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                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�FEATURES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE

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INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

What people
say about
heroin... Page 2

Cloudy. High near
37. Low around
20... Page 3

Local sports
action... Page 6

Gary A. Barnitz, 72
Marjorie Bowman, 93
James Cundiff, 69
Albert Dunn Jr., 71
Everett L. Gilmore, 54
Gene Hunt, 79

50 cents daily

TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 2014

Vol. 64, No. 46

William Marshall Sr., 86
Sarah L. Nott, 21
Dorcas June Riffle, 77
Frank Robert Root, 83
Eleanor Selby, 87
Jeanette Varney, 63
William H. Wood, 83

What happened to

MY BEAUTIFUL LITTLE GIRL
Fresh into the new year, my
oldest child moved out again…
for the third time. And like
her previous rookie attempts, I
wasn’t home to witness it.
Instead of the loading and
unloading of boxes involved in
typical moves,
this last time
she left with
nothing but a
light jacket.
It’s hard to
carry anything
when you’re
taken away in
Marla
handcuffs.
Thompson Any mother
Contributing can recognize
that her home
Columnist
life has become
unmanageable
with or without the presence
of the police. But mothers
of addicts have a hard time
sticking their heads out of the
trenches long enough to realize that their version of reality
has gradually become skewed.
Over the past several
months, I’ve struggled with
an identity I don’t want to
embrace. I’ve collected the
most random of thoughts,
and have sifted through each
wondering how to grasp from

Terrible things can happen to good people. Mayle Thompson was your typical little girl: She enjoyed putting four
candles on her birthday cake, eating macaroni and cheese made from the blue box, and listening to bed time stories.
Today, her family struggles with her addiction to heroin.

a place of fear, something
indisputable enough to pull
me through. I didn’t choose
this life any more than she did,
but addiction, even by association, lends to its own unique
conversion.
My child, the one who
adored macaroni and cheese
from the blue box, bedtime
stories and the Spice Girls,
grew up to be an addict.
While we may not know how
her addiction will play out,
we do know she will always
be an addict, whether or not
she ever chooses to shoot up
again.

As her mother, I feel I failed
her. And as penance, I continue to love her but hate her
disease.
The lexicon is cliché, yet
each experience is singular.
From Greenwich Village to
a small town in Ohio, addicts
die alone. Their identities
surprise us. Their deaths do
not. And the people they leave
behind, we are all the same.
Today my family, though
fractured, is in some way
oddly reinforced.
We are ashamed, yet we are
also proud.
We are doubtful, yet some-

how certain.
We are sad, yet ever hopeful.
For as long as she continues to
live, we continue to hope.
And every day we fear
because her next overdose
could be her last.
I still live in the trenches.
But for now, I’m coming up
for air. What has happened
may have impacted us, but it
doesn’t have to define us.
And some days, I positively
believe all of this.
Marla Thompson is a mother of six
who lives in Oberlin, Ohio. E-mailher
at marla.thompson@oberlin.edu.

A judge, a businesswoman … horrors of heroin well known
By DAVID C.L. BAUER

be cut short due to this drug
makes this an unusual case in
our area,” Petty said.
Here, in the womb of cyberLopez was 47 when she died
space, it is forever Sept. 25,
Sept. 26, 2012. Her Facebook
2012.
page remains, with tributes
Before Pike County, Ill.,
still being added to her
Sheriff Paul Petty received that memory.
urgent call.
A vivacious outdoorsBefore mother and busiwoman, Lopez was owner of a
ness owner Shanda Lopez lost hunting outfitting business in
the struggle between life and
a county where whitetail deer
death.
are more plentiful than people
Before a small town had to
on some acres. Her vibrant
come to grips with the realblue eyes and inviting smile
ity that drugs do not respect
were almost a trademark, as
boundaries, social classes or
was a personality many said
the tight knit of a community’s was loving, caring and advenfabric.
turous.
“We have been aware that
In Milton, a village of 269
heroin has been on the rise in
people, it’s hard to keep much
the large cities and has further quiet for long. Word quickly
introduced itself in our comspread of the determination
munities after several arrests
by forensic pathologist John
in the past couple of years;
Ralston that Lopez’s death was
however, for someone’s life to
the result of opiate intoxica-

Journal-Courier

Meigs Local presented
Auditor of State Award
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia .com

POMEROY — The Meigs Local School District, where
Mark Rhonemus is treasurer/CFO, is the recipient of an
Auditor of State Award in recognition of a clean audit report for fiscal year 2013.
The Auditor of State Award is presented to local governments and school districts upon the completion of a
financial audit. Entities that receive the award must meet
the criteria of a “clean” audit report on the finances of
their respective districts.
To qualify for the Auditor of State Award, material must
be submitted timely and in accordance with generally accepted accounting principals and filed with the auditor’s
See AWARD | 5

ABOUT
THE SERIES

T

his is the second of a
three-part series by
Civitas Media on the growing problems of heroin
addiction.
Utilizing the resources
of around 100 Civitas
newspapers in 12 states,
the series brings you into
the battles being fought by
addicts, their family members, law enforcement and
health officials.

Her vibrant blue eyes and inviting
smile were a trademark of Shanda
Lopez before heroin claimed the life
of the 47-year-old outdoorswoman.

tion.
Petty and his investigators
tried to put together the pieces
missing from their timeline

See HEROIN | 2

Day 1: Faces of Heroin:
A demon knocks on the
doors of America.
TODAY:
“Shattered Lives:”
Those whose lives have
been stung by addiction;
those who deal the drug.
Day 3: Success Stories:
Treating, beating the
epidemic.

Sarah Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Meigs County Prosecutor Colleen Williams and Assistant
Prosecutor Jeremy Fisher

Fisher named new
Assistant Prosecutor
By Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Meigs County’s newest assistant prosecutor began his new job Monday.
Meigs County native Jeremy Fisher replaces Amanda
Hall, who left the the Meigs County Prosecutor’s Office
earlier this year to take another position. Hall had served
in the position since July 2011.
Fisher had been in private practice in the area since last
May.
He will represent the state in misdemeanor criminal
cases in Meigs County Court, but will also handle felony
cases and civil matters on behalf of the county, as needed.
“When I originally came back to the area, I wanted to
make a difference and represent people where I grew up,”
Fisher said. “This allows me to represent their interests
in the legal system.”
Fisher is a 2001 graduate of Southern High School
and completed his undergraduate degree at Ohio University. He graduated in 2011 from Thomas M. Cooley
Law School at the University of Michigan with cum laude
honors.
Fisher was sworn in by the New York Bar in 2012 and
the Ohio Bar in May 2013. He has also spent two years
prior to law school working as an AmeriCorp member in
Athens.
He completed his externship at the Joint Task Force
of the Michigan National Guard and the Department of
Homeland Security in Lansing, Mich., in 2010.

Multiple
departments
respond to fire
Firefighters with the Middleport, Pomeroy and Rutland
Volunteer Fire Departments responded to a fire at a residence
along Ohio 7 near Hobson on
Sunday afternoon. A statement
on the Pomeroy Fire Department’s Facebook page says crews
were on the scene for approximately two hours and that there
were no injuries to personnel
who responded to the call.
Jenny Whan | submitted photo

�Page 2 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Dealers find big profits in heroin
By Edward Lewis

