m (1:38.93)
relay events and also claimed
one field event as John Qualls
won the long jump with a leap of
19 feet, 3.75 inches.
Andrew Moffett won both the
100m (11.73) and 200m (23.54)
dashes and Mark Wray came away
with the 400m dash title with
a time of 56.53 seconds. Ethan
Hersman also won the 3200m run
with a mark of 11:24.03.
The Marauders came away
with first place in both the
4x400m (3:50.91) and 4x800m
(9:33.55) relays and also scored
a field event win after Colton
Lilly claimed the high jump title
with a leap of 5 feet, 2 inches.
Austin Welch won both the
110m (no time available) and
300m (45.15) hurdles, while
Jake Swindell captured first in
both the 800m (2:15.83) and
1600m (4:59.19) runs.
Brent Welch had the lone wins
for Eastern after capturing first
place in both the shot put (41-
9.25) and discus (130-11.5) competitions.
Discus: 1. Cleland (E) 114-3.75; 2. Keller (E) 1033.5; 3. McGuire (RV) 92-6.75.
Quad at South Gallia High School
GIRLS
Team Scores: 1. Eastern 87; 2. River Valley 73; 3.
Meigs 66; 4. South Gallia 18.
4x800m Relay: 1. River Valley 11:49.91; 2. South
Gallia 12:26.02; 3. Meigs 12:34.43.
100m Hurdles: 1. Lawrence (E) 16.87; 2. Browning
(RV) 18.17; 3. Russell (M) 18.45.
100m Dash: 1. Warren (RV) 13.28; 2. Smith (RV)
13.98; 3. Hudson (M) 14.37.
4x200m Relay: 1. Eastern 1:57.75; 2. River Valley
2:02.18; 3. South Gallia 2:11.57.
1600m Run: 1. Hoffman (M) 5:49.73; 2. Michael
(E) 6:04.45; 3. Bailey (SG) 6:43.11.
4x100m Relay: 1. River Valley 52.96; 2. Eastern
54.49.
400m Dash: 1. McCourt (M) 1:13.99; 2. Michael
(E) 1:14.86; 3. Rowe (M) 1:16.60.
800m Run: 1. Haddad (RV) 2:46.34; 2. Michael
(E) 2:51.96; 3. Jackson (RV) 2:54.86.
300m Hurdles: 1. Johnson (E) 52.84; 2. Russell
(M) 53.08; 3. Browning (RV) 59.42.
200m Dash: 1. Warren (RV) 28.62; 2. English (M)
31.67; 3. Lauer (E) 35.85.
3200m Run: 1. Palmer (E) 12:47.72; 2. Hoffman
(M) 13:35.71; 3. Stewart (M) 15:26.07.
4x400m Relay: 1. Eastern 4:24.24; 2. River Valley
4:50.22; 3. Meigs 4:53.85.
Long Jump: 1. Johnson (E) 14-0; 2. English (M) 138.5; 3. Rowe (M) 13-6.
High Jump: 1. Rigsby (E) 5-2; 2. Pullins (E) 4-4; 3.
Wray (RV) 4-4.
Shot Put: 1. Keller (E) 33-2; 2. Cleland (E) 31-8; 3.
Johnson (SG) 30-4.
BOYS
Team Scores: 1. River Valley 97; 2. Meigs 77; 3.
Eastern 49; 4. South Gallia 18.
4x800m Relay: 1. Meigs 9:33.55; 2. River Valley
9:57.15; 3. Eastern 10:30.67.
110m Hurdles: 1. Welch (M); 2. Palmer (E); 3.
Mabe (RV).
100m Dash: 1. Moffett (RV) 11.73; 2. Geiger (SG)
11.84; 3. Facemyer (E) 11.87.
4x200m Relay: 1. River Valley 1:38.93; 2. Meigs
1:41.68; 3. Eastern 1:43.01.
1600m Run: 1. Swindell (M) 4:59.19; 2. Randolph
(RV) 4:59.73; 3. Hersman (RV) 5:07.73.
4x100m Relay: 1. River Valley 46.83; 2. Meigs
48.25; 3. Eastern 49.62.
400m Dash: 1. Wray (RV) 56.53; 2. Jackson (RV)
59.03; 3. Hamilton (RV) 59.23.
800m Run: 1. Swindell (M) 2:15.83; 2. Hamilton
(RV) 2:23.24; 3. Randolph (RV) 2:23.43.
300m Hurdles: 1. Welch (M) 45.15; 2. Palmer (E)
46.75; 3. Bickers (RV) 47.35.
200m Dash: 1. Moffett (RV) 23.54; 2. Qualls (RV)
24.67; 3. Jackson (RV) 25.20.
3200m Run: 1. Hersman (RV) 11:24.03; 2. Kemper
(RV) 11:27.99; 3. Mahr (M) 12:01.98.
4x400m Relay: 1. Meigs 3:50.91; 2. Eastern
3:56.62; 3. River Valley 4:02.89.
Long Jump: 1. Qualls (RV) 19-3.75; 2. Geiger (SG)
19-3.25; 3. Facemyer (E) 19-0.
High Jump: 1. Lilly (M) 5-2; 2. Facemyer (E) 5-0; 3.
Patterson (M) 4-6.
Shot Put: 1. Welch (E) 41-9.25; 2. White (SG) 3911.25; 3. Combs (M) 38-4.
Discus: 1. Welch (E) 130-11.5; 2. Tuttle (E) 1071.25; 3. Mack (M) 104-10.25.
#2C2F56CD
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Lady Marauders fall to Wellston, 12-2
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio — The
Lady Marauders ended up on the
wrong end of a stellar pitching performance Friday night, as the Maroon and Gold had just two hits in
a 12-2 Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division loss to the visiting Lady
Rockets of Wellston.
Meigs (4-3, 1-1 TVC Ohio) set
the Lady Rockets (4-3, 2-0) down
in order in the top of the first and
got a triple by Devyn Oliver to lead
off the bottom of the first. Oliver
scored on a wild pitch but Chelsea
McManaway struck out the next
three batters to leave the Lady Marauders with just a 1-0 advantage.
Wellston tied the game up in
the top of the second inning, with
three hits leading to Brittany Johnston crossing the plate. The Lady
Golden Rockets broke the game
open when they struck for five runs
in the third inning, highlighted by a
three-run triple by Carissa Darnell.
In the bottom of the fourth inning
Brook Andrus hit a one out triple
and scored on a passed ball to cut
the deficit to 6-2. After being held
scoreless for two innings Wellston
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
Meigs freshman Devyn Oliver fires
the ball to first base during the
Lady Marauders loss to Wellston,
Friday in Rocksprings.
added four runs in the sixth frame
and two in the seventh to secure the
12-2 victory.
