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                  <text>On this
day in
history

Cloudy.
High of 61,
low of 54

Meigs
routs
Raiders

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 18, Volume 70

Tuesday, February 2, 2016 s 50¢

Public library construction continues
By Kristi Eblin
Special to the Sentinel

POMEROY — Construction continues on the Meigs
County District Public
Library in Pomeroy. The
highlights of the renovation
so far are the expanded
children’s area and the
now enclosed front porch.
The renovated children’s
space will feature new kid
friendly browsing bins for
the children’s picture book
collection that will make the
materials more accessible to
the little ones. The shelves
Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel
The Meigs County District Public Library will continue are easier for the children
to offer their Book a Bike program during and after to reach and the books are
renovations.
arranged face out to make

them more appealing. The
library’s existing Early Literacy computers will be a
part of the new children’s
area as will the existing
chapter book and juvenile
non-ﬁction collections.
Teens can look forward
to a new separate space
designed especially for
them. The library’s Young
Adult collection will be
located near the new teen
area along with our graphic
novels. Two computers
will be available in the teen
area for students to access
the Internet for homework
or recreational uses such
as watching videos and/or
gaming.

The Riverview room,
which features panoramic
views of the river, will be
used for library programs
(needlework group, book
club), and when not in use
for a library program, will
be available for quiet study/
reading.
As renovations to the
upper level of the library
near completion, the downstairs renovations will begin
in earnest. The downstairs
renovation includes a new
kitchen and restrooms as
well as an expansion to
the existing large meeting
room to accommodate more
people and larger events.
The need for more space is

especially evident during
the Summer Reading Program.
In addition to the new
spaces mentioned above,
several of the library’s existing collections and spaces
will be re-arranged to better
suit the new building ﬂoorplan. Internet computers as
well as ﬁction, non-ﬁction,
genealogy, DVD, Book on
CD, magazines and genealogy will all be relocated.
As always, the friendly
staff is available to help
our users locate the books
and information they need
throughout the construction
and after the renovation is
complete.

Pick It Up!
reports 2015
numbers
By Jim Freeman
Special to the Sentinel

POMEROY — In the past two years, workers for
the Meigs County – Pick It Up! Program have cleaned
over 800 miles of township and county roads, collecting
nearly 4,000 bags of litter.
The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District
administers the program in partnership with the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners and the Gallia-JacksonMeigs-Vinton Solid Waste Management District. The
program started in January, 2014.
In 2015 the crew picked up 2,090 bags of roadside litter alongside 384.4 miles of county and township roads,
collected 742 tires and cleaned 10 illegal dump sites,
according to Steve Jenkins, program administrator for
the Meigs SWCD.
In 2014 the crew cleaned 430 miles of county and
township roads, picking up 1,820 bags of litter, 690
tires, and cleaning six illegal dump sites.
The program currently has two part-time employees.
“The workers have picked up along every county road
each of the past two years, along with township roads
throughout the county, but the problem is that people
keep littering,” Jenkins explained. “They can clean up a
road and two weeks later it looks just as trashy.”
With more than 760 miles of county and township
roads scattered through 12 township, there is no way
that one crew can get to all them. For that reason part of
the program is devoted to helping groups or neighbors
to do their own cleanup projects on their own roads.
Any group interested in doing their own cleanup as
a community service project can call the Meigs SWCD
ofﬁce at 740-992-4282, weekdays between 8-4:30 p.m.
to make arrangements. Meigs County – Pick It Up! will
supply bags, gloves, high-visibility vests and will collect
the bags left along the road.
Other upcoming events in Meigs County include the
16th annual Leading Creek Stream Sweep, which will
be held April 23, 9 a.m. to noon at the Meigs SWCD
Conservation Area on New Lima Road between Rutland
and Harrisonville.
The sixth Meigs County Clean-up Day will be held
May 21, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds. In addition the annual Ohio River Sweep will
be held June 18, 9 a.m. to noon.

Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

An illustration of what the splash park, which will be adjacent to the old Middleport schools, will look like once completed. The different
types of equipment will include a Fill N’ Spill, Slash-O-Lator, Popp Dropp, Baby Long Legs, a Water Weave and Aqua Arch. Construction
will hopefully begin this summer, according to Meigs County Health Department Grant Coordinator Laura Cleland.

Park to make a ‘splash’ in Middleport
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — Construction
will hopefully begin this year
on the new splash park that
Middleport Council recently
approved for the village.
The proposal for the splash
park, which will be located on a
piece of land adjacent to the old
Middleport schools, was originally
brought up at a council meeting
on Monday. Dec. 14 by Laura
Cleland, representing Creating
Healthy Communities, and Tim
King representing the Middleport
Development Group. The pair said
this speciﬁc location was chosen
because of its ﬂoodplain level and
proximity to Middlport Village
Hall/police station.

Initially the concern brought
forth by council was that neighbors
would not want the splash park in
the area. At the Jan. 11 Middleport
Council meeting both King and
Cleland returned with further
research and approval from nearby
residents. The pair told council
that they needed permission to
put the park on the land, but that
the village would still own the
property and the park would be
entirely funded, so the village
would not have to pay for the
expense. Council this time voted
unanimously in favor of the park.
According to Fiscal Ofﬁcer
Susan Baker, water turned on for
about six hours a day for three
months would cost the village
about $1,000 a year. The operator
of the park would be able to control

when the water runs throughout
the day.
Cleland, who also serves as the
grant coordinator for the Meigs
County Health Department, said
planning for this particular park
began last year, when Creating
Healthy Communities reported the
success of a splash park set up in
Perry County. David Williams and
Associates, Inc. will be providing
the equipment, which will include
a Fill N’ Spill, Slash-O-Lator, Popp
Dropp, Baby Long Legs, a Water
Weave and Aqua Arch.
Currently, Cleland said the goal
is to secure all of the funding
needed so that the park is fully
funded, meaning the park will not
cost village residents any money.
See PARK | 5

URG reminds students to be vigilant
By Dean Wright

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

take extra precautions if
walking alone. So far, no
reports of similar activity
RIO GRANDE — After being reported in Athens
Athens police announced County has appeared in
they are investigating a
Rio Grande.
potential serial sexual
URG Campus Police
predator in the Athens
Chief Scott Borden told
County area, the Unithe Tribune that Feb. 1
versity of Rio Grande is
marked the ﬁfth year of
remaining vigilant and
his time serving with
warning students to keep campus law enforcement.
their wits about them.
In his time with the instiUniversity ofﬁcials
tution, Borden said he
sent students and staff
and his team have made
e-mail messages to be
“every effort” to insure
cautious when traveling
the safety of students and
about campus and to
faculty on the campus

deanwright@civitasmedia.com

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CONVERSATION
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in support with the Rio
Grande Police Department.
Borden once served
as a post commander
with the Ohio State
Highway Patrol. Several
other ofﬁcers in campus
law enforcement have
also served with OSHP.
According to Borden, the
URG police force encompasses around 80 years
of collective state trooper
experience.
Borden said it is not
uncommon for police to
enter freshman introduc-

tory courses to speak
about campus safety with
students and to emphasize the necessity of
remaining aware of one’s
surroundings, especially
when trying to prevent a
potential sexual attack.
Police recommend that
students always travel in
groups, travel in well-lit
areas, talk on their phone
loudly or call a friend
when they suspect they
are being followed. Borden also said students or
See STUDENTS | 5

�LOCAL

2 Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES
JORDAN
BUSH
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — Anna F. Jordan, 82,
MASSILLON, Ohio — James Lee Bush, 68, of Massillon, died Nov. 15, 2015. A memorial service will be of Gallipolis Ferry, died Monday, Feb. 1, 2016.
Arrangements are incomplete and will be
1-3 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 6, 2016, at Lighthouse Assemannounced by Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasbly of God in Gallipolis.
ant .
CRABTREE
KAY
GALLIPOLIS — Laura B. “Boo” Crabtree, 102, of
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Judith Ann (McGufGallipolis, died Sunday, Jan. 31, 2016. Services will
ﬁn) Kay, 78, of Point Pleasant, died Sunday, Jan.
be 1 p.m., Feb. 4, at the Chambers &amp; James Funeral
Home, 1030 Main Street, Wellsburg, W.Va. Burial will 31, 2016. Judy’s life will be remembered at 1 p.m.,
follow in Franklin Cemetery. Callers may attend from Thursday, Feb. 4, 2016, at Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home. Burial will follow in Suncrest Cemetery. Visi11 a.m. to 1 p.m. prior to the service.
tation will be at the funeral home one hour prior to
the service.
HENSON
GALLIPOLIS — Juanita E. Henson, 81, of GalLEACH
lipolis, Addison Community, died 4:50 p.m., Jan. 30,
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — James Lewis
2016. Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m. Feb. 3 in
“Shilo” Leach, 36, of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., died Jan.
the Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis. Interment
29, 2016. Services will be held on Thursday, Feb. 4,
will follow in the Reynolds Cemetery. Visitors may
2016 at 2 p.m. at the Deal Funeral Home. Burial will
call one hour prior to the funeral service.

FOR THE RECORD

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Land Transfers
To view speciﬁc land
transfer records, visit
the Recorder’s Ofﬁce
at the Meigs County
Courthouse during
regular hours.

Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel
appreciates your input to the community calendar. To make sure
items can receive proper attention,
all information should be received
by the newspaper at least ﬁve business days prior to an event. All
coming events print on a spaceavailable basis and in chronological order. Events can be emailed to:
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com.

Jodi Hawk was questioned by Pomeroy
Police on Jan. 22 for
allegedly operating a
vehicle under the inﬂuence.
Tedra Sayer was
questioned by Pomeroy
Accidents
Police on Jan. 24 for
A vehicle accident
allegedly operating a
allegedly occurred
vehicle under the inﬂubetween Dennis L.
ence.
Richards Jr. and Deanna
Rikki Parsons was
F. Lemley on Jan. 22.
questioned by Pomeroy
Police on Jan. 24 for
Incidents
alleged disorderly detox
Johnathan Salser was
conduct underage.
questioned by Pomeroy
Perry Livingston
Police on Jan. 13 for
III
was questioned by
alleged domestic vioPomeroy
Police on Jan.
lence.
25
for
allegedly
operatJodi Hawk was quesing
a
vehicle
under
the
tioned by Pomeroy
inﬂuence.
Police on Jan. 14.
Richard A. Ward
David Crager Jr. was
Sr.
was questioned by
questioned by Pomeroy
Pomeroy
Police on Jan.
Police on Jan. 20 for
27.
alleged theft.
Dwayne Qualls was
Alice Daugherty was
questioned
by Pomeroy
questioned by Pomeroy
Police
on
Jan.
29 for an
Police on Jan. 22. for
alleged open container
allegedly operating a
vehicle under the inﬂu- and disorderly intoxicaence.
tion.