“The profit margin is so high here,”
Doherty said. “In
WILKES-BARRE, Pa. – Three police
Philadelphia, there
officers wearing civilian clothes with
is greater supply
badges hanging from their necks and serand less demand.
vice revolvers attached to their hips paced Up here, there is big
the hallway outside the private office of
demand and less supDistrict Judge Martin Kane.
ply and the traffickers
A sergeant was inside the office present- can charge more for
Chief Gerard Dessoye
ing a four page search warrant and affida- their product. It’s
vit for Kane to review and sign.
more profitable to sell
The ink of Kane’s signature wasn’t dry
heroin here than it is
as the four officers left in a hurry, racing
for cocaine.”
to execute the warrant at an apartment
Dessoye said when
under surveillance for suspected heroin
he was a patrol offisales.
cer, cocaine was the
Two people with criminal misdemeanor drug of choice.
convictions for using stolen credit cards
“We had a lot of
and forging names were arrested on felony cocaine arrests and
charges they were peddling heroin from
very view arrests for
the apartment.
heroin,” the police
Deputy Attorney
Police said they seized nearly 300
chief said. “It definite- General Tim Doherty
heroin packets, materials used to package ly has reversed itself
heroin and more than $2,700 cash from
over the last nine, 10 years.”
the residence.
Two undercover drug officers with the
How do people with convictions of
Luzerne County Drug Task Force said
petty crimes turn to selling heroin?
heroin dealers often reside in low-income
“Money, money and money,” explained apartments or rental properties.
Wilkes-Barre Police Chief Gerard Dessoye,
“They are not on the lease or rental
who has 34 years in law enforcement.
agreement because they don’t want to
“When you see petty criminals becoming
be identified,” an undercover drug agent
drug dealers in most cases, they were
explained. “Remember heroin is in wealthy,
committing petty crimes to support their
middle class and poor areas. Word of
habit. They bridge that gap and become
mouth is golden with heroin users. If one
dealers themselves, finding a source to
person meets a new dealer through somebuy heroin at a cheaper price and have
one, or at an area that is known for drug
enough to feed their habit and sell off the
sales, word will spread.”
access.”
Depending on its purity, a single heroin
packet on the streets of the Wyoming
PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS
Valley can earn a dealer $15 to $25, with
Two weeks ago, United States Attorney
a brick of heroin (10 packets) selling for
General Eric H. Holder Jr. called the rise
$100 to $150. A single heroin packet in
in deaths from overdoses of heroin and pre- Philadelphia sells for $5 to $10.
scription painkillers an “urgent and grow“Comparing heroin to cocaine and preing public health crisis.”
scription drugs, heroin is cheap and highly
Holder said heroin overdose deaths have addictive,” an undercover drug agent said.
increased by 45 percent across the U.S.
“Once you start using heroin, you become
between 2006 and 2010.
an instant addict because you don’t want
“Addiction to heroin and other opiates
to feel that dope sickness that sets in when
— including certain prescription painkillyou stop using heroin.”
ers — is impacting the lives of Americans
in every state, in every region, and from
THE SUPPLY LINES
every background and walk of life — and
A decade ago, most of the heroin
all too often, with deadly results,” Holder
sold in Luzerne County was traced to
said in the March 10 video message.
Philadelphia.
Dessoye and Doherty said the majority
TACTIC AND PROFITS
of today’s heroin comes from northern New
Pennsylvania Deputy Attorney General
Jersey and New York.
Tim Doherty said heroin traffickers are
“It’s coming from all over,” Doherty said.
attracted to Northeastern Pennsylvania
“It’s being brought in from people who
due to heavy demand resulting in higher
want to move it and quickly sell it. Where
profits.
there are ports and airports, you’re going to
elewis@civitasmedia.com

find that city is a source of heroin infiltration into the United States.”
“What we have seen are the professional
drug dealers; Organized drug dealers that
don’t use the product they are selling,”
Dessoye said.
Afghanistan is the biggest producer
of heroin sold in the United States, with
3.3 million Afghans involved in producing opium, according to the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Agency. It is part of a region
known as the Golden Triangle, which
also includes portions of Southeast Asia,
the Yunnan province in China, Thailand,
Vietnam and Laos.
However, an increasing amount of the
deadliest heroin entering the U.S. appears
to be coming from Mexico. Mexican drug
smugglers are increasingly peddling a form
of ultra-potent heroin – black tar — that
sells for as little as $10 a bag and is so pure
it can kill unsuspecting users instantly,
sometimes before they even remove the
syringe from their veins, according to an
Associated Press review of drug overdose
data.
Authorities are concerned that the potency and price of the heroin from Mexico and
Colombia could widen the drug’s appeal,
just as crack did for cocaine decades ago.

A CITY’S STRUGGLE
Within the last six years, Doherty said
there have been three large scale investigations that targeted heroin traffickers in the
Wilkes-Barre area:
��(&amp;'&amp;0�Ef[hWj_ed�BWij�&gt;khhW^"�W��(+&amp;"&amp;&amp;&amp;�
heroin ring that resulted in 21 people
charged.
��(&amp;'&amp;0�Ef[hWj_ed�8beeZijW_d"�W�D[mWha"�
N.J., Bloods street gang known as “Sex,
Money and Murder,” with 19 people
linked to distributing 1.5 million heroin
packets for three years. “Operation
Bloodstain was a hardened, violent
group that called themselves Sex, Money
and Murder that moved heroin by the
bundle and bricks,” Doherty said.
��(&amp;&amp;.0�Ef[hWj_ed�&gt;[Wlom[_]^j�j^Wj�
focused on two separate street gangs,
Long Island Boys and Jersey City Boys.
Then-state Attorney General Tom
Corbett, now governor, said the Long
Island Boys took sole control of the heroin
trade in the Sherman Hills Apartment
Complex after the murder of Aaron Baxter,
known as Rockstar, who was the leader of a
Philadelphia gang.
“It’s all about that profit. These out-oftown heroin dealers don’t care who they
sell too,” an undercover drug agent said.
Edward Lewis is the court and police reporter for the
Wilkes-Barre, Pa., The Times Leader.

WHAT THEY SAY
ONE OF TWO THINGS
“Over the past 20 years or
so, we’ve had a brief influx of
heroin, and the people involved
in its use either get arrested or
they overdose and die,”
— Graham Atkinson, sheriff
of Surry County, N.C.

realize how close they were to probably be atrocious.”
death.” — Blanchester (Ohio) — Joe VanVickle, Darke
paramedic Angie Schlake,
County (Ohio) Coroner’s Office
describing the reaction people
after they’ve been revived by
PLEASE, NEVER GIVE UP
Narcan
“If we give up on the addict,
then there is no hope for them
CATCH-22
to ever get better. By the same
“We are turning off the
token, sometimes we have to
THE FIGHT
spigot of opiates and turning turn away and let that addict
“The challenges we face
on the scourge of heroin use.” hit their own bottom. Because
are unlike any fight we have
— Allen Mock, West Virginia that bottom is what makes
undertaken before.”
State Medical Examiner
them tired. That bottom is
— U.S. Attorney Booth
what makes them realize, ‘I
Goodwin, of West Virginia
OVERDOSE PROBLEM
need a change in my life.’”
“It is easy to overdose on
— Kim Hillman, ministry,
EVERYONE’S WAR
heroin, because heroin is a
Alton, Ilinois
“We know we can’t arrest
very potent compound, and
our way out of this problem.” there’s very little regulation
TIMES CHANGE
— Skip Holbrook, police chief, over that compound. So when
“Back when I was a county
Huntington, W.Va.
you’re taking heroin, you’re not prosecuting attorney (1976100 percent sure what you’re
1980) you would not find
OHIO CONNECTION
getting.” — Dr. Scott Krakower, heroin in the rural counties. …
“Most of the heroin that
a psychiatrist at Zucker Hillside Today it’s everywhere; it’s all
(we) are coming into contact Hospital in Glen Oaks, N.Y., who 88 counties.” —Mike DeWine,
with is coming from Ohio.”
specializes in drug addiction
Ohio attorney general and
— Sonya Porter, Logan
former U.S. senator.
County (W.Va) sheriff.
ATROCIOUS PREDICTION
“As far as cases that I’m
CONTINUOUS TREATMENT
HOW ABOUT ‘THANKS’
looking at to date, we’re
“Treatment works, but not
“They come up fighting.
averaging one a week where
the first time. People come back
They’ll complain, ‘You took
we believe drugs to have
over and over. It does work in
away my high.’ They don’t
played a part … 2014 will
the end.” —Roselin Runnels,

Heroin
Heroin
FromPage
page11A
From
of what happened. That led
authorities to determine Lopez
had ingested heroin sometime
in the hours before her death.
Over the course of the next
few months, two men would be
arrested in connection with the
death — one man accused of
drug-induced homicide for providing the heroin and the other
with obstruction of justice for
being there at the time.
“Accountability must be a
priority for everyone involved
in this process. It is unfortunate
and sad, but this is the result of
the dangers of drugs and why
our office has been so proactive
in years past. Drugs don’t just
ruin lives, it takes them,” Petty
said.
In less than a year, Petty
would have to deal with another drug-related death.
Although it was cocaine
authorities said that claimed
the life of Judge Joseph Christ,
49, of O’Fallon, at a hunting
lodge, it would prompt an
investigation that ultimately
led to the person who found
Christ — fellow judge Michael
Cook — admitting to being a
drug addict.

A week after being sworn in as a
judge, Joseph Christ died of a drug
overdose. He was a 49-year-old
father of six.

Cook subsequently pleaded
guilty to a misdemeanor
heroin-possession charge and a
felony count of having firearms
while being a user of controlled
substances. Cook had already
stepped down as a St. Clair
County judge.
Cook has not been charged in
the death of Christ, a 49-yearold father of six who had been
sworn in as an associate judge
just a week prior to his death.
Questions about Cook’s drug
use led to convictions being
overturned in two murder trials
in which Cook was judge.
Some members of the Illinois

State Crime Commission want
heroin use declared a medical
emergency. They refer to it as
an epidemic.
Jacksonville, Ill., Police
Deputy Chief Tim Shea said
police have definitely noticed
an upturn in heroin use, primarily because it was so rarely
found just a decade ago.
“We have seen an influx in
the last year or two,” Shea said.
“Years ago, it was a ’70s thing,
and now it’s made a return for
whatever reason. I don’t know
if it’s cheaper or easier to get
ahold of. It’s probable those factors are involved. In my career,
I haven’t seen much of it at all.
There’s more now than I’ve
ever seen in the past 20 years.”
Chief Tony Grootens — who
retired several years ago from
the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Agency — said heroin has
been the cause of one death
in Jacksonville, a city of about
20,000.
Grootens said heroin derivatives have been found to be
made by cooking down medications with opium derivatives,
such Oxycontin, and said certain time-release medications
are often more fatal.
“Heroin is making a comeback, and it’s always done
that if you look at history. It

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Those
who died,
those who
tried
Heroin has killed and
haunted Hollywood stars

PHILIP SEYMOUR
HOFFMAN

The 46-year-old actor was
found dead Feb. 2, 2014, on
the bathroom floor of his New
York apartment with a syringe
in his left arm. Police found
nearly 50 envelopes filled with
heroin.

