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                  <text>Ohio Valley
Church
Chats
CHURCH s 4

Southern
holds off
Lancers

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

20°

28°

31°

Chilly today with a bit of snow. Low clouds
tonight. High 34° / Low 31°

SPORTS s 6

Today’s
weather
forecast
WEATHER s 10

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 19, Volume 73

Friday, February 1, 2019 s 50¢

Helping
suspended
drivers
regain
licenses

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Sentinel

Ready for a
warm up
After sub-zero temperatures on Wednesday night and Thursday morning,
the Ohio Valley will see a warm up for the weekend and early next week
with unseasonably warm temperatures. The bitter cold temperatures and
wind chill on Wednesday and Thursday closed area schools and even some
businesses. On Thursday morning, small pieces of ice were floating down the
river as the sun rose over the hills. In Syracuse, the Home National Bank clock
and thermometer showed a temperature of 3 degrees below zero. A few snow
showers are in the forecast for Friday morning before temperatures climb into
the 50s over the weekend.

See DRIVERS | 3

Storms drive blood need higher
Staff Report

OHIO VALLEY — The
American Red Cross is reissuing its emergency call for blood
and platelet donors to give now
after multiple snow storms,
frigid temperatures and the
government shutdown further
reduced lifesaving donations.
Scheduled blood drives in
Gallia are anticipated to be
held at Holzer, 100 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis, from 11 a.m.
to 4 p.m., Feb. 13, and Saint
Peter’s Episcopal Church, 541
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Feb.
21, 12:30 to 6 p.m. Drives will
also be held at the Mulberry
Community Center in Meigs
County, 1:30 p.m. to 6 p.m.,
Feb. 20, 260 Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy, and in Racine at

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
Church: 4
Church Directory: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 7
Comics: 8
TV listings: 9
Weather: 10

Southern Local High School,
920 Elm Street from 8:30 a.m.
to 2 p.m., Feb. 25.
In January, more than 4,600
Red Cross blood and platelet
donations went uncollected
as blood drives were forced
to cancel due to severe winter
weather blanketing parts of the
U.S., and additional cancellations are expected this week.
Weather travel advisories may
cause even more donors to
delay their planned donations.
Donors in areas affected by
winter weather are asked to
make an appointment now to
give once it is safe to travel.
The federal government shutdown also affected donations
as more than 4 percent of Red
Cross blood collections come
from drives sponsored by mili-

tary and local, state and federal
government agencies. About 30
blood drives hosted by federal
ofﬁces were canceled across the
country due to the shutdown,
leaving more than 900 donations uncollected.
“Disruptions to blood and
platelet donations jeopardize
the availability of blood for
patients who depend on transfusions for survival,” said Cliff
Numark, senior vice president,
Red Cross Biomedical Services.
“We’re grateful for all those
who have come out to give
since we issued our emergency
call earlier this month and now
urge others to come out and
give to prevent delays in essential medical care.”
Right now, Red Cross blood
donations are being distrib-

uted to hospitals faster than
they are coming in, and there
is less than a three-day supply of most blood types on
hand. The Red Cross strives
to maintain a ﬁve-day supply
of blood to meet the needs of
patients and to be prepared
for emergencies that require
signiﬁcant volumes of donated
blood products.
All eligible donors, especially platelet donors and
blood donors with type O
blood, are urgently needed to
help restock the shelves for
hospital patients. Donation
appointments can be easily
scheduled by using the free
Blood Donor App, visiting
RedCrossBlood.org or calling
1-800-RED CROSS (1-800733-2767).

OU named Music Teachers National
Association’s chapter of the year
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — Ohioans who
had their driver’s license
suspended for certain
violations may be able
to have their license
reinstatement fee waived
or reduced under a new
program going into effect
this week.
The Ohio Bureau of
Motor Vehicles says
the Reinstatement Fee
Amnesty Initiative went
into effect Thursday. It
allows drivers six months
to apply for a fee reduction or a waiver. Drivers
can apply from Thursday
through July 31, 2019.
The bureau will determine eligibility based on
qualifying offenses.
Offenders must have
completed all courtordered sanctions other
than paying the reinstatement fees and at least 18
months must have passed
since any court-ordered
suspension ended. The
offense cannot have
involved drugs, alcohol or

ATHENS — For the second time
in four years, Ohio University’s Collegiate Chapter of the Music Teachers
National Association (MTNA) has
been selected as the 2019 MTNA Collegiate Chapter of the Year and will
be recognized by MTNA President
Scott McBride Smith at a national
conference in Spokane, Washington,
in March.
Christopher Fisher, professor of
piano and OU’s MTNA chapter advisor, said this recognition is a signiﬁcant honor, as this distinction is
bestowed upon a single chapter from
the United States each year.
“The Ohio University Collegiate
Chapter last received this honor in

2015,” Fisher noted. “It is a sincere
pleasure to serve as chapter advisor
and to work with such an extraordinary group of young professionals. I
am deeply moved by their passion to
share the gift and power of music as
well as by their efforts to advance the
music teaching profession.”
MTNA executive director and
CEO Gary Ingle said in a prepared
statement that a selection committee considered multiple nominees
from MTNA state afﬁliate presidents,
and other outstanding chapters from
across the country, before making its
selection.
See MUSIC | 3

OU named
one of top
military
friendly
schools
ATHENS — Ohio
University is proud to
announce it has once
again been named one of
the nation’s top militaryfriendly schools for 20192020 by Viqtory Media, a
veteran-owned company
and publisher of G.I. Jobs
magazine.
OU placed 10th
among Tier 2 research
institutions, the only
such institution in
Ohio to be ranked. The
2019 Military Friendly
Schools® list honors colleges, universities and
trade schools across the
country that are doing
the most to embrace
America’s military service
members, veterans and
dependents as students
and ensure their success on campus. It’s the
eighth year in a row OU
has received the Military
Friendly® designation.
To compile the rankings, Viqtory measures
how well an institution’s
recruiting program
engages prospective military students and educates them once they’re
enrolled.
“We are proud to help
service members, veterans and their families
achieve success through
an education at Ohio
University,” said Ohio
University President M.
Duane Nellis. “Service
members and their families make daily sacriﬁces
See MILITARY | 3

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Friday, February 1, 2019

DEATH NOTICES

BUCKEYE STATE NEWS

WRAY
CROWN CITY — Karen Sue Wray, 62, Crown
City, passed away on Monday, January 28, 2019 at
her residence.
A graveside service for Karen Wray will be held
at 1 p.m. on Monday, February 4, 2019 at Bethel
Cemetery, Ohio Township. Friends may call prior
to the service on Monday from 11:30 a.m.-12:30
p.m. at Willis Funeral Home.

Order updates
workplace policy

YERIAN
JACKSON — Warren Yerian, 90, died on Tuesday, January 29, 2019.
Calling hours will be held on Saturday, February 2nd, 2019 from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. with
Masonic rites at 1:30 p.m. Funeral services will
follow at 2 p.m. with Rev. Tim Keaton ofﬁciating.
Graveside services will be at Evergreen Cemetery
in Coalton.

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

Joseph Lupo Art Exhibit at
Esther Allen Greer Museum
RIO GRANDE – The University of Rio Grande
and Rio Grande Community College School of
Arts and Letters is presenting a new art exhibit by
Joseph Lupo at the Esther Allen Greer Museum
Gallery on Rio’s main campus through Friday,
Feb. 8. The exhibit “Be Chance” features laser cut
intaglios and relief prints. There will be an artist’s
reception Wednesday, Jan. 30 from 5-7 p.m. Open
Hours for the Greer Museum are Tuesday-Friday
from 1-5 p.m. For more information, contact the
ﬁne arts ofﬁce at 740-145-7364.

Annual Olive Township
financial report available

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Gov.
Mike DeWine has signed an
executive order expanding
Ohio’s policy on workplace
domestic violence to offer
more protection to state
employees who are victims of
such violence.
The Republican governor
signed the order Wednesday.
It adds new protections and
expands the deﬁnition of
domestic violence to include dating
violence.
DeWine’s said in a release that it
“makes sense” that dating violence
survivors receive the same support and
services as other domestic violence
victims.
The order requires all state agencies,
boards, and commissions to maintain
and post lists of resources for survivors
and perpetrators of domestic violence
and take appropriate and necessary
protective and corrective actions.
Corrective actions could include
ﬁring an employee who commits or
threatens domestic violence on state
property, at state-sponsored events or
when using state resources.

Daily Sentinel

ﬁre in New Lexington is continuing.
Spokesman Brian Bohnert said investigators did determine the ﬁre started in
the kitchen, where two portable space
heaters were found. He said there were
no smoke detectors in the
home.
Fire ofﬁcials identiﬁed the
children who died in the blaze
as 3-year-old Shayde Thompson and 7-year-old Monica
Thompson. They say the parents and three other children
were taken to hospitals Monday. Their conditions weren’t
available Thursday.
New Lexington is roughly 55 miles
(89 kilometers) southeast of Columbus.

Coroner: Woman’s
death likely cold-related

LORAIN, Ohio (AP) — A coroner in
Ohio says the death of a woman whose
body was found in a vacant house was
likely related to the dangerous cold
gripping the state.
Lorain County Coroner Stephen
Evans said the 60-year-old woman’s
body was found Wednesday in Lorain.
He told The (Elyria) Chronicle-Telegram it appears she died of hypothermia.
Authorities say she may have been
staying in the house for months and
apparently died in the last day or two.
The deep freeze affecting the Midwest led some universities across Ohio
NEW LEXINGTON, Ohio (AP) —
to cancel classes again Thursday.
Authorities in Ohio have ruled the
The National Weather Service said
cause of a mobile home ﬁre that killed
a 3-year-old boy and his 7-year-old sis- the temperature Thursday fell to negative 10 degrees (negative 23 Celsius)
ter as undetermined for now but say
in Toledo, setting a record low for the
that could change.
A spokesman for the State Fire Mar- date there. The previous record was
minus 5 (minus 15 Celsius), set in
shal’s Ofﬁce said Thursday that the
investigation into the Monday morning 1971.

Authorities: Cause of
fatal fire undetermined

OLIVE TWP. — The Olive Township Trustees
Annual Financial Report for 2018 can be viewed
by appointment by calling Kaleen Hayman 740667-6859.

Middleport Refuge
Pickup schedule for 2019
The following is a pickup schedule for G&amp;M
Sanitation in Middleport (Village refuge service)
for 2019: Monday — All alleys throughout Middleport. All residents on Mill Street and North of Mill
Street to the Pomeroy Corporation Limit. Residents on Vine Street, Lynn Street and Dew Street.
Tuesday — All residents between Mill Street and
General Hartinger Parkway. Wednesday — All
residents between General Hartinger Parkway and
the Hobson area excluding those customers who
set their trash out in the alleys - your pick up is
Monday. G&amp;M Sanitation will run on all holidays
except for Christmas and Thanksgiving.

Immunization clinic set
for Tuesday in Pomeroy
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health
Department will conduct an Immunization Clinic
on Tuesday from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112
E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring
child(ren)’s shot records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/legal guardian. A $30 donation
is appreciated for immunization administration;
however, no one will be denied services because
of an inability to pay an administration fee for
state-funded childhood vaccines. Please bring
medical cards and/or commercial insurance cards,
if applicable. Those who are insured via commercial insurance are responsible for any balance their
commercial insurance does not cover for vaccinations. Pneumonia vaccines are also available as
well as ﬂu shots. Call for eligibility determination
and availability or visit our website at www.meigshealth.com to see a list of accepted commercial
insurances and Medicaid for adults.

AIM Media Midwest Operating, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.
Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
REGIONAL VICE PRESIDENT/
GROUP PUBLISHER
Lane Moon
937-508-2313
lmoon@aimmediamidwest.com
EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com
MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Matt Rodgers, Ext. 2095
mrodgers@aimmediamidwest.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER
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dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
The Associated Press

Today is Friday, Feb.
1, the 32nd day of 2019.
There are 333 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On Feb. 1, 1960, four
black college students
began a sit-in protest at a
Woolworth’s lunch counter in Greensboro, North
Carolina, where they’d
been refused service.

THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
“To forgive is wisdom,
to forget is genius.”
— Joyce Cary,
Anglo-Irish author
(1888-1957).

a tumultuous welcome
in Tehran as he ended
nearly 15 years of exile.
In 1982, “Late Night
with David Letterman”
premiered on NBC.
In 1993, Gary Bettman
On this date
took ofﬁce as the NationIn 1790, the U.S.
Supreme Court convened al Hockey League’s ﬁrst
for the ﬁrst time in New commissioner, succeeding the NHL’s ﬁnal presiYork. (However, since
dent, Gil Stein.
only three of the six jusIn 1994, Jeff Gillooly,
tices were present, the
Tonya Harding’s excourt recessed until the
husband, pleaded guilty
next day.)
in Portland, Ore., to
In 1862, “The Battle
racketeering for his part
Hymn of the Republic,”
in the attack on ﬁgure
a poem by Julia Ward
skater Nancy Kerrigan in
Howe, was published in
exchange for a 24-month
the Atlantic Monthly.
In 1942, during World sentence (he ended
up serving six) and a
War II, the Voice of
$100,000 ﬁne.
America broadcast its
In 2003, the space
ﬁrst program to Europe,
shuttle Columbia broke
relaying it through the
up during re-entry, killfacilities of the British
ing all seven of its crew
Broadcasting Corp. in
members: commander
London.
In 1943, during World Rick Husband; pilot WilWar II, one of America’s liam McCool; payload
commander Michael
most highly decorated
military units, the 442nd Anderson; mission specialists Kalpana Chawla,
Regimental Combat
David Brown and Laurel
Team, made up almost
Clark; and payload speexclusively of Japanesecialist Ilan Ramon (eeAmericans, was authoLAHN’ rah-MOHN’), the
rized.
ﬁrst Israeli in space.
In 1946, Norwegian
statesman Trygve Lie
(TRIHG’-vuh lee) was
Ten years ago
chosen to be the ﬁrst
The Pittsburgh Steelsecretary-general of the
ers defeated the Arizona
United Nations.
Cardinals 27-23 to win
In 1959, men in SwitSuper Bowl XLIII (43).
zerland rejected giving
Rafael Nadal held off
women the right to vote Roger Federer to win the
by a more than 2-1 refAustralian Open, 7-5, 3-6,
erendum margin. (Swiss 7-6 (3), 3-6, 6-2. Olympic
women gained the right
great Michael Phelps
to vote in 1971.)
acknowledged “bad
In 1968, during the
judgment” after a photo
Vietnam War, South Viet- in a British newspaper
nam’s police chief (Nguy- showed him inhaling
en Ngoc Loan) executed from a marijuana pipe.
a Viet Cong ofﬁcer with a Australian ﬁreﬁghter
pistol shot to the head in Dave Tree was photoa scene captured by news graphed giving water to
photographers. Richard
an injured koala found in
M. Nixon announced his burned brushland in Vicbid for the Republican
toria state; the rescued
presidential nomination. female koala, dubbed
In 1979, Iranian reli“Sam,” became an Intergious leader Ayatollah
net sensation, but ended
Ruhollah Khomeini
up being euthanized in
(hoh-MAY’-nee) received Aug. 2009.

Five years ago
The United Nations’
secretary-general, Ban
Ki-moon, pressed the
U.S. and Russia to help
ensure that peace talks
aimed at stemming
Syria’s civil war would
resume soon after a
week of peace talks
ended in Geneva with
no concrete progress.
Ray Guy became the
ﬁrst punter elected to
the Pro Football Hall of
Fame; joining the longtime Oakland Raider
were two ﬁrst-time
eligible players, linebacker Derrick Brooks
and offensive tackle
Walter Jones, as well as
defensive end Michael
Strahan, receiver Andre
Reed, defensive back
Aeneas Williams and
defensive end Claude
Humphrey. Peyton Manning won his ﬁfth Associated Press NFL Most
Valuable Player award
in a landslide. Academy
Award-winning actor
Maximillian Schell, 83,
died in Innsbruck, Austria.
One year ago
Republican State
Rep. Don Shooter was
expelled from the Arizona House because of a
lengthy pattern of sexual
misconduct, making him
the ﬁrst state lawmaker
in the U.S. to be booted
out since the #MeToo
movement emerged.
Sheriff’s ofﬁcials in Los
Angeles said new witnesses had emerged
in the 1981 drowning
death of actress Natalie
Wood, prompting investigators to name her
former husband, Robert
Wagner, a “person of
interest” in what they
considered a “suspicious
death.” (Detectives later
said the evidence hadn’t
reached the threshold
for a murder investigation and that they had
no plans to ﬁle criminal charges.) A judge
ordered a Wisconsin
girl, Morgan Geyser, to
be committed to a mental hospital for 40 years
for stabbing a classmate
when she was 12 years
old to curry favor with
the ﬁctional horror character Slender Man.

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

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

Saturday,
Feb. 2
POMEROY — The
American Legion Post
39 at Pomeroy is having
a program about the
four chaplains at 6:30
p.m. at the old Salisbury School. Dinner is
$6, program will start
immediately after. The
program of the four
chaplains is about those
who gave their lives in
World War II when the
USAT Dorchester sank
off the coast of Greenland February 3, 1943.
ORANGE TWP. —
The next regular meeting of Orange Township
will be held at 8 a.m. at
the Tuppers Plains Fire
Department.

Sunday,
Feb. 3
RACINE — Racine
American Legion will
have a dinner from
11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The
menu will be fried
chicken, kielbasa with
kraut, homemade noodles, mashed potatoes,
corn, macaroni salad,
dinner roll, dessert and
a drink.

Monday,
Feb. 4
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Cancer
Initiative, Inc. (MCCI)
will meet at noon in the
conference room of the
Meigs County Health
Dept. New members
are welcome. For more
information, contact
Courtney Midkiff at
740-992-6626 ext. 1028.
MIDDLEPORT
— Children’s Paint
Classes will be held at
290 N Second Street,
Middleport, Riverbend
Arts Council from
4-5:30 p.m. All materials included. Contact
Wendi Miller 740-4164015.
LETART TWP. —
The regular meeting
of the Letart Township
Trustees will be held
at 5 p.m. at the Letart
Township Building.

Tuesday,
Feb. 5
POMEROY — Pomeroy Library, 6 p.m.
Family Craft Night: Valentine Boxes. Make a
box for your cards. All
supplies are provided.
OLIVE TWP. — The
Olive Township Trustees will hold their regular meeting at 6:30 p.m.
at the township garage
on Joppa Road.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 1, 2019 3

Military

Rapid
thaw
follows
polar blast

Music
From page 1

The award honors an
MTNA chapter for its
exceptional contributions
to the music teaching
profession. Ingle said the
selection of OU’s chapter
recognizes the “signiﬁcant accomplishments
and important work” it is
doing to advance music
and music teaching on
campus and in the community.
President of OU’s
MTNA Collegiate Chapter, Elizabeth Jackson,
will be traveling to the
conference in March to
accept the award along

Drivers

Tony Dejak | AP

Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, meets with supporters after speaking at a rally in Brunswick,
Ohio, before kicking off his multi-state tour of states with pivotal early primaries for the 2020
presidential race. The circuit is a key step before he decides whether to launch a campaign for
the White House.

Eyeing 2020, Brown tests
pro-worker theme in Iowa
By Thomas Beaumont

“Donald Trump has used
his phony populism to
divide Americans.”
Brown has said some
DES MOINES, Iowa
Democrats wrongly
— Democrat Sherrod
Brown’s ﬁrst stop in polit- divide the party into its
liberal base and workingically inﬂuential Iowa
might feel a lot like home class voters, chieﬂy those
non-college-educated
for the Ohio senator.
white voters who lifted
His visit to the state
Trump not just in Ohio,
that hosts the ﬁrst 2020
but also in swing states
presidential caucuses
begins Thursday evening Michigan, Pennsylvania
and Wisconsin.
in small-town Cresco,
During more than 25
in the one county in the
years in Congress, Brown
nation both Democrat
has championed workerBarack Obama and
friendly trade and tax
Republican Donald
Trump won by at least 20 policies. He is also a close
ally of labor unions, and
percentage points.
has also supported liberal
Like Ohio, where
causes such as abortion
Donald Trump won in
rights, same-sex marriage
2016 on the strength of
and opposition to the Iraq
working-class voters,
War.
Brown’s stops on his
Brown attributes his
three-day Iowa itinerary
re-election to a third
underscore his central
Senate term last year to
argument as a potential
the resonance of a mes2020 presidential consage to workers who feel
tender: That he underleft behind, while also
stands economically
embracing his party’s
challenged Midwestern
liberal base, including its
voters who helped make
growing racial and ethnic
Trump president.
diversity.
“When work has digSeveral of Brown’s
nity, our country has a
planned Iowa stops are
strong middle class,”
Brown said in Brunswick, in counties carried by
Obama in 2008 and
Ohio, Wednesday.

Associated Press

with several of her peers.
Jackson said music is
meant to be shared, and
any time her chapter
takes its music beyond
the four walls of a recital
hall, it proves to be a
“very rewarding experience.”
“Our chapter has been
highly active and engaged
with the community in
both previous years and
this year,” Jackson added.
“We ﬁnd that bringing
arts to different populations in our community
is a very valuable experience as educators and
musicians.”
Ohio University President M. Duane Nellis congratulated the OU MTNA
Collegiate Chapter and

suspended for various
reasons, including stealing gasoline or not paying
child support.
From page 1
More than 1.25 million
license suspensions in
a deadly weapon.
2016 were for failing to
Bureau spokeswoman
provide proof of vehicle
Lindsey Bohrer says
insurance, according to
about 410,000 Ohioans
the bureau.
are eligible for the proA former registrar for
gram.
People who receive ben- the Ohio Bureau of Motor
eﬁts from the Supplemen- Vehicles says drivers who
have their licenses sustal Nutrition Assistance
Program can qualify for a pended and can’t afford
to pay the reinstatement
complete waiver of reinfees may keep driving
statement fees. Others
because they need to
may qualify for a reduction of at least 50 percent. work, but they get another suspension if they are
Jack Frech, former
director of Athens County caught driving with a suspended license.
Job &amp; Family Services,
“It’s a vicious cycle,”
told The Columbus
Mike Rankin said.
Dispatch that drivers
Most suspensions
can have their licenses

Trump in 2016, and all
of them in places that
have shed thousands of
manufacturing jobs in
recent decades.
“He’s making a statement with where he’s
going,” veteran Iowa
Democratic strategist
John Norris said of
Brown’s plans. “It plays
right to his strength
— that rural, populist,
labor thing — you can
weave that together in
all those towns.”
In Cresco, fewer
than 20 miles from the
Minnesota state line,
the largest employer
is a non-union trailer
manufacturer that shed
a third of its workforce
a decade ago.
Brown will also visit
Perry, where onceunionized meatpacking
plants are now staffed
largely by immigrant
workers willing to
accept lower wages.

for our country, and we
are honored to provide
them with a collaborative, supportive educational environment to
help prepare them for
future success.”
At Ohio University, the
Veterans and Military
Student Services Center
provides programs and
services for student veterans, military personnel
and their family members, including:
A wide variety of social
and academic support
outlets
Participation in a military-focused Learning
Community
Free tutoring
Priority course registration
Assistance transitioning from military to academic life
Assistance with
deployment and training
issues
Access to Ohio University’s Commuter and
Veterans Lounge
Graduation stoles recognizing their branch of
service and rank
Ohio University met
the 100 percent standard
on the six standards
to qualify as a Military
Friendly® school: Academic policies and compliance, admissions and
orientation, culture and
commitment, ﬁnancial
aid and assistance, graduation and career, and military student support and
retention. OU exceeded
the standards by an average of 57 percent.
“It’s an honor for
Ohio University to be
recognized as a Military
Friendly School for the
eighth year in a row,”
said David Edwards,
director of the Veterans
and Military Student
Services Center at Ohio
University. “We provide
an opportunity for veter-

Faith and Family is a project designed to reach out to
people in need and at the same time reach out to the
community with a message of hope. We want to form
a stronger alliance with the church community and do
more meaningful job of helping local churches spread
their message to people who are looking for answers and
inspiration. We need your help to do this.

OU School of Music; he
said the University is
extremely proud of its
exceptionally talented
musicians.
“We are extremely
fortunate to have such
a passionate group of
student performers and
advisors who go above
and beyond to make contributions to the music
teaching profession on
campus and in our community,” President Nellis added. “Ohio aims
to become a positive
catalyst of quality of life
change for Appalachia,
and the gift of music certainly plays a vital role.”

We will publish an inspirational full color magazine that we have entitled Faith and Family. This publication,
with your help, will list all our churches and carry a message of hope. As your local newspaper we want
to use our resources to help get your message to those in need. The magazine will carry profiles of local
churches and testimonials from local readers who have experienced a change in life as the result of their
faith and beliefs. These stories can be a powerful influence in raising the consonances of the reader looking
for answers and in need of a church to help heal. This publication will also increase the strength and unity
among the local church community.

CCaallllyyo
r
lo
reepprreesouurrlo
seennttaa ccaall
ive
TTOODDAA ttiv
YY!! e

Information provided by Ohio
University.

include reinstatement
fees, which range from
$40 to $650.
An attorney with
Southeastern Ohio Legal
Services, a civil legal aid
agency for low-income
individuals, believes the
amnesty program could
beneﬁt the state and
those with license suspensions.
“At a certain point,
people are uncollectable
when they have so many
fees,” attorney Ann Roche
said. “This is giving
people a fresh start.”
The bureau says those
wanting to participate in
the program can get an
application form at their
local deputy registrar’s
ofﬁce, call the bureau or
ﬁnd it online .

Information provided by Ohio
University.

2019 Faith &amp; Family

Deadline: Feb. 12th, 2019

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

Pomeroy
Daily Sentinel

740-446-2342

740-992-2155

www.mydailytribune.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

Point Pleasant
Register
OH-70104303

CHICAGO (AP) —
In Illinois, temperatures could rise by 80
degrees within days.
In Michigan, melting
snow and rain and a
17-mile ice jam on the
Muskegon River could
lead to ﬂooding. And
across the Midwest,
the warmer forecast
was sure to bring
more broken roads
and busted water
mains.
The polar vortex
that brought many cities to a standstill was
expected to come to a
swift end with a rapid
thaw that experts say
could be unprecedented. But the sudden
swing from long johns
to short sleeves could
create problems of its
own.
“I don’t think
there’s ever been a
case where we’ve
seen (such a big)
shift in temperatures,” in the winter,
said Jeff Masters,
meteorology director
of the Weather Underground ﬁrm. “Past
record-cold waves
have not dissipated
this quickly. ... Here
we are going right
into spring-like temperatures.”
On Thursday, the
system marched east,
spreading arctic conditions over an area
spanning from Buffalo to Brooklyn. In
western New York, a
storm that dumped up
to 20 inches of snow
(51 centimeters) gave
way to subzero temperatures and facestinging wind chills.
In New York City,
about 200 ﬁreﬁghters
battling a blaze in a
commercial building
took turns getting
warm on buses. The
number of deaths that
could be blamed on
the cold climbed to at
least 15.

