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                  <text>Flurries,
clouds
H-42, L-26

Wise men
give with
heart

Southern
tops
Wahama

WEATHER s 4A

EDITORIAL s 5A

SPORTS s 1B

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 198, Volume 70

Tuesday, December 13, 2016 s 50¢

W.Va. man pleads guilty to aggravated murder
Dailey sentenced to life in prison with possibility of parole
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@civitasmedia.com

Courtesy photo

Christopher Dailey turns to talk to those seated behind him prior to his change
of plea hearing and sentencing on Monday afternoon in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.

POMEROY — A
West Virginia man could
spend the rest of his life
in prison after pleading
guilty in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court on
Monday to aggravated
murder.
Dailey
Christopher M. Dailey, 44, of Sandyville,
W.Va., formally changed his
plea to guilty to the single
count related to the shooting
death of Brandon M. Lupardus, 30, of Millwood, W.Va.

By pleading guilty to aggravated murder, Dailey could
have been sentenced to
life in prison without
parole or life in prison
with the possibility of
parole after 20, 25 or 30
years.
In entering into a
plea agreement, the two
sides agreed to a joint
sentencing recommendation of life in prison
with the possibility of parole
after 20 years.
Judge I. Carson Crow went
along with the recommendation in sentencing Dailey after

accepting his guilty plea.
The body of Lupardus
was found on June 19 on the
property of the Shelley Gravel
Company in Portland by an
employee of the company.
Meigs County Prosecutor
Colleen Williams stated that
Dailey did purposely and with
prior calculation and design
murder Lupardus. Williams
said Lupardus died from a
gunshot wound to the head,
but did not elaborate further
on the details of the crime.
Williams stated that Dailey
See MURDER | 4A

Roush returns as
chief at Mason PD
By Mindy Kearns
Special to the Register

MASON — A familiar face is back in the Mason
Police Department, as Greg Roush was appointed
as temporary chief after a special council meeting
Monday.
Roush replaces Jimmy Reynolds, who was
recently asked to resign by the council.
Roush is a former chief who resigned in December 2015 and moved to Myrtle Beach, SC. He
and wife, Kim, still maintain a house in Mason,
however.
Both Roush and Mayor Donna Dennis said
the employment is temporary until a permanent
replacement can be hired. The mayor said the
council is looking for a full-time chief who can
commit to the town “24/7.”
Roush said he will remain at his Mason home
until a chief can be found that will “take care of
the guys and the department.”
“Two weeks, two months, six months,” Roush
said. “I don’t care how long it takes. The town will
See ROUSH | 3A

Beth Sergent/Register

The West Virginia State Farm Museum’s Christmas Light Display returns Friday, Dec. 9 through Dec. 18. The show is from 6-9 p.m. nightly
at the museum just north of Point Pleasant, located across from the Mason County Fairgrounds.

Farm museum Christmas lights on through Dec. 18
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

Courtesy photo

Former Mason Police Chief Greg Roush, left, was sworn into
that position on a temporary basis by Mayor Donna Dennis
on Monday. Roush was hired until a permanent replacement
can be found. He replaces Jimmy Reynolds, who was recently
asked by council to resign.

POINT PLEASANT — Friday, Dec.
9, marked the return of
a yuletide tradition in
Mason County as the
West Virginia State Farm
Museum’s Christmas
Light Display returned.
The show is from 6-9
p.m. and will run nightly
from Dec.9 through Dec.
18 at the museum just
north of Point Pleasant,
located across from the
Mason County Fairgrounds. It’s estimated
this is the 16th year for

the display, which is free
though donations are
appreciated.
It’s estimated more
than 1 million lights
adorn the grounds of the
farm museum, lighting
up the displays which
take visitors back to a
simpler time. Visitors
can drive through the
property or walk among
the old one-room schoolhouse, country church,
newspaper ofﬁce, the
Blacksmith shop and
more. While looking
at lights, visitors can
take in the Christopher
H. Bauer Memorial

Museum that opened
last year, containing an
array of animal trophies
and displays.
Employees at the farm
museum typically start
working on putting up
the light display just
after the Country Fall
Festival in October.
Staff at the farm
museum say in recent
years, visitors seem to
make a night out of looking at Christmas lights,
many starting at the
museum, working their
way to Krodel Park and
then to Gallipolis City
Park, or, vice versa. Like

many other Christmas
traditions in the area,
the museum’s Christmas
light display has become
a “must” for “kids” who
grew up with it and
now are treating their
children to this uniquely
Mason County memory.
Santa Claus will be
in the Country Kitchen
each night to visit with
children and there will
be free cocoa and cookies in the kitchen for
visitors as well.
Reach Beth Sergent at bsergent@
civitasmedia.com or on Twitter @
BSergentWrites.

Man leads chase through 3 counties, 2 states

A NEWS
Obituary: 2
Weather: 4
Editorial: 5

By Dean Wright
deanwright@civitasmedia.com

B SPORTS
Classifieds: 4
Comics: 5

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

OHIO VALLEY — An
Indiana man led area law
enforcement on a vehicular chase reportedly
reaching over 100 mph
Saturday morning across
the borders of Ohio, West
Virginia and through
three counties.
Franklin Housen, 19, of
Merrillville, Ind., according to Gallia Sheriff Joe
Browning, is awaiting
extradition to West
Virginia after the Gallia Sheriff’s Ofﬁce ﬁled
paperwork in regards to
Housen being reportedly

charged as a ﬂeeing fugitive from justice. The
ofﬁce has also sought
to charge Housen with
receiving stolen property
as law enforcement says
the vehicle Housen was
driving was reported stolen in the Chicago area.
According to Mason
County Sheriff Greg
Powers, he was told the
chase started around
Hurricane, W.Va., in
Putnam County with a
trooper from the West
Virginia State Police
involved in the pursuit
of the defendant. When
the pursuit made it into
Mason County, deputies

with the Mason County
Sheriff’s Department
then assisted the trooper,
following him into Ohio,
should the trooper
require backup.
Ohio State Highway
Patrol charged Housen
with reckless operation
of a vehicle, driving
under suspension of
license and not wearing a
seat belt, all misdemeanor crimes.
OSHP received calls
from Mason law enforcement that cruisers were
in pursuit of Housen.
Ohio troopers became
involved when Housen
reached S.R. 850 in Gal-

lia County and started
traveling northbound off
of U.S. 35.
“When the suspect
saw our vehicle, he did a
U-turn and started heading south back towards
Rodney,” said Lt. Barry
Call, of OSHP. “He was
then involved in an accident. At the high rate
of speed he was traveling — on 850 you’ve got
those bumpy hills — he
became airborne. It was
our understanding, the
vehicle then bottomedout on the roadway and
basically rendered the
See CHASE | 4A

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2A Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS CHURCH CALENDAR

OBITUARIES
SELMA CALL
LONG BOTTOM —
Selma Call, 85 of Long
Bottom, Ohio passed
away on Saturday, Dec.
10, 2016 at the Holzer
Hospital in Gallipolis.
She was born on Sunday,
Aug. 2, 1931, in Cleveland, Ohio, to the late
Siad and Darra (Slyman)
Yahya. Mrs. Call was a
graduate of Charleston
High School, a member
of the Forest Run United
Methodist Church and
she retired from the Veterans Memorial Hospital
in Pomeroy.
She is survived by her
step-son, John (Candace)
Call; step-daughter, Linda
(Dale) Rollins; special
niece, Cindi Rice; sisterin-laws, Millie Yahya and
Nancy Yahya; and several
grandchildren, nieces and

Saturday, Dec. 17
REEDSVILLE —
Reedsville United Methodist Church Christmas
Program “It all happened in the country”
will be held at 7 p.m. at
the Reedsville United
Methodist Church.
Everyone welcome.

nephews.
She is preceded in
death by her parents,
husband, John William
Call; son, Bill Call; sister,
Haseeba Collins; brothers, Moe, Fuad, and Joe
Yahya.
Funeral services will
he held on Tuesday,
Dec. 13, 2016, at 11
a.m. at the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with Pastor
Wes Thoene ofﬁciating.
Burial will follow at the
Riverview Cemetery in
Middleport. Visitation for
family and friends will be
held on Monday, Dec. 12,
2016, from 6-8 p.m. at the
funeral home.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Sunday, Dec. 18
MIDDLEPORT
— The First Baptist
Church (pastor, Billy
Zuspan) of Middleport
will be presenting the
kids Christmas play,
“The Incredible Adam

Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel appreciate 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@
civitasmedia.com.

REEDSVILLE — Danny Barber, 64, of Reedsville,
Ohio, passed away Monday, Dec. 12, 2016, at Arcadia
Nursing Center in Coolville.
Arrangements will be announced later by WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville.

VAN STEENBERG
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio — Leo Francis Van Steenberg, 77, of Chesapeake, Ohio passed away Monday,
December 5, 2016 at St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
Visitation will be held noon to 1 p.m., Monday
December 12, 2016 at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio.

Tuesday, Dec. 13
POMEROY — The Meigs Tea
Party meeting will be held at
7:30 p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Center, Pomeroy, Ohio. Snacks
will be provided. Everyone is
welcome. Guset speaker will be
Stephanie Kreuz, Grassroots
Manager and Midwest Regional
Coordinator for Heritage Action
for America.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Board of Health Meeting
will take place at 5 p.m. in the
conference room of the Meigs
County Health Department.

CARROLL
REEDSVILLE — Patrick Allen Carroll, 70, of
Reedsville, Ohio, passed away Sunday, Dec. 11 2016
at his residence.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m., Wednesday,
Dec. 14, 2016 at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in
Coolville with Joshua Wright ofﬁciating. Burial will
follow in the Gilmore Cemetery. Visitation will be held
from 11 a.m. until time of service on Wednesday.

Wednesday, Dec. 14
MARIETTA — A meeting

LAVENDER SR.
RACINE — Ronald R. Lavender Sr., 56, of Racine,
passed away on Sunday, Dec. 11, 2016, at the Holzer
Emergency Department.
Funeral services will be held on Wednesday, Dec.
14, 2016, at 1 p.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy. Visitation will be held one hour
prior to the service. In lieu of ﬂowers donations may
be made to the funeral home to help with expenses.

