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                  <text>Smith Chevy
goes to bat for
Little League

Rain.
High 53,
low of 34

Tornadoes
thump
South Gallia

BUSINESS s 3

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 56, Volume 70

Thursday, April 7, 2016 s 50¢

Meigs chamber honors members at dinner, auction
Staff Report

people attended the dinner. The
main course of steak, chicken
POMEROY — Kountry
or salmon was prepared by
Resort Campground in Pomeroy “Tom Reed and his famous grill
was the venue for the Meigs
team.”
County chamber of Commerce
The highlight of the Spring
Spring Dinner and Auction.
Dinner was the Silent and Live
The annual event was held
Auction, with Mark Porter
April 1 with a The Wizard of Oz returning as the auctioneer.
theme, centered on “There’s No Area businesses and individuals
Place Like Home,” which is how donate a variety of items to the
the chamber feels about Meigs
chamber fundraiser, and auction
County.
items are sometimes creative.
This event is the chamber’s
They have included live trees,
largest fundraiser of the year
picnic tables, a covered wagon,
and was held at resort with the wine, various themed baskets
Courtesy photo support of the facility’s new
and whiskey cherries.
This group of Chamber member purchased the Rio Grande Vouchers and plan on using it as a future scholarship owners, Andrew and Therese
award to a Meigs County student.
See CHAMBER | 5
Campbell. Approximately 100

Commissioners
approve Animal
Response team
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Meigs County Commissioners
met last Thursday to discuss several important
issues, including a contract between Meigs County
Deportment of Jobs and Family Services and the
sheriff’s ofﬁce, successful road and bridge projects
in 2015 and approval of members for a Dangerous
Wild Animal Response Team.
County Engineer Eugene Triplett presented the
commissioners with the annual report and said
2015 was a good year for the county. Triplet said
he was proud of the job the crews did to improve
the county roads. The work included 35 miles of
hot mix pavement and four new bridges and signiﬁcant improvement to three others.
Most of the paving came from a $3.12 m project
that was 80 percent funded by the Federal Highway Administration’s County Service Transportation Program and 20 percent by the county. Some
of the 20 percent was offset by Ohio Department
of Transportation grants.
An ODOT statewide program to replace bridges
at no cost to local governments paid for some of
the bridges and funding was found for the remaining bridges mentioned.
A contract was approved that allows the Department of Meigs County Department of Jobs And
Family Services to provide the Meigs County
Sheriff’s Ofﬁce with a family violence investigator
for a one-year contract April 6, 2016, until April 5,
2017.
Meigs County Prosecutor Colleen Williams
was granted funds to comply with records retention and disposal policies. She also proposed hiring Katie Gilkey, graduating Meigs High School
senior, for a summer term. Approval for the hiring
was postponed due to questions about what funds
would be used to employee the new hire.
Information concerning the Dangerous Wild
Animal Response Team was presented to the commissioners by Jamie Jones, Meigs County Emergency Management Agency.
The team is a response planning entity, whose
counsel and services will augment Meigs County’s
standard emergency response. Members of the team
include Keith Wood, Meigs County Sheriff Department; Frank Gorscak, Meigs County Health Department; Coleen MurphySmith, Meigs County Canine
Rescue and Adoption Center; Harry Spencer, Bashan
See TEAM | 5

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Business: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Softball: 6
Schedule: 6
— FEATURES
Classified: 8
Comics: 9
Television: 10

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

Photos by Beth Sergent | Ohio Valley Publishing

Brandy Barkey Sweeney, pictured standing, speaks about the importance of organ donation and her own story of receiving a heart
transplant.

Celebrating the gift of organ donation
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — “My health and
hope, they were fading.”
These were the words
of local organ transplant
recipient, Kevin Scott,
on Wednesday at a
special ceremony held at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
to celebrate April as
national organ donation
month. PVH has held
the ceremony for the last
several years to highlight
organ donation and,
as Scott pointed out,
“hope.”
Scott was the recipient
of a life-saving liver
transplant on Jan. 10,
ABOVE, Kevin Scott, the recipient of a life-saving liver transplant, speaks about his journey at PVH’s
2015 at The Ohio State
“Donate Life” event on Wednesday. BELOW, Macy Adkins sings to close the “Donate Life” event.
University. After two years
of ﬁghting health issues
and progressing liver
disease, his transplant
came just in time.
“I felt my time was
running out,” Scott said
about life just prior to
receiving the liver.
When he did receive
the liver, he told those
gathered it was a
“bittersweet” trip to
Columbus “because I
knew someone was dying
to give it to me.”
After a nearly nine-hour
surgery, Scott’s transplant
was complete but his
recovery continues with
the help and support of
his family.
See DONATION | 5

�LOCAL

2 Thursday, April 7, 2016

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR

MARGARET ELLA WILSON BURRI
RACINE — Margaret
Ella Wilson Burri, 94, of
Racine, passed away, at
11: 45 a.m. on Tuesday,
April 5, 2016 in the Hennis Care Center, Dover.
Born June 23, 1921
in Letart Township of
Meigs County, she was
the daughter of the late
William Edgar and Erma
Faye VanMeter Wilson.
She was a homemaker.
She is survived by her
nephews, Bill (Brenda)
Wilson, of Dover, Oh.,
David (Donna) Wilson,
of Michigan, Arthur
(Annette) Wilson, of
Michigan, a niece, Tina
Wilson, of Florida. Greatnephews, Cory (Roberta)
Wilson, Billy Wilson,
great-great nieces and
nephews, Kyra, Hayden,
Madison, Hunter, and
Chase. A brother, Butch
(Betty) Wilson, Letart

Falls, sisters, Katherine
Hunt, of Racine, and
Betty (Pete) Bearhs, of
Racine also survive.
In addition to her parents, Margaret is preceded in death by her husband, Charles E. Burri,
brothers, William “Rich”
Wilson, Dorsel Wilson,
Edgar Wilson, and Robert
Wilson.
Graveside services will
be conducted at 2:00 p.m.
on Friday, April 8, 2016
in the Chapel of Letart
Falls Cemetery. Rev. Bill
Marshall will ofﬁciate.
Interment will follow. The
Cremeens Funeral Home
of Racine is entrusted
with Margaret’s arrangements. Expressions of
sympathy may be sent
to the family by visiting
www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

LYLE DAVID “BUTCH” NICHOLS
REEDSVILLE — Lyle
David “Butch” Nichols,
70, of Reedsville, died
Tuesday, April 5, 2016, at
Fairﬁeld Medical Center
in Lancaster.
Born Nov. 9, 1945, in
Layman, Ohio, he was the
son of the late Paul F. and
Mary E. McGregor Nichols. Lyle was a former
member of the Reedsville United Methodist
Church.
He is survived by
three sisters, Melanie E.
Adkins, Norma (Wesley)
Arbaugh and Carol (Richard) Martin; ﬁfteen nieces and nephews. Of those
many nieces and nephews
several were very dear
to Lyle. The kind and
thoughtful acts of Paul
(Sandy) Brannon, Jessica (Michael) Barnett,
Bradley (Keri) Brannon,

Jillian Brannon, Joy Brannon, Paula Brannon and
Jeff Adkins will always be
treasured.
Graveside services will
be 2:30 p.m. Saturday,
April 9, 2016 at the Barlow Cemetery in Barlow,
Ohio with Rev. Richard
Thomas ofﬁciating. Visitation will be Saturday
from 12:00 till 2:00 p.m.
at the White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home in
Coolville, Ohio. In lieu of
ﬂowers donations can be
made to the National Alliance on Mental Issues,
100 Hospital Drive,
Athens, OH, 45701 or to
Barlow Central Cemetery,
c/o Diane L. Welch, 525
Bracken Ridge Road, Vincent, OH 45784. Friends
are invited to sign the
online guestbook at whiteschwarzelfh.com.

DEATH NOTICES
MILLER
FORT WORTH, Texas — Ronald Ray Miller Jr., 52,
of Fort Worth, Texas, passed away March 19, 2016.
Graveside service will be 11 a.m. Saturday, April 9,
2016, in the Miller Family Cemetery, Leon, W.Va.
Casto Funeral Home, Evans, W.Va., is assisting the
family.
MONTGOMERY
LETART FALLS, Ohio — Robert Keith Montgomery, 65, Letart Falls, died Wednesday, April 6, 2016, at
Holzer Clinic, Athens. Funeral arrangements will be
announced by Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine, Ohio.

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michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

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bwalters@civitasmedia.com

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111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:

740.992.2155

Editor’s Note: The
Daily Sentinel appreciates your input to the
community calendar.
To make sure items can
receive proper attention, all information
should be received by
the newspaper at least
ﬁve business days prior
to an event. All coming
events print on a spaceavailable basis and in
chronological order.
Events can be emailed
to:TDSnews@civitasmedia.com.
Thursday, April 7
SYRACUSE — Wildwood Garden Club will
meet at 6:30 p.m. at the
Syracuse Community
Center.
MIDDLEPORT —
Open town hall meeting, Middleport Village

Hall, 7 p.m. Residents of
Middleport are encouraged to attend an ideas
session and bring their
suggestions for the betterment of Middleport.
CHESTER — Chester
Shade Historical Association Board meeting
will be 7 p.m. in the
Academy Dining Hall.
Everyone is welcome.
Saturday, April 9
SYRACUSE — Sara
Roush will be celebrating her 90th birthday
Saturday, April 9 from 2
to 4 p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center. Her
family invites everyone
to join them in honoring
her on her special day.
MIDDLEPORT —
Mid-Valley Christian
School will hold their
Extravaganza from noon

to 4 p.m. at Meigs Intermediate/Primary School,
located at 36871 SR 124,
Middleport (please note
correction of location
originally reported as
Meigs Middle School
in Ruthland).There
will games set up and
food items available for
purchase. Prizes will
be given away to those
who purchase entrance
tickets. For more information, contact Melissa
Daily, MVCS Administrator, at 740-992-6249.
BURLINGHAM —
There will be a public
meeting of the Burlingham Cemetery Association at 1 p.m. at the Burlingham Church.
Monday, April 11
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP — The regular

meeting of the Bedford
Township Trustees will
be 7 p.m. at the Bedford
Township Hall.
Tuesday, April 12
TUPPERS PLAINS
— The Tuppers Plains
Regional Sewer District
will meet at 7 p.m. at
the district ofﬁce.End
of year 2015 ﬁnancials
for TPRSD are available
for review. Call 740-6679805 to review them.
HARRISONVILLE
— Jimmy Howson,
Country Gospil recording artist will be in
concerts hosts Sunday
Morning Memories
WATH in Athens Harrison Pre church on st
rout 143 Harrisonville
Friday, April 22, 7 p.m.
refreshments will follow

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS
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.

