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                  <text>Clinton won’t
be taken
by clown car.

Rain. High
of 65.
Low of 35.

Locals
shine at
games.

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 8

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 48, Volume 65

Wednesday, March 25, 2015 s 50¢

Kimes enters Alford Plea in theft case
Sentencing set for 10 a.m. May 15

By Lindsay Kriz

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

Kimes can be seen testifying during her trial July 2014. After four days of testimony
(Tuesday through Friday) the trial resulted in a hung jury. Kimes was originally scheduled
to have a second jury trial Monday, but took a plea deal instead.

POMEROY — Mary
Kimes has entered an Alford
Plea to amended charges in
a case stemming from 2011,
according to court documents.
Legally, an Alford Plea is
a guilty plea of a defendant
who says she is innocent of
the crime but admits that
the prosecution has enough
evidence to prove that she is
guilty beyond a reasonable
doubt.

Kimes was accused of
embezzling more than
$50,000 from the Meigs
County Sheriff Department in 2012. Kimes was
employed as the sheriff’s secretary under sheriffs Robert
Beegle and Ralph Trussell
until summer 2012.
Initially, a grand jury
indicted Kimes in May 2013
on eight counts of theft
in office after rumors and
speculation spread regarding missing funds from the
sheriff’s office. Counts 1, 3,
5 and 7 of Kimes’ indictment

alleges that between Jan. 1,
2011, and June 30, 2012,
Kimes committed theft in
office. Counts 2, 4, 6 and 8
of the indictment allege that
between Jan. 1, 2011, and
June 30, 2012, Kimes committed theft in office of property or service that belongs
to the state, any other state,
a country or municipal corporation of political subdivision. Last year, before the
start of her jury trial, Kimes
pleaded not guilty to the
See PLEA | 5

Middleport
Council discuss
employee hirings
By Donald Lambert

elambert@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Village
Council discussed two hirings during their meeting Monday night.
Mayor Michael Gerlach said he hired Mark
Mattox to work on the street crew. Existing village employee Brian Keith will be an “Operator of
Record.” Keith would have the added responsibilities of keeping an eye on water and waste water
plants.
Gerlach said he asked the EPA for guidance on
how to proceed after the council eliminated the village administrator position. Gerlach said Keith has
Water I and Waste water I licenses and the EPA
said they would work with Keith on a temporary
basis.
Gerlach said there is concern that the village
needs to find someone with the required licensing
to operate the water and sewer systems in Middleport.
Council members Doug Dixon and Roger Manley
said Gerlach should have consulted with council
before hiring Mattox and Keith. Gerlach said he
hired Mattox to replace a retired employee, a new
position wasn’t created and he didn’t think council
had to vote on it. For Keith, Gerlach said he had to
hire someone as soon as possible and the EPA said
the village would be in violation within a few days
if nothing was done. Council asked Solicitor Mick
Barr to give an opinion about the proper procedure,
but nothing was discussed during regular session.
See COUNCIL | 5

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5

— FEATURES
Classified: 9
Comics: 11
Television: 12

High School premieres ‘Our Town: Pomeroy’
By Lorna Hart

lhart@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — There was
an air of excitement and
anticipation at Meigs High
School on Saturday evening
as attendees entered the
auditorium for the premiere
viewing of “Our Town:
Pomeroy”
Evan Shaw, chief editor,
videographer and producer
of the documentary, and
his crew including assistant
See PREMIERE | 3

Evan Shaw is shown autographing a DVD for Suzanne Bentz. DVD’s are available for purchase.

Alumni Banquet features law director
The University of Rio
Grande alumna cites eduRIO GRANDE — The job
cation as one of the primadescription for a city law direcry keys to her success. A
tor doesn’t reference a cape and
member of the Rio Grande
fancy utility belt, or a shiny suit of Honors Program, Tischler
armor.
graduated in 2000 with
Tischler
But make no mistake, Beth
her Bachelor of Science in
Tischler is a modern-day hero to
Business Management and
many.
Bachelor of Arts in Economics, as
As the first in-house law director
well as a Spanish minor. Tischler
for the City of Maumee, Tischler
also earned a Masters in Business
drafts city policy and procedure,
Administration and Juris Doctorate
assists with finance and budgetary
from the University of Toledo.
issues and manages the entire law
As the guest speaker at Wednesday’s
department, which includes the city’s University of Rio Grande Honors
Alumni Banquet, Tischler hopes sharDivision of Municipal Prosecution.

Staff Report

— SPORTS
Basketball: 8
Schedule: 8
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook or twitter to
share your thoughts.

March 26th, 31st &amp; April 2nd

•Farmers Bank
•Ohio Valley Bank
•Superior Auto Body
•Story Law Office

Courtesy photos

A huge crowd was in attendance for the premiere of “Our Town: Pomeroy” on Saturday.

•Ridenour’s Gas Service
•White Schwarzel/Ewing
Schwarzel Funeral Home
•Hupp Auto Center

ing her experiences and success
will help to inspire the next generation of Rio students.
“I am honored to be
asked to speak to current
students,” Tischler said.
“When contemplating college, I looked at many larger
institutions. Ultimately I
am glad that I selected Rio. The
smaller class sizes, the availability
of faculty and staff, as well as the
friendships, were a good fit. … I
felt the Rio business curriculum
allowed me to excel within the
See BANQUET | 5

The Daily Sentinel

•Millie’s Restaurant
•Home National Bank
•Swisher Lohse Drugs
•Fabric Shop
60572457

�LOCAL

2 Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES
BEERS
VINTON, Ohio — John Beers Sr., 72, Vinton,
passed away Monday, March 23, 2015, at Holzer
Medical Center.
In accordance to John’s wishes, there will be no services. Cremation services are under the direction of
McCoy Moore Funeral Home, Vinton. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to: John Beers Memorial,
3957 Jones Road, Vinton, OH 45686.
DEPOY
GALLIPOLIS — Alvin Depoy, 78, of Guysville,
Ohio, died Tuesday, March 24, 2015, at Holzer Hospital in Gallipolis.
Arrangements will be announced later by WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville.
DRUMMOND
BIDWELL, Ohio — Gail L. Drummond, 59, of
Bidwell, passed away on Monday, March 23, 2015, at
Holzer Medical Center.
Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday, March 28, 2015, at
Willis Funeral Home with Minister Larry Drummond
officiating. Burial will follow in Pine Street Cemetery.
Friends may call the funeral home between 6-8 p.m.
Friday, March 27, 2015.

FETTY
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Shirley Dean Fetty, 68, of Huntington, passed away Monday, March 23, 2015 at home.
Private family services will be held. Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville, Ohio, is in charge of arrangements.
HOLCOMB
LaFAYETTE, Ga. — Barbara “Bobbie” Wheeler
Holcomb, 87, of LaFayette, and formerly of Gallia
County, Ohio, died Sunday, Dec. 28, 2014.
Graveside services will be 11 a.m. Saturday, March
28, 2015, at Providence Cemetery on Teens Run
Road, with Bob Powell officiating. Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home is assisting the family.
KIRK
GALLIPOLIS — Kimberly Louise Kirk, 28, of Gallipolis, passed away at 1:30 a.m. Monday, March 23,
2015, at The Arbors at Gallipois.
A memorial service will be conducted at the convenience of the family. Cremeens Funeral Home,
Gallipolis, has been entrusted with Kimberly’s finial
arrangements.

RACINE — The Bethany UMC
Sonshine Circle met recently with
devotions by Martha King reading from “Joy for Woman’s Soul’s”
article “Joy of Enjoying Life,” with
prayer followed by Evelyn Foreman.
Members read and approved the
Treasurer and Secretary reports.
Edie Hubbard, Correspondence
Secretary, reported the group
signed 98 cards for the month and
read Thank You notes from Becky
Dudding, Kay Warden and Family
and Eula Hensler and Family.
A report was given on noodlemaking.
The monthly donation to
MCCOA was discussed .
Greeting cards were purchased

for the next six months, as members are sponsoring them.
Members brought in school supplies to be given to the 3rd grades
classes at Southern Elementary
School.
The group sang Happy Birthday
to Betty Proffitt.
Susan Sheppard won the door
prize.
In April, members will bring an
Easter Basket lunch and they will
be exchanged in lieu of refreshments.
Kathryn Hart presented four baggies of Boxtops for Education to
Southern School from the Sonshine
members.
The group will have a Pampered
Chef Party possibly in June.
Guests for the evening were
Susan Sheppard and Shelly Wag-

ner, who were recent missionaries
in Honduras at The Montana de
Luz (Mountain of Light) Orphanage. The duo described the missionary journey as life-changing for
them, as well as a huge help to the
Honduran people.
Attending were: Evelyn Foreman,
Bobbie Holter, Michaela Holter,
Hazel McKelvey, Louise Frank,
Mildred Hart, Ruth Simpson, Betty
Proffitt, Debbie Morris, Jackie
White, Jan McKee, Denise Holman,
Blondena Rainer, Martha King,
Edie Hubbard, Kathryn Hart, Susan
Sheppard and Sherry Wagner.
Rainer, King and Hubbard were
the hostesses.
The next meeting is April 9th
at the Bethany UMC Church fellowship room. All are welcome to
come.