WEST COLUMBIA — Paul Daniel Chapman, 44, of
West Columbia, West Virginia passed away Dec. 11,
2016, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Funeral Services will be on Wednesday, Dec. 14,
2016, at 1 p.m. at the Deal Funeral Home. Burial will
be in the Union Cemetery New Haven West Virginia.
Friends may visit the family from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on
Wednesday at the funeral home.

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APPLE GROVE, W.Va. — Randall Lee Dunn, 83, of
Apple Grove, W.Va., died Saturday, December 10, 2016.
Funeral services will be held at the Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant, Monday, December 12, 2016,
at 11 a.m., with Rev. Charles Dabney ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow in the Forest Memorial Park in Milton.
Friends may visit the family at the funeral home on
Monday, from 10-11 a.m. prior to the service.

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Friday, Dec. 16
POMEROY — The PHS Class
of ‘59 will be having their 3rd
Friday lunch at Fox Pizza at
noon.
MIDDLEPORT — The Free
Community Dinner at the Middleport Church of Christ will be
held in their Family Life Center
at the corner of Fifth and Main
Streets. This month’s menu is
ham, mashed potatoes and gravy,
noodles, green beans, roll, and
dessert. The doors open at 4:30
p.m. with the meal served at 5
p.m. Everyone is welcome.

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Saturday, Dec. 17
MIDDLEPORT — Riverbend
Arts Council, 290 N. 2nd Ave.,
Middleport, OH will present
the band, “RIVERJAM”, playing the sounds of the 60s and
70s, big band music, and holiday
favorites from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Refreshments included. Tickets
are on sale at King Hardware,
Middleport and Clark’s Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy and at the door.
Singles are $15 and couples are
$25.
Wednesday, Dec. 28
POMEROY — A blood drive
will be held at the Mulberry
Community Center from 1-6:30
p.m. Please call 1-800-733-2767
or visit redcrossblood.org to
schedule and appointment.
Thursday, Dec. 29
LETART TWP. — The regular
meeting of the Letart Township
Trustees will be held at 3:30 p.m.
at the Letart Township Building.
Immediately following the regular meeting the Letart Township
Organizational Meeting will be
held.

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Worthington (NYSE) 55.63
Daily stock reports are the
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2016, provided by Edward
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TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13
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of the District 18 Executive
Committee will be held at 10
a.m. at the Best Western, 701
Pike Street, Marietta, Ohio.
The purpose of this meeting is
for the Executive Committee
to select projects for Round 31
funding under the Ohio Public Works Commission State
Capital Improvement and Local
Transportation Improvement
Programs (SCIP/LTIP). If you
have questions regarding this
meeting, please contact Michelle
Hyer at (740) 376-1025.

TUESDAY EVENING

DUNN

Civitas Media, LLC

Ongoing Events
PORTLAND — A
Bible study will be held

STOCKS

PINE

CHAPMAN

Saturday, Dec. 24
MIDDLEPORT — A
Candlelight Christmas
Eve Service will be held
from 7-8 p.m. at the
First Baptist Church
in Middleport, 211 S.
Sixth Street, Middleport. Everyone is welcome to join in celebrating our Lord’s birthday.

on Thursday evenings
at 7 p.m. at the Portland
Community Center with
Rev. Tom Curtis. Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT —
Pastor Billy Zuspan of
the First Baptist Church
of Middleport has begun
an in-depth Bible study
of The Revelation during the Sunday and
Wednesday evening
services at 7 p.m. at 211
S. 6th Ave., Middleport,
Ohio. If you have questions, please call 740992-2755 and leave a
message.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS

BARBER

CHESAPEAKE — Sharon Elizabeth Pine, 53, of
Chesapeake, passed away Thursday, December 8,
2016 at St. Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral service will be conducted 2 p.m. Wednesday, December 14, 2016 at Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville. Burial will follow in Getaway
Cemetery, Chesapeake. Visitation will be held noon to
2 p.m. Wednesday, December 14, 2016 at the funeral
home.

Methodist Church
Christmas program at 6
p.m. All invited.

Angel” on at 10:15 a.m.
at 211 S. Sixth Ave.,
Middleport, Ohio.
MIDDLEPORT —
Hope Baptist Church,
570 Grant Street,
Middleport, will hold its
Christmas cantata, “One
Small Child” at 11 a.m.
MIDDLEPORT —
Youth Christmas Play,
“Tis the Season”, to be
performed at 6:30 p.m.
at Ash Street Church in
Middleport, Ohio. Come
share the evening with
us.
LONG BOTTOM —
Long Bottom United

10

PM

10:30

My Big Fat Greek Wedding
2 ('16, Com) John Corbett,
Nia Vardalos. TV14
The Wrestler ('08, Dra)
Marisa Tomei, Evan Rachel
Wood, Mickey Rourke. TV14
Shameless "Happily Ever
After" A U.S. adaptation of
the British series.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 13, 2016 3A

MEIGS BRIEFS

Holiday
Events
MIDDLEPORT — Santa will be
at the Middleport Police Department from 5-7 p.m. on Dec. 14.
Cookies and drinks will be served.
A mailbox will be set up in the
main lobby for anyone wishing to
mail a letter to Santa at the North
Pole. Santa will reply to each letter
placed in the box. In addition, new
toys will be collected to be given to
the Meigs County Department of
Job and Family Services.
RUTLAND — The Rutland
Village Lighting Contest will be
judged beginning at 6 p.m. on Dec.
16. Prizes will be awarded in three
categories: Lighted entrance way;
Religious theme; and Non-religious
theme. No mixture of religious and
non-religious will be considered.
Location of coverage in Rutland
Village go from the Dean Harris
property on Salem Street, and following Main street through the village to the old hilltop grocery. Coverage on New Lima Road to the
Joe Bolin Property and on Depot
Street to the Bill Nicholson property. This is sponsored by the Rutland Friendly Gardeners with local
merchant support. Judging will be
completed by a non-member.
RUTLAND — The Village of
Rutland will host a Middle School
Dance at the Rutland Civic Center
from 7-10 p.m. on Dec. 16. The
dance is for grades 6-8 and admission is $2. Concessions will be
available and a uniformed ofﬁcer
will be on duty at the event. Children must be signed out by an
adult.
MIDDLEPORT — Youth Christmas Play, “Tis the Season”, to be
performed on Sunday, Dec. 18, at
6:30 p.m. at Ash Street Church in
Middleport, Ohio. Come share the
evening with us.
MIDDLEPORT — Riverbend

Arts Council, 290 N. 2nd Ave.,
Middleport, Ohio, will present the
band, “RIVERJAM”, playing the
sounds of the 60’s and 70’s, Big
Band Music, and Holiday Favorites
from 7-10 p.m. on Dec. 17. Refreshments included. Tickets are on sale
at King Hardware, Middleport and
Clark’s Jewelry Store, Pomeroy and
at the door. Singles are $15 and
Couples are $25.

p.m., mail $30 (for book, shipping
&amp; handling) to Meigs County 4-H
Committee, 113 East Memorial Dr,
Suite E, Pomeroy, OH 45769 or
visit the Meigs County Recorder’s
Ofﬁce in the Court House. If you
have any questions, please contact
Michelle Stumbo, Meigs County
4-H Youth Development Educator,
at stumbo.5@osu.edu or 740-9926696.

Animal Bedding
Available

French 500 Free
Clinic open

MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs
County Humane Society will be
providing straw for animal bedding
during the months of December,
January and February. Vouchers
may be picked up at the Humane
Society Thrift Shop located at 253
N. Second Street in Middleport. To
receive a voucher you must provide
proof of income and pay a $2 fee
for a bale of straw. For more information contact the Humane Society Thrift Shop at 740-992-6064
from 10 a.m to 4 p.m., Monday
through Saturday.

GALLIPOLIS — The French 500
Free Clinic will be open between
1-3 p.m., Dec. 15, for those who do
not have medical insurance or are
under-insured. The clinic is located
at 258 Pinecrest Drive in the former Hillcrest Clinic off Jackson
Pike in Spring Valley, next to The
Arbors Nursing Home. No appointment is necessary. Free of charge
and open to residents of southeastern Ohio, Mason County, W.Va.,
and beyond age 6 and older. Phone
740-446-0021.

Fruit
Baskets
POMEROY — Drew Webster
#39 of the American Legion
Pomeroy is taking orders fro fruit
baskets. Fruit baskets are $15 each
and will be delivered on Dec. 18.
Proceeds beneﬁt local veterans. To
order call John Hood 740-992-6991
or Steve VanMeter 740-992-2875.

Plat Books
available
POMEROY — Meigs County
4-H Committee has Plat Books
for sale for $25. Funds support
the 4-H program in the county
by providing funds for supplies,
camp and college scholarships,
learning opportunities and more.
To purchase a Plat Book, you can
stop by the Extension Ofﬁce on
Monday-Thursday from 8 a.m.-4:30

Immunization
Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department will conduct
an Immunization Clinic from 9-11
a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays at
112 E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot
records. Children must be accompanied by a parent/legal guardian.
A $15 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. Zostavax (shingles); pneumonia ; inﬂuenza vaccines are also available.
Call for eligibility determination
and availability or visit our website
at www.meigs-health.com to see a
list of accepted commercial insurances and Medicaid for adults.