Thursday, Feb. 4
CHILLICOTHE — The Southern Ohio Council of Governments
(SOCOG) will hold their next
board meeting at 10 a.m. in Room
B of the Ross County Service Center located at 475 Western Ave.,

3
4
6
7
8
10
11
12
13

6

PM

6:30

PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
(WOUB)
events.
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm(WCHS)
ent Tonight
News at 6
News
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
(WBNS)
at 6 p.m.
News
Fortune
2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls The Big Bang The Big Bang
(WVAH)
Theory
Theory
BBC World Legislature PBS NewsHour Providing inToday
depth analysis of current
(WVPB) News:
events.
America
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
(WOWK)
6:00 p.m.
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition
WSAZ News
(WSAZ)
3
WTAP News
(WTAP)
at Six
ABC 6 News
(WSYX)
at 6:00 p.m.
Nature Cat

CABLE

6

PM

NBC Nightly
News
NBC Nightly
News
ABC World
News
Newswatch

6:30

7

PM

7:30

Friday, Feb. 5
POMEROY —The regular meeting of the Meigs County Public
Employee Retiree, Inc. (PERI)
Chapter 74 will be held at noon
at the Mulberry Community Center, located at 156 Mulberry Av.
in Pomeroy. PERI representative
Carolyn Waddell will provide public employee state updates. Meigs
County Library Assistant Director
Chelsea Poole or a representative
will be the speaker. All retired

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

Chester Township
meetings in new town hall
The Chester Township Trustees will be holding

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Hollywood Game Night
"Football Game Night" (N)
Hollywood Game Night
"Football Game Night" (N)
Fresh Off the The Muppets
Boat (N)
(N)
Finding Your Roots
"Visionaries" (N)

Chicago Med "Reunion" (N) Chicago Fire "The Sky Is
Falling" (N)
Chicago Med "Reunion" (N) Chicago Fire "The Sky Is
Falling" (N)
Marvel's Agent Carter
What Would You Do? (N)
"Smoke and Mirrors" (N)
American Experience "Murder of a President" The story
of Garfield's unprecedented rise to power, his shooting and
bizarre aftermath. (N)
Fresh Off the The Muppets Marvel's Agent Carter
What Would You Do? (N)
Boat (N)
(N)
"Smoke and Mirrors" (N)
NCIS "Double Trouble"
Great Commercials Enjoy 50 years of great Super Bowl
commercials culminating with a top 50 countdown. (N)
New Girl (N) Grandfath- Brooklyn 99 The Grinder Eyewitness News
ered (N)
(N)
(N)
Finding Your Roots
American Experience "Murder of a President" The story
"Visionaries" (N)
of Garfield's unprecedented rise to power, his shooting and
bizarre aftermath. (N)
Great Commercials Enjoy 50 years of great Super Bowl
NCIS "Double Trouble"
commercials culminating with a top 50 countdown. (N)

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Men in Black II ('02, Sci-Fi) Will Smith. TV14
18 (WGN) Blue Bloods "Friendly Fire"
NHL Hockey Ottawa Senators at Pittsburgh Penguins (L)
24 (ROOT) DayLife (N) Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
NCAA Basketball Kentucky at Tennessee (L)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption NBA Coast Live look-ins to games across the country.
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;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

Outsiders "Doomsayer" (N) Outsiders "Doomsayer"
Post-game Penguins
Penguins
NCAA Basketball Indiana at Michigan (L)
NCAA Basketball West Virginia at Iowa State (L)
Dance Moms "Abby vs.
Dance Moms "Mini
Dance Chat "Now Your See Dance Moms "Abby's
Pitch Slapped "Eliminations
Melissa"
Dancers, Big Drama"
Abby, Now You Don't" (N) Replaceable" (N)
Begin" (N)
Recovery Road "The Art of Pretty Little Liars "The
Pretty Little Liars "New
Shadowhunters "Raising
Pretty Little Liars "New
the Deal"
Gloves Are On"
Guys, New Lies" (N)
Hell" (N)
Guys, New Lies"
(5:00)
Hitch Will Smith. While helping his latest client,
Happy Gilmore A would-be hockey player brings his
Hitch ('05, Com) Eva
a professional date doctor falls for a journalist. TV14
slap shot and unsportsmanlike attitude to golf. TV14
Mendes, Will Smith. TV14
Thunder
Thunder
Paradise (N) H.Danger
H.Danger
Nicky
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Law&amp;O: SVU "Outsider"
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360 (L)
Anderson Cooper 360 (L)
CNN Tonight (L)
Castle "The Fifth Bullet"
Castle
Castle "Sucker Punch"
Castle "The Third Man"
Castle "Suicide Squeeze"
(5:00)
The Rock A former spy and an FBI agent
The Fugitive (1993, Thriller) Sela Ward, Tommy Lee Jones, Harrison Ford. A man
must break into Alcatraz prison to foil a deadly plot. TVMA convicted of murdering his wife escapes and searches for the real killer. TV14
Mnshiner "Out on a Limb" Moonshiners
Shiners "Caved In" (N)
Moonshiners (N)
Fields "Family Matters" (N)
Fit to Fat to Fit "JJ/ Ray"
Fit to Fat to Fit "Steve/
Married at First Sight
Married at First Sight
Fit to Fat to Fit "Adonis/
Tasha"
"Making Memories"
"Celebrations" (N)
Alissa" (N)
River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters: Unhooked River Monsters: Unhooked "Amazon Apocalypse"
Wild Expectations
The Prancing Elites Project Pracing Elites "It’s My Party Pracing Elites "Prancing
The Prancing Elites Project The Prancing Elites Project
"Prance to My Own Beat" and I’ll Prance if I Want To" With the Enemy" (N)
"Prancing With the Enemy" "Prance to My Own Beat"
Law&amp;O. "The Working Stiff" Law &amp; Order "Skin Deep" Law &amp; Order "Conspiracy" Law &amp; Order "Forgiveness" Law &amp; Order
Total Divas
E! News (N)
Total Divas
Total Divas (N)
Just Jillian (N)
(:25) Griffith "Cyrano Andy" A. Griffith
(:35) Griffith (:10) Ray
(:50) Ray
(:25) Ray "The Nice Talk"
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
The Boonies "Finders
Mine Hunters "Seven
The Boonies "Finders
The Boonies "Into the
Mine Hunters "Blood Red
Keepers"
Sapphires"
Keepers"
Abyss" (N)
Rubies" (N)
Pro FB Talk NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Florida Panthers at Washington Capitals (L)
(:15) NHL Overtime (L)
Garbage Time (L)
NCAA Basketball Georgetown vs. Butler (L)
NCAA Basketball Providence vs. DePaul (L)
Curse of Oak Island
Curse of Oak Island "Sword Curse of Oak Island "Voices Curse/Oak Island "Secrets (:05) The Curse of Oak
"Silence in the Dark"
Play"
from Below" (N)
and Revelations" (N)
Island
Beverly Hills "Pretty Mess" Beverly Hills "Going Deep" Beverly Hills "Busted BBQ" Beverly Hills (N)
Girlfriends' Guide (N)
Martin
(:35) Martin (:05) Payne
(:40) Payne
(:15) Payne
(:50) House of Payne
(:25) Payne
Zoe Ever (N) Husbands (N)
House Hunters Renovation Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper (N)
House Hunt. House (N)
(5:30)
Silent Hill A mother and daughter are lost in a
Resident Evil The leaders of a commando team break The Expanse "Critical Mass/
ghost town's nightmare alternate reality. TVMA
into a secret laboratory where a deadly virus looms. TVM Leviathan Wakes" (SF) (N)

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

WISEMAN
BIDWELL, Ohio — J. Marlene Vaughan Townsend
Wiseman, 75, of Bidwell, died Saturday, Jan. 30, 2016,
at her residence. Memorial services will be 11 a.m.
Thursday, Feb. 4, 2016, at Main Street Baptist Church
in Point Pleasant, with Pastor Richard Sargent ofﬁciating.

Chillicothe, OH 45601. Board
meetings usually are held the ﬁrst
Thursday of the month. For more
information, call 740-775-5030,
ext. 103.

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2
7

MATTOX
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Elizabeth M. “Libby”
Mattox, 85, of Point Pleasant, died Sunday, Jan. 31,
2016, in Huntington, W.Va. Service will be 11 a.m. Friday, Feb. 5, 2016, at Trinity United Methodist Church,
Point Pleasant. Burial will be at New Lone Oak Cemetery, Point Pleasant. Visitation will be one hour prior
to the service at the church. Wilcoxen Funeral Home
is serving the family.

county employees are urged to
attend.
Saturday, Feb. 6
POMEROY — Family Night at
Eastern High School, sponsored
by Home National Bank, offers free
admission to the game and contests during halftime of the JV and
Varsity games. Gates open at 4:30
p.m. and games begin at 5 p.m.
with the Eastern Eagles vs. Green
Bobcats.
Monday, Feb. 8
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP — Bedford Township Trustees will hold
their regular monthly meeting at 7
p.m. at the town hall.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

TUESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

be in the Jordan Baptist Church Cemetery, Gallipolis
Ferry. Friends may visit the family from 6-8 p.m. on
Wednesday at the funeral home.

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

(5:00) Step Up All In ('14,

9:30

10

PM

10:30

Real Time With Bill Maher True Story ('15, Myst) Jonah Hill, James
(:45)
Divergent A young woman,
400 (HBO) Dra) Alyson Stoner, Briana
Franco. A reporter and an accused killer
classified as 'divergent,' learns of a
Evigan, Ryan Guzman. TV14
play a game of cat-and-mouse. TVPG
conspiracy to do away with her kind. TV14
(4:25)
(:35)
Meet the Spartans Sean Maguire.
300 (2006, Epic) Lena Headey, Dominic West,
300: Rise of an Empire
450 (MAX) Hollywood- A group of Spartan warriors defend their
Gerard Butler. The Spartan king assembles a small army of ('14, Act) Eva Green, Sullivan
land TV14
home and battle the Persian Empire. TV14 soldiers to defend his land from the Persians. TVMA
Stapleton. TVMA
(:20) Backcountry (2015, Thriller) Eric Balfour, Nicholas
Billions "YumTime" Axe
Inside the NFL "2015 Super Shameless "Going Once,
500 (SHOW) Campbell, Missy Peregrym. A couple gets lost in the woods makes an activist play that Bowl Preview" (N)
Going Twice"
and must survive a bear attack. TVMA
reverberates to Chuck.

