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                  <text>When
Obamacare
arrived.

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High of 31.
Low of 21.

Academy
wins
Invitational.

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 7, Volume 65

Tuesday, January 13, 2015 s 50¢

Commission appoints county officers for 2015
By Donald Lambert

Commissioner Tim Ihle laid
out some plans for the money,
including demolition of the
POMEROY — The
old veteran’s hospital and land
Meigs County Commission
purchasing.
announced the final number for
“With the carryover, we have
their carryover from their 2014
some breathing room to work
budget at their organizational
on side projects,” Ihle said.
meeting Monday morning.
Commissioner Randy Smith
The final carryover for 2014
attributed
the large carryover
was $963,439.63 — up from
to
economic
growth in the area
the 2013 total of $385,708.46.
in
the
last
year,
including resiThe commissioners were very
dents
buying
from
local shops.
happy with the carryover and
Smith
said
the
area
hasn’t seen
said to expect the money to
be put in good use in 2015.
this much growth since the

elambert@civitasmedia.com

coal mine closed down. The
commission said that the 2015
budget will be $5 million, up
from $4.64 million in 2014.
The commission approved
several county positions for
2015: Gloria Kloes will remain
clerk to commissioners; Jim
Hudson and Margret Burkhamer will remain janitors; Karen
Heater will remain dog warden;
Robbie Jacks will remain EMS
director; Bob Buyer will remain
EMA director; Chris Shank
will remain DJFS director;

Dan Nease and Ed Werry will
remain in the tax map office;
Denise Alkire will remain in
the grants office; Vicki Cundiff
will remain safety coordinator;
and Everett Holmes will remain
apiary inspector.
Smith was named president
of the commission, with Ihle
taking over as vice president.
Michael Bartrum, former
president, will stay on as an exofficio member of the board.
“I am grateful to be elected
as board president,” Smith

said. “I am blessed to be part
of a commission where I, along
with commissioners Bartrum
and Ihle, share a common
vision for Meigs County.”
Smith said that, with the group
effort with the elected officals
and employees of Meigs County,
“2015 will be a great year.”
The first bills of 2015 were
also approved. The commission
said that the meetings will continue to be 11 a.m. Thursdays.
Reach Donald Lambert at 740-992-2155,
Ext. 2555. or on Twitter @Donaldlambert22.

ODOT advises
plowing snow
on highways
Paul Reed, president
and CEO of Farmers
Bank, and Iva Sisson,
of the Computers for
Students program.

Staff report

MARIETTA — Whether plowing snow and
ice off highways or private driveways, it’s no easy
task.
To make it easier and safer for everyone, ODOT
District 10 respectfully asks that homeowners living along a state highway to not shovel or plow
snow onto the road or shoulder.
Shoveling or plowing snow onto the road or the
shoulder creates a hazard to other highway users,
and to ODOT snow plow drivers. Especially on
southeast Ohio roads, which tend to be hilly and
curvy, improperly placed snow on freshly plowed
pavement can catch motorists by surprise, making
for unsafe driving conditions.
In addition, this adds to extra snow removal
costs for the state as plow drivers need to make
another pass on the highway to clear the snow or
ice deposited by homeowners.
ODOT offers some easy-to-follow instructions
that not only keep the roads safe, but helps homeowners from having to re-shovel their driveways:
If you have a flat driveway, simply shovel or plow
the snow across the driveway, pushing the snow
into the grass. If you have a long, steep driveway,
plow the snow to the far side corner of the driveway. When facing the highway, the far side corner
of the driveway is to the right. Shoveling snow to
the far side of the driveway ensures that the plow
trucks won’t plow the snow back into your driveway as they plow the highway.
And try not to pile snow near or around your
mailbox as it’s less likely a passing plow will cause
damage
ODOT appreciates everyone working together
to keep the highways safe and passable for all
motorists.
For real-time winter road conditions in your
area, visit www.ohgo.com.

Lindsay Kriz | Daily
Sentinel

Computer program reaches goal
By Lindsay Kriz

in total, along with seven desktops.
Currently, nine students at Meigs
Local are awaiting computers,
POMEROY — Since her work
which are currently being refurbegan last February, Iva Sisson, of bished by Comunity Computer
Computers For Students, has given Alliance, out of Columbus, before
nearly 200 tablets and computers
Sisson picks 4o computers up and
to Meigs County students in need delivers to each student. Southern
of a home electronic.
Local Schools also have most of its
The most recent donations to
students taken care of, although
the cause have come from Powell’s, some are still awaiting computers.
who donated $300 and Paul Reed
Eastern Local Schools students are
and Farmers Bank. Reed presented not currently in need of compuers.
Sisson with a check of $250,
“(Meigs Local) teachers are
although the bank provided $1,000 saying, ‘This student doesn’t have

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

a computer, they’re a top-notch
student, let’s get them one,’” Sisson said. “If they’re not a top-notch
student, this is what this is about
(getting them computers), so they
can become a top-notch student.
Computer-lacking could be the
reason.”
Sisson said when she retrieves
the refurbished computers, everything is included — keyboard,
mouse, flatscreen monitor and the
computer itself.
See GOAL | 5

Kasich says Ohio must restore values, share prosperity
By Julie Carr Smyth
Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio — The
state and nation need an
infusion of basic values like

responsibility, resilience and
empathy in order to meet
future challenges, Ohio Gov.
John Kasich said Monday as
he kicked off his second term.
During a high-energy inau-

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Basketball: 6
Wrestling: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 7
Classified: 8
Comics: 9

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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gural celebration featuring a
marching band and gospel
choir, the Republican governor delivered a variation on
President John F. Kennedy’s
ask-not speech.
“Don’t ask what someone
else can do for you, but what
you can do to help yourself
and to help someone else,”
Kasich told supporters gathered at the historic Southern
Theater in Columbus. Absent
was New Jersey Gov. Chris
Christie, whose planned
appearance was called off due
to weather.
Kasich, 62, said fellow
Republicans sometimes mistake economic prosperity as
the end goal.
“Economic growth provides
the means whereby we can
reach out and help those who
live in the shadows,” he said.
Among those are the needy,
the mentally ill and the undereducated.

Kasich fought back tears
toward the end of the address
as he pledged to spend every
day trying to help each Ohioan achieve their full potential.
Sometimes faulted for the
extent of the reforms he’s
sought, Kasich said he doesn’t
intend to let up on the new
ideas that became a signature
of his first term, including
rethinking Ohio’s economic
development system, its social
services delivery and even its
two-year budget process.
“Make no mistake. If
we’re not innovating and
growing and changing, we’re
dying, and there’s nothing in
between,” he said. “Throughout human history, throughout the history of the world,
those institutions which
embraced innovation, risktaking and a certain fearlessness — fearlessness — they
achieved great things for our
society.”

He said complacency got
the state in trouble before,
leaving it struggling when he
first took office in 2011.
“That’s why Ohio got so far
off the track, not just in recent
memory but over the past few
generations,” Kasich said. “We
began to think our success
was our birthright, that we
would always be an economic
powerhouse. We thought it
was just in our DNA.”
The potential 2016 president contender drew applause
when he called for end to partisan bickering, saying someone who doesn’t share your
opinion isn’t the enemy.
“We’re Ohioans and we’re
Americans,” he said. “We
can’t be partisans and we can’t
be extreme ideologues if we’re
going to deal with the problems in America.”
Ohio Democratic Chairman
David Pepper said his party
is willing to work with the

Kasich administration during
the next term, challenging
him to make a reality of some
of Monday’s statements.
Pepper said in a statement
that Kasich’s first term was
marked by “an agenda that
divided our state with attacks
on public workers, tax changes that shifted a greater burden onto the backs of working
Ohioans in order to benefit
the wealthy, and budgets
that raided funds from local
communities causing many
families to struggle.”
The governor had been formally sworn at midnight, and
he completes the day Monday
with an inaugural gala. The
party coincides with the Ohio
State Buckeyes’ bid for the
national championship against
Oregon.
Kasich has said he’ll make
wide-screen TVs available for
fans.

�LOCAL/NATION

2 Tuesday, January 13, 2015

OBITUARIES

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR

SHIRLEY MAE LAMBERT
HARTFORD, W.Va. —
Shirley Mae Lambert, 66,
of Hartford, West Virginia
passed away Saturday,
Jan. 10, 2015. She was
born Feb. 5, 1948, in
Racine, Ohio, the daughter of the late Ishar “Ike”
Baker and Edna West
Baker.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in
death by her sister, Eloise
Wilbarger.
Shirley is survived by
her husband of 47 years,
Douglas G. Lambert; sons
Chris (Melissa) Lambert,
of Pomeroy, Ohio, and
Greg (Sheryl) Lambert,
of Branchland, W.Va.;

grandchildren Cody
and Hunter Lambert
and Ciera Older; sisters
Sharon (Sam) Lewis, of
Okeechobee, Fla., and
Maxine (Jim) Spires, of
Plain City, Ohio; and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
at the Rutland Church of
God on Wednesday, Jan.
14, 2015, at 11 a.m. with
Pastor Ron Heath officiating. Burial will follow at
Miles Cemetery. Visiting
hours are 6-8 p.m. Tuesday at the church.
A registry is available at
www.andersonmcdaniel.
com.

