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                  <text>Divestment
idea is a
disgrace

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29. Low 12.

Sharp
lifts
Blackhawks.

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 26, Volume 65

Tuesday, February 17, 2015 s 50¢

Rio awards chemistry scholarship
$1,000 renewable four-year
scholarship.
RIO GRANDE — Jackson
Rock Hill High School senior
High School senior Molly
Savannah Fields and Vinton
Markley has been awarded the County High School senior
Chemistry Academic ExcelAlex Dixon were awarded this
lence Scholarship from the Uniyear’s second and third place
versity of Rio Grande and Rio
scholarships, respectively.
Grande Community College.
“By studying chemistry,
The four-year, full-tuition
I
will
be able to deepen my
scholarship is awarded through
understanding
of our world,
Rio Grande’s annual Chemistry
and
work
toward
bettering our
Academic Excellence Award
future,”
Markley
wrote
in her
competition. Any student lookcompetition application. “It is
ing to major in chemistry is
eligible with first place being a my hope that, through chemistry, I will develop ways of lessfull scholarship, second place
ening our impacts on the natua $2,000 renewable four-year
ral world, making our earth a
scholarship and third place a

Staff report

cleaner, healthier place.”
The daughter of John and
Cheryl Markley, Molly has
been active in the Jackson High
School music program all four
years, a 13-year member of
Girl Scout troop 50515, active
participant in 4-H and volunteer worker at the Rio Valley
Stables.
Markley also was the 2014
Jackson County representative
at the Ohio State Fair, Jackson
High representative at the 2014
Ohio Governor’s Youth Art Show
and the former president and
current staffer for Southeastern
Ohio Model United Nations.

Markley said she was
attracted to Rio Grande due to
the reputation of its chemistry
program and small class sizes.
Rio currently boasts an 18 to
1 student-teacher ratio that
helps to foster its personalized,
learned-centered environment.
“Rio Grande provides an
excellent launching pad for
success, both personally and
professionally, as students gain
hands-on experience in the lab
and regular interaction with
faculty,” said Associate Chemistry Professor Dr. John Means.
“This year’s three Chemistry
Academic Excellence Award

winners are a unique class and
will be wonderful representatives for the chemistry program. I’m excited to work with
each of them throughout their
time at Rio Grande.”
For more information about
the Chemistry Academic
Excellence Award and future
competitions, visit rio.edu/
chemistryscholarship or contact Associate Professor Means
at jmeans@rio.edu.
For more information about
the University of Rio Grande
and Rio Grande Community
College visit rio.edu or call
1-800-282-7201.

Let it snow

ReUse plans
2nd competition
Staff report

OHIO VALLEY — Reuse Industries has
announced their second Appalachian Ohio ReUse
competition.
The event is open to youth and adult residents
of Appalachian Ohio, the competition offers a
showcase and more than $3,000 in cash prizes for
artistic and functional products made from re-used
materials.
“At ReUse, we know that the solutions to many
of the issues we face are hidden in the creativity of
the people in our community,” Chip Rice, ReUse
board president, said. “We think of this contest
not just as an opportunity to reward the skill to
rethink, reuse and upcycle materials. As we witnessed last year, this effort also brings our community together for the opportunity to learn from and
inspire one another.”
Reuse Executive Director Zachary Holl said the
group was overwhelmed by the response to the
competition last year.
“The wide range of innovation and creativity
was even more impressive than the large number
of entries we received,” he said.
More than 160 people and teams from 13 counties signed up for the 2014 competition and 90
entries were submitted.
The 2015 competition has several new categories.
“We learned how challenging an open-ended
approach can be from a judging standpoint,”
Lauren McCullough, a ReUse board member and
one of the judges last year, said. “How can you
compare a spot welder made from microwave oven
parts to a set of jewelry made from flatware to a
re-made piece of furniture?”
The new categories — clothing/fashion/jewelry,
home and garden, furniture and technology — will
allow entrants to pick the category they think is
the best fit and increase everyone’s chances of winning a prize. The 2015 competition also offers a
new young adult age category, in addition to youth
and adult categories.
Competition partners and supporters include
Ohio University’s Voinovich School of Leadership
and Public Affairs, the Sugar Bush Foundation,
Rural Action and the Appalachian Ohio Zero
Waste Initiative.
Those interested in entering the competition
must submit an “Intent to Enter” form by March
See REUSE | 5

Courtesy photos

‘ASS3MBLY’ performs on Chamber Series
By Lindsey Goodman

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5

For OVP News

— SPORTS
Basketball: 6
Schedule: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 3
Classified: 8
Comics: 9

The streets of
Pomeroy and
the rest of Ohio
Valley is hit with a
snowstorm.

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CONVERSATION
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GALLIPOLIS — The Ariel Theatre’s Chamber Series presents the dynamic new trio
ASS3MBLY in “Hot Off the Press” at 2 p.m.
Feb. 22.
Featuring a unique combination of flute,
percussion and piano, ASS3MBLY performs
an exciting program of six newly-written
works by living composers in this 90-minute
concert made possible by free-will offerings
in Gallipolis’ historic theatre space. “Hot Off
the Press,” the trio’s winter touring program,
features the world premiere performances of
Brooklyn-based composer Randall Woolf’s latest piece, “Between Me, Myself and the Lamp

Courtesy photo

ASS3MBLY is a dynamic new trio championing the chamber music of our
time for flute, piano, and percussion. Comprised of flutist Lindsey Goodman
See SERIES | 5 (right), percussionist Scott Christian and pianist Anne Waltner.

�LOCAL

2 Tuesday, February 17, 2015

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
PAMELA S. MILLER

POMEROY — Pamela
S. Miller, 60, of Pomeroy,
passed away Saturday,
Feb. 14, 2015, at The
Ohio State University
Medical Center in Columbus.
She was born Feb. 9,
1955, in Parkersburg,
W.Va., the daughter of
Shirley Blake Balser, of
Tuppers Plains, and the
late Lawrence Balser.
In addition to her
mother, Shirley Balser,
she is survived by a son
and daughter-in-law,
Jason and Brenda Miller;
a brother, Roger Balser;
four grandchildren,
Devin, Jole, Talvin and

Coltin; and several cousins.
She was preceded in
death by her father, Lawrence Balser.
Services will be held
at 1 p.m., Wednesday,
Feb. 18, 2015, at WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home,
Coolville, Ohio, with Pastor Michael Moore officiating. Burial will be in the
Heiney Cemetery.
Friends may call the
funeral home Wednesday
from 11 a.m. until time of
service.
You may sign the online
guestbook at www.whiteschwarzelfh.com.

DEATH NOTICES
BAKER
GUYSVILLE — Ralph H. Baker, 94, of Guysville, died
Sunday, Feb. 15, 2015, at Green Meadow Health &amp; Wellness Center in Lewisville, Ohio.
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 19,
2015, at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville,
Ohio, with the Rev. Edsel Hart officiating. Burial will be
in the Fairview Cemetery. Friends may call the funeral
home Thursday from 11 a.m. until time of service.
NIBERT
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Michael G. Nibert, 47, of Gallipolis, died Friday, Feb. 13, 2015, at Thomas Memorial
Hospital, South Charleston, W.Va.
There will be no services. Burial will be at the convenience of the family. Arrangements are under the direction of Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
STURGEON
ASHTON, W.Va. — Sammie C. Sturgeon, 77, of Ashton, died Thursday, Jan. 15, 2015, at St. Mary’s Hospital
in Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral services will be held Thursday, Feb. 19, 2015,
at 1 p.m., at Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
with the Rev. Mark Mayes officiating. Burial will follow
in the Moore’s Chapel Cemetery in Ashton, with full
Masonic graveside rites conducted by Masonic Lodge
19 AF&amp;AM. Friends may visit the family at the funeral
home from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. prior to the service.

TUESDAY, FEB. 17

POMEROY — American
Legion Post 39 will meet at 6:30
p.m. Dinner will be served.

WEDNESDAY, FEB. 18

food pantry. No equipment needed. For more information, contact
Paulette at 740-992-6097.

FRIDAY, FEB. 20

MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Presbyterian Church will
hold their Ash Wednesday service
at 7 p.m. All are welcome.
POMEROY — The Trinity
Congregational Church will hold
a Lenten breakfest and prayer
time in honor of Ash Wednesday
from 7:45 a.m. to 8:45 a.m. in
the church meeting hall on 2nd
Street. All are welcome to join.
Please call either Dianne Hawley,
992-2722, or Judy Sisson, 9922076, with number to attend.

POMEROY — The Sacred
Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy will hold their fish fry every
Friday from Feb. 20 to March 27
from noon to 7 p.m. Baked fish
and deluxe dinners are available
from 5-7 p.m. and carryout is
available. The event is sponsored
by the Knights of Columbus Monsignor Jessing Council 1664. Proceeds benefit local charities.
POMEROY — PHS class of ‘59
will be having their third Friday
lunch at Fox Pizza at noon Friday,
Feb. 20, weather permitting.