16th Leading Creek Stream
Sweep set for April 23

call the Meigs SWCD at 740-992-4282.

Natural Resources Assistance
Council meeting notice

MARIETTA — There will be a meeting of the
Natural Resources Assistance Council at Buckeye
RUTLAND – The 16th annual Leading Creek
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District,
Stream Sweep will take place Saturday, April 23
1400 Pike St. in Marietta at 10 a.m. April 19. The
from 9 a.m. to noon at the Meigs SWCD Conservapurpose of the meeting is to review the Round 10B
tion Area on New Lima Road between Rutland and
(supplemental round) grant applications to deterHarrisonville. Trash bags, safety vests and gloves
mine eligibility for funding of the Clean Ohio Conare provided for volunteers, and pizza will be served servation Fund for District 18. Questions regarding
afterwards. Youth or other community groups are
this meeting should be directed to Michelle Hyer
welcome.The ﬁrst Leading Creek Stream Sweep was mhyer@buckeyehills.org at Buckeye Hills-Hocking
held in 2001 in Rutland and it has been held every
Valley Regional Development District or call (740)
April since then, roughly coinciding with Earth Day. 376-1025.
The event is sponsored by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, Rutland Township Board of
Trustees and the Meigs Transfer Station. For more
details about Stream Sweep or for registration forms
contact the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District at 740-992-4282.
POMEROY - Meigs County Prosecutor Collleen
Williams’ ofﬁce will recognize National Crime
Victims’ Rights Week with two events. Meigs has
has received a grant of $1,010.87 for purposes of
POMEROY – Landowners interested in building
raising community awareness. The ﬁrst will be 7
or maintaining a pond should plan on attending a
p.m. April 12 in the Farmer’s Bank Banquet Room,
free pond clinic sponsored by the Meigs Soil and
640 E. Maint St., Pomeroy, where a representative
Water Conservation District on Thursday, April
from Woodlands will speak on “Recovery and Heal28, beginning at 6 p.m. at Buckley’s Pond, which
ing from a Traumatic Event.” The second will be a
is located off Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy, near the
Arbors Nursing Home. The pond clinic will include memorial display along the River Wall and pavilion
topics such as site selection, construction, stocking from April 8-15. The public is invited to write on
and maintenance. Although free, pre-registration is “luminary bags” and light a battery operated tea
required. For more information, or to pre-register,
light/candle.

Meigs honors National Crime
Victims’ Rights Week

Pond clinic slated

ODA launches ‘Ag is Cool’ contest
Contributed Article

which can include an
original video, phoOHIO VALLEY —
tograph, drawing or
The Ohio Department
painting, will be judged
of Agriculture will
in the following age
begin accepting entries categories. One winner
for the 2016 “Agriculfrom each age group
ture is Cool!” Creative
and category will be
Expressions contest.
chosen: Grades K-2:
Children enrolled
Photography, Drawing
in school or homeor Painting; Grades 3-5:
schooled in Ohio during Video, Photography,
the 2015-16 academic
Drawing or Painting;
year have until June 6
6-8: Video, Photograto capture their person- phy, Drawing or Paintal interpretation of why ing; Grades 9-12: Video,
Ohio agriculture is cool Photography, Drawing
for their chance to win or Painting.
prizes, including tickets
Entries will be judged
to the Ohio State Fair.
by a panel that may
“Ag is Cool!” entries, include representatives

School-age children (K-12) can enter to win a trip to
the Ohio State Fair

from the Ohio Department of Agriculture, the
Ofﬁce of the Governor,
the Ohio Expo Center
and professionals in
the areas of video production, photography,
drawing, painting and
other visual arts. Judging will be based on
the student’s visual representation of the “Ag
is Cool!” theme, if it
accurately reﬂects 21st
century agriculture, creativity and use of Ohio

images, and quality of
work.
Winners of the art
contest will be recognized by the Ofﬁce of
the Governor and other
state ofﬁcials at the
Ohio State Fair on July
27, 2016.
For additional information about the contest, a complete copy
of the rules and entry
form visit www.agri.
ohio.gov/AgIsCool, or
call 614-752-9817.

CHARITY FUNDRAISING EVENTS
Editor’s Note: The Daily
Sentinel appreciates your input
to the Charity Fundraising
calendar. To make sure items
can receive proper attention, all
information should be received
by the newspaper at least ﬁve
business days prior to an event.
All coming events print on a
space-available basis and in
chronological order. Events can
be emailed to:TDSnews@civitasmedia.com
TUPPERS PLAINS - Annual
Spring Yard Sale at Amazing

Grace Community Church this
Friday, April 8 and Saturday,
April 9 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Supports Amazing Grace Community Church Food Pantry.
POMEROY — Christian
Motorcyclist Association Indoor
Rummage Sale Saturday, April 9
from 9 a.m.- 2 p.m. at the Common Ground Missions, 216 E.
Main St. in Pomeroy. Items are
not priced, donations only. All
proceeds go to Run for the Son,
an evangelistic outreach,which
supports three world outreach

Visit us at

ministries and evangelism for
the biker community, primary
but not exclusively in the U.S.
Will accept donated items for
the sale during set up from 6
-9 p.m. on Friday, April 8. For
more information contact Dallas
Jarrell at 740-949-1307.
RACINE — Carmel-Sutton
United Methodist Church,
48540 Carmel Rd., Racine,
invites everyone to their Spring
Indoor Yard Sale Thursday April
7 from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m and Friday, April 8 from 8 a.m to 2.p.m.

www.mydailysentinel.com

�BUSINESS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 7, 2016 3

Smith Chevrolet goes to bat for Little League
Car dealership provides new equipment, monetary contribution, instructional clinics
Staff Report

GALLIPOLIS — Smith Chevrolet is partnering
with the Mason County Little League in Gallipolis.
Smith Chevrolet has joined forces with the national
Chevrolet Youth Baseball program to provide new
equipment, a monetary contribution, invitations to
free instructional clinics, and an opportunity for community members to earn additional donations for
their league via a Test Drive fundraiser.
“Playing the game of baseball helps kids develop
skills like leadership, cooperation and sportsmanship
while bringing families and communities together to
show their support. Smith Chevrolet and Chevrolet
Youth Baseball are proud to participate in a sport that
brings so many smiles to kids and families in Mason
County,” said Cindy Epling, of for Smith Chevrolet.
“Chevrolet believes that in play, there are possibilities and supports the spirit of teamwork that baseball
instills in its players.”
2016 marks Chevrolet’s Youth Baseball program’s
11th year, and since its introduction has helped aid
local teams, beneﬁting more than 5 million young
people in communities where Chevrolet’s customers
live, work and play. In 2015, more than 1,400 Chevrolet dealers participated across the country.
Smith Chevrolet will present the Mason County
Little League with an equipment kit that includes useful items such as bags, scorebooks, catcher’s gear and
Chevrolet Youth Baseball T-shirts. The sponsorship
also includes youth clinics featuring current and former MLB/MiLB players and coaches, and instructors
from Ripken Baseball.
In addition, Smith Chevrolet will present a check
representing a one-time monetary contribution to
Mason County Little League. Sponsored leagues
across the country will have the chance to earn addiCourtesy photo
tional funds as community members take test drives
Smith Chevrolet has joined forces with the national Chevrolet Youth Baseball program to provide new equipment, a monetary
at their partnering dealership to help support the
contribution, invitations to free instructional clinics, and an opportunity for community members to earn additional donations for their
league.
league via a Test Drive fundraiser.

Laurel and Hardy
Exhibit Opens at
Bob Evans Farm
Staff Report

Courtesy photo

This recently established used car business is located on Butternut Avenue in Pomeroy.