Visit us at

www.mydailysentinel.com

meetings on the second Tuesday of each month at 7
p.m. in the new town hall.

Eighth annual
‘Big Fooze Night’
RACINE — “Big Fooze Night” Southern Alumni
basketball game will be March 12 at Southern High
School. Gates open at 5:15 p.m. and games begin at
6 p.m. There are plans for two men’s games that will
bring back the stars of the past along with a women’s
game featuring some of the best Southern Tornado
basketball women. Home National Bank in Racine
and Syracuse , longtime supporter of the event, will
once again be involved to boost the annual hometown
event. Proceeds from the game go to the Southern
Alumni Association’s Hilton Wolfe Jr. “Big Fooze”
Scholarship fund which has awarded scholarships over
the past 7 years to graduating Southern seniors.

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CONTACT US
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elitteral@civitasmedia.com

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Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 2, 2016 3

NEWS FROM AROUND THE BUCKEYE STATE

GOP outpaces Democrats in
legislative campaign cash
COLUMBUS (AP) — Since this summer, majority
Republicans in the state Senate have raised nearly
seven times the campaign cash as their Democratic
counterparts.
Campaign ﬁnance reports on Friday show that the
Republican Senate Campaign Committee took in
about $1.6 million since their last ﬁling in July. The
GOP campaign committee has about $3.3 million on
hand to spend headed into the election year.
Senate Democrats reported about $234,000 in contributions, with more than $166,000 on hand. Democrats hold 10 of 33 seats in the chamber.
Republicans maintained a signiﬁcant money advantage in the Ohio House, where they hold 65 of 99
seats. Their campaign committee raised about $2.3
million and had a balance of nearly $4.4 million.
House Democrats reported raising almost $448,000
since the summer and about $643,000 on hand.

Jury awards $27M to man
injured in 2013 crash
CLEVELAND (AP) — A jury in Ohio has awarded

$27 million to a man who was badly injured in a Greyhound bus accident on a Pennsylvania interstate.
Cleveland.com reports 45-year-old Mark Soberay, of
Cleveland, was awarded $23 million in compensatory
damages and $4 million in punitive damages on Jan.
22. Greyhound attorneys say an appeal is planned.
Soberay lost his right leg and needed more than 30
surgeries after the crash on Interstate 80 in September 2013. Investigators say the driver fell asleep and
rear-ended a semitrailer. One woman was killed and
dozens were injured, including the driver. The bus
was traveling from New York City to Cleveland.
Soberay’s attorneys argued that the driver ignored
a company rule about stopping every 150 miles. Greyhound said the 150-mile rule was merely a “guideline.”

report to the judge Monday.
Attorneys in the case didn’t immediately return
calls seeking comment.
Dudley’s 2014 lawsuit says course materials were
inaccessible to her text-to-speech software and she
hadn’t received material in forms she could use without help. It also said Miami violated federal law by
failing to provide equal access.
The university has denied it did anything wrong.

Ohio gas prices stay below $2,
though up from week ago

COLUMBUS (AP) — Ohio drivers are still seeing
gas pump prices below $2 despite a slight increase
over the past week in the average price for a gallon of
regular fuel.
The state average reported in Monday’s survey from
auto club AAA, the Oil Price Information Service and
WEX Inc. was $1.64. That’s about 8 cents higher than
CINCINNATI (AP) — A judge is to hear ﬁnal
details of an agreement to settle a blind student’s law- a week ago, but well below the $2.05 price reported a
suit accusing Miami University in Ohio of using tech- year ago in Ohio.
The state’s average price also remained below the
nology that presented a barrier to her education.
national average of $1.80 reported Monday. The surCourt documents show attorneys for Aleeha
vey reports the national average price of a regular galDudley and Miami agreed two weeks ago on the
main parts of a settlement. But U.S. District Court lon of gas that time last year was $2.06.
Gas prices could head even lower as a result of the
documents in Cincinnati show some “modest”
reduced seasonal demand and falling crude oil costs.
negotiations were continuing with both sides to

Judge sought to settle blind
student suit against college

Escaped inmates fought over killing taxi driver
By Amy Taxin
Associated Press

SANTA ANA, Calif.
— Three inmates
planned their escape
from a California jail for
at least six months then
abducted a taxi driver
and drove to Northern
California, where two
of the fugitives argued
about killing him,
authorities said Monday.
Sheriff’s Capt. Jeff
Hallock also said the
inmates were picked up
by an accomplice shortly after they escaped
on Jan. 22 from Central
Men’s Jail in Orange
County.
Later that day, inmate
Hossein Nayeri held a
gun on a taxi driver,
who spent two nights
with the fugitives in
Southern California
before they stole a van
and drove north, Hallock said.
Nayeri and inmate
Bac Duong then had
a physical fight in an
Alameda hotel room
over whether to kill
the taxi driver, he said.
Sheriff’s officials believe
Nayeri is the one who
wanted to kill the driver, Hallock said.
Duong and the taxi
driver returned the
next day to Santa Ana,
where Duong later surrendered.
Earlier Monday, prosecutors said a teacher
who was arrested
in connection with
the escape would be
released due to insufficient evidence to charge
her with any crime.
Prosecutors have
requested that the county Sheriff’s Department
conduct further inves-

tigation of Nooshafarin
Ravaghi, 44, who teaches English as a second
language to jail inmates,
District Attorney Tony
Rackauckas said.
Sheriff Sandra Hutchens later told reporters
that investigators still
believe Ravaghi was
involved.
Rackauckas also
announced the arrest of
Lac Ba Nguyen on suspicion of sending into
prison an article useful
for an escape. Prosecutors didn’t elaborate on
the article or say how it
might have been used.
Nguyen provided the
inmates with “things
that facilitated the
escape” and picked
them up shortly after
they escaped, Hallock
said.
Nayeri, 37, Duong,
43, and Jonathan Tieu,
20, escaped Central
Men’s Jail. Duong
turned himself in Friday
and the other two were
arrested in San Francisco on Saturday.
The Sheriff’s Department had initially said
Ravaghi and Nayeri,
who was in her class,
had exchanged letters of
a personal nature. Rackauckas said Monday
that the letters appear
to have been written by
Nayeri, not Ravaghi.
The district attorney
said Ravaghi was continuing to cooperate and
that steps were being
taken to ensure she
remains in the jurisdiction after her release.
Nguyen is due in
court Feb. 22. It’s not
immediately known if
he has an attorney.
With all three inmates
back in custody, authorities were examining

how they carried out
the jailbreak and what
they did during their
week on the run.
The sheriff vowed
over the weekend to fix
the security lapses that
allowed the escape.
The men sawed,
crawled and climbed
their way out of the
maximum-security jail
and used a rope made of
bedsheets to rappel four
stories to the ground.
The trio then spent
several days in Rosemead, a Los Angeles
suburb, where they held
the cab driver at gunpoint, Hallock said.
The three then drove
to Northern California
in a stolen van and the
taxi, taking the cabbie
with them, he said.
Duong surrendered on
Friday at an auto repair
shop in Santa Ana just a
few miles from the jail.
After dropping Duong
off, the cabbie immediately reported what had
happened.
Nayeri and Tieu were
arrested Saturday after
a civilian flagged down
officers near San Francisco’s Golden Gate
Park and pointed out a
parked van that looked
like one believed stolen
by the inmates after the
escape.
The three inmates did
not know each other
before being housed in
the Orange County jail.
They were awaiting
trial on charges involving violent crimes.
Duong and Tieu have
ties to gangs that operate in the shadows of
Orange County’s thriving Vietnamese community.
While behind bars,
the three were housed

Nick Ut | AP

Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas, far right, speaks on the arrest of three escaped
inmates seen on a video monitor at an Orange County Sheriff’s news conference Monday in Santa
Ana, Calif. The inmates, from left, Bac Duong, 43, Hossein Nayeri, 37, and Jonathan Tieu, 20, escaped
on Jan. 22 from Central Men’s Jail in Orange County. Duong turned himself in Friday and the other two
were arrested in San Francisco on Saturday.

together in a large jail
module that held 65
other men, about half of
whom were in custody
for violent felonies.
Ravaghi had been
booked on suspicion of
being an accessory to
a felony. The Sheriff’s
Department had said
she provided Nayeri a
paper copy of a Google
Earth map that showed
an aerial view of the
entire jail compound.
Nayeri is a former
Marine who grew up
in the Fresno area,
and authorities say it’s
unclear why as an English speaker he was in
her class that teaches
English as a second language.
Built in 1968, the
jail that housed the
men holds about 900
inmates. It was the first
breakout from the facility in nearly 30 years.

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�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

The river
runs through
my blood
The river runs through my blood.
Partly because my great-grandfather was a riverboat captain, partly because Grandpa Happy
seemed drawn to it like a frog to a lily pad and
partly because of my intrigue with Tom Sawyer’s
adventures.
My childhood home stood along the banks of
the Ohio. As a girl, I’d sit on the railroad track and
watch the river run south, imagining I was drifting
downstream with ole Tom, the trickster with an
ornery edge. We’d ﬂoat on a raft and ﬁsh all day
then ﬁnagle ourselves into and out
of a mess on shore. I felt like life was
indeed happening places other than
my limited view of the stationary
land.
When I wasn’t on a fantasy trip
with Tom, I’d imagine how my greatgrandfather felt as he navigated the
Michele Z. waterway for weeks on end and
wonder if he had any adventures of
Marcum
Contributing his own — if a group of thieves or
river pirates had attempted to take
Columnist
command of his ship.
What I remember most is perking
up when I heard the calliope music signaling the
arrival of the Mississippi Queen. Grandpa Happy
would pull out his Polaroid One Shot and shout,
“Whose going?” Grandpa never missed snapping
a picture of the grand vessel no matter that he
already had hundreds. He’d grab his keys from
the hook and scamper out the door to a car full
of whichever neighborhood kids happened to be
visiting.
I carried on the tradition. When my boys were
toddlers, I’d rush them to the river upon hearing
the familiar tune. On the way, I’d describe how I
had inherited grandpa’s infatuation for the iron
giant playing the unique jingle.
Standing there with my boys, I was tiny again
and watching through their eyes as the contraption carried souls from one place to another. I
daydreamed of foreign lands along the ship’s route
that were ﬂooded with people and creatures I’ve
never met.
To me, the four-story high party ship was more
than a ﬂoating hotel — it was an American icon
that looked like it sprang out of a Mark Twain
novel. With my automatic camera, I’d capture the
passing ship with people on board waving their
arms like dandelions in the breeze. I’d imagine
Grandpa Happy standing on this same bank as a
boy, watching the spectacle and I’d wonder if he
was ever a passenger on the grand vehicle or if he
was content to observe her majesty from shore.
As for me, I’ve never boarded the sternwheeler,
but I have sailed toward my dreams.
There’s water in these veins of mine, and I’m
still running to the river. Something about the
movement of the boats and the waves makes me
feel unstuck and able to travel into my own adventures — that is when I’m brave enough to dive in.
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native of Meigs County and an author. Her
column appears each Tuesday.