THURSDAY, FEB. 19

SATURDAY, FEB. 21

POMEROY — Mulberry Community Center will host Drums
Alive starting every Thursday
from 6:30-7:30 p.m at the community center. Admission will
be non-perishable food items. All
food items go to Meigs Co-op

SYRACUSE — Syracuse spring
sports sign-up will be Saturday,
Feb. 21 and Saturday, Feb. 28
from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the fire
station.
POMEROY — The Pomeroy
High School Class of 1956 will

meet for a luncheon at 1:00 p.m.
at the Wild Horse Café. Call 9922675 for information, if needed.
POMEROY — The Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the
DAR will hold their regular meeting at 1:00 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Public Library. Program will be by
Middleport Historian Mike Gerlach about the Middleport Slave
Trail. The Chapter will note it’s
107th anniversary.

SATURDAY, FEB. 28

POMEROY — The OH-KAN
Coin Club will have a coin
exhibition and picture exhibit
from Meigs and Mason counties
between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Library. Nothing for
sale, but there will be door prizes,
including silver dollars, every half
hour.
POMEROY — The New Beginnings United Methodist Church
will be holding their community
dinner. It is free for the public and
all are welcome.

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

‘Cutest Pets’ contest online
voting under way
OHIO VALLEY — The Daily Sentinel, in partnership
with Riverbend Animal Clinic, has launched its annual Cutest Pets contest and online voting is currently under way.
Visit www.mydailysentinel.com to register and vote. The
overall winner will receive $50 prize, along with a photo in
the newspaper and inclusion in a special section slated to
be distributed March 12. The second and third runners-up
will receive a photo in the newspaper and inclusion in the
special section. Winners will be announced March 6.

ber. The council will hold these meetings at the Meigs
County Department of Job and Family Services, located at
175 Race St., Middleport. For more information, contact
Brooke Pauley, coordinator at 740-992-2117, ext. 104.

Cancer screenings at Meigs
County Health Department

POMEROY — Breast and cervical cancer screenings
and education will he provided by the Ohio University
Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine’s Community
Health Programs on Feb. 25 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
clinic will be at the Ohio University Heritage College of
Osteopathic Medicine Community Health Programs’
Mobile Health Van parked at the Meigs County Health
Department, 112 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. Free Pap
tests, pelvic and breast examinations, breast health educaMIDDLEPORT — The Meigs County Family and
tion, and appointments for mammograms will be providChildren First Council will be holding regular business
ed to uninsured and under-insured women. Appointments
meetings at 9 a.m. on the third Thursday of the following
are required. Interested persons should call 1-800-844months: January, March, May, July, September and Novem- 2654 or 740-593-2432 to schedule an appointment.

Family and Children First
Council meetings announced

SURE program
continues this summer
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
— Marshall University
is accepting applications
for the 2015 Summer
Undergraduate Research
Experience (SURE) Fellowship. This program
has been conducted at
Marshall since 2005, and
is funded by the state of
West Virginia.
The SURE program
is designed specifically
to enable West Virginia
undergraduate students
with a history of research
to work at Marshall. Each
student will receive a stipend of $4,000.
SURE supports undergraduate researchers over
a 10-week period; this

year’s program runs from
May 18 through July 31.
The SURE program is
now accepting applications through 5 p.m. Feb.
27. Application forms are
available at the SURE
website: www.marshall.
edu/SURE.
Due to the intensity of
the program, applicants
may not enroll in other
courses or maintain other
weekday employment
during their 10-week
period of research. Students may contact the
SURE representatives
in their departments,
listed below, for more
information:Biology: Dr.
Jagan Valluri, Valluri@

marshall.edu
Biology: Dr. Marcia
Harrison, Harrison@marshall.edu
Chemistry: Dr. Michael
Norton, Norton@marshall.edu
IST: Dr. Elizabeth Murray, Murraye@marshall.
edu
Mathematics: Dr. Evelyn Pupplo-Cody, Pupploco@marshall.edu
Physics: Dr. Huong
Nguyen, Nguyenh@marshall.edu
Psychology: Dr. Steven
Mewaldt, Mewaldt@marshall.edu
For further information, e-mail Joshua Botkin, SURE assistant, at
botkin@marshall.edu, or
call him at 304-696-3488.
Or, visit: www.marshall.
edu/SURE.

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Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 17, 2015 3

Struggle to understand family slaying in small town
CORBIN, Ky. (AP) —
Friends and relatives of a
16-year-old boy killed in a
shootout with police in Maryland struggled to understand
how the faithful churchgoer
and high school ROTC student
could end up as the suspect in
the slaying of his parents and
younger sister in Kentucky.
Jason Hendrix was suspected
of killing his family executionstyle last week before fleeing
his small Southern town to the
East Coast, authorities said
Sunday.
Saturday's shootout led
police to search the teen's
home more than 500 miles
away in Corbin, Kentucky.
There, authorities found the
bodies of Kevin and Sarah Hendrix and their daughter, Grace,
about age 12, Corbin Police
Chief David Campbell said.
Police said they believe the
victims were gunned down

Wednesday afternoon, Campbell
said. Jason Hendrix then fled in
his parent's car, armed with four
weapons and a backpack full of
ammunition, Campbell added.
"Right now all the evidence
points toward him as being the
shooter," the chief said.
Police didn't know why the suspect decided to flee to the East
Coast. The family had no relatives
in Baltimore, Campbell said.
"We have no clue why he
went up there," the chief said.
Police also found a gas receipt
showing that the teen had been
in New Jersey on Thursday.
Baltimore County Police said
the teenager shot and wounded
a police officer Saturday after
crashing the parent's green
Honda Pilot into a silver sedan.
At least six officers opened
fire on Hendrix, who was
pronounced dead at the scene.
Maryland State Police said they
initially sought to pull Hendrix

over Saturday for a speeding
violation.
Campbell said the teenager
was angry at his parents for taking away his computer privileges
days before the slayings. "The
mother had talked to a co-worker
and told her that he was really
mad about that," the chief said.
The father, wearing a sport
coat and tie from work, was
shot twice in the head, Campbell said. He added that the
mother was shot twice in the
face and the girl twice in the
head and once in the arm.
Jason Hendrix met up with
friends at church that Wednesday evening and showed no
signs of distress. "They said
he was just like he usually is,"
Campbell said.
Family and friends in Corbin
sought Sunday to understand
the series of events, recalling a
teenager known for his politeness.

Kevin and Sarah Hendrix
were beekeepers who sold
honey in the local farmers market, and Grace Hendrix was
a middle school cheerleader.
A spokesman for Union College in Barbourville confirmed
Sarah Hendrix was a professor
at the school.
Drew Mahan, the founding
pastor of Forward Community
Church where the Hendrixes
attended, said officers questioned him extensively about
Jason on Saturday night after
discovering the bodies. He
described Jason Hendrix as a
faithful member of his 3-yearold church, which holds services at a local movie theater.
Hendrix would arrive at the
theater every Sunday at 7 a.m.
to help set up the church's
equipment and was baptized at
a service in December.
"People want to ask questions. Why? How? I simply

looked at folks today and said,
'I don't know," Mahan said
after finishing the Sunday
morning service. "The guy has
been here. He's been an influence on our students, he's been
an influence on my own kids.
They love him."
Michelle Payne, a 30-yearold mother who lived across
the street from the Hendrixes,
said they were "your classic
small town family," adding she
had not seen the family since
Tuesday night when Kevin was
walking the family's dog.
The police officer who was
shot was treated at the University of Maryland Shock Trauma
Center and released Sunday,
according to a statement.
Officials said the six Baltimore County Police officers
who fired their weapons during
Saturday's shootout will be
placed on administrative status
pending a review.

Alabama gay marriage fight echoes states’ rights battles
MONTGOMERY, Ala.
(AP) — Alabama Chief
Justice Roy Moore's
judicial building office
overlooks Montgomery's
Dexter Avenue, a historysoaked thoroughfare
topped by the Alabama
Capitol where Jefferson
Davis was inaugurated
president of the Confederacy and where the Rev.
Martin Luther King, Jr.
ended the 1965 march for
voting rights.
As gay and lesbian
couples left a nearby courthouse clutching marriage
licenses last week, Moore,
an outspoken critic of gay
marriage, was fighting to
stop the weddings using a
states' rights argument that
conjured up those historical ghosts of slavery, the
Civil War and the battle
against desegregation.
There has been resistance in other states to the
tide of rulings allowing gay
marriage. Some Florida
clerks' offices scrapped all
marriage ceremonies rather than perform same-sex
unions. In South Carolina
and Georgia, legislation
is being developed to let
individual employees opt
out of issuing marriage
licenses to gay couples out
of sincere religious belief.
No state, however, went
as far as Alabama, where
the 68-year-old Moore
instructed the state's probate judges not to issue
marriage licenses to gay
couples.
"It's my duty to speak up
when I see the jurisdiction
of our courts being intruded by unlawful federal
authority," Moore said.
Moore objected to a Jan.
23 ruling by U.S. District
Judge Callie Granade in
Mobile that Alabama's gay
marriage ban violates the
14th Amendment's guarantee of equal protection
and due process. After the
Supreme Court on Feb. 9
refused to stay the decision, Alabama became the
37th state — plus the District of Columbia — where

