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

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

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inhale... Page 4

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near 74. Low
around 53 ... Page 2

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SPORTS

OBITUARIES

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action ... Page 6

Teresa L. Curry, 50
Violet Elaine Robie Day, 83
Roger Lee Halstead, 58
Vivian Karr Matthews, 82

50 cents daily

THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014

Vol. 64, No. 56

Junior Lee Mattox, 65
Charles R. Plymale, 80
Milton Gray Spease, 66

The Meigs County Health Department
Experiencing a year of
change and challenge
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — For the Meigs
County Health Department,
2013 was a year of change and
challenge with some reduction
in funding for services to the
public.
While the recently-released annual report tells a story of less
funding for health services, it
also presents a picture of numer-

ous health-related services being
provided, both for individuals
and in the community, despite
the reduced funding.
However, some services
were reduced due to less local tax dollars and grant monies, which resulted in cutting
hours for several employees
over a period of several weeks,
and changing the way some
services were provided.

According to Courtney Midkiff, administrator, the health
department depends on two
primary sources of income — a
county 1-mill property tax levy
and funding grants from state
and federal agencies.
The current Meigs County
property tax levy to fund services was passed more than a
decade ago. It has been renewed
periodically, which means the local income generated has not increased over that period of time.
In fact, according to the annual
report, it has decreased because
of property valuation and tax collection.
See DEPARTMENT | 3

Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

The staff at the Meigs County Health Department includes, left to right,
seated, Steve Swatzel, Leanne Cunnigham, Larry Marshall, health commissioner, Sharon Buchanan, Courtney Midkiff, administrator, and second
row, Becki Ball, Beth Cremeans, Sandy Dalton, Coleen Murphy-Smith, Laura Cleland; and third row, Frank Gorscak, Janet Jones, Juli Simpson, Sherry
Eagle, Sherry Hayman and Joseph Verdier.

Man sought by
Honoring the victims of crime
investigators following
‘suspicious’ death
By Amber Gillenwater

agillenwater@civitasmedia.com

CLAY TOWNSHIP — Authorities are currently seeking a local
man who is wanted for questioning
following a reported “suspicious”
death that occurred Tuesday evening in Gallia County.
According to a release issued by
the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office David D. Brewster
late Wednesday morning, David
Dwayne Brewster, 43, is wanted in connection with the
death of Daniel Lee Day, 29, who was found dead at a
Clay Chapel Road residence in Clay Township on Tuesday
evening.
The Gallia County 911 Dispatch Center reportedly received a call at approximately 9:23 p.m. Tuesday from a
Clay Chapel Road resident who reported to dispatchers
that she believed her son was dead.
Deputies were dispatched to the scene and, upon arrival, discovered the body of Day deceased inside the home.
See DEATH | 3

Photos by Sarah Hawley | Daily Sentinel

Many groups and individuals have put time and effort into honoring and remembering the victims of crime during
National Crime Victims’ Rights Week. On Saturday morning, members of the Meigs High School National Honor
Society helped the Meigs County Victims Assistance Office place 679 shoes along the Pomeroy Parking Lot. Each
shoe represents one victim of crime in the county in 2013. On Wednesday, Meigs FFA members Alexis Schwab and
Josh Schwab worked to clean up and plant flowers the mini park on Court Street as part of the week’s events. They
were also assisted by Butch Dean, Bill Smith and the Pomeroy Merchants Association, with materials donated by
the Meigs FFA and Dettwiller Lumber. The annual ceremony to honor the homicide victims from Meigs County will
take place at 6 p.m. Thursday on the third floor of the Meigs County Courthouse. Meigs County Commissioner Randy
Smith will serve as the speaker for the event.

Garrison to headline
Kennedy Day Dinner
Staff Report
GDTnews@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — Jennifer
Garrison, Democratic candidate for Ohio’s 6th Congressional District, will be the
keynote speaker at the Gallia
County Democratic Party’s
annual spring Kennedy Day
Dinner this Saturday.
“I’m looking forward to
meeting with local Democrats
and sharing the story of our
campaign,” Garrison said.
Garrison, a resident of Marietta, previously served three Jennifer Garrison
terms in the Ohio House of
Representatives from 2005- Guernsey, Harrison, Jack2010, representing the people son, Jefferson, Lawrence,
of the 93rd district.
Mahoning, Meigs, Monroe,
Garrison will be facing Muskingum, Noble, Scioto,
fellow Democratic can- Tuscarawas, and Washingdidate Gregory Howard, ton counties.
of Meigs County, in this
This year’s Gallia County
year’s May 6 primary elec- Democratic Party Kennedy
tion. Also on the ballot for Day Dinner will be Saturthis year’s race for the 6th day at the Gallipolis QualDistrict of the U.S. House ity Inn. Social hour begins
of Representatives are Re- at 6 p.m. and dinner will be
publican incumbent Bill served at 6:30 p.m.
Johnson and Green party
For more details, includcandidate Dennis Lambert. ing ticket information, conThe 6th Congressional tact Carole Roush, Gallia
District includes all or parts County Democratic Party
of Athens, Belmont, Car- chairwoman, at (740) 339roll, Columbiana, Gallia, 3702.

OhioMeansJobs Center: New name, same services
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT —The Meigs
County One Stop Job Center now
has a new name — OhioMeansJobsMeigs County. The rebranding strategy, which went in effect April 1, will
create consistency across the state
for the 90 one-stop centers.
The state of Ohio has taken steps
to improve Ohio’s work force development system, including a rebranding
of the one-stop employment centers
across the state. The rebranding ef-

forts, funded by the Workforcce Improvement Act, will help both job seekers and employers know that when
they see an OhioMeansJobs sign in
any county they will receive similar
work force development services.
OhioMeansJobs Meigs center will
continue to provide the same job
seeker and employer services. Job
seeker services include: Resource
Room equipped with computers,
applications, fax machines, and
phones for seeking employment;
Free workshops such as resume
writing, basic computer skills, inter-

net job searching and job club.
Services for employers include recruitment services such as job posting, resume collection and screening
and rapid response for layoffs.
OhioMeansJobs is a partnership
between the Ohio Department of Job
and Family Services and the resume
services of Monster Worldwide Inc.
People looking for work and employers who seek workers can also use
the OhioMeansJobs website www.
ohiomeansjobs.com. OhioMeansJobs
- Meigs County is located at 150 Mill
St., in Middleport.

�Page 2 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Meigs County Community Calendar
Thursday, April 10
WELLSTON — The GJMV Solid
Waste Management District Board
of Directors will meet at 3:30 p.m.
at the district office, 1056 S. New
Hampshire Avenue in Wellston.
CHESTER — Shade River
Lodge 453 will conduct its monthly stated meeting at 7:30 p.m.
April 10. Refreshments will be
served afterward.

Friday, April 11
CHESTER — Chester Shade
Historical Association will have
their annual benefit dinner and
auction at 6:30 p.m. at Meigs High
School Cafeteria. Homemade
chicken and noodles, pork loin
and sauerkraut, salmon loaf, baked
spaghetti and chicken cacciatore is
the main menu with side dishes.
There will be an Chinese auction

along with the regular auction. If
you have any antiques, collectibles,
quilts or other nice items for the
auction, please bring them to the
dinner or drop off at the Chester
Courthouse. This will be a Matching Funds by Modern Woodmen
of America. Tickets are available
at Baum’s Lumber, Summerfield’s
Restaurant and Farmer’s Bank in
Tupper Plains and Pomeroy.