From page 1

ans, active duty military,
guard and reserve personnel and dependents
to enjoy and grow during their time at Ohio
University. Prospective
students and their families should know that we
will take care of them
and provide as smooth a
transition as possible into
college life.”
Institutions earning
the Military Friendly®
School designation were
evaluated using both
public data sources and
responses from a proprietary survey completed
by the school, along with
personal opinion data and
feedback from veterans.
Methodology, criteria,
and weightings were
determined by Victory
Media with input from
the Military Friendly®
Advisory Council of
independent leaders in
the higher education
and military recruitment
community. Final ratings
were determined by combining the institution’s
survey scores with the
assessment of the institution’s ability to meet
thresholds for Student
Retention, Graduation,
Job Placement, Loan
Repayment, and Loan
Default rates for all students and, speciﬁcally,
for student veterans.
OU has further
enhanced its support for
veterans by entering into
an agreement with the
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to participate in the Yellow Ribbon
Program, which provides
scholarship assistance to
U.S. veterans.
For more information
about Ohio University’s
commitment to military
veterans and available
academic opportunities,
contact the Veterans and
Military Student Services
Center at veteranscenter@ohio.edu or 740-566VETS (8387).

304-675-1333
www.mydailyregister.com

�4 Friday, February 1, 2019

Putting forth
the effort
Have you ever wondered why the apostles
often seemed to have more than one name?
Let’s take the apostle Peter, for example.
He is sometimes in the Bible
called Peter; he is sometimes
called Simon; and he is
sometimes called Cephas. All
three names are used to refer
to the same man, sometimes
in close proximity to each
other.
Search the
For instance, in the book
Scriptures of Galatians, Paul refers to
Jonathan
Peter, as Peter in Galatians
McAnulty
2:7, 8. But he calls him
Cephas in Galatians 1:13,
and Galatians 2:11, 14. This is not the only
time Paul calls Peter, Cephas. He does so
as well in 1 Corinthians 1:12, 3:22, 9:5 and
15:5. Why the different name?
And why is Peter called Simon in so
many other places? In approximately 69
places in the New Testament, in the four
Gospels and in Acts, the name Simon is
used to identify Peter. (cf. Acts 11:13, etc.)
Peter is the name most often used (well
over a hundred times) and is the name
used by the apostle himself when penning
his own epistles (cf. 1 Peter 1:1) though in
his second epistle, he identiﬁes himself as
Simon Peter, or Simeon Peter, depending
on the spelling. (2 Peter 1:1)
The answer has to do with languages,
and perhaps something to do with the
reason why God chose the period of time
He did for the birth of the church and the
initial preaching of the Gospel.
We are told that in many synagogues
in Palestine, in the ﬁrst century, Jewish
children were taught to read, write and
speak in at least three languages: Hebrew,
Aramaic and Greek. It was also common
for Jews to have names for each of these
languages. In Peter’s case, Simon was his
given Hebrew name, the name he grew
up with. In John 1:42, when Simon meets
Jesus, Jesus gives him a new nick-name:
Cephas. Cephas is Aramaic for rock. The
Greek equivalent to Cephas is Peter, which
also means stone, or rock.
Paul, writing to the Galatians in the
Greek language, naturally used the name
Peter in some places. This was the name
most of the Greek-speaking church would
have known him by. However, in private
conversation, with his friends, Peter, who
was a native Aramaic speaker, most likely
called himself Cephas. Thus Paul, when
thinking about his close friend and brother,
often thought of him as Cephas, the name
by which he knew him best.
Though we often think of the apostles
as “uneducated,” we should recognize that
they were each multi-lingual individuals
who could read and write ﬂuently in several
languages. This practiced ability was further supplemented by the miraculous gift of
tongues which allowed them to preach and
teach to a wide variety of individuals in that
own individual’s native language. (cf. Acts
2:7-11)
It was God’s plan for His apostles to take
the Gospel to the world, and the world
all spoke different languages. It was thus
necessary for the apostles to each be able
to communicate effectively to a wide swath
of people. When the apostle Paul wrote
to the Corinthian church, “To the Jews I
became as a Jew, in order to win Jews,” and
“to those outside the law I became as one
outside the law… that I might win those
outside the law,” we should not overlook
the lingual aspects of this approach. (cf. 1
Corinthians 9:19-21)
God wanted the Gospel presented to
people where they were, in the place where
they lived, in the language they were accustomed to speaking. This is why the books
of the New Testament were so quickly
translated into other languages soon after
they were written, including Coptic and
Latin. So that men could have the message
taken to them.
This was God’s plan, and it is reﬂected
in the Lord’s grand commission, commanding us to, “Go to all the world (Matthew
28:19).” One wonders how often modern
Christians would prefer for the world to
come to us?
If we meet a non-believer who is also not
a native English speaker, would we prefer
that they ﬁrst learn English before we convert them, or are we willing to put forth
the effort to learn their tongue so as to
better teach them? Do we prefer potential
converts to walk into the doors of our buildings, or are we willing to go out and meet
them where they are? These are important
questions to consider.
As we consider such questions, we might
keep in mind the Apostle who was willing
to address his epistles, in Greek, as Peter,
even though to most of his friends, he normally went by Cephas.
The church of Christ is always willing to
come and study with you, though we also
invite you to come worship with us at 234
Chapel Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio. Likewise,
if you have any question you would like
answered or addressed, please share them
with us.
Jonathan McAnulty is minister of Chapel Hill Church of
Christ.

CHURCH/NEWS

Daily Sentinel

God is good at being merciful
When you consider the
meaning of mercy, you
can understand why God
is good at being merciful.
Simply put, mercy is not
receiving what we deserve.
We deserve judgment, but
God is merciful in the dispensing of mercy despite
fully knowing about the
things we do. We deserve
to have no hope, but God
is merciful in that He gives
abundant hope. We deserve
to not experience His providence, but He is merciful
with comforting blessings.
The Scripture points
out to us, “For the Lord
thy God is a merciful God;
He will not forsake thee,
neither destroy thee, nor
forget the covenant…”
Actually, God is known for
His mercy, and the main
reason for it is because He
desires to have relationship
with us.
The Lord could not
have relationship with us
if He were not merciful,
because, otherwise, He
would completely alienate
Himself from us. But, He is
not willing to be that way.
We are assured of it in that
He mercifully manifests
His presence with us. A
merciful God—-such as
He is—-would not deign

good courage, and
to associate Himself
do it: fear not, nor
with us by giving us
be dismayed, for the
the presence of His
Lord God will be
Holy Spirit the way
with thee. He will
He does.
not fail thee, nor forHe would not give
sake thee, until thou
us leadership for
our lives the way He Pastor Ron hast ﬁnished all the
work for service of
does. He would not Branch
give us His Word the Contributing the Lord.” If you put
columnist
forth effort for the
way that He has. I
sake of God’s House,
consider as a great
you have His merciblessing in life to
ful support.
know that God is merciful
Other verses point out
by being present with us in
that, if you live righteously,
this life we live.
God is merciful to you.
Furthermore, God is
known for His forsake-me- If you are faithful, God is
merciful to you. If you are
not mercy: “For the Lord
thy God is a merciful God; trustful, God is merciful to
you. The mercy of God is
He will not forsake thee..”
manifested to us in more
This is a compelling conways than we think. Why
sideration. By comparing
would not the Lord direct
Scripture with Scripture,
we read that, because God mercy toward those who
have made decisions in life
is merciful, He will not
to stand for Him?
forsake those providing
Another qualiﬁcation
spiritual leadership, neither
will He fail them. If you are is that God is known for
a leader in the Church, this His destroy-me-not mercy:
“The Lord thy God is
has to be an assurance to
a merciful God; He will
you.
Because God is merciful, not forsake thee, neither
destroy thee…”
He will not forsake or fail
We are assured of such
those who are trying to
a qualitative mercy from
advance the Church. The
Him because it is clear that
Bible speaks of how King
He gives us opportunity to
Solomon had a heart to
repent when we transgress
advance the Temple. He
was told, “Be strong and of His law and expectations,

and He is longsuffering
concerning it.
He extends forgiveness
so well, “For who is a God
like unto thee that pardons
iniquity…He retains not
His anger for ever, because
He delights in mercy. He
will turn again. He will
have compassion upon us.
He will subdue our iniquities. And, He will cast all
our sins into the depths of
the sea.” That typiﬁes our
merciful God!
Cutting the course of this
chase, God is known for
His forget-me-not mercy,
in that “He will not forget
the covenant…” He will
not forget the covenant He
made with Israel, for sure.
But, speciﬁcally for you
and me, He will not forget
the covenant of salvation
He provided through the
death and resurrection of
His Son, Jesus Christ.
That is how merciful God
is. He could forget matters
as it concern our eternal
salvation. But, He just is
not willing to forget what
His Son did for us that gave
us eternal hope. That is
being greatly merciful, if
you ask me.
Pastor Ron Branch lives in Mason
County and is pastor of Hope Baptist
Church, Middleport, Ohio.

Overheating: I almost quit God calls
I’m not acting on what I know.
It caught me off guard. I was
I’m hearing, but I’m not doing.
on my way to school. Jamming
Call me a hypocrite. That’s ﬁne.
to some rap. Feeling pretty good.
You may want to examine yourself
When all of a sudden, a warnﬁrst, though.
ing came across my dashboard:
The Bible says, “But be doers
“Warning, engine overheated.”
of the word, and not hearers
I glanced at the temperature
Cross
only, deceiving yourselves. For
gauge, only to ﬁnd the dial resting on red. Needless to say, I
Words if anyone is a hearer of the word
and not a doer, he is like a man
was freaking out. I stopped my
Isaiah
who looks intently at his natural
engine as soon as I could. Hello,
Pauley
face in a mirror. For he looks at
State Route 733. The outskirts of
himself and goes away and at
Pomeroy.
once forgets what he was like. But the
My Meigs County readers know two
one who looks into the perfect law, the
things about 733: there’s nowhere to
law of liberty, and perseveres, being no
pull off, and the cell phone service is
hearer who forgets but a doer who acts,
terrible.
he will be blessed in his doing” (James
After letting my engine cool for a
couple of minutes, I made it to Taz’s gas 1:22-25 ESV).
Maybe you’re receiving God’s Word.
station. I ﬁnally reached my dad on the
But are you retaining it? According
phone. He said, “Pop the hood. Check
to James, the way to retain what you
the antifreeze.”
receive is to put what you receive into
And here’s a good place to pause.
practice. Actually, Paul says the same.
Because Isaiah Pauley is not a handy
He writes, “What you have learned and
man. I’m one of those “book smart”
received and heard and seen in me—
people. When it comes to anything
practice these things, and the God of
mechanical, I’m totally lost.
peace will be with you” (Phil. 4:9 ESV).
When my dad told me to pop the
You see, the problem in my car wasn’t
hood, I didn’t know how. No joke. I was
running out of time to get to class. Did I a lack of antifreeze. It was a lack of antifreeze retention. There was a leak.
mention I was freaking out?
In the same way, you may hear God’s
About ten minutes later, my mom
Word. Read. Pray. Go to church. But
arrived with another car. And by God’s
if you ﬁnd yourself consistently low,
grace, I made it to class on time.
During lunch, I called my mom to ask maybe you’re struggling to practice what
you’re receiving. Maybe you have a leak.
how my car was doing. Turns out, one
If that’s you, I know what it feels like.
of the parts containing the antifreeze
was cracked. Antifreeze had been shoot- We must allow God to mend the leaks in
our lives. He desires to make us whole.
ing into the air. Splashing against the
“But he [Jesus] was pierced for our
hood. How? Ask a mechanic.
rebellion, crushed for our sins. He was
Throughout the day, the Spirit spoke
beaten so we could be whole. He was
to me concerning this experience. I
soon realized a correlation between my whipped so we could be healed” (Isa.
53:5 NLT).
car and my life. Like my engine, I was
I almost quit writing. I almost quit
overheated.
something I love.
The day before this experience, I
I’m overheated. I need healed. I need
wrote ten words in reference to my
columns: “I just can’t even get myself to to retain what I receive. I’m recovering
from a handful of transitions. God has
write one anymore.” I was overheated.
Burnt out. But why? I was reading God’s me where He wants me. I’m seeking the
wise counsel of others. And the healing
Word. Devoting myself to prayer. Fastprocess is underway.
ing. Serving. And obeying. Plenty of
Maybe the same is true for you. I pray
“antifreeze” had been placed in my tank.
God mends the cracks in your life. I
I’m learning there’s a difference
between my reception and my retention. pray He ﬁlls you with His Spirit. Where
there’s Jesus, there’s hope.
Just because I’m “ﬁlling up” doesn’t
mean I’m staying full. I’m receiving what
Isaiah Pauley is passionate about sharing Jesus in a
I need to be on ﬁre for Jesus. But I’m
simple way. Follow the journey of this young pastor at
not retaining what I receive. My tank
www.isaiahpauley.com, on Facebook at Isaiah Pauley
Page, or on Instagram @isaiahpauley.
has a leak. As a result, I’m overheated.