gays and lesbians can
legally wed.
In his dissent when
the U.S. Supreme Court
refused to block that order,
Justice Clarence Thomas
pointedly raised the states'
rights flag, complaining
that the court's decision
was made "without any
regard for the people who
approved these laws in
popular referendums or
elected the representatives
who voted for them."
The decision, he added,
"represents yet another
example of this court's
increasingly cavalier attitude toward the states."
Moore, who is head of
the Alabama court system,
threw the Granade ruling
into disarray when he urged
the probate judges in a
letter to stand against "judicial tyranny" and claims
Granade had no authority
to "redefine marriage."
Alabama probate judges
were not defendants in the
case, Moore argues, and
thus are not subject to a
direct court order. He also
said they are part of a parallel state court system that
doesn't have to submit to
Granade's views until the
U.S. Supreme Court says
otherwise.
"She has no control over
the state of Alabama to
force all probate judges
to do anything," Moore
said. "This is a case of dual
sovereignty of federal and
state authorities. The United States Supreme Court
is very clear in recognizing
that federal courts do not
bind state courts."
Although he bristles at
the link, Moore's action
drew inevitable parallels
with former Gov. George
Wallace's 1963 "stand in
the schoolhouse door"
aimed at preventing federal
court mandated desegregation at the University of
Alabama.
Wallace was attempting
to fight integration nine
years after education segregation was ruled illegal by
the U.S. Supreme Court.

Moore said such a final
decision hasn't happened
yet on the subject of gay
marriage.
"The rhetoric and
demagoguery of states'
rights and federal judges,
you can't help but make
that comparison," said
Doug Jones, a former U.S.
attorney who prosecuted
the two Ku Klux Klansmen
who bombed Birmingham's 16th Street Baptist
Church in 1963, killing
four black girls in a crime
that helped galvanize the
civil rights movement.
Many legal experts think
Moore and other states'
rights advocates are on
shaky ground. Ruthann
Robson, a law professor at
the City University of New
York, said Granade's decision should be considered
the law of the state unless
overruled by a higher court
or contradicted by a state
court.
"If what Moore says is
true, then no federal court
could ever hold a state law,
regulation or policy uncon-

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Marry Me (N) About a Boy
(N)
Marry Me (N) About a Boy
(N)
Marvel's Agent Carter
"Snafu" (N)
The Italian Americans "La
Famiglia (1890-1910)" (N)

Marvel's Agent Carter
"Snafu" (N)
NCIS: New Orleans "Le
Carnivale de la Mort" (N)
Masterchef "The Creme de New Girl
The Mindy
la Creme...Brulee" (N)
"Oregon" (N) Project (N)
Genealogy Roadshow
The Italian Americans "La
Famiglia (1890-1910)" (N)
"Philadelphia: Historial
Society of Pennyslvania" (N)
NCIS "Cabin Fever" (N)
NCIS: New Orleans "Le
Carnivale de la Mort" (N)

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Chicago Fire "Headlong
Toward Disaster" (N)
Chicago Fire "Headlong
Toward Disaster" (N)
Countdown to the Oscars
(N)
The Italian Americans
"Becoming Americans
(1910-1930)" (N)
Countdown to the Oscars
(N)
Person of Interest "Q&amp;A"
(N)
Eyewitness News at 10
The Italian Americans
"Becoming Americans
(1910-1930)" (N)
Person of Interest "Q&amp;A"
(N)

10 PM

10:30

Any Given Sunday (1999, Sport) Jamie Foxx, Cameron Diaz, Al Pacino. TVPG
Wrestling (N) Wrestling (N)
18 (WGN) Blue Bloods
Post-game Slap Shots
Cavaliers
24 (FXSP) Cavaliers (N) B.Jacket Pre NHL Hockey Columbus Blue Jackets at Philadelphia Flyers (L)
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
NCAA Basketball Kentucky vs. Tennessee (L)
NCAA Basketball Michigan State vs. Michigan (L)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption NCAA Basketball Baylor vs. Texas Tech (L)
NCAA Basketball Texas vs. Oklahoma (L)

42

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riage bans nationwide are
unconstitutional when the
justices issue their ruling
later this year. But Robson
pointed to a 1958 decision
involving a school desegregation fight in Little Rock,
Arkansas, that made it

TUESDAY EVENING

39

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MOTORCOACH TO AIRPORT, LUGGAGE HANDLING, ROUNDTRIP AIRFARE AND TAXES
OVERNIGHT SEATTLE, WA. DINNER AND TOUR 8 DAY TOUR CRUISE INSIDE PASSAGE INCLUDING
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stitutional. And the 14th
Amendment, then, would
be essentially meaningless,"
Robson said in an email.
It's unclear what
Moore's reaction would be
if the U.S. Supreme Court
determines that gay mar-

Dance Moms "Bye Bye
Dance Moms "Hello
DanceMom "Nia Risks It All Dance Moms "Wild Wild
Child Genius "You Need to
Pittsburgh"
Hollywood, Goodbye Abby" (Choreographer's Cut)" (N) West Coast" 1/2 (N)
Stop Lying to Yourself" (N)
Switched at Birth "Black
Pretty Little Liars "Out
Pretty Little Liars "Pretty
Switched at Birth "Fog and Pretty Little Liars "Pretty
and Gray"
Dammed Spot"
Isn't the Point" (N)
Storm and Rain" (N)
Isn't the Point"
Bar Rescue "Bad to the
Bar Rescue "Muscle
Bar Rescue "Barely Above Bar Rescue "Crayons and
Framework "Common
Bone"
Madness"
Water"
Anger Lines"
Sensibility"
(5:00) Splitting Adam
iCarly 1/2
iCarly 2/2
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
Law&amp;O: SVU "Hothouse"
Law&amp;O: SVU "Snatched"
The Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show "Closing Night" (L)
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Cougar T (N)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Special Report (N)
CNN Tonight
Rizzoli "Phoenix Rising"
Rizzoli &amp; Isles
Rizzoli "Burden of Proof"
Rizzoli &amp; Isles (N)
Perception "Brainstorm" (N)
(5:00) Air Force One The president fends off deadly
Casino Royale (2006, Action) Judi Dench, Eva Green, Daniel Craig. On his first
terrorists who are holding his plane and family hostage.
mission with 00 status, James Bond must stop terrorist banker Le Chiffre. TV14
Amish "Shepherds' End"
Amish Mafia "End of Days" Amish "The Return" (N)
Amish Mafia (N)
Swords "The Destroyer" (N)
Shipping
Shipping
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Shipping
Shipping
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars (N)
Wars (N)
Wars (N)
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
Maid in Manhattan A senatorial candidate falls for a Street Art Throwdown
Street Art Throwdown
Street Art Throwdown
"#ThisTruck"
hotel maid who is posing as a Manhattan socialite. TV14 "Going All City"
"#ThisTruck" (N)
Law &amp; Order "Competence" Law &amp; Order "Precious"
Law &amp; Order "Virtue"
Law &amp; Order "Scoundrels" LawOrder "House Counsel"
Fashion Police
E! News
Chrisley
Chrisley
Chrisley
Chrisley
Chrisley
Chrisley
Walker, Texas Ranger
Walker, Texas Ranger
Family Feud Family Feud Loves Ray
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King-Queens King-Queens
Mick Dodge Legend of
Filthy Riches "Go Big or Go Building Wild "No Job Too Legend of
Legend of
Mick Dodge Legend of
"Dogcatcher" Mick Dodge Home"
Tough" (N)
Mick (N)
Mick Dodge (N)
Mick Dodge
(5:30) FB Talk NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Buffalo Sabres at New Jersey Devils (L)
Overtime
(:45) Hockey
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
NCAA Basketball St. John's vs. Georgetown (L)
NCAA Basketball Oklahoma vs. Iowa State Women's (L)
Vikings "Answers in Blood" Vikings "Unforgiven"
Vikings "Blood Eagle"
Vikings "Boneless"
Vikings "The Choice"

68 (BRAVO) Beverly "It's Just a Scratch" Beverly "Drama Queens"
Beverly Hills "Sister Act"
72 (BET) (5:30) Negroes The Book of Negroes Pt. 2 of 6
BookNegroes Pt. 3 of 6 (N)
73 (HGTV) Bargain Hunt Bargain Hunt Bargain Hunt Bargain Hunt Fixer Upper
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

Face Off "Monkey
Business"

6 PM

6:30

Face Off "Royal Flush"

7 PM

7:30

Face Off "Sounding Off"

8 PM

8:30

Beverly Hills "Surprise!" (N)
BookNegroes Pt. 4 of 6 (N)
Fixer Upper (N)
Face Off "Troll Bridge" (N)

9 PM

9:30

Girlfriends' Guide (N)
Being Mary Jane (N)
H.Hunt (N)
House (N)
Troy: Street Magic (N)