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THEIR VIEW

Trump holds an unflattering mirror
The GOP debate he
line with its ideological beat
wasn’t attending hadn’t yet
cops.
begun, but Donald Trump,
Fox News has been a great
safely tucked into the
brand, but now Trump has
plush leather seats of his
decided he has to rough it up
757, declared himself the
to build his own brand as a
winner.
candidate. So far, it’s workHe was right.
Mary
ing.
Political commentators
Trump reiterated in interSanchez
would spend the next
Contributing views before the debate that
Columnist
several hours parsing his
he had to stand up to Fox
feud with Fox News host
News. This isn’t just the
Megyn Kelly. They would
narcissistic bluster we’ve
rehash the more genteel tone of
come to expect from Trump. It’s
the GOP debate that went on with- true. Forget about his counterout Trump and try to determine
event and whether it succeeded
if he offended Iowa voters by not
or disappointed on its merits. The
appearing at the debate in Des
important message is that Trump
Moines, attending his own event a dominated Fox News — and that
few miles down the road instead.
is unprecedented.
They were missing the point.
The squabble with Fox News
The tiff had little to do with
illustrates how Trump has become
Trump fearing Kelly’s stern and
such an appealing candidate. It’s
persistent questions as one of the
a peek into the brain under the
debate moderators. It had to do
pompadour.
with Fox News boss Roger Ailes’
A lot of what he does is shtick,
role as GOP kingmaker.
as you might expect from someone
If you are going to run against
with a background in pro wresthe Republican establishment, that tling and reality TV. Consider the
means running against Fox News.
interview he gave on his plane
Trump knew it; Ailes knew it
with CNN correspondent Brianna
(which is why premier Fox talent
Keilar before taking the stage at
scurried to placate Trump); and
his veterans event
now everybody knows it.
“I was insulted by Fox,” he said,
Ailes built his network empire
following a well-honed script. Of
by deﬁning it against the so-called voters, he added: “I think they are
mainstream media. At the same
going to say he’s the one person
time, he was building it as a sort
who stands up for himself. And we
of “oppo” research and broadcast
need that.”
arm of the Republican Party, a
Claim that you are being mistalent incubator for conservative
treated and disrespected by the
media stars and a source of comfy
political establishment — a victim,
sinecures for past and aspiring
if you will. It takes a lot of chutzRepublican candidates. Whatever
pah to do that when you’re Donald
part of the Republican Party Fox
Trump. But that has been the script
News doesn’t own, it keeps in
at Fox News since forever, and now

Trump is making it his own.
Another Fox News trope that
Trump has turned against the network is its grievance over political
correctness. While for years the
network (and conservatives generally) have prissily wailed against
this form of supposed oppression,
Trump has run his mouth and
Twitter account, violating decorum and decency with reckless
and unapologetic abandon. When
he did so against Kelly, Fox News
was put in the uncomfortable position of having to acknowledge that
such standards should exist.
Fox News — and the Republican Party it has remade — likes
to bully. Its audience likes to see
it bully. Now comes the spectacle
of Fox News and the Republicans
being bullied, outright dominated
by a free-lancer nobody took seriously. Democrats and Republicans
alike may despise Trump, but
he understands all too well the
populist strategy that lifted Fox
News and the Republican Party to
commanding heights in American
politics.
How do you take down this
verbose bully? If you’re the Republicans, you probably can’t. The
other GOP candidates can’t beat
him at his own game. He’s too
good and they’re so lame. The verbal ribs that the other candidates
lobbed at Trump in his absence at
the debate came off ﬂat. Spontaneity and authenticity are not their
forte. Political life has stilted them.
Trump is a different story. What
you see is what you get, and it’s
very entertaining.
Reach Mary Sanchez at msanchez@kcstar.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Tuesday, Feb.
2, the 33rd day of 2016.
There are 333 days left in
the year. This is Groundhog Day.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Feb. 2, 1914,
Charles Chaplin made
his movie debut as the
comedy short “Making a
Living” was released by
Keystone Film Co.
On this date:
In 1653, New Amsterdam — now New York
City — was incorporated.
In 1848, the Treaty of
Guadalupe Hidalgo, ending the Mexican-American War, was signed.
In 1887, Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, held
its ﬁrst Groundhog Day
festival.
In 1925, the legendary
Alaska Serum Run ended
as the last of a series of

dog mushers brought
a life-saving treatment
to Nome, the scene of a
diphtheria epidemic, six
days after the drug left
Nenana.
In 1932, Duke Ellington and His Orchestra
recorded “It Don’t Mean
a Thing (If It Ain’t Got
That Swing)” for Brunswick Records.
In 1942, a Los Angeles
Times column by W.H.
Anderson urged security
measures against Japanese-Americans, arguing
that a Japanese-American “almost inevitably …
grows up to be a Japanese, not an American.”
In 1943, the remainder of Nazi forces from
the Battle of Stalingrad
surrendered in a major
victory for the Soviets in
World War II.
In 1964, Ranger 6, a
lunar probe launched

by NASA, crashed onto
the surface of the moon
as planned, but failed
to send back any TV
images.
In 1971, Idi Amin,
having seized power in
Uganda, proclaimed himself president.
Today’s Birthdays:
Gossip columnist Liz
Smith is 93. Former
French President Valery
Giscard d’Estaing is 90.
Actor Robert Mandan
is 84. Comedian Tom
Smothers is 79. Rock
singer-guitarist Graham
Nash is 74. Television
executive Barry Diller
is 74. Actor Bo Hopkins
is 72. Country singer
Howard Bellamy (The
Bellamy Brothers) is 70.
TV chef Ina Garten is
68. Actor Jack McGee
is 67. Actor Brent
Spiner is 67. Rock
musician Ross Valory

(Journey) is 67. Sen.
John Cornyn, R-Texas,
is 64. The president
of South Korea, Park
Geun-hye, is 64. Model
Christie Brinkley is 62.
Actor Michael Talbott
is 61. Actress Kim
Zimmer is 61. Actor
Michael T. Weiss is 54.
Actor-comedian Adam
Ferrara is 50. Rock
musician Robert DeLeo
(Army of Anyone;
Stone Temple Pilots)
is 50. Actress Jennifer
Westfeldt is 46. Rock
musician Ben Mize is
45. Rapper T-Mo is 44.
Actress Marissa Jaret
Winokur is 43. Actress
Lori Beth Denberg is
40. Singer Shakira is
39. Actor Rich Sommer
(TV: “Mad Men”) is 38.
Country singer Blaine
Larsen is 30. Actress
Zosia Mamet (TV:
“Girls”) is 28.

�LOCAL/WORLD

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 2, 2016 5

SOUTHERN HS 2ND NINE WEEKS HONOR ROLL
Contributed Article

tin L; Roberts, Jaiden M; Roush,
Riley L; Warden, Sailor H; White,
All A Honor Roll Ninth Grade:
Kendra J; Wolfe, Joseph C; Wood,
Anderson, Peyton R; Harmon,
Nikita N.
William F; Arnold, Austin L;
All A Honor Roll Eleventh
Jarrell, Rylan C; Baker, Austin
Grade:
D; Johnson, Mallory R; Brooker,
Barton, Katelyn B; Johnson,
Marissa F; Katona, Kaylee L;
Marissa A; Carsey, Abbigaile I
Chaney, Tori M; Knotts, Jordan M;
Maynard, Marlee H; Cleland,
Cunningham, Brayden N; Lisle,
Madison A; Dailey, Jacquelynn S; Sierra S McMillan, David C; Cole,
Matson, Kathryn E; Diddle, Noah Amanda K; Michael, Macie A;
B; Reitmire, Elizabeth N; Dunfee, Davis, Crysta J; Musser, Haley
David J; Reuter, Reece C; Grueser, C; Drummer, Talon Q; Pickens,
Baylee P; Rifﬂe, Elaina A; Haines, Trey O; Dunfee, Daniel R; Rogers, Crenson A; Fisher, Jordan J;
Morgan L; VanMeter, Alex M;
Schenkelberg, Sara; Hunter, Eli F;
Hall, Emily E; Wolfe, Emma M.
Smith, Kamryn N; Hunter, Lucas
All A Honor Roll Tenth Grade:
W; Teaford, Faith E; Jarrell, ConCleland, Sydney M; Ervin,
Jolisha N Evans, Hannah E; Green- nor B.
All A Honor Roll Twelfth Grade:
lee, Miranda D; Hill, Andee M;
Hoback, Jonah S; Mckibben, AusArnold, Kari L; Kowell, Michael

A; Beegle, Joseph A; Lamm,
Dimitrious O; Blain, Myria D;
Lavender, Timothy M; Cochran,
Holly D; Maynard, Madison G;
Cunningham, Brooke M; Patterson, Dalton J; Deem, Alison J;
Porter, Brandy R; Diddle, Sydney
H; Richards, Sylvia A; Dutton,
Jeremy R; Seymour, Kalynn A;
Harmon, Cameryn D; Shortridge,
Kristopher D; Harris, Brynn N;
Teaford, Elizabeth A; Hill, Haley
Wolfe, Elizabeth A; Hill, Hannah
M; Wolfe, Jansen N.
All A/B Honor Roll Ninth
Grade:
Acree, Ryan M; Marshall, Jenna
N; Anderson, Brian J; Miller, Alora
T; Boyer, Kayla S Milliron, Erica
P; Brooker, Marissa F; Mills, Ryan
J; Collingsworth, Alexandra N;