Meigs Local free lunch, breakfast information
Staff Report

Meigs Local School
District will continue
its policy to operate the
Community Eligibility
Provision (CEP) Program
under the National School
Lunch Program and
School Breakfast Program
for the 2016-2017 school
year. All schools that
operate CEP will serve
breakfast and lunch to all
children at no charge and
eliminate the collection
of meal applications for
free/reduced-price, and
paid student meals. This
new approach reduces
burdens for both families
and school administrators
and helps ensure that stu-

dents receive nutritious
meals.
Families with children
eligible for school meals
may be eligible for free
health care coverage
through Medicaid and/
or Ohio’s Healthy Start
&amp; Healthy Families programs. These programs
include coverage for doctor visits, immunizations,
physicals, prescriptions,
dental, vision, mental
health, substance abuse
and more. Please call
1-800-324-8680 for more
information or to request
an application. Anyone
who has an Ohio Medicaid card is already receiving these services.
For additional infor-

mation please contact
Christina Musser, 41765
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy,
OH 45769; 740-992-6171;
Chrissy.musser@meigslocal.org
In accordance with
Federal civil rights law
and U.S. Department
of Agriculture (USDA)
civil rights regulations
and policies, the USDA,
its Agencies, ofﬁces, and
employees, and institutions participating in or
administering USDA programs are prohibited from
discriminating based on
race, color, national origin, sex, disability, age, or
reprisal or retaliation for
prior civil rights activity
in any program or activity

conducted or funded by
USDA.
Persons with disabilities who require
alternative means of communication for program
information (e.g. Braille,
large print, audiotape,
American Sign Language,
etc.), should contact the
Agency (State or local)
where they applied for
beneﬁts. Individuals who
are deaf, hard of hearing
or have speech disabilities may contact USDA
through the Federal
Relay Service at (800)
877-8339. Additionally,
program information
may be made available
in languages other than
English.

Ohio inmate loses appeal to block execution
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) — The U.S.
Supreme Court on Monday rejected an appeal by
a condemned killer whose
2009 execution was called
off after two hours during
which he cried in pain
while receiving 18 needle
sticks.
The court’s 6-2 ruling
denies Romell Broom the
opportunity to argue that
giving the state prisons
agency a second chance
to execute him would
amount to cruel and
unusual punishment and
double jeopardy.
Broom, 60, is only the
second inmate to survive
an execution in U.S. history and the only via lethal
injection. In 1947, Louisiana electrocuted 18-yearold Willie Francis by
electric chair a year after
an improperly prepared
electric chair failed to
work. The U.S. Supreme
Court ruled 5-4 to allow
the second execution to
proceed, rejecting double
jeopardy arguments.

Broom was sentenced
to die for raping and killing 14-year-old Tryna
Middleton after abducting
her in Cleveland in 1984
as she walked home from
a football game with two
friends.
Justices Stephen Breyer
and Elena Kagan said
they would have granted
Broom’s appeal, with
Breyer saying the execution attempt took place
under “especially cruel
and unusual circumstances.”
Despite the ruling, a
second execution is years
away because of other
scheduled executions
and uncertainty over the
state’s supply of lethal
injection drugs.
Broom’s lawyer called
the court’s decision a
missed opportunity. Previous lawsuits alleging
that a botched execution
violated an inmate’s rights
involved prisoners who
ultimately died, said attorney Adele Shank.
“Here the court had the

opportunity to address a
case where there was a
living person there to vindicate their constitutional
rights,” Shank said. “So
it’s very disappointing
that this unique opportunity was not accepted for

review by the court.”
Ohioans to Stop Executions, the state’s largest
anti-death penalty organization, renewed its call
for Republican Gov. John
Kasich to grant Broom
clemency.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate headed to
a vote averting a government shutdown at midnight Friday as coal-state Democrats beat a tactical retreat and promised to continue their ﬁght
next year for months-long health care beneﬁts for
retired miners.
“We had no intention of shutting down the government,” said Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., adding that Democrats would provide enough votes
to pass a stopgap spending bill to keep the government operating through April 28.
The extended ﬁght over the miners’ beneﬁts
was intended to “highlight the seriousness of this
issue,” Schumer said.
Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., led the battle of
coal-state Democrats who demanded a one-year
extension for the miners rather than the shorter,
four-month ﬁx in the spending bill. Faced with
Republicans unwilling to agree to the robust coverage and the departure of House lawmakers, the
Democrats relented.
Manchin acknowledged Friday night that he
probably did not have the votes to block the bill,
but said “the ﬁght will continue” next year.
“I’m born into a family of coal miners. If I’m
not going to stand up for them, who is?” he asked
reporters.
Speaking on the Senate ﬂoor earlier, Manchin
stressed the importance of coal as an energy
source for Americans and the contributions of miners to the nation. “What 12 hours of the day do you
not want electricity? … Heat?” he asked as miners
watching from the Senate’s visitors’ galleries.
The high-stakes ﬁght gave Democrats, who suffered devastating election losses a month ago at
the hands of working-class voters, a chance to cast
themselves and not the GOP as the champion of
the common man. Manchin was joined by other
coal-state Democrats from states Donald Trump
won last month, including Pennsylvania and Ohio.
“We’re just getting warmed up,” said Sen. Bob
Casey, D-Pa., vowing a ﬁght next year. “These miners and their families kept their promise, put their
lives at risk. … It’s not too difﬁcult for a senator or
House member to keep a promise.”
The Senate was on track to vote late Friday
night, just two hours before the deadline, to send
the spending bill to President Barack Obama.
The underlying funding bill would keep the government running through April 28 to buy time for
the incoming Trump administration and Congress
to wrap up more than $1 trillion in unﬁnished
agency budget work. It also provides war funding, disaster aid for Louisiana and other states,
and an expedited process for considering Trump’s
nominee for defense secretary, retired Gen. James
Mattis.
Coal-state Democrats had pressed Trump, a
self-proclaimed coal supporter, to intervene with
Republicans. Manchin, mentioned as possible
candidate for energy secretary or secretary of state
in the new administration, will meet with Trump
Monday and said he will raise the coal miners’
issue.

Roush

distracted driver (cell
phone usage and texting) programs.
Mayor Dennis said
From page 1A
Reynold’s resignation
continue taking applicawas accepted during
tions until a replacethe special session.
ment is found.”
Roush said during his Council members also
met with employees of
former employment as
each town department
chief, he worked hard
to get grants, and wants in executive session to
discuss job responsibilisomeone in the position who will maintain ties and expectations.
Attending were
them, as well as apply
Mayor
Dennis and
for more. In the meancouncil
members Becky
time, Roush said he will
Pearson, Bob Wing,
be searching for grant
Sharon Kearns and
funds for new radios
Marty Yeager.
and a cruiser. Ofﬁcers
are still working under
Mindy Kearns is a freelance
grants on the “Click It
writer for Ohio Valley Publishing
or Ticket” campaign,
who can be reached at
along with seat belt and mindykearns1@hotmail.com.

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WE COVER THEM ALL
“Catering A Good Deed”
Meigs Council on Aging
����&amp;��.FNPSJBM�%SJWF��t��1PNFSPZ �0IJP

740-992-2161 or 740-992-7863
www.meigscoa.com

60694026

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

Shutdown threat
eases as Dems signal
retreat on miners’ aid

�NEWS/WEATHER

4A Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Chapel of Love lost to fire that ravaged city

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A federal judge on
Monday ordered a former deep-sea treasure hunter to
answer questions about the location of 500 missing
gold coins.
Tommy Thompson has been held in contempt
of court since last December, when Judge Algenon
Marbley in Columbus found he violated a plea deal by
refusing to respond.
Marbley on Monday told Thompson to answer the
questions within 30 days.
The judge’s order came after Thompson and his
attorneys spent the past month at Marbley’s direction
reviewing documents that might hold clues about the
location of the coins and other assets worth millions.
Thompson has said he told everything he knew
during depositions last year. Todd Long, an attorney
for Thompson, told Marbley on Monday that nothing
has changed from Thompson’s perspective.
“He has nothing further to say,” Long said.
The coins were minted from gold taken from the
S.S. Central America, a Gold Rush-era ship that sank
off South Carolina in an 1857 hurricane with thousands of pounds of gold aboard, contributing to an
economic panic.
The 161 investors who paid Thompson $12.7 million to ﬁnd the ship never saw any proceeds. Two
sued — a now-deceased investment ﬁrm president
and the company that once published The Columbus
Dispatch newspaper.

From page 1A

car inoperable. I think
it busted the radiator
out and damaged the
oil pan. (Housen) went
a short distance and
pulled off into a private
drive and ﬂed on foot.”
Call said that OSHP’s
Sgt. Jake Schuldt and
Trooper Marvin Pullins
took Housen into custody after Housen was
spotted just off of Jackson Pike in a wooded
area. Ofﬁcers gave Housen verbal commands
and took him into custody without incident.
Housen is currently
being housed in the Gallia County Jail.
Why the encounter

Dean Wright can be reached
at 740-446-2342, ext. 2103.
(Editor’s Note: Beth Sergent
contributed to this report.)

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

32°

40°

Temperature

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

(in inches)

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Wed.
7:39 a.m.
5:07 p.m.
6:18 p.m.
7:59 a.m.

MOON PHASES
Full

Last

New

Dec 13 Dec 20 Dec 29

First

Jan 5

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

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

Major
10:35a
11:36a
12:07a
1:14a
2:18a
3:17a
4:12a

Minor
4:20a
5:21a
6:24a
7:29a
8:31a
9:30a
10:24a

2

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

WEATHER TRIVIA™
Q: What is a duster?

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:39 a.m.
5:07 p.m.
5:18 p.m.
6:52 a.m.

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

Major
11:06p
---12:39p
1:43p
2:45p
3:43p
4:36p

Minor
4:51p
5:51p
6:54p
7:57p
8:58p
9:55p
10:48p

WEATHER HISTORY
A mass of arctic air settled into
Florida on Dec. 13, 1962. This cold
air caused Florida’s worst December
freeze of the 20th century.