Gov. DeWine plans Statehouse speech
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — New Ohio Gov.
Mike DeWine plans to
deliver his ﬁrst State
of the State address in
Columbus, breaking with
his Republican predecessor’s pattern of taking the
annual speech on the road.
Spokesman Dan Tierney
says the Republican governor intends to give his

speech at the Statehouse,
the traditional location.
No date has been set.
The speech is traditionally delivered to the
Legislature, with Supreme
Court justices, state
ofﬁceholders and other
ofﬁcials attending.
Former Gov. John
Kasich moved the address
away from Columbus for

the ﬁrst time in 2012.
That speech was in eastern Ohio’s Steubenville. In
subsequent years, Kasich
took it to Sandusky, Lima,
Medina, Wilmington
and Marietta. Last year’s
address was at Otterbein
University in the Columbus suburb of Westerville,
not far from Kasich’s
home.

Jeremiah
Our lesson this week
comes from the Old Testament in the book of Jeremiah. Jeremiah
was a prophet
– a person that
tells the will of
God. He wrote
two books
in the Bible:
God’s Kids Jeremiah and
Korner Lamentations.
One day,
Pastor Ann when JeremiMoody
ah was about
17 years old,
God told him he was going
to be a prophet, and he was
going to tell all the people
about God. At that time
Israel was unfaithful to the
laws that God wanted them
to obey, so God wanted Jeremiah to tell Israel to stop
worshiping idols and love
only God. But Jeremiah
was afraid and answered,
“I can’t do that! I’m not a
good speaker, and besides,
I’m just a kid. I don’t know
what to say to grown-ups!”
“Jeremiah, I chose you to
be my prophet before you
were even born, so don’t
say you can’t,” God told
him. “We’ll do it together.
Wherever I send you, I will
go with you, and whatever
I tell you to say, I will give
you the words.” Then God
touched Jeremiah’s lips.
“Now your mouth is full of
my words.”
So Jeremiah was able to
do what God wanted him
to do. He told the people
about how much God loved
them and wanted them to
be His people.
Wow, God didn’t want to
hear any excuses from Jeremiah, did He? When God
wants you and me to do
something, He will always
be with us and help us do
just that. God will reach
out His hands and touch
our lives to give us the ability to complete the task.
Don’t be afraid to try new
things. We may not be able
to do everything but if it is
God’s will, we will be able
to accomplish whatever He
desires for us to do.
Let’s say a prayer. Dear
God, thank You for giving
us the desire to do Your
will and then helping us to
accomplish that with Your
help and guidance. In Jesus’
name, Amen.
Ann Moody is pastor of Wilkesville
First Presbyterian Church and the
Middleport First Presbyterian Church.

�CHURCH DIRECTORY

Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 1, 2019 5

Meigs County Church Directory

OH-70104206

Fellowship Apostolic
Church of Jesus Christ
Apostolic
Van Zandt and Ward Road.
Pastor: James Miller. Sunday
school, 10:30 a.m.; evening,
7:30 p.m.
The Refuge Church
121 W 2nd St.Pomeroy, Oh
45769. Sunday, 10:30 a.m.
Pastor: The Rev. Jordan
Bradford.,740-209-0039
info@trclife.org
Emmanuel
Apostolic
Tabernacle, Inc.
Loop Road off New Lima
Road, Rutland. Pastor: Marty
R. Hutton. Sunday services,
10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.;
Thursday, 7 p.m.
***
Assembly of God
Liberty Assembly of God
Dudding Lane, Mason, W.Va.
Pastor:Rita Darst. Sunday
services, 10 a.m., Wednesday
6:30 pm
Baptist
Carpenter
Independent
Baptist Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
preaching service, 10:30
a.m.; evening service, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
Cheshire Baptist Church
Pastor Dr. Jim Williams,
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.;
evening service, 6:30 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 6:30
p.m. Call: 740-367-7801.
Hope
Baptist
Church
(Southern)
570 Grant Street, Middleport,
.Pastor: Ron Branch,. Sunday
school, 9:45 a.m.; worship, 11
a.m. and 6 p.m.; Wednesday,
7 p.m.
Rutland First Baptist Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptist
East Main Street, Pomeroy.
Pastor: Jon Brocket. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m.
First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor:
David Brainard. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:45 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
First Baptist Church
Sixth and Palmer Street,
Middleport. Pastor: Billy
Zuspan. Sunday school, 9:15
a.m.; worship, 10:15 a.m. and
7 p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Racine First Baptist
Pastor:Duke Holbert, Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:40 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
evening,
6:30
p.m.;
Wednesday services, 6:30
p.m.
Mount Union Baptist
Pastor: Randy Smith. Sunday
school, 9:45 a.m.; evening,
6:30
p.m.; Wednesday
services, 6:30 p.m.
Old Bethel Free Will Baptist
Church
28601 Ohio 7, Middleport.
Pastor Everett Caldwell.
Sunday service, 10 a.m.;
Tuesday and Saturday
services, 6 p.m.
Hillside Baptist Church
Ohio 143 just off of Ohio 7.
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree,
Sr. Sunday uniﬁed service.
Worship, 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.; Wednesday services, 6
p.m.
Victory Baptist Independent
525 North Second Street,
Middleport. Pastor: James E.
Keesee. Worship, 10 a.m. and
7 p.m.; Wednesday services,
7 p.m.
Faith Baptist Church
Railroad Street, Mason.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
108 Kerr Street ,Pomeroy,Oh,
Pastor:Rev
Randolph
Edwards, Sunday school,
10:30 a.m.; worship, 11:30
a.m.
Mount Moriah Baptist
Fourth and Main Street,
Middleport.,Oh.
Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:45 a.m.
Antiquity Baptist
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:45 a.m.; Sunday
evening, 6 p.m.
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Salem Street, Rutland.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 11:30 a.m.; evening
service and youth meeting, 6
p.m.; Pastor Ed Barney.
Second Baptist Church
Ravenswood, W.Va. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship,
11 a.m.; evening, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
First Baptist Church of
Mason, W.Va.
W.Va. Route 652 and
Anderson Street. Pastor:
Robert Grady. Sunday school,

10 a.m.; morning church,
11 a.m.; evening, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
Pageville Freewill Baptist
Church
40964 SR #684 Pageville, OH
Sunday 9:30 am, Wednesday
6:30 pm
***
Catholic
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Pastor: Rev.Mark Moore.
(740) 992-5898. Saturday
confessional 4:45-5:15 p.m.;
mass, 5:30 p.m.; Sunday
confessional, 8:45-9:15 a.m.;
Sunday mass, 9:30 a.m.;
For Mass schedule visit
athenscatholic.org.
***
Church of Christ
Westside Church of Christ
33226 Children’s Home Road,
Pomeroy. (740) 992-2865.
Sunday traditional worship,
10 a.m., with Bible study
following, Wednesday Bible
study at 7 p.m.
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church
Pastor Diana Carsey Kinder,
Church school (all ages),
9:15 a.m.; church service, 10
a.m.; Wednesday Bible study,
7 p.m.
Pomeroy Church of Christ
212 West Main Street. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of Christ
Fifth and Main Street.
Pastor: David Hopkins. Youth
Minister Mathew Ferguson.
Sunday school, 9 a.m;
Morning Worship Service 10
am, Sunday evening 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Keno Church of Christ
Pastor: Jeffrey Wallace. First
and Third Sunday. Worship,
9:30 a.m.; Sunday school,
10:30 a.m.
Bearwallow Ridge Church of
Christ
Pastor: Bruce Terry. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 6:30
p.m.
Zion Church of Christ
Harrisonville Road,Rutland,.
Pastor: C Burns,Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Tuppers Plains Church of
Christ
Worship service, 9 a.m.;
communion, 10 a.m.; Sunday
school, 10:15 a.m.; youth,
5:50 p.m.; Wednesday Bible
study, 7 p.m.
Bradbury Church of Christ
39558 Bradbury Road,
Middleport. Minister: Justin
Roush. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Church of Christ
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship and communion,
10:30 a.m.
Bradford Church of Christ
Ohio 124 and Bradbury
Road. Minister: Russ Moore.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 8 a.m. and 10:30
a.m.;
Sunday
evening
service, 6 p.m.; Wednesday
adult Bible study and youth
meeting, 6:30 p.m.
Hickory Hills Church of
Christ
Tuppers Plains. Pastor: Mike
Moore. Bible class, 9 a.m.;
Sunday worship, 10 a.m. and
6:30 p.m.; Wednesday Bible
class, 7 p.m.
Reedsville Church of Christ
Pastor:
Jack
Colgrove.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship service, 10:30 a.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 6:30
p.m.
****** REMOVE Dexter
Church of Christ********
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
Sunday worship, 10:30 a.m.
***
Christian Union
Hartford Church of Christ in
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va. Pastor: Mike
Puckett. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m. and
7 p.m.; Wednesday services,
7 p.m.
***
Church of God
Mount Moriah Church of
God
Mile Hill Road, Racine.
Pastor: James Satterﬁeld.
Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.;
evening service, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Rutland River of Life Church
of God
Pastor: Sam Buckley: Sunday
worship, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Church of God of Prophecy
O.J. White Road off Ohio 160.
Pastor: P.J. Chapman. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11
a.m.; Wednesday services, 7
p.m.
***
Congregational
Trinity Church

201 E. Second St., Pomeroy.
Worship, 10:25 a.m. Pastor
Randy Smith.
***
Episcopal
Grace Episcopal Church
326 East Main Street,
Pomeroy. Holy Eucharist, 11
a.m.
***
Holiness
Independent
Holiness
Church
626 Brick Street, Rutland.
Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.;
Worship Service, 10:30 a.m.;
Evening Service, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Community Church
Main
Street,
Rutland.
Pastor: Steve Tomek. Sunday
worship, 10 a.m.; Sunday
services, 7 p.m.
Danville Holiness Church
31057 Ohio 325, Langsville.
Pastor: Paul Eckert. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; Sunday
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7
p.m.; Wednesday prayer
service, 7 p.m.
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
State Route 143. Pastor: Mark
Nix. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m. and 6:30
p.m.; Wednesday service, 7
p.m.
Rose of Sharon Holiness
Church
Leading
Creek
Road,
Rutland. Pastor: Rev. Michael
S King. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; Sunday worship, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday prayer meeting,
7 p.m.
Wesleyan Bible Holiness
Church
75 Pearl Street, Middleport.
Pastor:
Matt
Phoenix.
Sunday: worship service,
10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening
service, 6 p.m.; Wednesday
service, 7 p.m. 740-691-5006.
***
Latter-Day Saints
Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints
Ohio 160. (740) 446-6247
or (740) 446-7486. Sunday
school, 10:20-11 a.m.; relief
society/priesthood, 11:05
a.m.-12 p.m.; sacrament
service,
9-10-15
a.m.;
homecoming meeting ﬁrst
Thursday, 7 p.m.
***
Lutheran
Saint John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove. Worship, 9 a.m.;
Sunday school, 10 a.m.
Our Savior Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Streets,
Ravenswood, W.Va. Pastor:
David Russell. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11
a.m.
Saint Paul Lutheran Church
Corner of Sycamore and
Second streets, Pomeroy.
Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.;
worship, 11 a.m.
***
United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Pastor: Richard Nease.
Worship, 11 a.m.
Bechtel United Methodist
New Haven. Pastor: Richard
Nease. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; Tuesday prayer meeting
and Bible study, 6:30 p.m.
Mount
Olive
United
Methodist
Off of 124 behind Wilkesville.
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7
p.m.; Thursday services, 7
p.m.
Alfred
Pastor: John Frank. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
11 a.m.
Chester
Pastor:Walt and Sheryl
Goble. Worship, 9 a.m.;
Sunday school, 10 a.m.
Joppa
Pastor: Denzil Null. Worship,
9:30 a.m.; Sunday school,
10:30 a.m.
Long Bottom
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.
Reedsville
Pastor: John Frank. Worship,
9:30 a.m.; Sunday school,
10:30 a.m.; ﬁrst Sunday of
the month, 7 p.m.
Tuppers Plains Saint Paul
Pastor: Mark Brookins,
Sunday school, 9 a.m.;
worship, 10:15 a.m.; Bible
study, Tuesday 10 a.m.
Asbury
Syracuse. Pastor: Wesley
Thoene. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.;
Wednesday services, 7:30
p.m.
Flatwoods
Pastor:Walt and Sheryl
Goble. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; worship, 11:15 a.m.
Forest Run
Pastor: Wesley Thoene.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 9 a.m.
Heath
339 S. 3rd Ave., Middleport.
Pastor: Rebecca Zurcher.
Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.