DEATH NOTICES
CASTO
EVANS, W.Va. — Lila Roberta “Bo” Casto, 88, of Evans,
died Friday, Jan. 9, 2015, in the Ravenswood Care Center,
Ravenswood, W.Va., following an extended illness.
Service will be 1 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2015, at Casto
Funeral Home Chapel in Evans, with the Rev. Gerald B.
Sayre officiating. Burial will follow in Blaine Memorial
Cemetery in Cottageville, W.Va. Visitation will be from 4-7
p.m. Monday at the funeral home with an Order of Eastern Star service beginning at 7 p.m.
CHILDERS
SOUTH POINT, Ohio — Betty Fern Childers, 85, of
South Point, died Sunday, Jan. 11, 2015, at River’s Bend
Health Center in South Point.
There will be a visitation from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan.
13, 2015, at Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio. The funeral service will also be 2 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2015, at the funeral home with Pastor Tracy
Tooley from reGeneration Church, Huntington, W.Va.,
officiating.
NORTH
GALLIPOLIS — Evelyn North, 90, of Gallipolis, passed
away Monday, Jan. 12, 2015, at Holzer Senior Care in
Bidwell.
Graveside Services will be held noon Saturday, Jan. 17,
2015, at Bethel Cemetery, at the corner of East Bethel
Road and Bulaville Pike, Gallipolis, with the Rev. Alfred
Holley Officiating. In lieu of flowers, the family requests
memorial gifts be made to the Evelyn North Memorial,
c/o McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, P.O. Box 536, Gallipolis,
OH 45631.

Obama to call for
laws on hacking,
student privacy
By Julie Pace

AP White House Correspondent

WASHINGTON —
President Barack Obama
wants Congress to pass
legislation requiring companies to inform customers
within 30 days if their data
has been hacked, a move
that follows high-profile
breaches at retailers including Target, Home Depot
and Neiman Marcus.
A White House official said Obama would
announce the proposed legislation Monday, along with
a measure aimed at prevent-

ing companies from selling
student data to third parties
and from using information
collected in school to engage
in targeted advertising.
Obama’s proposals are
part of a White House
effort to preview components of the president’s
State of the Union address
in the lead-up to the Jan. 20
speech. The official, who
insisted on anonymity, was
not authorized to discuss
the proposed legislation
by name ahead of Obama’s
speech at the Federal Trade
Commission.

TUESDAY, JAN. 13

We meet as “We the People” who
want to keep updated on what our
TUPPERS PLAINS — The
government is doing. Tea stands
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
for “taxed enough already”. We
will have their regular meeting
believe in small government.
at 7 p.m. at the Tuppers Plains
Snacks and beverages are supSewer office.
plied.
POMEROY — The Meigs
SALISBURY — The Salisbury
County Board of Health meeting
Township
Trustees will meet at
will take place at 5 p.m. in the
noon
at
the
home of Manning
conference room of the Meigs
Roush.
County Health Department, locatPOMEROY — The Meigs
ed at 112 E. Memorial Drive.
County Health Department will
SYRACUSE — Syracuse Comconduct an Immunization Clinic
munity Center Board of Directors
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112
will meet at 7 p.m.
E. Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
POMEROY — The Meigs
Please bring child(ren)’s shot
County Board of Elections will
records. Children must be accomhold their regular monthly Board panied by a parent/legal guardian.
meeting at 8:30 a.m. at the Board A $10 donation is appreciated
of Elections office in the Meigs
for immunization administration;
County Annex building at 117 E. however, no one will be demed
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
services because of an inability
POMEROY — The Meigs
to pay an administration fee for
County Tea Party will meet at
state-funded childhood vaccines.
7:30 p.m., at the Meigs County
Please bring medical cards and/
Senior Citizens Center, 112 E.
or commercial insurance cards,
Memorial Dr., Pomeroy. Dan
if applicable. Flu shots are availHalliburton from Representative
able for people age 6 months and
Bill Johnson’s office will present
older. Only Ohio Medicaid via
a legislative update. Other Items
Caresource is accepted for those
usually discussed are Constitution age 19 or older. Zostavax (shinTidbits, current laws being disgles) vaccine is also available. Call
cussed by both the state and Fed- for eligibility determination.
eral government, Common Core,
etc.. Anyone is invited to attend.
THURSDAY, JAN. 15
We do not meet as Republicans,
CHESTER —The Chester
Democrats, Independents or etc.. Shade Historical Society will

CONTACT US
EDITOR:
Michael Johnson
740-446-2342 Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com
CIRCULATION MANAGER:
Ed Litteral
740-353-3101 Ext. 1925
elitteral@civitasmedia.com
NEWSROOM:
Lindsay Kriz
740-992-2155 Ext. 2555
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

ADVERTISING:
Sarah Thompson
740-992-2155 Ext. 2554
sthompson@civitasmedia.com
Brenda Davis
740-992-2155 Ext. 2553
bdavis@civitasmedia.com
SPORTS:
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@civitasmedia.com
Alex Hawley, Ext. 2100
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

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

SATURDAY, JAN. 17

POMEROY — The Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the DAR
will meet at 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Public Library. Jack Fowler, director of the Point Pleasant River
Museum, will present the program. Anyone interested in joining the DAR is invited to attend.

SUNDAY, JAN. 18

MIDDLEPORT — Ash Street
Church at 398 Ash Street will be
showing the movie, “God’s Not
Dead,” at 6:30 p.m. Everyone is
invited.

TUESDAY, JAN. 20

SYRACUSE — Beginners
painting class to resume at the
Syracuse Community Center Jan.
20 at 6 p.m. and Jan. 23 at 1 p.m.
Bring three stacker boxes and
painting supplies. Call 740-9922365 for further information.

Job and Family Services building. For more information, contact Brooke Pauley, Coordinator at 740992-2117 EXT. 104.

POMEROY — Meigs County 4-H Committee
has reduced the price of the current plat book to
$10. 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. to 4:30 p.m
(closed 12-12:30 for lunch) mail $15 (for book, shipping &amp; handling) to Meigs County 4-H Committee,
PO Box 32, Pomeroy, OH 45769 or visit the Meigs
County Recorder’s Office in the Court House..

Regional liaisons in
Athens, Meigs counties

OHIO VALLEY — Secretary of State Jon Husted
announced January regional office hours. Regional
liaisons for the Secretary of State’s office will be
in 26 counties around Ohio including Meigs and
Athens Counties. The purpose of open office hours
is to give local residents an opportunity to learn
more about, and stay connected with the secretary
of state’s office in an informal and accessible setting. In addition to making voter registration forms
and election information available, regional representatives will be on hand to answer questions and
distribute materials to those interested in learning
OHIO VALLEY — Veteran’s Outreach is starting more about the other functions of the office such as
a campaign to give back to veterans this holiday sea- the business services division and initiatives includson. Show your support by making a tax-deductible ing the Ohio Business Profile and Military Readyto-Vote program. The date for Meigs and Athens
$10 donation by texting vet to the number 52000.
counties will be Jan. 9. The Athens time will be 10
The $10 will be applied to your next cell phone
a.m. to noon at the Athens County Public Library,
bill. No additional charge will be applied on your
located at 95 W. Washington St. in Nelsonville. The
bill. Show our deserving veterans you care! You
Meigs time will be 1-3 p.m. at the Meigs County
can also donate at their website, veteranoutreach.
com, call 1-888-283-8638, or send your check to 542 District Public Library, located at 216 W. Main St.
in Pomeroy.
Youngstown Poland Rd., Struthers, Ohio, 44471.

Veteran’s Outreach Mobile
Giving Campaign

2015 Family and Children
First Meetings Announced
MIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Family
and Children First Council will be holding regular
business meetings at 9 a.m. on the third Thursday
of the following months: January, March, May, July,
September and November. The council will hold
these meetings at the Meigs County Department of
Job and Family Services, located at 175 Race Street,
Middleport. The Meigs County Family and Children
First Council will also be holding an Intersystem
Collaborative Meeting at 9 a.m. Thursday, Feb. 5.
Meetings will then be held the first Thursday of
every month at the Meigs County Department of

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Meigs Local Board completes
Financial Statements
POMEROY — The Meigs Local Board of Education has completed its General Purpose External
Financial Statements for Fiscal Year ending June 30,
2014, and they are available for public inspection at
the office of the Treasurer/CFO, Mark E. Rhonemus,
41765 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy.