10 PM

10:30

Real Time With Bill Maher Rosie O'Donnell Rosie
Together12 Years a Slave (‘13, Dra) Dwight Henry, Dickie (:45) Girls
400 (HBO)
returns with an intimate and ness "Kick
Gravois, Chiwetel Ejiofor. In pre-Civil War United States, a "Sit-In"
honest take on life.
free black man is sold into slavery and fights to live. TVMA
the Can"
(:15)
Rush Hour (‘98, Act) Chris Tucker, Jackie
Grudge Match (2013, Action) Robert De Niro, Kevin Hart,
Red 2 (‘13, Act)
450 (MAX) Chan. A Hong Kong police inspector is paired with an L.A. Sylvester Stallone. Two old rivals are tempted back to the Helen Mirren, Bruce Willis.
detective to investigate a kidnapping. TV14
boxing ring to settle an old grudge. TV14
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Episodes
(5:00) The Fifth Estate (‘13, (:15)
Last Vegas (2013, Comedy) Michael Douglas,
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Morgan Freeman, Robert De Niro. A group of old friends
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throw a bachelor party for their last single friend. TVPG

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Pres. can’t
stop history’s
Crusades
Godwin’s law: “As an online discussion grows
longer, the probability of a comparison involving
Nazis or Hitler approaches one.”
This bizarre and reliable form of conversational degeneration has a close cousin when the
topic involves Christianity. As we observe it, the
phenomenon goes like this: “As a discussion of
religion grows longer, the probability of someone
invoking the Crusades or Inquisition approaches
one.”
If someone speaks on social media of nuns feeding orphans, or of Baptist missionaries staffing an
AIDS hospice, count on opponents of Christianity
to chime in with reminders of atrocities committed in the name of Christ 10 centuries ago.
Complain on Facebook about the religious component of the latest beheading or the attacks of
Sept. 11 — or anything committed in recent days
by a radical faction of Islam — and a lecture about
the Crusades and Inquisition will follow. These
crimes from the Middle Ages are contextualized
to establish a slight vibe of moral equivalence
between today’s Christian community and the
most fanatical factions of Islam that torture the
world at this moment.
One might think these arguments come from
grown men who live with their parents and blog
from the basement to begrudge the family’s religion. Not so fast. None less than the president of
the United States — a Harvard man — conflated
medieval church atrocities with modern Islamicbased evil. Here’s what he said while speaking
about ISIS at the National Prayer Breakfast in
Washington, D.C.:
“Lest we get on our high horse and think this is
unique to some other place, remember that during
the Crusades and the Inquisition, people committed terrible deeds in the name of Christ. In our
home country, slavery and Jim Crow all too often
was justified in the name of Christ.”
Fair enough. Christians — with sanction of the
Roman Catholic bureaucracy — committed organized acts of torture and murder in the name of
God. But society long ago moved on. No one lives
in mortal fear of 21st century Baptists, Lutherans,
Catholics or Quakers slicing throats for all to see
on YouTube.
Religious communities are composed of imperfect humans. As such, we can mine history and
find extraordinary acts of good and evil done in
the name of Christianity, Islam, Judaism or any
other religion. Yes, some people exploited Christianity as rationale for oppression of blacks. But far
more Christians, in the name of God, played an
essential role in stopping slavery and other forms
of oppression in Europe and the United States.
More importantly, President Barack Obama isn’t
living in 11th-century Jerusalem, 12th-century
France or the 19th-century Confederacy. He is the
highest ranking government executive for a country radical Muslims would like to destroy. The
president governs territory viewed by much of
the world as a defender of freedom and peace. He
bears responsibility for Americans and allies —
stateside and abroad — who are seen as infidels
by murderous Islamic extremists.
Christian crusaders and inquisitors died centuries ago and threaten no one. President Obama
should leave them in the past. He should focus his
energy and words on minority factions of Islam
that are alive, well and anxious to kill the people
who elected him to lead.
Reprinted from the Colorado Springs Gazette.

The Daily Sentinel
Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor
should be limited to 300
words. All letters are subject
to editing, must be signed and
include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be
in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities.
“Thank You” letters will not be
accepted for publication.

THEIR VIEW

College’s divestment idea is a disgrace

Most maps show that
their critical distance from
California is part of the
and lack of sympathy with
United States. That would
these United States, they are
make, by a fairly airtight
particularly callow represenchain of reasoning, the
tatives of a left that is most
University of California
comfortable when afflicting
also part of the United
its own country.
Rich
States.
The UC resolution cites
Although not if its StuU.S. drone strikes, the prison
Lowry
dent Association has anyKing Features system and deportations of
columnist
thing to say about it. Not
illegal aliens. Reasonable
satisfied merely to urge
people can disagree about
divestment from Israel, as
policy in all these areas
is the trend on campuses around
without endorsing a symbolic
the country, the Student Assosecession from the United States.
ciation board has voted to divest
(Somewhere old Jeff Davis is smilfrom the United States itself, in
ing that self-styled progressive
an act that is a mashup of Noam
students caught up to his wisdom
Chomsky and a Monty Python
150 years later.)
skit.
The UC students lump in the
The “Resolution Toward Socially U.S. with other divestment-worthy
Responsible Investment” recalls
governments like Sri Lanka and
the notorious motion that carried
Russia. “The only way to achieve
the day at the Oxford Union in
financial neutrality in such situa1933, “that this House will in no
tions,” they judiciously conclude,
circumstances fight for its King
“is to end our investment in and
and Country.”
implicit support for such governBack then, the forces of social
ments through divestment.” Take
responsibility rallied behind the
that, United States.
Oxford motion. One proponent
What the UC students lack in
argued that “the only country
thoughtfulness, they make up in
fighting for the cause of peace,
presumptuous brattiness. Through
Soviet Russia, is the country that
no fault of their own, they were
has rid itself of the war-mongering born in a country that respects
clique.” Another explained that
individual rights, enjoys untold
“this House will never commit
material abundance and invests
murder on a huge scale whenmassively in the education of its
ever the Government decided it
young people — even though the
should do so.” These sentiments,
UC resolution suggests some of
of course, didn’t fare well over the
them are, in fact, uneducable.
course of the 1930s.
Rather than thundering on
The heirs of the Oxford scourges about what the university should
of “King and Country” live on
do with its investments, it is
in the student representatives of
directly within the power of stuthe University of California. In
dents who agree with the UC reso-

lution to forgo all federal student
aid, as a step toward severing their
own connection to the country
they find so monstrous. But moral
rectitude is always much easier on
someone else’s dime.
If the University of California
were to establish its own, independent republic, at least it would
open up another cushy ambassadorial spot to be sold to the highest
Obama donor. But how would it
defend itself from aggressive acts
by a United States that might want
to reclaim its sovereign territory?
Soon enough, splinter groups of
UC students would surely be protesting the unacceptable measures
undertaken by the Free Republic
of UC to protect its own territorial
integrity.
The main event at UC was
the Israel divestment resolution
(technically from companies doing
business in Israel), which is part of
the ongoing effort to delegitimize
the Jewish state for the offense
of being a pro-Western country
struggling to survive in a Middle
Eastern pit of vipers. It is always
curious that the world’s lone Jewish state is singled out for obloquy
on campuses. At least the additional UC resolution including the
United States provides some cover
in the form of non-Jewish states.
Regardless, the UC action raises
the question, as writer William
Jacobson asked, “Can the United
States divest from the University
of California?”
It might be the only socially
responsible thing to do.
Rich Lowry can be reached via e-mail:
comments.lowry@nationalreview.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Shrove Tuesday, Feb. 17, the 48th day
of 2015. There are 317
days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Feb. 17, 1865, during the Civil War, Columbia, S.C., burned as the
Confederates evacuated
and Union forces moved
in. (It’s not clear which
side was responsible
for setting the blaze,
or whether it had been
deliberate.)
On this date:
In 1815, the United
States and Britain
exchanged the instruments of ratification for
the Treaty of Ghent, ending the War of 1812.
In 1863, the International Red Cross was
founded in Geneva.
In 1904, the original

two-act version of Giacomo Puccini’s opera “Madama Butterfly” received
a poor reception at its
premiere at La Scala in
Milan, Italy.
In 1913, the Armory
Show, a landmark modern art exhibit, opened in
New York City.
In 1925, the first issue
of The New Yorker magazine (bearing the cover
date of Feb. 21) was published.
In 1933, Newsweek
magazine was first published under the title
“News-Week.”
In 1944, during World
War II, U.S. forces invaded
Eniwetok Atoll, encountering little initial resistance from Imperial Japanese troops. (The Americans secured the atoll less
than a week later.)