Program aims to improve pasture quality
applicants must either
have an existing grazOHIO VALLEY — Last ing management plan
year, farmers in 10 Appa- or include developing a
lachian counties took
grazing management plan
advantage of the Southas part of their contract
ern Ohio Appalachian
if they are selected for
Environmental Quality
funding. Grazing manageIncentives Program to
ment plans lay out which
create grazing plans
conservation practices to
aimed at improving pasinclude in the plan and a
ture quality and protectschedule for implementing natural resources.
ing those practices over
This year, the U.S.
time, depending on the
Department of Agriculfarmers’ goals and the
ture’s Natural Resources
natural resource issues
Conservation Service
present.
expanded the program
In the rolling southern
to include 10 additional
Appalachian region,
counties in the Appalagrazing animals can
chian region.
cause erosion problems.
Eligible farmers in
Rotational grazing, movAdams, Athens, Galing grazing animals from
lia, Highland, Jackson,
one pasture to another,
Lawrence, Meigs, Pike,
allows pastures to regrow,
Scioto, Vinton, Coshocimproving the quality of
ton, Guernsey, Harripasture forages while also
son, Jefferson, Morgan,
protecting the soil from
Monroe, Muskingum,
exposure and erosion due
Noble, Perry, and Washto overgrazing.
ington counties can apply
Creating these separate
now for Southern Ohio
grazing areas requires
Appalachian EQIP. All
either fixed or portable

Staff Report

fencing, which may be
included in the EQIP
contract. Access roads,
water pipelines and storage tanks, stream crossings, and heavy use area
protection are other conservation practices frequently included in grazing management plans.
Southern Ohio Appalachian EQIP funds help
successful applicants
cover a part of the cost of
implementing these and
other conservation practices in grazing management plans.
Since southern Ohio
drains to the Mississippi
River, soil erosion can
affect water quality not
only in Ohio’s lakes and
rivers, but in places as
far away as the Gulf of
Mexico. The conservation
practices offered through
the Southern Ohio Appalachian EQIP help prevent this from happening,
while creating healthier
soil, forages, and livestock right here in Ohio.
Applications for EQIP
submitted by entities,
such as groups applying

as a corporation, must
have a DUNS (Data
Universal Numbering
System) number and an
active SAM (System for
Award Management)
registration status when
applying, a process that
may take several weeks.
Applications cannot be
processed without this
information. Information
on obtaining a DUNS
number and registering
with SAM is posted at
www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/farmbill.
Farmers with land in
the 20-county Southern
Appalachian EQIP area
should make an appointment with the local NRCS
conservationist to start
the application process.
In Meigs County, you
may contact Carrie Crislip, District Conservationist at 740-992-6646.
To receive consideration for funding this
year, apply by April 17.
Learn more about
NRCS programs and services to conserve Ohio’s
natural resources at www.
oh.nrcs.usda.gov.

Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes Tuesday through Saturday.
Please call for more information on local pricing.

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

ADVERTISING:
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740-992-2155 Ext. 2554
sthompson@civitasmedia.com
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bwalters@civitasmedia.com
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111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

STEWART
LEON, W.Va. — Gail Stewart, 48, of Leon, formerly
of Oak Hill, W.Va., passed away Sunday, March 22,
2015, at her home following a long illness.
A celebration of Gail’s life will be held at Leon Elementary School on Sunday, March 29, 2015 at 2 p.m.
Everyone is invited to attend. Raynes Funeral Home,
20072 Charleston Road, Buffalo, W.Va., is in charge of
arrangements.

WARD
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — Kristi Michelle Ward, 42,
of Huntington, passed away Wednesday, March 18,
2015, in Chicago.
Funeral service will be 11 a.m. Friday, March 27,
2015, at New Beginnings Apostolic Church, Huntington. Burial will follow in Miller Memorial Gardens,
PENNINGTON
Miller, Ohio. Visitation will be held 6-8 p.m. Thursday,
GALLIPOLIS — Evelyn L. Pennington, 80, of Galli- March 26, 2015 at the church.

Group hears from former missionaries
Staff Report

polis, died Monday, March 23, 2015, at her residence.
Services will be 11 a.m. Friday, March 27, 2015, at
Chapel of Hope Mausoleum, Ohio Valley Memory Gardens with the Rev. Junior Preston officiating. Entombment will follow. Friends may call Willis Funeral Home
between 6-8 p.m. Thursday, March 26, 2015.

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

740.992.2155

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

Family and Children First
Council 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 St., Middleport. For more information, contact Brooke Pauley, coordinator at 740-992-2117,
ext. 104.

Shade River Lodge
awarding two scholarships
CHESTER — Shade River Lodge 453 will be
awarding two $250 scholarships to certain graduating sneiors again this year. Those eligible to
apply are graduating seniors from Eastern High
School and the children or grandchildren of members of Shade River Lodge. Each candidate’s application must be postmarked prior to April 27 to
be qualified. For information, contact the student
counselor at Eastern High School or call Delmar
Pullins at 740-985-3669.

Public hearing notice
POMEROY — The Meigs Local School District
Board of Education hereby gives public notice in
accordance with Section 3307.353 of the Ohio
Revised Code that Rick Blaettnar, who is currently
employed by the Board of Education as Assistant
Principal at Meigs High School, will be retired
and seeking re-employment with the Meigs Local
School District in the same position following his
service retirement. The Board of Education will
hold a public meeting on the issue of re-employing
the above-named person at a meeting April 28 at
7 p.m. at the Board of Education Central Office
located at 41765 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy.

Meigs High School to hold
Parent-Teacher Conferences
POMEROY — Parent-Teacher Conferences will
be held at Meigs High School Thursday, March
26, from 3-6 p.m. Students will be bringing home
a letter describing the conference scheduling procedure along with information on the conferences.
All parents and/or guardians are encouraged to
attend so that they may be informed of the progress of their child(ren). Please return the form
attached to the letter to the school to schedule
a conference or call 740-992-2158 by Thursday,
March 26. In conjunction with the Parent/Teacher
Conference, Meigs High School will also be holding the College Credit Plus informational meeting
at 5:30 p.m. in the cafeteria. The College Credit
Plus will be taking the place of the current Post
Secondary Option. Any or all students utilizing
the College Credit Plus must be in attendance or
you will not be able to participate in the CCP Program next year.

Sixth annual RT 143 Yard
Sale to be held May 30
OHIO VALLEY — The sixth annual Route 143
Yard Sale will be 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 30. The
event will feature 21 miles of fun and treasures
from State Route 7 in Pomeroy to State Route 50
near Albany. Scipio Volunteer Fire Department in
Harrisonville will have a pancake breakfast and
hot dogs later in the day. Columbia Township
Volunteer Fire Department will also have food.
If you don’t live on State Route 143 and know
someone who does, you can rent space at each
fire department to sell goodies. Contact numbers
for fire departments are: Columbia — Rexie
Cheadle at 740-591-6086; and Scipio — Dan or
Rhea Lantz at 740-742-2819. For more information and more spaces to rent, call Dave or Paula
Carr at 740-742-4002.

�LOCAL/INTERNATIONAL

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 25, 2015 3

Crash kills 150 people in French Alps; Europe in shock
About 10 gendarmes will
spend the night at the crash site
Associated Press
to guard it, and search operations will resume at daybreak,
SEYNE-LES-ALPES, France
Lt. Col. Jean-Marc Meninchini
— A Germanwings jet carryof the regional police rescue sering 150 people from Barcelona
vice, told The Associated Press
to Duesseldorf slammed into
in the mountain town of Seynea remote section of the French
les-Alpes. Recovery operations
Alps on Tuesday, sounding
are expected to last a week, he
like an avalanche as it scatsaid.
tered pulverized debris across
German Chancellor Angela
a rocky mountain and down its Merkel insisted, “We still don’t
steep ravines. All aboard were
know much beyond the bare
assumed killed.
information on the flight, and
The pilots sent out no distress there should be no speculation
call and had lost radio conon the cause of the crash.
tact with their control center,
Lufthansa Vice President
France’s aviation authority said, Heike Birlenbach told reporters
deepening the mystery over the in Barcelona that for now “we
A320’s mid-flight crash after a
say it is an accident.”
surprise 8-minute descent.
In Washington, the White
“The site is a picture of horHouse said American officials
ror. The grief of the families
were in contact with their
and friends is immeasurable.
French, Spanish and German
We must now stand together.
counterparts.
We are united in our great
“There is no indication of a
grief,” German Foreign Minister nexus to terrorism at this time,”
Frank-Walter Steinmeier said in said U.S. National Security
a statement after being flown
Council spokeswoman Bernaover the crash scene and briefed dette Meehan.
by French authorities.
Video and photos of the site
The crash left officials and
showed scattered white flecks
families across Europe reeling
across a stony mountain and
in shock. Sobbing, grieving rela- several larger airplane body
tives at both airports were led
sections with windows. French
away by airport workers and
officials said a helicopter crew
crisis counselors. One German
that landed briefly in the area
town was rent with sorrow after saw no signs of life.
losing 16 high school students
“Everything is pulverized.
coming back from an exchange The largest pieces of debris
program in Spain.
are the size of a small car. No
“This is pretty much the
one can access the site from
worst thing you can imagine,”
the ground,” Gilbert Sauvan,
a visibly rattled Haltern Mayor
president of the general council,
Bodo Klimpel said at a hastily
Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, told
called press conference.
The Associated Press.
After night fell on the hardFrench Interior Minister Berto-reach site, French authorities nard Cazeneuve said a black box
called off the search and helihad been located at the crash
copters stopped flying over the site and “will be immediately
investigated.” He did not say
area.