A: Another name for a brief snow squall
that coats the ground

Snowfall

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.0
Month to date/normal
0.5/1.0
Season to date/normal
0.5/1.8

EXTENDED FORECAST
WEDNESDAY

Periods of clouds and
sunshine

THURSDAY

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

Waverly
38/20
Lucasville
40/22
Portsmouth
42/23

500

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

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

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

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.71 -0.39
Marietta
34 16.94 -0.25
Parkersburg
36 21.63 -0.03
Belleville
35 12.92 +0.08
Racine
41 13.26 -0.24
Point Pleasant
40 25.00 -0.12
Gallipolis
50 12.87 -0.01
Huntington
50 25.92 -0.87
Ashland
52 34.29 -0.89
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.52 -0.85
Portsmouth
50 18.10 -0.30
Maysville
50 33.90 +0.10
Meldahl Dam
51 17.50 -0.60
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Not as cold with
clouds and sun

46°
26°

40°
25°

Milder with periods
of rain

Cloudy, chance of a
little rain

Times of clouds and
sun

Marietta
39/22

Murray City
38/19
Belpre
40/23

Athens
39/21

St. Marys
40/23

Parkersburg
39/23

Coolville
39/22

Elizabeth
41/25

Spencer
41/27

Buffalo
43/27

Ironton
42/27

Milton
43/27

Clendenin
44/26

St. Albans
44/28

Huntington
43/26

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
90s
Seattle
80s
38/27
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
57/51
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
66/53
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

49°
41°

Wilkesville
40/21
POMEROY
Jackson
41/25
40/21
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
42/26
42/24
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
36/18
GALLIPOLIS
42/26
42/27
42/26

Ashland
42/28
Grayson
43/26

SUNDAY

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
39/19

South Shore Greenup
42/26
40/21

53

Logan
38/18

SATURDAY

29°
25°

Mostly sunny and
colder

Adelphi
38/19
Chillicothe
38/20

FRIDAY

22°
9°

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

0

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.80
Month to date/normal
1.38/1.34
Year to date/normal
43.67/40.73

ment, Ravenswood
(W.Va.) Police Department, Ripley Police
Department, Parkersburg
(W.Va.) Police Department and the West
Virginia State Police,
worked through the night
to locate Dailey.
He was taken into
custody in Wood County,
W.Va., and later brought
back to Meigs County on
the charge.
Williams praised the
work of the agencies
involved in the investigation and the conviction
of Dailey.
Williams said that
Dailey was the one who
pulled the trigger in
killing Lupardus, but
acknowledged that there
may have been others
involved in the case
although there are questions as to what involvement by other individuals could be proven or
if it had taken place in
Ohio or West Virginia.
While the plea and
sentence of Dailey cannot bring Lupardus back,
Williams said she hopes
it can bring a sense of
security in knowing that
the man responsible is in
prison.

37°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

(in inches)

tify Dailey as a possible
suspect.
On the afternoon of
June 19, Sheriff’s deputies secured the scene
and Attorney General Mike DeWine’s Ohio
Bureau of Criminal Investigation was called to
assist in processing and
investigation. The Meigs
County coroner’s investigator was also present,
and Williams was made
aware of the pending
investigation.
While still on site, deputies were informed by
the Ripley (W.Va.) Police
Department and the
Jackson County (W.Va.)
BCI that their ofﬁces
had received information
concerning the death of
a West Virginia man in
Ohio. They were told he
had been shot in a gravel
pit.
Details were relayed
between both agencies, and the victim was
positively identiﬁed as
Lupardus
Meigs deputies, together with agents from Ohio
BCI and Gallia-Meigs
Task Force, detectives
from Jackson County
BCI, Jackson County
(W.Va.) Sheriff’s Depart-

A bit of snow today. Mostly cloudy tonight. High
42° / Low 26°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

said Horn. “Someday I
hope I can forgive you.”
More on Horn’s statement
to the court, as
From page 1A
well as her statements to
had admitted his guilt in the Sentinel and other
an interview with BCI
media outlets following
agents and in jail phone
the hearing will appear
calls.
in Wednesday edition of
Public Defender HerThe Daily Sentinel.
man Carson stated that
Following the statethe defense did not
ment by Horn, Crow
contest the statement
asked Dailey if he had
of facts by Williams and
anything he would like
was stipulate that there
to say. Dailey simply
was sufﬁcient evidence
responded “no.”
for a ﬁnding of guilt.
No ﬁne was imposed
When asked by Crow
in the case, as Dailey
how he wished to plead
is indigent and unable
to the charge of aggravat- to pay a ﬁne. He was
ed murder, Dailey stated, ordered to pay restitu“guilty.”
tion to the victim’s
Prior to sentencing,
family in the amount
Kimberly Horn, the
of the funeral expenses
mother of Lupardus,
($4,371.03) and to pay
addressed the court.
court costs associated
Horn recalled he son’s with the case. While
life before stating there
not initially included in
were two things she
the plea agreement, the
wanted to know from the defense did not oppose
defendant — what it was the restitution.
that her son had done
Numerous agencies
that led Dailey to end his took part in the investilife, and why he did it on gation and the arrest of
Father’s Day weekend.
Dailey the day after the
“If you ever ﬁnd it in
body was discovered.
your heart to sit down
According to previous
with me and tell me why Sentinel reports, a tip
you did this, I am willing enabled law enforcement
and ready to hear it,”
ofﬁcials to quickly iden-

38°
13°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

48°/45°
46°/29°
72° in 2015
-4° in 1962

something about that
one.”
The ﬁres that devastated Gatlinburg also
took the life of the Rev.
Ed Taylor, 85, who
nearly four decades ago
launched the weddingdestination industry that
has expanded throughout
the city and into neighboring towns, including
Pigeon Forge. Hundreds
of thousands of people
each year now ﬂock to
the Smoky Mountains
region to get married or
attend a wedding.

8 PM

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

couple from Hurricane,
West Virginia, always rent
a cabin nearby in Pigeon
Forge for their anniversary and take pictures
where they were married.
Moats cried when she
saw photos of the rubble.
It’s uncertain whether
the chapel will ever be
rebuilt.
“You could just feel that
it was a special place.
There was a lot of love
there,” she said. “We
looked at several chapels
down there to get married in, but there was just

Murder

between Housen and
West Virginia State
Police initially occurred
has yet to be conﬁrmed
with West Virginia
State Police, Call surmised it likely had to
do with identiﬁcation
of a reportedly stolen
vehicle.
In relation to any possible, pending charges
against Housen in
Mason County, Powers
said the case remains
under investigation and
his department will be
working to assist the
West Virginia State
Police which is leading
the investigation in the
Mountain State.

TODAY

waterfall around back
hosted more than 20,000
weddings in more than
two decades. Some were
quick, 15-minute “let’s get
married this weekend”
appointments. Others
were full ceremonies,
renewals of vows and
weddings built on family traditions that began
when parents and grandparents eloped there.
Alongside 20 friends
and family members,
Cheryl Petty Moats and
her husband Jim got married there in 2014. The

GATLINBURG, Tenn.
(AP) — The wildﬁres
that killed 14 people and
tore through Gatlinburg
also stole an iconic venue
from this city at the
foot of the Great Smoky
Mountains whose nickname is “the wedding
capital of the South.”
All that remains of
Cupid’s Chapel of Love is
a heart-shaped pink sign
with its name spelled out
in Barbie-doll-style cursive lettering.
The white, log building
with a green tin roof and

Charleston
42/28

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
1/-7

Billings
14/-6

Denver
39/15

Montreal
32/22
Minneapolis
Detroit
10/1
30/9
Chicago
16/4

Toronto
29/14
New York
42/34
Washington
46/34

Kansas City
30/16

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

Wed.
Hi/Lo/W
59/38/pc
16/10/s
59/33/pc
43/26/pc
42/22/pc
15/6/pc
33/31/sn
38/25/pc
37/15/pc
55/35/pc
23/11/sf
17/-2/pc
34/10/pc
25/9/c
29/7/pc
57/41/c
28/8/c
22/7/s
22/4/sf
78/67/pc
67/47/pc
27/6/pc
31/17/s
66/51/pc
46/26/pc
67/56/pc
38/16/s
84/67/pc
7/-7/s
45/21/pc
64/45/pc
40/25/pc
44/24/pc
82/64/pc
42/23/pc
77/53/pc
29/9/pc
36/18/c
53/33/pc
48/30/pc
33/16/s
43/40/sn
62/53/r
37/30/pc
46/28/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

Atlanta
59/47

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

El Paso
70/44
Chihuahua
Houston
76/41
74/55
Monterrey
83/54

Today
Hi/Lo/W
57/35/s
14/6/pc
59/47/r
44/35/pc
43/31/pc
14/-6/sn
30/20/c
42/30/pc
42/28/c
52/39/r
35/14/c
16/4/pc
38/19/sn
32/16/sn
34/18/sn
59/42/pc
39/15/c
23/13/pc
30/9/c
78/67/s
74/55/c
33/13/sn
30/16/pc
65/48/pc
51/31/pc
66/53/pc
44/24/pc
83/71/sh
10/1/pc
49/31/sh
74/58/t
42/34/pc
45/24/pc
83/60/pc
43/33/pc
74/52/pc
35/21/sn
37/26/pc
55/39/sh
50/33/pc
36/17/pc
41/30/c
57/51/c
38/27/s
46/34/pc

87° in Marathon, FL
-20° in Orr, MN

Global
High 110° in Red Rocks Point, Australia
Low
-60° in Ikki-Ambar, Russia
Miami
83/71