McManaway was the winning
pitcher of record after allowing two
unearned runs on two hits, while
walking two and striking out 15,
including five in a row at one point.
Destinee Blackwell suffered the
loss after throwing five innings and
allowing six runs on nine hits and a
walk, while striking out two. Alliyah
Pullins pitched for two innings and
surrendered six runs on five hits
and three walks.
Andrus and Oliver each had a
triple and run scored for the Lady
Marauder offense.
Leianna Hanes led the Jackson
County natives with three hits, followed by Brittany Johnston, Brook
Carpenter and Chelsea McManaway with two apiece. Abby Scott,
Sydney Compston, Carissa Darnell,
Megan Daily and Madison Kilgour
marked one hit each in the win.
Scoring twice for the Lady Rockets were Scott, Johnston and Darnell, while Carpenter, McManaway,
Compston, Hanes, Daily and Amber
Gilliland each scored once. Darnell
drove in a game-high three runs,
followed byMcManaway with two.
Carpenter, Compston and Hanes
each added one RBI in the triumph.
Carpenter had a team-best two stolen bases, followed by Gilliland and
Dailey with one each.
Meigs will travel to Wellston for
the rematch on April 21.
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com
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By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com
TUPPERS
PLAINS,
Ohio — The Eastern baseball team dropped its third
straight decision Friday
night following a 14-8 setback to visiting Federal
Hocking in a Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division matchup in Meigs
County.
The host Eagles (1-6, 0-5
TVC Hocking) committed
seven errors and never led
in the contest, as the Lanc-
ers stromed out to an early
5-0 advantage and never
looked back.
FHHS (3-2, 2-2) led 4-0
after an inning of play
and added another run in
the top of the second, but
the Eagles answered with
three runs of their own
in the second to close to
within 5-3 through three
complete.
Fed Hock, however, extended its lead out to six
with a four-run fourth,
but the Green and White
answered with three runs
to pull back to within 9-6
through four full frames.
The Lancers plated five
runs in the fifth on one hit,
two walks and four errors,
allowing the guests to secure a 14-6 lead. Eastern
responded with two runs in
the sixth to close to within
14-8, but ultimately never
came closer the rest of the
way.
Fed Hock outhit the
hosts by a 12-3 overall
margin and also committed
four errors in the triumph.
Cameron Richmond took
the loss for EHS, while
Devin Maxey was the winning pitcher of record.
Christian Speelman led
EHS with two hits and four
RBIs, while Richmond also
added a hit. Eastern —
which received 11 walks —
also got three runs scored
from both Tyler Morris and
Zack Scowden.
Phillip Hoffman led the
Lancers with three hits,
followed by Maxie and
McCure with two safeties
apiece.
McARTHUR, Ohio — A gem on the mound leads
Meigs to its fourth straight win.
The Marauder baseball team got a huge lift from junior
pitcher Cameron Mattox on Thursday night, as he held
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division host Vinton County
to just one hit and helped the Maroon and Gold to a 10-0
triumph.
The Meigs (4-0, 2-0 TVC Hocking) leadoff batter, Chase
Whitlatch, reached first base on an error to start the game
and later came around to scored on a single by Cody Bartrum. The Maroon and Gold added two more runs in the
second inning, first when Trenton Cook singled home Ty
Phelps and when Bradley Helton brought Cook around
to score.
Meigs was at it again in the fourth inning when Damon
Jones singled home Michael Davis and then crossed the
plate on a single by Bartrum. MHS senior Taylor Rowe
added on to the lead with a two-run double in the top
of the sixth frame, scoring Whitlatch and Davis, while a
sacrifice fly by Luke Musser plated Rowe.
The first three Marauder batters were walked to start
the seventh frame, Kaileb Sheets and Helton both scored
to secure the 10-0 Meigs victory.
Cameron Mattox earned the win after throwing seven
innings of shutout baseball, in which he allowed just one
hit, one base on balls and one hit batter. Mattox struck
out 10 if the 25 batters he faced and didn’t surrender a hit
until the seventh inning.
Ward suffered the loss for Vinton County (0-4, 0-1) after allowing eight runs on 11 hits in six innings of work.
The Marauder offense was led by Bartrum with four
basehits, while Rowe and Whitlatch each marked two hits.
Jones, Phelps, Cook, Helton and Davis each added one hit
for the Maroon and Gold. Bartrum also led the Marauders on the base paths with three stolen bases, followed by
Phelps and Davis with two each, and Sheets and Helton
with one apiece.
Rowe’s three runs batted in led the Marauders, followed
by Bartrum with two. Whitlatch, Jones, Musser, Cook and
Helton each drove in one run, while Davis and Whitlatch
led Meigs with two runs scored each. Sheets, Jones, Rowe,
Phelps, Cook and Helton each scored once in the win.
Vinton County’s lone hit came off the bat of McIntire to
leadoff the seventh inning.
Meigs will look to sweep the Vikings on Cinco de Mayo,
when Vinton County visits Rocksprings.
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By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio
— The Eastern softball team
remained alone atop the league
standings after claiming 12-2
victory in five innings over visiting Federal Hocking Friday
night during a Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division matchup
at Don Jackson Field in Meigs
County.
The Lady Eagles (8-0, 5-0
TVC Hocking) never trailed in
the contest, as the hosts led 2-0
after an inning of play before
sending 10 batters to the plate in
the second — which resulted in
six runs on four hits and three errors for an 8-0 cushion after two
complete.
EHS scored two more runs in
the fourth to take a 10-0 lead,
but the Lady Lancers (2-2, 2-2)
answered with their only scores
in the fifth as the guests plated
two runs on two hits, a walk and
an error.
Eastern, however, had Sabra
Bailey start the bottom of the
fifth by reaching on an error,
then Paige Cline singled to put
the game-winning run on base
with nobody out. Grace Edwards
followed two batters later with a
bases-clearing double to wrap up
the mercy-rule decision.
The Lady Eagles outhit FHHS
by an 11-4 overall margin and
committed only one error in the
contest, compared to four by the
guests.
Edwards was the winning
pitcher of record after allowing
just two walks over five innings
while striking out six, while Ashton Cale suffered the loss after
surrendering one walk over 4.1
innings of work while striking
out zero.