Asbury Syracuse
Pastor: Wesley Thoene.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.
New Beginnings
Pomeroy. Pastor:Walt and
Sheryl Goble. Worship, 10
a.m.; Sunday school, 9:15
a.m..
Rocksprings
Pastor: Walt and Sheryl
Goble. Sunday school, 9 a.m.;
Worship Service 10 am:; 8
am worship
service with Lenora Leifheit
Rutland
Pastor: Mark Brookins.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.;
Thursday services, 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: John Chapman.
Sunday school, 10:15 a.m.;
worship, 9:15 a.m.; Bible
study, Monday 7 p.m.
Bethany
Pastor: James Marshall.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
worship, 9 a.m.; Wednesday
services, 10 a.m.
Carmel-Sutton
Pastor: James Marshall.
Carmel and Bashan Roads,
Racine.. Sunday school,
9:45 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.;
Wednesday Bible study,
noon.
Morning Star
Pastor: James Marshall.
Sunday school, 11 a.m.;
worship, 10 a.m.
East Letart
Pastor:Larry Fisher. Sunday
school, 9 a.m.; worship, 9:30
a.m.
Racine
Pastor:Larry Fisher. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11
a.m.; Tuesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
Coolville United Methodist
Church
Main and Fifth Street. Pastor:
Helen Kline. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; worship, 9 a.m.;
Tuesday services, 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Road 468C. Pastor:
Phillip Bell. Sunday school, 9
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
Hockingport Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.
Torch Church
County Road 63. Sunday
school, 9:30 am.; worship,
10:30 a.m.
***
Free Methodist
Laurel Cliff
Laurel Cliff Road. Pastor: Bill
O’Brien. Sunday school, 9:30;
morning worship, 10:30;
evening worship, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible Study, 7
p.m.
***
Nazarene
Point Rock Church of the
Nazarene
Route 689 between Wilksville
and Albany. Pastor: Larry
Cheesebrew. Sunday School,
10 a.m.; worship service, 11
a.m.; evening service, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 6 p.m.
New Hope Church of the
Nazarene
980 General Hartinger
Parkway, Middleport. Pastor
Bill Justis. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; morning worship, 11
a.m.; evening worship, 6:30
p.m.; Wednesday evening
Bible study, 6:30 p.m.; men’s
Bible study, 7 p.m.
Reedsville Fellowship
Pastor: Russell Carson.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:45 a.m. and 6
p.m.; Wednesday services, 7
p.m.
Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene
Pastor: Daniel Fulton. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m., worship,
10:30 a.m.; Wednesday and
Sunday evenings, 7 p.m.
Chester Church of the
Nazarene
Pastor: Will Luckeydoo.
Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.;
Sunday morning service,
10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening
service, 6 p.m.
Rutland Church of the
Nazarene
Pastor: Ann Forbes. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening,
6 p.m.
***
Non-Denominational
Christ Temple Fellowship
Church
28382 State Route 143,
Pomeroy. Services are 6 p.m.
Sunday with Pastor Dennis
Weaver. For information, call
740-698-3411.
Common Ground Missions
Pastor: Dennis Moore and
Rick Little. Sunday, 10 a.m.
Team Jesus Ministries
333
Mechanic
Street,
Pomeroy. Pastor: Eddie Baer.
Sunday worship, 10:30 a.m.
New Hope Church
Old American Legion Hall,
Fourth Ave., Middleport.
Sunday, 5 p.m.
Syracuse Community Church

2480
Second
Street,
Syracuse., Sunday evening,
6:30 p.m.
A New Beginning
(Full
Gospel
Church).
Harrisonville. Pastors: Bob
and Kay Marshall. Thursday,
7 p.m.
Amazing Grace Community
Church
Ohio 681, Tuppers Plains.
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap.
Sunday worship, 10 a.m. and
6:30 p.m.; Wednesday Bible
study, 7 p.m.
Oasis Christian Fellowship
( Non - de n om i nat i ona l
fellowship). Meeting in
the Meigs Middle School
cafeteria. Pastor: Christ
Stewart. Sunday, 10 a.m.-12
p.m.
Community of Christ
Portland-Racine
Road.
Pastors: Dean Holben,
Janice Danner, and Denny
Evans. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.;
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
Bethel Worship Center
39782 Ohio 7 (two miles
south of Tuppers Plains).
Pastor: Rob Barber; praise
and worship led by Otis
and Ivy Crockron; (740)
667-6793. Sunday 10 a.m.;
Afﬁliated with SOMA Family
of Ministries, Chillicothe.
Bethelwc.org.
Ash Street Church
398 Ash Street, Middleport.
Pastor:
Mark
Morrow.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
morning worship, 10:30 a.m.
and 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
service, 6:30 p.m.; youth
service, 6:30 p.m.
Agape Life Center
(Full Gospel church). 603
Second Ave., Mason. Pastors:
John and Patty Wade. (304)
773-5017. Sunday 10:30
a.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Abundant Grace
923 South Third Street,
Middleport. Pastor: Teresa
Davis. Sunday service, 10
a.m.; Wednesday service, 7
p.m.
Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Pastor: Steve
Reed. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 9:30 a.m. and
7 p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.;
Friday fellowship service, 7
p.m.
Harrisonville Community
Church
Pastor: Theron Durham.
Sunday, 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Middleport
Community
Church
575 Pearl Street, Middleport.
Pastor: Sam Anderson.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
evening,
7:30
p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7:30 p.m.
Faith Valley Tabernacle
Church
Bailey Run Road. Pastor: Rev.
Emmett Rawson. Sunday
evening, 7 p.m.; Thursday
service, 7 p.m.
Syracuse Mission
1141 Bridgeman Street,
Syracuse. Sunday School,
10 a.m.; evening, 6 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Dyesville
Community
Church
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 7
p.m.
Morse Chapel Church
Worship, 5 p.m.
Faith Gospel Church
Long Bottom. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:45 a.m.
and 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday,
7:30 p.m.
Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy.
Pastor: Roy Hunter. Sunday
school, 10 a.m. and 7:30
p.m.; Wednesday evening,
7:30 p.m.
South Bethel Community
Church
Silver Ridge. Pastor: Linda
Damewood. Sunday school,
9 a.m.; worship, 10 a.m.
Second and fourth Sundays;
Bible study, Wednesday, 6:30
p.m.
C a r l e t o n
Interdenominational Church
Kingsbury. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship service,
10:30 a.m.; evening service,
6 p.m.
Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob on County
Road 31. Pastor: Rev. Roger
Willford. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; worship, 7 p.m.
Fairview Bible Church
Letart, W.Va., Route 1. Pastor:
Brian May. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
Faith Fellowship Crusade for
Christ
Pastor:
Rev.
Franklin
Dickens. Friday, 7 p.m.
Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
Rev.
Blackwood. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
and 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday
service, 7:30 p.m.

Stiversville
Community
Church
Pastor: Bryan and Missy
Dailey. Sunday school, 11
a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Rejoicing Life Church
500 North Second Ave.,
Middleport. Pastor: Mike
Foreman. Pastor Emeritus:
Lawrence Foreman. Worship,
10 a.m.; Wednesday service,
7 p.m.
Clifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton, W.Va. Sunday school,
10 a.m.; worship, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Church of the
Living Savior
Route 338, Antiquity. Pastor:
Jesse Morris. Saturday, 2 p.m.
Salem Community Church
Lieving
Road,
West
Columbia, W.Va. (304) 6752288. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m.; Sunday evening, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7
p.m.
Hobson Christian Fellowship
Church
Pastor: Herschel White.
Sunday 7 p.m. Wednesday, 7
p.m.
Restoration
Christian
Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road, Athens.
Pastor: Lonnie Coats. Sunday
worship, 10 a.m.; Wednesday,
7 p.m.
House of Healing Ministries
(Full Gospel) Ohio 124,
Langsville. Pastors: Robert
and Roberta Musser. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
Hysell Run Community
Church
33099 Hysell Run Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio; Pastors Larry
and Cheryl Lemley. Sunday
School 9:30 a.m.; morning
worship 10:30 a.m.; Sunday
evening service, 7 p.m.;
Sunday night youth service,
7 p.m. ages 10 through high
school; Thursday Bible study,
7 p.m.; fourth Sunday night
is singing and communion.
Endtime House of Prayer
Ohio 681, Snowville; Pastor
Robert Vance. Sunday School
10 a.m., Worship 11 a.m.;
Bible Study, Thursday 6 p.m.
Mount Olive Community
Church
51305 Mount Olive Rd, Long
Bottom, OH 45743 Sunday
School 9:30 am, Sunday
Evening 6 pm, Pastor: Don
Bush Cell: 740-444-1425 or
Home: 740-843-5131
Grace Gospel
196 Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 Sunday
School 10:00 AM, Sunday
Service 11:00 AM, Sunday
Evening 6:00 PM, Wednesday
6:00 PM, Pastor: Thomas
Wilson
***
Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
Tornado Road, Racine.
Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
evening, 7 p.m.; Wednesday
services, 7 p.m.
***
Presbyterian
Harrisonville Presbyterian
Church
Pastor: Rev. David Faulkner.
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m.
Middleport
First
Presbyterian Church
165 N Fourth Ave Middleport,
OH 45760, Pastor:Ann
Moody. Sunday school, 10
a.m.; worship service, 11:15
am
***
United Brethren
Eden United Brethren in
Christ
Ohio 124, between Reedsville
and Hockingport. Pastor
Peter Martindale. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11
a.m.; Wednesday service, 7
p.m.
Mount Hermon United
Brethren in Christ Church
36411 Wickham Road,
Pomeroy. Pastor: Adam
Will. Adult Sunday School
- 9:30 a.m.; Worship and
Childrens Ministry – 10:30
a.m.; Wednesday Adult Bible
Study and Kingdom Seekers
(grades 4-6) 6:30 p.m. www.
mounthermonub.org.
***
Wesleyan
White’s Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road. Pastor: Rev.
Charles Martindale. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m.; Wednesday
service, 7 p.m.

�S ports
6 Friday, February 1, 2019

Daily Sentinel

White Falcons
fall at Waterford,
43-27 Tuesday
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.
com

WATERFORD, Ohio
—No offense, no hope.
The Wahama boys
basketball team was
held to a season-low in
points on Tuesday in
Washington County, as
Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division host
Waterford pulled out a
43-27 victory over the
White Falcons.
Wahama (2-15, 2-10
TVC Hocking) —
which was also held
under-30 in its ﬁrst
meeting with the Wildcats, dropping a 52-29
decision on Dec. 11 in
Mason — trailed by
just four points, at 13-9,
after eight minutes of
play.
Waterford (10-5, 9-3)
held the guests to just
three points in the second quarter, stretching
the margin to 22-12 by
halftime.
The White Falcons
played evenly with the
Green and White in the
third period, each team
scoring nine to make
the hosts’ advantage
31-21 with eight minutes to play.
The Wildcats sealed

the 43-27 victory with a
12-to-6 run in the ﬁnal
quarter.
In the game, Wahama
was 1-of-4 (25 percent)
from the free throw
line, where Waterford
was 15-of-23 (65.2 percent).
Jacob Lloyd led
Wahama with nine
points on a trio of
three-pointers. Adam
Groves was next with
six points, followed by
Brayden Davenport
and Abram Pauley
with four apiece. Brady
Bumgarner and Dakota
Belcher rounded out
the guests’ tally with
two points each.
Holden Dailey
paced the hosts with
12 points, followed by
Peyten Stephens with
nine and Russell Young
with eight. Luke Teters
and Wes Jenkins both
scored four points in
the win, Nick Fauss
added three, McCutcheon came up with two,
while Smith marked
one.
Wahama is scheduled
to be back on the road
against TVC Hocking leader Trimble on
Friday.

Hornets sting GA, 51-49
By Bryan Walters

during an 11-4 charge that
knotted the game up at 22-all
entering the break.
Aaron Music spearheaded
CENTENARY, Ohio — Not
a 16-11 third quarter run
a fairy tale ending.
by Coal Grove that gave the
The Gallia Academy boys
Red and Black a 38-33 edge
basketball team overcame a
seven-point ﬁrst quarter deﬁ- headed into the ﬁnale, but the
cit and held a three-point lead Blue Devils answered with
a 14-6 surge that ultimately
midway through the fourth,
but visiting Coal Grove made gave the hosts their ﬁnal lead
of the night at 47-44.
a 7-2 run down the stretch
CGHS — which made
to pull off a 51-49 victory on
Tuesday night in an Ohio Val- only two ﬁeld goals down
the stretch — hit 9-of-11 free
ley Conference matchup in
throws in the fourth while
Gallia County.
closing regulation with a 7-2
The host Blue Devils (9-7,
spurt that ultimately turned a
6-4 OVC) built early leads of
one-possession deﬁcit into a
2-0 and 6-4, but the Hornets
one-possession triumph.
(12-5, 7-3) countered with a
The Hornets also salvaged
14-5 surge that gave CGHS an
a season split after dropping a
18-11 cushion through eight
65-58 decision back on Jan. 4
minutes of play.
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
in Lawrence County.
The
Blue
and
White
rallied
Gallia Academy junior Ben Cox (23) goes up for a shot
in
the
second
frame
as
Justin
attempt during the first half of a Jan. 5 boys basketball
See STING | 7
McClelland scored ﬁve points
contest against Point Pleasant in Centenary, Ohio.
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

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

Lots of questions
for Goodell, not
a lot of answers
ATLANTA (AP) —
Faced with a blitz of
ofﬁciating questions
and queries about the
effectiveness of the
Rooney Rule, Colin
Kaepernick’s football
unemployment, and
the cancellation of a
news conference for a
Super Bowl halftime
show that has drawn
hefty criticism, Roger
Goodell scrambled.
The NFL commissioner did provide
some nuggets of news
on Wednesday. He
noted establishing a
quarterbacks summit at
Morehouse College in
June to help get more
minority coaches into
the pipeline of higherlevel assistant coaching
jobs that are quicker

pathways to head
coaching opportunities.
Otherwise, Goodell
generally ducked the
rush at his annual State
of the NFL appearance
as effectively as Russell
Wilson.
Naturally, Goodell
was peppered with
questions, some bordering on demands, to
upgrade the ofﬁciating
10 days after a non-call
late in the NFC championship game pretty
much cost the Saints a
spot in the Super Bowl.
While agreeing that
game ofﬁcials missed
the helmet-to-helmet
hit and pass interference penalty by Rams
defensive back Nickell
See QUESTIONS | 7

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Friday, Feb. 1
Boys Basketball
River Valley at Southern, 6 p.m.
Belpre at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Belpre Christian at Ohio Valley Christian, 7 p.m.
South Gallia at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at South Point, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
Ripley at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 2
Boys Basketball
Southern at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Chillicothe, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Green, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
River Valley at Regional Duals, TBA
South Gallia at Federal Hocking, TBA
Swimming
River Valley at SEO meet at Kenyon, 1 p.m.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Southern’s Arrow Drummer (left) works in the post against Wahama’s Adam Groves (right), during the Tornadoes’ 11-point win on Friday
in Racine, Ohio.