Thursday, April 17
POMEROY — The Meigs County Retired Teachers will meet at
noon in the private meeting room
of the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center. Lunch will be catered
by the center. Please call 992-3214
two days ahead with the number
attending. The speaker will be
Beth Shaver, Director of the Meigs
County Council on Aging. Mem-

Ohio Valley Forecast

Meigs County Church Calendar

Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 74. Southwest wind
7 to 12 mph increasing to 13 to 18 mph in the afternoon.
Winds could gust as high as 28 mph.
Thursday Night: A chance of showers after 1 a.m. Increasing clouds, with a low around 53. Southwest wind
11 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent. New
precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.
Friday: Showers likely, with thunderstorms also possible after 2 p.m. Some of the storms could produce heavy
rainfall. Cloudy, with a high near 67. Southwest wind 5 to
8 mph becoming northwest in the afternoon. Chance of
precipitation is 70 percent. New rainfall amounts between
a half and three quarters of an inch possible.
Friday Night: Showers and thunderstorms likely before 1 a.m, then a chance of showers. Some of the storms
could produce heavy rainfall. Cloudy, with a low around
48. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent. New rainfall
amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Saturday: Partly sunny, with a high near 72.
Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 49.
Sunday: Mostly cloudy, with a high near 77.
Sunday Night: A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a low around 56. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Monday: Showers likely. Cloudy, with a high near 67.
Chance of precipitation is 70 percent.
Monday Night: A chance of showers. Cloudy, with a
low around 40. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Tuesday: Mostly cloudy, with a high near 56.

Community Dinner
and Lenten Service
POMEROY — A free
community dinner of spaghetti, salad, desserts and
drinks will be April 10 with
serving time from 5:306:30 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran Church, Pomeroy.
The Community Lenten
service will be held following the dinner at 7 p.m.

Fish Fry
POMEROY — Sacred
Heart Church in Pomeroy
will have a fish fry from
noon-7 p.m. April 11. Carry-out and deluxe dinners
are available. The fish fry is
sponsored by the Knights
of Columbus Monsignor
Jessing Council #1664.
All proceeds benefit local
charities.

Church Yard Sale
RACINE — CarmelSutton Building Fund yard
sale will be April 10-11
at the Carmel Fellowship
Building, 48540 Carmel
Road in Racine. The yard
sale will be 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
April 10 and 9 a.m.-2 p.m.
April 11. There will be refreshments.
RUTLAND — Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church
will hold an indoor yard
sale April 10-12 from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. Food will be
served. For more information, call 742-2790 or 7422999.

Palm Sunday service
HEMLOCK GROVE —
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church will hold special
Palm Sunday services at
10 a.m. and 6 p.m. April
13. Experience communion through The Beals
Mime Team. Dan and Sandy Beals began their mime
ministry in 2005 with their
three children. For more
information call (740) 5915960.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 51.54
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 27.08
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 97.96
Big Lots (NYSE) — 38.10
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 48.03
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 62.12
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 13.82
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.470
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.77
Collins (NYSE) — 78.94
DuPont (NYSE) — 67.52
US Bank (NYSE) — 42.01
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 25.95
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 67.88
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 59.27
Kroger (NYSE) — 44.72
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 58.88
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 96.28
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.00
BBT (NYSE) — 39.84

Birthdays
MIDDLEPORT — Pauline
Mayer will observe her 93rd
birthdray on April 16. Cards may
be sent to her at Overbrook Center, 333 Page Street, Middleport,
Ohio 45760

Soon” at 7 p.m. April 13 at
the Tuppers Plains United
Methodist Church.
Easter Services
MIDDLEPORT
—
Easter services at First
Baptist Church of Middleport will include the
following: April 13, Palm
Sunday regular services
with celebration of Bring
a Friend Sunday. Sunday
School, 9:15 a.m.; morning worship, 10:15 a.m.,
no evening service. April
17, Maundy Thursday
Service, 7 p.m. communion service celebrating
the Last Supper for Jesus
and His disciples; April
20, Easter Sunrise Service, 6:30 a.m. Breakfast
will be served by Golden
Rule Sunday School class
following service. Sunday
School, 9:15 a.m., morning worship service 10:15
a.m. no evenimg sservice.
Community Dinner
TUPPERS PLAINS —

A free community dinner
with a special Easter celebration will be held at 6:30
p.m. April 17 at St. Paul
United Methodist Church
in Tuppers Plains.
Meigs Cooperative
Parish events
POMEROY — The
Meigs Cooperative Parish
hosts a variety of events
and service projects available throughout the week
at the Mulberry Community Center. Some of those
are as follows: Meals at the
Mulberry Community Center — 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.
Tuesday and Thursday.
Parish Shop — 9 a.m.-3
p.m. Monday-Friday and 9
a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday.
Comfort Club — 9 a.m.noon Wednesday.
Food Pantry — 9-11
a.m. Tuesday-Friday.
Celebrate Recovery —
7-9 p.m. Monday.
Shape-Up — 9-11 a.m.
and 5-7 p.m. Tuesday and
Thursday.

Meigs County Local Briefs

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 25.23
Pepsico (NYSE) — 83.91
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.30
Rockwell (NYSE) — 123.94
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.44
Royal Dutch Shell — 74.47
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 35.97
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 77.97
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.63
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.97
Worthington (NYSE) — 37.67
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions April 9, 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.

Boil Advisory
RUTLAND — Water customers
in the village of Rutland are under a
boil advisory until further notice.
Rotary Pancake Event
POMEROY — The MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club will stage its
annual pancake breakfast from 7-11
a.m. April 26 at the Meigs Senior
Center. Proceeds from the event will
benefit “Celebrate Recovery,” a program of assistance addicts. Tickets
for the all-you-can-eat breakfast are
$5.
Chester Courthouse Benefit
CHESTER — The annual benefit
dinner and auction for the Chester
Courthouse and Academy will be
6:30 p.m. April 11 in the Meigs High
School cafeteria. Cost is $15. Tickets are available at Farmers Bank
in Tuppers Plains and Pomeroy,
Baum’s Lumber and Summerfield’;s
Restaurant in Chester. Items for the
auction, antiques, collectibles, quilts
and other items are needed and can
be taken to the dinner or left at the
Chester Courthouse.

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(USPS 436-840)

SWITCHBOARD: 740-992-2155
Annual local subscription price for The Pomeroy Daily Sentinel is $250. Please
call for more information on local pricing. Full-price single-copy issues are $1.

IKES’ Youth Day
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Ikes Club Youth Day will be 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. April 12. Registration gets

CONTACT US
EDITOR:
Michael Johnson
740-992-2155
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

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Ext. 25
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NEWSROOM:
Charlene Hoeflich
740-992-2155
Ext. 12
Sarah Hawley
740-992-2155
Ext. 13

ADVERTISING:
Sarah Thompson
740-992-2155
Ext. 15
Brenda Davis
740-992-2155
Ext. 16

Special Singing
TUPPERS PLAINS —
The Unity Singers will be
performing “He’s Coming

bers are asked to bring in paper
products and personal care products for the women’s shelter.

under way at 9 a.m. All activities,
including lunch, are free. Each child
will receive a free T-shirt and be eligible for drawings for many door prizes. There will be free fishing in the
afternoon in the club’s pond, which
was recently stocked with catfish. An
adult must accompany each child.
Easter Egg Hunt
RUTLAND — An Easter egg hunt
will take place at 11:30 a.m. April 12
at the Old Fort Meigs, 35431 New
Lima Road, Rutland. Cost is $1 per
child up to 15 yeas old. There will be
prizes, food available and free fishing.
PORTLAND — An Easter egg
hunt will take place at the Portland
Community Center at 1 p.m. Saturday for children 12 and under. Each
child will receive an Easter basket
filled with goodies.
Cemetery Cleanups
RACINE — The village of Racine
will be completing the annual spring
cleanup of the Greenwood Cemetery
during the week of April 13. Anyone
wanting to save any decorations is
asked to remove them before Monday, April 14th.
LEBANON TOWNSHIP — Lebanon Township will be doing their spring
cemetery lot cleanup. Items that people
don’t want thrown away must be re-

moved from gravesites by April 28.
LETART TOWNSHIP — Letart
Township cemeteries’ cleanup, remove grave blankets and flowers by
April 10. Reminder, nothing is to be
placed beyond 6 inches perimeter
around headstones. No glass items.
Shade River
Lodge Scholarships
CHESTER — Shade River Lodge
453 will be awarding two $250 scholarships to eligible seniors at Eastern
High School. To qualify to apply
those eligible must be children and/
or grandchildren of Shade River
Lodge members. Deadline to apply is
April 25. For more information contact school counselor or call Delmar
Pullins, 985-3669.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will conduct a
childhood immunization clinic from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. Tuesday at the
Meigs County Health Department
located at 112 E. Memorial Drive in
Pomeroy. Bring child’s shot record.
Children must be accompanied by
a parent/legal guardian. A donation
is appreciated for immunization administration, however no one will be
denied services. Bring medical cards
or commercial insurance cards.