Edwards led the hosts with
�
three hits, followed by Cline with
two safeties. Erin Swatzel, Jess
Coleman, Katlyn Barber, Amber
Moodispaugh, Hannah Bailey
and Hannah Hawley also had a
hit apiece for EHS. Cline, Edwards, Swatzel and Bailey each
scored twice in the triumph.
Cobb led Fed Hock with two
hits, while Cale and Glass added
a hit apiece for the Lady Lancers.
Hatfield and Glass also scored a
run each in the setback.
Classifieds - Continued from previous page
FORECLOSURE
Property to be sold
at Sheriff’s Sale at
Meig’s County Courthouse
Pomeroy Ohio
April 18, 2014 at 10:00am
Houses For Sale
FORECLOSURE
Property to be sold at Sheriff’s Sale at
Meig’s County Courthouse Pomeroy Ohio
April 18, 2014 at 10:00am
Please visit us online at
www.mydailytribune.com
Houses For Sale
Help Wanted General
HOUSE FOR SALE
Now Hiring!
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�&@>6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D
Page B6 LîSunday Times Sentinel
Sunday, April 13, 2014
�2CG:4<îH:?Dî9:Dî\CDEî�2C=:?8E@?îA@=6
DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP) —
Kevin Harvick won his first career pole at Darlington Raceway
on Friday as he looks to chase his
first Southern 500.
Harvick came out on top in the
first knockout qualifying session
at NASCAR’s oldest superspeedway since the circuit made the
change from single-car laps. Joey
Logano, the winner Monday in
Texas, was second, followed by
Aric Almirola.
Almirola’s teammate, Marcos
Ambrose, was fourth, followed
by Brad Keselowski, Jamie McMurray, Ryan Newman and Kyle
Busch.
Points leader Jeff Gordon, a
seven-time Darlington winner,
will start ninth, with Denny
Hamlin rounding out the top 10.
Almirola finished first in the
second of three rounds of qualifying and set a track record of
184.145 mph, shattering Kurt
Busch’s mark of 181.918 set last
May when the Southern 500 was
held on Mother’s Day weekend.
It’s the sixth time in eight races
this season the qualifying record
fell.
But Harvick used a higher line
in the final segment to lead the
field.
“It all worked out. Knockout
qualifying paid off for us today
because we were able to save the
best for last,” Harvick said.
Harvick, in his first season
with Stewart-Haas Racing,
hasn’t been a qualifying demon
McDermott, Ogwumike
win Wooden Award
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Doug McDermott of Creighton accepted the John R. Wooden Award on Friday night,
one of several honors the senior won this year as college
basketball’s player of the year.
The women’s award went to Chiney Ogwumike of Stanford in a ceremony at the Los Angeles Athletic Club.
McDermott received 3,930 points in nationwide voting that went through the first three rounds of the NCAA
tournament. He was announced as the winner last week
at the Final Four in Arlington, Texas. Jabari Parker of
Duke finished second with 2,569 points.
McDermott’s father, Greg, who coached his son at
Creighton, was on hand. The Blue Jays lost in the third
round of the NCAA tourney.
“The best thing about Doug is he’s a great teammate,”
his father said. “Most people that watched us practice
would not be able to tell we were father and son and that’s
the way we wanted it.”
The younger McDermott was presented with the award
by Wooden’s grandson Greg.
“I never got satisfied,” McDermott said. “I stuck it out
for four years. That’s why it’s so great seeing other seniors
be here with me. We’re guys who decided to get better
every year.”
Among the other trophies won by McDermott were
from The AP and the U.S. Basketball Writers Association.
Russ Smith of Louisville finished third with 2,228
points, followed by Cleanthony Early of Wichita State
with 1,907, and Nick Johnson of Arizona with 1,758.
McDermott was the nation’s leading scorer with 26.7
points per game this season. He finished his career as the
NCAA’s fifth-leading scorer with 3,150 points. He was a
previous three-time finalist for the Wooden Award.
Ogwumike received the award from Wooden’s grandson, Craig Impelman. Her coach, Tara VanDerveer, and
her sister, Nneka Ogwumike of the WNBA’s Los Angeles
Sparks, were on hand. Nneka was a two-time finalist for
the Wooden Award.
Chiney led the Cardinal to the Final Four, where they
lost in the national semifinals. She was a two-time Pac-12
player of the year and three-time league defensive player
of the year. As a senior, Ogwumike averaged 26.5 points
and 12.1 rebounds this season. She ended her career as
the league’s career scoring leader with 2,722 points.
Ogwumike carries a 3.6 grade-point average in international relations, a component of the award that was important to Wooden.
She had accompanied her sister to the Wooden Award
gala in previous years only to see Nneka go home emptyhanded.
“I guess three time’s a charm,” Chiney said.
While accepting the Legends of Coaching award earlier
in the evening, VanDerveer inadvertently blurted out that
Ogwumike was the women’s Wooden winner. VanDerveer
stopped herself midway through, but the news was already out of the bag.
Ogwumike received 774 points in nationwide voting
that took place from March 12-25, including the first two
rounds of the NCAA tournament. Odyssey Sims of Baylor
finished second with 761.
Breanna Stewart of national champion Connecticut
was third at 732. Kayla McBride of Notre Dame finished
fourth at 562 and Alyssa Thomas of Maryland was fifth
at 509.
“I’m so humbled,” Ogwumike said. “The girls on the
video are equally as deserving. I’m just in awe.”
Q:
during his successful NASCAR
career, winning just six of them
in his previous 473 career Sprint
Cup races. He said his triumph
Friday was simple — he had the
fastest car.
“We just had faster cars to
drive in qualifying,” he said.
His No. 4 Chevrolet team has
improved in finding qualifying
speed the past few weeks. Harvick hadn’t started better than
13th in his first four events. He’s
had a fourth, a third and a first
in qualifying in three of past four
events.
It didn’t look like anyone would
have the speed to move past
Almirola in the second segment,
whose fast lap was more than 2
mph quicker than the old mark.
“That track record lap I actually felt like I was going faster in
the third session than the second
session,” Almirola said. “But the
record was in the second session.
It was a great lap for us and I am
proud of everyone (at Richard
Petty Motorsports).”
In all, 25 drivers went faster
than Kurt Busch’s old record
in the first round of qualifying.
There were 14 who bettered
Busch’s 2013 mark in the second
session. The top seven qualifiers
ran faster than the old record in
the final run.
Among those not advancing
to the second round were sixtime Sprint Cup champion Jimmie Johnson and Matt Kenseth.
The two drivers combined for 13
�C@H?DîBF:4<=Jî>2E49î@R6Cî7@Cî#24<
CLEVELAND (AP) — Alex
Mack was as good as gone. The
Browns pulled back their Pro
Bowl center in a snap.