Premiere

dreds of people here an
hour before the start of
this documentary is a tesFrom Page 1
tament to Meigs County,”
Evan Shaw said. “This
Brett Maszczak, spent
isn’t about me, it’s about
several months filming in the people of this county,
and around the Pomeroy how proud they are of
area. “Our Town: Pomethis area.”
roy” tells the story of the
Lynn and Lizz Shaw,
settlement of Pomeroy
Evan’s parents, were on
and includes history from hand to welcome everyother areas of Meigs
one to the reception. Liz
County as well.
Shaw, a trustee of the
Seating filled quickly
Meigs County Historical
and bleachers had to be
Society and Museum,
pulled out to accommowas also in the docudate the growing crowd,
mentary and Lynn Shaw
which was estimated to
was the voice of George
be 700 by the time the
Washington. In addition,
film began.
the couple also provided
WOUB Executive
music for the documenDirector Tom Hodson
tary’s soundtrack. Lynn
expressed his excitement.
played fiddle, guitar and
“This is a tremendous
provided vocals while
outpouring, 20 minutes
Lizz played fiddle, viola,
until the film begins and
the auditorium is almost clawhammer banjo and
full, surpassing our wild- guitar.
“It is wonderful that
est hope,” he said. “A lot
Evan
has found a way to
of our region has been
promote
the history of
ignored too long. It’s time
this
great
county,” Midsomeone gave this area
dleport
mayor
and former
their due. This documenhistory
teacher
Mike
tary helps focus the spotGerlach
said.
Gerlach
also
light on the rich history
appears
in
the
documenthat either isn’t known
tary.
or taken for granted.
Stefan Gleissberg, the
Residents of this area
voice-over
for Heinrich
should take pride in their
Dilcher,
said
he was
history.”
excited
to
be
a part of the
Jordon Pickens, author,
experience
of
making a
Meigs Historical Society
historical
documentary.
and Museum trustee and
Meigs County Commisassociate producer of
sioner
Randy Smith also
“Our Town: Pomeroy,”
expressed enthusiasm.
echoed Hodson’s senti“I’m very excited about
ments.
“It is really great to see this production,” he said.
“I’m a local history buff
this many (people) in
and enjoy hanging out
attendance that have an
interest in the past of this with members of the history society, Jordan Pickarea, that share a comens and Gary Coleman.”
mon heritage,” Pickens
At 7:30 p.m., Steve
said.
Loring Lovett, WOUB Olinger, principal of
Meigs High School, took
corporate support representative, was at the door the podium. As the crowd
grew silent ,Olinger conhanding out programs.
gratulated Evan Shaw
“Awesome. Produce it
on his accomplishments.
and they will come, and
they did,” he said. “Evan According to Olinger,
has a lot of talent and it is Shaw was a graduate of
the College Tech Prep
certainly evident in this
Audio Visual Program
documentary”
at Meigs High School,
A VIP reception was
held before the documen- taught by Suzanne Bentz,
and a 2010 Meigs High
tary began for all those
School Hall of Fame
who had participated in
inductee. He expressed
the film’s production.
the community’s excite“This is an amazing
ment in Shaw’s wish to
experience. To see hun-

whether it was a data recorder
or a cockpit voice recorder.
Germanwings is low-cost
carrier owned by Lufthansa,
Germany’s biggest airline, and
serves mostly European destinations. Tuesday’s crash was its
first involving passenger deaths
since it began operating in 2002.
The Germanwings logo, normally maroon and yellow, was
blacked out on its Twitter feed.
Germanwings said Flight
9525 carried 144 passengers,
including two babies, and six
crew members. Officials believe
67 Germans were on board,
including the 16 high school
students from Haltern and two
opera singers.
Barcelona’s Gran Teatre del
Liceu says German contralto
Maria Radner was aboard the
crashed plane along with her
husband and baby. The opera
house in Duesseldorf said bass
baritone Oleg Bryjak, was also
on the plane.
One Dutch citizen and one
Danish citizen were among the
victims as well, their governments said.
The plane left Barcelona Airport at 10:01 a.m., then began
descending again shortly after
reaching its cruising height
of 38,000 feet, Germanwings
CEO Thomas Winkelmann
told reporters in Cologne. The
descent lasted eight minutes.
Eric Heraud of the French
Civil Aviation Authority said the
Germanwings plane lost radio
contact with a control center at
10:30 a.m. Tuesday, but “never
declared a distress alert itself.”
He said the combination of loss
of radio contract and the plane’s
quick descent prompted the
control center to declare a distress situation.
“We cannot say at the moment

make a documentary
about his hometown.
Olinger was followed
by Hodson, who gave a
thank-you on behalf of
WOUB to all who participated in the documentary.
“This idea was a new
effort to reach out to the
community to highlight
history through the concept of the ‘Our Town’
series,” Hodson said.
The documentary “Our
Town: Lancaster” was
the first in WOUB’s “Our
Town’ series, and Shaw
was the chief editor, videographer and producer
for that piece as well.
“We are very proud
of what was produced,”
Hodson said, “We feel it
is important to take pride
in wherever we are from.
There is a rich fabric of
history in each county.
While the area is linked
by much of its culture
and heritage, each is very
unique in its own way.”
Shaw spoke to the audience about the documentary itself.
“I consider Meigs
County home, and the
documentary is the entire
community’s story,”
he said to a round of
applause.
He said, upon introducing the documentary, that
“Our Town: Pomeroy”
was a testament to everyone in the county.
He thanked everyone
for all they did to make
the documentary possible. Shaw gave a special thank-you to Bentz,
his tech prep teacher
at Meigs High School.
It was Bentz who gave
him his first camera to
work with, and it was in
her class where he first
learned about cameras

Emilio Morenatti | AP

Friends of the German students involved in the crashed plane attend a mass
in Llinars del Valles, near Barcelona, Spain, on Tuesday. Sixteen 10th-grade
students from a town in western Germany and two of their teachers had just
spent a week on an exchange near Barcelona and were less than an hour from
landing when their Germanwings flight crashed in southern France. Officials
confirmed Tuesday they were among the 150 people who died in the crash.

why our colleague went into
the descent, and so quickly, and
without previously consulting
air traffic control,” said Germanwings’ director of flight operations, Stefan-Kenan Scheib.
The plane crashed at an
altitude of about 2,000 meters
(6,550 feet) near the towns
of Prads-Haute-Bleone and
Meolans-Revels and the popular
ski resort of Pra Loup. The site
is 700 kilometers (430 miles)
south-southeast of Paris.
“It was a deafening noise. I
thought it was an avalanche,
although it sounded slightly
different. It was short noise
and lasted just a few seconds,”
Sandrine Boisse, the president
of the Pra Loup tourism office,
told the AP.
Interior Ministry spokesman Pierre-Henry Brandet told
BFM television he expected “an
extremely long and extremely
difficult” search-and-rescue
operation because of the area’s

and editing.
During the performance, murmurs of recognition rose from the audience. Comments of, “Oh,
I remember that building”
and “Oh, I remember
when that happened”
could be heard. There
were a few tears as well.
The biography of
Samuel Wyllys Pomeroy,
for whom Pomeroy was
named, was also part of
the documentary. Pomeroy was a member of a
powerful New England
political family. His forefathers served a combined
nine terms as governor of
Connecticut. The famous
Charter Oak, a lasting
symbol of the colony’s
resistance to British tyranny, stood on his family
farm. As a young boy,
Pomeroy played in the
tree’s branches.
“Awe!” could be heard
when it was revealed that
Pomeroy’s family lineage
also included a direct link
to the English crown.
He was the 14th great
grandson of Edward III;
the 18th great-grandson
of John, King of England,
signer of the Magna
Carta; the 22nd greatgrandson of William the
Conqueror and the 29th
great-grandson of Alfred
the Great, England’s first
king.
Audience members
were not in a hurry to
leave the auditorium. In
fact, the film was a catalyst for the audience to
share their own stories
with each other. Small
groups formed as they
began to talk with each
other about the people
and events portrayed in
the documentary.
Pomeroy Mayor Jackie

SYRACUSE VILLAGE IS NOW HIRING
FOR THE LONDON POOL 2015 SEASON!
Applications are being accepted for
management, lifeguards and pool dispatchers/
concession workers at Village Hall,
2581 Third Street, Syracuse until 4:30 pm
on April 3rd. Certification is not required to
apply as a lifeguard, but must be obtained
before the pool opens. Information about
training will be provided during interviews.

60571304

By Lori Hinnant
and Claude Paris

remoteness. The weather in the
area deteriorated Tuesday afternoon, with a chilly rain falling.
Winkelmann said the pilot,
whom he did not name, had
more than 10 years’ experience
working for Germanwings and
its parent airline Lufthansa.
The aircraft was delivered to
Lufthansa in 1991, had approximately 58,300 flight hours in
some 46,700 flights, Airbus
said. The plane underwent a
routine check in Duesseldorf on
Monday, and its last regular full
check took place in the summer
of 2013.
The plane had a minor technical problem Monday with a
nose gear landing door, Lufthansa spokesman Christoph
Meier said, but added that it
was really only a noise problem
that did not appear to have any
link to the crash. He also said a
few Germanwings crews asked
not to fly after the crash “for
personal reasons.”

Welker said, “I thought
it was tremendous, I
had seen Our Town:
Lancaster and knew this
would be good, but it
exceeded my expectations. I’m very proud to
see Pomeroy and Meigs
County represented. This
will be a valuable tool to
encourage entrepreneurs
and visitors to come to
the area.”
Jean Butcher, a representative from WOUB,
said, “It is heart-warming
to be so well received.”
Meigs County History
Society President Margaret Parker said she was

very happy that Pomeroy
and Meigs County history
was documented in such
a positive way.
“Wonderful job, very
well done, great portrait
of the community and the
people,”she said.
“Our Town: Pomeroy”
DVDs were sold out
at the premiere. They
will be for sale online at
WOUB.org, local stores,
and the Meigs County
Historical Society Museum as soon as more can
be produced.
Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9922155.

�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Rat cake?
Even prisoners
deserve better
We were relatively disgusted when the sins of
Michigan and Ohio’s prison food vendor included
maggots in the food prep area, and employees
smuggling drugs into correctional facilities and
having sex with inmates.
So the latest revelation about Aramark Correctional Services — that an Aramark employee
instructed an inmate kitchen worker to serve prisoners rodent-eaten cake — well, we’re struggling
to find the right words. Horrifying? Appalling?
Reflex-gagging?
The liberal organization Progress Michigan used
the state Freedom of Information Act to obtain
e-mails sent among state corrections officials
detailing what we’ve dubbed “the rat-cake incident,” which took place last summer at the Central
Michigan Correctional Facility in St. Louis.
The Aramark worker reportedly told the inmate
to cut the sides off the rodent-chewed cake, and
cover the damage with frosting, a wretched bit of
culinary improv that has us retching. Honestly, we
may never eat cake again. That employee was fired
over the incident, which prison officials rightly
realized was a big deal — “I’m heading into work
now to assess the mood of the population and
address any situation concerns,” one corrections
official wrote after being notified about what had
happened.
No one got sick, but that’s not the point.
Outsourcing the state’s prison food operation
— a $145-million, three-year contract — saved
taxpayers about $12 million a year and eliminated
370 state jobs.
For foes of privatization, this is the worst-case
scenario: State jobs cut, replaced by a vendor
whose services are cheap but woefully inadequate
— a savings in cost, but a loss in quality.
The way this contract was awarded leaves us
uneasy — Aramark’s first bid was rejected because
it didn’t meet the state’s 5 percent cost-savings
threshold, but Republican state lawmakers asked
the Department of Management, Technology and
Budget to re-review the contract. That analysis
found errors in the first review, and declared that
Aramark’s bid met the savings requirement.
After a Free Press investigation exposed the first
round of Aramark problems last summer, the state
fined the company. Gov. Rick Snyder appointed
a contract monitor to examine issues, “possibly
on both sides,” and ensure sufficient training, a
spokesman said, adding that Snyder believes there
have been improvements.
Let’s be completely honest: The only reason
this contract hasn’t become a major scandal for
the Snyder administration is because the rodenteaten food from kitchens infested with maggots is
being served to prisoners. For some folks, there’s
an instinctive belief that prisoners don’t deserve
humane treatment, that committing a crime forfeits one’s humanity.
Let’s be honest about this, too: There are some
really awful people in prison. Rapists, murderers,
armed robbers, people who’ve done really terrible
things. And yet they still deserve better than rateaten food.
And in no small part, that’s because we deserve
better. It’s a cliché that one can judge a society by
how it treats its least — but that doesn’t mean it’s
not true.
Reprinted from the Detroit Free Press via The Associated Press

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

Clinton won’t be taken down by clown car

as ‘the big dog’ now know
It is beginning to seem
Hillary Clinton is a twin not
as though the rush beyond
to be messed with; she has
judgment is tilting against
earned her spurs in every
a Hillary Clinton presiway possible, and knows how
dential choice; “too much
to use them.”
baggage” is usually the
That may have been true
explanation.
when she spoke about what
Part of what is still to be Stanley
had happened in Benghazi
done is removing factoids
Crouch
from influential power,
KingFeatures on the night the Republicans
have turned into a factoid
what Hillary Clinton once columnist
scandal; repeating supposed
correctly called “a vast
“fact” about incompetence at
right-wing conspiracy.”
the top. The bullhorn of exaggeraThat’s more than a mouthful.
tion, lodged in the national throat,
I once observed: “When she
needs to be spat out.
testified last week for seven hours
No matter the plundering of the
before the congressional committee and was not swayed by the nip- environment, recurring disasters
ping of rubber teeth attempting to transporting the muck of dirty
oil, the disruption of trust for our
wound, I thought of seeing her in
person at an unannounced appear- banks that began with the Great
ance following Nelson Mandela 10 Recession, and the distracting
entertainment of racial protests,
years or so ago.
“The audience did not know she the supposed redneck vision stays
in place, shifting as much as possiwas there until Clinton turned the
ble to maintain controlling power.
microphone into a flamethrower.
I see embarrassing examples of
Suddenly, the little woman who
intellectual failure on the parts of
could not be recognized from a
the Republican elected lawmakdistance sent forward a voice that
ers, who seem to be sure that
all had heard but not that way.
She spoke about getting up off the Americans can be manipulated by
the claims of dangerous people
canvas, because a real champion
in the federal government, from
knows what it takes. No matter
the very top to the very bottom.
how often or how much one has
been hurt, an unfair opponent will These claims of reruns being in
place come from elected men like
be sent back to the opposite corTed Cruz of Texas, Louie Gohmner with a pocket full of defeat.
ert of Texas and Rick Perry of
“Sometimes, when a bear is
Texas. Cruz is a bad photocopy of
being pursued and decides to
Sen. Joe McCarthy, even though
stand up and fight it out with
McCarthy was elected in Wisconthose hunters, the bear will
sin; Gohmert is a blustering man
be slightly distracted by some
possessed of the gall to talk down
little dogs biting at its paw. The
Attorney General Eric Holder;
dogs will be hurled into a tree if
Perry always seems somewhat soft
unlucky, and perhaps killed.
“Those who refer to Bill Clinton in the head, regardless of how long

he was seated in the governor’s
chair of the Lone Star State.
This is happening while American cities are facing or assenting
to female leadership, which is a
very serious answer to the failures
of low-level thinkers among the
GOP women like Sarah Palin and
Michele Bachmann, longtime drivers of what Chris Matthews calls
“the clown car.”
Hillary Clinton will not be run
down by the clown car while crossing the street.
It may or may not be her time. If
it is, she and the country will benefit, perhaps on the level of what
Angela Merkel has brought to Germany, raising a nation through the
brutal memories of 20th-century
history very effectively. If it is not
her time, everything seems to be
coming to a point in which the
pimple of bigotry and its Siamese
twin greed and corruption will
pop because Republicans followed
what Richard Nixon called the
“Southern strategy.”
Pimples break but do not maintain the unpleasant look and feeling. This is almost guaranteed by
the presence of brilliant politicians
and powerhouse executives like
Loretta Lynch, Claire McCaskill
and Elizabeth Warren, who symbolically match the Michael Brown
family with heat, determination
and superbly responsible thinking.
Even Big Oil is about to stub its
toe in New Jersey because of Gov.
Chris Christie, having become too
slick to hide like a hog in a blanket. Squeals are on the way.
Stanley Crouch can be reached by email at
crouch.stanley@gmail.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Wednesday,
March 25, the 84th day of
2015. There are 281 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On March 25, 1965,
the Rev. Martin Luther
King Jr. led 25,000 people
to the Alabama state
capitol in Montgomery
after a five-day march
from Selma to protest the
denial of voting rights
to blacks. Later that day,
civil rights activist Viola
Liuzzo, a white Detroit
homemaker, was shot and
killed by Ku Klux Klansmen as she drove a black
volunteer to the airport.
On this date:
In 1306, Robert the
Bruce was crowned King
of Scots.
In 1634, English colo-

nists sent by Lord Baltimore arrived in presentday Maryland.
In 1776, Gen. George
Washington, commander
of the Continental Army,
was awarded the first Congressional Gold Medal by
the Continental Congress.
In 1865, during the
Civil War, Confederate forces attacked Fort
Stedman in Virginia but
were forced to withdraw
because of counterattacking Union troops.
In 1911, 146 people,
mostly young female
immigrants, were killed
when fire broke out at the
Triangle Shirtwaist Co. in
New York.
Today’s Birthdays:
Movie reviewer Gene
Shalit is 89. Former
astronaut James Lovell is

87. Feminist activist and
author Gloria Steinem
is 81. Singer Anita Bryant is 75. Singer Aretha
Franklin is 73. Actor Paul
Michael Glaser is 72.
Singer Elton John is 68.
Actress Bonnie Bedelia
is 67. Actress-comedian
Mary Gross is 62. Actor
James McDaniel is 57.
Former Sen. John Ensign,
R-Nev., is 57. Movie
producer Amy Pascal is
57. Rock musician Steve
Norman (Spandau Ballet) is 55. Actress Brenda
Strong is 55. Actor Fred
Goss is 54. Actor-writerdirector John Stockwell
is 54. Actress Marcia
Cross is 53. Author Kate
DiCamillo is 51. Actress
Lisa Gay Hamilton is
51. Actress Sarah Jessica Parker is 50. Former

MLB All-Star pitcher Tom
Glavine is 49. Olympic
bronze medal figure skater
Debi Thomas, M.D., is 48.
Actor Laz Alonso (TV:
“The Mysteries of Laura”)
is 44. Singer Melanie Blatt
(All Saints) is 40. Actor
Domenick Lombardozzi
is 39. Actor Lee Pace is
36. Actor Sean Faris is
33. Auto racer Danica
Patrick is 33. Actresssinger Katharine McPhee
is 31. Singer Jason Castro
(“American Idol”) is 28.
Rapper Big Sean is 27.
Rap DJ/producer Ryan
Lewis is 27. Actor Matthew Beard (Film: “The
Imitation Game”) is 26.
Actress-singer Aly (AKA
Alyson) Michalka is 26.
Actor Kiowa Gordon is
25. Actress Seychelle
Gabriel is 24.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 25, 2015 5

Council

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR

From Page 1

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25
OHIO VALLEY — Leading Creek
Water has scheduled a repair on a
12-inch main line late night Wednesday until approximately 6 a.m. All
customers east of the intersection of
State Road 124 and State Road 325
could experience low pressure or
interruption of service and will be on
a boil advisory until further notice.
For the integrity of the water system,
water conservation would be appreciated during this period.

THURSDAY, MARCH 26

MARIETTA — The Buckeye
Hills Regional Transportation
Planning Organization (RTPO)
Technical Advisory and Citizens
Advisory Committees will meet
at 10 a.m. at 1400 Pike St. If you
have any questions regarding this
meeting, contact Karen Pawloski,
transportation planning manager,
at 740-376-7658.
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil
&amp; Water Conservation monthly
board meeting will be at the Meigs
SWCD office in Pomeroy beginning
at 11:30 a.m.
POMEROY — The Alpha-Iota
Masters will meet at 11:30 a.m. at
the KFC.
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Council on Aging’s Annual
March for Meals Dinner will be

Plea
From Page 1

not guilty to the charges.
After a four-day trial,
the jury deliberated for
approximately five hours,
but could not reach a verdict, resulting in a hung
jury.
On Monday, Kimes
again appeared before
the court and pleaded
guilty to only one count

held starting with the Spaghetti
dinner at 5:30 p.m. Cake winners
will be announced at 6:15 p.m.
Tickets cost $8 or two for $15. $6
for ages 12 &amp; under.

upcoming production of Nunsense
on from 2-4 p.m. on at RCP Headquarters. Performances will take
place June 6-7. For more information, visit RCP’s Facebook page.

FRIDAY, MARCH 27

MONDAY, MARCH 30

MARIETTA — The Regional
Advisory Council for the Area Agency on Aging will meet at 10 a.m.
in the Buckeye Hills-HVRDD Area
Agency on Aging office.
MIDDLEPORT — The monthly
Free Community Dinner at the
Middleport Church of Christ’s Family Life Center will be 5 p.m. They
will be serving chicken/bacon/ranch
pasta, tossed salad, and dessert.
Everyone is welcome.
MIDDLEPORT — Enjoy a free
movie at the Middleport Village Hall
at 6:30 p.m. sponsored by Middleport Community Association.