Gay marriage’s win streak tested in higher court
By Nicholas Riccardi
Associated Press

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DENVER — The gay
rights movement’s winning
streak in same-sex marriage
lawsuits faces its biggest
test yet in Denver where a
federal appeals court will
weigh whether to give an
important victory to gay
couples’ right to marry or
halt their momentum.
A three-judge panel
will hear arguments on
Thursday and next week
on whether they should
uphold separate rulings
by two federal judges that
threw out same-sex marriage bans in Utah and
Oklahoma.
They do so, however, in
a climate far different than
2004, when voters overwhelmingly approved the

prohibitions in both states.
After the U.S. Supreme
Court last year ruled that a
law forbidding the federal
government from recognizing same-sex marriages
was unconstitutional, eight
federal judges in all have
struck down state bans on
gay marriage or on the recognition of same-sex marriages from other states.
As the panel of the 10th
Circuit Court of Appeals
considers the Utah case
Thursday, experts say
pressure is on the judges
at a time when polls show
a majority of Americans
backing same-sex unions.
“The challenge for conservative judge would be:
Do you want to be the only
court of appeals that upholds discrimination that
the country is rapidly gal-

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60495237

loping to renounce?” said
William Eskridge, a law
professor at Yale University, said. “The handwriting
is on the wall.”
Opponents say that
shouldn’t factor into the
judges’ calculations.
“There are strong political factors that seem to
be driving these district
court decisions,” said Ed
Whelan of the Ethics and
Public Policy Center in
Washington, D.C., adding
that expectations that the
Supreme Court will ultimately find that gays have
the right to marry may
also feed into it.
“It’s not the job of lower
courts to predict where
the Supreme Court will
go,” he said.
Despite the legal momentum, attorneys say it is
distinctly possible the 10th
Circuit could rule against
gay marriage backers and
argue the issue is best settled at the ballot box.
“It’s an institutional argument that we’ve seen
at the Supreme Court and
we’ve seen in state litigation,” Douglas NeJaime, a
law professor at the University of California-Irvine,
said. “If the court wanted
to not say something about

the merits, but uphold the
ban, they could go that direction.”
The three judges picked
randomly to hear the case,
and next week’s appeal of
the ruling that struck down
an Oklahoma gay marriage
ban, include two Republicans and one Democrat.
One of the Republicans,
Jerome A. Holmes, appointed by President George W.
Bush, initially voted against
staying the trial court’s ruling, which allowed more
than 1,000 gay couples to
wed in Utah in December
before the Supreme Court
stepped in and stayed the
initial ruling.
The other two judges
are Carlos F. Lucero, appointed by President Bill
Clinton, and Paul J. Kelly,
Jr., appointed by President
George H.W. Bush.
Kenneth Upton, an attorney with the Lambda
Legal Defense Fund who
watches the 10th Circuit
carefully, said the panel is
a perfect representation
of a court that is generally
moderate and centrist.
“If you wanted to pick a
panel where you could do a
straw poll of the judiciary,
this is a pretty good sample,” Upton said.

�Thursday, April 10, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Meigs drama class to present musical revue
POMEROY — The
Meigs High School Drama
Club will be presenting
“Timeless Jukebox,” a musical revue of popular songs
from the Roaring ’20s to
the present, on Friday and
Saturday nights in the gymnasium.
The musical, directed by
Amy Perrin, traces the journey of an unlikely teenage
hero as he travels through
time to stop the evil mastermind Dr. Nosong from
taking away music forever.
The doors will open at
6 p.m. and the curtain will
Submitted photo
go up at 7 p.m. Admission Senior drama students Carly Taylor, Kaylee Rowe, Alyssa McKenzie, Trenton Prater and Miranda Manley rehearse for this weekend’s production of “Timeless Jukebox” at MHS.
charge is $5.

Page 3

COAD hosting
volunteer
appreciation dinner
POMEROY — A 2014 spring celebration and
volunteer appreciation dinner will be 2 p.m. Monday at the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center.
Hosting the event is the Meigs COAD Retired Senior
Volunteer Program, coordinated by Katie Alexander.
The volunteers will be honored at the luncheon .
Door prizes will be awarded. The family and
friends of the volunteers are invited to attend.
There will be information at the event about volunteer opportunities in the community.
Those who plan to attend are asked to RSVP
to kalexander@coadinc.org.

Dillon PVH Employee of the Month
Pleasant Valley Hospital announces the Customer Service Employee
of the Month for March was Sherri
Dillon from the Laboratory Department. Sherri has been employed with
Pleasant Valley Hospital since March
of 1986 as a phlebotomist.
Because of recent events, Sherri’s
dedication to her job was acknowledged
by her peers. On her birthday, she
stayed an extra shift to cover for a coSubmitted photo worker who was ill. Following her shift
Sherri Dillon, center, was Pleasant Valley Hospital’s Employee coverage, employees discovered it had
of the Month for March. Also pictured, PVH CEO Glen Washing- been her birthday and her decision to
ton and Mitch Smith, director of laboratory services.
stay to cover the shift was a very selfless

act for others. Her coworkers wanted to
recognize Sherri for her dedication to
the hospital and the patients.
“Sherri is a longstanding employee
who is very conscientious of patient
care. Patients speak highly of her
ability to draw blood without pain,
and she is truly valued at Pleasant
Valley Hospital” said Mitch Smith,
director of laboratory services.
Sherri and her husband Chuck
live in Pliny and have one daughter
named Stephanie. They enjoy traveling and spending time together.
In this recognition, she received

a $50 check, pie to celebrate with
her department, and a VIP parking
space. She will also be eligible for the
Customer Service Employee of the
Year award with a chance for $250.
Established in 1959, Pleasant Valley Hospital is a partner of Cabell
Huntington Hospital and the Marshall University Joan C. Edwards
School of Medicine and is a not-forprofit healthcare system that provides community-oriented healthcare for Mason and Jackson counties
in West Virginia and the counties of
Gallia and Meigs in Ohio.

More ‘pings’ raise hopes Flight 370 will be found
By Nick Perry
Associated Press

PERTH, Australia — After a navy ship
heard more signals from deep in the Indian Ocean, the head of the search for the
missing Malaysian jetliner said Wednesday he believes the hunt is closing in on
the “final resting place” of Flight 370.
The Australian vessel Ocean Shield
picked up two signals Tuesday, and an
analysis of two other sounds detected Saturday showed they were consistent with a
plane’s flight recorders, or “black boxes,”
said Angus Houston, the Australian official coordinating the search for the Malaysian Airlines jet.
“I’m now optimistic that we will find the
aircraft, or what is left of the aircraft, in
the not-too-distant future,” Houston said.
“But we haven’t found it yet, because this
is a very challenging business.”
Finding the flight data and cockpit
voice recorders soon is important because
their locator beacons have a battery life of
about a month, and Tuesday marked one
month since Flight 370 vanished March 8
en route from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to
Beijing with 239 people aboard.
If the batteries fail before the recorders

are located, finding them in such deep water — about 15,000 feet — would be difficult, if not impossible.
“I believe we are searching in the right
area, but we need to visually identify aircraft
wreckage before we can confirm with certainty that this is the final resting place of
MH370,” Houston said. “For the sake of the
239 families, this is absolutely imperative.”
The hope expressed by Houston contrasted with the frustrating monthlong
search for the Boeing 777, which disappeared shortly after takeoff in one of the
biggest mysteries in aviation history. The
plane veered off-course for an unknown
reason, with officials saying that satellite
data indicates it went down in the southern Indian Ocean off the coast of western
Australia. The black boxes could help
solve that mystery.
The signals detected 1,020 miles northwest of Perth by the Ocean Shield’s towed
ping locators are the strongest indication
yet that the plane crashed and is now at
the bottom of the ocean in the area where
the search is now focused.
A data analysis of the signals heard
AP Photo
Saturday determined they were distinct, This image provided by the Joint Agency Coordination Center on Wednesday shows a map inman-made and pulsed consistently, Hous- dicating the locations of signals detected by vessels looking for signs of the missing Malaysia
Airlines Flight 370 in the southern Indian Ocean.
ton said.