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

60647073

Ex-treasure hunter
ordered to answer
missing coins questions

Chase

Daily Sentinel

�E ditorial
Tuesday, December 13, 2016 5A

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

What Obama doesn’t
get about terror
By Bryan Dean Wright
Contributing Columnist

President Barack Obama last week delivered his
ﬁnal defense of the nation’s counter-terrorism strategy. He rightfully claimed progress on a number of
fronts, including the death of Osama bin Laden, an
end to waterboarding and the effective use of drones
to kill terrorists. Just one week after the Islamic
State-inspired attack in Columbus, Ohio, he also
reiterated that there is no “war between the United
States and Islam.” The Islamic State and al-Qaida,
he said, do not speak for Muslims everywhere.
To me and many of my former colleagues at
the Central Intelligence Agency, such pronouncements reﬂect Obama’s greatest blind spot in his
ﬁght against terrorism: He has been unwilling to
acknowledge that Islamic ideology plays a role in
what motivates terrorists to strike. Meanwhile, men
like Imam Bujar Hysa, a jailed cleric in Albania,
frame the war on terrorism quite succinctly: “Islam
can coexist with other religions, but with democracy? No!”
Hysa isn’t an anomaly. He is a Salaﬁst Muslim
— a sect also called Wahhabi — who follows an
ultraconservative set of beliefs propagated by Saudi
Arabia and other Sunni Arab nations. Wahhabis do
not believe in a separation of church (mosque) and
state. For them, government should be made up of
religious clerics — and only clerics — that use the
Koran to justify their decisions.
President-elect Donald Trump’s chosen national
security advisor, Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, has tried
explaining this — albeit in impolite terms — by
saying that “Islam is a political ideology based on a
religion.”
Flynn’s poorly worded warning stems from experience, and he knows what happens when religious
leaders take over governments. Women face widespread discrimination. Gay people are imprisoned
or killed. Dancing, music and other forms of art are
banned. And those who criticize Islam or convert to
Christianity face prison or death.
However, what causes the most alarm to national
security experts is the Wahhabi objective of global
conquest. The Islamic State and al-Qaida are terrorist groups built on Wahhabi ideology. They want
to govern the world under sharia law, and they are
more than willing to achieve their goals through
force. The Islamic State is known for beheading its
victims or burning them alive. And as we saw in
Columbus, these groups are inspiring legions of supporters.
Which brings us back to Imam Hysa and his home
nation of Albania. The tiny Balkan country has a
majority-Muslim population that — until recently
— had a tradition of moderate, tolerant Islam. But
the country is in the midst of Wahhabi radicalization, spread by Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf
donors. The result? More than 100 citizens of Albania are now conﬁrmed to have fought for the Islamic
State. That’s roughly the same number as those sent
from much larger nations such as Italy and Spain.
Albania is not alone. The easiest targets for Wahhabis are smaller countries and places where poverty and corruption run deep. Consider the struggling
nation of Kosovo. Radical clerics and secretive associations have turned a once-tolerant Muslim society
into a font of extremism.
In Afghanistan too, Saudi Arabia and its virulent
strain of Islam are wrecking havoc.
Terrorism experts understand that larger, more
stable nations are under threat as well. In Germany,
the government recently launched a massive raid
on a Wahhabi missionary group called The True
Religion because of its ties to the Islamic State. This
crackdown followed a wave of attacks on the German people last summer. In the words of Berlin’s
interior minister, Islamic terrorism is Germany’s
greatest domestic security threat. In a controversial step just days ago, German Chancellor Angela
Merkel added her vocal opposition to the full-faced
veil — a Salaﬁst requirement for female worshipers.
The United States has also suffered the consequences of Islamist extremism and those inspired by
the radical ideology. We remember San Bernardino.
Boston. Ft. Hood. Little Rock. Garland. Chattanooga. Ft. Dix. Orlando. Shanksville. New York.
Washington.
Muslims have every right to sit at the American
table if they support the Constitution. We should all
acknowledge brave women and men like my former
CIA colleague who led our nation’s war on terrorism
for more than 15 years; he’s Shiite Muslim. This ofﬁcer — whom I can’t name because he’s still under
cover — was ruthless in his hunt for radical killers,
and he deserves a medal for his years of sacriﬁce.
Are we at war with the whole of Islam, or should
we be? Of course not. But Islam is a faith in crisis,
and to deny that certain strains of the religion are
contributing to global instability is to deny reality.
After eight years as president, Obama still doesn’t
understand that.
With luck and wisdom, President Trump will fare
better. My hope is that he and others in his administration will go out of their way to embrace loyal
Muslim Americans, even as they publicly acknowledge that this proud faith is struggling to shed itself
of a cancerous evil.
Bryan Dean Wright is a former CIA ops officer and member of the
Democratic Party. Follow him on Twitter @BryanDeanWright. He wrote
this for the Los Angeles Times.

THEIR VIEW

Wise men give with heart
The best gift we
is no such thing as
can give any time
coincidence, the
of year is the gift
heart’s position on
of acceptance. In
the feminine side
the famous show,
of the body is not
“How the Grinch
by happenstance.
Stole Christmas,”
Females are notoriCindy Lou saw a
Michele Z. ously more in-tune
speck of sweetwith the expresMarcum
ness in the Grinch Contributing sive, nurturing
that no one else
song of the heart
columnist
saw until she
than are men—
announced it.
that is, with the
Because she embraced an exception of Dr. Seuss’s
outcast, she changed not green giant whose name
only his heart, but those
is synonymous with
of the entire community.
an illuminated holiday
When we welcome
heart.
instinctual caring, our
The Grinch’s heart
heart expands and more
grew to three times its
love ﬂows in and out.
original size just like an
The amount of love a
athletes enlarges because
heart is capable of givthey work the heart
ing and receiving is only
muscle hard. In order to
limited by the walls we
create a healthy heart,
create out of fear— fear
we must practice cultivatof letting someone see
ing acceptance.
our tender, vulnerable
Mary and Joseph were
side—fear of caring too
strangers to the many
much and getting hurt— faces opening and closjust like the Grinch built
ing the door to them that
walls and shrunk his
fateful night of Jesus’
heart because of cruel
birth. Had the innkeeper
comments from schoolnot been in touch with
mates.
his nurturing side, he
The Grinch’s heart
would have possibly sent
may have been two sizes
Mary and Joseph packing
too small, but it was still
and the divine infant to
tucked a bit to the left of
an undeterminable fate.
his rib cage just like all
Of course, the Inﬁnite
the Whos in Whoville. If
who sent Jesus had,
Freud is right and there
no doubt, considered

“Of course, the size of a physical heart
doesn’t determine the amount of love or
understanding that cultivates within it any
more than the size of a germ dictates the
amount of damage it can impose on a body.”
—Michele Zirkle Marcum

that possibility and had
arranged another clandestine location in which
the baby would’ve been
safely born, but the Allknowing One also had
equipped the innkeeper
with an accepting, caring
heart.
God gave each person
the ability to extend that
warm-hearted welcome
to a stranger like the
Innkeeper did to the
holy couple—like Cindy
Lou did to the Grinch.
He gave us the ability to
see into the heart of a
stranger who is hurting
and invite the outcasts
into our circle of hay
bales and hot apple cider.
He gave us the ability to
love as many people as
deeply as we will permit
ourselves to.
Of course, the size of
a physical heart doesn’t
determine the amount
of love or understanding
that cultivates within it
any more than the size
of a germ dictates the

amount of damage it
can impose on a body. A
child’s tiny heart emits
as much love as an
adult’s much bigger one,
and men are as capable
of compassion as are
women. For this I am
thankful. All of humanity
beneﬁts when diversity
is embraced and outsiders like the Grinch can
be accepted for who they
are.
Like the sun melts
the icicles that drip
onto the frozen patches
of ground this winter,
so too will the warmth
from our hearts melt the
despair that in grows in
the hearts of those who
feel there isn’t even a
barn in which they are
good enough to rest their
weary heads. The wisest
of men offer gifts from
the heart.
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native
of Meigs County, author of “Rain
No Evil” and host of Life Speaks on
AIR radio.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Dec.
13, the 348th day of
2016. There are 18 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Dec. 13, 1981,
authorities in Poland
imposed martial law in
a crackdown on the Solidarity labor movement.
(Martial law formally
ended in 1983.)
On this date:
In 1642, Dutch navigator Abel Tasman sighted
present-day New Zealand.
In 1769, Dartmouth
College in New Hampshire received its charter.
In 1862, Union
forces led by Maj. Gen.
Ambrose Burnside
launched futile attacks
against entrenched Confederate soldiers during
the Civil War Battle
of Fredericksburg; the
soundly defeated Northern troops withdrew two
days later.
In 1918, President
Woodrow Wilson arrived

in France, becoming the
ﬁrst chief executive to
visit Europe while in
ofﬁce.
In 1928, George Gershwin’s “An American in
Paris” had its premiere
at Carnegie Hall in New
York.
In 1937, the Chinese
city of Nanjing fell to
Japanese forces; what
followed was a massacre
of war prisoners, soldiers
and citizens. (China
maintains as many as
300,000 people were
killed; Japan says the toll
was far less.)
In 1944, during World
War II, the light cruiser
USS Nashville was badly
damaged in a Japanese
kamikaze attack off
Negros Island in the Philippines that claimed 133
lives.
In 1962, the United
States launched Relay 1,
a communications satellite which retransmitted
television, telephone and
digital signals.

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“My theory is to enjoy life, but the practice is
against it.”
— Charles Lamb, English essayist (1775-1834)

In 1974, Malta became
a republic. George Harrison visited the White
House, where he met
President Gerald R. Ford.
In 1994, an American
Eagle commuter plane
crashed short of RaleighDurham International
Airport in North Carolina, killing 15 of the 20
people on board.
In 1996, the U.N. Security Council chose Koﬁ
Annan (KOH’-fee AN’nan) of Ghana to become
the world body’s seventh
secretary-general.
Ten years ago: President George W. Bush
held high-level talks
at the Pentagon, after
which he said he would
“not be rushed” into a
decision on a strategy
change for Iraq. Sen. Tim

Johnson, D-S.D., underwent emergency surgery
after suffering bleeding
in his brain. (Johnson
later resumed his Senate
duties.) Lamar Hunt, 74,
the owner of football’s
Kansas City Chiefs who
coined the term “Super
Bowl,” died in Dallas.
Five years ago: Early
sound recordings by
Alexander Graham Bell
that were packed away
at the Smithsonian Institution for more than
a century were played
publicly for the ﬁrst time
using new technology
that read the sound with
light and a 3D camera.
(In one recording, a man
recites part of Hamlet’s
Soliloquy; on another, a
voice recites the numbers
1 through 6.)