Today’s Birthdays:
Actor Hal Holbrook is
90. Mystery writer Ruth
Rendell is 85. Singer
Bobby Lewis is 82.
Actor-comedian Barry
Humphries (aka “Dame
Edna”) is 81. Country
singer-songwriter Johnny
Bush is 80. Actress
Christina Pickles is 80.
Football Hall-of-Famer
Jim Brown is 79. Actress
Brenda Fricker is 70.
Actress Rene Russo
is 61. Actor Richard
Karn is 59. Actor Lou
Diamond Phillips is 53.
Basketball Hall of Famer
Michael Jordan is 52.
Actor-comedian Larry,
the Cable Guy is 52. TV
personality Rene Syler
is 52. Movie director
Michael Bay is 51. Singer
Chante Moore is 48.
Rock musician Timothy

J. Mahoney (311) is 45.
Actor Dominic Purcell is
45. Olympic gold and silver medal skier Tommy
Moe is 45. Actress
Denise Richards is 44.
Rock singer-musician Billie Joe Armstrong (Green
Day) is 43. Actor Jerry
O’Connell is 41. Country
singer Bryan White is 41.
Actress Kelly Carlson is
39. Actor Ashton Holmes
is 37. Actor Jason Ritter is 35. TV personality
Paris Hilton is 34. Actor
Joseph Gordon-Levitt
is 34. TV host Daphne
Oz (TV: “The Chew”) is
29. Actor Chord Overstreet (TV: “Glee”) is 26.
Singer-songwriter Ed
Sheeran is 24. Actress
Meaghan Martin is 23.
Actress Sasha Pieterse
(TV: “Pretty Little
Liars”) is 19.

�LOCAL/INTERNATIONAL

Daily Sentinel

Egypt strikes IS group
after video of mass killing

NELSONVILLE —
Stuart’s Opera House
in Nelsonville welcomes nationally recognized Elvis tribute artist Dwight Icenhower
at 8 p.m. Feb. 20 and
tickets are on sale now.
Icenhower was raised
in Pomeroy and began
his Elvis career by
singing karaoke at a
local fair when he was
just 16 years old. Now,
he is one of the very
few Elvis tribute artists
that have made a fulltime career of keeping
the legend alive.
Dwight performs
four to five shows
weekly and he keeps

Egyptian Presidency | AP

In this image released by the Egyptian Presidency, Pope Tawadros II,
left, and President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, right, walk together at St.
Mark’s Cathedral in Cairo, Egypt, on Monday, a day after militants
affiliated with the Islamic State group released a video showing
the beheading of Egyptian Coptic Christians held in Libya. Egyptian
warplanes struck Islamic State targets in Libya on Monday in swift
retribution for the release by the extremist group of the grisly video.

just a month before Egypt
is scheduled to host a
major donor's conference
at a Sinai resort to attract
foreign investment needed to revive the economy
after more than four years
of turmoil following its
own 2011 uprising.
Libya's air force commander, Saqr al-Joroushi,
told Egyptian state TV
that the airstrikes were
coordinated with the
Libyan side and that they
killed about 50 militants.
Separately, a Libyan
security official told The

ReUse
From Page 1

14, with submissions due between
March 31 and April 5 at ReUse Industries in Athens. The competition will

From Page 1

Post,” as well as signature
ASS3MBLY commissions
by American composers
Ty Alan Emerson, Erich
Stem and John Allemeier.
Rounding out the versatile program are two duos
by Pulitzer Prize-winner
Kevin Puts and Gareth
Farr.
ASS3MBLY is a dynamic new trio championing
the chamber music of our
time for flute, piano, and
percussion. Comprised of
flutist Lindsey Goodman
(solo flutist, Pittsburgh
New Music Ensemble),
percussionist Scott Christian (principal timpanist,
West Virginia Symphony
Orchestra), and pianist
Anne Waltner (assistant professor, Eastern
Mennonite University),
ASS3MBLY has been presented by the Charleston
Chamber Music Society
(West Virginia), Fresh
Ink Music Series (North
Carolina), Marietta College’s Esbenshade Series
(Ohio), West Liberty
University’s Concert Artist Series (West Virginia),
Marshall University’s
Festival of New Music,
Eastern Mennonite
University’s Faculty Artist Performance Series
(Virginia), West Virginia
State University, and the
Kanawha Forum and
Kanawha Forum 2.0.
Promoting both fresh
and iconic works by
master composers like
Morton Feldman through
exemplary live performances, ASS3MBLY is
equally passionate about

Associated Press by
telephone that Egyptian
warplanes struck four IS
positions in the eastern
city of Darna, an extremist stronghold that was
taken over by an Islamic
State affiliate last year.
Two Libyan security
officials said civilians,
including three children
and two women, were
killed in the strikes.
The officials spoke on
condition of anonymity
because they were not
authorized to speak to
the media.

the audiences asking
for more. Born four
years after the King
passed away, he has
studied every move
that Elvis made and
has mastered the
1950s, 60s and 70s
eras of Elvis’ career.
Icenhower packs the
opera house and is a
crowd favorite.
Icenhower has performed all over the
United States and is
soon planning to perform across the world.
He’s had the opportunity to share the stage
with some personal
friends of Elvis, including DJ Fontana, The

Jordanaires, The Sweet
Inspirations, Cynthia
Pepper, Julie Parrish,
Charlie Hodge and Joe
Esposito.
Icenhower has sometimes even been mistaken for Elvis himself.
He continues to awe
audiences of all ages
and his fans enjoy him
both on and off stage.
Floor seats are $25 in
advance or $30 at the
door, balcony seats are
$20 in advance or $25
at the door, box seats
are sold out.
For more information, call (740) 7531924 or visit www.stuartsoperahouse.org.

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 57.83
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.20
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 127.58
Big Lots (NYSE) — 47.02
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 56.41
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 60.17
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 23.10
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.320
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 46.14
Collins (NYSE) —88.81
DuPont (NYSE) — 76.18
US Bank (NYSE) — 45.07
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 25.15
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 63.90
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 59.67
Kroger (NYSE) — 72.86
Ltd Brands (NYSE) —94.51
Norfolk So (NYSE) —109.91
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 24.00

BBT (NYSE) —38.28
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.81
Pepsico (NYSE) — 99.13
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.19
Rockwell (NYSE) — 117.90
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 18.43
Royal Dutch Shell — 66.32
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 35.70
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 85.81
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 10.95
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.14
Worthington (NYSE) — 31.13
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Feb. 13, 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.

conclude with an awards ceremony
and exhibition on Earth Day (April 22)
co-hosted by Ohio University’s Office
of Sustainability. The intent to enter
form, more details, and last year’s prizewinning entries can be found at www.
reuseindustries.org.

For the best local weather coverage, visit www.mydailysentinel.com
creating new music, with
three world premiere
commissions under their
belts, and will make a
spring tour to South
Dakota in May to perform
on the Studio Subscription Series.
In addition to concertizing activities,
ASS3MBLY has recently
recorded John Allemeier’s
Bolamkin and will record
Pulitzer Prize-winner
Joseph Schwantner’s
“Taking Charge” this

spring, both for an
upcoming CD release,
and gives panel presentations on chamber music,
commissioning, and
entrepreneurship while
engaging in educational
outreach for high school
and collegiate music students.
To learn more about
this group and performance, please contact
Lindsey Goodman at
614-439-1173 or email
LJGflute@gmail.com.

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28TH
AT 11:59 P.M.

60562730

Series

Pomeroy native will bring
‘Elvis’ to Nelsonville

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Janice Williams, DVM t Bill Harnetty DVM
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CAIRO (AP) — Egyptian warplanes struck
Islamic State targets
in Libya on Monday in
swift retribution for the
extremists' beheading
of a group of Egyptian
Christian hostages on a
beach, shown in a grisly
online video released
hours earlier.
An armed forces
spokesman announced
the strikes on state
radio, marking the first
time Cairo has publicly
acknowledged taking
military action in neighboring Libya, where
extremist groups seen
as a threat to both countries have exploited the
chaos following the 2011
uprising against dictator
Moammar Gadhafi.
The statement said the
warplanes targeted weapons caches and training
camps before returning
safely. It said the "intense
strikes" were "to avenge
the bloodshed and to seek
retribution from the killers."
"Let those far and near
know that Egyptians have
a shield to protect and
safeguard the security of
the country and a sword
that amputates terrorism
and extremism," it said.
Egypt is already battling a burgeoning
Islamist insurgency
centered in the strategic
Sinai Peninsula, where
militants have recently
declared their allegiance
to the Islamic State and
rely heavily on arms
smuggled across the
porous desert border
between Egypt and Libya.
The strikes also come

Tuesday, February 17, 2015 5

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 17, 2015 s Page 6

Former NHL Gordon wins pole for final Daytona 500
defenseman
Montador dies
By Jenna Fryer