SATURDAY, MARCH 28

POMEROY —The Christian
Motorcyclists Association will have
a rummage event from 9 a.m. to 2
p.m. at Common Ground Missions,
located at 216 E. Main Street. For
more information, call 740-9491307.

SUNDAY, MARCH 29

MIDDLEPORT— River City
Players will hold auditions for an

— Count 7, which alleged
that between Jan. 1,
2011, and June 30, 2012,
Kimes committed theft.
Counts 1-6 and Count
8 were dropped. Count
7 is a felony in the fifth
degree.
During the hearing,
it was established that
Kimes will pay $2,500 in
restitution as a deductible, with an unnamed
insurance company
paying the rest of the
amount, totaling $76,854.

POMEROY — The Meigs County Veterans Service Office Commission will meet at 9 a.m. at 117 E.
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1

LETART TWP. — Please remove
grave blankets and old flowers by
today. Reminder: Nothing is to be
placed beyond a six-inch perimeter
around headstones. Please regard
rules and regulations posted in cemeteries so we can keep them beautiful. No glass items. Letart Township Trustee Board: Mike Roush
247-2851 , Dave Graham 949-2281,
Christopher Wolfe 949-3315.

MONDAY, APRIL 3

POMEROY— The regular meeting of Meigs county PERI Chapter
74 will be 1 p.m. at the Mulberry
Community Center, 156 Mulberry
Ave.,Pomeroy. Meigs County EMS
director Robbie Jacks will be the
speaker. Carolyn Waddel, District
7 Representative, will provide state
updates. Meigs County PERI retirees are encouraged to attend.

Ohio Assistant Attorney General Melissa A.
Schiffel said the state had
spoken with Sheriff Keith
Wood, Meigs County
Prosecutor Colleen Williams and the Meigs
County Commissioners,
who were all in agreement with the restitution
amount. Both the state
and the defense requested
that Kimes receive community control and
Kimes’ bond was continued.

A pre-sentence investigation report has been
ordered, and sentencing
for Kimes will be 10 a.m.
May 15. According to
court documents, the rest
of the dropped charges
will be addressed at this
hearing.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 9922155 EXT. 2555 or on Twitter @
JournalistKriz.

Council discussed the Logan/Hysell streets
project bid process. During an earlier meeting, the
council voted to solicit bids to replace the water
line near those streets because of the homes near
the line. Gerlach said that bids for the project
will be opened April 21 and awarded April 27.
The engineer’s project estimated cost was around
$90,000. Gerlach said the project is “a matter of
safety and risk management.”
Other council matters included a vote to
approve the village to participate in ODOT’s road
salt program to buy salt at the state’s negotiated
price. Gerlach said this could save the village a bit
of money.
Council also approved the village’s participation in the Summer Youth Employment Program,
which gives youths work experience and the
youths get paid and the village is reimbursed by
the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services.
Council also approved to change the operation of the traffic light at North Second and Race
streets to be a blinking yellow on North Second
and a blinking red light on Race Street.
Resident Wayne Neff spoke to council about
property taxes and dilapidated property. Neff said
that he felt council members that owe delinquent
property taxes should not be involved in decisions
about dilapidated properties. Council members
Manley and Dick Vaughan said they resented that
statement.
Resident George Hoffman read a statement
that he had prepared to council expressing his
concerns about some of council’s recent decisions,
like abolishing the village administrator position
and getting rid of the permissive taxes. Hoffman
said council should keep the majority of residents
in mind when they make major decisions.
Former Village Administrator Faymon Roberts
gave a statement thanking Middleport for allowing him to serve his position, which he had held
since 2008. Roberts said that, while working with
the mayor and Fiscal Officer Sue Baker, he had
helped bring in $14.5 million in grants and forgiven loans. The council went into executive session
and no action was taken during the session.
The council also approved last meeting’s minutes and the bills, which totaled $5,919.12.
The next Middleport council meeting will be 7
p.m. April 6.
Reach Donald Lambert at 740-992-2155, Ext. 2555. or on Twitter @
Donaldlambert22

Banquet

Smith, Enactus advisor and director of
the Loren M. Berry Center for Economic Education at Rio Grande. “Students
From Page 1
of her caliber are a privilege to work
with, and an example of the type of
MBA program at the University of
quality students who received their eduToledo as well as prepared me for law
cation at the University of Rio Grande.”
school.”
Tischler still serves on the Enactus
Wednesday’s Honors Alumni Banquet
Business
Advisory Board and “is willalso will honor eight seniors — English
ing
to
assist
us in any capacity that is
major Jessica DeLong, marketing major
needed,”
Smith
said.
Corey Fisher, education major Karla
That
commitment
to service and
Garn, computer science major Pearce
hard
work
played
a
significant
role in
Michal, education major Tabitha MosTischler
being
appointed
as
Maumee’s
ley, education major Brittany Piccone,
law director.
computer science major John Rexroad
Maumee Mayor Richard H. Carr said
and graphic design major Samantha
Taylor.
Tischler’s educational background sepaThe Rio Grande Honors Program,
rated her from other candidates. The
Simple Brilliance, engages gifted stufact she wasn’t satisfied with just a Juris
dents through a specialized curricuDoctorate, but also attained her MBA,
lum, Honors seminars, and a capstone
all while working and participating in
project that challenges all perceptions
extracurricular activities demonstrated
to achieve maximum potential. The aca- “initiative and drive.”
demic excellence embodied by the Rio
Maumee is a community of 14,000
Grande faculty combined with the core residents, but more than 30,000 people
value system of the surrounding Appaearn an income within the city that
lachian culture fosters socially responsi- manages an annual budget of more than
ble, culturally diverse leaders dedicated
$17 million. Such a community requires
to confronting global change.
a law director with a broad array of
Tischler, an alumna of the Honors
skills, to which Tischler delivers.
Program, also was active in numerous
“She can work under pressure, work
extra curricular activities at Rio. She
well
with other city employees, and
ran cross country and track, earned
meet the challenges of her job. These
NAIA Academic All-America status,
participated in entrepreneurial student attributes were not learned in law
school, but were established as an
club SIFE (now Enactus) and twice
undergraduate at the University of Rio
traveled to Mexico through the LanGrande,” Carr said. “Beth is an imporguage Experience Program.
tant part of our administrative team
“As a student, Beth was motivated,
today and integral part of the future of
responsible, intelligent, caring, comthe City of Maumee.”
mitted and a hard worker,” said Carol

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

AEP (NYSE) — 57.25
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.01
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 127.42
Big Lots (NYSE) — 49.85
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 46.76
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 59.99
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 13.90
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.250
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 47.45
Collins (NYSE) —95.28
DuPont (NYSE) — 73.60
US Bank (NYSE) — 44.20
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 25.27
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 60.92
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 6046
Kroger (NYSE) — 77.17
Ltd Brands (NYSE) —94.09
Norfolk So (NYSE) —106.07
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.90

BBT (NYSE) —39.12
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 23.45
Pepsico (NYSE) — 95.86
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.19
Rockwell (NYSE) — 116.13
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 21.66
Royal Dutch Shell — 61.67
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 41.66
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 83.05
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 11.22
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.02
Worthington (NYSE) — 28.77
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
March 24, 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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�LOCAL

6 Wednesday, March 25, 2015

LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 25, 2015 7

2015
March Mania Bracket
Kentucky • Villanova

MISS/BYU • UCLA

Gallia Auto Sales

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy

David Mink

740-992-2955
630 East Main Street�tPomeroy, OH 45769

2147 Jackson Pike, Bidwell, OH 45614

60571404

60571082

Texas So. • N. Dakato St.

Phone: (740) 446-0724

Xavier • SMU

l

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O’D

DAVE’S SUPREME AUTO SALES

True Value Lumber

1393 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio

60571406

740-446-4400

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60571303

MANH/HAMP • Lafayette

Harvard • E. Wash.

SMITH

. DRY KILNS

CHEVROLET

MANH/HAMP • Lafayette

Northeastern • Albany

DILES
HEARING CENTER

Buy Locally - Save Locally

SMITH
CHEVROLET

60570536

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FIND NEW ROADS™

1911 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
740-446-2282
www.smithsuperstore.com

FIND NEW ROADS™

www.dileshearing.com
800-237-7716

1911 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
740-446-2282
www.smithsuperstore.com

659 E Main St, Ste. D
Jackson, OH 45640
740-288-3571
275 W. Union Street
Athens, OH 45701
740-594-3571

Wichita St. • Michigan St.

Arizona • Gongoza
R. Craig Mathews, D.D.S.

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy

530 W. Union Street, Athens, Ohio 45701
Phone: (740) 592-1493 or
(800) 923-7329

740-992-2955

Pomeroy,
OH 45769

630 East Main St.

60570564

60570566

Cincinatti • NC State

N. Carolina • Georgetown

Dailey Tire

296 State Rt. 7
Gallipolis, OH 45631
740-446-8051

“Expert Tire Sales and Service”

740-446-8473
www.daileytire.com

1740 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

60570231

Ohio St. • Davidson

Owner
John Dailey

60570232

APPLIANCES · ELECTRONICS

60570561

J.B

$13,990
60570533

ake Great Selection Of
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JEFF BOBB
OWNER

Indiana • Georgia

Overbrook Rehabilitation Center
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740-992-6472

www.overbrookrehabilitationcenter.com

60570238

60570361

Georgia St. • UAB

VCU • Iowa

AB Contracting Inc.
Modular Home Division

5533 Ohio River Rd Point Plesant, WV 25550
Phone: 304-674-8022 • Fax: 740-879-1765

60569343

mike@abcontractingwv.com
www.abcontractingwv.com

Maryland • Louisville

60569315

W. Virgina • N. Iowa

Gallipolis, Ohio

Sales

60569737

61 Ohio River Plaza, Gallipolis, OH
(740)446-7632 • Manager - Keith Vanover

740-446-0842

OHIO
VALLEY
BANK
®

Member
FDIC

www.ovbc.com

0/ "OX �� s #HESTER /HIO

(/-% #/--%2#)!, &amp;!2-

740-949-2210

740-985-3307

Robert Morris • Dayton

Mike Sigler

Where your child’s needs are always being met.