Addiction and Mental Health
Services Meeting Change
GALLIPOLIS — The Jan. 19 meeting of the
Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services has been cancelled
due to the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. There
will be a special meeting on Jan. 26 at 7 p.m. The
board typically meets on the third Monday of each
month at 7 p.m. at the Board Office, 53 Shawnee
Lane, Gallipolis.

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CHESTER —Shade River
Lodge 453 will host its’ annual
inspection in the Fellowcraft
Degree. Dinner will be served at
6:30 p.m. with inspection to follow no later than 7:30 p.m. The
Grand Master of all Masons in
Ohio will be in attendance.

4-H Committee
Plat Book sales

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Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, January 13, 2015 3

Peoples Bancorp donates $50K
POINT PLEASANT
— Peoples Bancorp
Foundation, a nonprofit
corporation formed to
make donations in Peoples Bank market areas,
announced it will donate
$50,000 toward regional
food pantries throughout
its markets of Kentucky,
Ohio and West Virginia.
“The people who benefit
from hunger programming
and food assistance are
our neighbors and friends.
Peoples Bank is pleased
to increase its support of
food banks and pantries in
communities all across our
region,” said Rick Stafford,
Peoples Bank executive
vice president of sales and
marketing. “In the United
States, 1 in 6 people struggle
with hunger. This information is also consistent across
the market area we serve. If
you have a child, chances are
someone your child goes to
school with struggles to get
enough to eat.”
Since the inception of
Peoples Bancorp Foundation

Submitted photos

AT LEFT, pictured, from left, are Delyssa Huffman, director of Crosslight, Sharon Stapleton and Amanda Pearce, both of Peoples Bank-Point Pleasant, and Craig Dean, of
Peoples Bancorp Inc. AT RIGHT, pictured, from left, are Sharon Stapleton and Roxanne Weaver, both of Peoples Bank-Point Pleasant, and John Holland, pastor of Point
Pleasant Presbyterian Church.

in 2003, the foundation has
donated more than $250,000
to area food pantries.
The donations will be
used by each organization

to purchase food and support on-going needs.
Peoples Bancorp Foundation contributions
focus on charitable giving

in four major areas: community investment and
economic development,
youth and education,
human services programs

that improve the social
needs of low- to moderate-income communities
and individuals, and the
arts and cultures. Organi-

zations receiving grants
meet those requirements
and serve the markets
where Peoples Bank currently has office locations.

Marshall,
NAACP plan
activities

Achmad Ibrahim | AP

Indonesian air force personnel carry the flight data recorder of the ill-fated AirAsia Flight 8501 that crashed in the Java Sea, at
the airport in Pangkalan Bun, Indonesia, on Monday. Divers retrieved one black box Monday and located the other from the AirAsia
plane that crashed more than two weeks ago, a key development that should help investigators unravel what caused the aircraft to
plummet into the Java Sea.

Divers find black boxes in AirAsia crash
By Achmad Ibrahim

down on Dec. 28, killing
all 162 people on board.
They should provide
PANGKALAN BUN,
essential information
Indonesia — Divers
about the plane and all
retrieved one black box
of the conversations
Monday and located the between the captain and
other from the AirAsia
co-pilot for the duration
plane that crashed more of the flight.
than two weeks ago,
“There’s like 200-plus
key developments that
parameters they record,”
should help investigators said aviation safety
unravel what caused the expert John Goglia, a
aircraft to plummet into former U.S. National
the Java Sea.
Transportation Safety
The flight data
Board member. “It’s
recorder was pulled
going to provide us an
from beneath a piece
ocean of material.”
of the aircraft’s wing
The flight data
and brought to the sea’s recorder will be taken
surface, and the cockpit to Jakarta, Indonesia’s
voice recorder was found capital, for evaluation,
hours later, said Suryadi and the other black box
Bambang Supriyadi,
will be sent as soon as
operation coordinator
it is retrieved. It could
for Indonesia’s national
take up to two weeks
search and rescue
to download and anaagency.
lyze their information,
He said the voice
said Nurcahyo Utomo,
recorder was about 20
an investigator at the
meters (66 feet) from
National Committee for
the data recorder but
Safety Transportation.
remained lodged beneath
The slow-moving hunt,
heavy wreckage, and
which has often gone
divers were struggling
days with little progto free it at a depth of 32 ress, was boosted over
meters (105 feet).
the weekend when the
Searchers began zero- Airbus A320’s tail was
ing in on the location a
lifted from the seabed.
day earlier after three
It was the first major
Indonesian ships picked wreckage excavated from
up intense pings from
the crash site, but the
the area, but they were
black boxes were not
unable to see the devices found inside as hoped.
due to strong currents
Search efforts have
and poor visibility.
been consistently hamThe two instruments, pered by big waves and
which emit signals from powerful currents cretheir beacons, are vital
ated by the region’s rainy
to understanding what
season. Silt and sand,
brought Flight 8501
along with river runoff,

Associated Press

have created blinding
conditions for divers.
Henry Bambang
Soelistyo, head of the
national search and rescue agency, said Sunday
that divers had located
a wing and debris from
an engine. Officials have
been working urgently
to locate the main
section of the plane’s
cabin, where many of
the victims’ corpses are
believed to be entombed.
So far, only 48 bodies
have been recovered.
Decomposition is making identification more
difficult for desperate
families waiting to bury
their loved ones. Nearly
all of the passengers
were Indonesian.
“I still believe many
victims remain trapped
there, and we must
find them,” said Gen.
Moeldoko, Indonesia’s
military chief, who uses
one name.

He said more than 80
divers are involved in the
recovery effort and have
been ordered to make
finding the fuselage their
top priority.
The last contact the
pilots had with air traffic
control, less than halfway into their two-hour
journey from Indonesia’s
second-largest city,
Surabaya, to Singapore,
indicated they were
entering stormy weather.
They asked to climb
from 32,000 feet (9,753
meters) to 38,000 feet
(11,582 meters) to avoid
threatening clouds, but
were denied permission
because of heavy air traffic. Four minutes later,
the plane dropped off the
radar. No distress signal
was sent.
Associated Press writer Niniek
Karmini in Jakarta, Indonesia, and
reporter Nicki Mayo in Washington
contributed to this report.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — In conjunction with the Huntington-Cabell Branch of the NAACP, Marshall University
will celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Monday, Jan.
19, with various activities, including the MLK Jr. Traditional March.
Maurice Cooley, associate vice president of Intercultural
Affairs, said his office and the NAACP are co-planning
this year’s activities with the local community, churches,
pastors, community leaders, and various other constituents in the area.
“We hope to have strong support from our Marshall
family,” Cooley said. “Our goal at Marshall is to have 250
faculty, staff and/or students attending at least the traditional march and as many as possible to attend the unique
observance day program at the Joan C. Edwards Performing Arts Center, immediately following the march.”
When he moved into the position of associate vice
president of Intercultural Affairs last year, one of the first
things Cooley did was contact Sylvia Ridgeway, president
of the local NAACP chapter, to express his desire to coplan all future MLK Day events – including the traditional
march – with the community each year.
“King’s principles are fully consistent with neighbors
becoming brothers,” Cooley said. “King once said, ‘The
large house in which we live demands that we transform
this world-wide neighborhood into a world-wide brotherhood.’ Consequently, this year we have had a great collaboration with the NAACP and we look forward to a great
celebration on Jan. 19.”
The march will be led by Pastor Donte’ Jackson of First
Baptist Church, other local ministers, the NAACP and
Marshall University leaders. It starts at 4:30 p.m. at 16th
Street Baptist Church, located at 1647 9th Ave., and ends
at Marshall’s Joan C. Edwards Performing Arts Center,
located across 5th Avenue from the Memorial Student
Center.
A celebration will follow the march at 5:30 p.m. in the
performing arts center. It will feature a performance by
the Marshall University Chamber Choir; original poetry
readings by Tim Meadows, a performance by the Jehovah’s Warriors Praise-Dance Team, and a rendition of
King’s “I Have a Dream” speech by Lynn Edwards.
Gary White, Marshall University’s interim president,
will speak during the celebration, as will Ridgeway. The
Huntington High School Chamber Choir also will perform.
“We want to demonstrate our support for community
integration and inclusion, while continuing to raise awareness of Dr. King’s contributions,” Cooley said. “This is the
time and a most worthy occasion to show our support for
social justice in memory of Dr. King. We want everyone to
pour out their support for this historical occasion in recognition of the social unrest in our country, even today.”
A light reception will follow the celebration in the performing arts center.