T&amp;T Autos open for business in Pomeroy
many in the area who
and say, ‘I know his dad,
need a reliable source of I bought cars from his
transportation, and just
dad,’” Penny said. “It’s a
POMEROY — David
don’t have the resources small-town thing, people
Hysell has been around
for a new car.”
get to know someone
automobiles since he was
David’s father left a
they can trust in their
born.
positive legacy for him to
business dealing, and
His father owned a car
follow.
that can continue into
business in Rutland, and
“People come up to us the next generation.”
David grew up surrounded
by cars. He began working
with his father at age 14,
and took over the business
when his father passed
away in 1997.
David continued the
business until a ﬁre
forced its closure in 2003.
After a move to Pomeroy
in 2010, he decided to
open T&amp;T Autos with his
Community News
wife, Penny.
“It’s in my blood, I
Sports Scores
was raised around cars,
I’ve always worked with
Editorials
cars, so it seemed like
a natural … to start
Church Events
another car business,” he
said.
Breaking News
Together, they model
their business on selling
clean, dependable used
cars, and keep around
10 cars on the lot priced
from $2,500 to $5,000.
“We saw a need in
the community for
moderately priced cars,”
Penny said. “We noticed
that if cars are in a
lower price range, they
are more affordable to

lhart@civitasmedia.com

Your news ... Your newspaper

THE DAILY SENTINEL

YOUR NEWSPAPER
Story idea or news tip?
Call 992.2155

T &amp; T Autos are
located at 152 Butternet
Ave. in Pomeroy. For
more information, they
can be contacted at 740444-5454.
Reach Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155
Ext.2551

Visit us at

www.mydailysentinel.com

MEIGS COUNTY SUMMER YOUTH EMPLOYMENT PROGRAM
THE MEIGS COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF JOB AND FAMILY SERVICES WILL BE CONDUCTING ELIGIBILITY DETERMINATIONS ON WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 2016 FROM 1:30PM UNTIL 6:00PM AND
THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 2016 FROM 1:30PM UNTIL 6:00PM AT THE OHIO MEANS JOB CENTER, 150
MILL STREET, MIDDLEPORT, OHIO FOR THE TANF SUMMER YOUTH EMPLOYMENT PROGRAM.
APPLICANTS UNDER THE AGE OF 18 MUST BE ACCOMPANIED BY A PARENT OR GUARDIAN.
APPLICANTS MUST BE ABLE TO SHOW PROOF OF AGE, SUCH AS A BIRTH CERTIFICATE AND
PROOF OF RESIDENCY, SUCH AS A UTILITY BILL (MUST BE A MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENT.) IN
ADDITION, PROOF OF HOUSEHOLD INCOME FOR THE LAST 30 DAYS MUST BE PROVIDED.
TO BE ELIGIBLE THE PARTICIPANT MUST BE:
*Youth ages 14-17 as long as the youth is a minor child in a needy family and is in school (youth may be 18
if they are a full time student in a secondary school);
*Youth ages 18-24 as long as they are in a needy family that also has a minor child;
*Youth ages 18-24 that have a minor child and is considered needy;
* Youth served may be non-custodial parents as long as they are considered “needy” and have a minor child;
or
*Youth in a foster care setting age 14 to 17 years of age or 18 years of age if they are a full-time student in a
secondary school.
NEEDY IS CONSIDERED LESS THAN 200% OF THE POVERTY LEVEL. FOR EXAMPLE:
FAMILY SIZE

INCOME LEVEL

2
3
4
5

LESS THAN $2,670 A MONTH
LESS THAN $3,360 A MONTH
LESS THAN $4,050 A MONTH
LESS THAN $4,740 A MONTH

AN APPLICANT WHICH IS DEEMED ELIGIBLE IS NOT GUARANTEED EMPLOYMENT

60647354

By Lorna Hart

RIO GRANDE — From now through Dec. 23,
the Bob Evans Farm Homestead Museum will host
a one-of-a-kind exhibit titled “Another Fine Mess:
A Collection of Laurel and Hardy Memorabilia.”
The collection is privately owned by Thurman,
Ohio, resident Maggie Oiler.
Oiler began collecting Laurel and Hardy memorabilia in the mid-1980s. Most of the items were
given to her as birthday or Christmas gifts or were
purchased through online auctions. The exhibit
includes life-size displays, movie posters, photographs, ﬁgurines, dolls, music boxes, miniatures,
and more.
“Growing up in a family of 10 in the 1950s, my
brothers and I would come in from school and
watch afternoon movies on an old black and white
television,” Oiler recalls. “Our favorite movies
were the comedies of Laurel and Hardy. Watching
Laurel and Hardy movies takes me back to a more
carefree time in my childhood.”
The Bob Evans Farm Homestead Museum is
located at 10854 State Route 588, Rio Grande, and
admission is free. The museum is open MondayFriday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
For more information about Bob Evans Farms,
visit www.bobevans.com/aboutus/the-farm.

�E ditorial
4 Thursday, April 7, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Security in
terrorist attack
was ‘Belgian awful’
The latest European terrorist attacks redeﬁned
nuclear security.
The ISIS supporters who attacked Brussels
killed more than 30 people and injured hundreds
more. Bombings at the city’s airport and a subway
station blew up the notion that measures taken
after the Paris siege were keeping Europe safe.
The scariest part of this story is
something that hasn’t happened yet
and hopefully never will: an act of
nuclear terrorism.
World leaders and the experts
who track the whereabouts of ﬁssile
material should see Belgium’s ordeal
as a wakeup call. Nuclear reactors
— as the Fukushima disaster proved
Emily
ﬁve years ago in Japan — aren’t
S. Greco
Contributing worth the risks they pose based on
operational safety considerations
Columnist
alone. But security questions also
render them unacceptably perilous.
Consider this news out of Europe that you may
have missed.
Didier Prospero, a security guard at a Belgian
reactor, was murdered in his own home two days
after the March attacks. The killers shot the slain
man’s dog too. After Prospero’s children found his
body, authorities determined that his security pass
was missing.
This gut-wrenching tragedy is even more troubling than it sounds.
Belgian authorities discovered hours of secretly
recorded video footage of a nuclear scientist
during a raid on a suspected terrorist late last
year. Khalid and Ibrahim El Bakraoui, two brothers believed to have participated in the Brussels
attacks, planted a camera in the bushes outside
that scientist’s home.
Perhaps the suspected terrorists intended to
sabotage one of Belgium’s aging nuclear reactors,
turning it into a weapon of mass destruction — a
tactic our government says the 9/11 attackers contemplated.
Or the suspected terrorists may have aimed to
steal radioactive material for a “dirty bomb,” a
conventional explosive that contaminates the area
where it detonates with radiation. Either way,
they’ve raised the bar for guaranteeing security at
nuclear power plants.
Even before the attacks on Brussels and Prospero’s murder, Belgium was under pressure from
Germany, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg to
address lapses at the 11 aging nuclear reactors
that generate half its electricity.
There were good reasons to be alarmed. The
Belgian nuclear agency’s computer system has
been hacked, intruders have stolen and sabotaged
equipment, and two employees at a Belgian reactor joined ISIS after quitting their jobs.
Hundreds of thousands of Europeans had signed
a petition calling for independent inspections of
Belgium’s worrisome reactors weeks by late January. Their goal was to “avoid the next Chernobyl,”
based on reports of leaks and cracks, along with
assorted sabotage attempts.
Fifteen years after 9/11, how are reactor safety
and security on our side of the pond? Not so hot,
as seven engineers employed by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission recently made clear.
Upon ﬁnding the NRC unresponsive to their
concerns about a dangerous design ﬂaw at all
but one U.S. nuclear reactor, they ﬁled a public
complaint using the same channels available to all
private citizens.
It’s not clear who has the power to do something about this problem.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo apparently
doesn’t. He wants the Indian Point power plant
located 30 miles north of the Bronx closed. That’s
easier said than done, even though its two active
reactors — rife with security and safety issues —
are so near our country’s biggest city.
Plant operator Entergy downplayed one recent
outage after blaming it on — get this — bird droppings.
If the company can’t protect Indian Point’s
equipment against natural threats like avian excrement, how well would it handle terrorists?
Columnist Emily Schwartz Greco is the managing editor of
OtherWords, a non-profit national editorial service run by the Institute
for Policy Studies. www.OtherWords.org.

Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:

740.992.2155

THEIR VIEW

Our oddly personal bond with tech
over the years that porTechnology in the modern
trayed what our eventual
world is oddly personal don’t
relationship to technology
you think? I mean, from the
might be like. Artiﬁcial
moment we open the box
pets, like the robot dog
and hear that “chime” as the
from the classic “Battlestar
machine blinks to life for the
Galactica,” or the artiﬁcial
ﬁrst time, we’re connected
to it in a strangely intimate
Deer in boy in the ﬁlm, “AI.” Obviway.
Headlines ously, these are extreme
examples of technology
Not that long ago, techGery L.
replacing ﬂesh and blood
nology was more exterDeer
companions, but how far
nal, something we didn’t
away can that be?
“interact” with but used to
If you don’t believe the analoachieve some speciﬁc purpose.
gies I’m making here, consider
While computers, tablets and
your own behavior. How often do
smart phones are still helping us
you leave your smart phone someto go about our day-to-day lives,
where and panic? What if your
they’ve become far more than a
tool, evolving rapidly into a sort of laptop or tablet computer crashes
and won’t boot? Does your chest
companion.
tighten and your breathing speed
Computers and tablets have
up?
a very limited type of “artiﬁcial
Those of you still using a ﬂip
intelligence,” so to speak, but
phone probably don’t feel it as
applications like the iPhone’s Siri
strongly because the bond is difmake it feel that way to us. We
ferent. With the older type phone,
somehow associate the digital
the feeling is more one of disconvoice as a friend or conﬁdant.
nection from communication than
In my day, a younger person
full out separation anxiety.
would be far more likely to bond
However “normal” all of this
with his car than with the girl
might seem in our high-tech
he likes in his math class. It was
world, I can’t help but think of its
easier. The car won’t reject you,
rip your heart out, stomp on it, set detrimental ramiﬁcations. After
it on ﬁre and spread the ashes in a all, that “bond” I mentioned is artimud hole. But, I digress, not that I ﬁcial, but the emotional ties are
very real.
harbor any bitterness.
You should take a moment to
Still, no matter how stoic or
think of the connection between
introverted, human beings are
always crying out for some kind of you and your technology. How is
connection, even if it comes from a it helping or harming? Can you
talking toaster. I read recently that even tell either way? You’ll have to
this bond is similar to the ones we ﬁgure that one out on your own.
But, for what it’s worth coming
develop with stuffed animal toys
or that special blanket as children. from me, if you indeed feel a high
level of separation anxiety at the
I’m reminded of science ﬁction