60569767

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740-446-9356
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RUTLAND BOTTLE GAS
282 Main Street
Rutland, Ohio
740-742-2511 or 1-800-837-8217
www.rutlandbottlegas.com

Chicken Wings! Tenders! Party Trays!

Twyllia Y. Conelley-Jay 740-339-2605
Owner/Director
6286 State Route 588
Gallipolis, OH 45631-8454

March
Mayham
Madness
35

Texas • BOISE/DAY
G &amp; W Auto Parts LLC

Home Away From Home Daycare

2615 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant,
WV, 25550

Preschool Available
Before/After School
60570218

Butler • Providence

NOE &amp; SAUNDERS
LAW OFFICE

60569322

60571192

Hampton • BYU

N. Florida • Boise St.

We’ve solved the puzzle.

EASTMAN’S

60570585

Family owned &amp; operated

Ridenour’s Gas Service

Kansas • Virgina

60570223

740.446.3093
60569326

560 Second Ave | Gallipolis, OH | 704.446.1761
www.myinsplus.com
60570226

ServiceTech

209 Upper River Road
Gallipolis, Oh

RESTORATION AND
CLEANING SOLUTIONS

3 Rooms for $9900

740-446-2962

Phil Mitchell - Manager

Arkansas • Utah

Wisconsin • Duke

Notre Dame • Oklahoma

604 State Route 7 South
Gallipolis, OH 45631

4afreesomhome.com/760

AUTO PARTS

216 Upper River Road,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Phone: 740-446-1813
Fax: 740-446-4056
carquestofgallipolis.com

60570370

888-675-8554

175 North 2nd Avenue, Middleport, OH 45760
740-992-7028

We’ve Got
Money to Lend!

Manhatten • Ole Miss

SERVICE TRI-COUNTY AREA
60569328

60569329

250 N. Columbus Rd. | Athens, OH 45701

Valparaiso • UC Irvine

60569325

INGELS CARPET

Baylor • Iowa St.
60570568

Buffalo • Wyoming

Purdue • LSU

60571083

740-446-4704

60570353

“A Celebration of Life”
333 Page Street
Middleport, Ohio

Great Wine Selection
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�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 25, 2015 s Page 8

Point wins
season opener
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The Point Pleasant softball team started
the 2015 season on a
positive note Monday
night after claiming a
10-0 victory in three
innings over visiting
Parkersburg South in a
non-conference matchup
in Mason County.
The Lady Knights (1-0)
battled through two-anda-half scoreless innings
with the Lady Patriots
(0-1), but the hosts
erupted for 10 runs in the
bottom of the third —
which ultimately allowed
the Red, Black and White
to secure the mercy-rule
decision.
PPHS sent a dozen batters to the plate in its half
of the third, which resulted in six hits, two walks
and one costly error that
turned into five unearned
runs. It also allowed Point
Pleasant to load the bases
with two away and a 6-0
lead with the top of the
order coming to the plate.
Sophomore leadoff hitter Cami Hesson belted a
first-pitch shot to straight
away centerfield that
cleared the fence, and that
walkoff grand slam gave
the Lady Knights their
first victory of the spring.

Hesson led the hosts with
two hits and four RBIs.
Makinley Higginbotham, Leah Cochran,
Kelsey Price and Megan
Hammond also had a hit
apiece for PPHS, with
Leah Cochran driving in
two runs. Higginbotham
and Price also added an
RBI apiece to the triumph.
Megan Hammond
joined Hesson with two
runs scored, while Higginbotham, Price, Kelsey
Byus, Michaela Cottrill,
Leah Cochran and Karissa Cochran also crossed
home plate once each.
The Lady Knights did
not commit an error and
outhit PSHS by a 7-3 overall count. The Lady Patriots stranded four runners
on base, while the hosts
left just one on the bags.
Karissa Cochran was
the winning pitcher of
record after allowing just
one walk in three innings
while striking out five.
Megan Bosley took the
loss after surrendering
three walks over 2.2
frames while fanning two.
Lindsey Cox, Alyssa
Gates and Sydney Smith
each had a hit for the
guests, who had only one
baserunner reach third in
the setback.

Burns, Rose earn all-state honors
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The West
Virginia Sports Writers Association has
released the Class A All-State team for the
2014-15 season, featuring two representatives from Mason County.
Hannan senior Tyler Burns and Wahama
senior Hunter Rose were each named honorable mention after leading their teams to
4-18 and 12-11 records respectively. Burns
became the ninth Wildcat to surpass the
1,000 point mark for a career this season.
Wheeling Central junior Chase Harler
was named first team captain, Austin Ratliff
of Gilmer County was second team captain,
while Henry Barron-Houchins of ValleyFayette was the third team captain.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Wahama senior Hunter Rose (1) shoots ver Tavian Miller (23) of Belpre during
the White Falcons 85-80 victory over BHS in Mason.

Class A All-West Virginia
First team
Chase Harler, Wheeling Central, jr. (capt.)
Preston Boswell, Magnolia, jr.
Elisha Kidd, Greater Beckley Christian, sr.
Jarrod West, Notre Dame, soph.
See HONORS | 12

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

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, March 25
Baseball
Parkersburg South at Point Pleasant, 5:30
Softball
Point Pleasant at Logan, 5:30
Wahama at Parkersburg, 5:30
College baseball
Rio Grande at Pikeville (DH) 1 p.m.
Thursday, March 26
Baseball
Roane County at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Hannan at Buffalo, 6 p.m.
Softball
Point Pleasant at Wahama, 5:30
Hannan at Calvary Baptist, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Point Pleasant at Capital, 4 p.m.
Tennis
St. Albans at Point Pleasant, 5 p.m.
Friday, March 27
Baseball
Wahama at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Grace Christian at Hannan, 5:30
Softball
Lincoln County at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Tolsia, 5:30
Track and Field
Hannan, Wahama at Point Pleasant, 4 p.m.
Tennis
Point Pleasant at Spring Valley, 5 p.m.
College baseball
Rio Grande at Brescia (DH) 2 p.m.
College softball
Rio Grande at Alice Lloyd (DH) 2 p.m.
Saturday, March 28
Baseball
Meigs at Eastern (DH) 11 a.m.
Wahama at Wirt County (DH), 1 p.m.
Southern, Westfall at Oak Hill, 10:30
Gallia Academy, Batavia at Hillsboro, noon
River Valley at Symmes Valley (DH), noon
Charleston Catholic at Point Pleasant, 1 p.m.
Softball
Winfield at Point Pleasant, noon
Wahama at Wirt County (DH), 1:30
Gallia Academy at Hillsboro (DH) 11 a.m.
River Valley at Symmes Valley (DH), noon
Southern at Amanda Clearcreek (DH) 11 a.m.
Meigs at Eastern (DH) 11 a.m.
Track and Field
Gallia Academy at Cabell Midland, 10 a.m.
Eastern at Fairweather Relays, 10 a.m.
Tennis
Point Pleasant vs. Logan/Lincoln County at
Schoenbaum, 9 a.m.
College baseball
Rio Grande at Brescia (DH) noon
College softball
Rio Grande at Alice Lloyd (DH) 11 a.m.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Southern senior Tristen Wolfe (2) leads a fast break during the Tornadoes’ Division IV district semifinal game against Paint Valley at the
Ohio University Convocation Center in Athens, Ohio.

Locals shine at District 13 all-star games
Turley named girls
MVP, Wolfe wins
slam dunk crown
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

JACKSON, Ohio — Southern
seniors Cierra Turley and Tristen
Wolfe came away with some serious hardware and a pair of victories
Monday night during the 2015 Ohio
High School Basketball Coaches
Association District 13 all-star games
being held at Jackson High School.
Turley hit five trifectas and
scored a game-high 17 points while
leading the Division III-IV squad to
a 68-59 win over the Division I-II
team. Turley also came away with
the District 13 girls most valuable
player award for her efforts.
Turley was one of five Ohio Valley
Publishing area senior girls in the
annual event, with Gallia Academy’s
Micah Curfman and Chelsy Slone
respectively scoring 13 and two
points for the Division I-II team.
Neither Kendra Barnes of GAHS
(D 1-2) nor Kelsey Hudson of Meigs
(D 3-4) scored in the contest.
Micah Couch of Trimble broke a
90-all tie with a basket with 20 seconds left, giving the Division III-IV
squad a 92-90 victory over the Division I-II team in the boys contest.
All 29 players scored in the boys
game, which did feature some shuffling of players to different teams
for a more competitive event.
Trevor McNeal of Gallia Academy
– a D-2 program – led the winning
Division III-IV team with 12 points,

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Southern senior Cierra Turley (10) converts a layup over South Gallia’s Courtney Haner
(12) and Sara Bailey (20) during the Lady Tornadoes triumph over SGHS in Racine.

while Brayden Greer of South Gallia
added nine points for the smaller
schools. Wolfe also had six points
for the victors.
Christian Speelman of Eastern
– D-4 program – netted two points
during the setback for his Division
I-II squad.
Tristan Cox of Ironton was
named the boys most valuable
player after netting nine points for
the Division III-IV squad.
A trio of North-South representatives

collected the special hardware by night’s
end. Wolfe came away with slam dunk
title, while the Athens duo of Joe Burrow and Dominique Doseck teamed up
to win the three-point shootout.
The OHSBCA District 13 allstar games involve seniors from
Lawrence, Jackson, Gallia, Meigs,
Athens, Washington, Perry and
Hocking counties in Ohio.
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2101.

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Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost
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Got an older car, boat or
Health Hotline Now! 1- 800RV? Do the humane thing.
430-1045
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Daily Sentinel

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to
work? Denied benefits? We
Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing!
Contact Bill Gordon &amp; Associates at 1-800-509-2201 to
start your application today!
Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert
for Seniors. Bathroom falls
can be fatal.Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic
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Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors.
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LEGALS
A viewing to consider the vacation of Caldwell Road, T-442,
in Orange Township, is set for
Thursday, March 26, at 9:30
a.m. AT THE ROAD SITE .
The hearing for the proposed
vacation is set for 11:05 A.M.
on March 26 at the Commissioners' regularly-scheduled
meeting on the third floor of the
Court House. All interested
parties are welcome to attend
both the viewing and the hearing. 03/19,03/25/15
Notices
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.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.