60550262

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Russia’s
downward
spiral bad
The year 2014 was unkind to Vladimir Putin’s
quasi-empire — 2015 will be worse. As it hurtles
toward some new bottom, Russia’s downward spiral is awful news for Russians. It’s very bad news
for America, too.
The situation amounts to one of history’s most
unfortunate paradoxes. On the one hand, it’s in
the best interests of the United States that Russia does not become too powerful. Not only is it
against America’s interest for any Asian power to
dwarf Europe; it’s especially problematic if Russia
does.
On the other hand, while a strong Russia threatens us, a weak Russia menaces us. Whereas our
economy is tied very closely to China’s — creating
real incentives to maintain peace or do battle in
a controlled, localized way — our economic ties
with Russia are virtually nil. In fact, when the U.S.
is up, Russia tends to be down. Cheap oil is great
for us, rotten for them. Ditto a strong dollar. That
means we’re primed for big, open conflict.
It gets worse. While it seemed like a big win for
us when Russia was on the ropes in the early ’90s,
that period actually produced the concentration
of wealth and the threat of anarchy that paved the
way for Mr. Putin’s rise to unchallenged power.
Now, Russia is headed into another period of great
economic weakness — with the ruble tanking, and
oil losing its value in a hurry. Only, this time, Russia’s military isn’t as weak as it was in the wake
of its failed coup in the final days of the Soviet
Union. It’s ready and willing to do Mr. Putin’s bidding.
At the same time, it’s hard to see how even Russia’s united and motivated military can maintain
order amid a real turn for the worse. Mr. Putin
must still have nightmares pondering Russia’s
sprawling territory and its vulnerability to Muslim
terror on its southern flank. In fact, Russia’s situation to its south and east is so bad that it’s no wonder Mr. Putin has turned west to act out — putting the squeeze on Ukraine, sending a submarine
into Swedish waters and keeping the Baltics in a
state of nervous dismay.
This year could well witness a Russia that lashes
out at the West even as it implodes from within.
Reprinted from the Orange County (Calif.) Register.

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THEIR VIEW

When Obamacare arrived at Harvard

ment explains that rising
Obamacare has come to
health-care costs, some
Harvard, and the faculty
caused by Obamacare,
is in a state of shock and
account for the changes hitdismay.
ting the pocketbooks of the
In what has to be concustodians of learning at
sidered an early contender
Harvard. It cites specifically
for the most hilarious and
free preventive services and
enjoyable news story of the Rich
the extension of coverage
year, The New York Times
Lowry
recounts the tumult over
King Features for younger adults up to age
columnist
26 (as well as the impendObamacare in Cambridge.
ing “Cadillac tax” on pricey
“For years,” the Times
health plans).
writes, “Harvard’s experts
Q: How many Harvard profeson health economics and policy
sors does it take to figure out that
have advised presidents and Confree government benefits aren’t
gress on how to provide health
actually free? A: As many Harvard
benefits to the nation at a reasonprofessors who are forced to pay
able cost. But those remedies will
the indirect costs of those benefits.
now be applied to the Harvard
To the stupidity of the Amerifaculty, and the professors are in
can voter, in Jonathan Gruber’s
an uproar.”
infamous phrase, can now be
In other words, they are getadded the stupidity of the Harvard
ting the change they believed
faculty. If Gruber ever gets axed
in — good and hard. As a wag
by MIT, he apparently shouldn’t
commented on Twitter, karma is
expect a warm reception at Cama pre-existing condition. The Harbridge’s other elite university.
vard imbroglio is a little like the
The obstructionists on the Facfamously free-market University of
Chicago economics faculty launch- ulty of Arts and Sciences voted
by a lopsided margin against the
ing a revolt against tax cuts or
health-care changes, but they were
deregulation.
As the saying goes, when you’ve too late.
According to the Times, history
lost the Harvard faculty … you’ve
professor Mary D. Lewis is a leadlost self-satisfied elites who never
er of the faculty opposition, which
imagined that the policies that
makes her practically the Mitch
they support imposing on everyMcConnell of Harvard University.
one else might come back to bite
Let’s hope she has a plausible
them. Perhaps President Barack
repeal-and-replace plan and isn’t
Obama can issue an executive
merely campaigning on the power
order waiving Obamacare for Ivy
of sheer, nihilistic rejectionism.
League faculties that believed his
Richard F. Thomas, a Virgil
election was the dawn of a new era
scholar, said the health-care
of enlightened rule.
changes are “deplorable.” (Quoth
The enrollment guide from
Harvard’s human-resources depart- the poet, “Each of us bears his

own Hell.”) They are “deeply
regressive.” (“It never troubles
the wolf how many the sheep
be.”) And they are “a sign of the
corporatization of the university.”
(“O accursed hunger of gold, to
what dost thou not compel human
hearts!”)
Don’t worry, Harvard faculty,
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz is coming
to the rescue. Who better than a
Harvard Law graduate to swoop in
to save professors at his dear old
alma mater from the consequences
of their own folly?
Actually, the changes Harvard
is experiencing are quite mild. By
any measure, the school’s plan is
still incredibly generous. Faculty
will, for instance, now have an
annual deductible of $250, which
is hardly exorbitant. Perhaps the
Harvard faculty foolishly believed
that other alum, President Obama,
when he said Obamacare would
save the average family $2,500?
In a properly constructed market, consumers — even including
Harvard professors — should
indeed bear more of the costs of
their health care directly. But in
today’s system, consumers tend
not to have free choice of their
plans, and Obamacare layers on
top of that system costly mandates
that make no sense.
The Harvard faculty can whine
and stew all it likes, but the president has sent an unmistakable
message to such malcontents: The
law is the law. Harvard won the
health-care debate years ago, and
there’s no going back on it now.
Rich Lowry can be reached via e-mail:
comments.lowry@nationalreview.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Tuesday, Jan.
13, the 13th day of 2015.
There are 352 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Jan. 13, 1915, a magnitude-7 earthquake centered in Avezzano, Italy,
claimed some 30,000 lives.
On this date:
In 1733, James Oglethorpe and some 120 English colonists arrived at
Charleston, S.C., while en
route to settle in presentday Georgia.
In 1794, President
George Washington
approved a measure adding two stars and two
stripes to the American flag, following the
admission of Vermont
and Kentucky to the
Union. (The number of
stripes was later reduced

to the original 13.)
In 1864, American songwriter Stephen Foster died
in poverty in a New York
hospital at age 37.
In 1883, the Henrik
Ibsen play “An Enemy
of the People” was first
performed in Christiania
(Oslo), Norway.
In 1898, Emile Zola’s
famous defense of Capt.
Alfred Dreyfus, “J’accuse,”
was published in Paris.
In 1941, a new law went
into effect granting Puerto
Ricans U.S. birthright
citizenship. Novelist and
poet James Joyce died in
Zurich, Switzerland, less
than a month before his
59th birthday.
In 1962, comedian Ernie
Kovacs died in a car crash
in west Los Angeles 10 days
before his 43rd birthday.
In 1964, Roman Catholic

Bishop Karol Wojtyla (the
future Pope John Paul II)
was appointed Archbishop
of Krakow, Poland, by
Pope Paul VI.
In 1978, former Vice
President Hubert H. Humphrey died in Waverly,
Minn., at age 66.
In 1982, an Air Florida
737 crashed into Washington, D.C.’s 14th Street
Bridge and fell into the
Potomac River after taking
off during a snowstorm,
killing a total of 78 people;
four passengers and a
flight attendant survived.
Today’s Birthdays:
Actress Frances Sternhagen is 85. TV personality
Nick Clooney is 81. Actorcomedian Charlie Brill
is 77. Actor Billy Gray is
77. Actor Richard Moll is
72. Rock musician Trevor
Rabin is 61. Rhythm-and-

blues musician Fred White
is 60. Rock musician
James Lomenzo (Megadeth) is 56. Actor Kevin
Anderson is 55. Actress
Julia Louis-Dreyfus is
54. Rock singer Graham
“Suggs” McPherson
(Madness) is 54. Country
singer Trace Adkins is
53. Actress Penelope Ann
Miller is 51. Actor Patrick
Dempsey is 49. Actress
Traci Bingham is 47.
Actor Keith Coogan is 45.
TV producer-writer Shonda Rhimes is 45. Actress
Nicole Eggert is 43. Actor
Michael Pena is 39. Actor
Orlando Bloom is 38.
Meteorologist Ginger
Zee (TV: “Good Morning
America”) is 34. Actor
Julian Morris is 32. Actor
Liam Hemsworth (Film:
“The Hunger Games”) is
25.