Acting quickly after Jacksonville signed Mack to a five-year,
$42 million offer sheet, Cleveland
wasted little time and matched
the deal for Mack, who will remain with the Browns for at least
two more years.
The 28-year-old Mack will receive $26 million guaranteed in
the deal, which he can void after
two seasons. Also, the Browns are
not allowed to tag or trade him.
That’s the steep price they’ll pay
for allowing another team to do
their negotiating, and for letting
one of their core players test the
free-agent market.
“We have talked about keeping
our own players and this is a positive for us,” general manager Ray
Farmer said in a release. “Alex is
a quality person and player that
truly brings to life what playing
like a Brown means. The ending
is positive for everyone. Keeping
our young, good nucleus of players is vital for clubs and specifically the Browns, and therefore
this is a good step.”
Farmer was able to be upbeat at
the conclusion of a strange saga
that began when the club placed
a $10 million transition tag on
Mack at the outset of free agency.
If they had lost Mack, it would
have been yet another blunder
by the Browns, who have lost at
least 11 games in each of the past
six seasons and are on their third
head coach in three years.
They took a major risk in first
letting Mack explore what his professional life could be like outside
Cleveland. Then the Browns were
in danger of losing him by permitting the Jaguars to structure a
contract Cleveland might not be
able to equal.
Fortunately for the Browns,
they have salary-cap space and
owner Jimmy Haslam had stated
several times he was committed
to keeping Mack, who has not
missed a single snap in five seasons with Cleveland.
“I think we’ve made it very
clear that he’s the kind of person,
the kind of player we want in our
organization,” Haslam said earlier
this week.
But for a few hours Friday,
Mack appeared to be headed for
Florida and a fresh start before
the Browns locked him up.
Mack has kept a low profile during free agency. The brief tug-ofwar between the Browns and Jaguars, two teams who seemingly
should have higher priorities than
a center. A California graduate in
NEW YORK (AP) —
Get a grip.
Using a suspicious substance for a better hold of
the baseball on cool days is
not such a sticky situation.
Whether it’s the Yankees’
Michael Pineda with a mysterious brown goo on his
hand, Boston’s Jon Lester
with a green smudge in his
glove or Houston’s Josh
Zeid spraying something on
his forearm before entering
a recent game, most major
leaguers don’t care whether
pitchers get a little help —
even though it’s against the
Official Baseball Rules.
To some, it’s preferable.
“It’s an unwritten rule
in the game. I’m sure a lot
of pitchers do it,” Red Sox
outfielder Shane Victorino
said Friday before Boston
played the Yankees. “As a
hitter, do what you got to
do from letting that ball go
astray and hitting me in the
head. I’m fine with that.”
Ever since pitchers
started throwing to batters in the 1800s, they’ve
looked for an edge — and
it has continued long after
doctoring the baseball was
banned in 1920.
Television
cameras
caught Pineda with what
looked like sticky pine tar
on his hand early in the
Yankees’ 4-1 victory over
Boston on a cool Thursday
night, when the ball could
be slick. Red Sox manager
John Farrell didn’t see a
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legal studies, Mack, who is working toward a master’s degree, said
at the end of last season he liked
playing in Cleveland. However,
his flirtation with the Jaguars has
damaged his image with some
Browns fans.
It’s tough to fault him for testing free agency. After all, the
Browns have gone just 23-57 since
he joined them in 2009, and Mike
Pettine will be Mack’s fourth head
coach in six years.
Mack has shown plenty of loyalty
toward Cleveland. He’s been on the
field for 4,998 consecutive plays
with the Browns, who drafted him
with the No. 21 overall pick in 2009.
In his third season, Mack played
despite a severe attack of appendicitis that landed him in surgery the
following day. He has developed
into one of the game’s top centers,
lauded for his blocking ability,
leadership and helping Cleveland’s
quarterbacks read defenses.
With Mack in the middle and
Pro Bowl tackle Joe Thomas on
the left side, the Browns have one
of the AFC’s top offensive lines.
They didn’t want to weaken one
of their biggest strengths and will
have Mack around to snap the ball
to their quarterback for at least
two more seasons.
Now they go back to working
on who will line up behind him.
Players know pitchers try for better grip on ball
Waiting for lower interest rates?
A:
victories last season, yet each is
winless through the first seven
events this year.
Some who didn’t make it
through to the final 12 qualifiers
were Kurt Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Greg Biffle and Tony
Stewart.
Logano is starting in the top
10 for the seventh time in eight
races. He’ll try for his second
straight Sprint Cup win after
taking the rain-delayed Duck
Commander 500 at Texas Motor
Speedway.
“It’s insane,” Logano said.
“This is the place you go to
where you have the most sensation of speed. Here and Dover
are the two places you feel like
you’re really hauling the mail.”
4/9/14 3:58 PM
photograph of Pineda’s
hand until the fourth inning. By the time Pineda
came out to warm up for
the fifth, his hand was clean
and Farrell didn’t complain
to umpires.
“In conditions like last
night, it’s not uncommon
for pitchers to try and get
a grip in some way,” Farrell said. “We’re more focused on what we need to
do offensively to kind of
get going rather than taking anything away from his
abilities.”
Joe Torre, Major League
Baseball’s executive vice
president of baseball operations, said in a statement
Friday that Pineda would
not be suspended.
“The umpires did not
observe an application of
a foreign substance during
the game and the issue was
not raised by the Red Sox,”
Torre said. “Given those
circumstances, there are no
plans to issue a suspension,
but we intend to talk to the
Yankees regarding what occurred.”
Yankees General Manager Brian Cashman spoke
with Torre and said the issue was resolved. Pineda
said hadn’t spoken with any
Yankees management as of
early afternoon.
Perhaps Farrell didn’t
say anything because his
pitchers have been accused
of using something extra.
Toronto Blue Jays broadcasters last season thought
they caught Clay Buchholz — who faced Pineda
Thursday — using an illegal substance. During the
2013 World Series opener,
Lester was seen on TV with
something in his glove.
Yankees manager Joe Girardi has never questioned
his own pitchers, but he
knows what goes on.
“I don’t talk to pitchers
about that: ‘Do you use or
don’t you use?’ This is not
a recreational drug. I don’t
talk to people about that,”
Girardi said. “I’m aware.
I’ve been on teams where
I’ve seen it. I’m 99 percent
sure that I know of other
guys on other teams that
use it.”