�6A Tuesday, December 13, 2016

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�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 13, 2016 s Section B

Lady Eagles
pull away from
Jackson, 58-44
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — The Lady
Eagles excelled at free
throw shooting, especially when it mattered
most.
The Eastern girls
basketball team sank
9-of-11 fourth quarter
free throw attempts on
Saturday evening at
‘The Nest’, as the Lady
Eagles sealed a 58-44
win over non-conference guest Jackson.
Eastern (5-0) —
which is now 3-0 in
non-conference play
— trailed the Ironladies
(2-3) by one point,
16-15, at the end of the
ﬁrst period, but the
Lady Eagles rallied to
take a 31-29 lead into
the half.
EHS used a 14-to-9
third quarter run to
extend its advantage
to 45-38 with eight
minutes to play. Both
teams managed only a
ﬁeld goal apiece over
the ﬁnal eight minutes,

but Eastern was 9-of-11
from the stripe, while
Jackson was 4-of-5.
For the game, Eastern shot 19-of-23 (82.6
percent) from the free
throw line, while JHS
was 15-of-20 (75 percent). The hosts also
held a 5-to-1 advantage
in three-pointers made.
EHS senior Laura
Pullins led the Green,
White and Gold with 25
points, while Madison
Williams scored 16
points. Next for Eastern
was Jess Parker with
seven points, followed
by Alyson Bailey with
ﬁve and Becca Pullins
with three. The Lady
Eagle scoring with
rounded out by Elizabeth Collins, who had
two points in the win.
Rebekah Green
poured in 29 points
to lead the Ironladies.
Mariah Ridgeway
chipped in with six
points, Debra Hill, Ally
Irwin, Olivia Carroll
and Emily Brown each

Lady Tornadoes top Wahama, 53-31
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

Southern senior Faith Teaford shoots a layup
over Wahama’s Natalie Rickard during the
Lady Tornadoes 53-31 victory, on Thursday in
Racine.

RACINE, Ohio — The
momentum started in the Lady
Tornadoes’ favor, and they
weren’t about to give it up.
The Southern girls basketball
team outscored Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division guest
Wahama by eight points in
the opening quarter and never
looked back, en route to a 53-31
victory, on Thursday night in
Meigs County.
The Lady Tornadoes (3-1,
2-0 TVC Hocking) — who have
now won three straight games
by double-digits — outscored
WHS (1-2, 0-1) 14-to-6 in the
opening quarter, with SHS
senior center Faith Teaford scor-

ing 10 of the SHS markers.
SHS extended its lead to
24-12 by halftime and 36-19 by
the end of the third period. Both
offenses had their best quarter
of the night in the fourth, as
Southern scored 17 and Wahama scored 12, capping off the
Lady Tornadoes’ 53-31 victory.
Teaford ﬁnished with gamebests of 23 points, 11 rebounds
and four assists for the victors. Sierra Cleland, Ashley
Acree and Jaiden Roberts each
scored six points for the Lady
Tornadoes, with Roberts also
marking four assists. Paige
VanMeter and Macie Michael
both chipped in with four
points, while Baylee Wolfe and
See WAHAMA | 2B

See EAGLES | 2B

GA, Meigs, Eastern
compete at ‘Peake
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

CHESAPEAKE, Ohio
— Gallia Academy’s
youngest grapplers were
on display, while the
two Meigs County clubs
featured full squads, as
part of Saturday’s annual Phil Davis Memorial
Wrestling Invitational
at Chesapeake High
School.
The meet was the
second of the season for
Gallia Academy, Meigs
and Eastern — as there
were 20 total teams
representing Ohio, West
Virginia and Kentucky.
Gallia Academy,
with 131 team points,
ﬁnished ﬁfth — while
Meigs tied Jackson for

eighth with 82.
Eastern amounted 47
points and placed 15th,
as Huntington (W. Va.)
won the team championship with 217.5
points.
The Highlanders
edged Vinton County
(191.5), Spring Valley,
W. Va. (153) and Huntington of Ohio (133.5),
as the Blue Devils
clipped Unioto (128) by
three points for ﬁfth.
Fairland (90) ﬁnished
eight points ahead
of both Jackson and
Meigs.
For the Blue Devils,
as was the original plan,
they did not send their
ﬁve most experienced
See ‘PEAKE | 2B

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, December 13
Boys Basketball
Southern at Wahama, 7:30
Alexander at Meigs, 7:30
Chesapeake at Gallia Academy, 7:30
Jamie Darrin Christian at Hannan, 6:30
South Gallia at Trimble, 7:30
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 7:30
River Valley at Wellston, 7:30
Ohio Valley Christian at Wayne County, 7:30
Wrestling
Gallia Academy, South Gallia at River Valley, 6
p.m.
Wednesday, December 14
Boys Basketball
Point Pleasant vs. Nicholas County at Glenville
State, 4 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Point Pleasant vs. Nicholas County at Glenville
State, 5:40
Thursday, December 15
Boys Basketball
Hannan at Ohio Valley Christian, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Southern at Eastern, 7:15
Hannan at Ohio Valley Christian, 6 p.m.
Alexander at River Valley, 7:15
Gallia Academy at Coal Grove, 7:30
Meigs at Wellston, 7:30
Wahama at Trimble, 7:30
Wrestling
Point Pleasant, Herbert Hover, at Independence,
5 p.m.

Alex Hawley/OVP Sports

Meigs junior Christian Mattox (1) runs off of a screen set by senior Garrett Buckley (42) during the Marauders’ loss to Gallia Academy,
on December 2, in Rocksprings.

Oaks roll Marauders
By Paul Boggs
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

RIO GRANDE,
Ohio — For the Meigs
Marauders, they have to
be glad last week is over
with.
That’s because the
Marauders, playing their
fourth game in eight
days to open the boys
basketball season, suffered their most lopsided
loss on Saturday — a
62-40 defeat to the Oak
Hill Oaks as part of the
annual Newt Oliver
Coaches Classic inside
the University of Rio
Grande’s Newt Oliver
Arena.
With the loss, the
Marauders fell to 0-4
— as their ﬁrst three setbacks all came by double
ﬁgures at home (70-53
to Gallia Academy, 60-46
to Warren and 63-46 to
Jackson).
Against undefeated
Oak Hill, which raised

its record to 4-0, the
Marauders never led —
and trailed by as many
as 27 points with 2:24
remaining.
The Oaks amounted
a 19-9 advantage after
the opening quarter,
inched the edge up to
37-24 at halftime, then
outscored the Marauders
14-5 in the third frame
for a commanding 51-29
cushion.
Both teams tied the
ﬁnal frame at 11-11, as
Meigs’ only third-period
points were a ﬁeld goal
by Christian Mattox
and three free throws by
Jared Kennedy.
It was indeed another
night of struggling shooting for the Marauders,
which made just 15-of-41
(37-percent) against Oak
Hill — as that statistic
was skewed by their 2-of16 (12.5-percent) performance from three-point
range.
Oak Hill, conversely,

canned 25-of-46 ﬁeld
goals for a sizzling
54.3-percent — and
drained eight of 20 threepoint attempts (40-percent) throughout.
The Oaks also outrebounded Meigs 28-23,
and amassed an impressive 20 assists.
Mitchell Hale and
Landon Carroll combined for 44 of the Oaks’
62 points, outscoring
the Marauders by themselves.
Hale hit for nine total
ﬁeld goals, including
four threes, towards 23
points — while Carroll
connected for eight ﬁeld
goals, including two
treys for 21.
Carroll also made 3-of4 free throws.
He also led all players
in rebounds (eight) and
assists (seven).
His twin brother,
Nolan Carroll, chipped
in seven points on three
ﬁeld goals — including

the club’s other trifecta.
Kennedy paced the
Marauders with 11
points, ﬁnishing with
four baskets — including two in the opening
period.
Luke Musser made
Meigs’ two triples
towards nine points, as
Mattox, Weston Baer
and Dillon Mahr mustered six markers apiece.
Mattox made three
ﬁeld goals along with
Musser, while Baer and
Mahr each notched two
ﬁeld goals and two free
throws.
Zach Helton had a
bucket to round out the
Meigs countians’ scoring.
The Marauders return
home, and open TriValley Conference Ohio
Division action, tonight
(Tuesday, Dec. 13)
against Alexander.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

Tornadoes rally past River Valley, 49-48
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE, Ohio — A win is a
win, no matter how small the
margin.
The Southern boys basketball
team is still unbeaten thanks to
a 49-48 come-from-behind victory over non-conference guest
River Valley, on Saturday in Meigs
County.
The Raiders (1-3) — who have
now dropped three straight decisions — took a 10-9 lead through
one quarter of play, but Southern

(3-0) outscored its guest 14-to-9 in
the second canto and held a 23-19
advantage halftime.
River Valley outscored SHS
17-to-8 in the third period, and the
Silver and Black headed into the
ﬁnale ahead 36-31.
However, RVHS made just 4-of10 free throws in the ﬁnal period,
opening the door for a Tornado
comeback. Southern outscored
the Raiders 18-to-12 over the ﬁnal
eight minutes of play, giving SHS
the 49-48 win.
For the game, Southern shot
17-of-55 (30.9 percent) from the

ﬁeld, including 7-of-18 (38.9 percent) from beyond the arc. Meanwhile, River Valley was 17-of-46
(37 percent) from the ﬁeld, including 3-of-8 (37.5 percent) from
deep. Both teams struggled from
the charity stripe, as the Tornadoes were 8-of-17 (47.1 percent)
and the Raiders were 11-of-21
(52.4 percent).
River Valley held a 37-to-31
advantage in rebounding, but the
Tornadoes had a 9-to-8 edge in
assists. SHS committed 17 turnovers in the win, while the Raiders
See TORNADOES | 2B

�SPORTS

2B Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Wahama
From page 1B

Lauren Lavender rounded out the Southern
scoring with two points
apiece.
Teaford also led the
Purple and Gold defensively with two steals
and three blocked shots,
while Sierra Cleland
added a team-high three
steals.
Southern shot 22-of58 (37.9 percent) from
the ﬁeld, including 3-of12 (25 percent) from
beyond the arc. SHS
made 6-of-8 free throws,
equaling 75 percent.
As a team, SHS had 31
rebounds, 13 assists, 10
steals, four blocks and
13 turnovers.
WHS freshman Hannah Rose led the Lady
Falcons with 18 points,
followed by Nena Hunt
with ﬁve and Gracie
VanMeter with four.
Natalie Rickard and
Elizabeth Mullins both
scored two points in
the setback for WHS.
Maddy VanMatre led
Wahama in rebounding and assists, pulling
down seven boards and