�LOCAL/INTERNATIONAL

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, January 13, 2015 5

As many as 6 Paris terror suspects may be at large
By Jamey Keaten

police and soldiers by
midday Monday. About
4,700 of the security
PARIS — As many as
forces would be assigned
six members of a terrorto protect France’s 717
ist cell involved in the
Jewish schools, Interior
Paris attacks may still be Minister Bernard
at large, including a man Cazeneuve said.
who was seen driving
“A little girl was tella car registered to the
ing me earlier that she
widow of one of the gun- wanted to live in peace
men, police officials said and learn in peace in her
Monday.
school,” Cazeneuve as on
Two French police offi- a visit to a Paris Jewish
cials told The Associated classroom, where the
Press that authorities
walls were covered with
were searching the Paris
children’s drawings of
area for the Mini Cooper smiling faces.
registered to Hayat
“That’s what the govBoumeddiene, the widow ernment, that’s what the
of Amedy Coulibaly.
Republic, owes to all
Turkish officials say she
the children in France:
is now in Syria.
security in all schools,
The French police offi- especially in the schools
cials spoke on condition
that could be threatened,”
of anonymity because
he added.
they are not authorized
The children listened
to discuss details of the
and waved both Israeli
investigation with the
and French flags.
news media.
Israeli Prime Minister
France deployed
Benjamin Netanyahu
10,000 troops to protect
visited the Paris kosher
sensitive sites — includgrocery where four of
ing Jewish schools and
the hostages were killed
neighborhoods — in
Friday. Volunteers, meanthe wake of the attacks
while, recited prayers
that killed 17 people last
over the bodies of some
week. Brothers Cherif
hostage victims as they
and Said Kouachi, as
were prepared for burial
well as Coulibaly, their
by the Jewish Burial
friend who claimed ties to Society in Paris.
Islamic extremists in the
Defense Minister JeanMiddle East, died Friday Yves Le Drian said the
in clashes with police.
nationwide deployment
Prime Minister Manuel of troops would be comValls said the manhunt
pleted by Tuesday and
is urgent because “the
would focus on the most
threat is still present”
sensitive locations.
after the attacks that
“The work on these
began Wednesday with 12 attacks, on these terrorist
people killed at the satiri- and barbaric acts contincal newspaper Charlie
ues ... because we conHebdo by gunmen the
sider that there are most
police identified as the
probably some possible
Kouachi brothers.
accomplices,” Valls told
Authorities said
BFM television.
Coulibaly killed a policeFrench police have said
woman Thursday and
the Charlie Hebdo attacks
then killed four people
were carried out by three
at a kosher supermarket
people, but only two of
Friday before all three
those attackers — Cherif
attackers were slain in
and Said Kouachi —
two nearly simultaneous
have been identified by
clashes with security
authorities.
forces around Paris.
Video emerged Sunday
Paris’ Marais district
of Coulibaly explaining
— one of the country’s
how the attacks in Paris
oldest Jewish neighborwould unfold. French
hoods — was filled with
police want to find the

Associated Press

Remy de la Mauviniere | AP

French interior minister Bernard Cazeneuve, with at his side Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo, addresses reporters after visiting the Jewish
school of the Rue Pavee, in the heart of the Paris Jewish quarter on Monday. France on Monday ordered 10,000 troops into the streets
to protect sensitive sites after three days of bloodshed and terror, amid the hunt for accomplices to the attacks that left 17 people and
the three gunmen dead.

person or persons who
shot and posted the
video, which was edited
after Friday’s attacks.
Boumeddiene was seen
traveling through Turkey
with a male companion
before reportedly arriving in Syria with him on
Jan. 8 — the day after the
Charlie Hebdo attack and
the same day Coulibaly
began his murderous
spree by killing the
policewoman.
According to security camera video shown
Monday by Turkey’s
Haberturk newspaper,
Boumeddiene arrived
Jan. 2 at Istanbul’s Sabiha
Gokcen airport. A highranking Turkish official,
who spoke on condition
of anonymity, confirmed
the woman on the video
was Boumeddiene.
Turkish intelligence then tracked
Boumeddiene from her
arrival.
Turkish Foreign
Minister Mevlut
Cavusoglu told the staterun Anadolu Agency that
she had stayed at a hotel

in Istanbul with another
person before crossing
into Syria on Thursday.
She and her traveling
companion, a 23-yearold man, toured Istanbul
before leaving Jan. 4 for
a town near the Turkish
border, according to a
Turkish intelligence official who was not authorized to speak by name.
Her last phone signal
was Jan. 8 from the border town of Akcakale,
where she apparently
crossed into Islamic
State-controlled territory
in Syria, the official said.
Their Jan. 9 return plane

tickets to Madrid went
unused.
Witnesses said the
Kouachis claimed they
were being supported by
al-Qaida in Yemen, the
group the U.S. considers the most dangerous
offshoot of that network.
In his video and in comments to French media
before he died, Coulibaly
pledged allegiance to
the Islamic State group,
which has taken over
large sections of Iraq and
Syria but is a bitter rival
of al-Qaida.
Ties among the three
attackers date back to

at least 2005, when
Coulibaly and Cherif
Kouachi, 32, were jailed
together. It later emerged
that Said Kouachi, 34,
fought with or was
trained by al-Qaida in
Yemen. Cherif Kouachi
was also convicted in
2008 along with several
others of belonging to a
network that sent jihadis
to fight American forces
in Iraq.
Associated Press writers Lori
Hinnant, Sylvie Corbet, Thomas
Adamson and John-Thor Dahlburg
in Paris; Suzan Fraser in Ankara,
Turkey; and Desmond O. Butler in
Istanbul contributed to this story.

For the best local weather coverage, visit www.mydailysentinel.com

Goal
From Page 1

“Every dime that we
get is for this organization,” Sisson said. “Every
penny goes to buying,
refurbishing and providing for the students. This
is strictly for the kids.”
While her demand
has gone down, Sisson
said she has been told by

two local Social Security
offices that as soon as they
update their systems, their
old computers — about 15
to 30 of them — will go to
Computers For Students.
“This isn’t about me
at all,” she said “This is
about the community
pulling together, people
like Paul Reed, CIC
(Community Improvement Corporation),
Stuart Johnson out of

Columbus, Ohio Health
out of Columbus, Powell’s
Food Fair for giving $300
and the little businesses,”
she said. “The other day
the guy from the laundromat gave me $20. This is
about a community that
cares about their kids and
wanted to see it happen.”
Anyone who wants
to contact Sisson about
their work may reach her
at 740-742-2187.

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 61.56
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.34
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 119.75
Big Lots (NYSE) — 44.43
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 55.39
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 52.12
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 23.76
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.193
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.45
Collins (NYSE) —84.15
DuPont (NYSE) — 74.41
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.56
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 23.98
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) —64.66
JP Morgan (NYSE) —58.83
Kroger (NYSE) — 66.00
Ltd Brands (NYSE) —85.71
Norfolk So (NYSE) —101.97
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 24.16

BBT (NYSE) —36.49
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 24.49
Pepsico (NYSE) — 96.42
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.19
Rockwell (NYSE) — 106.00
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 13.94
Royal Dutch Shell — 62.93
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 35.33
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 90.02
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.93
WesBanco (NYSE) — 32.03
Worthington (NYSE) — 25.79
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Jan. 12, 2015, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

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�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, January 13, 2015 s Page 6

Blue Angels soar past Jackson, 50-43
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

JACKSON, Ohio — It’s
been a long time coming.
The Gallia Academy girls
basketball team snapped a
nine-game losing skid against
rival Jackson on Saturday
evening following a 50-43
win at JHS in a Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League matchup in the Apple City.
The visiting Blue Angels
(10-3, 2-2 SEOAL) picked
up their first victory over the
Ironladies since the 2009-10
campaign, which was a 44-34
decision at JHS back on February 3, 2010.
After battling back-andforth through three quarters
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
of play, GAHS captured a
Gallia Academy senior Micah Curfman (2) dribbles
the ball at the top of the key during the Blue Angels’ permanent lead at the 7:15
victory over River Valley, in the championship game of mark of the fourth after
Jalea Caldwell made a basthe SGHS Lady Rebels Holiday Tournament.

ket for a 34-33 advantage.
Jackson (5-6, 1-3) was
never closer the rest of the
way, as the guests closed the
final seven-plus minutes with
a 16-10 run – which included
an 8-of-17 effort at the free
throw line down the stretch
– to wrap up the three-possession triumph.
The Blue Angels stormed
out to an early 5-0 edge, but
the hosts answered with
a 12-6 run to claim a slim
12-11 lead after eight minutes of play.
GAHS, however, countered
with a 17-10 second period
run that allowed the guests
to take a 28-22 advantage
into the break.
Jackson answered the
second half bell by going on a
9-4 charge in the third canto,
which cut the deficit down to
32-31 headed into the finale.

The Blue Angels connected on 17-of-48 field goal
attempts for 35 percent,
including a 1-of-7 effort from
three-point territory for 14
percent. The Angels also outrebounded JHS by a 44-34
overall margin.
Jordan Walker led GAHS
with 16 points, followed
by Caldwell with a doubleeffort of 15 points and 10
rebounds. Walker also had
nine rebounds for the victors.
Kendra Barnes was next
with eight points, followed
by Micah Curfman with
seven points. Grace Martin
and Adriene Jenkins rounded
out the winning tally with
two markers apiece.
The guests were 15-of-31
at the free throw line for
48 percent. Martin also
hauled in 10 rebounds,
while Barnes dished out a

team-high five assists.
The Ironladies sank 15-of54 shot attempts for 28
percent, including a 2-of-17
effort from behind the arc for
12 percent. The hosts also
committed 12 turnovers in
the contest, one fewer than
the Angels’ tally of 13.
Kacee Jenkins paced
Jackson with a game-high 18
points, followed by Rebekah
Green with 15 points. Jenkins also hauled in a gamebest dozen rebounds in the
setback.
Sam Humphreys and Amelia Davis both chipped in four
points apiece, while Abby
Waugh rounded out the scoring with two markers. The
hosts were 11-of-23 at the
charity stripe for 48 percent.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2101.