Department

Death

From Page 1

From Page 1

As a result of the financial crunch
and increased requirements from the
State Board of Health, Midkiff said the
Meigs County Board of Health is contemplating placing an additional one
mill replacement levy on the ballot in
November.
Meanwhile, the Meigs County
Health Department is moving ahead
to achieve its mission: “to protect the
public health by working to assure
availability of, and access to quality
health care services, promoting individual and community responsibility
for the prevention of disease, injury
and disability by providing preventive
health care, education and environmental safety to all members of the
community.”
The governing board consists of
Roger Gaul, president; Gene Jeffers,
vice president, Jim Clifford Jr., Dr.
James Witherell and Mary Cline, who
is fulfilling the unexpired term for Donna Corsi, who resigned. Larry Marshall
remains the health commissioner, with
Midkiff as the administrator.
The state vision of the agency is “to
become recognized by the public as the
local advocate in promoting, assessing
and safeguarding public health and the
environment.”
The health department programs
funded with grant money and services
provided last year include: Women,
Infant and Children’s program, which
is a special supplemental nutrition and
education program pregnant women,
new mothers and infants and children
under age 5. The department had a
caseload of 750 WIC participants in
2013, according to Leanne Cunningham, director of nurses. The emphasis
is on providing nutrition education

Gallia County Coroner Dr. Daniel Whiteley was later
dispatched to the scene and agents with the Ohio Bureau
of Criminal Identification and Investigation were requested to respond to help process the scene.
Gallia County Sheriff Joe Browning said Wednesday
that Day’s death is being considered “suspicious” and the
case remains under investigation.
In addition to Ohio BCI, the sheriff’s office is also being
assisted by the Gallia County Prosecutor’s Office.
Those with possible information about the case are encouraged to call sheriff’s office dispatchers at (740) 4461221, or the sheriff’s office anonymous tip-line at (740)
446-6555.
Tuesday’s suspicious death follows the reported homicide of John S. Sheets, 58, at his Wray Road home in Gallia County in early February.
Sheets, whose body was discovered by a deputy performing a well-being check on the victim, was reportedly
killed by a gunshot wound.
Joseph D. Plymale, 27, of Bidwell, and Christopher
Bowman, 34, of Gallipolis, were both later arrested in relation to this case.
Plymale has been charged with two counts of aggravated murder, three counts of murder, two counts of theft,
aggravated robbery, receiving stolen property, weapons
under disability and tampering with evidence. He is being held in the Gallia County Jail under a $2 million, 10
percent bond.
Bowman was also recently charged with complicity to
aggravated robbery, complicity to theft of guns, complicity to the theft of a 2004 Chevrolet Silverado, receiving
stolen property and tampering with evidence for his alleged involvement in the homicide.
A $50,000, 10 percent, bond was later posted for Bowman’s release from the county jail.
More information on this latest “suspicious” death will
be released as it is made available by investigators.

Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Serving on the Meigs County Board of Health are from the left, Gene Jeffers, vice
president; Roger Gaul, president; Marty Cline, DLC member; Dr. James Witherell,
medical member; and Jim Clifford, junior member.

and some financial assistance to those
who qualify.
Frank Gorseak, who handles protective devices, reported the installation
of a closed circuit CCTV system and
network for security both inside and
outside the facility. Also included was a
nutrition education project for second
graders; funding for creating healthy
communities through program involving th citizens, and the reproductive
health and wellness grant.
The Child and Family Health Service grant consisted of nutritional
programming for 130 second graders
at Eastern Local. The emphasis of the
program was on nutrition. The Creating Healthy Communities dealt with
forming citizen groups to work together to make positive changes in the
community.
The Reproductive Health and Wellness Grant provided services to 196
clients. The services included contraceptive counseling and birth control
products, natural family planning

education, and infertility counselling,
along with STD/HIV information.
The annual report of nursing statistics for last year included, among other
tests, 791 persons immunized; communicable disease services to 156; 114
pregnancy tests; 24 HIV tests; and 14
hepatitis C tests.
The report also noted that four mammography clinics were held during the
year with 88 women being screened.
As for vital statistics, the report
showed that of the 134 deaths, the
leading cause was cardiac arrest.
Environmental health issues are an
important part of the health department’s operation. The agency deals
with issues pertaining to food services,
private water systems, solid waste
disposal facilities, health and safety in
public schools, public swimming pools,
animal bites and public health nuisances. The emphasis is on protecting the
health of the public through making
sure no issues are detrimental at public
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�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Page 4
THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2014

The business of black America People read what they want
By Esther Cepeda
The
National
Urban
League’s 2014 report on the
state of black America released a torrent of negative
assessments. “Dismal and getting worse,” read one headline. “Blacks behind whites,
Latinos in job market, report
says,” read another.
While superficial, these
summaries do contain one
truth: On measures of economics, health, education,
social justice and civic engagements,
African-Americans
have realized less of the American Dream than have their
white and Hispanic peers.
Indeed, the Urban League
report notes, 56.5 percent
of African-American households are less than middle
income compared to 50.8
percent of Hispanic and 35.5
percent of white households.
But that’s far from the end
of the story. Dig deeper and
you’ll find that the AfricanAmerican community possesses untapped potential
that represents authentic opportunities.
As a bright counterpoint
to the gloomy news about
blacks’ current well-being,
half of the 12 essays included
in the Urban League’s annual
appraisal were about the topic of entrepreneurism.
Randal D. Pinkett and Jeffrey A. Robinson, both entrepreneurs as well as scholars,
call entrepreneurism no less
than “the most important
vehicle of economic development in the black community.”
Donna Jones Baker is the
president/CEO of the Urban
League of Greater Cincinnati,
which runs a variety of business development programs.

She writes, “Being economically self-sufficient through
owning your own business is
not a new concept in the African-American community.
We have traditionally owned
the neighborhood grocery,
the barber shop, the beauty
parlor and the funeral home
— all providing needed services and specializing in serving the African-American
community. We recognize
such businesses as the backbone of America in general.”
But
African-American
business ownership is not —
and should not be perceived
as being — limited to momand-pop shops.
“We see a wide diversity of
interest in building different
types of business from home
health care, to mail and fulfillment enterprises, and
telecommunications firms,”
Baker told me. “And the rewards of that diversity aren’t
just for the individuals creating their business, but for the
community at large where
those businesses then develop workforce needs and then
begin to hire — it all works
together for the benefit of the
community at large.”
It’s not all rosy, of course.
Pinkett and Robinson note
that while they believe that
entrepreneurs are the major
wealth creators in America
and entrepreneurism can
transform the black community, “unfortunately, less than
5 percent of the black population is self-employed or
engaged in founding and running registered businesses.
Furthermore, the entrepreneurs who are making money in black communities are
not black. Often, the wealth
that is created through entrepreneurship doesn’t stay

in the black community and,
therefore, our communities
do not reap the benefits of
the kind of entrepreneurship
that also invests in the local
community.”
The answer these experts
suggest to encourage new
African-American businesspeople is business-focused
education and workforce
training, heavy investments
in entrepreneurship programs and small business
incubation programs, and
better access to capital for
up-and-coming minority entrepreneurs.
But it seems that what’s
necessary above all is the
fundamental reframing of
the perception of AfricanAmericans so that they are
considered an underutilized
pool of potential job creators
just waiting to be tapped.
“In a study conducted by
the Kauffman Foundation,”
Pinkett and Robinson write,
“it was noted that black
Americans, and in particular
black males, were the most
likely to say they wanted to
open their own business.
Unfortunately, the statistics
also tell us that blacks are the
least likely to actually open a
business.”
That has to be in no
small part because the most
common narratives about
African-Americans have to
do with incarceration, unemployment and underachievement.
It’s time to flip the script.
We need to stop seeing the
African-American community strictly as one in need of
recuperative social services
and begin to understand that
it could reach its full potential if we invested in its inherent ability to be enterprising.