Pullins, Tysen S; Cummins, Abby
D; Theiss, Declan B; Drummer,
Logan R; Thomas, Shawn E; Dutton, James B; Thorla, Weston C;
Francis, Travis M; Hamm, Colton
T; Harmon, William F; Hoschar,
Mikayla R.
All A/B Honor Roll Tenth
Grade:
Barton, Kendra R; Montgomery,
Julia M; Bottomley, Hanna A;
Moore, Julia M; Clark, William
W; Phillips, Emily C; Cormack,
Ashley N; Ritchhart, Autumn P;
Dailey, Shelbi; Roush, Augusta J;
Dunn, Larry D; Smith, Christopher D; Evans, Andrew M; Stover,
Holly N; Floyd, Bailee N; Thomas,
Connor M; Johnson, Brandon M;
VanMeter, Paige D; Jones, Owen
G; Wehrung, Dominique L; Laven-

Britain approves experiments Park
LONDON (AP) — In
a landmark decision that
some ethicists warned is a
step down the path toward
“designer babies,” Britain
gave scientists approval Monday to conduct experiments
in which they will try to edit
the genes in human embryos.
The scientists won’t
be creating babies — the

modiﬁed embryos will be
destroyed after seven days.
Instead, they said, the goal is
to better understand human
development and thereby
improve fertility treatments
and prevent miscarriages.
The decision by Britain’s
Human Fertilisation and
Embryology Authority
marks the ﬁrst time a coun-

the Ohio Department
of Health, and through
donations. Cleland said
those getting the project
together are also currently working on applying for funding from
the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources.
“Our whole goal
is to increase access
to recreational

From Page 1

ty’s national regulator has
approved the technique.
Permission isn’t explicitly
required in many other
countries, including the
U.S. and China. The U.S.
does not allow the use of
federal funds for embryo
modiﬁcation, but there is
no outright ban on gene
editing.

der, Lauren E; Young, Christopher
A; Lyons, Domineke D.
All A/B Honor Roll Eleventh
Grade:
Acree, Ashley P; Boso, Clayton
C; Hensley, Gage A; Johnson,
Coalton, B; Marcinko, Macey L;
Petrie, Larissa M; Theiss, Logan
C; Thorla, Tanner M; Willis, Edgar
D; Wood, Clayton M.
All A/B Honor Roll Twelfth
Grade:
Bailey, Sabra L; Bailey, Savannah R; Eblin, Mickayla D; Ginther,
Katelynn M; Hill, Parker A; Johnson, Theron D; Katona, Courtney
N; Matthews, Madison G; Morris,
Joseph W; Quillen, Madeline J;
Ramthun, Thomas J; Shockey,
Wayne A; Uribe, Dominic G; Warden, Crew M.

The project is estimated
to be about $80,000,
with about $25,000 currently secured through
the Creating Healthy
Communities grant,
which comes through

opportunities,” Cleland
said. “I’m really excited
about the project.”
For more information
on how to donate,
contact Laura Cleland
at laura.cleland@meigshealth.com or at 740992-6626 EXT. 1031.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-9922155 EXT. 2555.

LOCAL STOCKS

Students
From Page 1

faculty could make use of the campus escort
system which provides an ofﬁcer to help
travel with an individual about the area.
Borden said campus police make efforts
to patrol the surrounding areas on campus
in car or by foot. According to the University of Rio Grande 2015 Campus Safety and
Fire Annual Report, no sexual crimes were
committed outside of a building on university property in the last three years. Three
recorded sex offenses happened inside residential facilities in 2013 and one in 2014.
There were no sexual offenses in 2012.
Borden said ofﬁcers’ appearance can often
dissuade a potential attacker or law breaker.
Despite there having been no attacks

TODAY
8 AM

2 PM

51°

57°

HEALTH TODAY
AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

Precipitation

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.24
Month to date/normal
0.24/0.11
Year to date/normal
2.23/3.08

Snowfall

(in inches)

0

SUN &amp; MOON

Q: On average what is the snowiest
month across the United States?

MOON PHASES
New

First

Feb 8

Full

Feb 15 Feb 22

Last

Mar 1

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

Major
6:25a
7:10a
7:55a
8:42a
9:30a
10:21a
11:15a

Minor
12:15a
12:57a
1:42a
2:28a
3:17a
4:07a
5:01a

Major
6:49p
7:35p
8:21p
9:08p
9:58p
10:49p
11:42p

Minor
12:37p
1:22p
2:08p
2:55p
3:44p
4:35p
5:28p

WEATHER HISTORY
Gusty winds surged through the
Great Lakes region and into western
Pennsylvania on Feb. 2, 1983. It was
so windy that Punxsutawney Phil had
a hard time holding on to his shadow.

Lucasville
61/55
Portsmouth
62/55

AIR QUALITY

49°
30°

Plenty of sun

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER

Belpre
59/52

Athens
58/53

St. Marys
58/51

Parkersburg
59/51

Coolville
58/53

Elizabeth
60/51

Spencer
60/50

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.53 -0.52
Marietta
34 17.40 +0.72
Parkersburg
36 19.83 +0.09
Belleville
35 12.74 +0.01
Racine
41 13.34 +0.01
Point Pleasant
40 25.06 +0.03
Gallipolis
50 12.18 -0.26
Huntington
50 27.48 +0.54
Ashland
52 35.36 +0.33
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.90 +0.03
Portsmouth
50 22.30 +1.30
Maysville
50 34.60 +0.30
Meldahl Dam
51 21.30 +0.50
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Let’s Talk
About Your

Buffalo
62/54
Milton
64/54

Clendenin
59/50

St. Albans
64/54

Huntington
65/56

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
48/38
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
San Francisco
0s
55/44
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
61/42
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

50°
29°

Partly sunny

Marietta
58/51

Murray City
57/53

Ironton
64/54

Ashland
64/54
Grayson
65/55

MONDAY

50°
33°

Periods of clouds and
sunshine

Wilkesville
60/54
POMEROY
Jackson
60/52
60/55
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
61/53
61/55
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
59/51
GALLIPOLIS
61/54
61/53
61/54

South Shore Greenup
64/54
61/54

58
0 50 100 150 200

SOLUNAR TABLE
Today
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.

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

SUNDAY

Partly sunny

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
58/54

Waverly
58/54

42°
27°

Cooler with partial
sunshine

Logan
56/53

SATURDAY

A: February.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Chillicothe
56/54

FRIDAY

41°
21°

Adelphi
57/53

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Wed.
7:34 a.m.
5:52 p.m.
3:03 a.m.
1:29 p.m.

Morning rain;
otherwise, mostly
cloudy

0

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.0
Month to date/normal
0.0/0.3
Season to date/normal
14.2/11.8

Today
7:34 a.m.
5:50 p.m.
2:08 a.m.
12:46 p.m.

THURSDAY

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

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

WEDNESDAY

Mainly cloudy today. Heavy rain and a t-storm
early tonight. High 61° / Low 54°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

61°/46°
43°/26°
71° in 2002
-2° in 1899

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

60°
35°
35°

BBT (NYSE) —32.29
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 18.11
Pepsico (NYSE) —98.99
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.60
Rockwell (NYSE) — 94.47
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) —11.10
Royal Dutch Shell — 43.35
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 17.67
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 67.48
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 10.17
WesBanco (NYSE) — 28.89
Worthington (NYSE) —28.83
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Feb. 1, 2016, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

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

ALMANAC
High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

AEP (NYSE) — 61.79
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 21.14
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 93.53
Big Lots (NYSE) — 39.20
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) —41.69
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 29.77
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 4.36
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.250
City Holding (NASDAQ) —43.68
Collins (NYSE) — 81.55
DuPont (NYSE) — 53.50
US Bank (NYSE) — 39.78
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 28.64
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 40.13
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 58.86
Kroger (NYSE) —40.11
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 96.56
Norfolk So (NYSE) —70.19
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.00

Charleston
62/54

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
15/-6

Billings
35/21

Minneapolis
32/19

Toronto
39/31
Detroit
46/39

New York
47/42

Chicago
44/36

Denver
26/7

Montreal
29/22

Washington
51/43

Kansas City
55/25

Wed.
Hi/Lo/W
42/18/s
24/19/i
67/39/t
59/48/r
63/39/r
37/25/c
40/30/pc
53/47/r
62/37/r
72/48/t
22/11/c
37/20/sf
52/28/c
54/28/c
55/30/c
53/30/s
29/9/pc
27/12/c
48/28/sn
82/68/pc
61/37/s
46/24/c
31/20/pc
49/34/s
51/30/s
63/44/pc
53/31/c
80/70/pc
23/8/pc
55/31/pc
63/44/pc
57/47/r
45/25/s
82/65/t
63/44/r
58/39/s
60/31/r
48/43/r
74/53/t
67/47/t
42/25/c
29/19/sf
56/49/c
46/42/r
62/43/r

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

El Paso
49/27

GOALS

Today
Hi/Lo/W
42/22/sf
25/15/c
73/63/c
48/40/s
48/40/c
35/21/c
38/21/pc
45/35/s
62/54/pc
63/53/c
22/7/sn
44/36/r
63/50/c
51/48/c
55/53/c
65/36/pc
26/7/sn
39/26/sn
46/39/r
82/70/s
73/43/t
59/42/r
55/25/sh
47/30/s
71/37/t
61/42/s
69/49/t
80/72/pc
32/19/sn
73/51/c
77/56/t
47/42/s
54/28/pc
81/66/pc
50/39/s
56/35/s
50/44/pc
41/28/s
57/52/c
55/45/c
64/39/t
29/14/c
55/44/c
48/38/c
51/43/c

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
Atlanta
73/63

Chihuahua
Houston
65/24
73/43
Monterrey
78/41

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

91° in Cotulla, TX
-23° in West Yellowstone, MT

Global
High
Low
Miami
80/72

116° in Vioolsdrif, South Africa
-66° in Delyankirskiy, Russia

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589

WEATHER

outside of a building, Borden warned young
people to always be cautious of “date rape.”
While campus and village police do what
they can, crime still can happen. Individuals
should always be cautious of who they invite
into their home.
Campus police offer information on
counseling services. Borden said in the
event a crime takes place, authorities are
quick to investigate.
Dr. Michelle Johnston, president of URG,
has been a vocal advocate of programs like
Changing Campus Culture, an Ohio Department of Higher Education initiative to
empower staff, faculty, law enforcement and
students to prevent sexual violence through
researched training methods.