misplacement of your phone or
computer, it might be time to disconnect.
For me, my devices and the
Internet are how I get work done
and stay in touch with people
throughout the day. I’ve written
several articles on disconnecting from the tech when you can,
to give yourself a break from the
anxiety and stress caused, mainly,
by social media.
Most of these artiﬁcial bonds
between man and machine have
come from the fact that the technology continues to evolve faster
than our education and social
skills. When I ﬁrst worked with
computers, I was about 11 years
old and you had to be a programmer to operate them.
The technology of the day is,
in many cases, playing surrogate
friend, servant, conﬁdant, in a way
that is rapidly changing how we,
as individuals, relate to others. It
may be time to take a look at the
attachment you have with your
own tech and put it aside for a
day. Give yourself a break from the
stress of social media, game apps,
and so on, and have a conversation
with a friend over coffee.
Building connections to people
can be tough for someone as
socially awkward as I was growing
up. But technology is no substitute. Try always to remember your
phone and computer are tools, not
companions.
Gery L. Deer is an independent columnist and
business writer. Deer In Headlines is distributed
by GLD Enterprises Communications, Ltd.,
www.gerydeer.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Thursday,
April 7, the 98th day of
2016. There are 268 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On April 7, 1966, the
U.S. Navy recovered a
hydrogen bomb that the
U.S. Air Force had lost
in the Mediterranean
Sea off Spain following a
B-52 crash.
On this date:
In 1614, painter,
sculptor and architect
El Greco died in Toledo,
Spain.
In 1788, an expedition led by Gen. Rufus
Putnam established a
settlement at present-day
Marietta, Ohio.
In 1862, Union forces
led by Gen. Ulysses S.
Grant defeated the Confederates at the Battle of
Shiloh in Tennessee.
In 1927, the image and
voice of Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover
were transmitted live

from Washington to New
York in the ﬁrst successful long-distance demonstration of television.
In 1939, Italy invaded
Albania, which was
annexed less than a week
later.
In 1949, the Rodgers and Hammerstein
musical “South Paciﬁc”
opened on Broadway.
In 1953, the U.N. General Assembly ratiﬁed
Dag Hammarskjold of
Sweden as the new secretary-general, succeeding
Trygve Lie of Norway.
In 1962, nearly 1,200
Cuban exiles tried by
Cuba for their roles in the
failed Bay of Pigs invasion were convicted of
treason.
In 1978, President
Jimmy Carter announced
he was deferring development of the neutron
bomb, a high-radiation
weapon.
In 1984, the Census
Bureau reported Los

Angeles had overtaken
Chicago as the nation’s
“second city” in terms of
population.
Ten years ago: A
suicide attack in a Shiite
mosque in Baghdad killed
85 people. Tornadoes in
Tennessee killed a dozen
people. Dena Schlosser,
charged with killing her
infant daughter Margaret
by cutting off her arms
in what her lawyers portrayed as a religious frenzy, was found not guilty
by reason of insanity by
a judge in McKinney,
Texas. A British judge
ruled that author Dan
Brown did not steal ideas
for “The Da Vinci Code”
from a nonﬁction work.
Today’s Birthdays:
Media commentator
Hodding Carter III is 81.
Country singer Bobby
Bare is 81. Rhythm-andblues singer Charlie
Thomas (The Drifters) is
79. California Gov. Jerry
Brown is 78. Movie direc-

tor Francis Ford Coppola is 77. Singer Patricia
Bennett (The Chiffons)
is 69. Singer John Oates
is 68. Former Indiana
Gov. Mitch Daniels is 67.
Singer Janis Ian is 65.
Country musician John
Dittrich is 65. Actor Jackie Chan is 62. College
and Pro Football Hall-ofFamer Tony Dorsett is
62. Actor Russell Crowe
is 52. Christian/jazz singer Mark Kibble (Take 6)
is 52. Actor Bill Bellamy
is 51. Rock musician
Dave “Yorkie” Palmer
(Space) is 51. Former
football player-turnedanalyst Tiki Barber is 41.
Actress Heather Burns
is 41. Christian rock
singer-musician John
Cooper (Skillet) is 41.
Actor Kevin Alejandro is
40. Rock musician Ben
McKee (Imagine Dragons) is 31. Actor Ed Speleers is 28. Actor Conner
Rayburn is 17.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 7, 2016 5

Donation
From Page 1

“My family gave me
the courage to ﬁght
my ﬁght,” Scott said,
adding, he owes his life
to organ donation.
Also speaking at the
ceremony was Brandy
Barkey Sweeney who
underwent a life-saving
heart transplant last year
at University of Pittsburgh
Medical Center. After
developing a rare
condition which caused
her heart to fail during
her third pregnancy,
Sweeney found herself in
a life-or-death situation
that only a new heart
could heal. She told those
gathered, she was blessed
because she hadn’t been
sick for years, like many
patients awaiting an organ
transplant, and she was
only on the transplant
list for 31 days before
her prayers were literally
answered.
She said she
remembered laying on
the surgery table before
being put under, looking
up at the lights and
praying thanks to God
and the donor’s family.
“God was in control
the entire time,”
Sweeney said.
Though she said she
has reached out to the

Courtesy photos

Pictured are April Davis and family at Friday night’s chamber event.

Team
From Page 1

Volunteer Fire Department; Jordan Pickens, media contact; Jamie Jones, E.M.A.;
Robert Jacks Meigs County E.M.S.; and
Randy Smith, Meigs County Commissioner’s ofﬁce.
The commissioners approved the
applications for membership of the above
individuals for the response team.
More information concerning the Dangerous Animal Response Plan and Team
will be published in an upcoming edition
of The Daily Sentinel.
For more information on road improvements throughout the county, go to
mydailysentinal.com, and search for a
Sept. 20, 2015 article titled, “Meigs County road, bridge projects at all-time high.”
The Meigs County Commissioners

Chamber
From Page 1

One special auction
item this year was a
one-year dorm voucher
sponsored by Rio Grande
Community College,
valued at $4,700. A number of attendees banded
together to win the bid,
and plan to use it as a
scholarship award, which
will be managed by the
Meigs chamber. Dr.
Michelle Johnston, president of the University of
Rio Grande, presented
the donation.
DJ Kip Grueser provided entertainment for the
night that was organized
by chamber director Whitney Thoene and board
members Tina Wood Richards, Amber Johnson and
Tammy Grueser.

meet each Thursday at 11 a.m. at the
courthouse in Pomeroy.
Contact Lorna Hart at 740-992-2155 Ext. 2551.

8 AM

2 PM

50°

47°

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

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.

68°
28°
65°
42°
88° in 2010
23° in 1982

Precipitation

(in inches)

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

0.00
0.02
0.66
10.15
10.71

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:04 a.m.
7:58 p.m.
7:20 a.m.
8:29 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

New

Apr 7

First

Full

Last

Apr 13 Apr 22 Apr 29

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

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

Major
12:20p
12:49a
1:51a
2:56a
4:00a
5:03a
6:01a

Minor
6:05a
7:04a
8:06a
9:10a
10:15a
11:17a
12:15p

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

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
Low

Moderate

High

Moderate

High

Lucasville
51/33

Very High

Major
12:48p
1:18p
2:20p
3:25p
4:29p
5:31p
6:28p

Minor
6:34p
7:32p
8:35p
9:40p
10:44p
11:45p
----

WEATHER HISTORY
Lightning struck an oil reﬁnery on
April 7, 1926, at San Luis Obispo,
Calif. The resulting ﬁre lasted ﬁve
days, scorched 900 acres and burned
more than 6 million barrels of oil.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

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

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

Level
12.24
16.39
21.39
12.25
13.26
24.46
12.19
25.78
34.26
12.46
17.70
33.10
17.90

Portsmouth
52/33

24-hr.
Chg.
-0.55
-0.15
+0.01
+0.09
+0.27
+0.42
+0.45
-0.68
-0.08
-0.05
-1.20
none
-1.00

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

50°
39°

said if he could speak to
his donor, he would say:
“You loved me without
knowing me. I wish you
peace. You must know,
you made my miracle
come true.”
Also speaking at the
event were PVH CEO
Glen Washington and
Pastor John Holland
giving the invocation.
Christy Conley from
Center for Organ
Recovery and Education
attended as well and
PPJ/SHS student Macy
Adkins performed
a song. Members of
American Legion Post
#23 raised a special
organ donation ﬂag in
front of the hospital at
the start of the ceremony.
Reach Beth Sergent at bsergent@
civitasmedia.com or on Twitter @
BSergentWrites.