COREY MONTEITH

The actor, who played Finn
Hudson in the Glee TV series,
was found dead July 13, 2013,
at age 31 in a Vancouver hotel
room after taking a lethal
cocktail of heroin and booze.

Mental Health and Recovery
Board of Clark, Greene and
Madison Counties in Ohio.
ONCE IS ENOUGH
“Every addict we’ve talked
with said the first time they
took it, they were hooked.
Once they’re on it, unless
you have a really determined
person, it’s difficult for them
to kick the habit.” — Shelby
(Ohio) County Sheriff’s
Deputy Sgt. Aaron Steinke
AVOIDING THE COPS
“Oklahoma leads the nation
in prescription pill abuse. It’s
easier and cheaper to obtain a
prescription for the pills versus
taking the risk of transporting
and getting caught with an
illegal drug such as heroin.”
— Lt. Billy Jones, of the
Narcotics Division of the Durant
(Oklahoma) Police Department

ROBERT DOWNEY JR.

On his past drug use, the
actor notes: “All those years
of snorting coke, and then I
accidentally get involved in
heroin … you are rendered
defenseless.”

ADDICTIVE POWER
“It’s a monkey like no other
and that monkey is almost
impossible to get off your back.”
– Fayette (Ohio) County Sheriff
Vernon Stanforth

peaks and valleys. But the
Oxycodone, Oxycontin problem started in the early 2000s,
and it’s only getting worse,” he
said.
Local police and the DEA
are involved in active investigations into heroin trafficking.
Morgan County (Ill.)
Sheriff’s Department Chief
Deputy Mike Carmody said his
agency has been working with
state police and the Central
Illinois Enforcement Group and
concentrating more on heroin
trafficking than in previous
years.
“It does seem like (heroin) is
getting more popular,” he said.
Grootens said the heroin
being brought into the region
originates in Mexico and comes
here from the St. Louis area.
“It goes away for a couple of
years, and then it comes back
again, for whatever reason,”
Grootens said. “We’re going to
have a drug problem long after
you and I are gone. You just do
your best to curtail it from the
community because it’s hard on
the community. Hard economically, hard on the families that
have problems with it and try
to deal with it.”
Cody Bozarth and Bre Linstromberg Copper contributed to this article.

RUSSELL BRAND

In March 2013, the actor
revealed he’s been clean for
10 years, but staying that way
hasn’t always been easy. “The
last time I thought about taking heroin was yesterday.”

ANGELINA JOLIE

Now clean, the actress and
mother of six once revealed:
“I have done just about
every drug possible: cocaine,
ecstasy, LSD and, my favorite,
heroin.”
SOURCES: CNN, MSNBC Web Sites

�Tuesday, March 25, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Death Notices
BOWMAN
Marjorie Lois Dillon Bowman, 93, of Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., died Friday, March 21,
2014, at her home with family at her side.
A memorial service will be
noon Friday, March 28, 2014,
at The Center for Spiritual
Living (The Science of Mind
Center) with the Rev. Barbara Lunde officiating.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that any donations be made in the memory
of Marjorie to the Center for
Spiritual Living-Boca Raton,
located at 2 SW 12 Ave.,
Boca Raton, FL 33486.
A future memorial celebration service is planned at the
Crown City Cemetery in
Ohio at noon Monday, May
26, 2014.
CUNDIFF
POMEROY — James
“Jimmy” Scott Cundiff, 69,
of Pomeroy, died Saturday,
March 15, 2014, at his Gold
Ridge Road residence. A memorial service was conducted
at 2 p.m. Monday, March 24,
2014, in the God’s House of
Hope Church in Middleport.
His brother, the Rev. Charles
Cundiff, officiated. Arrangements were entrusted to
the Cremeens-King Funeral
Home of Pomeroy.
DUNN
EWINGTON, Ohio — Albert Sherdian Dunn Jr., 71
of Ewington, died Saturday,
March 22, 2014, at Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be
11 a.m. Thursday, March
27, 2014, at the Harvestime
Church, Main Street, Vinton, Ohio, with Pastor Mike
Puckett officiating. Burial
will follow in Vinton Memorial Park. Friends may call
from 5-8 p.m. Wednesday,
March 26, 2014, at Harvestime Church. Mccoy-Moore
Funeral in Vinton is honored
to serve the Dunn Family.
HUNT
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
— Gene Hunt, 79, of Parkersburg, died Saturday, March
22, 2014, at Camden Clark
Medical Center, Memorial
Campus, in Parkersburg.
Funeral services will be
1 p.m. Wednesday, March
26, 2014, at Grace Brethren
Church in Coolville, Ohio,
with the Rev George Horner
officiating. Burial will be in
Coolville Cemetery. Friends
may call from 2-4 p.m. and
6-8 p.m. Tuesday, March
25, 2014, at Grace Brethren
Church in Coolville. Services
are being conducted by the
White-Schwarzel
Funeral
Home in Coolville.
MARSHALL
POINT PLEASANT —
William Kyle Marshall Sr.,
86, of Point Pleasant, died
Friday, March 21, 2014, at
Pleasant Valley Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center in
Point Pleasant.
A funeral service will be
11 a.m. Wednesday, March
26, 2014, at Bachtel United
Methodist Church in New
Haven, W.Va., with William
Kyle Marshall Jr. officiating.
Burial will follow at Graham
Cemetery in New Haven,
where military graveside
rites will be give by the West
Virginia Army Honor Guard
and Stewart-Johnson V.F.W.
Post No. 9926 of Mason. Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m.
Tuesday, March 25, 2014,
at Wilcoxen Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant, and again
one hour prior to the service

The Daily Sentinel

Page 3

Obituaries

Wednesday at the church.
NOTT
POINT PLEASANT —
Sarah L. Nott, 21, of Point
Pleasant, died Friday, March
21, 2014, at St. Mary’s Medical Center in Huntington,
W.Va. Funeral services will
be 11 a.m. Tuesday, March
25, 2014, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home. Visitation was
Monday, march 24, 2014,
at the funeral home. Burial
will be in Kirkland Memorial
Gardens. Arrangements are
under the direction of Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant. Condolences may
be made at www.wilcoxenfuneralhome.come.
RIFFLE
GALLIPOLIS
FERRY,
W.Va. — Dorcas June Riffle,
77, of Gallipolis Ferry, died
Saturday, March 22, 2014.
Graveside services will be
2:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 25,
2014, at Lone Oak Cemetery
in Point Pleasant. In lieu of
flowers, donations should be
made to the Emogene Dolin
Jones Hospice House, 3100
Staunton Ave, Huntington,
WV 25702. Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant is
serving the family.
ROOT
COOLVILLE, Ohio —
Frank Robert Root, 83, of
Coolville, died Saturday,
March 22, 2014.
Funeral services will be 11
a.m. Wednesday, March 26,
2014, at White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home in Coolville,
with the Rev. George Horner
officiating. Burial will be in
Coolville Cemetery, where
military services will be conducted. Friends may call 5-8
p.m. Tuesday at the funeral
home.

GARY A. ‘BARNY’ BARNITZ
BELPRE — Gary A.
“Barny” Barnitz, 72, of Belpre, passed
a w a y
We d n e s day, March
19, 2014,
at Allegheny General
Hospital
after an extended illness. He was born
Jan. 20, 1942, in Gallipolis,
to Elva Dean Barnitz and
the late Hayman Barnitz.
He graduated from Pomeroy
High School and attended
Kent State University. He
worked for 35 years in the
ulitlities department at Shell
Chemical in Belpre and retired in 1997. He enjoyed
coin and currency collecting,
and was a member of the
Parkersburg Coin Club. Gary
also loved to travel and play
sports. For many years, he
bowled and played golf.
He is survived by his
mother; his wife of 35 years,
Beverly Barnitz; four daugh-

ters, Carol (Paul) Baker,
Mary (Steve) Dickson, Ellen
(Joel Lynch) Smith and Ann
(Steve) Snell; two stepchildren, Bryan Specht and Debi
Mongan; 10 grandchildren;
three stepgrandchildren, including Katie Dickson and
Danielle Smith; five greatgrandchildren; one brother,
Keith (Francis) Barnitz, of
Kingston, Ohio; and several
nieces, nephews, aunts, uncles and cousins.
He was preceded in death
by his grandparents, William
O. and Ruth Barnitz, and
Dean and Eunie Brinker.
Services will be 1 p.m.
Wednesday, March 26, 2014,
at Leavitt Funeral Home,
with the Rev. L. Norman Butler officiating. Friends may
call from 2-8 p.m. Tuesday,
March 25, 2014, at the funeral home, and one hour prior
to services on Wednesday.
Online condolences may
be sent to the family at www.
leavittfuneralhome.com.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Today: Snow likely, mainly between 7 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Cloudy, with a high near 37. Light and variable wind becoming west 9 to 14 mph in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 70 percent. New snow accumulation of less
than one inch possible.
Tonight: A chance of snow, mainly before 8 p.m.
Cloudy, then gradually becoming partly cloudy, with a
low around 20. Northwest wind 10 to 16 mph, with gusts
as high as 30 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.