AP Auto Racing Writer

By Jay Cohen

a respected opponent. We
extend our deepest sympathies to Steve’s family and
CHICAGO — Former
friends.”
NHL defenseman Steve
Montador had five
Montador was rememgoals and nine assists in
bered Sunday for being
52 games with Chicago in
a solid teammate and for
his last NHL season. He
his work with the players’ suffered a concussion in
union.
February 2012 and played
Montador was found
in just one game the rest
unconscious in his home
of the year.
in Mississauga, Ontario,
“He was a leader in the
early Sunday morning
locker room,” Blackhawks
and was later pronounced forward Patrick Sharp said
dead, according to the
after Sunday’s 2-1 shootPeel Region Police. No
out win over Pittsburgh.
foul play was suspected.
“He did a lot for the
“Steve was a great perunion on our team, and
son who quickly became
then league-wide. He was
a friend of everyone he
friendly with everybody
came to know in the game; and a great teammate.
teammates, NHL club
It’s really disappointing
staff, the media and fans,” to hear the news before
Donald Fehr, the executhe game. We’re going to
tive director of the NHL
support each other, supPlayers’ Association, said
port his family and all of
in a statement.
his close friends, and get
“Over the course of his
through it.”
career, he was an active
Some players praised
member of the NHLPA
Montador on Twitter for
and someone who I and
being a mentor at the start
our entire staff enjoyed
of their careers.
working closely with.
“So sad to hear the passHe dedicated a lot of his
ing of my former teamtime to advancing the
mate Steve Montador,”
interests of his fellow
former Sabres teammate
players. On behalf of the
Luke Adam wrote. “I will
players and staff, we send
always remember how
our thoughts and prayers
good you were to me as a
to Steve’s family and his
rookie, Monty.”
many friends. He will be
The Sabres and
greatly missed.”
Blackhawks
also expressed
Montador made his
their
condolences
in teamNHL debut in 2001 with
issued
statements,
professCalgary and played for
ing
a
deep
sadness
over
six teams in parts of 10
Montador’s
death.
seasons. The Vancouver,
“Steve was a passionate
British Columbia, native
hockey
player, a valued
had 33 goals and 98 assists
member
of the Sabres famin 571 career games.
ily
and
a
highly respected
“The NHL family
individual off the ice. Our
was saddened to learn
thoughts and condolences
of the passing of Steve
Montador,” Commissioner are with Steve’s family and
friends during this difficult
Gary Bettman said in a
statement. “Steve’s career time,” Buffalo said in its
release.
was defined by a passion
for the game and a deterJay Cohen can be reached
mination that made him a at http://www.twitter.com/
great teammate as well as jcohenap

AP Sports Writer

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Jeff
Gordon and Jimmie Johnson outsmarted the field Sunday to sweep
the front row for the Daytona 500,
with Gordon earning the pole in
what will be his final start in “The
Great American Race.”
Gordon announced last month
this will be his final full-time season as driver of the famed No. 24
Chevrolet, and he’s been adamant
next Sunday’s season-opening
Daytona 500 will be the last of
his storied career. The four-time
NASCAR champion is a three-time
500 winner.
“That feels good. That’s awesome,” Gordon said.
Gordon and Hendrick
Motorsports teammate Johnson
locked down the front row in
Sunday’s qualifying session, which
was done in knockout rounds for
the first time in 57 years.
The qualifying was blasted by
most of the drivers.
Clint Bowyer called it a “cute
show” after he wrecked in the first
round. Reigning champion Kevin

Tuesday, Feb. 17
Boys Basketball
South Gallia at Wahama, 7:30
Point Pleasant at Shady Spring, 7:30
Hannan at Rose Hill Christian, 7:30
Ohio Valley Christian at Wayne, 7:30
Southern at Miller, 7:30
River Valley at Athens, 7:30
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Point Pleasant at Riverside, 7:30
Hannan at Rose Hill Christian, 6 p.m.
Men’s college basketball
Indiana University-Kokomo at Rio Grande, 7:30
Women’s college basketball
Indiana University-Kokomo at Rio Grande, 5:30
College baseball
Rio Grande at WVU Tech, 1 p.m.
Wednesday Feb. 18
Boys Basketball
South Gallia at Southern, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Gallia Academy vs. Sheridan at Logan, 8 p.m.
Meigs vs. Wellston at Athens, 6:15
Eastern vs. Green at Meigs, 8 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 19
Boys Basketball
Point Pleasant at Winfield, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Southern vs. Pike Eastern at Meigs, 8 p.m.
Wahama at Point Pleasant, 7:30
Friday, Feb. 20
Boys Basketball
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 7:30
Meigs at River Valley, 7:30
Trimble at South Gallia, 7:30
Sherman at Hannan, 7:30
Wahama at Waterford, 7:30
Eastern at Southern, 7:30

Bowyer, who angrily gestured
inside Sorenson’s window after the
wreck, was seething. He placed
the blame squarely on NASCAR
for scrapping single-car qualifying
runs in favor of the more exciting
knockout rounds.
“It’s NASCAR’s fault for putting
us out in the middle of this crap
for nothing,” Bowyer fumed. “We
used to come down here and worry
about who would sit on the front
row in the biggest race of the year.
Now all we do is come down here
and worry about how a start-andpark like this out of desperation
is going to knock us out of the
Daytona 500.
“We’ve been in meetings for 45
minutes just trying to figure out
what in the hell everybody is going
to do just so we can make the race.
It’s stupid.”
The knockout rounds whittled it
down to one final 12-car session in
which the drivers had five minutes
to make a qualifying run.
Only all 12 idled on pit road, as
none of them wanted to be first out
on the track.

See GORDON | 10

Paul Beaty | AP

Chicago Blackhawks' Marcus Kruger (16), of Sweden, battles Pittsburgh Penguins' Patric Hornqvist (72), also of Sweden, for the puck
during the second period of an NHL hockey game in Chicago on Sunday. Chicago won 2-1 in a shootout.

Sharp lifts Blackhawks to 2-1 win
By Jay Cohen

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

Harvick grumbled Daytona’s tradition had been ruined, while threetime champion Tony Stewart called
it “a complete embarrassment for
our series.”
The group qualifying was messy
from the very start, when the first
25 drivers all jockeyed for position before they even left pit road.
Some even drove through the grass
to get through the traffic jam.
It stuck Bowyer behind Reed
Sorenson, a driver who needed a
big run Sunday to lock himself into
the field.
So Sorenson tried to block
Bowyer in a desperation attempt
to advance through the knockout
rounds and it triggered a five-car
pileup. Both Bowyer and Sorenson
ended up with a pair of wrecked
Toyotas. It was Sorenson’s only car
of Speedweeks, and he wasn’t sure
if he’d be able to locate another car
before Thursday’s qualifying races.
“I didn’t mean to wreck anybody
or anything like that,” Sorenson
said. “Just a product of this qualifying, trying to get that one lap.
I didn’t want it to end that way,
that’s for sure.”

AP Sports Writer

CHICAGO — Jonathan
Toews and Patrick Kane
kicked it off for Chicago,
and Patrick Sharp finished the job. The starstudded shootout turned
into quite a show for the
Blackhawks.
Sharp scored the decisive goal in the tiebreaker,
lifting the Blackhawks to
a 2-1 victory over Sidney
Crosby and the Pittsburgh
Penguins on Sunday.
Toews and Kane also
converted their shootout
attempts, helping the
Blackhawks improve to
7-2 when the game is tied
after overtime. Chicago
went 6-8 in shootout
games last season.
“I mean Jonny and
Kaner, that’s a 1-2 punch
that’s as good as any team
in the league, and then
Sharpy ends up finishing
it,” Blackhawks coach Joel
Quenneville said. “So it
was necessary today, and
it’s been effective for us
this year.”
Nick Spaling scored
in the third period for
Pittsburgh, which had
won four of five. MarcAndre Fleury made 31
saves through overtime,
but was unable to stop
any of Chicago’s shootout
attempts.
Thanks to David Perron
and Crosby, the Penguins
still had a chance for a

big road win before Sharp
skated in and beat Fleury
into the right side for the
victory. Fleury slammed
his stick into the post in
disgust after the final play.
“It’s almost unfortunate
that it wasn’t a playoff
game where I guess you
could see a real winner
and win,” Perron said.
“They got the two points
today, but I thought we
were satisfied with how
we played the whole 65
minutes.”
Niklas Hjalmarsson
scored in the second
period for Chicago, which
also posted a shootout win
at Pittsburgh on Jan. 21
in their only other scheduled meeting this season.
Corey Crawford finished
with 36 stops.
The Blackhawks have
captured six of a possible
eight points through the
first half of a season-high
eight-game homestand.
“We can’t be giving up
any points,” Crawford
said. “Teams below us in
our division are starting
to play really good hockey.
Especially at home, we’ve
got to get as many as we
can.”
Chicago jumped in front
when Hjalmarsson beat
Fleury with a long slap
shot early in the second.
Following a faceoff in the
Pittsburgh zone, Brandon
Saad played the puck
back to Hjalmarsson to

set up the second goal of
the season for the steady
defenseman.
The Penguins responded in the third period.
Beau Bennett got free for
a shot that was stopped
by Crawford, but Spaling
sent the rebound into the
upper left corner for his
ninth of the season.
Perron was stopped
by Crawford on a prime
opportunity midway
through overtime, and
Fleury made a nice save
on Marian Hossa to help
the send the game to the
shootout.
“That’s two games we’ve
played against this team
and we’ve played well
defensively,” Pittsburgh
coach Mike Johnston
said. “We had our scoring
chances and we didn’t convert. I thought our power
play looked good, too.”
Crosby was shut out
after he had two goals
in Thursday night’s
5-4 shootout victory at
Ottawa. The captain also
was a part of a strange
sequence at the end of the
second period.
Crosby was sent off
for tripping Blackhawks
defenseman Johnny
Oduya, drawing loud
cheers from the crowd
of 22,169. But replays
showed Oduya went
down on his own and the
officials conferred before
rescinding the penalty,

allowing Crosby to leave
the box.
The All-Star center
was whistled for tripping
Toews in the third, leading to more cheers from
the sellout crowd. But the
Penguins killed off the
ensuing power play.
Notes
Penguins D Christian
Ehrhoff (concussion
protocol) skated Sunday
morning. He was injured
Jan. 28 at Washington and
has missed the last eight
games. ... Blackhawks F
Ben Smith returned to
the lineup after he was a
healthy scratch for Friday
night’s win over New
Jersey for the first time this
season. D Michal Rozsival
also played after missing the game against the
Devils with an upper body
injury. ... Bennett finished
with a game-high nine
shots. ... Canadiens general
manager Marc Bergevin
attended the game. ...
Former Blackhawks defenseman Steve Montador
was found unconscious
in his home early Sunday
morning and was later
pronounced dead, according to police in Canada.
Montador, 35, made his
NHL debut in 2001 with
Calgary and played for
six teams in parts of 10
seasons.
Jay Cohen can be reached at http://
www.twitter.com/jcohenap