Mostly cloudy,
warmer; a p.m.
shower

60°
38°

Periods of rain and a
thunderstorm

Mostly cloudy with a
little rain

NATIONAL CITIES
Belpre
53/34

Athens
50/32

St. Marys
53/34

Parkersburg
52/33

Coolville
51/32

Elizabeth
53/34

Spencer
52/33

Buffalo
52/34
Milton
53/34

Clendenin
53/33

St. Albans
54/34

Huntington
53/34

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
Seattle
100s
76/52
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
68/57
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
69/58
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Charleston
53/34

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
35/16

Billings
62/39

Montreal
48/35

Minneapolis
45/30

Toronto
44/24

Chicago
45/31

Denver
64/38

Detroit
45/27

New York
59/42
Washington
63/44

Kansas City
64/35

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

Fri.
Hi/Lo/W
65/44/c
49/40/pc
66/46/pc
53/38/pc
54/31/pc
70/44/s
80/54/s
52/34/c
51/30/c
64/42/pc
63/37/pc
43/24/sn
47/28/c
44/27/c
48/28/sh
78/57/pc
65/40/pc
50/24/pc
43/25/sn
84/71/sh
82/56/pc
48/27/c
59/30/s
70/58/sh
71/44/s
65/59/sh
55/34/pc
84/67/pc
37/20/pc
62/38/pc
79/60/pc
53/35/pc
73/47/pc
85/57/s
53/35/pc
82/62/t
47/29/sf
50/32/c
63/42/pc
61/38/pc
57/33/pc
74/52/pc
67/56/sh
74/50/pc
58/39/pc

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

El Paso
84/56

96° in Thermal, CA
-1° in Clayton Lake, ME

Global

Houston
82/52

Monterrey
86/64

Today
Hi/Lo/W
78/50/pc
46/35/pc
70/51/pc
57/44/r
62/39/r
62/39/s
79/48/s
57/44/r
53/34/sh
69/44/pc
59/33/s
45/31/sn
49/31/sh
44/30/sh
48/31/sh
87/57/pc
64/38/s
56/34/pc
45/27/sn
82/71/pc
82/52/pc
47/31/sh
64/35/pc
83/58/c
79/49/s
69/58/sh
56/38/sh
86/66/pc
45/30/c
66/43/c
79/60/s
59/42/r
84/45/s
83/58/pc
63/42/r
89/65/c
50/32/sh
51/42/r
70/45/t
65/43/r
60/41/c
71/46/s
68/57/pc
76/52/s
63/44/r

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

Atlanta
70/51

Chihuahua
88/55

WEDNESDAY

66°
47°

Marietta
52/33

Murray City
49/31

Ironton
53/35

Ashland
53/36
Grayson
53/35

TUESDAY

68°
53°

Wilkesville
50/31
POMEROY
Jackson
52/32
51/31
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
53/33
52/34
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
47/30
GALLIPOLIS
53/34
53/34
52/34

South Shore Greenup
53/35
51/32

40

Logan
48/31

McArthur
49/30

Very High

Primary: maple, elm, hombeam
Mold: 62

MONDAY

Periods of sun, a
Sunny to partly cloudy
snow shower; colder
and warmer

Adelphi
49/32
Chillicothe
50/33

SUNDAY

41°
20°

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

Waverly
49/31

Pollen: 9

Low

MOON PHASES

SATURDAY

Mostly cloudy, a
shower in the p.m.

3

Primary: ascospores
Fri.
7:02 a.m.
7:59 p.m.
8:02 a.m.
9:42 p.m.

FRIDAY

Breezy and cooler today with a shower or two.
Mostly cloudy tonight. High 53° / Low 34°

ALMANAC
High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

51°
31°
47°

donor’s family a couple
of times with no answer,
she understands. She
explained that family
is going through their
“ﬁrsts”…such as their
ﬁrst birthday, Easter,
Christmas, without their
loved one. Sweeney
added, because of
the donor’s sacriﬁce,
she’s had many ﬁrsts,
including seeing her
youngest child crawl,
seeing her oldest son’s
ﬁrst baseball game and
being there for her
youngest son’s ﬁrst pair
of glasses.
“Inside of me, beats
the heart of a hero…
that’s what he (the
donor) is to me,” she
said. “Not only did he
save me but he gave my
children a mother.”
During his talk, Scott

Meigs County Historical Plains Branch of Farmers stressed by the move.
for more information
Society, Meigs IndepenBank this year. RJ is not
Visit the chamber web- about your Meigs County
dent Press, Ohio Health
a real goose, and is not
site or Facebook page
chamber of Commerce.
O’Blenness Hospital
, Ohio Valley Bank ,
Peoples Bank , Pleasant
Valley Hospital , Pleasant
Valley Hospital , QualLOCAL STOCKS
ity Print Shop, Reed &amp;
Baur Insurance Agency,
AEP (NYSE) - 65.63
BBT (NYSE) - 33.13
Reﬂections Beauty
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 22.25
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 19.2
Salon, Alyssa Richards,
Ashland
Inc.
(NYSE)
109.79
Pepsico (NYSE) - 103.95
Riverside Auto and TowBig
Lots
(NYSE)
44.52
Premier (NASDAQ) - 15.67
ing, LLC, Seasons Gifts
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 46.76
Rockwell (NYSE) - 111.58
and Home, Simmons
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 34.8
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) - 12.75
Musser Warner InsurCentury Alum (NASDAQ) - 6.58
Royal Dutch Shell - 47.65
ance, Subway, Sweet
Champion (NASDAQ) - 0.17
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 14.7
Dreams Chocolates,
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 46.48
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 69.04
Swisher &amp; Lohse PharCollins (NYSE) - 92.16
Wendy’s (NYSE) - 11.12
macy, Treasure Chest,
DuPont (NYSE) - 63.5
WesBanco (NYSE) - 29.78
US Bank (NYSE) - 40.09
Worthington (NYSE) - 35.38
Two Olde Hens, The
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 30.91
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
Vaughan Agency, WeavHarley-Davidson (NYSE) - 46.34
ET closing quotes of transactions
ing Stitches, Wild Horse
JP
Morgan
(NYSE)
58.82
April 6, 2016, provided by Edward
Café, and Wolfe MounKroger
(NYSE)
39.08
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
tain Entertainment .
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 86.1
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
The chamber also aucNorfolk So (NYSE) - 81.15
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
tioned RJ, the chamber
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 21.74
674-0174. Member SIPC.
Goose, who will make his
home with the Tuppers

Auction donations
were provided by: Bartee
Photography, chamber
of commerce, Clark’s
Jewelry Store, Farmers Bank and Savings
Company, Front Paige
Outﬁtters ,Gary Coleman Photography, Home
National Bank, Rio
Grande Community College, The Daily Sentinel,
WBYG 99.5 Big Country,
WYVK-WMPO 92.1, Carl
Michael Magician, COSI,
Dale and Kathryn Hart,
The Fabric Shop, Francis
Florist, Fruth Pharmacy,
Fur Peace Ranch, The
Grill Team, Hill’s Classic Cars, LLC , Hill’s
Citgo, Holzer Acute
Care, Jittery Joe’s, Karr
Contracting, Shade River
Ag, King ACE Hardware,
Paul and Laurie Reed,
Mark Porter Chev Buick
GMC, Mary T. Byer-Hill,
Meigs County Auditor,

TODAY

WEATHER

Mark Porter held the spotlight during the
chamber Auction.

Beth Sergent | Ohio Valley Publishing

Members of American Legion Post #23 in Point Pleasant do a
special flag raising for the “Donate Life” event.

High
110° in Diffa, Niger
Low -42° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
86/66

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

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 7, 2016 s Page 6

Lady Tornadoes thump South Gallia, 32-0
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — Talk about laying the smack down.
The Southern softball team
claimed a 32-0, no-hit victory
over Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division guest South
Gallia, on Monday night at
Star Mill Park.
The Lady Tornadoes (2-3,
2-2 TVC Hocking) scored 14
runs on 11 hits, four free passes and two SGHS (0-3, 0-3)
errors in the opening inning
and then added two more runs
in the second frame.
Eight Lady Tornadoes
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
Southern sophomore Sydney Cleland delivers a pitch during the Lady Tornadoes’ crossed the plate in both the
third and fourth innings, as
32-0, no-hit victory over South Gallia, on Monday at Star Mill Park.

the Purple and Gold rolled to
a 32-0 mercy rule win, in ﬁve
innings.
SHS sophomore Sydney Cleland earned the pitching victory, after striking out seven in
ﬁve innings of work. Cleland
allowed zero runs, zero hits
and zero walks, while facing
the minimum 15 batters.
SGHS senior Caitlyn Vanscoy was the losing pitcher of
record, allowing 32 runs on
23 hits and eight free passes,
while striking out three in
four innings. The South Gallia
defense committed 11 errors
in the setback.
Southern senior Brandy Porter led the hosts at the plate,
going 4-for-5 with three dou-

bles, one single and ﬁve runs
batted in. Haley Hill was 3-for5 with three singles, three runs
scored and three RBI, Hannah
Hill was 3-for-6 with one triple,
two singles, ﬁve runs scored
and one RBI, Paige VanMeter
went 3-for-5 with three singles,
ﬁve runs scored and two RBI,
while Sydney Cleland was
3-for-5 with three singles, four
runs scored and one RBI.
Southern junior Sierra
Cleland was 2-for-4 with two
doubles, one run scored and
three RBI, Ali Deem was 2-for5 with one double, one single,
two runs scored and two RBI,
while Katie Barton doubled
See LADIES | 10

Tornadoes
topple Belpre
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — What
a difference a week
makes.
After suffering six
straight losses by a
combined 58-7 margin
to start the season,
the Southern baseball
team has now outscored opponents 28-2
in consecutive victories following an 11-2
decision over visiting
Belpre Tuesday night
in a Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
matchup at Star Mill
Park in Meigs County.
The Tornadoes (2-6,
2-3 TVC Hocking)
trailed 1-0 after a halfinning of play, but the
hosts rallied with four
runs in the home half of
the ﬁrst while establishing a lead they would
never relinquish.
The Golden Eagles
(3-4, 3-3) cut the deﬁcit
in half with a run in
the top of the fourth,
but SHS countered
with seven unanswered

scores the rest of the
way — allowing the
Purple and Gold to
wrap up the nine-run
triumph.
Southern starter Trey
Pickens was nearly masterful in his completegame triumph, allowing
zero earned runs and
only four hits and walk
over seven innings
while striking out a
dozen.
The Tornadoes outhit
the guests by a 12-4
overall margin and
committed three erros
in the contest, but the
Golden Eagles also
had their share of woes
with nine errors in the
game — including three
during the four-run ﬁrst
and four more during a
ﬁve-run bottom of the
sixth.
Blake Johnson led
Southern with four
hits, followed by Dylan
Smith, Billy Harmon
and Clayton Wood with
two safeties apiece.
Pickens and Haden
See TORNADOES | 10

Paul Boggs | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant’s Kelsie Byus (1) sprints toward third base during the Lady Knights’ softball game against Wahama on Tuesday at Point
Pleasant High School.