*******************
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE
All real estate advertising in
this newspaper is subject to
the Fair Housing Act which
makes it illegal to advertise
“any preference, limitation or
discrimination based on race,
color, religion, sex, handicap,
familial status or national origin, or an intention to make
any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with
parents or legal custodians,
pregnant women and people
securing custody of children
under 18.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in
violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that
all dwellings advertised in this
newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis. To
complain of discrimination call
HUD toll-free at 1-800-6699777. The toll-free telephone
number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

RETIREMENT SALE
EVERYTHING MUST GO
ALL STOCK CARPET/VINYL
MOLLOHAN CARPET
740-446-7444
Wanted
Market Research Opinions
Needed$150 for 7.5 hours plus lunch
and
free parking. Study being conducted
in the Charleston area.
Participants must be age 18 or
over,
and be registered to vote.
Please call: 800-646-3401
Miscellaneous
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to
work? Denied benefits? We
Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing!
Contact Bill Gordon &amp; Associates at 1-800-509-2201 to
start your application today!
Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert
for Seniors. Bathroom falls
can be fatal.Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic
Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In.
Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors.
American Made. Installation Included. Call 800-596-9892 for
$750 Off.
Got Knee Pain? Back Pain?
Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost
to you. Medicare Patients Call
Health Hotline Now! 1- 800430-1045
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delivered-to-the-door Omaha
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SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to
work? Denied benefits? We
Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing!
Contact Bill Gordon &amp; Associates at 1-800-509-2201 to
start your application today!
Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert
for Seniors. Bathroom falls
can be fatal.Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic
Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In.
Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors.
American Made. Installation Included. Call 800-596-9892 for
$750 Off.
Got Knee Pain? Back Pain?
Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost
to you. Medicare Patients Call
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delivered-to-the-door Omaha
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Meet singles right now! No
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like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now:
800-404-1874
Got an older car, boat or
RV? Do the humane thing.
Donate it to the Humane Society. Call 1- 800-610-7614
Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your
stairs! **Limited time -$250 Off
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Got an older car, boat or
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Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your
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Sunday Ticket Included with
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Home Improvements
BASEMENT
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SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to
work? Denied benefits? We
Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing!
Contact Bill Gordon &amp; Associates at 1-800-509-2201 to
start your application today!
Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert
for Seniors. Bathroom falls
can be fatal.Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic
Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In.
Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors.
American Made. Installation Included. Call 800-596-9892 for
$750 Off.
Got Knee Pain? Back Pain?
Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost
to you. Medicare Patients Call
Health Hotline Now! 1- 800430-1045
ENJOY 100% guaranteed,
delivered-to-the-door Omaha
Steaks! SAVE 78% PLUS 4
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Family Banquet-ONLY $49.99.
ORDER Today 1-800-7159127 use code 43285KZG or
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14

Wednesday, March 25, 2015 9

Lawn Service

Food Services

Lawn Sharks
For All Your Lawn Care
and Pressure Cleaning Needs
Serving Point Pleasant, WV.
call 304-208-0390
or
304-593-3064 after 6pm

Sodexo at The University of
Rio Grande is seekng an experince Cook, Food Service
Worker. On-Call, Part-Time
Please apply in Person or
740-245-5660

Professional Services
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)

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�SPORTS

10 Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Huggins looks for another win over Calipari

Probation
ordered in
Toledo case

By John Raby
AP Sports Writer

West Virginia coach Bob
Huggins has had his way
against Kentucky’s John
Calipari over the years.
Huggins is 8-2 all-time
against his close friend.
Meeting No. 11 will be
Huggins’ greatest challenge against a Caliparicoached team when West
Virginia takes on the
NCAA Tournament’s top
overall seed in the Sweet
16 on Thursday night in
Cleveland.
“We’re going to have
fun trying,” Huggins said.
“He’ll have them ready. He
always has them ready.”
Whether fifth-seeded
West Virginia (25-9) will
be ready for double-digit
favorite Kentucky (36-0)
may be another matter, but
Huggins insists his players
won’t give in to the pressure.
He noted that when
senior guards Juwan
Staten and Gary Browne
were out with injuries
late in the regular season,
freshmen Javon Carter and
Daxter Miles Jr. embraced
the opportunity to lead the
team into Allen Fieldhouse
in Lawrence, Kansas,
where the Mountaineers
took the Jayhawks to overtime before losing 76-69.
“These guys are different,” Huggins said. “They
kind of relish the moment.
They love to play, and
that’s what’s fun about
them. They love to play.
They love being around
each other.”
So do Huggins and Calipari, who enjoy a longtime
friendship. When Huggins
suffered a heart attack at
the Pittsburgh airport in
2002, Calipari went to

DETROIT (AP) — A former University of Toledo basketball player
who accepted at least $3,000 from a
gambler to miss shots and make other
mistakes was sentenced to probation
Tuesday in a decade-old point-shaving
scandal.
Sammy Villegas is the first of seven
former Rockets to be sentenced this
spring, including three ex-football
players. The case was handled in federal court in Detroit, the hometown
of two gamblers and 60 miles north of
the Ohio campus.
“I would like to apologize to the
University of Toledo,” said Villegas,
who took cash from 2004 to 2006
while playing guard for the Rockets.
Villegas, 32, had faced as much as
30 months in prison but got a break.
U.S. District Judge Mark Goldsmith
followed the recommendation of
prosecutors and ordered three years
of probation and 100 hours of community service.
Villegas quickly cooperated with the
FBI and pleaded guilty to conspiracy
in 2008. The case has dragged on for
years for a variety of reasons. The lead
gambler, Ghazi “Gary” Manni, had
planned to go to trial until pleading
guilty in 2014.
Manni was the “driving force” in the
point-shaving scheme, Assistant U.S.
Attorney Lynn Helland told the judge.
Villegas was young and immature,
and he deserves credit for helping
investigators, Helland said.
In a court filing, Villegas said he got
$300 to $400 when Manni won a bet
on a fixed Toledo game. In February
2006, he intentionally missed two free
throws and tried to hold the ball to
manipulate the final score of a 78-62
victory over Central Michigan.
Villegas said he now gets $18,000
to play professional basketball for four
months in Puerto Rico.
Former basketball player Anton
Currie was expected to get his sentence Tuesday. Manni is likely to get
about six years in prison when he
returns to court on May 26.

AP file

Kentucky head coach John Calipari (left) and West Virginia coach Bob Huggins face off Thursday when their teams
play in the regional semifinals of the NCAA Tournament in Cleveland. Huggins is 8-2 against Calipari, who is a friend.

visit him in the hospital.
Huggins said he couldn’t
estimate the number of
times the pair speak during the year.
“We talk about a lot of
things,” Huggins said.
“Sometimes it’s about basketball.”
Eight of Huggins’ wins
against Calipari came
when Huggins was Cincinnati’s coach. Six occurred
when Calipari was at
Memphis and two when he
coached Massachusetts.
They’re 1-1 head-to-head
with their current teams.
It marks the third time
in West Virginia’s last four
NCAA Tournament appearances that it will play Kentucky.
West Virginia advanced
to their first Final Four in
51 years by beating Kentucky 73-66 in 2010 when
the Wildcats were a No.
1 seed in Calipari’s first
season. Kentucky ousted
the Mountaineers in the
second round of the tour-

nament a year later.
In 2010, West Virginia
used a 1-3-1 zone defense
that forced Kentucky to
shoot 4 of 32 from 3-point
range.
Huggins doesn’t plan to
use that win as a blueprint
this time.
On offense, West Virginia made eight 3-pointers
in the first half without a
2-point basket in the 2010
game. This year’s team is
making only 32 percent of
its 3-point attempts and
doesn’t have the same variety of long-range shooters.
But what West Virginia
lacks in all-around shooting accuracy is a tenacity
and grit to go after loose
balls, rebounds and get in
the face of opponents.
The centerpiece of West
Virginia’s defense is a fullcourt press that has helped
force an NCAA-best 19.6
turnovers per game. Maryland committed 23 Sunday
night in West Virginia’s
69-59 win.

West Virginia also leads
the nation with 16.5 offensive rebounds per game
— Kentucky allowed 21
offensive rebounds in a
64-51 win over Cincinnati
on Saturday.
But West Virginia managed only nine points from
its bench against Maryland. The Mountaineers
also have been too aggressive at times — they’ve set
a school record with 792
personal fouls, something
that will bear watching
against Kentucky.
“I think they’re terrific
defensively,” Huggins said.
“John does a terrific job of
getting them to guard, getting them to play together
(and) share the ball. They
guard so well.
‘’I think the hardest
thing is going to be figuring out ways to score.
We’ve got to find ways to
still be able to attack the
basket and be able to get it
on the rim.”

Cleveland Browns expect Manziel on field in April
PHOENIX (AP) — Browns
coach Mike Pettine expects
quarterback Johnny Manziel
to take part in the team’s
practices next month after
leaving rehab.
Pettine said the team has
received “good” feedback about
Manziel, who entered a treatment facility on Jan. 28 for an
undisclosed problem. A firstround draft pick in 2014, the
2012 Heisman Trophy winner
from Texas A&amp;M backed up
Brian Hoyer before playing
poorly in two starts. Following
the season, Manziel acknowledged he should have taken his
job more seriously.