EVERETT LEE GILMORE
LANGSVILLE, Ohio —
Everett Lee Gilmore, 54,
of Langsville, passed away
peacefully at his home on
Saturday, March 22, 2014.
He was born April 25, 1959,
in Frankfort, Ind., the son of
Carol Lee Gilmore, of Langsville, and Wilma Mae Gard, of
Middleport.
Mr. Gilmore was employed
as a corrections officer at Lakin. He was also a truck driver
who was known by his handle,
“Rock n’ Roll.”
He is survived by his wife,
Kasey Gilmore; father Carol
Gilmore; mother Wilma
(Chuck) Gard; his children
Travis (Teresa) Gilmore, Elijah Gilmore and Stacy (Chris)
Collins; stepsons Cody Mor-

ris, Anthony Morris and Joseph Morris; grandchildren
Jericho, Jayden, Jayleena,
Cordalle, Gabrielle, Pheobe,
Alexa and Kyla; his brother
Gary (Truly) Gilmore; sisters
Diana Lynn (Charles) Landers and Carolyn “Kay” Gillian;
and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
11 a.m. Thursday, March 27,
2014, at Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy
with the Rev. Dewey King
officiating. Burial will follow
at Miles Cemetery. Visiting
hours will be 6-8 p.m. Wednesday, March 26, 2014, at the funeral home in Pomeroy.
A registry is available at
www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 48.76
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 26.40
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 98.28
Big Lots (NYSE) — 37.47
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 50.96
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 60.73
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 12.43
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.550
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 45.41
Collins (NYSE) — 80.04
DuPont (NYSE) — 66.49
US Bank (NYSE) — 43.32
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 25.41
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 66.83
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 61.07
Kroger (NYSE) — 43.61
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 57.91
Norfolk So (NYSE) 96.55
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.27
BBT (NYSE) — 40.18

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 25.28
Pepsico (NYSE) — 81.89
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.16
Rockwell (NYSE) — 122.13
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.29
Royal Dutch Shell — 71.38
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 48.16
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 76.76
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.00
WesBanco (NYSE) — 31.86
Worthington (NYSE) — 41.06
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
March 24, 2014, 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.

SELBY
POINT PLEASANT —
Eleanor Duncan Selby, 87,
died Friday, march 21, 2014,
after a courageous battle with
Alzheimer’s disease.
Visitation was 6-8 p.m.
Monday, March 24, 2014,
at Deal Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant. Funeral services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday,
March 25, 2014. Burial will
follow at Beale Chapel in
Apple Grove, W.Va. In lieu of
flowers, the family requests
contributions to the building
fund at Canaan Land FWB or
Alzheimer’s disease research.
VARNEY
BIDWELL — Jeanette
Varney, 63, of Gallipolis, died
Monday, March 24, 2014, at
Abbyshire Place.
Arrangements will be announced later by Willis Funeral Home.
WOOD
CROWN CITY, Ohio —
William Harold Wood, 83,
of Crown City, (Mercerville)
died Sunday, March 23,
2014, at his residence.
Funeral services will be
1 p.m. Thursday March 27,
2014, at Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home with Pastor
Dean Warner officiating.
Burial will follow in Salem
Baptist Cemetery. Friends
may call from 6-8 p.m.
Wednesday, March 26, 2014,
at the funeral home. Masonic
services will be conducted at
8 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home by Patriot Lodge
#496. Following the committal service on Thursday, there
will be a time of food and fellowship at Mercerville Missionary Baptist Church.

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�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Page 4
TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 2014

Conversations worth Myth of inequality
having with kids
is weapon of oppression
By Esther Cepeda

Talking to your kids can
be hard. Really hard. Even
children who never stop rattling off every imaginable
detail about their favorite
cartoon become completely
unresponsive when asked
“How was your day?” “What
did you learn at school?” or
“What’s new?”
“I don’t like being asked
about what’s new,” my
12-year-old son declared at
breakfast the other day.
Well, at least that was
seven more words than I usually get. My inquiries seem
to have the exact same oneword answer day in and day
out: “Fine.” Or “Nothing.”
Coming as no surprise to
anyone who’s been to a family restaurant in the last year,
a new study in the journal
Pediatrics confirmed that
families increasingly go out
for meals together and then
ignore each other for iPads,
iPhones, portable video
games and whatever else
passes the time while mom
and dad check email or surf
the Internet.
Researchers observed 55
adults eating with one or
more young children in fastfood restaurants in a single
metropolitan area. They then
identified common patterns
of device use.
Forty used their mobile devices during meals and demonstrated varying degrees of
absorption with their phones
rather than with their children. The kids reacted by either entertaining themselves
or escalating their ploys for
attention. Researchers noted
that highly absorbed adults
often responded harshly to
child misbehavior.
Who knows whether these

people are just clueless jerks
or simply ran up against the
brick wall of “nothing” and
the old standby “I dunno”
too many times and gave up?
Either way, you don’t need
to be a social scientist familiar with the latest research
on the impact that parentchild interactions have on
vocabulary, impulse control
and interpersonal relations
to know that this is not a
good thing.
But how do you get your
kids — especially teens — to
talk?
As you can see from my
breakfast “conversation,” I’m
no expert. But I do have two
foolproof ways to get your kids
into thoughtful, wide-ranging
conversations at dinner.
No. 1: Show up with news.
In the last month, my family has talked through one
opinion columnist’s take
on how to treat people who
have lived through a tragedy
or are grieving a close one’s
death, and a news story
about how 10.4 million men
in their prime working years
don’t have jobs and many
aren’t looking for one. (As it
turns out, my 15-year-old son
has designs on being a stayat-home dad. Who’da thunk
it?)
This week we’ll discuss
A.O. Scott’s review of Wes
Anderson’s new movie “The
Grand Budapest Hotel.”
We’ve watched every Anderson film multiple times and
really “get” his movies, but it
won’t hurt to clear up a few
things about 20th-century
European culture and the
Iron Curtain.
Talking about current
events is perfect for kids
because they practice a
fundamentally adult skill
without the pressure of

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Department extensions
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Charlene Hoeflich,

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talking about themselves.
No. 2: Show up with prepared questions, an open
mind and a soft touch.
This technique is especially good to bring out those
who don’t share of themselves freely. Get the book
“All About Me” by Philipp
Keel and just throw out questions for everyone at the
table to answer. “[Describe]
one of your most peaceful
moments” or “[Describe] a
country you fear exploring.”
Or try “The Game of
Scruples.” We don’t play the
actual board game at meals;
we take turns reading off
game cards and answering
honestly. “Your boss shows
up at work sporting a bad
comb-over and asks if you
like his new hairstyle. Do you
lie and say ‘yes’?” “The bank
teller gave you an extra $20
by mistake. Do you inform
him or her of the error?”
Some questions are delicate
— and some answers require
keeping emotions in check
— but they are definitely
worth asking.
We just bought “Would
You Rather … ?” which features questions such as:
“Would you rather find out
your parents are secretly
spies or aliens?” and “Would
you rather have seven samurai sworn to protect you or
500 hamsters?”
Randomly selected, questions that are not personal
give kids the freedom to
open up without feeling
something is at stake. Plus
they get to learn all kinds
of things about their parents, too, making conversation entertaining enough to
keep even the most devoted
phone-checkers engaged —
and hoping mom and dad
are spies.