Southern holds off Lancers, 61-57
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

RACINE, Ohio —
Comeback denied.
The Southern boys
basketball team led by
16 points at halftime of
Tuesday’s Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
bout in Meigs County,
and the Tornadoes held
on for a 61-57 victory
over guest Federal Hocking.
Southern (8-7, 7-5
TVC Hocking ) trailed
by a 17-13 clip after
one quarter of play, but
exploded for 27 points
in the second period and
led 40-24 at halftime.
The Lancers (4-12
4-8) held SHS to just

six points in the third
period, and trimmed the
margin to 10 points, at
46-36, with eight minutes
to play.
Federal Hocking
poured in 21 points in
the fourth quarter, but
Southern sealed the
61-57 victory with 15
markers in the period.
In the win, the Purple
and Gold shot 22-of-59
(37.3 percent) from the
ﬁeld, including 5-of-13
(38.5 percent) from
beyond the arc. Meanwhile, the Lancers made
20-of-56 (35.7 percent)
ﬁeld goal attempts,
including 8-of-21 (38.1
percent) three-point
attempts. SHS made
12-of-19 (63.2 percent)

free throws, while FHHS
was 9-of-12 (75 percent)
from stripe.
The guests won the
rebounding battle by a
28-to-24 count, including
10-to-6 on the offensive
end, but Southern committed 14 turnovers, six
fewer than the Lancers.
The Tornadoes combined
for 16 steals, 15 assists
and two blocked shots,
while taking a trio of
charges.
The victors were paced
by Weston Thorla with
21 points, followed by
Jensen Anderson with
12. Cole Steele was next
for SHS with nine points,
followed by Arrow Drummer with six points and
ﬁve rebounds.

Coltin Parker scored
ﬁve points in the win,
while Austin Baker and
Brayden Cunningham
had three each, with
Cunningham grabbing
ﬁve rebounds and dishing out a team-best ﬁve
assists. Trey McNickle
rounded out the Tornado
tally with two points.
Steele, Drummer and
Baker led the hosts on
defense with three steals
apiece, while Cunningham came up with two
steals and two rejections.
Hunter Smith and
Brad Russell led Federal
Hocking with 21 and 20
points respectively. Wes
Carpenter and Elijah
See SOUTHERN | 7

Holtmann, OSU limping through rough patch
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
Even Chris Holtmann’s daughter is
a little worried.
The second-year Ohio State
coach has been noticeably down
lately during a skid in which the
Buckeyes have lost six of the last
seven games and saw one of their
key players sidelined indeﬁnitely
with an injury.
Holtmann acknowledged that
January has been the toughest
stretch of his coaching career. And
Nora Jane Holtmann noticed.
“My wife told me after one of
the games that I needed to go talk

to my daughter, who’s 8, because
she was very concerned about
me,” Holtmann said. “That was
after the game, so I had to wake
her up and tell her daddy is going
to be OK, we’re going to keep
ﬁghting at this thing and working
at it and try to ﬁgure out how to
do better.”
Holtmann came to Columbus
with a reputation for being able
to make his teams greater than
the sum of their parts. But with
a young lineup and lack of depth,
the coach had predicted adversity
this season. Now the Buckeyes are

mired in it.
Ohio State lost ﬁve straight Big
Ten contests to start 2019, the longest losing streak at the school in
21 years. After outlasting Nebraska on Saturday, the Buckeyes were
blown out by No. 5 Michigan on
Tuesday night.
The same problems have hurt
Ohio State all month. Poor shooting, turnovers, committing too
many fouls and not drawing
enough.
The team’s best player, Kaleb
See LIMPING | 7

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

Southern
From page 6

Lucas both scored six
points for the Lancers,
Collin Jarvis added
three, while Ian Miller
chipped in with one.
This marks the
season sweep of the
Maroon and Gold for
SHS, as the Tornadoes
won by a 58-46 count
on Dec. 11 in Stewart.
Southern is slated
to be back on its home
court against nonleague foe River Valley
on Friday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Sting

emy with 17 points
apiece, followed by
Blaine Carter and Bailey
Walker with six markers
From page 6
each. Ben Cox completed
the scoring with three
The Blue Devils outrebounded the guests by points.
McClelland led the
a 27-21 overall margin,
including a 14-8 edge on hosts with six rebounds
the offensive glass. Both and three assists, while
Cole Davis came up with
teams committed 13
a team-best two steals in
turnovers apiece in the
the setback.
contest.
The Hornets made
GAHS netted 19-of-46
ﬁeld goal attempts for 41 17-of-36 shot attempts
percent, including a 5-of- for 47 percent, includ12 effort from behind the ing a 5-of-12 effort from
3-point territory for 42
arc for 42 percent. The
hosts were also 6-of-10 at percent. The guests were
the free throw line for 60 also 12-of-17 at the charity stripe for 71 percent.
percent.
Music and Cory BorMcClelland and Cory
ders led Coal Grove with
Call paced Gallia Acad-

Questions

It doesn’t mean that we
won’t. It’s something that
we’re going to put to the
competition committee
From page 6
to see if there’s an answer
Robey-Coleman — league to that, but the reality
is that’s been at least an
ofﬁciating chief Al Rivopposition philosophieron called Saints coach
cally for many clubs.”
Sean Payton after the
Goodell completely
game and admitted the
ruled out any use of comblown call — Goodell
missioner’s powers to
said the league will rechange the call or resume
examine the ofﬁciating
the game; a lawsuit was
process.
ﬁled in New Orleans seekHe didn’t rule out
ing that. He also stressed
adding such plays to the
that he and the competivideo review system,
tion committee will examand he deﬁnitely didn’t
ine a potential expansion
endorse such a move.
of replay to include
“We will look again
helmet-to-helmet hits.
at instant replay,” said
“We have worked very
Goodell, who added
hard to bring technology
that league executives
recognize the frustration in to try to make sure we
can do whatever possible
of Saints fans. “There
to address those issues,”
have been a variety of
Goodell said. “But techproposals over the last
— frankly 15 to 20 years nology is not going to
solve all of these issues.
— of should replay be
The game is not ofﬁciated
expanded? It does not
by robots, it’s not going
cover judgment calls.
This was a judgment call. to be. But we have to
continue to go down that
“The other complicapath.”
tion is that it was a noThe path to top coachcall. And our coaches
and clubs have been very ing positions has been a
rocky one for minorities.
resistant and there has
not been support to date In a report Wednesday,
the AP pointed out that
about having a replay
on 2018 coaching staffs,
ofﬁcial or somebody in
only four minorities held
New York throw a ﬂag
the stepping-stone jobs of
when there is no ﬂag
(thrown). They have not offensive coordinator and
voted for that in the past. quarterbacks coach, just

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

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

7.1 percent of 56 jobs.
That lack of minority
coaches in the pipeline
helped contribute to
the NFL’s sharpest-ever
one-year drop in minority head coaches, from
eight to three, with Brian
Flores soon to become
the fourth when he moves
from the Patriots to the
Dolphins.
Many advocates of
diversity in the league
have questioned the current effectiveness of the
Rooney Rule, in which
teams are required to
interview at least one
minority candidate for
any head coach or general
manager vacancy.
Goodell defended the
rule, which has been
used in other industries,
emphasizing it has
opened opportunities that
didn’t exist previously.
“We don’t look at the
success or failure of the
Rooney Rule in one-year
increments,” Goodell
said. “We’ve had the
Rooney Rule around for
nearly 20 years. It has had
an extraordinary impact
on the NFL. Over 20
clubs have hired minority
(head) coaches in that
period of time.
“We want to ﬁgure
out how we can create a
deeper pool of coaches so
that they have that oppor-

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ing and produced unexpected success: a 25-9
record — including an
impressive 15-3 ﬁnish
From page 6
in the Big Ten — and
an NCAA Tournament
Wesson, gets into foul
trouble early and often. appearance, with Keita
Bates-Diop emerging as
His frustration boiled
over in the 65-49 loss at the conference player of
Michigan, touching off the year.
This season, the
a second-half skirmish
Buckeyes (13-7, 3-6 Big
that resulted in techniTen) started with a 12-1
cal fouls for players
run and reached No. 13
from each team.
in the AP Top 25 before
“We can handle it
the bottom dropped
better,” Holtmann
out.
said. “I think that was
Guard C.J. Jackson,
accumulation of some
frustration, for a variety the only senior in the
starting lineup, appreciof reasons.”
ates Holtmann’s emoWith the 6-foot-9,
tional desire to right the
270-pound Wesson on
the bench, the Buckeyes ship.
“No one likes losing,”
lack height and bulk
inside and are forced to he said after the Michigan game. “You could
play small ball.
Last year, Holtmann’s tell he was upset about
that. But as a player,
ﬁrst in Columbus, the
you want that. You don’t
former Butler coach
want a coach that’s sattook a squad that was
supposed to be rebuild- isﬁed with losing.”

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

tunity when the coaching
opportunities arise.”
— On Kaepernick,
who some claim has been
blackballed by the league
for sparking social injustice and police brutality
demonstrations during
the national anthem,
Goodell said:
“I think if a team
decides that Colin Kaepernick or any other player
can help their team win,
that’s what they’ll do.
They want to win and
they make those decisions
individually in the best
interest of their club. Our
clubs are the ones that
make decisions on players they want to have on
their roster. They make
that decision individually
in the best interests of
their team.”
— On the cancellation
of the halftime news conference following widespread condemnation of
the choice of Maroon 5
and several artists refusing to participate as a
sign of support for Kaepernick:
“We’re extremely
pleased with the diversity, quality and the
excitement surrounding
our entertainers. This
is the biggest stage in
the world, and I know
people want to be part
of that.

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

Has an opening for a results oriented

Limping

15 points apiece, followed by Payten Smith
with 10 points and Jaylen
McKenzie with six markers. Nate Harmon and
Evan Gannon completed
the winning tally with
three and two markers,
respectively.
Music led the guests
with six rebounds, ﬁve
steals and four assists.
McKenzie also handed
out four assists in the
victory.
Gallia Academy
returns to action Saturday when it travels to
South Point for an OVC
matchup at 6 p.m.

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

AIM MEDIA MIDWEST NEWSPAPERS

Friday, February 1, 2019 7

6TH ANNUAL
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
Notices
The Ohio Township's 2018
Annual Financial Report is
complete and available to
view at the office of the
Fiscal Officer. Ohio
Township will hold their
2019 monthly meetings
on the second Friday of
each month at the Fire
Station on Waugh Road
at 8:00 P.M.
Raymond S. Gibson
Fiscal Officer Ohio Township

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�COMICS

8 Friday, February 1, 2019

BLONDIE

Daily Sentinel

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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�SPORTS/TV

Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 1, 2019 9

Missouri sanctioned by NCAA after academic misconduct
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
— The NCAA handed oneyear postseason bans and
other penalties to Missouri’s
football, baseball and softball
programs on Thursday after a
two-year investigation revealed
academic misconduct involving a tutor.
The penalties mean that the
Tigers’ highly regarded football team won’t be eligible for
the SEC title game or a bowl
game this fall. Their baseball
and softball programs likewise
will not be allowed to participate in the SEC Tournament
or the NCAA Tournament.
The Division I Committee
on Infractions found that the
former tutor, Yolanda Kumar,

admitted in late 2016 she had
“violated NCAA ethical conduct, academic misconduct
and academic extra beneﬁts
rules when she completed
academic work for 12 studentathletes.”
Kumar told the panel that
she felt pressured to ensure
athletes passed certain courses, primarily in mathematics.
But according to the committee’s report, “the investigation did not support that her
colleagues directed her to
complete the student-athletes’
work.”
NCAA investigators said
Kumar completed course work
offered by Missouri, courses
offered by other schools

and a math placement exam
required of all students. In
one instance, she allegedly
completed an entire course for
a football player, whose name
was not revealed.
Missouri was expected to
address the penalties later
Thursday.
The school began investigating after Kumar announced on
social media that she had committed academic fraud. Earlier
this year, athletic director Jim
Sterk sent a letter to Kumar
that she also posted on social
media in which he conﬁrmed
she had provided impermissible beneﬁts and that she could
no longer be associated with
the athletic department.

prospects, and 12.5 percent
reductions in ofﬁcial visits and
in-person evaluations.
The NCAA also ﬁned the
school $5,000 plus 1 percent
of each program’s budgets.
Kumar has already been
barred by the university
from working for the athletic
department. She also received
a 10-year show-cause order
form the NCAA that bars her
from working with athletes.
While the case is expected
to draw comparisons to
recent academic misconduct
at North Carolina, the NCAA
said it differed in that “UNC
stood by the courses and
grades it awarded studentathletes.”