Pettine does not know when
Manziel will be discharged
from rehab, but he expects the
young QB to return to football
immediately. The Browns will
work out on April 20.
“When he is back, it will
be full speed ahead for him,”
Pettine said. “I think he’s very
anxious at this point.”
Pettine emphasized Manziel’s
personal issues outweigh anything related to his profession.
“Football, it’s a back seat,”
Pettine said. “For his football
life to get it where it needs to
be, he needs to get the personal
life where it needs to be. …
This takes precedence, so how-

ever long of time he needs, the
football will be there when he
gets out.”
While at the owners’ meetings, the Browns have had
discussions with HBO about
being featured on “Hard
Knocks,” the cable network’s
popular reality series that
gives viewers and inside look
at an NFL team during training camp. Pettine knows all
about “Hard Knocks” from
when he was an assistant
coach with the New York Jets.
Pettine said Manziel’s situation is a factor in the Browns’
hesitancy to be on the program.
“When we decided not to

Help Wanted General

Commercial

Apartments/Townhouses

Instructor Needed
Gallipolis Career College is
seeking part-time instructors
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morning 9am – 1:40pm and
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The qualified accounting
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minimum associates degree
and Business Communications
minimum master s degree.
Send resumes to
director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu, or mail to
1176 Jackson Pike, Suite
312, Gallipolis, OH 45631

FOR LEASE: Commercial
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1-800-214-0452
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I know (Arizona Cardinals
coach) Bruce Arians spoke to
it a year ago. If you have to
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you’re not thinking about your
job and you’re thinking about
something else, for even an
instant, then it’s a distraction.
“I saw that as a negative,
when guys are different, guys
that can’t handle, they act different, play to the camera. I
see that as a potential negative.
And the positives are maybe
the same thing. Guys know
there’s a camera around and
something they do can wind up
on the show.”

volunteer for ‘Hard Knocks,’
we discussed everything that
was involved with it. That
(Manziel) was certainly something we needed to consider. I
wouldn’t say (Manziel) loomed
large. You just weigh everything in. Because being a part
of ‘Hard Knocks,’ knowing
they’re going to look to cover
the team’s biggest, current
story lines — it’s obvious that
he would be a point of attention.”
From his experience, “Hard
Knocks” can be an unnecessary diversion for players and
coaches.
“It’s hard to be yourself.

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phone: 304-786-9202

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Help Wanted General

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Help Wanted General

WANTED

Certified Nursing
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Pleasant Valley Hospital currently has openings for fulltime, part-time and per diem Certified Nursing Assistants
at our Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. Must be state
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Apply at:
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fax to (304) 675-6975
or apply on-line at www.pvalley.org.
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60572439

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Wednesday, March 25, 2015 11

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

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BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

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PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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By Hilary Price

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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
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1-800-697-0129
All offers require 24-month commitment and credit qualification. Offers expire 6/10/15. Restrictions apply. Call for details

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�SPORTS

12 Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Daily Sentinel

AP SPORTS BRIEFS

Illini coach: Team didn’t
finish tough, together

Director of Athletics Chris Reynolds
made the announcement Sunday in a
news release.
Ford compiled a 46-86 record during
his tenure, including a 9-24 record in
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) — Illinois
coach John Groce said his team handled the 2014-15 season.
Reynolds says a national search for a
injuries and suspensions to make the
new coach will begin immediately.
most of its first 31 games. That left
the Illini on the verge of a spot in the
NCAA Tournament.
But the last three games left the Illini
in the National Invitation Tournament
and, finally, done for the season.
Groce said Monday that Illinois’
ROSSBURG, Ohio (AP) — Earl
trouble started in the second half of
Baltes, the founder and longtime prothe regular-season finale at Purdue. It
moter of Eldora Speedway, has died. He
ended with a blowout loss to Alabama
was 93.
in the NIT.
Speedway officials say Baltes died
Groce said the Illini didn’t play tough
Monday at Miami Valley Hospital in
or together in those games, and players
Dayton, Ohio.
and coaches share the blame.
Eldora owner and three-time NASGroce said he won’t have any idea
CAR
champion Tony Stewart says
whether anyone might transfer until he
Baltes
“was the yardstick other track
meets with players next week.
promoters
measured themselves by. He
Groce also said he understands fan
constantly
raised the bar, and he did it
unhappiness with the season’s disapby
creating
events everyone else was
pointing ending.
afraid to promote. He did them himself,
too.”
Stewart added it was a time without
“major sponsors or millions of dollars in
TV money.”
Baltes built Eldora, nestled in rural
west-central Ohio, in 1954 and slowly
PEORIA, Ill. (AP) — Geno Ford is
out as head basketball coach at Bradley shaped it into a showplace for dirt
motorsports. Eldora races were shown
after four years.

Speedway founder
Baltes dies at 93

Geno Ford out as
head coach at Bradley

Be
forecast
weather
Be ready!
ready?Check
Checkout
out the
the five-day
five-day forcast
onon
thethe
weather
page
orpage
at mydailytribune.com,
mydailyregister.com, and
or online at MyOwnWashingtonCourthouse.com.
mydailysentinel.com

on ABC’s “Wide World of Sports”
with Keith Jackson and Al Michaels as
broadcasters.
He is survived by Berneice, his wife
of 67 years, and a son and daughter.

MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP) — Martinsville Speedway will erect additional
tire barriers in time for this weekend’s
NASCAR races.
International Speedway Corp.
said Monday the tire barriers will be
installed at the end of the backstretch of
CINCINNATI (AP) — Ohio state
the .526-mile oval. The barriers will be
police said Tuesday that crime laborain place in time for Sprint Cup practice
tory tests found no other illegal drugs
and qualifying on Friday.
in the vehicle a veteran professional
All tracks that host NASCAR events
football player was driving when he was
are studying their safety measures folcharged with a misdemeanor marijuana lowing Kyle Busch’s crash last month at
possession count.
Daytona. Busch broke his right leg and
State Highway Patrol Sgt. Vincent
left foot in the Xfinity Series opener
Shirey said a small amount of marijuana when he spun and hit a concrete wall
has been confirmed in the case involvthat was not protected by an energying running back Ahmad Bradshaw.
absorbing SAFER barrier.
Troopers had sent other unidentified
substances taken from the car for testing.
Troopers said Bradshaw was stopped
Feb. 5 for following another vehicle
too closely on Interstate 70 in western
Ohio. Trooper J.A. Barhorst said in a
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — The New York
statement that he “smelled the strong
Senate is set to vote for the fifth straight
odor of raw marijuana” coming from
year for legalizing professional mixed
inside the Cadillac driven by Bradshaw martial arts and end the state’s position
after he pulled it over.
as the last one prohibiting the sport.
A pretrial conference is scheduled for
With MMA star Ronda Rousey
April 8 in Eaton municipal court, after
in Albany Tuesday lobbying for its
an earlier conference was postponed
passage, supporters in the Democratpending the outcome of the lab tests.
controlled Assembly say they believe
The marijuana misdemeanor carries
momentum is building.
fines and costs totaling $270. Bradshaw
The Assembly’s majority Democratic
has pleaded not guilty.
Conference, where the legalization bill
A message left for Bradshaw’s attorhas foundered in the past, is expected
ney, David Williamson, wasn’t immedi- to consider it again sometime after a
ately returned.
new state budget is adopted for the new
The 29-year-old Bradshaw is a free
fiscal year starting April 1.
agent who played for the Indianapolis
The Senate bill would authorize the
Colts the last two seasons, scoring
New York State Athletic Commission to
eight touchdowns with 725 total yards
regulate MMA as it does professional
in 10 games in 2014 before suffering
boxing.
a season-ending fractured fibula. He
One proposed revision would estabplayed for two Super Bowl champions
lish a compensation fund, like the state’s
as a New York Giant.
jockey fund, to benefit injured fighters.

Police: Pot found, no
other drugs in car

NY Senate set to back
legalizing MMA

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Martinsville to erect
tire barriers for race

Tyler May, Tug Valley, fr.
Zac Warden, Valley-Fayette,
jr.
Derek Zirk, Tucker County,
sr.
Spencer Campbell,
Magnolia, sr.
Matt Dlugos, Trinity, sr.
Deaundra Murphy,
Huntington St. Joseph, jr.
Third team
Henry Barron-Houchins,
Valley-Fayette, jr. (capt.)
Jessy Moore, St. Marys, sr.
Isaiah Francis, Greater
Beckley Christian, soph.
Jeremy Dillon, Tug Valley, fr.
Ryan Clutter, Cameron, jr.
Jesse Padlow, Bishop
Donahue, sr.
Hayden McCarty, Charleston
Catholic, jr.
Will Fenton, Fayetteville,
soph.
Honorable Mention
Kenny Joe Adkins, Man;
Boyd Bibey, Wheeling
Central; Calvin Blankenship,
Tug Valley; Steven Blume,
Midland Trail; Jake Boice,
Parkersburg Catholic; Tyler
Burns, Hannan; Tucker
Cain, Valley Wetzel; Zach
Chapman, Gilmer County;
Iain Clarke, St. Joseph;
Aaron Cole, Moorefield;
Tracy Conliffe, Valley
Fayette; Logan Cooper,
Pendleton County; Luke
Cooper, Paden City; Seth
Crosier, Midland Trail; Seth

Evans, Tucker County; Casey
Elza, Harman; Justin Estep,
Greenbrier West; Nathan
Evans, Union; Kaleb Farr,
Meadow Bridge; Sam Friend,
Union; Pierce Griffith, Trinity;
Cory Grogg, Gilmer County;
Zach Heasley, Paden City;
Austin Hensley, Buffalo;
Dylan Hupp, St. Marys; Kyle
Judy, Meadow Bridge; John
Thomas Keefer, Man; Josh
Lemley, Clay-Battelle; Drew
Lett, Doddridge County;
Luke McKown, Charleston
Catholic; Travis McNeil, St.
Joseph; Ricky Meadows,
Fayetteville; Josh Miller,
Bishop Donahue; Zach
Moore, Clay-Battelle; Levi
Mowery, Richwood; Josh
Palmer, Williamstown; Cary
Robertson, Pocahontas
County; Nick Rodesheimer,
Parkersburg Catholic;
Hunter Rose, Wahama; Tyler
Stewart, Sherman; Tyler
Sims, Calhoun County;
Brandon Smith, Doddridge
County; Corey Smith,
Sherman; Luke Smith, Wirt
County; Trenton Smith,
Wheeling Central; Griffen
Snyder, Richwood; Bryce
Strawderman, East Hardy;
Ben Sycafoose, Tygarts
Valley; Cortney Walton,
Greater Beckley Christian;
Zak Wentz, South Harrison;
Mitch Winters, Magnolia.

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