By Bryan Golden
Throughout history, those seeking to
usurp power and subjugate a population
have learned that you can get people to
agree to almost anything if it’s in the name
of equality and fairness.
Pitting one group against another on
the basis of unfairness or inequality is a
tactic consistently employed by those
seeking to destroy freedom. Achieving
equality of positive outcomes is impossible to accomplish and certainly cannot
be imposed through law or by dictate. The
only outcomes that can be forced are suffering and misery.
Only the goal of equal opportunity is
achievable. This fact has been proven repeatedly throughout time. People cannot
be compelled to be successful.
Let’s take a look at some real world examples that clearly and simply illustrate
this fact. We’ll first examine a college
class. The class has as even a playing field
as is possible. Each student has the same
identical opportunity. All of the students
are at the same school, in the same room,
at the same time, have the same book,
the same instructor, hear the exact same
lectures, are given the same assignments,
have the same grading standards, and take
the same tests.
In spite of equal opportunity, the students don’t all earn the same grade. Why
don’t all the students receive A’s? Why are
the outcomes different? Because each individual student is different.
Each student decides what to do with
their opportunity. Those students who
make scholastic achievements a priority
get better grades than those who don’t. Is
it unfair that the more conscientious students earn higher grades?
Financial inequality is often blamed as
the root of needless suffering. The argument is made that confiscating from those
who have, in order to give to those who
don’t, will make a better, more just and equitable society.
This approach never works. As a clear

Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the
press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

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.

example, let’s examine what happens
when people win multimillion dollar lottery jackpots. One would presume that
such a windfall must surely lead to a happy, successful, enjoyable and worry-free
life.
However, the reality of what happens to
these winners is the complete opposite.
Based on studies of lottery winners, the
more money they win, the more likely they
are to end up bankrupt. It is estimated
that up to 70 percent of the winners end
up broke within seven years, with many
winding up in worse financial condition
than before they won.
As another example, consider two individuals starting a job in the exact same position, at equal pay at the same business.
One person may work harder. The other
might do only the minimum required to
avoid being fired. Is it unfair for the more
diligent employee to receive promotions
along with an increase in pay?
These examples clearly dispel the myth
that successful outcomes can be forced,
engineered, coerced or assured.
Each individual is different in terms of
their likes, dislikes, goals, aspirations and
work ethic. Using inequality to justify social engineering or wealth redistribution
is a proven formula for disaster. Throughout history, every society utilizing this
faulty strategy has failed miserably.
The myth of inequality is a deceitful
premise, intentionally designed to break
apart a free society. It is used to justify
punishing the successful without any benefit to those who they are claiming to help.
Only in a free society where people have
the right and liberty to thrive is success
possible. History has explicitly proven
this fact time and time again. Misery and
suffering are the only things that can be
spread equally upon a population. The
myth of inequality is a weapon of oppression.
Golden is the author of “Dare to Live Without Limits.”
Contact Bryan at Bryan@columnist.com or visit www.
DareToLiveWithoutLimits.com.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Newspapers
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com
Michael Johnson
Content Manager

�Tuesday, March 25, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 5

Meigs County Community Calendar
Tuesday, March 25
POMEROY — The Meigs County annual District Advisory and Licensing Council meeting will be at 6 p.m.
at the new EMA/911 building located at 41859 Pomeroy
Pike. The Advisory Council is the body responsible for
appointing the board of health members and consists of
presidents of township trustees, president of the board of
county commissioners and village mayors.
POMEROY — The March meeting of the Local Emergency Planning Committee will be held at 11:30 a.m. in
the EOC/911 building 41859 Pomeroy Pike. Lunch will
be catered by the Meigs County Council on Aging. RSVP
to meigsema@hotmail.com or call (740) 992-4541.
Wednesday, March 26
MARIETTA — There will be a meeting of the Natural Re-

sources Assistance Council at Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District, 1400 Pike St., Marietta, at 10
a.m. to rate and rank Round 8 grant applications for funding.
Questions regarding this meeting should be directed to Michelle Hyer at Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District at (740) 376-1025 or mhyer@buckeyehills.org.
Thursday, March 27
CHESTER — Shade River Lodge 458 will hold a special meeting at 7 p.m. for the purpose of conferring the
Entered Apprentice Degree on two candidates. Refreshments will be served afterwards.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Soil and Water Conservation District Board of Supervisors will meet in regular session at 11:30 a.m. at the district office at 113 E.
Memorial Drive, Suite D.

Meigs County Church Calendar
Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Mark Rhonemus, Meigs Local School District, treasurer/CFO

Award
From Page 1
office, and must not contain any findings for recovery,
material weaknesses, significant deficiencies, single audit
findings or questionable costs.
Rhonemus said that since he has been the chief financial
officer, the district has received the Auditor of State Award
several times. He noted that his office handles more than
$30 million in federal and state money and, in addition,
another $5 million relating to employees being self-insured
since premiums are paid and payments are made by the district with the money flowing through the district’s books.
He described himself as being the chief financial officer
of the largest employer in Meigs County — which comes
with a lot of responsibility.
“I’m honored at receiving the award in the sense that it
does validate that the audit is reflecting what I strive to
do,” he said, adding that it lets the taxpayers know that
their money is in good hands in terms by being a watchdog
of what they expect.
Also on the list released Friday by Auditor of State David
Yost were the Greater Columbus Convention and Visitor’s
Bureau DBA Experience
Columbus (Franklin County); Matthews Local School
District (Trumbull County); Newton Falls Exempted Village School District (Trumbull County); Ottawa Hills
Local School District-2012 and 2013; Ottawa Hills Local
School District-2013 (Lucas County); Perrysburg Exempted Village School District (Wood County); and Upper Valley Career Center (Miami County).
On a list of recipients released earlier was Eastern Local
School District, CFP/Treasurer Lisa Ritchie, as reported earlier.
The Auditor of State’s office, one of five independently
elected statewide offices in Ohio, is responsible for auditing more than 5,800 state and local government agencies.
Under the direction of Yost, the office also provides financial services to local governments, investigates and prevents fraud in public agencies, and promotes transparency
in government.

Revival
MIDDLEPORT — Revival services will be held at the Old Bethel
Free Will Baptist Church, located at
the intersection of Ohio 7 and Story’s
Run, April 7-11, 6 p.m. each evening.
Norman Taylor will be the evangelist, pastor is Clyde Ferrell.
Gospel Sing
MIDDLEPORT — Gospel sing at
the Middleport Village Hall auditorium, Saturday, 4-8 p.m. Music by the
Singing Shaffers, Brian and Family
Connections, Jerry and Diana Frederick, Rick and Jenny Towe, Ran-

dall Jones and Angela Gibson. Free
admission, concessions. Brian and
Family Connections will also be singing at the Gospel Lighthouse Church
in Mt. Alto, W.Va., at 6 p.m. Sunday.
Richard Parsons is the pastor.
Gospel concert and dinner
POMEROY — A gospel concert
and dinner will be held at the Meigs
Cooperative Parish Saturday. Dinner
will be served from 4:30 to t6 p.m.
and the concert will begin promptly
at 6 p.m. A love offering will be taken
at the door. Snacks will be available
during the concert. Desserts will be

available to take home before and
after the concert. Sandwiches, $2,
Sides $50 cents. Bands featured will
be Rachael Jackson and Appalachian
Divide, Harold Payne and Junction.
Proceeds will go to the Parish for
building improvements.
Free Community Dinner
TUPPERS PLAINS — A free community dinner of baked potatoes,
salad bar, dessert and drinks will be
held from 4:30-6:30 p.m., Tuesday,
March 25 at St.Paul U.M. Church,
Ohio 7 in Tuppers Plains. Everyone
welcome.

Meigs County Local Briefs
Senior Golf
League organizing
POMEROY — The Senior
Golf League will start April
4 at the Meigs Golf Course.
Sign-in is by 8:30 that morning. Only those 50 and older
can play in the senior league.
For more information, call
James Snyder at 992-7377.
Lunch Along the River
MIDDLEPORT — Lunch
Along The River kicks off
April 2 with chicken and
noodles, green beans, rolls,
cake and your choice of pop
or water for a donation of
$6. Lunch will be served in
the Depot at Dave Diles park
from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. If you are
unable to attend, call (740)
591-6095, 740-416-2247 or

60491423

740-444-9157 for delivery in
the Pomeroy and Middleport
areas.
Alumni Basketball
ROCKSPRINGS — The
Meigs High School alumni
basketball game will be
March 29. The women’s
game will begin at 6 p.m.
with the men’s game to follow. Participants are asked
to bring maroon shirts and
white shirts. There is a $10
pay to play. Admission is

$3 for adults and $1 for students. Those wishing to
participate may pre-register
(not required) by email (amber.ridenour@meigslocal.
org), phone (740-992-2158)
or Facebook (Meigs Alumni
Basketball Game).
Health Fair
POMEROY — Appointments are still being accepted for the fasting blood sugar
test that will be offered free
as a part of the health fair

March 29 at the Mulberry
Community Center/Meigs
Cooperative Parish. To make
an appointment for the fasting lipid profile, call either
Lenora Leifheit, the Parish
nurse, or Nancy Thoene at
992-7400 anytime between
9 a.m. and 1 p.m. any day
except Monday. The last day
to make an appointment is
March 28. Since appointments are limited, it is suggested that interested residents register early.