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 2, 2016 s Page 6

Lady Tornadoes pound Pike Eastern, 57-29
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — Now that’s
how you bounce back.
The Southern girls basketball team was left with a
sour taste in its mouth following an 0-2 performance in
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division play this past
week. However, the Lady
Tornadoes ended the week
on a high note, knocking off
non-conference guest Pike
Eastern by a 57-29 count on
Saturday in Meigs County.
Southern (13-6) bolted out
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
to
a 12-4 lead through one
Southern junior Sierra Cleland looks to evade a trio of Pike Eastern defenders, during
quarter, and the Purple and
the Lady Tornadoes’ 57-29 victory on Saturday, in Racine.

Gold expanded the advantage
to 25-9 by halftime.
A 22-to-9 third quarter run
pushed the Lady Tornado
lead to 47-18 headed into the
ﬁnale. SHS hit all six fourth
quarter free throw tries and
sealed the 57-29 triumph.
“It’s a big win for us in
non-league, especially after
a tough loss at Belpre,” SHS
head coach Kent Wolfe said.
“We’re trying to get where we
need to be and that was a big
stepping stone for us. I was
very happy with our third
quarter performance, because
I didn’t want them to come
out, see that lead and relax.
Our post players were very

good, we knew that we had a
slight advantage there and we
were able to attack that.”
The SHS offense was led by
Haley Hill and Faith Teaford
with 18 points each, followed
by Ali Deem with 10. Jansen
Wolfe scored six points, Sierra Cleland added four, while
Savannah Bailey rounded out
the Southern scoring with
one marker.
Teaford also led the hosts
on the glass with seven
rebounds, while Bailey
chipped in with seven. Hill
and Cleland both recorded
four assists to lead Southern,
See TORNADOES | 10

Eastern soars
past Lady
Falcons, 48-17
By Alex Hawley

The Green and Gold
closed the game with
a 6-2 run, sealing the
MASON, W.Va. —
48-17 victory and the
Another night, another season sweep of WHS.
convincing win for the
Eastern also defeated
Green and Gold.
the Red and White on
The Eastern girls
December 19, by a 47-6
basketball team picked
count in Tuppers Plains.
up its second straight
EHS sophomore
30-plus point win
Elizabeth Collins paced
Thursday evening, this the Lady Eagles with
time defeating Tri-Valnine points, followed by
ley Conference Hocking freshman Alyson Bailey
Division host Wahama
with eight. Laura Pulby a 48-17 count, on
lins and Madison Kuhn
Gary Clark Court.
scored seven points
The Lady Falcons
apiece, Rebecca Pullins
(0-13, 0-11) managed
chipped in with six,
just two points over the while Hannah Bailey
ﬁrst eight minutes of
scored four. Annalisa
play, as Eastern (14-5,
Boano contributed
12-2) charged out to
three points to the EHS
a 19-2 lead. The Lady
cause, while Kelsey
Eagles outscored their
Casto and Abbie Hawhost 13-to-3 in the
ley rounded out the
second canto, and the
Eastern scoring with
EHS lead was 31-5 at
two points apiece.
halftime.
Eastern — which
Wahama connected
drained two three-pointon two trifectas in the
ers in the win — shot
third period, but was
12-of-22 from the charoutscored 11-to-10 in
ity stripe, equaling 54.5
the quarter, as Eastern’s percent.
lead grew to 42-15
headed into the fourth.
See EASTERN | 10

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, February 2
Boys Basketball
Trimble at Southern, 7:30
Federal Hocking at Wahama, 7:30
Logan at Gallia Academy, 7:30
Athens at River Valley, 7:30
Mid-Valley Christian at Ohio Valley Christian,
7:30
Eastern at Waterford, 7:30
South Gallia at South Point, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Hannan at Ohio Valley Christian, 6 p.m.
Men’s College Basketball
Ohio Christian University at Rio Grande, 8 p.m.
Women’s College Basketball
Ohio Christian University at Rio Grande, 6 p.m.
Wednesday, February 3
Boys Basketball
Wahama at Eastern, 7:30
Wellston at River Valley. 7:30
Point Pleasant at Shady Spring, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Nitro at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Wahama at South Gallia, 6:30
Wrestling
Chesapeake, Fairland at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Thursday, February 4
Girls Basketball
Wahama at Southern, 7:30
Nelsonville-York at River Valley, 7:30
Waterford at South Gallia, 6:30
Trimble at Eastern, 7:30
Meigs at Jackson, 7:30
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth, 7:30
Wrestling
River Valley at Warren, 4 p.m.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Meigs senior Colton Lilly (3) releases a shot attempt over River Valley defender Jacob Dovenbarger (32) during the second half of Friday
night’s TVC Ohio boys basketball contest in Rocksprings, Ohio.

Marauders routs Raiders, 76-54

By Bryan Walters

— including a 10-5 edge on the
offensive glass. The hosts also shot
57 percent from the ﬁeld through
ROCKSPRINGS — Simply put, three quarters of play.
the Raiders ran into a buzz saw.
Second-year MHS coach Ed Fry
Tyler Twyman became only the
was obviously pleased with the
second male in River Valley history ﬁnal outcome, particularly in the
to reach 1,000 career points, but
way that everyone contributed
the Meigs boys basketball team
from the tip-off. Fry was also humshot 54 percent from the ﬁeld
ble in expressing his pleasure for
Friday night en route to a 76-54
Twyman and his wonderful accomvictory in a Tri-Valley Conference
plishment afterwards.
Ohio Division contest at Larry R.
“The kids were just totally
Morrison Gymnasium in Meigs
focused on what we needed to do.
County.
I’ve not seen these kids as focused
The visiting Raiders (3-13, 0-7
for a game as they were tonight,”
TVC Ohio) stormed out to an early Fry said. “We made some tweaks
5-0 advantage, but the Maraudto our offense and we were able to
ers (14-2, 6-2) — who missed
get some really great looks at the
their ﬁrst two shot attempts —
basket tonight, and our kids took
answered by hitting 20 of their
care of the rest.
next 26 ﬁeld goal tries while estab“I do want to say that I am very
lishing a commanding 47-28 cush- happy for Tyler Twyman tonight.
ion at the break.
He’s a great kid and I’m really
MHS followed by netting three
happy to see him back out on a
of their ﬁrst four shot attempts in
basketball court. For what he’s
the third canto for a 57-30 advanbeen able to battle back from, I’m
tage three minutes in, but the
glad that he was able to reach this
Silver and Black answered with
milestone.”
a small 9-6 run to close to within
Twyman — who missed the ﬁrst
63-39 headed into the ﬁnale.
10 games of the year due to a sumJared Kennedy gave the hosts
mertime knee injury — joined Joey
their largest lead of the night at
James as the only Raiders to ever
69-40 following a jumper at the
reach quadruple digits in points
6:19 mark, but the Silver and
during a career. Twyman netted a
Black closed regulation with a 14-7 trifecta from the right wing with
charge to wrap up the 22-point
23.9 seconds left in the ﬁrst quaroutcome.
ter, which allowed him to surpass
Meigs, winners of two straight,
1,000 points.
claimed a season sweep of the
It’s a been an incredibly tough
Raiders after previously posting a
road in reaching this point, but
61-39 decision in Bidwell back on
the senior was pleased to have this
December 18. RVHS, conversely,
burden lifted.
has now dropped four consecutive
“It’s a special feeling knowing
contests.
that I have ﬁnally reached this mileThe Marauders had 10 different stone,” Twyman said. “I’ve worked
really hard to get to this point and
players reach the scoring column,
I just want to thank my teammates
committed only nine turnovers
and coaches for continuing to
and also outrebounded the guests
believe in me over the years.
by a sizable 44-23 overall margin

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

“There were a lot of times while
waking up at ﬁve in the morning
that I really wondered why I was
doing all of this rehab on my knee.
I’m glad I stayed with it and was
able to get back out here to reach
this goal. I’m really glad that all of
the hard work has paid off and I’m
really glad that this pursuit is over.
It’s really a relief off of my shoulders.”
The Raiders committed only one
turnover in the ﬁrst half and had
just ﬁve miscues in the contest.
The guests also shot 36 percent
from the ﬁeld and had eight different players reach the scoring
column.
But, as second-year RVHS coach
Jeremy Peck noted afterward, it’s
hard to win a game when your
opponent is making every shot it
throws up.
“I can’t be disappointed too
much with my boys. We played
together very well in this game,
especially offensively, but Meigs
just would not miss a shot there
in the ﬁrst half. There was simply
nothing we could do,” Peck said.
“We obviously still need to tighten
our defense up, but we put together a lot of positive things tonight in
this game.”
Peck, on a more sentimental
note, was very proud that his
senior guard was able to join a very
exclusive club at River Valley.
“I will say that I’m happy for
Tyler tonight. I was there when
he tore his knee and have been
with him throughout the whole
journey,” Peck said. “He’s come a
long way and he’s fought through
so much, so I’m really proud of
him for what he’s been able to
accomplish in getting to this
milestone.”
See MARAUDERS | 10

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 2, 2016 7

Rebels top Tornadoes, stretch streak to 10
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

MERCERVILLE —Saturday
was a good day, and night, to
be a Rebel.
That’s because South Gallia’s
hot streak is ofﬁcially at 10,
and after Saturday, the Rebels
can stake their claim to ﬁrstplace in the Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division.
On Saturday night, in a
TVC-Hocking Division boys
basketball makeup matchup
from Friday, Jan. 22, the Rebels
rolled the visiting Southern
Tornadoes 67-47 for their 10
consecutive victory.

high 23 points, including nine
total ﬁeld goals — four of
which were three-pointers.
In the Rebels’ 73-63 division win over Miller on Friday
night, Ehman amassed 24
markers.
Against Southern, South Gallia led 16-7 after the ﬁrst quarter, 28-18 at halftime and 45-31
following three periods.
Ehman had all but seven of
his points in the second half,
as Landon Hutchinson — on
six ﬁeld goals — and Dominick
Johnson — on ﬁve ﬁeld goals
and 2-of-3 free throws — each
added 12.
Corey Rhodes — on four

That win, which improved
the Rebels’ record to 10-2 in
the TVC-Hocking and part of
14-2 overall, pushed South Gallia into a half-game lead in the
division.
Combine that with Waterford’s 64-61 win over Trimble
in Saturday’s makeup matinee,
and the Rebels lead both the
9-2 (TVC-Hocking) Wildcats
and Tomcats for the league
lead.
Southern’s loss left the Tornadoes at 3-14 overall, and 3-9
in the TVC-Hocking.
South Gallia got another
excellent outing from Joseph
Ehman, who poured in a game-

of second-half ﬁeld goals —
boasted four points while Pickens, Weston Thorla and Jonah
Hoback hit a three-point goal
apiece.
Crenson Rogers recorded a
ﬁeld goal and Brayden Cunningham had two free throws
for Southern.
The Tornadoes host Trimble
in another TVC-Hocking tilt
tonight (Tuesday), while South
Gallia goes for its 11th straight
win with a non-league date at
South Point.