Rule 8.02 says a pitcher
may not apply a “foreign
substance” to the ball, and
section B of the rule says a
pitcher may not have any
“foreign substance” in his
possession on the mound.
The penalty if caught is
automatic ejection and suspension.
The rule has been applied, perhaps most famously when Twins pitcher
Joe Niekro was caught with
an emery board and sandpaper in the back pocket of
his uniform pants in 1987.
He was banned for 10 days.
But Victorino agreed, doctoring the ball this way is
different than improving
one’s grip.
Dodgers reliever Jay
Howell was suspended
three days (later reduced
to two) for pine tar on his
glove in Game 3 of the 1988
NL championship series.
For a player to be ejected,
he has to be caught. Umpires are obligated to take
action if they see a violation or if one is reported to
them. Not so easily done.
Yankees shortstop Derek
Jeter and Victorino each
said they have never gone
up to the plate and noticed whether a pitcher
had something on his hand
or uniform. But as camera
resolution increases, spotlight has increased on all
players. Unlike golf, which
has a self-policing policy
that allows fans watching
at home to point out rules
violations, there’s no such
mechanism in baseball.
Challenging the use of
an illegal substance is not
among the reviewable plays
under MLB’s new replay
system. Baseball executives
plan to examine the rules
and make changes for 2015,
perhaps a path that would
allow for a change.
For most, though, the
problem for Pineda was he
was too blatant.
“Be discreet,” Victorino
said.
�Sunday Times-Sentinel
SUNDAY,
APRIL 13, 2014
ALONG THE RIVER
A capacity crowd filled the Meigs County Common Pleas courtroom Thursday evening for the Homicide Victim Memorial Service.
C1
Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sunday Times-Sentinel
Remembering those taken too soon
Memorial held to
remember homicide victims
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com
POMEROY — A ceremony to remember and honor
the lives of homicide victims brought together dozens of
people Thursday evening.
The annual National Crime Victims’ Rights Week memorial service brings together a group of people with a
tragic connection — a loved one has been taken from
them too soon.
While the cause of death may vary for the 24 individuals
recognized during the ceremony, the absence felt by those
left behind and their emotions are much the same.
Victim’s Assistance Director Theda Petrasko noted that
while it is difficult for family members to attend an event
such as the annual memorial, it can also help to connect
families with others in a similar situation.
Meigs County Prosecutor Colleen Williams thanked all
of those who had worked to make the event a success each
year.
She then introduced keynote speaker Randy Smith, Victims Assistance Director Theda Petrasko and Prosecutor Colleen Williams spoke during the Crime Victims’ Rights Week
who currently serves as Meigs County Commissioner and ceremony Thursday.
pastor of Mount Union Baptist Church. Smith has also
served in law enforcement, as a child support investigator
and probation officer.
Smith said when he was asked to speak at the event, he
was not sure from what perspective he would be speaking
— law enforcement, commissioner or pastor.
“When I was asked to participate this evening, I wondered what perspective I may be able to bring,” Smith
said. “I can’t stand here today and say that I have ever
been in your shoes. I can’t stand here today and tell you
that I understand your pain. But, what I can stand here
and say is that I remember.
“When I read the article in the paper with the list of
those being honored this evening, I was humbled by the
number of victims that I knew personally.”
Smith told of Becky Ackerman, Bobbie Butcher, Chris
Roush and Josh Starcher — all of whom he had known
throughout their lives in one way or another.
“While I didn’t know each of those remembered this
evening, I shared those things because somewhere right
now, maybe in this room even, is someone who can share
a memory about your loved one that maybe you’ve never
heard,” Smith said. “As we go through life, we are leaving a mark. We are creating memories for those we are
around, just as your loved ones have, and it’s through
those memories that they will always live.”
Smith closed by reading the poem, “Look for me in
Rainbows” by Vicki Brown. The poem reads:
See REMEMBER | C2 Members of the River City Players performed three songs throughout the event.
AT LEFT, Deputy James Stacy receives the Certificate of Appreciation of Outstanding Service on Behalf of Crime Victims during Thursday’s ceremony. CENTER, Victims Advocate Linda Taylor
hands a candle to Brenda Roush, the mother of homicide victim Christopher Roush, during Thursday’s ceremony. AT RIGHT, Meigs County Commissioner Randy Smith serves as the keynote
speaker for the annual event.
�&@>6C@JîLî#:55=6A@CEîLî�2==:A@=:D
Page C2 LîSunday Times Sentinel
Sunday, April 13, 2014
From the Bookshelf
Bossard Library to celebrate
National Library Week April 13-19
This week, the Bossard
Memorial Library of Gallia County joins libraries
in schools, campuses and
communities nationwide
in celebrating National Library Week, a time to highlight the value of libraries,
librarians and library workers.
First sponsored in 1958,
National Library Week is a
national observance sponsored by the American
Library Association and libraries across the country
each April.
Libraries today are more
than repositories for books
and other resources. Often
the heart of their communities, libraries are deeply
committed to the places
where their patrons live,
work and study. Libraries
are trusted places where
everyone in the community can gather to reconnect
and re-engage with each
other to enrich and shape
the community.
Librarians work with
community leaders, business owners, students,
and the public at large to
discover what the needs of
their communities are and
strive to meet these needs.
Whether through offering
resources for students, the
latest bestsellers, e-books
and technology classes,
and programs for all ages,
librarians listen to the
community they serve, and
they respond.
Service to the community has always been the
focus of Bossard Library.
While this aspect has never changed, libraries have
grown and evolved in how
they provide for the needs
of every member of their
community. Bossard Library will soon embark on
a building expansion project that will provide ample
space to enable the library
to bring a myriad of pro-
Livestock Report
form of art that
grams for all
depicts
why
ages to Galthey love their
lia County.
library. SubmisThe library
sions are due
also provides
by April 20. All
access to eBages are welooks, digital
come to particimagazines
pate. Interested
and a variety
patrons
may
of online daobtain an entry
tabases.
form at the liTo
celbrary or at the
ebrate Nalibrary’s website
tional
Liwww.bossardlibrary Week,
B o s s a r d Debbie Saunders brary.org.
Library Director,
Many people
Library
is
can relate to
currently
Bossard Memorial
how a favorite
conducting
two contests for patrons. book made an impact on
The first provides patrons their life. Books can make
the opportunity to sub- a lasting impression on a
mit an original work such young mind. One of my
as a song, poem, essay or favorite authors as a child,
Judy Blume, is the 2014
honorary chair of National
Library Week.
In keeping with the
theme of National Library
Week, “Lives Change at
Your Library,” the staff is
holding a fun promotion
that encourages patrons
to match the library staff
member with his or her
favorite children’s book.