Eagles
From page 1B

had two points, while
Marley Haynes rounded
out the JHS total with
one marker.

dishing out two helpers.
The Lady Falcons
were 4-of-14 from the
charity stripe, equaling 28.6 percent. As a
team, WHS marked 25
rebounds, two assists
and 19 turnovers.
On Tuesday at Buffalo, Wahama claimed
a 29-24 victory over
the host Lady Bison,
snapping the Lady
Falcons’ 68-game losing skid. In that game,
VanMatre led the Red
and White with 11
points, 15 rebounds and
two assists. Rose was
next with nine points,
followed by Hunt with
seven and Grace Haddox with two.
Wahama and Southern will face off again
on January 21, at Gary
Clark Court, in Mason.
After a non-conference meeting with
Athens, on Saturday at
Wellston High School,
the Lady Tornadoes will
resume TVC Hocking
play on Monday, at Federal Hocking.
Wahama will host 0-4
Miller in its next game,
on Monday in Mason.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

After visiting South
Gallia on Monday, the
Lady Eagles will return
home for a showdown
with in-county rival
Southern, on Thursday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

‘Peake

Carter Campbell (8th)
at 182.
Meigs was paced
by the Ohio Valley
From page 1B
Publishing area’s only
wrestlers — Caleb
weight-class champion
Greenlee, Kyle Greenat Chesapeake — senior
lee, Jared Stevens,
Trae Hood in the 220Kaleb Crisenbery and
pound weight class.
Hunter Jacks — to
Hood posted a perChesapeake.
fect 5-0 record, winInstead, Saturday
ning the 220 title by
was about the develop- decisioning Mason Cox
ment of GAHS’ younger of Fairland 7-1 in the
matmen, as sophomore championship tilt.
Jason Stroud was the
Hood’s ﬁrst four
Blue Devils’ highest
victories were all via
placer.
pinfall, including three
Stroud was the runof those in the opening
ner-up in the 106-pound period.
weight class, compiling
Only Dustin McCoy
a 3-2 record with three of Man, in Hood’s third
ﬁrst-period pinfalls.
match, pushed him
In fact, both of his
beyond the ﬁrst two
losses were to the even- minutes.
tual weight-class chamOther placers for
pion — Jaishawn Lyles Meigs included Nathanof Huntington.
iel Gearheart (5th at
Stroud’s second
152) Keynath Rowe
loss to Lyles — in the
(5th at 182), William
championship match
Smith (6th at 182),
— lasted into the third
Tucker Smith (7th at
period.
132) and Levi Rafferty
Andrew Mullins
(8th at 160).
ﬁnished third for GalFive Eastern Eagles
lia Academy in the
ended up placing,
160-pound weight class
including four — Eion
— as Kenton Ramsey
Marcinko at 106, Dillon
(106), Corbin Walker
Aeiker at 126, Gavin
(113), Justin Day
Mullen at 195 and
(132), Kaden Ehman
Caden Goff at 160 —
(145) and Logan Rose
ﬁnishing sixth.
(195) all ﬁnished
Addie McDaniel of
fourth.
Eastern was eighth at
Two other Blue Dev170 pounds.
ils placed among the
top eight — Dewey Fer- Paul Boggs can be reached at
guson (6th) at 170 and 740-446-2342, ext. 2106

Tornadoes

RVHS senior Jacob
Dovenbarger led the
Raiders with 14 points,
followed by Dustin
From page 1B
Barber with 12. Jargave the ball away 21
ret McCarley posted
times.
eight points for the
SHS sophomore
Silver and Black, Tre
Weston Thorla conCraycraft added six,
nected on ﬁve three
while Jacob Campbell
pointers and led all
chipped in with four
scorers with 16 points. points. Patrick Brown
Crenson Rogers and
and Ian Polcyn rounded
Trey Pickens both
out the River Valley
scored 12 points for the scoring with two points
Purple and Gold, with
apiece.
Pickens pulling in a
Both teams return
team-best 11 rebounds. to league action on
Next for the victors was Tuesday, with Southern
Dylan Smith with seven traveling to Wahama
points, followed by
and River Valley visitTylar Blevins with two ing Wellston.
points, eight rebounds
and a team-high four
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.
assists.

Daily Sentinel

Southern holds off Lady Bulldogs, 46-41
By Alex Hawley

SHS senior Sierra Cleland
sank a two-pointer with
2:10 left to push the marWELLSTON, Ohio —
gin back to four.
When you’re hot you’re
With 20 seconds
hot, and when you’re not, remaining, Athens again
you’re not.
pulled within two points,
The Southern girls
at 43-41. With 12 seconds
basketball team picked up left, SHS freshman Baylee
its fourth straight win on Wolfe sank a pair of free
Saturday afternoon at the throws to extend the lead
Wellston Classic, as the
to 45-41. Any hopes of
Lady Tornadoes claimed an AHS comeback were
a 46-41 victory over
erased with a steal by
Athens, which has now
SHS freshman Phoenix
dropped four straight
Cleland, who then made
decisions.
one free throw to put the
After three quarters of cap on Southern’s 46-41
play, Southern (4-1) led
victory.
the Lady Bulldogs (1-4)
The Lady Tornadoes
by a 36-32 margin. Athwere led both offensively
ens cut its deﬁcit to one
and defensively by Faith
possession, 41-39, with
Teaford, who earned
3:41 left in regulation, but Player of the Game hon-

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

ors with 21 points, 13
rebounds, three steals
and four blocked shots.
Phoenix Cleland
marked seven points, six
rebounds and a team-best
ﬁve assists for Southern,
Sierra Cleland and Jaiden
Roberts both added six
points, while Wolfe, Paige
VanMeter and Lauren
Lavender each scored two
points in the win. Phoenix Cleland, Sierra Cleland and Macie Michael
also had three steals
apiece, with Michael adding four assists.
Southern shot 21-of-58
(36.2 percent) from the
ﬁeld, including 0-of-4
from beyond the arc. The
Lady Tornadoes were
4-of-9 from the charity

stripe, equaling 44.4 percent.
As a team, SHS posted
34 rebounds, 13 assists,
13 steals, four blocked
shots and 24 turnovers.
The Player of the Game
award for Athens was
given to Sami Russell,
who marked 14 points.
Southern resumed
Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division play
at Federal Hocking on
Monday, and will visit
in-county rival Eastern on
Thursday.
Craig Dunn, Sports
Editor at the Logan Daily
News, contributed to this
report.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2100.

Belpre outlasts White Falcons in overtime, 75-71
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

BELPRE, Ohio — The Golden
Eagles weren’t going to make a
comeback like that just to lose.
The Belpre boys basketball team
erased a 16-point fourth quarter
deﬁcit to force overtime in Friday’s
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division showdown with visiting
Wahama, and the Golden Eagles
outscored WHS 12-to-8 in the
extra stanza to take the game by a
75-71 ﬁnal.
BHS (1-1, 1-1 TVC Hocking)
jumped out to a 10-4 lead, but the
White Falcons (0-1, 0-1) battled
back to take a lead at 12-11. After
a pair of lead changes, the teams
were tied at 16, but Wahama
claimed the ﬁnal three points of
the opening stanza and led 19-16.
The Golden Eagles regained the
advantage at 24-23, early in the
second period. WHS took the lead
back at 25-24 and, after two more
lead changes, extended the edge to
31-26. BHS scored the ﬁnal basket
of the ﬁrst half and headed into
break, trailing 31-28.
Wahama didn’t relinquish the
lead in the third period, outscoring BHS 18-to-9 in the quarter to
expand the lead to 49-37 headed
into the ﬁnale.

Wahama pushed its lead to
53-37, early in the fourth, but Belpre fought back to tie the game
at 61. The White Falcons reestablished the advantage with back-toback free throw makes by junior
Noah Litchﬁeld. However, WHS
fouled Belpre’s Mythius Houghton,
who made two-of-three free throws
to send the teams into overtime,
tied at 63.
Wahama claimed the opening
basket of the overtime period, but
Houghton made a two-pointer to
tie the game and followed it up
with a trifecta, giving Belpre its
ﬁrst advantage since 26-25, late in
the second quarter.
Leading 68-65, Belpre made 7-of12 free throws over the remainder
of the game, sealing the 75-71 victory.
For the game, Wahama shot
14-of-21 (66.7 percent) from the
free throw line and 27-of-62 (43.5
percent) from the ﬁeld, including
3-of-15 (20 percent). Belpre was
16-of-29 (55.2 percent) from the
stripe and 27-of-64 (42.2 percent)
from the ﬁeld, including 5-of-18
(27.8 percent) from deep.
The White Falcons held a 47-to32 advantage in rebounding, but
committed 27 turnovers, 12 more
that BHS.
Before fouling out, Litchﬁeld led

Wahama with 32 points, followed
by Philip Hoffman with a doubledouble effort of 22 points and 19
rebounds. Randy Lantz posted
eight points, Jacob Lloyd added
four, while Travis Kearns had three
points and a team-best three steals.
Mason Hildreth rounded out the
White Falcon scoring with two
points, while leading the team with
six assists. Kearns and Litchﬁeld
both had nine boards for the Bend
Area team.
Houghton led Belpre with 23
points, followed by Nate Godfrey
with 15 points and Logan Adams
with 11. Brandon Simoniette was
next with 10 points, followed by
Jessie Collins with ﬁve. Deijon
Bedgood and Cole Knotts both
scored four points in the win, while
Tojzae Reams rounded out the
BHS total with three markers.
Collins and Godfrey led Belpre
on the glass with six boards apiece,
while Houghton had team-highs in
assists with eight and steals with
10.
Wahama will have its chance for
revenge when the Golden Eagles
visit Mason, on January 20.
The White Falcons return to
action on Tuesday, when they host
Southern.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.