Lady Knights roll White Falcons
Staff Report

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, April 7
Baseball
River Valley at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Softball
River Valley at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Saunders Relays at Gallia Academy, 4:30
Southern at Waterford, 4 p.m.
Tennis
St. Albans at Point Pleasant, 4:30
Gallia Academy at Ironton, 4:30
Friday, April 8
Baseball
River Valley at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Trimble at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Lincoln County at Hannan, 5:30
Wahama at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Chapmanville Tournament,
TBA
Softball
River Valley at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Trimble at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Huntington St. Joseph at Hannan (DH), 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Logan, 5:30
Southern at Roane County (DH), 5 p.m.
Wahama at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Meigs at Logan Mingo Relays, 4:30
Wahama at St. Mary’s, 4 p.m.
Tennis
Point Pleasant at Logan, 4:30
College Softball
Carlow at Rio Grande (DH), 3 p.m.
College Track and Field
Rio Grande at All-Ohio Championship at OU

of errors early that got us going
and it’s hard to give teams extra
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. —
outs. I tell our girls 21 outs, three
With Wahama’s help, at least in the (outs) an inning. It’s hard to beat
opening inning anyway, the Point
somebody when you’re giving away
Pleasant Lady Knights made sure
extra outs. They gave us a window
Tuesday’s tilt took very little time. there to score some runs in the
From ﬁrst pitch to ﬁnal out, the
ﬁrst inning, then we came up in
host Lady Knights needed just 45
the second inning and hit the ball a
minutes and two-and-a-half innings lot harder.”
to mercy-rule the White Falcons
With one out in the ﬁrst, Makin12-1.
ley Higginbotham reached on an
With the win, Point Pleasant
error, and actually made it to third
improved to 9-6, while its Mason
on a throwing miscue on the same
County rival White Falcons fell to
play.
6-3.
She scored when Karissa
With West Virginia’s softball
Cochran dropped in a bloop single
mercy rule, the contest was called into shallow left ﬁeld, as three
following the third inning.
White Falcon ﬁelders converged
After allowing an unearned run
on the ball, but miscommunication
on two errors in the opening at-bat, and no call-off allowed it to drop
the Lady Knights notched seven
in.
runs on ﬁve hits and three Wahama
Cochran’s courtesy runner —
errors in the bottom of the ﬁrst
Rachael Grimm — scored the
— combined with an unsuccessful go-ahead run from ﬁrst base two
ﬁelder’s choice.
batters later, when Leah Cochran
All seven of those markers were
poked a two-out single combined
unearned, as all but one of the runs with an error in right ﬁeld.
were scored with two outs.
Megan Hammond then singled
Point Pleasant sent 10 batters
Leah Cochran home, as Tanner
to the plate in the inning, but the
King followed with an inﬁeld hit —
White Falcons could have gotten
and Hammond made it 4-1 when
out of the inning without any runs she scored on an unsuccessful ﬁeldbeing scored.
er’s choice by Cammy Hesson.
In the second, Point pushed
That set up a three-run home run
across ﬁve more runs on ﬁve more to centerﬁeld by nine-hole hitter
hits — as all of those points off
Kelsey Price, making it 7-1.
Wahama pitcher Taylor McGrew
In the second, Higginbotham and
were earned.
Karissa Cochran singled to lead
Indeed, it was a tale of two
off, as a walk to Kelsie Byus loaded
innings tied together by the Lady
the bases.
Leah Cochran then doubled to
Knights hammering the softball.
center, scoring Higginbotham and
“We hit the ball hard tonight,”
Grimm, before Byus crossed on a
said PPHS coach James HigginHammond single to left.
botham. “They made a couple

King then conked a two-run single to center, plating Leah Cochran
and Hammond to put the mercy
rule into effect.
McGrew did strike out three
batters, but faced the Lady Knight
lineup two times through.
Karissa Cochran — meanwhile
— struck out the White Falcons
for all three outs in the opening
inning, then fanned two more in
the second sandwiched around a
popout back to her.
After allowing a leadoff single
to Emily VanMatre in the third,
Cochran induced Rachel Roque
into a 4-3 double play, in which
Hannah Smith made a nice diving
catch at second base.
The ﬁnal out of the game, after
11 Wahama batters, was a groundout to the shortstop Higginbotham.
“We played very well defensively
after giving up those two errors
in the ﬁrst inning. And Karissa
(Cochran) pitched well,” said Higginbotham. “She’s (Cochran) been
hurt a little bit with her ankle, but
she’s starting to come out of it. We
need her down the stretch, and
hopefully she keeps on pitching like
she’s pitching now.”
Roque reached on an error to
lead off the game, stole second
and third, then scored on the Lady
Knights’ other error.
Wahama was set to host Eastern
on Wednesday in the Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division,
while Point Pleasant was scheduled
to travel to Lincoln County.
The Lady Knights will venture
across the bridge today (Thursday,
April 7) to Meigs.

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 7, 2016 7

Belpre doubles up Lady Tornadoes
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — Unfortunately for
the Lady Tornadoes on Tuesday, it
was too little too late.
That’s because Belpre jumped
out to a 9-0 lead through ﬁveand-a-half innings, and eventually
doubled up host Southern 10-5 in
a Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division softball makeup matchup
at Star Mill Park in Racine.
The Lady Tornadoes scored
twice in the sixth inning and three
more in the seventh to trim their
deﬁcit in half, but thanks to a ﬁverun outburst in the third frame,
Belpre built momentum that carried to the end.
The Golden Eagles are now 4-1,
both overall and in the league.
The Tornadoes fell to 2-2 in the
TVC-Hocking, part of 2-4 overall.
The game was a makeup bout
from March 28, when it was rained
out.
The Tornadoes did have 10 hits,
but Belpre pitcher Madison Harman held Southern off the scoreboard until the ﬁnal two frames.

Southern stranded eight baserunners, with seven of those left in
scoring position.
Harman hurled a complete game
with eight strikeouts, as her only
two walks and lone hit batsman led
to the two sixth-stanza runs.
She retired the side 1-2-3 in the
ﬁfth, which followed facing four
Tornadoes apiece in the opening
three innings.
Sydney Cleland was the losing
pitcher for Southern, allowing
13 hits and three walks with four
strikeouts.
Harman helped herself with
two hits, including a fourth-inning
double, as Katie Osburn paced the
Golden Eagles with three singles
while scoring two runs.
Osburn’s two-run single made it
2-0 in the third, followed by a tworun single by Alexandria Williams,
which made it 5-0.
Williams’ single in the fourth
scored Harman for the sixth run,
which was followed by three more
in the sixth inning, including on a
double by Sydney Hall.
Hall had two hits as well.
Cleland faced four Belpre batters

in each of the opening two innings,
prior to the pivotal ﬁve-run third.
A leadoff walk and a one-out outﬁeld error off the bat of Osburn led
to Belpre’s lone run in the seventh.
Brandy Porter paced the Tornadoes with three hits, including a
second-inning double.
Savanah Bailey and Ali Deem
dialed up two hits each, including
Bailey’s RBI-double in the seventh.
Paige VanMeter’s RBI-single in
the seventh, along with singles by
Cleland (fourth inning) and Katie
Barton (sixth inning), rounded out
the Tornadoes’ hits.
Hannah Hill — who was hit by
a pitch — and VanMeter — who
walked — both scored in the sixth
to trim the deﬁcit to 9-2.
Deem, VanMeter and Porter all
singled and scored in the last, as
Bailey doubled in Porter but was
left stranded to end the game.
The Lady Tornadoes returned
to TVC-Hocking play on Wednesday when they traveled to Federal
Hocking.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2106

OVP SPORTS BRIEFS

GPRD hosting MLB
competition for youth
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Gallipolis Parks
and Recreation Department will host a free Major
League Baseball Pitch, Hit and Run Competition
for the area youth at noon Saturday, April 9, at the
K and P area near the swimming pool.
Registration begins at 11:30 a.m. and all participants must show proof of age before advancement, as well as ﬁll out a waiver/registration form
prior to the start of the event. No metal spikes are
allowed.
Pitch, Hit and Run is the Ofﬁcial Skills Competition of Major League Baseball. This grassroots
program is designed to provide youngsters with an
opportunity to compete, free of charge, in a competition that recognizes individual excellence in
core baseball skills.
Boys and girls will compete in separate divisions. Competitors are divided into four age divisions: 7/8, 9/10, 11/12, 13/14 ( age as of 7-17-16),
and have the chance to advance through four levels of competition, including Team Championships
at Major League ballparks and the National Finals
at the 2016 MLB All-Star Game.
The individual Pitching, Hitting , and Running
Champions, along with the All-Around Champion
in each age and gender group at the Local Competition will be awarded and advance to the Sectional Level of competition.
For more information, contact event coordinator
Brett Bostic at 740-441-6022 or email cityrec@gallipoliscity.com

PPGSL Registrations in April
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The Point Pleasant Girls Softball League will be holding multiple
registration sessions at a pair of locations.
Signups at the Point Pleasant Junior/Senior
High School Commons Area will be held from
6:30 p.m. until 8 p.m. on Thursday, April 7; Tuesday, April 12; Monday, April 18; Thursday, April
21; Monday, April 25; and Tuesday, April 26.
Signups will also be held at The Fields from 10
a.m. until noon on the Saturdays of April 23 and
April 30.