Visit the display in the library’s main entrance to
participate for your chance
to win a prize.
It has been said that “a
library is the door to many
lives” (Creech 2001). I
hope you will visit your local library soon to discover
the many ways the library
can change and enrich
your life, too.
New AAA7 board
GALLIPOLIS — United Producers, Inc., livestock report of sales from April 9 2014.
Feeder Cattle
275-415 pounds, Steers, $150-$233, Heifers, $140-$225;
425-525 pounds, Steers, $140-$225, Heifers, $140-$215;
550-625 pounds, Steers, $140-$200, Heifers, $140$180; 650-725 pounds, Steers, $130-$185, Heifers,
$125-$165; 750-850 pounds, Steers, $130-$150, Heifers, $125-$135.
Fed Cattle
Choice, Steers, $140-$148, Heifers, $138-$145; Select,
Steers, $130-$139, Heifers, $130-$137; Holstein, Steers,
$120-$137.
Cows
Well Muscled/Fleshed, $92-$103; Medium/Lean, $82-$91;
Thin/Light, $38-$81; Bulls, $95-$109; Heiferettes, $110-$130.
Back to the Farm
Cow/Calf Pairs, $925-$1,800; Bred Cows, $500-$1,050;
Baby Calves, $60-$290; Goats, $25-$75; Lambs, $50-$160.
Upcoming Specials
4/16/14 — feeder sale, 10 a.m.
Direct sales and free on-farm visits.
Contact Dewayne at (740) 339-0241, Stacy at (304) 6340224, Luke at (740) 645-3697, or Mark at (740) 645-5708, or
visit the website at www.uproducers.com.
New Board Members for 2014 are pictured below with AAA7 Executive Director Pamela K. Matura (second from left) including, left to right, John King of Highland County; Alice Ward of Pike County; and Mary Jo Baumgartner of Adams County.
Schmoll named president
COLUMBUS — Robyears, eventually earnert Schmoll, R.Ph., of
ing the rank of captain.
Thurman, was installed
“We are pleased to
as president of the Ohio
have Bob Schmoll leadPharmacists Association
ing our Association
at its 136th annual conas president. Through
ference April 4-6 in Cohis volunteerism and
lumbus.
active participation in
He also was awarded
the association over the
the 2014 Pharmacy Leadyears, he has proven
ership Award of the Nato be an asset,” said
tional Community PharErnest Boyd, OPA exmacists Association.
ecutive director. “His
Schmoll is a 1966
graduate of Middleport
passion for the profesHigh School and a 1972
Photo courtesy of A.J. Zanyk sion of pharmacy is
graduate of Ohio State Robert Schmoll
seemingly limitless. We
University’s College of
look forward to workPharmacy. He began his
ing with him as president.”
internship in 1967 at Swisher & Lohse
OPA, established in 1879, represents
Pharmacy in Pomeroy, and has since
more
than 4,000 pharmacists, pharpracticed in community, hospital and
long-term care settings before retiring in macy educators, and pharmacy students
throughout the state. It is OPA’s mission
January 2012.
Schmoll has been a member of OPA to unite the profession of pharmacy and
for more than 10 years, and serves on encourage interprofessional relations,
various committees. He is a veteran while promoting public health through
who served in the National Guard for 12 education, discussion, and legislation.
Fellowship trained cardiologist joins PVH
ticing at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
This means better health care for the
Pleasant Valley community,” DamPOINT PLEASANT — Dr.
ron said. “I am pleased to be part of
Timothy A. Damron, a cardioloPleasant Valley Hospital and Cabell
gist who specializes in diagnosing
Huntington Hospital’s community of
and treating diseases and condicaring, we can improve the lives of
tions of the heart and blood veseach and every patient.”
sels for patients 10 years of age Damron
Dr. Damron specializes in providand older, has joined the medical
ing care for patients ages 10 years of age
staff at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Damron earned his medical degree at the and older with disorders of the heart and
Marshall University School of Medicine in the treatment of heart failure, arrhythmia
Huntington, where he also completed his (abnormal heart rhythms), cardiomyopathy
internal medicine residency and fellowship (heart muscle disease), pericardial disease,
training in cardiovascular disease. He is a heart valve problems, peripheral vascular disfellow of the American College of Cardiol- ease, cardiac issues in athletes, heart attack
ogy. Damron is a member of the American and the management of hypertension (high
Board of Internal Medicine, Cabell County
Medical Society, West Virginia Medical blood pressure) and high cholesterol. He also
Society, Southern Medical Society and has a special interest in treating atheroscleroAmerican Medical Association. He starts sis, which is the diagnosis of coronary artery
providing services for patients this month. disease. Other special interest include clinical
“The partnership with Pleasant Valley and nuclear cardiology, cardiac monitoring,
Hospital, Cabell Huntington Hospital and the cardiac rehabilitation and stress testing.
Damron’s office is open Monday
Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School
of Medicine enhances the best of our orga- through Friday and he is accepting new
nizations. Cabell’s academic affiliation with patients at Pleasant Valley Hospital. For
Marshall provides Pleasant Valley Hospital more information or to schedule an apwith a tertiary network of specialized physi- pointment, call (304) 675-1484, or visit
cians that compliment the physicians prac- www.pvalley.org.
Register Staff
PPRnews@civitasmedia.com
Remember
From Page C1
Time for me to go now, I won’t say goodbye; look for me in rainbows, way up in
the sky. In the morning sunrise when the
entire world is new, just look for me and
love me, as you know I loved you.
Time for me to leave you, I won’t say
goodbye; look for me in rainbows, high up
in the sky. In the evening sunset, when the
entire world is through, just look for me
and love me, and I’ll be close to you.
It won’t be forever, the day will come
and then my loving arms will hold you,
when we meet again.
Time for us to part now, we won’t say
goodbye; look for me in rainbows, shining
in the sky. Every waking moment, and all
your whole life through just look for me
and love me, as you know I loved you.
Just wish me to be near you, and I’ll be
there with you.
Following the address by Smith, Williams presented the Certificate of Appreciation for Outstanding Service on Behalf
of Crime Victims to Deputy James Stacy.
In describing why Stacy received the
award, Williams noted, that twice in the
past year Stacy was asked to write to
the parole board regarding inmate parole
hearings opposing inmate release. After
25 years, Stacy remembered every detail
of the case and information about the victims, working to oppose the release.