60491636

�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

TUESDAY,
MARCH 25, 2014

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Haraway’s 29 lead Truckers to first title in debut
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— With 4 minutes remaining and Norwalk hanging
on to a suddenly tenuous
lead over defending champion Columbus Watterson,
Truckers guard Ben Haraway came up lame.
So what were you thinking at that time, coach
Steve Gray?
“Oh my God,” he said.
But Haraway was able
to return despite a twisted
ankle and his presence was
huge down the stretch as the
Truckers beat the Eagles 6558 for the Division II state
championship on Saturday.
Haraway scored 29
points, scoring nine points
after he hobbled briefly to
the bench, to lead the way.
“I buckled my knee and
rolled my ankle at the same

time,” said Haraway, an
Associated Press honorable mention All-Ohioan.
“I thought I was going to
be out for a while.”
He hit a free throw after
limping to the free-throw
line, then after Watterson
pulled within four points
with under a minute left,
he made four foul shots
in the final 36.6 seconds
to lock up the victory —
which came in Norwalk’s
first-ever trip to the state’s
final four.
“He’s a special person,”
Gray said, nodding to his
smiling point guard. “The
way he looks now is the
way he looks in every practice and at school. He’s just
a happy guy.”
First-team
All-Ohioan
Jeff Thomas added 18

points and 10 rebounds for
the Truckers (29-1), who
were ranked No. 2 in the final regular-season AP poll.
“We’re the first team
from Norwalk to win a
(basketball) state championship,” Thomas said. “I
can’t explain my feelings
right now.”
Second-team All-Ohioan Matt Hughes had 23
points and 10 rebounds for
fourth-ranked Watterson
(26-3), which hit just 4 of
24 behind the arc. Cody
Calhoun added 15 points
and Matt Lehmann had 11.
“It was a little more fun
last year,” Eagles coach
Vince Lombardo said of
the 2013 title run in Watterson’s only previous trip
to the state tournament.
Norwalk made 8 of 11

shots from the field in the
first quarter, scoring the
final six points, to take a
20-14 lead it never relinquished. The Truckers led
31-19 at the half and 42-33
through three.
But Watterson, as canny
and resilient a team as
you’ll find, fought back to
cut the gap to 61-57 with
53 seconds left on Hughes’
slashing drive through the
paint.
After Gray called a timeout to settle his team, Haraway took an inbounds
pass and dashed the length
of the court before being
fouled with 36.6 seconds
left. He made both foul
shots to give the Truckers
some breathing room.
See HARAWAY | 8

Submitted photo | URG Athletics

Rio Grande freshman Jenna Jones threw the school’s first nohitter in almost five years in Friday’s game one win over the
University of Pikeville.

Rio’s Jones tosses
no-no in sweep of UPIKE
By Randy Payton
Special to OVP

PIKEVILLE, Ky. — Jenna
Jones threw an opening
game no-hitter and the University of Rio Grande softball team got its weekend
road trip off on the right
foot, sweeping a Mid-South
Conference doubleheader
from the University of Pikeville, Friday afternoon, at Paul
Butcher Field.
The RedStorm won the
opening game, 2-0, and finished off a perfect day with a
7-3 triumph in the nightcap.
Rio Grande improved to
12-7 overall and 7-5 in the
MSC with its first twinbill
sweep after splitting each
of its first five conference
doubleheaders.
Pikeville dropped to 4-15
overall and 0-10 in league
play.
Jones, a freshman from
Lancaster, Ohio, was dazzling in the opener, walking
just one and striking out six
en route to her seventh win
in 12 decisions.
UPike had just one baserunner advance as far as second base in the contest.
The no-hitter was Rio’s
first since former standout
Anna Smith hurled consecutive no-hitters in a doubleheader sweep of Point Park
(Pa.) on April 11, 2009.
Smith’s double no-hitter also
included the RedStorm’s last
perfect game in the opening
game win.
The RedStorm, who had
just three hits themselves,
gave Jones all the offense
she would need by pushing
across an unearned run in
the second inning.
Sophomore Mattie Lanham (Rio Grande, OH) drew
a one-out walk and, one out
later, scored when freshman
Sheana Long’s (Wellston,
OH) grounder to third was
errored.
Rio tacked on an insurance marker in the fourth
inning when junior Haley
Gwin (Troy, OH) led off
with her first home run of
the season.
UPike starter Sydney
Morris, who actually played
as a freshman at Rio Grande,

was the hard-luck loser
for the Bears. She allowed
just the three hits and one
earned run in a complete
game effort.
Game two saw Rio Grande
jump to a 3-0 second inning
lead and then take control by
scoring three more times in
the fifth inning.
Lanham and freshman
Cheyenne Hamaker (Hilliard, OH) had run-scoring
doubles in the three-run second, while sophomore Kim
Rollins (Cincinnati, OH)
hit her fifth home run of the
season and sophomore Ariel
Roder (Parma Heights, OH)
had an RBI double in the
three-run fifth inning.
Pikeville got on the scoreboard in the bottom of the
fifth thanks to an RBI single
by Eady Beth Connally and
a sacrifice fly by Courtney
Morgan, but Rio Grande got
one of those runs back in the
seventh when Roder led off
with her second home run of
the season.
The Bears closed out the
scoring in their final at-bat
thanks to a two-out, runscoring double by Hollie
Hinkle.
Roder finished 2-for-3
with two RBIs and three
runs scored, while Hamaker
also went 2-for-3 with a run
batted in. Both of Hamaker’s
hits were doubles.
Jones added a triple in the
winning effort for the RedStorm, while freshman Kali
Weidner (Lancaster, OH)
also drove in a run.
Freshman Tiffany Bise
(Circleville, OH) improved
to 5-2 on the season, scattering 11 hits and two walks
in a complete game effort.
Only two of the three runs
she allowed were earned and
she fanned one batter.
Hinkle doubled twice in
the loss for UPike, while
Brandi Jo Howard and Taylor Weeks also had two hits
each.
Lauren Barnes started
and took the game two loss
for the Bears.
Rio Grande returns to
action on Saturday with another MSC doubleheader at
Bluefield (Va.) College.

OVP Sports Schedule
Tuesday, March 25
Baseball
Parkersburg South at Point Pleasant, 5:30
Softball
Point Pleasant at Wahama, 5:30
Teays Valley Christian at Hannan (DH), 5 p.m.
Wednesday, March 26
Softball
Wahama at Roane County, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Cabell Midland JV (DH), 5:30
Thursday, March 27
Baseball
Point Pleasant at Nitro, 7 p.m.
Rose Hill Christian at Hannan, 5:30
Softball
Wahama at Buffalo, 6 p.m.
Van at Hannan, 5:30

Chris Lee | St. Louis Post-Dispatch | MCT

The Dayton bench reacts after Jalen Robinson hit a 3-point shot in second-half action against Saint Louis on
Wednesday, March 5, 2014, at Chaifetz Arena in St. Louis. Dayton won, 72-67.

Dayton more than just NCAA tourney starting point
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — For
the last 14 years, the NCAA tournament has started with play-in
games and the First Four at the
University of Dayton Arena. The
home team? Didn’t even get in the
bracket most times.
This year, it’s flying high.
With two close wins under
daunting circumstances, the Flyers have turned Dayton into more
than just a starting point for the
NCAA tournament. It’s become a
focal point.
President Obama is tweeting
about it. The national media is
talking about it. Students are
staying up until the early morning
hours celebrating the Flyers’ first
trip to the Sweet 16 in 30 years.
“This opportunity is a once-ina-lifetime chance,” guard Jordan
Sibert said Monday before practice.
Given how things had gone
lately for the Flyers, it felt like a
lifetime since they’d been relevant
in March.
Dayton was a mainstay in the
tournament in the 1960s, finishing as the runner-up in 1967
with a loss to UCLA. The winning waned after 1990. Dayton
went 10 years before its next
tournament appearance and is
making only its fifth NCAA trip

in the last 14 years.
Those Flyers fans who pack
UD Arena for the First Four can
keep cheering this time — which
is exactly what they’ve been doing since the 11th-seeded Flyers
(25-10) beat Ohio State 60-59 in
Buffalo, followed by a 55-53 win
over Syracuse. They’ll play 10thseeded Stanford (23-12) in Memphis on Thursday.
“We have to sort of come back
down out of the clouds a little bit,”
coach Archie Miller said. “There’s
just so much hype, media and the
talk around you.”
As soon as the Flyers finished
off Syracuse, the pundits started
talking about Miller possibly
moving on after his third season
rebuilding the program. He had
privately agreed to a contract extension midway through the season, but wanted to hold off saying
anything about it until the Flyers
were finished.
On Monday, he and athletics
director Tim Wabler announced
the extension through the 201819 season, hoping it will dampen
some of the where-will-he-go-next
speculation.
Wabler thinks the Sweet 16 appearance will jump-start the program.
“It’s credibility nationally,”

Wabler said. “It’s putting us on
the map as far as with recruits
and saying Dayton not only is a
great place to come to school and
play, but now it’s an even greater
place.”
The Flyers have come a long
way since the First Four last year,
when the Big East was reconfiguring itself as a basketball conference and local rival Xavier left the
Atlantic 10 to become part of it,
leaving the Flyers behind. Xavier
wound up playing in the First
Four this year and losing. The
A-10 got six teams in the NCAA
tournament, and Dayton wound
up as the only Ohio team to reach
the Sweet 16.
The victory over Ohio State
was particularly satisfying, with
the Dayton Daily News running
a front-page headline the next day
referring to the winners as “THE
University of Dayton” — a jab at
the Buckeyes.
After the win over Syracuse,
President Obama tweeted on
the White House’s account:
“Congrats to the DaytonFlyers on a huge upset win! Devin
Oliver, I may need to take you
up on that pick-up game one of
these days. -bo”
See DAYTON | 8