By Kathleen Parker
After writing close to 3,000 columns, I’ve
learned that people sometimes read what
they’re looking for, often as a result of a headline, rather than what I wrote.
Same words, different prisms.
The same is true of the spoken word. What
did she just say?
Listener 1: “She said all Southerners are
stupid.”
Listener 2: “No, she didn’t. She was saying
that whenever political operatives or the media need to show someone who is confused
or clueless, they always find somebody with a
Southern accent. Parker’s been writing about
this for years. Besides, she is a Southerner.”
Let’s hear it for Listener Number 2!
This exchange might have taken place after I recently appeared on “Meet the Press,”
where I made a comment about Southerners
and an ad attacking the Affordable Care Act.
Apparently, at least one person with a laptop
was offended and social media took it from
there. Think Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Birds.”
To recap, NBC host David Gregory showed
a clip I hadn’t seen before in which a fellow expresses how confusing he found Obamacare.
He said he felt like he was in a “haze.” The
clip followed my comment that the greatest
challenge to Democrats in the midterm elections is the broad understanding that those
who passed Obamacare had no idea what
they were doing.
Rather than continuing this thread, I reacted to something that has irked me for years
— the media stereotype of the Southerner as
a befuddled hayseed — and that has been a
theme throughout my body of work.
In the moment, my gut got the better of
my brain. I said surely they could have found
someone without a Southern accent to express confusion about Obamacare. My followup was that there are plenty of other people
(who might be considered smarter and more
sophisticated by certain folks) who were also
perplexed by the law.
Alas, people unfamiliar with my work had
no context for the remark and took offense.
Herewith, the rest of the story.
First, I would never intentionally insult
Southerners or the South. Although I was
born in Florida, owing in part to my mother’s

poor health (she needed a mild climate but
died young anyway), South Carolina has
been home to my maternal family since 1670.
In fact, my mother was the only family
member to leave the state up to that point,
except for the men who left, some for eternity, to fight in various wars. Her other reason for leaving was because she committed
the unpardonable sin of marrying a Yankee
pilot during World War II. My father said he
couldn’t have found work in South Carolina
back then.
My Southern resume otherwise includes
the fact that my permanent address is still
South Carolina, my first job was at The
Charleston Evening Post, and I’m married
to a native son whose bona fides are not in
question.
To those angry emailers who pointed out
that I’m no smarter than people with Southern accents, I would add only, “Amen, sister.”
I have one of those accents myself, but adapt
as circumstances require. Catch me on NBC
and I probably sound like the Midwesterner
my father was. Catch me on SC Highway 97,
and you won’t know me from any other local.
My grandfather was one of those authentic Southerners whom reporters always hope
to find — a farmer who plucked food from
the ground a couple of hours before we sat
down to say grace, told ghost stories from a
rocking chair on the front porch and took us
to Turkey Creek to fish and to scavenge for
arrowheads. There was nothing dumb about
Mr. John B, as everyone called him. If there
were a way to capture the smell of him — a
combination of leather, tobacco, soil and Old
Spice — I’d give it away as tonic to help city
children fall asleep at night.
My own yearning for the smells and sounds
of the motherland brought me back to South
Carolina after years of roaming and writing for several newspapers here and there.
The reporter in me began to notice the way
Southerners were portrayed by the media as
ignorant yokels. The Scots-Irish Southerner
in me burned with ancient rage.
It was with this mindset that I watched the
ad and commented. I sure meant no offense
and do wish I had chosen my words more
carefully. Even so, knowing Southerners as
I do, I also know they’re as quick to forgive
as to convict if treated respectfully, which was
my intent all along.

Hey Congress: Try inhaling
By Dana Milbank
Legal marijuana is spreading like a weed across the
land but it has yet to take
root in the place where people might benefit most from
inhaling: the U.S. Capitol.
The Maryland General
Assembly finished work
Monday on a marijuana
decriminalization bill, joining two dozen other states
and the District in some
form of legalization. Colorado and Washington allow
recreational pot, while most

others have legalized only
medical marijuana, but the
combined campaign has
redefined the meaning of a
grass-roots movement.
Still, federal law hasn’t
budged, and a bill sponsored by Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Ore., that would
recognize the medical value
of marijuana has languished
for a year; it has only 23
co-sponsors and no chance
of passing. On Monday,
when members of the prolegalization Americans for
Safe Access held their an-

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nual “lobby day” on Capitol
Hill, not a single member of
Congress granted them a
personal audience.
Of course, the cannabis
corps wasn’t agitated about
that. It isn’t agitated about
much of anything. This
might have something to do
with the fact that many of its
members use marijuana.
The lobby day briefing,
scheduled for 11 a.m., was
pushed back to noon, at
which point the host asked
for a further five-minute
delay. There were no com-

plaints, perhaps because
munchies had been provided — potato chips and
sandwiches, as well as CocaCola — and the crinkling
of wrappers and crunching
of chips could be heard
throughout the event. If the
pot proponents were any
more laid back, they would
have been horizontal.
In this sense, our perpetually warring lawmakers
would have benefited from
meeting with the legalization crowd, and perhaps trying some free samples. Our

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

ever-indignant representatives need urgently to chill
out and free their minds. If
the benefits the medical marijuana advocates touted on
Monday are real, Congress
should immediately “reefer”
the matter to committee to
draft a “joint” resolution: Everybody must get stoned.
Jahan Marcu, a Ph.D. who
gave the pharmacological
portion of Monday’s briefing, explained to me the
mechanism by which medical marijuana, if consumed
by a sufficient number of
lawmakers, could cure our
political ills. “Cannabis acts
upon a system in our body,
and that system — the endocannabinoid system —
regulates five things,” said
Marcu, who has long sideburns and wore an opencollar purple shirt. “It helps
us to eat, sleep, relax, forget
and protect.”
Our leaders don’t have
much trouble eating, and
whether they sleep well and
are protected from cancer
and other illnesses is not our
concern. But getting them
to relax and to forget? This
could be most therapeutic.
Marcu said new research
indicates that people who
use marijuana perform better intellectually than those
who drink alcohol or smoke
tobacco. This suggests
that if House Speaker John
Boehner, R-Ohio, were to
switch vices from cigarettes
and wine to pot, the body
politic might be healthier.
Tests show that marijuana makes animals less sensitive to provocations such as
a bell ringing. “If you ring it,
they get freaked out,” Marcu said. “If you give them a
cannabinoid, they tend not
to get freaked out.”
In addition, cannabis
might help lawmakers rise

above the cycle of constant combat and revenge
— much the way it helps
soldiers overcome posttraumatic stress disorder.
“That’s one great thing
about the endocannabinoid
system,” he said. “It’s there
to help you forget useless
information or information
that’s harmful.”
Far out.
At the briefing, the advocates took pains to demonstrate their professionalism.
Most wore business attire
(although one man sported
a black cap, sunglasses and
a large flower in his lapel)
and they spoke about manufacturing processes and
growing standards.
“This is an industry that’s
in the maturation state,”
said Tim Smale, who runs
a marijuana dispensary in
Maine. “No longer do you
see the hippies and the tiedyes necessarily speaking.”
Still, a moment later he got
on his knees and asked congressional staffers to help
the cause. “I’m not opposed
to begging,” he said.
Smale, who uses cannabis
for his migraines, wants his
product to be treated as any
other “medicinal herb.”
Mike Liszewski, Americans for Safe Access’ policy
director, described the
increasing array of marijuana tinctures and lotions.
“There are all kinds of ways
to consume medical cannabis without smoking,”
he said, “although smoking
actually does remain a very
effective delivery system for
many patients.”
And so it could be for
chronically dyspeptic lawmakers. Smoking dope
won’t necessarily stop them
from making a hash of
things. But it could hardly
make things worse.