The NCAA acknowledged
the proactive steps that Missouri took in investigating
the academic fraud, but the
penalties handed down to the
football, baseball and softball
programs were stiff.
Along with three years of
probation and the postseason
bans, the programs also must
vacate any records from when
the 12 athletes involved in
the misconduct participated;
they will have a 5 percent
reductions in scholarships for
the upcoming academic year;
and they received recruiting
restrictions that included a
seven-week ban on unofﬁcial
visits, off-campus contacts
and any communications with

The game within Super Bowl LIII
By Barry Wilner
The Associated Press

The previous time the Rams
played in a Super Bowl, the opponent was New England. It didn’t
work out so well for the then-St.
Louis team.
The Patriots, of course, have
made a habit of being in the NFL
championship game — this is
their eighth since that 2002 victory over the Greatest Show On
Turf.
Here’s how they’ll match up in
Atlanta:

Jae C. Hong | AP file

Los Angeles Rams defensive end Aaron Donald hits Philadelphia
Eagles quarterback Nick Foles in their December game in Los
Angeles. Whether Donald, defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh and
edge rusher Dante Fowler can put pressure on New England
quarterback Tom Brady will have a lot to do with the Rams’ success
— or failure — in Sunday’s Super Bowl in Atlanta.

When New England has the ball
Thanks to a dominating line
led by LT Trent Brown (77), C
David Andrews (60) and RG
Shaq Mason (69), Tom Brady
(12) barely was touched and
never was sacked by Kansas City
in the AFC title game. And the
Chiefs led the league in sacks. If
that group can be just as stout
against All-Pro DT Aaron Donald, the only unanimous choice
for the squad, Ndamukong Suh
(93) and Michael Brockers (90),
Brady could have another one of
his MVP performances. However,
the secondary he’ll face this time
is far superior to what the Chiefs
put on the ﬁeld, particularly with
cornerbacks Aqib Talib (21)
and Marcus Peters (22) — and
backup Nickell Robey-Coleman
(23), he of the now-infamous
helmet-hit pass interference non-

Chasing Brady: Donald,
Suh to lead Rams’
Super Bowl pursuit
ATLANTA (AP) —
Practically every member
of the Los Angeles Rams
has a favorite story about
Aaron Donald’s feats of
ridiculous athleticism.
Michael Brockers loved
the moment at Carolina
in 2016 when Donald
beat the Panthers’ left
guard and launched himself like Superman, swallowing up Cam Newton
while airborne.
Nickell Robey-Coleman
preferred the game at
San Francisco this season
when Donald shredded a
double-team and sacked
C.J. Beathard — not by
grabbing him, but by
shoving the 49ers’ center
into his own quarterback.
“Aaron can do things
you didn’t know were
possible,” said Rams
defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh, no stranger to
improbable feats himself.
Donald is the NFL’s
current sacks champion,
the only unanimous AllPro and a probable twotime league Defensive
Player of the Year. But
Los Angeles’ powerful
defensive tackle has one
more daunting task in the
Super Bowl.
Donald and the Rams
must ﬁgure out how to
pressure Tom Brady, who
completely stumped the
New England Patriots’
ﬁrst two playoff opponents.
The Chargers and
Chiefs never sacked the
41-year-old superstar
while he sat comfortably
behind his stellar offensive line and picked apart
their defenses for 691
yards passing, completing 71.1 percent of his
throws.
Donald, who set an
NFL record for sacks by
an interior lineman with
20½ this season, believes
Los Angeles (15-3) can
do what the Chargers and
Chiefs couldn’t.
“We’ll get to him, but
we have to stay patient
and don’t get frustrated,”
Donald said. “We’ve got
a great secondary that
will do its job and make
sure he doesn’t have easy
throws. If he has to hold

onto the ball, we’ll have
our chances. We just have
to go get him.”
The Rams have been
assembling the tools for
this job all year long.
In the spring, they
signed the imposing Suh
to a $14 million deal.
They also acquired Aqib
Talib and Marcus Peters,
two elite cornerbacks
who can create chances
for their pass rush.
They gave a six-year,
$135 million contract
extension to Donald in
late August, making their
best player happy after
two offseason holdouts.
He responded with the
best season of his stellar
career.
Los Angeles then
acquired edge rusher
Dante Fowler from Jacksonville in late October,
adding a speedy outside
pass-rushing threat to
a roster that lacked it.
Fowler has 1½ sacks and
six quarterback hits in the
Rams’ past four games
— including the biggest
hit of LA’s season, forcing Drew Brees’ overtime
interception in the NFC
championship game.
Fowler never became
a superstar with the Jaguars, but he loves being a
role player for LA.
“I knew I was going to
ﬁt in with this defense
because of A.D. and Suh,”
Fowler said. “They make
it easy for everybody else
on the defense. They
cause so many problems.”
Donald, Suh and Brockers are a formidable
defensive line, and their
teamwork has improved
each month. Although
Donald doesn’t have a
sack in the Rams’ two
postseason games, he
draws double-teams that
free up Suh, who has 1½
sacks and four quarterback hits in an outstanding postseason.
Even if Donald and
Suh win their individual
matchups on the line,
Brady’s quick decisions
and swift release make
him awfully difﬁcult for
anyone to touch. He was
sacked just 21 times in
the regular season.

call against the Saints.
Those two must be aggressive
at the line of scrimmage against
WRs Julian Edelman (11) and
Chris Hogan (15), who were so
open on some routes against Kansas City it looked like a passing
drill.
The other intriguing matchup
here is TE Rob Gronkowski (87)
against safeties Lamarcus Joyner
(20) and John Johnson III (43),
who are physical enough to deal
with Gronk, but it’s a wearying
and thankless task.
And there’s this for LA to
deal with: Rookie Sony Michel
(26) has become a ground force
with his power and instincts.
Fellow RB James White (28) is
one of the best receivers out of
the backﬁeld in the league, and
third-stringer Rex Burkhead (34)
scored twice, including the winning TD for the AFC crown.
Rams defensive coordinator
Wade Phillips will challenge
Brady with his schemes, but LA
must disrupt the QB’s timing and
comfort zone. Brady’s O-line has
to prevent that.
When Los Angeles has the ball
Michel’s former teammate
at Georgia, All-Pro RB Todd
Gurley (30), has been battling
knee issues. While late-season
pickup C.J. Anderson (35) has
been masterful, the Rams need
a healthy and productive Gurley
for the Super Bowl. At least he’s

had extra time to heal.
Gurley led the NFL with 21
TDs and ranked fourth with
1,831 yards from scrimmage.
He’d be a handful as a receiver
for Patriots LBs Dont’a Hightower (54) and Kyle Van Noy (53),
who comes off a superb outing in
Kansas City. So one of the DBs,
perhaps safeties Devin McCourty
(32) or Patrick Chung (23),
could get some assignments.
The Rams want to have balance on offense, and they certainly have the options in the passing
game with Jared Goff (16) throwing to WRs Robert Woods (17),
Brandin Cooks (12) and rapidly
developing Josh Reynolds (83).
Cooks will be eager for a big
game after the Patriots dealt him
to LA last offseason. He’ll likely
see plenty of All-Pro CB Stephon
Gilmore, who struggled a bit in
KC.
New England managed four
sacks of Patrick Mahomes and
the Rams can’t be that generous if they expect to carry off
the Lombardi Trophy. Steady
linemen LT Andrew Whitworth
(77), LG Rodger Saffold (76)
and RT Rob Havenstein (79)
must hold their own against DE
Trey Flowers (98), Van Noy and
the guys on the interior for New
England.
Goff vs. Brady would seem a
mismatch. But Goff and his team
beat Drew Brees for the NFC
title.

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(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)
12 (WVPB)
13 (WOWK)
CABLE

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1

6 PM

6:30

WSAZ News
3 (N)
WTAP News
(N)
ABC 6 News
at 6pm (N)
Arthur

NBC Nightly
News (N)
NBC Nightly
News (N)
ABC World
News (N)
Newswatch

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune (N) (N)
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune (N) (N)
Ent. Tonight Access
(N)
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events. (N)
News at 6
ABC World Judge Judy Ent. Tonight
(N)
News (N)
(N)
(N)
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
(N)
Fortune (N)
Daily Mail
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
TV
News (N)
Theory
Theory
Legislature Nightly
PBS NewsHour Providing inToday
Business
depth analysis of current
events. (N)
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Big Game
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)
7:00 p.m. (N) Access (N)

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Blindspot "Careless
Whisper" (N)
Blindspot "Careless
Whisper" (N)
Fresh Off the Speechless
Boat (N)
(N)
Washington Firing Line
Week (N)
(N)

The Blacklist "Alter Ego"
Dateline NBC Investigative
(N)
features are covered.
The Blacklist "Alter Ego"
Dateline NBC Investigative
(N)
features are covered.
20/20 "BTK Serial Killer" The daughter the BTK killer
speaks out. (N)
Great Performances at the Met "Marnie" Nico Muhly’s
reimagining of Winston Graham’s novel about a woman
with multiple identities. (N)
Fresh Off the Speechless 20/20 "BTK Serial Killer" The daughter the BTK killer
Boat (N)
speaks out. (N)
(N)
MacGyver "Father + Bride + Hawaii Five-0 "Ikliki I Ka La Blue Bloods "Ripple Effect"
Betrayal" (N)
O Keawalua" (N)
(N)
Last Man
The Cool
Hell's Kitchen "What's Your Eyewitness News at 10 (N)
Standing (N) Kids (N)
Motto?" (N)
Washington Firing Line
Great Performances at the Met "Marnie" Nico Muhly’s
Week (N)
reimagining of Winston Graham’s novel about a woman
(N)
with multiple identities. (N)
MacGyver "Father + Bride + Hawaii Five-0 "Ikliki I Ka La Blue Bloods "Ripple Effect"
Betrayal" (N)
O Keawalua" (N)
(N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

xXx (‘02, Action) Samuel L. Jackson, Marton Csokas, Vin Diesel. TV14
xXx (‘02, Act) Vin Diesel. TV14
18 (WGN) Blue Blood "Moonlighting"
Pre-game
NHL Hockey Ottawa Senators at Pittsburgh Penguins (L)
Post-game In the Room DPatrick (N)
24 (ROOT) Villanova
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
Countdown NBA Basketball Boston Celtics at New York Knicks (L)
NBA Basketb. Hou./Den. (L)
26 (ESPN2) Horn (N)
Interrupt (N) NCAA Basketball Davidson at St. Bonaventure (L)
Football All-Star Challenge
27 (LIFE)
29 (FREE)
30 (PARMT)
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

Me Before You (2016, Drama) Sam Claflin,
Dirty Dancing (1987, Dance) Jennifer Grey, Jerry
(:05)
The Bucket List
Jenna Coleman, Emilia Clarke. TVPG
Orbach, Patrick Swayze. TVPG
Jack Nicholson. TV14
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory A poor boy's dreams come true
Tarzan (1999, Animated) Voices of Minnie Driver, Grown "Love
when he wins a tour of a wondrous chocolate factory. TVPG
Glenn Close, Tony Goldwyn. TVPG
Galore"
Friends
Friends
Friends
Friends
Dumb and Dumber (‘94, Com) Jim Carrey. Two pals decide to do
Ace Ventura:
something right by driving across the country to return a briefcase. TV14 Pet Detective
Loud House Loud House Lip Sync (N) Dare (N)
H.Danger
CousinLife
SpongeBob SpongeBob The Office
The Office
(4:20) Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets TVPG
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them Eddie Redmayne. TV14 Movie
FamilyGuy
FamilyGuy
Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy
The LEGO Movie (‘14, Ani) Chris Pratt. TVPG
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
Bones
Bones
(:05)
Rogue One (2016, Action) Diego Luna, Ben Mendelsohn, Felicity Jones. TV14
(5:40)
The Breakfast Club (1985, Drama) Emilio
Jurassic Park (1993, Sci-Fi) Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Sam Neill. Genetically reEstevez, Molly Ringwald, Judd Nelson. TVMA
created dinosaurs break out of captivity and wreak havoc in a theme park. TV14
Rush "Old School Heroes" Gold Rush: Pay Dirt (N)
GoldDirt "Gold School"
Gold Rush: White Water "Broken Bones"
(5:00) Live PD
Live PD /(:05) Live PD:
Live PD Live access inside the country's busiest police
Rewind
forces. (L)
Tanked!
Tanked!
Tanked
Tanked (N) Hanging/Hendersons (N)
Tanked: Supersized (N)
Secrets Uncovered "Secrets Secrets Uncovered "Out
Secrets Uncovered "The
Smiley Face Killers: The Hunt For Justice Smiley "Luke
"Dakota James"
in the Snow"
There in the Dark"
Women &amp; Dirty John" (N)
Homan"
Love After Lockup
Love After Lockup
Love After "She Said Yes?" Love After Lockup (N)
Extreme Love (N)
Chrisley
Chrisley
E! News (N)
Just Go With It (‘11, Com) Jennifer Aniston, Adam Sandler. TV14
Movie
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Two 1/2 Men Two 1/2 Men
Underworld, Inc. "The
Prison Nation
Inside Maximum Security Hard Time: Locked Up
Drugs, Inc. "X-Rated High"
Money Laundry"
"Moms on Trial" (N)
Journey to Hammers (N)
Racing "Rolex 24 Recap"
NASCAR Hall of Fame (L)
Racing "Rolex 24 Recap"
Boxing
Tip-Off
NCAA Basketball Michigan at Iowa (L)
NCAA Basketball (L)
Ancient Aliens "Creatures Ancient Aliens "Aliens and Ancient Aliens: Declassified "The Alien Legacy" Exploring the suggestion that aliens
of the Deep"
the Red Planet"
visited Earth in the distant past. (N)
(:10) BelowD. "Au Revior!" (:10)
The Green Mile (1999, Drama) David Morse, Bonnie Hunt, Tom Hanks. TV14
Black-ish
Black-ish
Black-ish
Black-ish
Black-ish
Black-ish
A Madea Christmas Chad Michael Murray. TVPG
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
Dream Home Dream Home Dream H. (N) Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home
(4:20)
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
The Magicians "A Flock of The Magicians "Lost,
Life of Pi (‘12, Fant)
(‘02, Fam) Rupert Grint, Daniel Radcliffe. TVPG
Lost Birds"
Found, ...Ed"
Suraj Sharma. TVPG
(5:30)