Wahama HOF
golf tournament
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant second baseman Tristan Austin, left, successfully applies a tag to a Sissonville runner during a second inning steal
attempt Tuesday night in a non-conference baseball contest in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Point Pleasant rallies past Indians, 5-3
By Bryan Walters

most of a golden opportunity in the bottom of the
ﬁfth.
POINT PLEASANT,
Kaleb Beckner led
W.Va. — A breakthrough things off with a double
… due in large part to a
and advanced to third on
big break.
a passed ball, then Lush
The Point Pleasant
singled in Beckner for a
baseball team claimed the 3-2 deﬁcit.
lead on a pair of unearned
Derek King sacriﬁced
runs while snapping a
Lush over to second base
four-game losing skid
with the ﬁrst out of the
Tuesday night during a
inning, then Matt Rich5-3 victory over visiting
ardson walked. Sockwell
Sissonville in a nonfollowed with a single
conference matchup in
that plated Lush while
Mason County.
tying the contest at three.
The Big Blacks (6-5)
Austin Richardson
found themselves in a 3-0 ﬂew out to centerﬁeld,
hole after four Indian hits but Matt Richardson
in the top half of the ﬁrst, advanced to third on the
but the hosts answered
second out — putting
with a run in the bottom
runners on the corners
half of the frame as Cody with two down.
Sockwell delivered a twoAbe Stearns grounded
out single to center that
softly to third base, but
plated Chris Lush for a
the throw was errant and
3-1 contest.
allowed Stearns to reach
PPHS allowed only
safely while both Matt
four hits over the next six Richardson and Sockwell
crossed home plate —
innings, then made the

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

giving Point its ﬁrst lead
of the night at 5-3.
Trey Tucker followed
by reaching an error that
advanced Stearns to third
base, but the remaining
threat was ended one batter later with a strikeout.
SHS (5-4) had a twoout single in the sixth
and stranded the runner
at second, then produced
a one-out single in the
seventh that never moved
into scoring position. The
hosts left seven runners
on base, while the Indians
stranded six on the bags.
Sissonville outhit the
Big Blacks by an 8-6
overall margin, but also
committed four of the
ﬁve errors in the contest.
PPHS also claimed a season sweep with a 3-0 win
at SHS back on March 17.
Jordan Cunningham
was the winning pitcher
of record after allowing
only two hits and striking
out one in three innings

of scoreless relief. Stearns
lasted four innings while
allowing three earned
runs, six hits and three
walks while fanning ﬁve
in the start.
Ethan Lauchart took
the loss for SHS after
allowing two runs (zero
earned), one hit and one
walk over two-thirds of
an inning of relief while
striking out one.
Lush and Sockwell led
the Big Blacks with two
hits apiece, followed by
Stearns and Beckner with
safety each. Sockwell
drove in two runs and
Lush scored twice for the
victors.
Cayd Snyder and Josh
Landis each had two hits
and scored a run to pace
Sissonville. Trent Bodnar
also had a safety and two
RBIs for the guests.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

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

Meigs football golf scramble
MASON, W.Va. — The Meigs Marauder football
team will host a golf scramble on Saturday, April
30, at the Riverside Golf Course. Registration for
the tournament will begin at 8 a.m. and a shot gun
start will take place at 9 a.m.
The tournament will cost $240 per team, or $60
a player. Cost includes free food and and beverages (Pepsi products and water). Each team must
have a handicap of at least 40 with only one player
below 8.
Club house credit for the top-three teams will be
awarded, along with Closest to the Pin, Longest
Drive and other cash prizes. Checks should be
made payable to Meigs football.
For more information, contact Tonya Cox at
740-645-4479 or the Riverside Golf Course at 304773-5354.

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

Point Pleasant, Wahama track competes at Viking Classic
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

RIPLEY, W.Va. — Now
that’s how you defend your
home track.
The Ripley boys and girls
track and ﬁeld teams both
claimed ﬁrst place in Tuesday
night’s Viking Classic, hosted
by RHS.
The Vikings won the boys
team title with a score of
176, while Point Pleasant was
second with a 111. Roane
County was third with a 69,
Wahama and Wirt County
tied for fourth with each scoring 62, while Sissonville took
sixth (45) and Ravenswood
ﬁnished seventh (30).
The PPHS relay team
of Justin Brumﬁeld Jason
Wamsley, Cason Payne and
Sheb Harris took ﬁrst place

in the 4x400m relay with a
time of 3:50.41 and third in
the 4x200m with a time of
1:38.71. The Point Pleasant
4x100m relay team of Brumﬁeld, Payne, Wamsley and
Grant Safford took third with
a time of 47.64.
The Black Knight throwers were led by Seth Stewart,
who was ﬁrst in the shot put
(44-7) and third in the discus
throw (107-6.5), and Cody
Mitchell, who won the discus
with a throw of 147-6.25.
Joseph Clark ﬁnished second
in the shot put (43-11), while
Jesse Gleason was second in
the discus throw (109-6.25).
Harris was ﬁrst in the 400m
dash with a time of 52.13,
Andrew Flowers was third in
the 300m hurdles with a time
of 45.23, while Luke Wilson
was third in both the 1600m

run (4:58.49) and the 3200m
run (10:55.45).
Wahama’s relay team of
Brady Bumgarner, Nolan
Pierce, Wesley Jones and
Austin Juelfs claimed second
place in both the 4x100m
(46.49) and the 4x200m
(1:37.61).
Pierce was second in the
high jump (5-2) for the Red
and White, Juelfs ﬁnished second in the long jump (18-01),
while Travis Kearns was third
in the 800m run (2:11.52).
The Lady Vikings scored
a 202 to win the girls team
competition, while Roane
County was second with a
96.5 and Point Pleasant was
third with a 93. Wirt County
came in fourth with a 90.5,
Wahama ﬁnished ﬁfth with a
37, Sissonville was sixth with
24, and Ravenswood rounded

out the seven-team ﬁeld with
seven.
Point Pleasant’s 4x800m
relay team of Cierra Beatty,
Allison Henderson, Ashlie
Flory and Lexi Watkins-Lovejoy was second — although
no time was recorded —
while the PPHS 4x102.5
shuttle hurdle relay team of
Lexy Toth, Siera Toles, Carlee
Dabney and Cierra Porter was
second with a time of 1:18.14.
The Lady Knights team
of Teagan Hay, Madison
Hatﬁeld, Sydnee Moore
and Brianna Reymond took
third in the 4x200m relay
(1:57.35), while the team of
Hay, Hatﬁeld, Henderson and
Reymond was third in the
4x400m relay (4:35.6).
Aislyn Hayman led the Lady
Knights in the ﬁeld events,
claiming ﬁrst place in both the

shot put (38-6) and the discus
throw (114-00.5). Henderson
took second in the 800m run
(2:44.66), Porter was third
in the high jump (4-8), while
Reymond claimed third in the
long jump (14-00.5).
The Wahama team of
Rebekah Roach, Elizabeth
Mullins, Kaleigh Stewart and
Molly Fisher claimed third
place in both the 4x100m
relay (55:29) and the 4x102.5
shuttle hurdle relay (1:20.22).
Stewart was second in the
long jump (14-8) and third in the
100m dash (13.4) for the Red and
White, while Mullins ﬁnished second in the 100m dash (13.3).
Complete results of the 2016 Viking Classic
can be found on the web at www.runwv.
com
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2100.

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Thursday, April 7, 2016

Miscellaneous
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growing organization with publications in Gallipolis, OH
Pomeroy, OH and Point
Pleasant, WV. Please email
cover letter, resume and
references to Julia Schultz.
Email address:
jschultz@civitasmedia.com
Civitas Media Newspapers
has an opening for a results
orientated salesperson
capable of developing
multi-media campaigns for
advertisers. You must be a
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have a positive attitude, and
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gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

For Sale By Owner
For Sale
Nice 3 Bdrm 1-1/2 Bath home
Full Basement
Lg Lot
2 car Garage
Good Neighborhood
and Location
$110,000.00
Seller pays closing cost,
low or no down payment
if qualified.
740-446-9966
Consider property trade in.

Lease
For Lease:
Commercial space, first floor,
downtown Gallipolis,approx.
1500 sq. feet, suitable for
retail or office space. $550.00
per mo., references required.
740-441-7875 or
740-446-3936

Miscellaneous

Lawn Care

For Sale
2001 Jayco Camper 30 FT
in good condition $7500
phone 740-256-1355

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

For Sale
12 FT John Boat
alumacraft model 2012
used 2 times
with trol motor $500
phone 740-256-1355

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Want To Buy

Call

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

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

Estate Sales
Big Estate Sale
April 8-9-10
gun cabinets, tables,
knick knacks ect.
204 Hemlock Rd off
of Evergreen

Land (Acreage)
15 Acres in Mason County
off of Redmond Ridge. Some
level ground, all woods, great
hunting or camping, $23,000.
Financing with $2300 down &amp;
$273/mth for 10 yrs. Call for
maps, (740)989-0260
For Sale: 4.23 Acres
Split Property, 2 house seats
Utilities available
Intersection of Letart &amp; Bethel
Good timber: Cherry, Oak,
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20,000 O.B.O.
(304) 634-1771
Apartments/Townhouses
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Clean 1 bdr. furnished apt.
No Smoking.
Deposit and references req.
Call: 304-593-5125
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
For Lease:
Unfurnished 2nd floor, very
nice, 3 bedroom apt.,1 1/2
baths, downtown Gallipolis,
$750.00 security deposit &amp;
references required, no pets,
$700.00 per mo,
740-441-7875 or
740-446-3936
For Lease:
Unfurnished 2nd floor,
nice one bedroom apt., in
Gallipolis, $450.00 security
deposit &amp; references required,
no pets, $400.00 per mo. Call
740-441-7875 or
740-446-3936
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 1151 Evergreen
Drive, Point Pleasant, WV.
(304) 675-5806.