RedStorm
women
notch first
KIAC win
By Randy Payton

For Ohio Valley Publishing

RICHMOND, Ind. — The University of
Rio Grande raced to a double-digit lead
in just over five minutes and never looked
back, posting a 95-81 win over Indiana
University-East, Saturday afternoon, in
Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference women’s basketball action at Richmond High School’s Tiernan Center.
The victory was the first-ever KIAC triumph for the RedStorm, who improved to
10-6 overall and 1-1 in league play.
The Red Wolves, who are fielding a
varsity program for the first time, had a
four-game winning streak snapped and
dropped to 10-7 overall and 1-1 in the
KIAC.
Rio Grande jumped to a 15-5 lead after
a jumper by senior center Morgan Daniels
(Gallipolis, OH) with 14:57 left in the
first half and led by as many as 22 points
before settling for a 19-point halftime
advantage, 50-31.
The RedStorm, who shot a sizzling 60.5
percent from the field in the opening half,
continued to pull away in the second stanza, opening up a 30-point cushion, 65-35,
after an offensive rebound and stickback
by sophomore forward Brooke Marcum
(Vinton, OH) with 15:48 remaining in the
contest.
IU-East responded with a 15-2 run of
their own over the next four minutes to
close within 67-50 after a pair of Keragan
Niehoff free throws, but the Red Wolves
got no closer than the final 14-point margin the rest of the way.
Sophomore forward Alexis Payne (Deep
Water, WV) led five players in double figures for Rio Grande with 21 points, while
senior guard Brianna Thomas (Newark,
NJ) finished with 17 points and a gamehigh six assists.
Marcum posted her second consecutive
double-double with 13 points and a gamehigh 16 rebounds, while sophomore guard
Aly Herren (Mason, OH) netted 12 points
and handed out a career-high five assists
and junior guard/forward Sarah Bonar
(Hartford, OH) chipped in with 10 points.
Sophomore guard Sharday Baines (East
Cleveland, OH) also contributed five
assists and a game-high three steals to the
winning effort.
Tia King had 20 points and 10 rebounds
to lead IU-East in a losing cause, while
Niehoff tallied 16 points and Kristen
Miller finished with 12 points and a gamehigh three steals.
Brooke Packer and Mackenzie Campbell
added 10 points each for the Red Wolves.
Rio Grande is scheduled to return to
action on Tuesday night at Indiana University-Kokomo. Tip-off is set for 5 p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Pictured above are members of the 2014-15 GAHS varsity wrestling team. Standing in the front row, from left, are Nathanael Phillips,
Alex White, Cole Tawney, Justin Reynolds, Jared Stevens, Kyle Greenlee, Caleb Greenlee, Andrew Mullins, David Kuhn and Chris Matthew.
Standing in the back row are Ryan Terry, Kaleb Crisenberry, Austin Wolf, Anthony Sipple, Hunter Jacks, Hunter Terry, Wendell Rossiter, Nic
Hufford and Isaiah Holley.

Blue Devils win NY Invitational
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

NELSONVILLE, Ohio —In
the end, it was a collective group
effort.
The Gallia Academy wrestling
team managed only one individual
title, but the Blue Devils still came
away with top honors Saturday
at the 2015 Nelsonville-York Invitational held on the campus of
NYHS in Athens County.
The Blue Devils earned seven
top-three finishes in the 14 different weight classes, which allowed
the Blue and White to win the
team championship by four points
over the 17-team field.
GAHS posted a winning tally
of 249 points, which came in
just ahead of runner-up Caledo-

nia River Valley and its total of
245 points. Defending champion
Northwestern was third overall
with 242.5 points.
Washington Court House
(241.5) and Vinton County (229)
rounded out the top five spots,
while Meigs was 17th overall with
34 points.
Jared Stevens was the lone Blue
Devil to win an individual crown
at the event, going 5-0 overall with
five pinfall wins at 106 pounds.
Cole Tawney (132), Justin Reynolds (182) and Anthony Sipple
(195) each placed second in their
respective weight classes, while
Caleb Greenlee (113), Kaleb Crisenberry (145) and Ryan Terry
(170) each came away with third
places finishes.
Gallia Academy – which was one

of eight programs to earn an individual title on Saturday – also won
the 2013 team championship.
The Marauders had only one
top-six effort at the event, which
came from Brandon Gilkey after he
placed fifth overall at 138 pounds.
Nelsonville-York led the tournament with four individual champions, followed by Northwestern,
Jonathan Alder and Washington
Court House with two apiece.
Jackson, Vinton County and
Bishop Ready also joined GAHS
with one individual title each.
Complete results of the 2015
Nelsonville-York Wrestling Invitational can be found on the web at
baumspage.com
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2101.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Jan. 13
Boys Basketball
Vinton County at River Valley, 7:30
South Gallia at Eastern, 7:30
Van at Hannan, 7:30
Meigs at Nelsonville-York, 7:30
Wahama at Miller, 7:30
Grace Christian at Ohio Valley Christian, 7 p.m.
Southern at Belpre, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Van at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Grace Christian at Ohio Valley Christian, 5:45
Men’s college basketball
Rio Grande at Indiana University-Kokomo, 7 p.m.
Women’s college basketball
Rio Grande at Indiana University-Kokomo, 5 p.m.

Wednesday, Jan. 14
Girls Basketball
Point Pleasant at Cabell Midland, 7:30
Wrestling
Gallia Academy at Warren, 5:30
Thursday, Jan. 15
Girls Basketball
River Valley at Alexander, 7:30
South Gallia at Federal Hocking, 7:30
Miller at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County, 7:30
Trimble at Wahama, 7:30
Southern at Waterford, 7:30
Eastern at Belpre, 7:30

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, January 13, 2015 7

Lady Raiders fall to Nelson-York High School
By Bryan Walters

5-1 TVC Ohio) picked up their
seventh straight victory and
moved into sole possession of
BIDWELL, Ohio — A battle first place within the league
for first place ultimately ended standings, while the host Lady
after eight minutes of play SatRaiders (5-7, 3-2) had a threeurday as visiting NelsonvilleYork stormed out to a 16-6 lead game win streak within the
Ohio Division come to an end.
and never looked back during
NYHS got four points apiece
a 62-46 victory over the River
from
Jessie Addis and Sam
Valley girls basketball team in
Taylor
in the first period, which
a Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
helped the guests out to their
Division matchup in Gallia
early 10-point advantage.
County.
The Lady Buckeyes (9-2,
Rachael Smith – who had

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

Wildcats pounce
on Point, 58-46

four of the hosts’ six points in
the opening canto – followed
with five more markers during
a 14-all second period, which
made it a 30-20 contest at the
break.
RVHS managed to whittle
the deficit down to three possessions after a small 14-13
third quarter spurt made it
43-34, but the Lady Buckeyes hit 10-of-18 free throw
attempts during a 19-12 run
that ended regulation with a

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — A 19-6 first
quarter charge made all the difference for visiting
Logan Saturday night during a 58-46 decision over
the Point Pleasant boys basketball team in a nonconference matchup in Mason County.
The Big Blacks (3-5) had a two-game winning streak come to an end in their first game in
two weeks as the hosts struggled out to an early
13-point deficit. The Wildcats (5-1) followed with
a 16-12 run to close the first half with a comfortable 35-18 advantage.
PPHS went on a small 10-9 third quarter run to
close to within 44-28, then made a spirited 18-12
charge in the fourth — but never came closer than
the four-possession finale.
Aden Yates led Point Pleasant with a game-high
20 points, followed by Brian Gibbs with eight
points and Douglas Workman with seven markers.
Cody Sroufe and Bradley Gibbs rounded out the
respective scoring with six and five points.
LHS had nine different players reach the scoring
column, led by Zach Acord with 16 points. Braxton Goff and Austin Tre-week Noe were next with
10 markers apiece, while Amechi Chukwu-Noe
contributed six points.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Blue Devils fall to
Rock Hill, 53-43
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