LCC survives last-second shot to win D3 title
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— It came down to one
shot for the high school
basketball championship.
Lima Central Catholic
Coach Frank Kill hoped
for a favorable outcome —
and got it.
Martyce
Kimbrough
had 22 points — including all four of his secondhalf points in the final 93
seconds — to lead Lima
Central Catholic past
Cleveland Villa Angela-St.
Joseph 64-62 on Saturday
in the Division III state
boys final.
After VASJ (22-8) had
cut the lead to a point on
6-foot-10 junior Carlton

Bragg’s 3-pointer with 6
seconds left, two LCC players missed three consecutive free throws. But Brian
Parker’s heave from midcourt was just short, touching the front of the rim.
“I believed the ball was
bouncing our way today,”
Kill said. “And hopefully
that one shot wasn’t going
to be a backbreaker.”
The title was the second for the seventh-ranked
Thunderbirds (25-4).
Bragg had 23 for defending champ VASJ, denied its
sixth title.
“This team has always
found a way to win games
like that,” said Vikings

coach Babe Kwasniak. “It
just didn’t happen.”
The Thunderbirds led
by 14 midway through the
third quarter. But the Vikings would not go away.
LCC, staked to a lead
after Kimbrough went off
in the first half, never let
VASJ get the lead.
“Once I made my first
couple, I knew I was feeling it,” said the first-team
Associated Press All-Ohioan and co-player of the
year in the division. “I just
kept letting go.”
After Xavier Simpson,
who had 18 points for
LCC, hit a high-arching
floater with 5:41 left, the

Thunderbirds were on top
51-44. But VASJ ran off the
next seven points — the
first five by Dererk Pardon
and the last two on free
throws by Bragg — to tie
it with 4:31 left.
Pardon ended up with
17 points and 15 rebounds.
Cory Stewart and Simpson — again on a looping
shot over the outstretched
arm of Bragg — gave the
Thunderbirds a 55-51 lead.
Bragg hit two foul shots
only to have Kimbrough
— scoreless in the second
half to that point — make
two more to get the margin
back to four points.
See LCC | 8

�Tuesday, March 25, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 7

The Daily Sentinel

Request for Proposal
The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners are seeking
proposals to provide a comprehensive year-round youth program to eligible youth ages 1421 consistent with Meigs
County’s Workforce Development Plan, provisions of the
federal Workforce Investment
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WIA, service providers are expected to link programs with
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strong connection between
academic and occupational
learning, and establish programs which prepare youth for
post secondary education or
unsubsidized employment as
appropriate. Services should
include: determining eligibility
for WIA programs, providing a
comprehensive array of services to eligible youth and incorporating the ten program
elements under WIA. The
Board has allocated a total of
$55,000 (subject of available
funds) for the older and younger youth program. The Board
has a strong preference toward a single contract incorporating both youth programs
and components. Contract
period will be for the period of
July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2015.
Administrative cost may not
exceed 10% of the total contract award. In addition, 30% of
the total contract award must
be used to serve out-of-school
youth. Proposals must demonstrate the capability to meet
performance standards and to
quantify program outcomes. A
copy of the Request for Proposal may be picked up from
Meigs County Board of Commissioners, 100 East Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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The Meigs County Board of
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County’s Workforce Development Plan, provisions of the
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WIA, service providers are expected to link programs with
local labor needs, provide a
strong connection between
academic and occupational
learning, and establish programs which prepare youth for
post secondary education or
unsubsidized employment as
appropriate. Services should
include: determining eligibility
for WIA programs, providing a
comprehensive array of services to eligible youth and incorporating the ten program
elements under WIA. The
Board has allocated a total of
$55,000 (subject of available
funds) for the older and younger youth program. The Board
has a strong preference toward a single contract incorporating both youth programs
and components. Contract
period will be for the period of
July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2015.
Administrative cost may not
exceed 10% of the total contract award. In addition, 30% of
the total contract award must
be used to serve out-of-school
youth. Proposals must demonstrate the capability to meet
performance standards and to
quantify program outcomes. A
copy of the Request for Proposal may be picked up from
Meigs County Board of Commissioners, 100 East Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Proposals should be submitted to the Meigs County Board
of Commissioners, 100 East
Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
no later than Tuesday, March
25, 2014 at 2:00pm. All submissions must be received by
mail or hand delivery by the
above date and time. No materials received after the date
will be included in previous
submissions nor be considered. The Board reserves
the right to reject any or all proposals. In accordance with 29

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Proposals should be submitted to the Meigs County Board
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no later than Tuesday, March
25, 2014 at 2:00pm. All submissions must be received by
mail or hand delivery by the
above dateLEGALS
and time. No materials received after the date
will be included in previous
submissions nor be considered. The Board reserves
the right to reject any or all proposals. In accordance with 29
CFR part 31, 32, Meigs County
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�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Haraway
From Page 6

game, but Haraway was fouled
again while Norwalk spread the
floor. He toed the line with 16.7
seconds left and made both —
finishing 15 of 19 on free throws.
The Eagles were only 16 of 22 as
a team, compared to the Truckers’ 23 of 33.
Moments after Gray left the

“He’s an outstanding player,”
Lombardo said of Haraway. “We
thought we had a good plan, but
yet he still scored 29 points.”
Hughes came back with a free
throw to make it a five-point

court, a piece of the net in his
hands, he summed up his feelings.
“It’s a great day to be a Trucker,” he said.
NOTES: Ben Haraway, who
scored 29 points while hitting
15 of 19 free throws to lead
Norwalk to the championship in

its first trip to the final four, is
the most outstanding player on
the 2014 Associated Press Division II boys state all-tournament
team.
Haraway totaled 49 points in
two games. He was joined on the
squad by teammates Jeff Thomas (38 points, 19 rebounds) and

Grant Hull (25 points).
Also making the team were
Watterson’s Matt Hughes (34
points in two games), Dayton
Thurgood Marshall’s Derrick
Daniels (13 points, 14 rebounds
in a semifinal loss) and Akron St.
Vincent-St. Mary’s Jalen Hudson
(18 points in a semifinal defeat).

Dayton
From Page 6
at

Oliver was a star guard
Kalamazoo (Mich.)

Central High School,
where Obama gave a commencement address in
2010. He met the presi-

dent and challenged him
to a one-on-one match.
He was surprised that he
remembered.

“That’s just more icing
on the cake to where we’re
already at,” Oliver said on
Monday. “More than any-

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Wife Swap "Wife Swap
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Decisions"
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Answers"
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Tattooed"
Jackman"
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Full House
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"Comeupp- Comedy
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thing, I hope he responds
and actually takes me up
on it. That would be really
cool.”
The Flyers were still trying to get back on schedule
Monday after their wild
weekend. They returned to
Dayton after the win over
Syracuse, their bus reaching campus around 3:30
a.m. with an estimated
200 students waiting up to
greet them.
“Well, I was a little bit
worried that they were
going to tip the bus over,
seeing some of the photos and some of the action before we landed,”
Miller said. “It was overwhelming. I was happy
for our fans and really

happy for our students.
“This is what it’s about,
what in my mind that a
proud tradition deserves.”
There wasn’t much
time to catch up on sleep
over the weekend. Senior
center Matt Kavanaugh,
whose uncles and fathers
attended Dayton, got
about five hours of rest
before waking up to watch
Stanford’s 60-57 upset of
Kansas on Sunday.
Sleep?
“I was ready to watch
the games,” Kavanaugh
said. “I was too excited to
miss any moment of it.”
Nobody in Dayton is
sleeping through this tournament.

LCC
From Page 6
Kimbrough hit the first of two shots with 37.8 seconds remaining for a 60-57 lead, then was fouled after a huge offensive rebound by Dantez Walton and hit another free throw five
seconds later to make it 61-57.
Simpson made a foul shot before Parker sank two foul shots
with 13.8 seconds on the clock to cut the lead to 62-59. Simpson made another free throw with 11.5 seconds left before
Bragg — one of the most highly recruited juniors in the Midwest — came off a pick and drained the 3 with 6 seconds left.
The Thunderbirds then missed two foul shots, had a follow
shot blocked and were fouled again with 1.7 seconds remaining. This time Tre Cobbs hit the first of two shots.
When he missed the second, Parker dribbled to near midcourt
and flipped a shot that was right on line but came up just short.
“It looked good, but I missed it,” said Parker, a first-team
all-stater and also a co-player of the year, who finished with
15 points.
LCC’s players celebrated in a large pile.
Jake Williams, an undersized 6-3 center, was an unsung star
for LCC, not only playing tough defense but scoring 12 points
and grabbing seven rebounds against VASJ’s large (6-11 and
6-8) frontcourt.
Exactly 17 years earlier, to the day, Kill had led Lincolnview
High School to a state championship.
Asked if his coaching title was an upset, he added, “Not in
my heart.”
NOTES: Martyce Kimbrough, who scored 41 points in two
games while leading Lima Central Catholic to its second state
championship, is the most outstanding player on the Associated Press Division III boys all-tournament team.
Kimbrough had 22 points, including 18 in the first half, of a
dramatic 64-62 victory over Cleveland Villa Angela-St. Joseph
on Saturday. He had 19 points in a semifinal win over St. Bernard Roger Bacon.
Joining him on the team were teammates Xavier Simpson (32
points in two games) and Jake Williams (19 points, 16 rebounds
in two games), along with VASJ’s Carlton Bragg (34 points in
two games) and Dererk Pardon (26 points in two games).