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

(5:40) Three Billboards Outside Ebbing,

400 (HBO)

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

Logan (2017, Action) Patrick Stewart, Dafne Keen, Hugh
Missouri A grieving mother puts up signs on the Jackman. Logan and Professor X are brought out of retirement when a
edge of town accusing the police of inaction.
young mutant is hunted. TVMA
(:15) Steve Jobs (2015, Biography) Kate Winslet, Seth
(:20) Upgrade (‘18, Act) Betty Gabriel, Logan MarshallRogen, Michael Fassbender. Co-founder and Apple CEO
Green. An implanted computer chip helps a paralyzed man
Steve Jobs's story is told. TVMA
walk again and turns him superhuman. TVMA
I Feel Pretty (2018, Comedy) Rory Scovel, Michelle
Mary Shelley (2017, Biography) Douglas Booth, Maisie
Williams, Amy Schumer. A woman believes she is the most Williams, Elle Fanning. The future author of 'Frankenstein'
beautiful lady in the world after she hits her head. TV14
meets and falls in love with a married father. TV14
(:40)

10 PM

10:30

Real Time With Bill Maher
(N)
Strike Back (N)

Boxing Shobox: The New
Generation Site: Main Street
Armory (L)

�SPORTS/WEATHER

10 Friday, February 1,2019

Puig warms to winteiy new home

No. 20 Iowa State
rolls past West
Virginia 93-68

CINCINNATI (AP)
— Yasiel Puig boarded a
jet in Los Angeles, flew
all night and arrived in
his new home just before
sunrise. The temperature
was still falling toward
zero, and the wind chill
was enough to cause
frostbite in a few min­
utes.
That first blast of cold
as he left the plane was
another reminder: You’re
not in LA anymore, Yas­
iel.
The former Dodg­
ers outfielder who was
part of a seven-player
deal with Cincinnati in
December decided to
explore his new town
Wednesday. He did just
about every Cincinnati
thing that a visitor could
do on a below-freezing
day.
Puig looked for a place
to live, visited Great
American Ball Park , and
spent time with children
at the Reds’ baseball
academy. He went to City
Hall and met the mayor.
One of the local chili par­
lors tweeted hello.
During his visit to the
new clubhouse, Puig got
a Reds home jersey with
No. 66 and his name on
the back. Also, a red-andgray stocking cap that
sure came in handy under
the conditions, though
he insisted that 20-below
wind chill wasn’t intimi­
dating.
“It’s not that cold,” he
said in a tone that had
less conviction than his
words. “It’s all in your
head. I’ll be fine. It’s not
going to be like that in
the season.”
Reds fans are hoping
Puig and a cadre of new­
comers can make this sea­
son one worth following,
finally.
After four straight

AMES, Iowa (AP) — Iowa State’s Lindell Wigginton leapt into the lane to steal a pass, sprinted
down the court and got fouled. He then casually
flipped the ball underhanded toward the basket
from 30 feet — and found the bottom of the net.
It was that kind of night for Wigginton, who has
transitioned from a starter on a losing team to a
lethal weapon off the bench for a winning one.
Wigginton scored a season-high 28 points and
20th-ranked Iowa State cruised past West Virginia
93-68 on Wednesday night, its fourth win in five
games.
Wigginton’s previous high for points this season
was 18 on Saturday in a Top 25 road win at Mis­
sissippi, a sign that he’s finally 100 percent back
from the foot injury that cost him most of the non­
conference season.
“When you’ve got players and coaches that
believe in you, you’re going to give it your all,”
said Wigginton, a preseason all-league pick. “Your
confidence is going to stay high.”
Marial Shayok scored 18 points for the surging
Cyclones (16-5, 5-3 Big 12), who shot 26 of 39
inside the 3-point line and 29 of 33 from the free
throw line.
After a somewhat sluggish start, Iowa State
closed the first half on 18-6 run to jump ahead
by 17. West Virginia hung around, even using its
shelved press defense to confuse the Cyclones and
pull to within 61-51 with just under 10 minutes
left.
Iowa State then hit seven straight shots, a
stretch capped when Wigginton’s three-point play
made it 74-56 with 6:12 to go.
Nick Weiler-Babb had 14 points with six
rebounds and four steals for the Cyclones.
“We hit our struggles earlier in the season and
got those out of the way,” Weiler-Babb said. “Now
we’re getting our guys back to full health. Lindell
is coming back (and) probably getting a little
rhythm back.”
Lamont West led West Virginia (9-12,1-7) with
24 points. The Mountaineers committed 19 turn­
overs and didn’t score once on a fast break.
“No knock on them, but everyone shoots a high
percentage against us,” West Virginia coach Bob
Huggins said.
Huggins was ejected from the game with 3:28
left for arguing with the officials, and he had to be
restrained by an assistant on his way back to the
locker room.
“I’m trying to say this so I don’t get in trouble. I
just think things ought to be equitable,” Huggins
said of the calls that ended his night. “I thought
our guy got knocked down. Obviously they didn’t,
so we had a difference of opinion.”

TODAY

AccuWeather

SATURDAY

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. Thu.

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™
The

Milder with clouds
and sun

Snowfall (in inches)
Thu. 0.8
2.2/6.9

7:34 a.m.
5:51 p.m.
6:08 a.m.
3:59 p.m.

First

Full

Feb 4

Feb 12

Last

1

Ê)
Feb 19

1

Feb 26

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

Major

Today
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.
Tue.
Wed.
Thu.

8:53a
9:38a
10:23a
11:10a
11:29a
12:17p
1:09a

Murray

31/27

o

Athens O

Chillicothe

31/27

McArthur

32/29

Waverly
34/30

9

r

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Minor Major

2:41a 9:18p
3:26a 10:03p
4:11a 10:48p
4:58a 11:33p
5:45a
6:32a 12:43p
7:19a 1:30p

Minor

3:06p
3:50p
4:36p
5:21 p
6:07p
6:54p
7:41 p

ojazqng'668L

‘H-U

q3d

:V

AIR QUALITY
33

WEATHER HISTORY
Brownsville, Texas, and Juneau,
Alaska, both had temperatures of
32 degrees on Feb. 1,1985. On that
same day, 2 inches of snow accumu­
lated in Dallas, Texas.

Milton

0 50 100150200 300
Primary pollutant: Particulates

37/34

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.

Grayson
9 40/35

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

110s

1

100s

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. Thu.

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

NATIONAL FORECAST
■j

OHIO RIVER
Location

WEDNESDAY

56°
45°
Low clouds may
break; mild

THURSDAY

60°
" " 33°

4^ 38°
21°

Cloudy, chance of a
little rain

Much colder with
decreasing clouds

Marietta
30/26

City

Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Elizabeth
Chicago
33/29
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
o Ripley
Denver
35/31
Des Moines
Spencer
Detroit
34/31
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Buffalo
Kansas City
36/32
Las Vegas
Clendenin
Little Rock
Los Angeles
36/30 o
St. Albans
Louisville
38/34
Miami
Charleston
Minneapolis
o 37/32
Nashville
New Orleans
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and New York City
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

a

■euepwi ui(j) 1.9--jsboq ung
(j)

63°

City

30/26

Fl I

MOON PHASES
New

! weather with a number of demo■ graphic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.

aiHot

the city, I do that.”
The Reds’ offseason
makeover involves more
than Puig and a new
coaching staff. They also
traded with the Nationals
for starter Tanner Roark
and with the Yankees
for starter Sonny Gray,
giving him an additional
three years on his con­
tract that added $30.5
million in guaranteed
money from 2020-22.
It’s unclear how far
they can rise in the
tough NL Central, where
they’ve been at the bot­
tom for years. Puig’s
arrival gives them a fresh
face that fans already
know from afar.
Puig has already had
one memorable moment
in Cincinnati. During a
Dodgers visit in 2014, he
went to the zoo and got
a snake draped over his
shoulders, leaving him
with a look of dread that
made for a memorable
photo. Puig plans to visit
the zoo again.
“But the snake thing —
that’s not going to happen
for myself,” he said.

NATIONAL CITIES

31/27

The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local

Sat.

TUESDAY

A little afternoon rain

break in the U.S.?

Today

7:35 a.m.
5:50 p.m.
5:18 a.m.
3:09 p.m.

Milder with periods
of sun

Q: When was the coldest Arctic out­

SUN &amp; MOON
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

,

42°

Adelphi

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

2

61 °

30/26

O

Asthma

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

24 hours ending 3 p.m. Thu. Trace
Month
to
date/normal
3.09/2.97
Year
to
date/normal
3.09/2.97

24 hours ending 3 p.m.
Month to date/normal
Season to date/normal 3.8/11.5

AccuWeather.com

MONDAY

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

0

Precipitation (in inches)

SUNDAY

O

ALMANAC
2071°
43726°
78° in 2002
-4° in 1899

How’s that going to work?
“I’ve been playing in a
small city, a small coun­
try, almost all my life,”
said Puig, who grew up in
Cuba.
He hasn’t yet met most
— Yasiel Puig,
of his new teammates
Cincinnati Reds
— that will happen in a
few weeks in Goodyear,
rebuilding seasons with
Arizona — but he’s part
at least 94 losses — and
of a text chain with 10-15
significant attendance
players who stay in touch
drops — the Reds have
daily. The most familiar
overhauled their rotation
person on the team is
and lineup in a series of
batting coach Turner
trades giving them an
Ward, who left the Dodg­
entirely different look for
ers after last season to
at least one year.
join manager David Bell’s
The Reds got Puig,
staff.
Ward helped Puig
left-handed starter Alex
significantly in LA, and
Wood and outfielder Matt
the outfielder showed
Kemp from the Dodgers
in December . Puig and
his appreciation by plant­
Kemp are free agents
ing a kiss on his cheek
after this season, so Cin­
after a home run. Puig
also developed a habit of
cinnati could be just a
one-year stand for them.
licking his bat when he
For Puig, it’s a chance
feels he needs good luck.
to solidify his free agent
He plans to continue the
resume in a smaller ball­
smooching and showing
park and a much smaller
his personality in his new
city that’s been waiting
town.
“I was born like that,”
for a reason to be excited.
he said. “No matter where
LA to Cincy? Dodger
I play, no matter what’s
Dogs for three-way chili?

“It’s not that cold.
It’s all in your head.
I’ll be fine. It’s not
going to be like that
in the season.”

(0

20° 28° 31°
Chilly today with a bit of snow. Low clouds
tonight. High 34° / Low 310

High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

the P&amp;G MLB Cincinnati Reds Youth Academy on Wednesday in Cincinnati.

48°
" 35°

*—^5^ J—JL i—j—JL

Temperature

John Minchillo | AP

Cincinnati Reds Yasiel Puig poses for a photograph with young athletes during a media availability at

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 AM 2 PM 8 PM

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Daily Sentinel

90s

Flood
Stage

Level

24-hr.
Chg.

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

12.31
19.41
23.92
12.57
20.15
26.23
12.54
30.76
36.64
12.50
29.80
36.60
31.90

+0.08
-2.25
-0.63
-0.21
-2.08
-0.33
+0.39
-1.62
-1.21
-0.14
-3.40
-1.60
-4.40

80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
10s
0s

'

Huntington
37/32

a

o

-0s

Today

Sat.

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

56/33/pc
20/12/pc
58/39/s
25/20/sn
25/18/sn
48/35/pc
51/38/c
24/14/s
37/32/sn
56/35/pc
54/31/s
22/19/pc
38/31/sn
23/18/sn
29/23/sn
65/53/sh
53/26/s
30/27/s
16/12/pc
81/67/pc
67/57/c
37/26/c
45/38/s
67/56/pc
56/42/sh
62/54/c
45/34/i
79/68/c
20/18/c
48/39/r
64/54/pc
23/18/pc
56/46/sh
72/62/sh
22/14/sn
73/54/c
22/15/sn
20/3/s
53/33/pc
45/26/c
47/35/c
46/37/pc
61/54/r
53/43/r
32/25/sn

57/39/pc
22/17/pc
61/46/pc
42/34/pc
42/30/pc
51/20/c
50/36/r
36/27/pc
51/36/pc
62/39/s
56/33/pc
41/37/i
49/37/pc
44/38/c
44/37/pc
65/56/t
57/36/c
45/42/sh
40/35/r
80/69/sh
68/57/r
48/39/pc
54/52/sh
59/47/r
61/47/c
58/48/r
55/40/pc
80/67/sh
37/33/pc
63/44/pc
66/57/sh
36/31/pc
61/51/sh
75/62/c
38/28/pc
69/56/c
42/35/pc
29/15/pc
59/39/s
54/34/s
57/45/pc
51/41/r
58/51/r
51/38/r
49/34/pc

EXTREMES THURSDAY

I I-10s

National for the 48 contiguous states

T-storms
£3lfein
Showers

High
Low

l*VI Snow

Global

Flurries

High
Low

lice

Forecasts and graphics provided by

79° inTamiami, FL
-53° in Cotton, MN

112°

in

Rabbit

Flat,

Australia

-69° in Ikki-Ambar, Russia

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

AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

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financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
Since all of our loan decisions are made locally we can close
a loan quickly. Please come see us for all your bank needs, we
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Middleport 740-691-5131

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>newspaper</text>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        </element>
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      <name>wray</name>
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    <tag tagId="485">
      <name>yerian</name>
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</item>