CENTENARY, Ohio
— Revenge at its worst.
Less than two weeks
after the Gallia Academy boys basketball
team defeated Rock Hill
at RHHS, the Redmen
extracted some revenge
as they claimed a 53-43
victory, Saturday night
in Gallia County.
The Blue Devils
(2-10) jumped out
to an 11-9 lead after
eight minutes of play,
but the Redmen (3-7)
rallied back to take a
21-18 lead into the half.
Rock Hill maintained
the three-point advantage through the third
quarter and outscored
GAHS 21-14 in the
finale, to take the 53-43
victory.
The Blue Devils were
led by Devin Henry
with 14 points, followed by Alex White
with nine. Wes Jarrell
and Kole Carter each

added eight points,
while Michael Putney
rounded out the GAHS
scoring with four
points. Gallia Academy
shot 15-of-20 from the
free throw line for 75
percent.
The Redmen were
led by Austin Collins
with 16 points and Jake
Falls with 11. Austin
Barcus marked 11
points; Brady Knipp
and Trystan Matney
each added four, while
Nathan Turvey chipped
in with three. Timmy
Adkins rounded out the
Rock Hill scoing with
two points. RHHS was
6-of-13 from the charity
stripe for 46.2 percent.
GAHS will look to
end its two game skid
on Friday when the
Blue Devils invade Jackson, while Rock Hill will
try to keep things going
when it visits Portsmouth on Tuesday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

By Randy Payton

RICHMOND, Ind. —
For the second time in
four days, a seemingly
comfortable lead didn’t
produce a first conference
victory for the University
of Rio Grande men’s basketball team.
Indiana University-East
erased a 17-point deficit
with 12-1/2 minutes left
to play and outlasted the
RedStorm, 95-85 in overtime, Saturday afternoon,
in Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
action at Richmond High
School’s Tiernan Center.
The Red Wolves, who
were picked just behind
the RedStorm in the
North Division of the
KIAC in the preseason
coaches’ poll, improved
to 14-5 overall and 2-0 in
league play with the victory.
Rio Grande dropped to
10-7 overall and 0-2 in the
conference on the heels of
a two-point loss at home
to Point Park University
on Wednesday night - a
game in which the RedStorm failed to maintain
a 19-point lead late in the
opening half.
Rio appeared well on
its way to its first conference win, jumping to a
12-1 lead in the game’s
first four minutes and
extending the cushion to

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Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

remaining following two
free throws by Clark.
The RedStorm got no
closer than five the rest of
the way and the final margin produced the hosts’
largest lead of the day.
Clark led the Red
Wolves with 19 points
and 11 rebounds and
shared the team-lead of
four assists with Bollenbacher.
Vasha Davis added
15 points off the bench,
while Huffman added a
career-high 14 points and
Tyler Fangman netted 12
points.
Parker Salinas also had
10 points in the winning
effort for IU-E, which
enjoyed a whopping 49-7
edge in bench scoring.
Junior center Dwayne
Bazemore (Columbus,
OH) scored a game-high
20 points and had nine
rebounds for Rio Grande
before fouling out late in
regulation, while Black
finished with 17 points, a
career-high 11 rebounds

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and a game-high four
steals.
Legg, like Black, had
17 points and both shared
game-high honors with
six assists, while Joiner
had his second straight
double-double with 15
points and 10 rebounds
to go along with five
assists and the club’s lone
blocked shot.
The RedStorm shot
just 32.6 percent from
the field in the second
half and overtime after
connecting on 52.8 percent of their shots in the
opening stanza. They
were also outrebounded,
47-46, and committed 20
turnovers.
Rio Grande returns to
action on Tuesday night,
traveling to Indiana
University-Kokomo for
a meeting with the Cougars. Tip-off is set for 7
p.m.
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

Have story ideas
or suggestions?
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TUESDAY, JANUARY 13

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as many as 15 points on
seven different occasions
before settling on a 46-35
advantage at the intermission.
The RedStorm lead
reached its pinnacle when
a layup by junior guard
Kevonta Black (Nashville,
TN) made it 65-48 with
12:29 remaining and was
still at 16 points, 76-60,
after senior guard Evan
Legg (Piketon, OH)
nailed a three-pointer
and a pair of free after a
technical foul on the Red
Wolves with 6:47 left to
play.
IU-East roared back
from that point on,
though, closing the rest
of regulation on a 19-3
run and forcing the game
to overtime on a layup
following an offensive
rebound by Huston Clark
with 2.3 seconds left.
The Red Wolves took
their first - and only - lead
of the day after a steal
by Lucas Huffman and
a subsequent layup by
Nick Bollenbacher just
35 seconds into the extra
session.
Rio closed to within
82-81 after a short jumper
by junior guard/forward
D.D. Joiner (Columbus,
OH) with 3:30 left in the
overtime, but IU-East
reeled off seven of the
next eight points to take
an 89-82 edge with 2:03

TUESDAY EVENING

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Taylor and Addis both paced
NYHS with 15 points apiece,
followed by Kaitlyn Hurd with
14 points and Madison Davis
with seven markers.
Camrin Dupler was next with
six points, while Hannah Taylor
and Tori Campbell respectively
wrapped things up with three
and two points. The guests
were 14-of-26 at the charity
stripe for 54 percent.

Rio men cough up lead, fall in OT
For Ohio Valley Publishing

By Bryan Walters

16-point outcome.
Leia Moore led the Silver
and Black with 13 points, followed by Smith and Chelsea
Copley with 11 markers apiece.
Copley hit all three of the
team’s trifectas after halftime.
Courtney Smith was next
with five points, while Shelby
Brown and Tiana Qualls respectively rounded out the scoring
with four and two markers.
RVHS was 3-of-10 at the free
throw line for 30 percent.

42

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The Curse of Oak Island "X The Curse of Oak Island "A The Curse of Oak Island
(:05) Ancient Aliens
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House Hunt. House (N)
Face Off "Beautiful
Face Off "Creature
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Disaster"
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6

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ness "Family Cameron Diaz. A woman and her boyfriend's wife team up
Day"
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to exact revenge on the man that's lying to them. TVMA
(:10)
The Mexican ('01, Cri) Brad Pitt, Julia Roberts. A (:15)
Dawn of the Dead ('04, Hor) Ving Rhames,
Man of Steel (2013,
450 (MAX) clumsy criminal is sent to Mexico to find a pistol while his Sarah Polley. Survivors of a worldwide plague take refuge Action) Amy Adams, Michael
girlfriend is held hostage. TV14
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Episodes
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Philomena ('13, Dra) Steve Coogan, Judi
Shameless "Milk of the
Inside the NFL "2014: Week House of
500 (SHOW) Dench. A journalist explores the story of a woman's search Gods"
20"
Lies
for her son, who was taken from her. TV14

�CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Notices

Help Wanted General

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

NEW YEAR NEW CAREER!!
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Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
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will be
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*******************

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to work weekends. Minimum
wage. Send resume to French
Town Veterinary Clinic 360 SR
160 Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or
Fax 740-446-4101

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1 bedroom house $275 mo
plus utilities. $275 Deposit.
Phone: 740-256-6661

FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

1bd 1ba newly remodeled w/att
gar, stove, fridge, NO PETS,
Eden Park, $525/mo, wtr inc,
ref req'd, 740-456-6769

Middleport, 2 room efficiency
apt. No Pets, deposit and reference required.(740)9920165.

Rentals

Newer 1 BR apt., Pt. Pleasant.
Equiped kitchen, large bath,
laundry. Cent-air, storage bldg.
Ref. &amp; Dep. No Smoking. 740446-2801

2-Bdrm &amp; 1 1/2 bath near hospital $575.00/mo, plus deposit
NO PETS and NO SMOKING
740-446-2651

2 bdrm trailer for rent in Gallipolis Ferry, WV. $450/m plus
deposit. 304-962-0167
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Donestics/ Janitorial
Industrial Cleaners Needed in
Buffalo, WV. Full-time Positions Available. Days/Evenings. Must pass background
check and drug test. 304-7686309.

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Three bedroom unfurnished
2nd floor townhouse on Court
Street. Condition excellent. No
pets. Lease application with
references and security deposit required. $650 month. Call
441-7875, 446-3936 or 4464425.

SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Full Time Bus Driver needed at
the Meigs County Board of Developmental Disabilities. Must
have valid operator s license
and CDL with School Bus Endorsement. Substitutes also
needed – teacher, assistant,
cook, van driver – qualifications vary depending on substitute position. Send resume to:
MCBDD
P.O. Box 307/1310 Carleton
Street
Syracuse, Ohio 45779

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

Auto Sales
2013 Dart, Fusion, Malibu.
2012 Cruze, Malibu, Equinox,
Altima. 2010 Silverado, Accent 5 spd., Civic, and Cobalt.
A-Z year &amp; Makes. 740-4467278 or 740-645-2287

Manufactured Homes
Used single wides
3 to choose from
starting at $1500.
freedomhomesohio.com
740-446-3093

Call

Housing/ Rentals
Looking for renters?

WANTED

those empty homes.

Workers needed willing to work with
a behaviorally and physically challenging
individual in Middleport.
Must be willing to work within approved
guidelines and behavior supports plans.
Training provided. Pay commensurate with job
duties. Previous experience preferred.

Job Network
Reach future employees
seekers wherever they
are using our
Recruitment Ad
Network.

license and three years good driving
experience required.
Send resume to: Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640; or
email: beyecserv@yahoo.com.
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

60558062

Professional Services

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

We now offer free liners for lost/found pets!
Offering highly discounted In Memory,
Thank You and Anniversary displays!!

Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee. Local References. Established in 1975. Call 24HRS
740-446-0870. Rogers Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com

Miscellaneous

Other Services

One bedroom unfurnished 2nd
floor, recently redecorated apt.
2nd Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio
45631. Lease application with
references. Security deposit.
$425 month. Call 441-7875,
446-3936 or 446-4425.

Help Wanted General
RETIREMENT SALE
EVERYTHING MUST GO
ALL STOCK CARPET/VINYL
MOLLOHAN CARPET
740-446-7444

Daily Sentinel

Help Wanted General

Employment Opportunity
Civitas Media is looking for a Customer Service Specialist. This
is full time salary position, with Benefits include Health insurance,
401K, vacation, etc. If interested-send resume to Julia Schultz at
jschultz@civitasmedia.com.
Civitas Media LLC is a growing company offering excellent
compensation and opportunities for advancement to motivated
individuals.
Prior customer service experience preferred
Self-motivated and able to work independently
Excellent communication skills
Professional, articulate voice
Ability to multi-task in several computer applications while
holding a conversation with a customer
Type 30 words per minute
Enjoy working in a fast-paced environment while maintaining a
professional attitude
Answer customer inquiries and provide appropriate technical
and/or product related information
Contact customers to follow up on customer issues or order
information
Independently resolve customer support issues and escalate
when necessary
Document all contacts, actions, and responses in customer
database
Maintain working knowledge of products and services
Strong mathematical skills
Excellent written and verbal communication skills
Strong organizational, problem solving and analytical skills
Commitment to excellence and high standards with close
attention to detail
Ability to work independently and as a part of a team
Ability to work well under pressure and diffuse difficult situations
Ability to handle multiple projects
Civitas Media has publications in NC, SC, TN, KY, VA, WV, OH,
IL, MO, GA, OK, IN and PA.
EOE

Business Card Directory
(bulletin board size ad)
BUSINESS
Your Business
Goes Here
Example

Each publishing day &amp; weekend edition for 1 month!
Great for service providers in the Tri-State Area.

Point Pleasant Register
304-675-1333
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
740-446-2342
60558714

The Daily Sentinel
740-992-2155

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, January 13, 2015 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

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THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

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BABY BLUES

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PARDON MY PLANET
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CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
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RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Superintendent
resigns, all
charges dropped
STEUBENVILLE,
Ohio (AP) — A school
superintendent accused
of misleading authorities investigating the
rape of a girl by two
high school football
players resigned from
the district, prompting
prosecutors to drop the
charges.
Jury selection in the
trial of suspended Steubenville schools superintendent Mike McVey
was to begin Monday,
but the Ohio Attorney
General’s office agreed
to dismiss all pending
charges against him following his resignation.
McVey, who pleaded
not guilty to felony
charges of obstructing
justice and tampering
with evidence, had been
accused of destroying data related to the
school’s investigation of
the August 2012 rape
of the 16-year-old West
Virginia girl.
McVey wiped computer hard drives, erased
emails and lied to
investigators about his
knowledge of the allegations against the boys,
authorities said.
The charges stemmed
from an investigation of
McVey’s actions after
he learned of the allegations made by the girl
in 2012 against the two
members of the Steubenville High School
football team. The teens
eventually were found
guilty in juvenile court
and were sent to youth
detention centers and
classified as sex offenders. Both have since
been released.
The case drew national attention in part

because of the role of
texting and social media
in exposing the attack,
which led to allegations
that authorities were
covering up the actions
of football players.
McVey also was
accused of concealing knowledge about
rumors of sex and
drinking at a teen party
four months earlier.
McVey’s attorney
Charles Bean confirmed
the resignation and the
dropped charges.
Along with his resignation, McVey cannot
be employed by the
Steubenville school
district in the future
and can have no contact
with anyone involved
in the case and related
investigation, said Dan
Tierney, a spokesman
for the Ohio Attorney
General’s office.
Judge Patricia Cosgrove agreed to dismiss
the charges against
McVey, but will not formally do so until she’s
received confirmation
that the school district
has accepted the resignation, Tierney said.
A grand jury investigating whether other
laws were broken in
the case also brought
charges against five
other adults.
Charges against four
of the adults have been
resolved. William Rhinaman, the Steubenville
schools’ former technology director, has
pleaded not guilty to
charges including tampering with evidence
and obstructing justice.

Daily Sentinel

Stadium developers expect payback
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The
developers behind a sprawling
sports and housing complex in the
Los Angeles suburbs — whose
centerpiece stadium could become
home for an NFL team — expect
to recoup up to $100 million in
local tax dollars in the first five
years of operation, an Associated
Press review has found.
When the proposal was unveiled
last week, Christopher Meany,
a senior executive with the joint
venture designing and financing the project, emphasized that
“there will be no public dollars,
no taxpayer dollars, used for this
project.”
While the plan does not include
any upfront tax money to build
the 298-acre community of homes,
offices and entertainment venues,
a 187-page outline released by
developers includes provisions
for multimillion-dollar public paybacks to them over time from tax
dollars generated by the project,
which would cover costs ranging
from installing street lights and
fire hydrants to running shuttle
buses and providing police security on game days.
The documents submitted to
officials in Inglewood, where
the stadium would be built, say
that if annual tax revenue to the
city from the completed project
exceeds $25 million as expected,
the developers, including a company controlled by the owner of the
St. Louis Rams, would be entitled
to reimbursements for funds they
invested in streets, sewers, parks
and other projects deemed dedicated to the public.
Chicago-based sports finance
consultant Marc Ganis said claiming no tax money would be used
in the project is “hyper-spin” and
could damage the project’s credibility.
“It’s not an outright lie … but
there will be people who think
it is,” Ganis said. “They might
be prospective tax dollars, and it
might make sense for Inglewood
to contribute them to the project,
but they are tax dollars.”
Inglewood officials are reviewing the proposal, but Mayor James
Butts said the deal appears favorable because the city isn’t required

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“It’s not an outright lie … but there will be people who think
it is. They might be prospective tax dollars, and it might
make sense for Inglewood to contribute them to the project,
but they are tax dollars.”
— Marc Ganis
Chicago-based sports finance consultant

to invest hundreds of millions
of dollars into the development.
The city about 10 miles from
downtown Los Angeles could end
up with a steady source of tax
income and a vibrant entertainment mecca, he said.
“We get revenue that we didn’t
have to make a financial investment for. That is unheard of in a
project of this magnitude,” Butts
said.
The proposal envisions a
domed, 80,000-seat stadium rising on the site of a defunct horse
track and would also include a
6,000-seat performance venue and
parking. It’s the latest in a string
of stadium proposals in the Los
Angeles area since the Rams and
the Oakland Raiders abandoned
Southern California after the 1994
season.
According to the plan, developers could be reimbursed an
estimated $50 million to $60 million for building the structural
backbone of the site: sidewalks
and road work, landscaping, water
mains and utility lines. Meany
said in a statement that those
costs are expected to be paid back
within the first few years from tax
revenue generated by the project,
and they represent a fraction of
the overall investment.
Additionally, the records say
developers can be reimbursed by
the city for costs on event days for
police, emergency medical crews
and shuttle bus services from offsite parking. They estimate that
could tally $8 million annually, or
$40 million for a five-year period.
The records were submitted
to the city as part of developers’
plans to place a ballot question
before Inglewood voters later this
year, which must be approved
before stadium construction could
move forward. They first must
gather thousands of petition sig-

natures to qualify the question.
The alliance behind the plan,
the Hollywood Park Land Co.,
includes The Kroenke Group,
controlled by Rams owner Stan
Kroenke, and Stockbridge Capital
Group, which had been developing
a 238-acre tract of homes, parks
and office space at the former Hollywood Park track. Kroenke’s company owns an adjacent 60 acres,
which would be merged into the
overall development.
By the developers’ estimate, in
its first 25 years, the project will
produce more than $1 billion in
local taxes — on property, tickets,
parking, utilities and other sources. The first $25 million each year
would be guaranteed for Inglewood, and once developers are
reimbursed for eligible costs, any
surplus would stay with the city.
West Virginia University economist Brad Humphreys said that
the cost of infrastructure in stadium deals is typically absorbed
by government, even in developments described as privately
financed, as with the Washington
Redskins’ new stadium. He noted
that research has found taxpayers
often end up paying more than
forecast in sports stadium and
arena projects, once infrastructure
and other costs are considered.
Victor Matheson, a specialist
in sports economics who teaches
at the College of the Holy Cross
in Massachusetts, said the reimbursements for the Inglewood
project amounted to “essentially
giving tax breaks.”
“The project isn’t quite subsidyfree, but it is also a far cry from
the direct building subsidies that
averaged about two-thirds of
total stadium costs in the building boom” of the 1990s and early
2000s, he said.

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