ﬁeld goals — chipped in eight
points, while Kane Hutchinson
had two ﬁeld goals and 3-of-4
free throws for seven.
Darren Drenner, with an oldfashioned three-point play in
the opening quarter, and Caleb
Henry — with a fourth-quarter
ﬁeld goal — rounded out the
Red and Gold scoring.
Tylar Blevins — with three
deuces, three treys and 2-of-2
free throws — paced the Tornadoes with 17 points.
Clayton Wood — with two
three-pointers — scored six,
while Trey Pickens and Dylan
Smith each scored ﬁve.
Jaylen Blanks — on a pair

Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2106

Lady Bulldogs hold off Meigs Marauders, 39-32
By Alex Hawley

quarter, but it was too little,
too late, and the Lady Bulldogs claimed the 39-32 win.
THE PLAINS — Some
MHS sophomore
nights you just can’t buy a
Madison Hendricks led
bucket.
the Maroon and Gold with
The Meigs girls basketball seven points, followed by
team shot under 25 percent Madison Fields and Marissa
from both the ﬁeld and the
Noble with six apiece. Devin
charity stripe Thursday
Humphreys scored ﬁve
night, as the Lady Maraudpoints, Kassidy Betzing,
ers dropped a 39-32 decision
Danielle Morris and Sadie
to Tri-Valley Conference
Fox each added two, while
Ohio Division host Athens,
Courtney Jones and Bre Colin McAfee Gymnasium.
burn both marked one point
The host Lady Bulldogs
in the setback.
(5-12, 4-6 TVC Ohio) —
Fields and Humphreys
who have now won four
led
Meigs on the glass with
straight games after a 1-12
six
rebounds
apiece, while
start to the season — led
12-7 at the conclusion of the Betzing had a team-best ﬁve
assists. Fields came away
ﬁrst period and pushed the
with a team-leading two
lead to 30-19 by halftime.
steals, while Humphreys
Athens managed just
blocked two shots to pace
three points in the third
MHS.
quarter, but the Lady
The Lady Marauders
Marauders (8-10, 3-8)
made
just 3-of-15 (20 percouldn’t capitalize, only
cent)
free
throw attempts
scoring one point in the
and 11-of-46 (23.9 percent)
eight-minute span. Meigs
ﬁeld goal attempts, includoutscored the Green and
Gold 12-to-6 in the fourth
ing 7-of-28 (25 percent)

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

tries from three-point range.
As a team the Maroon and
Gold recorded 32 rebounds,
nine assists, four steals,
three blocks and 18 turnovers.
Athens senior Alexis
McCollum led the victors
with 16 points, seven steals
and ﬁve assists, followed
by Taylor Gergory with
nine points and six boards.

Want The Best Deal
On TV &amp; Internet?

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THE PLAINS — Always beware of a wounded dog.
The Athens Bulldogs boys basketball team — which
was without the services of usual starters Grifﬁn Lutz and
Robert Dickelman due to injuries — pulled off a 68-65
upset victory over Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division
guest Meigs, on Saturday evening in McAfee Gymnasium.
The Marauders (14-3, 6-3 TVC Ohio) led 18-to-11 after
the opening stanza, but the advantage was trimmed to
one point, 31-30, by halftime.
Meigs outscored Athens (9-7, 6-3) by a 17-to-13 clip in
the third period, making the MHS lead 48-43 headed into
the ﬁnale.
The Maroon and Gold scored the ﬁrst seven points
of the fourth quarter, expanding the lead to 12, but the
Bulldogs answered with a 23-8 run to take the lead at
66-64 with 18 seconds remaining. Meigs cut the deﬁcit
to one point with 10 seconds left, but AHS sank a pair
of free throws extend the lead to 68-65. The Marauders
attempted to force overtime, but the three-point shot fell
short and the Bulldogs escaped with the 68-65 win.
MHS senior Kaileb Sheets led the Maroon and Gold
with 24 points, ﬁve rebounds, four assists, three steals and
two blocked shots, while Colton Lilly and Luke Musser
both scored 12 points. Christian Mattox scored six points,
Jaxon Meadows added ﬁve, while Tyler Fields contributed
four. Jared Kennedy rounded out the MHS scoring with
two points in the setback.
The Marauders shot 12-of-20 (60 percent) from the free
throw stripe and 25-of-53 (47.2 percent) from the ﬁeld,
including 3-of-9 (33.3 percent) from three-point range.
Collectivley, Meigs ﬁnished with 23 rebounds, 10 assists,
10 steals, four blocks and nine turnovers.
Zacciah Saltzman led the Bulldogs with 27 points and
four assists, followed by Dalton Cozart with 19 points.
Justin Hines scored six points and pulled in a game-best
nine rebounds, Brody Ball scored ﬁve points, while Noah
Skinner and Logan Maxﬁeld rounded out the AHS scoring with four points each.
Athens made 11-of-15 (73.3 percent) free throw
attempts and 24-of-52 (46.2 percent) ﬁeld goal tries,
including 9-of-26 (34.6 percent) from beyond the arc. As
a team the Green and Gold recorded 35 rebounds, 13
assists, three steals, two blocks and 18 turnovers.
The season series between AHS and MHS now sits
tied a 1-1, as Meigs claimed a 72-64 victory over Athens
on December 11 at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium. Grifﬁn Lutz led Athens in that game with 36 points and 10
rebounds.
Meigs returns to action at home on Friday when the
Maroon and Gold look for revenge on Alexander, which
handed the Marauders their ﬁrst loss of the season, by a
80-69 count in Albany on January 15.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

ﬁeld, including 2-of-8 (25
percent) from beyond the
arc. As a team Athens ﬁnished with 18 rebounds, 11
assists, 10 steals, ﬁve blocks
and 15 turnovers.
The season series between
Athens and Meigs now sits
tied at one win apiece, as
MHS claimed a 42-33 victory
over the Lady Bulldogs on
December 17, in Larry R.

Morrison Gymnasium.
Meigs — which has now
lost four straight decisions
— returns to action on Monday when 1-18 Wellston visits Rocksprings. The Lady
Marauders topped the Lady
Rockets by a 48-30 count on
December 21, at WHS.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

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Bulldogs slip
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By Alex Hawley

Sophie Miller scored six
points and blocked a gamehigh three shots, while
Lauren Abdella scored ﬁve
points in the win. The AHS
scoring was rounded out by
Kat Kroutel with two points
and Lilly Mills with one.
The Lady Bulldogs shot
13-31 (41.9 percent) from
the free throw line and 12-of22 (54.5 percent) from the

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�SPORTS

8 Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Raider wrestlers
win tri-match
By Paul Boggs

and at heavyweight.
The Raiders rolled the Eagles
60-6, with Eastern’s only win
BIDWELL — The River Valbeing a Jessie Morris pinfall at
ley High School wrestling squad 182.
swept a host triangular match
River Valley won 10 total
on Thursday night, defeating the matches, including three pinEastern Eagles 60-6 and the Jack- falls (Ward at 195, Dobbins at
son Ironmen 33-21.
138 and Robert Drummond at
Against the Ironmen, the Raid- heavyweight) and seven forfeits
ers won six matches, including
(Dakota Doss at 220, Nathan
Michael at 160, Grant Gilmore at
ﬁve for six points apiece and a
145, Weber at 170, Edwards at
three-point decision.
113, Franklin at 126 and Williams
River Valley’s Eric Weber
at 152).
pinned Jackson’s Garrett Daily
The Ironmen won over Eastat 170 pounds, while Tyler Ward
ern 36-9 in the other match,
did the same to the Ironmen’s
scoring six six-point wins with
Ben Daily at 195.
In the most competitive match, four of those being forfeits (Brennen Green at 132, Caleb Storms
the Raiders’ George Williams
at 145, Tyler Storms at 152 and
— at 152 pounds — decisioned
Jackson senior Tyler Storms 8-7. Warrens at 160).
Kirby pinned Eastern’s Caden
The Raiders’ three forfeit wins
Goff
in a minute and 25 seconds
were Jacob Edwards at 113, Cole
Franklin at 126 and Noah Jenkins in the opening period at 138,
while Ben Daily pinned Sam
at 182.
Jones with nine seconds remainThe Ironmen amassed four
ing in the ﬁrst period at 195.
victories, including a pair of
The Eagles’ only wins were
six-point pinfall wins by Caleb
heavyweight
Brandon Colburn
Storms at 145 and Zayne Warpinning
Daniel
Case at the end of
rens at 160.
the
ﬁrst
period,
as Morris deiciJackson’s Kyle Kirby captured
sioned
Garrett
Daily
8-7 at 182.
a 6-4 decision over River Valley’s
There
were
six
double
forfeits
Jeremiah Dobbins at 132.
—
at
106,
113,
120,
126,
170 and
David Moore of the Ironmen
220.
won via forfeit at 138.
There were four double
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-446forfeits — at 106, 120, 220
2342, ext. 2106

pboggs@civitasmedia.com

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$$$$$$$$$

By Randy Payton

The Red Wolves responded
on their ensuing possession,
however, when Parker Salinas
RICHMOND, Ind. — Indiburied a clutch three-pointer
ana University-East built a
with 59 seconds remaining to
12-point second half lead,
make it 76-71.
but was forced to withstand
Rio junior Matt Rhodes
a late rally by the University
(Westerville, OH) canned a
of Rio Grande for a 78-74 win
three-pointer of his own with
over the RedStorm, Saturday
41.5 seconds left to make it
afternoon, in Kentucky Intera two-point game again, but
collegiate Athletic Conference the RedStorm failed to take
men’s basketball action at Rich- advantage of an opportunity
mond High School’s Tiernan
to tie the contest when Joiner
Center.
misﬁred on two free throw
The Red Wolves, who
attempts with 7.4 seconds
remained perfect in four
remaining.
all-time meetings with Rio,
IU-East’s Jacoby Claypool
improved to 15-10 overall and
hit
one of two free throws
9-2 in the KIAC by completing
with
5.6 seconds left to make
the season sweep of the Redit
77-74,
but Rio Grande lost
Storm.
the
ball
out
of bounds on the
Rio Grande, which fell for
ensuing
inbounds
play with 3.2
the third time in its last four
seconds
remaining
and Nick
outings, dropped to 15-7 overBollenbacher
hit
one
of two
all and 5-3 in league play.
The RedStorm’s three KIAC free throws for the Red Wolves
with six-tenths of a second left
losses have come by a comto set the ﬁnal score.
bined 10 points.
Rio Grande led throughout
IU-East appeared in control
the
game’s ﬁrst seven minutes,
after a bucket by Lucas Huffbut
a 15-1 run by the Red
man gave the Red Wolves
Wolves
turned an 18-15 deﬁcit
their biggest lead of the day,
into
a
30-19
lead after a pair
55-43, with 12:11 remaining in
of free throws by Salinas with
the game, but the RedStorm
9:50 left in the ﬁrst half.
methodically chipped away at
The RedStorm rebounded
the deﬁcit and pulled to within
73-71 following a rebound and and snared a 35-34 advantage
stickback by senior D.D. Joiner after a jumper by Joiner with
(Columbus, OH) with 1:25 left 2:32 remaining in the half, but
a pair of free throw by Clayto play.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