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, April 7, 2016 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

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�SPORTS

10 Thursday, April 7, 2016

UConn wins 4th consecutive title

Eastern blanks
Buckeyes, 10-0

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Peerless again. Perfect again.
Connecticut senior Breanna
Stewart capped off her brilliant
career with a fourth straight
national championship — a feat
never accomplished before in Division I women’s basketball.
“It was the perfect ending,”
Stewart said. “We had a goal coming in as freshmen and now as
seniors we did that. We did what
we wanted to do. It was a lot of
fun.”
The 82-51 win over Syracuse on
Tuesday night ﬁnished another
ﬂawless season for Geno Auriemma and his Huskies. Until now,
only the UCLA men’s team had
won four in a row in D-I, rolling to
seven consecutive championships
under John Wooden from 1967-73.
And now Auriemma has passed
the Wizard of Westwood with his
11th national title.
“What those 11 championships
mean to me is how many great
players I’ve had the opportunity
to coach,” Auriemma said. “How
many great people have come
through the program. It doesn’t
matter whose name is above, or
whose name I’m under. As long as
I have those players in my memory,
I’m good.”
He won’t forget Stewart anytime
soon.
The three-time AP Player of the
Year has said it is up to others to
decide her place in women’s college

By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS — You can’t lose if your
opponent doesn’t score.
The Eastern baseball team claimed its ﬁrst shutout win of the year on Tuesday night, defeating
non-league guest Nelsonville-York by a 10-0 count
in ﬁve innings.
The Eagles (4-3) were held scoreless in the
opening inning, but combined four hits with one
free pass and one NYHS (3-3) error to score ﬁve
runs in the second frame.
Eastern failed to push across a run in the third
inning, but scored ﬁve times on four hits, one walk
and two errors in the bottom of the fourth. The
Buckeyes were retired in order in the top of the ﬁfth
and the hosts claimed a 10-0 mercy rule victory.
Ethen Richmond tossed a complete game and
earned the pitching victory for the Eagles, striking
out four, while allowing zero runs, one hit and one
walk.
Eastern committed two errors in the win, while
NYHS had three.
Sophomore Austin Coleman led the Green and
Gold at the plate, going 3-for-3 with three singles,
two runs scored, one RBI and three stolen bases.
Cameron Richmond was 2-for-3 with one double,
one single, one run scored, three RBI and one stolen base, while Ethen Richmond and Josh Brewer
both singled once, scored twice and stole one
base.
Dillon Swatzel singled once, scored once, stole
one base and drove in two runs, Kaleb Hill singled
once and drove in one run, Owen Arix added a
single, a run scored and a stolen base, while Nate
Durst ﬁnished with one single and one run scored.
The Eagles — who ended a three-game losing skid with the triumph — left ﬁve runners on
base in the win, while NYHS has now lost three
straight and left four runners stranded.
The Eagles resumed Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division play on Wednesday at Wahama,
and are scheduled to return to action on Friday,
when Federal Hocking visits Tuppers Plains.

By Paul Boggs

against Point Pleasant 4-3
in their season opener,
then lost last WednesVINCENT — Unfortu- day at Meigs 2-1 in nine
nately for the Blue Devils, innings.
it was another one-run
On Monday, GAHS lost
loss.
at South Point, 7-6.
That’s because the GalOn Tuesday, the Blue
lia Academy High School Devils erased a 1-0 deﬁcit
baseball team suffered its after the opening inning
fourth one-run setback of by scoring once in the
the season on Tuesday,
second and two in the
as the Blue Devils lost at third for a 3-1 advantage
Warren 6-5 in the South- after two-and-a-half.
eastern Ohio Athletic
But the Warriors went
League opener.
off for ﬁve runs in the
Gallia Academy fell to
third to take a 6-3 lead,
2-4 on the season — with and fended off a Blue
all four games being
Devil rally in the late
decided by one run.
stages, as Gallia Academy
The Blue Devils lost
amounted a run apiece in
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Advertise your
business in this
space, or bigger
Call us at:

740.992.2155

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Wheel of
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basketball lore. There is no denying
she is the most accomplished player
ever, winning more titles than fellow UConn greats Diana Taurasi
and Maya Moore, who watched
from the stands at Bankers Life
Fieldhouse. Auriemma wouldn’t
argue with the description of Stewart as the best ever.
‘I’ll say this. She’s the greatest
NCAA Tournament player I’ve ever
been around,” Auriemma said.
“When the lights were the brightest, that’s (when) she was at her
best.”
Stewart said when she came to
campus four years ago that she
wanted to win four titles. She delivered on that promise by scoring 24
points and grabbing 10 rebounds.
She and fellow seniors Morgan
Tuck and Moriah Jefferson posed
on a ladder after cutting down the
net for the ﬁnal time.
Mission accomplished. The
three went 24-0 in NCAA tourney
games, too.
“It wasn’t a sense of relief, it
was a sense of success. This is
exactly what we wanted,” Stewart
said. “Going into every one of our
national championship runs, we
were conﬁdent and that’s what we
were tonight, conﬁdent. We made
history and to be able to say that
we did that with those two guys,
we’re going to remember that forever.”
The Huskies (38-0) have been
nearly unbeatable since Stewart

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

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Bruce Lee" (SF)
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arrived. They lost four games her
freshman year and only one since.
The win over Syracuse was the
75th straight for UConn, all by
double ﬁgures.
Stewart earned the most outstanding player of the Final Four
all four years of her career. No
other women’s player has won it
more than twice and only Lew
Alcindor did it three times on the
men’s side.
Like the other great UConn
teams, this version had a killer
instinct. The Huskies scored the
ﬁrst nine points of the game and
UConn built a 23-6 lead. Stewart,
Jefferson and Tuck, who have
helped the Huskies to an NCAArecord 151 wins over four years,
combined for 26 of the 28 points in
the opening quarter.
Handling the Orange’s press with
precision passing that led to easy
layups, the Huskies were up 50-23
at the half and extended their lead
to 33 early in third quarter before
Syracuse scored 16 straight points
to get within 60-43 with 2:02 left
in the period that brought the
Orange fans to their feet. Consecutive layups by Napheesa Collier
restored the 20-plus point lead and
UConn cruised from there.
“Not shocked by how good they
are, not shocked by the things they
did in the game. We were deﬁnitely
prepared for it,” Syracuse coach
Quentin Hillsman said. “We didn’t
play scared.”

GAHS Blue Devils lose at Warren

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

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the fourth and seventh.
The Blue Devils did
have the tying and goahead runs aboard in the
seventh, as Josh Faro—
after a single — was at
second, while John Stout
reached on an error.
But Bryce Gandee
induced Jeremy Brumﬁeld into a game-ending
out to record the save.
Gallia Academy actually outhit the Warriors
10-7, but the Blue Devils
did themselves no favors
by committing ﬁve errors.
They also left 10 runners on base.
Kole Carter pitched the
ﬁrst four innings and was
the losing pitcher, but of
the six runs he allowed,
only two were earned.
Carter struck out ﬁve
and walked three, scattering seven hits along the
way.
He gave up three hits in
the ﬁve-run third, which
also consisted of three
Gallia Academy errors.
Brumﬁeld pitched the
ﬁnal two innings, facing
seven Warriors with one
walk, one hit and one
strikeout.
Cole Weihl was the winning pitcher for Warren,
allowing ﬁve runs on nine
hits with two walks in

working the opening six
frames.
Gandee got the save,
which included a pair of
strikeouts.
Eric Ward led the Blue
Devils with three hits,
including a two-run single
in the third that gave Gallia Academy its 3-1 lead.
Ward scored the ﬁrst
Blue Devil run in the second — after singling and
following a Ryan Terry
sacriﬁce, a Faro single
and ﬁnally an RBI-single
by Stout.
Faro and Stout singled
twice, including Stout in
the third and Faro in the
seventh.
Carter with a single
in the third, Terry with
a single in the ﬁfth and
Brumﬁeld with a single in
the sixth rounded out the
Blue Devils’ hits.
Ward scored twice
along with single runs by
Carter, Matt Bailey and
Marcus Moore, as Bailey
drove in Moore for the
6-4 deﬁcit in the fourth.
The Blue Devils
returned to the road, and
returned to Ohio Valley
Conference action, at
Fairland on Wednesday
(April 6).
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

Ladies
From Page 6

once, scored one and drove in one run. Savannah
Bailey singled once, scored four times and drove in
one run, Sabra Bailey singled once, scored twice and
drove in one run, while Haley Musser scored ﬁve runs
in the win.
Vanscoy was Lady Rebels’ only baserunner of the
game, and she reached via error in the top of the ﬁfth
inning, but was throw out at second base.
These teams are scheduled to meet again on April
22, in Mercerville.
The Lady Tornadoes — who hosted Belpre on
Tuesday — will return to action on Wednesday at
Federal Hocking. The Lady Rebels return to the diamond on Wednesday, at Miller.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Tornadoes
From Page 6

Miller also had a hit each
for the hosts.
Pickens scored a teamhigh three runs, while
Wood and Johnson each
scored twice in the triumph.

Sprague suffered the
loss for BHS after walking one and striking out
six in six innings of work.
Gilbert led the guests
with two safeties, while
Sprague and Tullius each
added a hit in the setback.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

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