�Thursday, April 10, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituary

Page 5

Death Notices

VIVIAN ‘POLLY’ KARR MATTHEWS
PORT CHARLOTTE,
Fla. — Vivian “Polly” Karr
Matthews, 82, of Port
Charlotte, died Tuesday,
April 7, 2014.
Polly was born in Pomeroy, Ohio, on March 24,
1932, to the late Charles
and Leona Karr. She graduated from Middleport High
School and attended business school in Michigan.
She was married to her
best friend, the late Ted
Matthews, in 1972.
A 25-year member of the
American Business Women’s Association, Mrs. Matthews was twice honored
as “Woman of the Year.”
Polly retired from Vulcan
Materials Co. in Birmingham, Ala., as supervisor
of invoicing and pricing,
chemicals division. After
retirement, Polly did extensive volunteer work for
various religious organizations and volunteered
with a diabetes education
program for several years.
She was an avid Ohio State
Buckeyes fan.
Polly is survived by nieces Polly Ann Bauer (Frank
Dahlberg), Kelly Sue DeConnick (Matthew Fritchman), and Celeste and

The Daily Sentinel

Alyssa Karr; nephews Jeffrey (Linda) Karr, Rodney
(Kathryn) Karr, and Rory
and JJ Karr; stepchildren
Nancy Matthews and Richard (Marilyn) Matthews;
sister-in-law Mildred Karr;
brother-in-law
Edward
(Vivian) Bauer; grandchildren Zoe and Derek Merkle, Allison Matthews, and
Tallulah and Henry Leo
Fritchman; and more beloved friends and cousins
than can be listed.
Polly was preceded in
death by her brother and
sister, Patricia Ann Bauer
and Richard Karr.
Memorial services will
be held at a date that has
yet to be decided at Holy
Trinity Lutheran Church in
Port Charlotte by pastors
Andrea and Ken Barrios.
In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Holy
Trinity Lutheran Church,
2565 Tamiami Trail, Port
Charlotte, FL 33952; or
Shades Valley Presbyterian
Church, 2305 Montevallo
Road, Birmingham, AL
35223.
Graveside services will
be held in Pomeroy at a
later date as well.

CURRY
CHESAPEAKE, Ohio
— Teresa L. Ferris Chafin Curry, 50, of Chesapeake, died Monday, April
7, 2014, at Jo-Lin Health
Care Center in Ironton,
Ohio.
Funeral services will be
11 a.m. Saturday, April
12, 2014, at Hall Funeral
Home and Crematory in
Proctorville, Ohio Burial
will follow at Highland Memorial Gardens in South
Point, Ohio. Visitation will
be 6-9 p.m. Friday, April
11, 2014, at Hall Funeral
Home and Crematory.
DAY
LANDRUM, S.C. — Violet Elaine Robie Day, 83, of
Landrum, S.C., died peacefully on Saturday, Jan.
18, 2014, at the Hospice
House in Landrum. Memorial services will be noon

By Pete Yost

Associated Press

WASHINGTON — A federal
judge is calling for an investigation of the State Department over
years of delays in prosecuting
Blackwater security guards in the
shootings of dozens of Iraqi citizens in 2007.
Four Blackwater guards are
scheduled to go on trial June 11
for the deaths of 14 Iraqi civilians
and the wounding of 18 others.
In an opinion, U.S. District
Judge Royce Lamberth said the
State Department caused the delays by allowing the Diplomatic
Security Service to grant legal immunity to the guards in exchange
for their statements, which were
subsequently leaked to the news
media.
In 2009, a judge dismissed the
charges over the immunity issue,
saying government lawyers ignored the advice of senior Justice
Department officials by building
the criminal case on sworn statements that had been given under

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — The White House and the federal government have won the dubious honor of a “Jefferson
Muzzle” for snooping on the news media and limiting access.
The censorship-shaming awards announced Wednesday
by the Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free
Expression are intended to draw a harsh light on people and
institutions that engage in the most egregious affronts to the
First Amendment.
Other recipients included the governing board of Kansas’
public universities. A new board policy says faculty members
who use social media to disrupt “harmony among co-workers”
or make comments deemed “contrary to the best interest of
the university” can be fired. The policy was a reaction to a
faculty member’s statements on his personal Twitter.
The awards are announced each year on or near the April
13 birthday of Jefferson, a free-speech advocate and the nation’s third president. Winners get a T-shirt with Jefferson’s
likeness and a black rectangle over his mouth.
Josh Wheeler, director of the Charlottesville center, said
in the Muzzles’ 23-year history, he can’t remember a time in
which free press issues dominated the awards.
“From the White House to the statehouse, from universities to high schools, members of the press have had to defend against a variety of challenges, some never seen before,”
Wheeler said in a statement.
The White House collected a Muzzle for limiting photographers’ access at events deemed private. The presidents of the
American Society of Newspaper Editors and The Associated
Press have urged their members to stop using White House
handout photos and video, saying they amount to propaganda.
The Obama administration has said the handouts allow the
public greater access to the inner workings of the administration.
The U.S. Justice Department was singled out for seizing
telephone records of AP reporters and editors and for falsely
labeling a Fox News reporter a criminal co-conspirator to obtain a search warrant for his phone records and emails.
The Justice Department announced in February it was revising its rules for obtaining records from the media in leak
investigations to give news organizations an opportunity to
challenge any subpoenas or search warrants in federal court.
The National Security Administration and the Department
of Homeland Security earned a Muzzle for going after a retail
website that sold T-shirts and products poking fun at government, including one product that featured a variation on the
NSA seal and the statement, “The NSA: The only part of government that actually listens.”
Muzzles were also awarded to:North Carolina General Assembly police for arresting a Charlotte Observer reporter who
was covering a protest at the Capitol. Despite wearing a press
ID and identifying himself as a reporter, he was handcuffed
and charged with trespassing.
The Tennessee General Assembly for adopting an “ag-gag” bill
aimed at animal rights activists who go undercover to document
abuse of livestock. Ultimately vetoed, the bill would have criminalized unauthorized recordings inside agricultural operations.
Modesto Junior College in California for telling a student
on Constitution Day his free distribution of the Constitution
could only be done on one designated spot on campus, and
only if he scheduled days in advance.
The principal of Wharton High School in Tampa, Fla., for shutting off the microphone during the school’s salutatorian’s graduation speech, fearing he was going to depart from his preapproved
text. The student was escorted away by sheriff’s deputies.

PLYMALE
GALLIPOLIS — Charles
R. Plymale, 80, of Gallipolis, died Wednesday, April
9, 2014.
Services will be 11 a.m.
Saturday, April 12, 2014, at
Willis Funeral Home, 12 Garfield Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio.
Burial follow in Mound Hill

Cemetery. Friends may call
from 9:30-10:45 a.m. on Saturday, prior to the funeral.
There will be graveside military services.
In lieu of flowers, please
consider donations in
Charles’ memory to the
ALS Society.
SPEASE
VINTON, Ohio — Milton Gray Spease, 66, of
Vinton, died Wednesday,
Feb. 19, 2014, at Riverside
Methodist Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. Graveside
services will be 11 a.m.
Saturday, April 12, 2014,
at Vinton Memorial Park
with the Rev. Heath Jenkins officiating. There will
be full military graveside
services conducted by
Vinton American Legion
Post 161. McCoy Moore
Funeral Home is honored
to assist the family.

a promise of immunity from prosecution. An appeals court ruling
later revived the case.
In his opinion released Tuesday
on the current charges, Lamberth
said that neither the government
nor its witnesses made use of
the immunized statements of the
Blackwater guards.
The judge asked U.S. Attorney
Ronald Machen to request that
the State Department’s inspector
general look into how the decision
was made to grant immunity to
the guards back in 2007.
“If the Department of State and
the Diplomatic Security Service
had tried deliberately to sabotage this prosecution, they could
hardly have done a better job,”
said Lamberth. “It is incredible
the way these defendants were
coerced into making statements”
under threat of losing their jobs.
“Even more egregious, though,
was the leaking to the news media of all the statements given,”
said the judge. “Yet it appears
there has been no investigation of
these circumstances and no one

has been held accountable. Nor is
there any reason to think anyone
learned a lesson from this fiasco
or that any steps have been taken
to avoid a repetition.”
Lamberth pointed out that in
the Iran-Contra controversy in the
1980s, Congress made a deliberate choice to immunize Oliver
North, one of the key figures in
the scandal, knowing that it might
make a prosecution of North impossible. As a result, North’s convictions were dismissed.
In the Blackwater case, Lamberth wrote, “It does not appear
that any such analysis was performed” as in North’s case. “It is
unclear … whether the DSS or
the State Department even had
the authority to grant immunity
to the defendants in exchange for
their testimony absent approval
from the attorney general.”
He added: “Nor is the court
aware if the State Department
sought any legal advice regarding
the decision to grant immunity —
a decision that was questionable
at best.”

THURSDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

Anti-censorship awards
go to White House, feds

HALSTEAD
SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. —
Roger Lee Halstead, 58, of
Southside, died Wednesday, April 9, 2014, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
A funeral service will be
1 p.m. Saturday, April 12,
2014, at Wilcoxen Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., with Pastor Ted
Nance and Pastor Julio
Camcho officiating. Burial
will follow at Beale Chapel
Cemetery in Apple Grove,
W.Va. Visitation will be
from 6-8 p.m. Friday at the
funeral home.

MATTOX
LEON, W.Va. — Junior
Lee Mattox, 65, of Leon,
died Tuesday, April 8,
2014, at his home.
Junior’s life will be remembered at noon Monday, April 14, 2014, with
Pastor Bob Patterson officiating. Burial will follow
in Jack Yauger Cemetery in
Leon. Visitation will be at
the funeral home one hour
prior to the service on
Monday. Junior’s care has
been entrusted to CrowHussell Funeral Home.

Judge slaps State Department over Blackwater

AP Photo

This image provided by The Thomas Jefferson Center for the
Protection of Free Expression shows an image that is printed
on a T-shirt to be presented to the Jefferson Muzzle awards
by The Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression. The awards will be announced Thursday.

Saturday, April 12, 2014,
at First Church of the Nazarene, 1110 First Ave., Gallipolis, with Pastor Gene
Harmon officiating. Graveside interment services
will be 10 a.m. Saturday in
the Vinton Memorial Park.

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Call

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Funniest Home Videos
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Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother
Reds Weekly Slap Shots UFC Rio 142 Jose Aldo takes on Chad Mendes.
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(5:00) NCAA Hockey Division I Tournament SportsNation
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Project Runway: Under the Under the Gunn "The
Project Runway: Under the Project Runway: Under the
The Stepfather ('09,
Gunn "Crossing Teams"
Benefit of Fashion"
Gunn "Superhero Fashion" Gunn "Finale" (SF) (N)
Thril) Dylan Walsh. TV14
Middle "The
The Sandlot A baseball team tries to retrieve an
The Rookie ('02, Fam) Dennis Quaid. A baseball coach decides to
Fun House" autographed baseball after a ferocious dog steals it. TVPG fulfill his dream by trying out for a professional team. TVG
Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "Coast Cops "War Cops "In
Cops "In
Impact Wrestling Watch high-risk athletic entertainment
to Coast"
to Coast"
to Coast"
on Drugs"
New Jersey" New Jersey" featuring the most recognizable stars of wrestling.
SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Sam &amp; Cat Inst.Mom (N) See Dad (N) Full House Full House Full House Full House
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Rockabye" Law &amp; Order: SVU "Gone" SVU "Valentine's Day"
Suits "No Way Out" (SF) (N) (:05) Sirens (:35) Modern
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Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
Situation
Crossfire
OutFront
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The Lead With Jake Tapper Chicagoland (N)
Castle
Castle
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NBA Basket.
(5:00)
Die Hard A cop visiting from New York helps
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Next of Kin ('89, Cri)
stop some terrorists in his wife's business building. TV14 West battles a politician's evil plot to ruin a town. TVMA Patrick Swayze. TV14
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River Monst. Bizarre
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Ice Gold After Thaw (N)
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P.S. I Love
transform a geeky girl into a beautiful prom queen. TV14 woman tries moving on with the help of her deceased husband. TV14
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(:35) Gilligan (:10) Gilligan (:50) Ray
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Life Below Zero "The Mess Life Below Zero "Hungry
Life Below Zero "No Time Life Below Zero "Through Alaska State Troopers
of Success"
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the Darkness" (N)
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(4:30) Mecum Auctions "Houston" (L)
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Night Chum"
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Choo Chum" "Tee'd Off" Jammed" (N) (N)
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Atlanta "Mess Rehearsal" Millionaire (N)
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106 &amp; Park (N)
The Game
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Celebration of Gospel "2014"
My Sister's Wedding TV14
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House Hunt. House (N)
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search of a fallen star discovers it has taken human form and must protect her. TVPG
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Pitch Perfect ('12, Comedy) Brittany Snow, Rebel 24/ 7
Veep "Some Silicon
400 (HBO) The Wedding Wilson, Anna Kendrick. A freshman joins her university's
"Pacquaio/ New
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Beginnings"
Date TVPG all-girls singing group and takes on their male rivals. TVPG Bradley"
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�The Daily Sentinel

THURSDAY,
APRIL 10, 2014

SPORTS

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Oaks rally past Southern, 13-6
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — A reversal
of fortunes.
The Southern baseball team
stormed out to a 3-1 lead through
four innings of play, but visiting Oak
Hill countered with 10 consecutive
runs en route to claiming a 13-6 victory Tuesday night in a non-conference matchup at Bob Evans Field on
the campus of the University of Rio
Grande in Gallia County.
The host Tornadoes (2-2) led 1-0
after two innings and each team
traded a run apiece in the third for a
2-1 contest, but the Purple and Gold
tacked on another score in the fourth
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports for a comfortable 3-1 cushion after
Eastern shortstop Grace Edwards tags out Vinton County’s Allen four complete.
The Oaks (2-4), however, counto start the 6-4 doubleplay in the top of the fourth inning, Tuesday night, during the Lady Eagles 8-5 triumph in Tuppers Plains.

See OAKS | 8

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Southern freshman Blake Johnson dives safely back toward home plate during the
second inning of Tuesday night’s non-conference baseball contest against Oak Hill
at the University of Rio Grande. Johnson initially slid past home plate and avoided
the tag of OHHS catcher Riley Kuhn.

Lady Eagles top
Vinton County, 8-5
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio — Two teams headed in different directions met in Meigs County on Tuesday.
The Eastern softball team earned its fifth consecutive
win, while the Vikings dropped their fifth straight game,
as the Lady Eagles earned an 8-5 triumph.
The Lady Eagles (5-0) broke through in the bottom of
the first inning when Grace Edwards doubled with two
outs and then scored on Erin Swatzel’s single. Eastern
freshman Kallyn Barber singled in the second inning and
advanced to third base on a stolen base and a passed ball.
Paige Cline drove in Barber to push the EHS lead to 2-0
after two innings.
Eastern’s offense took off in the bottom of the fourth
with Barber, Hannah Hawley, Sabra Bailey and Cline all
crossing the plate, pushing the EHS lead to 6-0. Vinton
County’s (0-5) first offense of the night came in the top of
the fifth when a Park homerun cut the lead to 6-2.
The Lady Eagles added some insurance in the seventh inning with a two-run homerun by Grace Edwards.
The Lady Vikings rallied in the seventh to score three
times but they couldn’t complete the comeback and EHS
claimed the 8-5 victory.
EHS freshman Jess Coleman earned the pitching victory, throwing five innings and allowing just two runs
on six hits and three walks. Grace Edwards earned the
save after giving up three runs on five hits and two walks
in two innings. Coleman struck out four, while Edwards
fanned three in the win.
Vinton County’s Hunt was the losing pitcher of after
surrendering eight runs on 12 hits and four walks in six
innings. Hunt struck out five in the loss.
The EHS offense was led by junior Grace Edwards with
a 3-for-3 effort that included a homerun and two doubles.
Erin Swatzel, Kallyn Barber and Jourdan Griffin each
singled twice, while Sabra Bailey added a double. Amber
Moodispaugh and Hannah Hawley each marked a single
in the win.
Edwards and Swatzel each had two runs batted in, while
Cline, Griffin and Bailey each finished with one RBI. Barber and Edwards each scored twice to lead the charge,
followed by Cline, Griffin, Hawley and Bailey with one
score each. Barber had the Lady Eagles lone stolen base.
Park, Owings, Thomas and Smith each had two hits for
VCHS, while Hale and Allen each had one hit. Owings
and Park scored twice, while Hale crossed the plate once.
Park drove in two runs, Thomas had one RBI, while Owings had the lone Vinton County stolen base.
The victory pushes Eastern to 3-0 against Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division teams.