OVCS outlasts Lady Flyers, 31-28
By Bryan Walters

for the hosts.
OVCS got ﬁve points
from Rachel Sargent as
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
part of a 12-4 ﬁrst quar— A good start led to a
ter surge, then Sargent
better ﬁnish for the Ohio scored four of the Lady
Valley Christian girls
Defenders’ seven points
basketball team Friday
in the second canto as the
night during a slim 31-28 hosts made a 7-4 run to
victory over visiting
secure a 19-8 advantage
Ironton Saint Joseph in a at the break.
non-conference matchup
The Lady Flyers (3-3),
in the Old French City.
however, made things
The Lady Defenders
very interesting down the
(1-4) picked up their ﬁrst stretch as the guests went
victory of the 2016-17
on a 10-7 third quarter
campaign, thanks in large run to close to within
26-18 headed into the
part to a solid ﬁrst half
showing that resulted in a ﬁnale.
Morgan Turner hit a
double-digit halftime lead

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

pair of trifectas as ISJHS
made a 10-5 surge down
the stretch, but Sargent
connected on 5-of-8 free
throws to secure the Lady
Defenders’ ﬁrst triumph
of the year.
Sargent led Ohio Valley Christian with a
game-high 18 points, as
well as six rebounds and
six blocked shots. Katie
Bradley was next with
four markers, while Cori
Hutchison, Kristen Durst
and Emily Childers also
added three markers
apiece for the victors.
Childers also had six
rebounds and a team-best

two steals for OVCS,
which committed 18 turnovers and ﬁnished the
night 7-of-10 at the free
throw line for 70 percent.
Turner led Ironton St.
Joe with 11 points, followed by Kaitlin Sheridan
with seven points and
Ashley Bartram with six
markers.
Ashlee Blankenship and
Megan Riley completed
the ISJHS scoring with
two points each. The
guests were 6-of-14 at
the charity stripe for 43
percent.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Browns fall to 0-13, lose 23-10 to Bengals
CLEVELAND (AP) —
Robert Grifﬁn III shook off
some rust, then couldn’t
jolt the Browns to a win.
They’re 0-13, three losses from infamy and shame.
Grifﬁn returned from
injury and played for the
ﬁrst time in three months,
but didn’t stop Cleveland
from falling closer to a
0-16 ﬁnish as the Cincin-

nati Bengals built a big
early lead and held off the
winless Browns 23-10 on
Sunday in the snow.
Andy Dalton threw two
touchdown passes in the
ﬁrst half to Tyler Eifert as
the Bengals (5-7-1) kept
their playoff chances pulsating for another week.
Grifﬁn hadn’t played
since the Sept. 11 opener,

when he broke a bone in
his left shoulder. He had a
handful of positive plays,
showed poise under pressure and most importantly,
survived to play another
week.
“He showed that he
belongs,” coach Hue Jackson said. “He has to get
better in some areas. I am
not running from that,

but for the ﬁrst time back
out late in the season like
this, I thought he held his
own.”
Grifﬁn scored on a
1-yard sneak in the third
quarter, but the Browns
(0-13) lost their 16th
straight dating to Dec. 13
last season. Cleveland has
lost 23 of 24 and 31 of 34
since the end of 2014.

Wildcats net first win, 82-78 at Elk Valley Christian
Staff Report

now 1-1 on the season.
HHS sophomore Dalton Coleman led the victors
ELKVIEW, W.Va. — Offense in abundance.
with 20 points, followed by junior Malachi Cade
The Hannan boys basketball team had ﬁve playwith 18 and freshman Chandler Starkey with 17.
ers reach double-ﬁgures in the scoring column on
Logan Nibert was next for the Wildcats with 11
Saturday afternoon in Kanawah County, as the
Wildcats picked up an 82-78 victory over host Elk points, followed by Chase Nelson with 10, Josh
McCoy with four and Corey Hudnall with two.
Valley Christian.
Hannan returns to action on Tuesday, when
The Wildcats — who lost their season opener
by a 57-45 count to visiting Grace Christian — are Jamie Darrin Christian visits Ashton.

�Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 13, 2016 3B

Naughty &amp; Nice
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y
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combination of education and experience.
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Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550, fax to
(304) 675-6975, or apply on-line at
www.pvalley.org.
EOE: M/D/F/V

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

Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
2 bedroom apartments
$550/$600 and deposit
located in Bidwell some
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2-Bdrm House
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$575/mo.
NO PETS,
740-591-5174.

LEGALS
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
IN THE COMMON PLEAS COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
100 East Second St., Pomeroy, OH 45769
United States of America, acting through the Rural Housing
Service, United States Department of Agriculture vs. George
Chapman aka George Edward Chapman, Jr., Deceased, et. al.
Case No. 16CV067
Unknown Administrator, Executor, or Fiduciary of the Estate of
George Chapman aka George Edward Chapman, Jr., Deceased; Unknown heirs, legatees, devisees, executors, executrixes, administrators, administratrixes, assignees, and representatives of George Chapman aka George Edward Chapman,
Jr., Deceased; Unknown spouses of unknown heirs, legatees,
devisees, executors, executrixes, administrators, administratrixes, assignees, and representatives of George Chapman aka
George Edward Chapman, Jr., Deceased; Unknown guardian of
minor and/or incompetent heirs of George Chapman aka George
Edward Chapman, Jr., Deceased, whose last known addresses
are unknown, will hereby take notice that on September 16,
2016, United States of America, acting through the Rural Housing Service, United States Department of Agriculture, filed its
Complaint in Foreclosure and Marshalling of Liens in the Common Pleas Court of Meigs County, Ohio, 100 East Second St.,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 being Case No. 16CV067 against George
Chapman aka George Edward Chapman, Jr., Deceased, et al.,
praying for judgment in the amount of $62,240.75 with interest
thereon according to the terms of the note from July 14, 2016
until paid and for foreclosure of said Mortgage Deed on the following described real estate, of which said Defendant, George
Chapman aka George Edward Chapman, Jr., Deceased, is the
owner of:
Real estate located at 947 Ash Street, Middleport, OH 45760

Notices

Daily Sentinel

60694200

4B Tuesday, December 13, 2016

as further described in Plaintiff's mortgage recorded on February 14, 2014 in OR Book 358, Page 196 of the Mortgage Records of Meigs County, Ohio.
and that the aforementioned Defendants be required to set up
any interest they may have in said premises or be forever
barred, that upon failure of said Defendants to pay or to cause to
be paid said judgment within three days from its rendition that an
Order of Sale be issued to the Sheriff of Meigs County, Ohio, to
appraise, advertise in The Daily Sentinel and sell said real estate, that the premises be sold free and clear of all claims, liens
and interest of any of the parties herein, that the proceeds from
the sale of said premises be applied to the Plaintiff's judgment
and for such other relief to which United States of America, acting through the Rural Housing Service, United States Department of Agriculture is entitled.
Said Defendants are directed to the Complaint wherein notice
under the fair debt collection practice act is given.
Said Defendants are required to answer within twentyeight days
after the publication. Said Defendants will take notice that you
are required to answer said Complaint on or before the 7th day
of February, 2017 or judgment will be rendered accordingly.
United States of America, acting through the Rural Housing Svc,
United States Department of Agriculture, Plaintiff
Stephen D. Miles/Vincent A. Lewis, Attorneys for Plaintiff
18 W. Monument Ave., Dayton, OH 45402
12/6/16, 12/13/16, 12/20/16, 12/27/16, 1/3/17, 1/10/17

Help Wanted General

Y
A
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P
LET’S
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n
o
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t
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u
20 Q
* Are you a fan of Facebook?

YES NO
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* Do you live in the digital world?
* Do you have a desire to win?
* Do you have a passion for helping people succeed?
* Do you possess a Hunter mentality?
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* Are you a problem solver?
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We are trusted and valued by our readers and
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60694265

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, December 13, 2016 5B

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

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

by Dave Green

By Dave Green

3

By Hilary Price

8
5
6
3 9

8

7 6
1
5
2

2
1

3

9
4 1 5

9
12/13

Difficulty Level

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

12/13

8
7
6
9
2
4
5
1
3

3
9
7
1
5
6
8
2
4

6
4
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9
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3
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1

1
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9
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2

4
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7
2
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6
9
4
3
8

2016 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

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DENNIS THE MENACE

THE LOCKHORNS

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

Difficulty Level

Hank Ketcham’s

2
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7
1
5
9
8
6

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

2016 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

3 6 1
5
9

5

�6B Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Daily Sentinel

Have Yourself
a Merry Local Christmas
Your local merchants invite you to shop,
dine and celebrate close to home this season for
unparalleled variety, value and convenience!
When you spend your dollars locally, you also help support our
area’s economic growth and vitality, making it a great place to call
home for the holidays and all year.

Think
Local
First!

COOL
SPOTS
Cool Stuff

60691943

CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17th 9-6
Sales Throughout the Store

Santa Will Be Here!! 12-3 &amp; 4-6
The Kids Get A Take Home Craft!
REFRESHMENTS
SR #7 Tuppers Plains, Ohio
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Hartwell
House
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BANKS CONSTRUCTION
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With the two together
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60693018

www.banksconstruction.co
BANKS CONSTRUCTION is now offering
5-7 &amp; 10 year extended warranties

Owner: Melissa Jones Bowles

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34070 SR #7 Pomeroy, Ohio

Bowles Accounting

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60694186

100 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

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AN

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60692884

WE HAVE MOVED!
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Walk in’s welcome
Monday-Friday 9-5
Evening &amp; weekend
appointments available

duo

740-691-5124
cell: 740-508-2289

1 ct. $1599 (reg. $3198)
½ ct. $975 (reg. $1950)
¼ ct. $499 (reg. $998)

*Refund transfer Checks
*Walmart Direct2Cash

Acquisitions

110 Court Street
Pomerov OH 45769

Fine Jewelry

151 2nd Ave Gallipolis Ohio

60693198

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