Stacy has also taken part in the Attorney General’s “Two Days in May” training
for victim advocates and the Ohio Domestic Violence Training. While Stacy primar-
ily works the night shift, he is always responding to calls for help and is there to
assist victims of crime when needed.
Previous recipients of the award were
Deputy Mark Griffin of the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Office (now sergeant) and Lt.
Jimmy Riley of the Pomeroy Police Department (now with the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Office).
The award presentation was followed
by the candlelight memorial to remember
those who have been lost.
Petrasko read memorial tributes written by the families of those being remembered as family members took part in
lighting candles.
Those remembered during the candle
light memorial included Robert Harrison,
Kenneth Rizer Sr., Doris Jackson, Joshua
Starcher, Brett Pierce, Dyle Bay, Deborah
Ellis, William Underwood, Todd Johnson,
Tommy Parker, Winfield Hardiman, Howard Lawrence, Christopher Roush, Chase
Roush, Bobbie Butcher, Jeffrey Shannon
Halley, James Gardner, Keitha Whitlatch,
Stephanie Ramey, Rebecca Ackerman,
Stephanie English, Diana Brewer, Jeffrey
Halley, and Wallace Chaffin.
The poem “Sweet Child” (author unknown) was read in memory of Thomas
Matthew “Tommy” Parker II who passed
away at 26 months of age. The poem reads:
God made for us a sweet child; a child
who never grew old.
He made a smile of sunshine, he molded
a heart of gold.
He made that child as close to an angel,
as anyone could ever be.
God made for use a Sweet Child With a
future we just could not see.
Then God saw his wonderful creation
with so much pain and weeping, he
wrapped the child in his loving arms and
said “You my child I am keeping.”
Now our Sweet Child is an angel free
from hurt and pain.
We’ll love you forever, until we meet
again.
So many times we have cried.
If all our love could have saved you
Sweet Child you never would have died.
No farewell words were spoken, no time
to say goodbye, you were gone before we
knew it, and only God knows why.
In a remembrance of Christopher
Roush, his mother wrote, “We all have a
story or we wouldn’t be here today. A year
ago, I was before the group here today telling Chris’ story. I stuck my head in the
sand and chose not to think my son could
do drugs. How could he? I thought we
did it all right. I would never wish this on
anyone. Ignoring their habit doesn’t bring
our kids back to us or make it go away. My
family will never see Chris again. We’ll
never get to hold his babies. I don’t get to
hug and kiss him or see his smiling face.
I do get to drive by the cemetery every
morning on my way in to work and my
way home.”
“What I hope we can all remember is
the good memories we have with our
loved ones. Never give up on your kids
and love them unconditionally. You never
know when they leave from you if they
will be back.”
In closing Petrasko read, “I thought
of you today, but that is nothing new. I
thought of you yesterday, and the days
before that too. I think of you in silence,
I often speak your name. All I have are
memories and a picture in a frame. Your
memory is a keepsake from which I’ll never part, God has you in his arms, I have
you in my heart.”
During the ceremony members of the
River City Players performed three songs.
Those songs were “Stand By Me,” “You’ve
Got A Friend” and “With a Little Help
from My Friends.”
Refreshments were also served following the ceremony.
In addition to the ceremony, National
Crime Victims’ Rights Week was recognized by a display or shoes representing
each victim in Meigs County last year.
There were 679 victims served by the
Meigs County Victims Assistance Office
in 2013.
The Meigs High School National Honor
Society assisted in the placement of the
shoes, while a few members of the Meigs
FFA assisted with cleaning up and planting flowers in the mini-park.
The Meigs County Prosecutor’s Office
received a mini-grant from the Attorney
General’s Office to assist with the event.
Attending from the Attorney General’s Office were Brian Sass, victim services development director at the Ohio Attorney
General’s Office, and Kat Wargo, director
and service provider for the Survivor Advocacy Outreach program created in 2013
by the Sexual Assault Expansion grant.
�Sunday, April 13, 2014
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Sunday Times Sentinel Lî&286î�
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THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE
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BABY BLUES
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CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
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RHYMES WITH ORANGE
Hank Ketcham’s
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Page C4 LîSunday Times Sentinel
Sunday, April 13, 2014
Five generations
Clarence and Virginia Hayman
Haymans observe
55th anniversary
POMEROY — Clarence and Virginia Hayman
will observe their 55th wedding anniversary on
April 18.
Mr. and Mrs. Hayman, the former Virginia
Lewis were married on April 18, 1959, at Portland by the late Rev. Clarence Proffit.
They have eight children, two of which are deceased, a son, Paul, and a daughter, Jean. Their
daqughters are Violet Hayman, Kathy and Craig
Dougan, Valerie Large, Lisa and Bob Johnson,
and June Mohler; and a son Clarence, Jr. and
Robin. They also have 22 grandchildren and 16
great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Hayman is the daughter of the late
Charles Jr. and Lucile Lewis. Mr. Hayman is the
son of the late Harry A. and Garnet Hayman.
The Haymans are members of the Ash Street
Baptist Church in Middleport.
Cards may be sent to the couple at 33547 Naylor’s Run Road, Pomeroy, OH 45769.
Generations of the family of Robert Goodall of Middleport, 93 years old, and a World War II veteran, gathered recently at his Middleport home for a reunion. Joining Mr. Goodall, seated second from left, for a picture were, left to
right, daughter Janice Neutzling, of Middleport, granddaughter Patti Frank, of Circleville, great-grandson Ryan Koch,
of Groveport, and great-great-granddaughter Ryleigh Koch.
Painting
classes offered
During last Friday’s
painting class Eleanor McKelvey, a
student, splashed
some paint on
her sweater when
opening a can.
Artist Michele
Musser fixed it.
She painted flowers all over as a
demonstration of
things to be taught
in the class.
SYRACUSE — A new series of painting classes will be held at the Syracuse
Community Center on Tuesdays from 6
to 8 p.m. and Fridays from 1 to 3 p.m.
The classes will be taught by artist
Michelle Musser.
The series will consist of paintings
on glass, stepping stones, two canvases, and shirt painting.
For more information call Joy Bentley, 992, 2365.
Submitted photo
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Graf graduates basic training
SAN ANTONIO — Air Force Airman
1st Class Rachel A. Graf graduated from
basic military training at Joint Base San
Antonio-Lackland, in San Antonio.
The airman completed an intensive,
eight-week program that included training in military discipline and studies, Air
Force core values, physical fitness, and basic warfare principles and skills.
Airmen who complete basic training
earn four credits toward an associate in
applied science degree through the Community College of the Air Force.
Graf is the daughter of Aimee and David Carmin, of Cheshire.