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60583312

Late rally falls short for Rio

The Annual Financial Report
of the Meigs County District
Public Library for the year
ended December 31, 2015
has been completed and is
available for public
inspection in the office of
Connie Taylor, Fiscal Officer,
at 216 West Main St.,
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between the hours of
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2/2/16
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pool 14 seconds later put IUEast back in front - a lead that,
as things turned out, the Red
Wolves would not relinquish.
Huffman led a quartet of
double-digit scorers for the
hosts with 19 points, while
Vasha Davis ﬁnished with 18
and the duo of Claypool and
Salinas netted 15 points each.
Claypool also had a team-best
ﬁve assists and four steals,
while Dominique Williams
pulled down a team-high seven
rebounds.
Joiner led Rio with a gamehigh 22 points and ﬁve assists.
He also pulled down 10
rebounds.
Fellow senior Dwayne Bazemore (Columbus, OH) added
18 points and a game-high 13
rebounds, while senior Kevonta Black (Nashville, TN) had
13 points and three steals.
The RedStorm out-shot
(48.2% to 39.7%) and outrebounded (43-30) IU-East,
but hurt their own cause by
going just 17-for-27 at the free
throw line (63.0%) and committing 17 turnovers to the
Red Wolves’ nine.
Rio Grande will return to
action on Tuesday night, hosting Ohio Christian University
for an 8 p.m. tipoff at the Newt
Oliver Arena.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information
Director for the University of Rio Grande.

Apartments/Townhouses
Pleasant Valley Apartments
is now taking applications for
2, 3, &amp; 4 Bedroom HUD
Subsidized
Apartments. Applications are
taken Monday through
Thursday 9:00 am-11:30 am.
Office is located at
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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, February 2, 2016 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

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

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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Red Wolves outlast Rio women

By Randy Payton

ﬁeld in the opening half en
route to building a pair of
13-point leads - the last of
RICHMOND, Ind. — Tia which came at 39-26 with
King became the ﬁrst 1,000- 4:20 left before halftime,
point scorer in Indiana Uni- following the second of backversity-East’s two-year-old
to-back buckets by senior
women’s basketball program
Harley Adler (Burton, OH).
and the host Red Wolves
The Red Wolves respondrallied from a 13-point ﬁrst
ed
with an 18-4 run to close
half deﬁcit to defeat the University of Rio Grande, 84-78, out the half, though, including 11 straight points after
in Kentucky Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference action, the basket by Adler, and
Saturday afternoon, at Rich- grabbed their ﬁrst - and only
mond High School’s Tiernan - lead of the half, 44-43, on a
layup by Libby Springmeier
Center.
with 10 seconds remaining
King scored 17 points
before the intermission.
and had a game-high 10
Rio Grande managed
rebounds for IU-East, which
its own bounce-back effort
improved to 14-9 overall
after the break and surged
and 9-2 in the KIAC with a
back in front, 57-52, after a
fourth straight win.
jumper in the lane by freshRio Grande, which sufman Jasmine Smith (Canal
fered a second consecutive
loss, slipped to 13-7 overall
Winchester, OH) with
and 6-3 in league play.
4:01 remaining in the third
The RedStorm shot just
quarter, but IU-East closed
under 56 percent from the
the period on a 15-2 run -

including a three-pointer by
Springmeier with 1:47 left
that snapped a 59-all tie and never trailed again.
The Red Wolves pushed
their advantage to as many
as 10 points, 81-71, following a layup by Keragan Niehoff with 3:35 remaining in
the game, but Rio refused to
go away quietly and reeled
off eight straight markers
to close within 81-79 after
a pair of free throws by
freshman Jaida Carter (New
Philadelphia, OH) with 41.9
seconds left.
That’s as close as the RedStorm would get, though,
with Niehoff connecting on
three of four free throw tries
in the ﬁnal 28.3 seconds to
secure the win and set the
ﬁnal score.
Niehoff ﬁnished with a
team-high 18 points for IUEast, including 14 in the second half. She also had eight

Tornadoes

Eastern

For Ohio Valley Publishing

From Page 6

while Deem paced the defense with six steals. Teaford came away with ﬁve steals in the win, while
Hill added four steals and a blocked shot.
Southern connected on 15-of-18 (83.3 percent)
free throw attempts and 20-of-62 (32.3 percent)
ﬁeld goal tries, including 2-of-15 (13.3 percent)
from beyond the arc. As a team the Purple and
Gold recorded 32 rebounds, 14 assists, 19 steals,
two blocked shots and 12 turnovers.
Carson Roney led the Lady Eagles with 17
points, followed by Olivia Hatﬁeld with seven.
Leah Compton and Cassidy Fremont both scored
two points, while Maddy Southworth added one
point to the EHS total.
Eastern sank 9-of-15 (60 percent) free throw
attempts and 10-of-44 (22.7 percent) ﬁeld goal
attempts, while pulling in 29 rebounds.
This game also served as revenge for the Purple and
Gold, as Pike Eastern ousted the Lady Tornadoes by a
46-40 count in the sectional ﬁnal last season.
Southern — which visited Federal Hocking on
Monday — returns to action on Thursday when
Wahama visits Racine. SHS claimed a 61-16 victory over the Lady Falcons on January 4, in Mason.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

rebounds and both of the
Red Wolves’ blocked shots.
Springmeier ﬁnished
with 16 points in just under
17-1/2 minutes of action off
the bench, while Kristen
Miller had 14 points and a
game-best seven assists in
the winning effort.
Senior Sarah Bonar
(Hartford, OH) led Rio
Grande with a game-high
18 points and 10 rebounds,
while Smith had Smith had
16 points and tied a careerhigh with eight rebounds.
Junior guard Sharday
Baines (East Cleveland,
OH) had 13 points and a
team-high six assists before
fouling out with 6:48 left
in the contest, while Adler
also netted 13 points to go
along with a game-high six
blocked shots.
Rio Grande, which played
much of the game without
junior forward Brooke

Photo courtesy of Justyce Stout

Rio Grande’s Sarah Bonar attempts to maneuver past IndianaEast’s Bailey Dreiman during Saturday afternoon’s Kentucky
Intercollegiate Athletic Conference game at the Tiernan Center
in Richmond, Ind. Bonar had 18 points and 10 rebounds, but the
RedStorm suffered an 84-79 loss to the Red Wolves.

Wahama — which also sank two
triples — was just 3-of-12 from the
free throw line, equaling 25 percent.
From Page 6
Eastern has now won ﬁve of its
last six decisions and returns to
WHS freshman Maddy VanMaaction on Monday at 16-1 Waterford.
tre led the Red and White with six
The league leading Lady Wildcats
points, followed by Faith Henry with claimed a 48-30 decision at Eastern
four. Nena Hunt and Rebecca Gerlach on December 21 and have now won
both scored three points for the hosts, 34 straight league games. Waterford
while Molly Fisher rounded out the
will clinch its second straight lead
Wahama scoring with one point.
title with a victory over EHS, which

Marauders
From Page 6

After falling behind
5-0, Meigs rallied with
eight straight points
before ending up tied
at nine with 4:51 left
in the opening canto.
The hosts reeled off 12
straight points over the
next 3:14 and closed the
period on a 16-5 surge,

MEIGS COUNTY
Visitors Guide 2016

giving the Maroon and
Gold a 25-14 lead after
eight minutes of play.
MHS made a 12-0
run to start the second
period for a 37-14 edge
at the 5:55 mark, and
River Valley never came
closer than 41-24 following a basket by Jacob
Dovenbarger with 2:34
left. The hosts closed
the half on a small 6-4
run to secure a 19-point
edge at the break.

The RedStorm return to
action on Tuesday night,
hosting Ohio Christian University for a 6 p.m. tipoff at
the Newt Oliver Arena.

Marcum (Vinton, OH) on
the ﬂoor - she also fouled
out with 4:51 remaining attempted half as many free
throws as the Red Wolves
and were outscored 15-7 at
the free throw line in the
ﬁve-point loss.

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director for the
University of Rio Grande.

now sits alone in second place.
Wahama — which has now lost 57
consecutive games and 48 straight
TVC Hocking tilts — returns to
action on Monday, when 11-8 Belpre
visits Mason. The Lady Golden
Eagles topped WHS on December
21, by a 72-14 ﬁnal tally in Washington County.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.

The Marauders connected on 32-of-59
shot attempts overall
and went 9-of-13 from
three-point range for
69 percent. The hosts
were also 3-of-7 at the
free throw line for 43
percent.
Kaileb Sheets led
Meigs with 19 points
and nine assists, followed by Colton Lilly
with 17 points and
Christian Mattox with
15 markers. Jared Kennedy was next with eight
points, while Dillon
Mahr and Jaxon Meadows respectively added
ﬁve and four markers.
Luke Musser, Tyler
Fields, T.J. Williams and
Devon Hawley rounded
out the winning tally
with two points apiece.
Kennedy and Lilly each
led the hosts with nine
rebounds, while Mattox
hauled in eight caroms.

The Raiders netted 20-of-56 ﬁeld goal
attempts overall, including a 9-of-26 effort from
three-point range for 35
percent. The guests also
netted 5-of-12 free throw
attempts for 42 percent.
Twyman led RVHS
with 16 points, followed
by Dovenbarger and
Kirk Morrow with 10
markers apiece. Layne
Fitch contributed six
points, while Jarrett
McCarley added ﬁve
points and Tre Craycraft
had three markers.
Mark Wray and Jacob
Morris rounded out the
Raider tally with two
points apiece. Dovenbarger led the guests
with nine rebounds
and Twyman added six
boards in the setback.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

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