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, February 17, 2015 7

NBA to air interview with injured Bryant
Associated Press

NEW YORK — There has been
one notable absence during AllStar weekend.
Kobe Bryant was voted into his
17th All-Star game as a starter, but
the Lakers star stayed away from
New York while he recovers from
season-ending surgery to repair a
torn rotator cuff in his right shoulder. A torn Achilles tendon kept
Bryant out of last year’s All-Star
game.
Just because Bryant didn’t come
to New York doesn’t mean he didn’t
want to be in the Big Apple. His
first All-Star appearance was at
Madison Square Garden in 1998,
a celebrated event between Bryant
and Michael Jordan, who won
MVP honors.
NBA TV is airing an interview
between Bryant and Ahmad
Rashad on Monday titled, “Kobe:
The Interview.” In the hour-long
special, Bryant discusses his rehabilitation, career highlights and
what motivates him to continue.
“I can’t say it is the end,” Bryant
tells Rashad. “I thought the Spurs
were done 20 years ago. Those
guys are still winning. So, to
answer the question, I can’t say
this is the end of my era because I
thought their (era) was done and
they’re still there. So I’m hoping I
can have the same rebirth.”
At one point, Rashad asks Bryant
what drives him to come back.
“The process of it. I want to
see if I can. I don’t know if I can.
I want to find out. I want to see,”
Bryant said. “What I’m going to do
is do what I always do: I’m going
to break everything down to its
smallest form, smallest detail, and
Kathy Willens | AP
go after it day by day. Just one day West Team's Russell Westbrook, of the Oklahoma City Thunder, dunks during the first half
at a time.”
of the NBA All-Star basketball game on Sunday in New York.

Sick crew member
threatens
leaders’ progress
Associated Press

ALICANTE, Spain — A case of influenza on
board Team Brunel threatened to derail its hopes
of victory in leg four of the Volvo Ocean Race after
it took the lead Sunday in the middle of the Pacific
Ocean en route from China to New Zealand.
While the six-strong fleet has been at sea for
a week since leaving Sanya, China, on the 5,264
nautical mile journey to Auckland, Spaniard Pablo
Arrarte has been confined to his bunk for long
periods with a fever.
One of the biggest risks facing the crews is sickness in the eight-man teams, which can spread
quickly in the cramped conditions aboard the
65-foot racing yachts.
Effectively, the Dutch team is a man down but a
bold tactical move to sail north of most of the rest
of the fleet has brought it stronger winds, allowing it to take a narrow lead.
Arrarte’s illness, however, is a big cause for concern among his crewmates.

Dawson crucial to Michigan State’s success
By Noah Trister

returned to help Michigan Spartans and Buckeyes
State beat rival Michigan struggling from the line
Saturday, there was plenty
for the Big Ten tournaEAST LANSING, Mich. ment title, and he scored of tension in the air when
— Denzel Valentine’s
he was fouled late in the
65 points in four NCAA
3-pointer in the closing
second half. He made
tournament games.
seconds was the obvious
both free throws to put
“My question is who
highlight of Michigan
Michigan State up 54-51.
in their right mind, with
State’s win over Ohio
“Coach, he just told me
a brain, would criticize
State — but the moment Branden Dawson? You
seniors make big plays,”
that really seemed to thrill have to be a moron to crit- Dawson said. “I’m in here
coach Tom Izzo took
icize that kid,” Ohio State every morning, just shootplace a bit earlier.
ing free throws, just workcoach Thad Matta said
When Branden Dawson after Saturday’s game. “I
ing on different things.”
stepped to the line and
The victory over Ohio
think of all the great playmade two free throws
State could be crucial as
ers I’ve coached against
with 3:18 remaining, it
the Spartans try to secure
and he’s one of them.”
was cause for a mild celan NCAA tournament spot.
Dawson has been
ebration.
Michigan State was 36th in
healthy and productive
“I told him he’s going to this season, but he’s
the RPI rankings as of early
make them because that’s shooting only 44 percent Sunday night, according to
what seniors do,” Izzo
rpiforecast.com.
on free throws. That’s
said.
The Spartans have
a problem because he’s
Dawson’s big free
fallen just short in some
second on the team in
throws were part of a
attempts. Michigan State of their biggest tests this
15-point, 11-rebound
went 7 of 18 from the line season — against Duke,
effort in what might have in a 59-54 loss to Illinois
Kansas, Notre Dame and
been Michigan State’s
Maryland, for example.
on Feb. 7.
most significant victory
Dawson attempted only The victory over a ranked
of the season, Saturday’s
Ohio State team was a
two free throws in that
59-56 win over the 23rdboost to Michigan State’s
game, but with both the
ranked Buckeyes. Now a
senior, Dawson’s career
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(Saturday) we did a great
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�SPORTS

8 Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Janzen edges Bryant in playoff on Champions Tour
However, Bryant struggled
in the playoff. After a short
NAPLES, Fla. — Lee
drive, he had 178 yards to go
Janzen had a good feeling
on the first playoff hole, No.
about his 8-foot putt on the
18. His second shot hit the
No. 18 hole.
railroad ties before bouncing
Janzen made the putt,
back into the water.
then topped Bart Bryant in
“Well, honestly, where I
a playoff to win the ACE
messed up was my drive,”
Group Classic on Sunday at
he said. “I kind of hit just a
TwinEagles Golf Club.
terrible little fade out there,
“I was like I have to make
so I lost 20, 30 yards. So now
birdie here to get in a playI have a longer yardage and
off, or I make a par and I
shooting more across the
don’t and I’ll just go back
water.
to the drawing board and
“Actually, the second
work harder on my putting
shot I felt like I hit pretty
because I had some putts I
good, I just left it a couple
could have made that would
yards right. I thought I had
have made a difference,”
enough, I thought I took
Janzen said. “But there was
enough club that even if I
a peace that to me it didn’t
pushed it, I was going to
matter whether I won or
carry the water.
not.”
“I think the wind had
Bryant fought his way back changed just a little bit from
into contention when he shot the first time played it and
a 10-under 62 Sunday, tying
was just enough. So I hit a
a course record while Janzen bad drive, caught a little bit
had a 5-under 67.
of a bad lie, hit it a little right
Both were 16 under in
and it all equals in the water.”
Janzen, with 164 yards to
regulation play.

Associated Press

go, put his approach shot
on the green. He then twoputted for the victory.
“Once he hit his shot, I
was, you know, thinking
about hitting it to the pin,
being aggressive, but once
he hit his shot, I calculated
where’s the best place to be
to make a 4?,” Janzen said.
“Long was no good.
“If I brought long into
play and went left at all, it
goes down left of the green
and that’s an extremely hard
chip, so I was very content
to be short and left. I just
had to be disciplined enough
to aim it left at the front of
the green and hit it there,
so that’s what I did with a 7
iron.”
Janzen, the U.S. Open
champion in 1993 and 1998,
hadn’t won an individual
tournament for more than 16
years, spanning 413 starts.
“I work on my game in a
certain way so I’m going to
do the best I can on every
shot and I don’t need to

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The PY 2016-17 proposal
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www.areaagency8.org. Proposal packets and instructions
will be available in electronic
format only. Proposals are due
to the AAA8 March 13, 2015.
02/17/15
Lost &amp; Found
Lost Rust &amp; White Pitbull Mix,
answers to the name of Harley.
Wearing a red collar. Lost in
the vicinity of Gallia Rd. in Patriot, Ohio. REWARD 740-7940881
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Street, Syracuse, Ohio 45779.
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or apply on-line at www.pvalley.org.
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Have a passion for writing?
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elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

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FOR SALE w/ 2 Residential
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Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

New Haven, WV 1 bedroom
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to go in a playoff, you don’t
want to get emotional, you
need to get tough and ready to
go to a playoff. I think I lost a
little bit of that, but I wouldn’t
trade it for the world.”
Colin Montgomerie
entered the day at 12 under
and with a one-shot lead.
He opened with a birdie but
then alternated birdies and
bogeys on Nos. 10-13. He
also bogeyed No. 18 to fall
into fifth place.
Esteban Toledo, who shot
a 6-under 66 Sunday, finished
third at 14 under.
Paul Goydos, the champion last week at The Allianz
Championship, finished 7 under.
Kirk Triplett, the defending ACE Group Classic
champion, finished 2 under
after going 68-72-74.
Bernhard Langer, who was
at 7 under, withdrew from
the tournament and returned
home to Boca Raton to be
with daughter Christina. She
had back surgery five weeks
earlier.

worry about what people
think, whether I hit a good
shot or a bad shot,” Janzen
said. “I used to have a terrible temper and threw clubs
and carried on.
“That was really the breakthrough was to realize I was
only doing that because I was
too worried about what other
people thought about my golf
game, so I felt like I had to
get mad to show them that I
was better than that, which
was just ridiculous.”
The tournament also was
emotional for Bryant, who
had to compose himself during a TV interview after he
finished his 54th hole. His
mother attended her first
tournament since her husband died in May.
“I really thought about it at
the beginning of the week how
cool it would be if Brad or I
could pull something off and
just couldn’t quite get it done,”
he said. “I hate to say it, there
might have been a little bit
when you get done and ready

We should
talk!