West receives scholarship
CIRCLEVILLE — Breanna West, of
Gallipolis, is the recipient of the Ohio
Christian University Scholarship from
Ohio Christian University.
West is studying psychology.
These merit- and need-based scholarships are made possible by the generous
support of those who partner in stewardship with the university and were awarded during the recent Annual Scholarship
Awards ceremony.
Ohio Christian University, founded in
1948 is one of the fastest growing universities in the nation, and is committed to offering a complete education that develops
AP Photo | Hillerich & Bradsby
This undated image released by the Louisville Slugger Museum & Factory shows the bat vault in Louisville,
Ky. Visitors can trace that baseball heritage along the Louisville Slugger Walk of Fame, stretching about a
mile from the Louisville Slugger Museum & Factory to the cities minor-league ballpark.
students intellectually, professionally and
spiritually. OCU offers degree programs
for traditional undergraduate students,
graduate students, and adult and online
students. Additionally, OCU’s Trailblazer
Academy allows high school students
to complete college classes on campus
or online. All programs are designed to
equip students to become leaders in their
careers, communities, families, and the
world.
AP Photos by Bruce Schreiner
This April 3, 2014 photo shows a lion statute featured in a section of the Old Louisville neighborhood known for its stately Victorian homes. Old Louisville has undergone a revitalization that makes it a showcase in Kentuckys largest city.
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By Bruce Schreiner
Associated Press
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — When it’s
Kentucky Derby season in Louisville, money seems to flow faster
than the Ohio River. Hotels and
restaurants fill up; bars serve mint
juleps and fine Kentucky bourbon.
Shopping includes a hunt for the
colorful hats worn as a Derby tradition. Parties are thrown, and
wagers are plunked down on can’tmiss colts and longshots alike as
fans guess which horse will win the
famous race at Churchill Downs.
Yet there are other sure bets for
relaxation and entertainment that
don’t cost a thing as folks head to
bluegrass country for the Derby,
which takes place May 3. Kentucky’s largest city offers a mix of
free contemporary and historic
sites — along with blooming dogwood trees.
Cave Hill Cemetery
The final resting place for many of
Louisville’s most prominent citizens
of the 19th and 20th centuries, the
nearly 300-acre cemetery opened
in 1848. It features ornate marble
and granite monuments, shaded by
trees seemingly as distinctive as the
headstones dotting the landscape.
Trees of many varieties loom over
the rolling grounds situated east of
downtown. Each spring and fall,
the cemetery is ablaze in colors. It
draws tours from groups of garden,
Civil War and history buffs. About
5,500 soldiers are buried here, mostly from the Civil War.
Luminaries buried in the cemetery include politicians, business
leaders and bourbon barons. Two of
the most notable are George Rogers Clark — an early frontiersman
and soldier and the brother of William Clark, who co-led the Lewis
and Clark expedition — and Colonel Harland Sanders, the founder of
Kentucky Fried Chicken. Sanders’
granite memorial features a bust
of the goateed entrepreneur, whose
likeness is still synonymous with
the chicken chain he started. Visitors sometimes place a bucket of
chicken at his grave.
Waterfront Park
In a town blessed with an abundance of parks known for foliage,
nature centers and scenic vistas,
the 85-acre Waterfront Park serves
as Louisville’s northern doorstep.
Visitors can walk, jog and bike
along paths that offer scenic views
of the Ohio River and downtown
Louisville. Linger long enough,
and the chances are good that you’ll
see a massive barge floating along
the Ohio, a busy waterway for commerce.
The park’s Great Lawn stretches
out as a giant front yard for downtown. There are playgrounds and
an amphitheater. A popular attrac-
tion is the Big Four Bridge, an old
railroad span that’s been turned
into a pedestrian and cycling path
spanning the Ohio River between
Louisville and Jeffersonville, Ind.
Contemporary Art
Contemporary art is a mainstay
at the acclaimed 21c Museum Hotel and the exhibitions are free to
the public. Artwork is on display
in 9,000 square feet of exhibition
space in the award-winning boutique hotel in downtown Louisville.
The artwork ranges from quirky
and whimsical to daring, dark and
thought-provoking. It was a goal of
the hotel’s owners to introduce contemporary art to a wider audience.
The exhibitions feature internationally acclaimed artists as well
as emerging artists, some from the
area. The hotel offers free cultural
programming for the public that
includes artist lectures and film
screenings. There are free, twice-aweek tours of the exhibitions. The
hotel’s most recognizable artwork
is outside looming over Main Street
— a 37-foot-tall replica of Michelangelo’s David. The replica created by
a Turkish artist is made of steel and
fiberglass and was painted gold.
Baseball
Known as a basketball hotbed,
the city’s name is also synonymous
with baseball. Visitors can trace that
baseball heritage along the Louisville Slugger Walk of Fame, stretch-
ing about a mile from the Louisville
Slugger Museum & Factory to the
city’s minor-league ballpark. Many
of the game’s greatest players —
from Babe Ruth and Ty Cobb to
George Brett and Ken Griffey Jr. —
are enshrined with bronze castes of
the Louisville Slugger model bats
they used, along with bronze home
plates that highlight their careers.
At the downtown Slugger Museum, visitors can stroll through the
main lobby for free. The lobby’s features include the Signature Wall —
emblazoned with the signatures of
more than 8,000 players who signed
contracts to use Louisville Slugger
bats. Visitors can grip replica bats
used by some of the game’s greatest
sluggers. Youngsters can climb on
a ball and glove sculpture made of
Kentucky limestone. Hovering outside is one of the city’s most popular
landmarks — a 120-foot-tall (37-meter-high) bat made of steel and handpainted to resemble wood.
Old Louisville
The stately Old Louisville neighborhood stands out in a city filled
with distinctive neighborhoods.
Old Louisville features rows of Victorian homes, some etched with
stained glass windows, along treelines streets. The neighborhood
was home to some of the city’s
wealthiest residents in the late 19th
century. The area went into decline
in the early to mid-20th century but
This April 3 photo shows a 37-foottall replica of Michelangelos David
outside the 21c Museum Hotel,
which showcases contemporary art
in 9,000 square feet of exhibition
space in downtown Louisville, Ky.
The David replica was created by a
Turkish artist and is made of steel
and fiberglass and was painted gold.
has since undergone revitalization.
The neighborhood stretches from
just north of the University of Louisville’s main campus to just south
of downtown Louisville. Each fall
the neighborhood hosts the renowned St. James Court Art Show.
�
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day
ferrell
hardesty
heck
offutt
smith
thomas
watson