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�Tuesday, March 25, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

The Daily Sentinel

Page 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

by Dave Green

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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1 7
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By Hilary Price

3/25

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By Dave Green

�Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Crestview’s big three leads way in third-quarter spurt
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — In
a tight game, Convoy Crestview’s
defense made all the difference in
the world.
Damian Helm, Tyson Bolenbaugh and Connor Lautzenheiser
each had two baskets in an 18-0
blitz to start the third quarter,
pushing the top-ranked Knights
to a 71-44 victory over Louisville
Aquinas on Saturday for its first
Division IV state championship.
“When we make up our minds
that we’re going to take away at
the defensive end what (the other
team) wants to do, we feed off
that,” Crestview coach Jeremy
Best said.
It ended up being a buffet.
Aquinas (18-12) hit its first four
3-pointers and also made seven of

its first 11 shots from the field but
still trailed 22-19 because of nine
early turnovers.
Crestview led 15-9 after a quarter and 26-23 at the half.
Then came the game-changing
run.
After scoring the last two points
of the second quarter, Crestview
ripped off the first 18 points of the
third to build a 44-23 lead.
Best had been angry and animated at the half of a 54-50 victory
over New Madison Tri-Village in
the semis, propelling his team to
score 15 of the 19 points in the
third quarter.
This time, he barely raised his
voice.
“He really stressed being tougher,” point guard Cam Etzler said.

Crestview (29-0) won the title
in its third trip to the final four.
Anthony Moeglin had 10 for
Aquinas, which making its second
trip to the state tournament but
first since 1975.
“Their guards were able to create and get into the paint,” he said.
“They got us in help situations
where they could dish off to their
big men.”
Crestview used its defense to
pick up points in transition, often
with long backside passes to its
big men who were open as Aquinas tried to trap out on top.
“My teammates found me,”
said Bolenbaugh, a 6-foot-5 senior.
“I just went with the flow in the
game.”
Crestview outscored Aquinas

“That they were being tougher
than us (in the first half).”
Lautzenheiser had two 3s and
Helm one during the spurt. Showing their depth, those three players
had at least two baskets and five
players scored for Crestview. Both
Bolenbaugh and Lautzenheiser
had six points and Helm had four.
Aquinas went scoreless for 6
minutes and 28 seconds, missing
five shots and surrendering seven
turnovers over that span before
sub Pete Ruthe finally broke the ice
when his shot from under the hoop
in traffic rolled in at the 2:48 mark.
“Man, Crestview is a good
team,” said Aquinas coach Matt
Hackenberg. “They really D’d it up
and made it hard for us to get good
looks.”

20-3 in the quarter to build the
lead to 46-26, hitting 8 of 12 shots
from the field with two turnovers
to Aquinas’ 1 of 7 with seven turnovers.
The school from Van Wert county kept piling it on in the fourth
quarter before substituting.
Helm, a first-team Associated
Press All-Ohioan, finished with
20 points. Bolenbaugh ended up
2ith 18 and Lautzenheiser had 11.
Preston Zaleski added 10 points.
NOTES: Damian Helm, Tyson
Bolenbaugh and Connor Lautzenheiser, — teammates who
brought Convoy Crestview its first
championship — share the most
outstanding player award on the
Associated Press Division IV state
all-tournament team.

Lakewood St. Edward wins second Division I title

COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — The play wasn’t
even designed to go to

Marsalis Hamilton.
Yet he hit the shot heard
‘round the state.

Hamilton hit a tying
3-pointer at the regulation
buzzer, and Associated

MEIGS COUNTY SUMMER YOUTH EMPLOYMENT PROGRAM
THE MEIGS COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF JOB AND FAMILY SERVICES
WILL BE CONDUCTING ELIGIBILITY DETERMINATIONS ON TUESDAY,
APRIL 8, 2014 FROM 1:00PM UNTIL 6:00PM AND WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9,
2014 FROM 3:00PM UNTIL 6:00PM AT THE DEPARTMENT OF JOB AND
FAMILY SERVICES, 175 RACE STREET, MIDDLEPORT, OHIO FOR THE TANF
SUMMER YOUTH EMPLOYMENT PROGRAM.
APPLICANTS UNDER THE AGE OF 18 MUST BE ACCOMPANIED BY A
PARENT OR GUARDIAN. APPLICANTS MUST BE ABLE TO SHOW PROOF
OF AGE, SUCH AS A BIRTH CERTIFICATE AND PROOF OF RESIDENCY,
SUCH AS A UTILITY BILL. IN ADDITION, PROOF OF HOUSEHOLD
INCOME FOR THE LAST 30 DAYS MUST BE PROVIDED.
TO BE ELIGIBLE THE PARTICIPANT MUST BE:
s 9/54( !'%3 �� �� !3 ,/.' !3 4(% 9/54( )3 ! -)./2 #(),$ IN A
NEEDY FAMILY AND IS IN SCHOOL;
s 9/54( !'%3 �� �� !3 ,/.' !3 4(%9 !2% ). ! .%%$9 &amp;!-),9 THAT
ALSO HAS A MINOR CHILD; OR
s 9/54( !'%3 �� �� 4(!4 (!6% ! -)./2 #(),$ !.$ )3 CONSIDERED
NEEDY.
NEEDY IS CONSIDERED LESS THAN 200% OF THE POVERTY LEVEL. FOR
EXAMPLE:
FAMILY SIZE
INCOME LEVEL
2
LESS THAN $2,622 A MONTH
3
LESS THAN $3,299 A MONTH
4
LESS THAN $3,975 A MONTH
AN APPLICANT WHICH IS DEEMED ELIGIBLE IS NOT GUARANTEED
EMPLOYMENT.
60490381

Press first-team All-Ohioan Kipper Nichols hit two
clinching free throws in
overtime to propel Lakewood St. Edward to a 6258 victory over Upper Arlington on Saturday night
for the Division I state
championship.
“I was counting in my
head. Tony (Vuyancih)
wasn’t open. Kipper wasn’t
open,” Hamilton said. “I
took a dribble to get some
room and let it go — and it
hit the bottom of the net.”
A laughing Nichols said
he couldn’t have been happier that the designed play
didn’t develop.
“Marsalis started to
dribble, and I didn’t know
what was going to happen,”
Nichols said. “I thought our
season was over.”
St. Ed coach Eric Flannery expressed something
less than confidence in
Hamilton.
“I don’t want to say I
don’t have confidence in
Marsalis, but when he shot
the ball I was kind of like,
‘Oh!’” he said. “But it went
in. Unbelievable.”
In the overtime, Nichols
stepped to the line with St.
Ed (26-2) hanging on to
a 60-58 lead with 5.8 seconds left. He drained both

to clinch the Eagles’ second
title and first since 1998.
They had been thwarted six
other times in the state tournament.
“It was a lot of luck and
working hard,” Nichols said.
“And never giving up.”
Danny Hummer and firstteam all-stater Kevin Vannatta each had 15 points for
the Golden Bears (27-2),
who were seeking their first
championship since 1937.
The Golden Bears led most
of the game but were never
on top in the overtime.
It appeared UA would
pull the stunner after making two 3s late in regulation.
Vannatta made a 3 over
Nichols on the left wing.
After Nichols was long on
a 15-foot jumper, Wes Davis poured in a 3 from the
left foul-line extended, and
the lead was 48-42 with
3:21 remaining.
St. Ed, scrambling on
defense and rushing back
on the break, cut it to 48-47
when Hummer was fouled
with 35 seconds left. He
made both, part of a clutch
6 for 6 showing at the line.
Vuyancih then drove to
the basket and hit a layup
to make it a one-point game.
Inbounding under the St.

Ed basket, UA’s Vannatta
threw a pass to midcourt to
a streaking Hummer who
hit the layup with 11 seconds left for a three-point
lead.
St. Ed brought the ball
down the court and called
timeout with 4.7 seconds
left. Hamilton inbounded
in front of his bench and the
ball came back to him. He
released the shot with just
over 2 seconds left and hit
nothing but net.
“We were trying to be
sure that Nichols or Vuyancih didn’t get the shot,”
UA coach Tim Casey said.
“We were going to take
our chances with the other
guys. That kid just made a
big shot.”
The Eagles won the overtime tip and held onto it
until Malcolm Waters drove
with 1:49 left and hit the
bucket. He missed the accompanying free throw.
Hummer was fouled and
made both at the other end,
then fouled St. Ed’s 6-foot-9
sophomore Derek Funderburk on a follow, the post
hitting both clutch shots.
Vannatta then missed a 3,
and St. Ed threw a long pass
to Vuyancih for a layup with
41 seconds left for a 58-54
lead.

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