Gallipolis Daily Tribune is seeking two reporters for its local news operation. The

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

Candidates are asked to submit
their resume with a cover letter
and any writing samples to
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

60561474

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BLONDIE

Tuesday, February 17, 2015 9

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Today’s answer

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10 Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Daily Sentinel

All-Star a success, NBA Finals still a ways away
the 1999 NBA title, a year after
he made his All-Star debut as
a rookie in 1998, when Kobe
NEW YORK — As one of the Bryant also made his first
NBA’s old men, Tim Duncan
appearance.
has a Madison Square Garden
The NBA’s first trip back
memory that few share.
to New York for All-Star week
He played there when the New since ‘98 was a smashing sucYork Knicks were actually title
cess, even before the game.
contenders.
City officials estimated it made
So when he took the floor
a nearly $200 million impact
with the NBA’s other stars for
on the city, according to NBA
the All-Star Game on Sunday
Commissioner Adam Silver.
night, he was thinking about the
“And as a New Yorker, I’m
good ol’ days of the last century. thrilled to hear that,” he said.
But unlike the Knicks, his days
Additionally, the 7.2 overnight
kept getting better after Y2K.
rating TNT drew in New York
“It’s a lot of good memories
for its All-Star Saturday night
here,” he said. “Made my first
coverage was the highest on
All-Star here, won my first NBA record for the massive market.
championship here. So a lot of
So the league and its partners
really good memories.”
probably can’t help but think
His San Antonio Spurs beat
about how good things could be
the Knicks in five games for
if the Knicks could ever get back
AP Basketball Writer

to the NBA Finals. The team
hasn’t really been close in the
last 15 years, with just five playoff appearances and one series
win since reaching the 2000
Eastern Conference finals.
Silver, and former
Commissioner David Stern
before him, dismisses the need
for the league to have a strong
franchise in New York. Others
disagree.
“The league missed that. The
league needs that. The league
needs New York to be that powerhouse again,” Knicks All-Star
Carmelo Anthony said.
The powerhouse is just a
punching bag now, with a
league-worst 10-43 record. The
Knicks have been so bad that
they had seven games yanked
from national TV, eliminating
opportunities that could have

been used to build even more
interest among a larger audience
for All-Star weekend.
The NBA covets its international presence, and New York
is a more affordable and convenient trip from overseas than
many other league cities. That
partly explains the record 534
international media members
credentialed for the weekend,
more than double last year’s total
in New Orleans.
If New York could stage an
NBA Finals, some of them would
surely return.
Things seemed headed in the
right direction when the Knicks
acquired Anthony in 2011, bringing a global basketball A-lister
to New York for the first time
since Patrick Ewing patrolled the
paint at Madison Square Garden.
Three straight playoff berths fol-

No. 5 Wisconsin beats Illinois 68-49
you in a lot of different ways,” Kaminsky
said.
MADISON, Wis. — Frank Kaminsky
Malcolm Hill scored 14 points and
started hot for Wisconsin, then Bronson
Rayvonte Rice added 10 to lead Illinois,
Koenig and Nigel Hayes finished off Illinois. which had won four straight.
Kaminsky had 23 points and 11 rebounds,
The Illini had held all four opponents to
and the fifth-ranked Badgers won 68-49 on
under 60 points and 40 percent shooting.
Sunday to clinch the best start in school
But of those teams, only Michigan State
history.
ranks in the top half of the Big Ten in scorKaminsky hit eight of his first nine
ing average.
shots on his way to 17 first-half points, but
Illinois coach John Groce said he was
was then held scoreless for more than 16
most disappointed that his team was outminutes. But Koenig and Hayes combined
rebounded 32-25 and allowed Wisconsin to
to score 23 points in the second half as
turn 15 offensive rebounds into 12 points.
Wisconsin (23-2, 11-1 Big Ten) put the
“Now you’ve got to sit down and guard
game away.
them again,” Croce said. “They’re already
“Our guys really don’t go out there and
the No. 1 offensive efficiency team in the
say, ‘OK, let’s make sure Frank gets his
last 17 years of analytics, so it would be prefX number of points and then we’ll go get
erable to guard them one time, instead of
ours,’” coach Bo Ryan said. “We took what
multiple times in a trip down the floor.”
they gave us. That’s all we ever do.”
Koenig finished with 15 points, and
Tip-ins
Hayes added 14.
Illinois: The last time the Illini defeated
Illinois (17-9, 7-6) started the game
a top-five team on the road was March 5,
hot, and four 3-pointers in just more than
1989, when Nick Anderson’s 35-footer at the
three minutes infuriated Ryan. Wisconsin
buzzer led Illinois past No. 3 Indiana 70-67.
responded by clamping down on defense.
... Rice had averaged 21.5 points and nine
The Illini then missed seven of their last
rebounds in his games against Wisconsin
eight shots in the half, and the Badgers sand- last season.
wiched a 20-4 run around halftime. Illinois got
Wisconsin: Josh Gasser will need at least
no closer than nine points the rest of the way. one more game to become only the second
“It just goes to show you that we can beat player in school history with 1,000 points,
Associated Press

Grueser &amp;
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Accounting

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500 rebounds and 250 assists. He came into
Sunday needing 10 points to accomplish
the feat but was held to three points on
1-of-5 shooting. Michael Finley finished his
Wisconsin career with 2,147 points, 648
rebounds and 371 assists.
Rice still finding stroke
Rice was a bit better Sunday than he was
Thursday against Michigan, his first action
after missing nine games because of injury
and suspension. Rice, who wore a wrap on
his non-shooting hand, was 4 of 12 from the
field, including 1 of 5 from the 3-point line.
In Thursday’s win, he had four points on
2-of-7 shooting.
Ryan on Hall honor
Ryan received a standing ovation before
the game for being selected as a finalist for
the Basketball Hall of Fame. Asked what
the honor would mean, he said it would be
a “thank you” to all those who he’s played
for, coached and worked with, including
administrators and faculty. Ryan said he’s
received a number of well wishes from
former players. “If that would put the smile
on the face of the 12th man that I had at
Brookhaven Junior High School, Sun Valley,
Platteville, Milwaukee, Madison,” Ryan said
before pausing, “I’d be pretty happy. I’d be
real happy.”

TAX
TIME

lowed before the Knicks tumbled
back toward the bottom, making
Sunday the likely last highlight
this season.
Before braving Arctic-like temperatures and rim-swaying winds
whipping down Manhattan’s
frozen streets to head to the
Garden, the NBA celebrated
New York and the city’s game
during a legends brunch attended by basketball immortals.
Among the players on hand
were Bill Russell, Oscar Robertson,
Magic Johnson, Kareem AbdulJabbar and Willis Reed.
Reed, “The Captain,” led the
Knicks to the 1970 title and is
best remembered for hobbling
onto the floor of the “world’s
most famous” arena for Game 7
with an injured knee and leading
New York to a win over the Los
Angeles Lakers.

Gordon
From Page 6

Finally, Martin Truex Jr. pulled
onto the track and the others slowly
followed. It was apparent as they
raced to cross the starting line in the
allotted time that they’d all been timing their move to make their lap just
under the wire.
It worked to perfection for Gordon
and Johnson, who gave Hendrick
Motorsports a sweep of the front row
for the fourth time in history.
“This is one of the more gratifying
poles here at Daytona that I’ve ever
had, not just because it’s my final
Daytona 500, but because you’ve got
to try and plan it out and play that
chess match and play it really, really
well,” Gordon said.
Gordon called the three rounds
“nerve-racking” and said it wasn’t his
plan to sit that long on pit road.
“I really wanted to go sooner than
that,” he said.
Also locking themselves into
the field was Aric Almirola, Ricky
Stenhouse Jr., Jamie McMurray and
Carl Edwards. It was a huge relief for
Edwards, who moved to Joe Gibbs
Racing in the offseason, and his new
fourth car was not guaranteed a spot
in the field.

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60564418

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