OVP Sports Schedule
Thursday, April 10
Baseball
South Gallia at Hannan,
5:30
Spring Valley at Point
Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County, 5
p.m.
Gallia Academy at Fairland, 5 p.m.
Softball
South Gallia at Hannan,
5:30
Ripley at Point Pleasant,
5:30
Buffalo at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County, 5
p.m.
Gallia Academy at Fairland, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Southern at Belpre, 4 p.m.
Tennis
Ironton at Gallia Academy,
4:30
Friday, April 11
Baseball
Southern at Wahama, 5
p.m.
Fairland at River Valley, 5
p.m.
Trimble at South Gallia, 5
p.m.
Wellston at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Grace Christian at Hannan, 5:30
Softball
Southern at Wahama, 5
p.m.
Fairland at River Valley, 5
p.m.

Trimble at South Gallia, 5
p.m.
Wellston at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Logan at Point Pleasant,
5:30
Ironton St. Joe at Hannan,
5:30
Track and Field
Meigs at Logan, 4:30
Tennis
Portsmouth Notre Dame
at Gallia Academy, 4:30
Saturday, April 12
Baseball
Alexander at Wahama
(DH), noon
Vinton County at River
Valley (DH), 11 a.m.
Meigs at Jackson, 5 p.m.
Softball
Vinton County at River
Valley (DH), 11 a.m.
Point Pleasant at Magnolia, TBA
Gallia Academy at Washington Courthouse (DH), 11
a.m.
Meigs at Jackson, 3 p.m.
Track and Field
Southern, South Gallia at
Belpre, 10 a.m.
Gallia Academy, River Valley, Wahama at Point Pleasant, 10 a.m.
Eastern at Parkersburg,
TBA
Tennis
Gallia Academy at Lawrence (KY), 9 a.m.
Point Pleasant at South
Charleston, 1 p.m.

Photos Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern second baseman Zack Scowden steps on second base to retire Vinton County’s Ward during the top of the
fifth inning of the Eagle’s 7-4 triumph in Tuppers Plains.

Eastern soars past Vikings, 7-4
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio —
The Eagles earn their first win of
the season.
The Eastern baseball team toppled non-conference guest Vinton
County by a count of 7-4, Tuesday
night in Meigs County.
The Vikings (0-3) pushed one
run across in the top of the first but
the Eastern (1-3) countered in a big
way with a three-run bottom of the
first. EHS senior Zack Scowden
singled home Tyler Morris in the
bottom of the second to push the
EHS lead to 4-1.
Vinton County tied the game
with a three-run third frame, but
the Vikings couldn’t take the lead.
Aided by a pair of Vinton County
errors, the Green and Gold regained
the lead with three runs in the bottom of the fourth frame. Eastern
pitcher Cameron Richmond threw
the final four innings without allowing a hit and the Eagles held on for
the 7-4 victory.
Richmond was the winning
pitcher, allowing just four runs,
two earned, on five hits and three
walks. Richmond struck out nine
Vikings in the triumph.
Vinton County’s McIntire was
the losing pitcher after allowing
three runs on three hits in three innings of relief work. VCHS starter
McFerren threw three innings and
allowed four runs on five hits and
three walks. McFerren struck out
four, while McIntire fanned two.
The Eagle offense was led by Ty-

Eastern junior Christian Speelman throws a runner out at first base in front of
pitcher Cameron Richmond, during the Eagle’s 7-4 home victory, on Tuesday.

ler Morris, Jesse Morris and Christian Speelman with two hits each,
followed by Scowden and Brandon
Coleman with one hit each. Speelman drove in a game-high three
runs, while Scowden, Jesse Morris
and Tyler Barber each had one RBI.
Tyler Morris crossed the plate
three times to lead EHS, followed
by Speelman with two scores.

Scowden and Richmond each
scored once, while Scowden and
Tyler Morris each had a stolen base.
The Vikings were led by Mcferren with two hits, followed by
Allen, McIntire and Hashman
with one hit each. Duncan led the
Maroon and Silver with two runs
scored, while Ward and Allen each
scored once.

Lady Knights top Wahama, Poca
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — No lack of offense
for the Lady Knights.
The Point Pleasant softball team scored 10 runs
in their first game Tuesday night and then posted
nine in the second tilt, as
the Lady Knights rolled
past Wahama and Poca at
PPHS.
The visiting Lady Falcons (1-7) marked first
when senior Bailey Hicks
scored on a passed ball in
the top of the opening inning. PPHS (7-3) senior
Payton Fetty was safe at
first base on an error to
open the bottom of the

inning and advanced to
third base on a steal and
a passed ball. Fetty scored
on a single by Makinley Higginbotham, who
then scored on a Karissa
Cochran single, putting
Point Pleasant on top 2-1
through one inning.
After sitting the guests
down in order PPHS added
on to their lead in the home
half of the second frame
when Cami Hesson doubled home Elizabeth Bateman. The Lady Knights
broke the game open in
the bottom of the fourth
with six runs in the inning,
highlighted by two-run singles by Fetty and Madison
Barker, as well as a two-run
double by Cochran.

Cynthia Hendrick scored
for the Lady Falcons on a
passed ball in the top of
the fifth but Higginbotham
singled home Hesson in
the bottom of the inning to
force the 10-2 mercy rule
victory.
Madison Barker earned
the victory in the circle for
PPHS after allowing just
two unearned runs on one
hit in five innings, while
striking out 12.
Shalyn Greer was the
losing pitcher of record
after allowing seven runs,
six earned, on seven hits
and two walks in 3.1 innings of work. Taylor McGrew threw one inning
in relief and surrendered
three runs, two earned, on

three hits and a walk, while
striking out one.
The Point Pleasant offensive attack was led by
Higginbotham,
Hesson
and Cochran with two hits
each, followed by Fetty,
Barker, Megan Hammond
and Bateman with one
hit apiece. Cochran had a
game-high three runs batted in, followed by Fetty,
Higginbotham and Barker
with two each. Hesson had
one RBI in the win, while
Fetty led the way with
two stolen bases. Barker
and Bateman each stole
one base against Wahama. Fetty, Higginbotham,
Bateman and Hesson all
See KNIGHTS | 8

�Thursday, April 10, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 7

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on Saturday, April 12, 2014 at
10:00am, a public sale will be
held at Pullins Excavating, Inc.
at 33334 St Rt 833, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769. The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company is
selling for cash in hand or certified check the following collateral:
1990 Case 450C Bulldozer
Serial # JAK0013002
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy, Ohio
reserves the right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw the
above collateral prior to sale.
Further, the Farmers Bank and
Savings Company reserves
the right to reject any or all
bids submitted.
The above described collateral will be sold “as is-where is”
with no expressed or implied
warranty given.
For further information, or for
an appointment to inspect collateral prior to sale date, contact Randy Hays at 740-9924048.(04)9,10,11

The Village of Racine will be
meeting on 4/24/14 at 6:30
P.M.to work on the following
agenda: Item 1- Recess Council Session..LEGALS
Item 2- PUBLIC HEARING
FOR THE APPROVED, BY A
PASSING VOTE IN THE 2013
GENERAL ELECTION, GOVERNMENTAL ENERGY OPTOUT AGGREGATION OF RETAIL ELECTRIC LOADS &amp;
LIMITATIONS.
SECOND AND FINAL OF
TWO PUBLIC HEARINGS
All citizens are invited to attend the hearing.
David Spencer, Clerk/Treasurer
Village of Racine.(04,10,17
PUBLIC NOTICE

Roscoe Mills, 53549 Great
Bend
Road, Portland, Ohio 45770,
(740)
843-1072 is applying to permit
a
well for the injection of brine
water
produced in association with oil
and
natural gas. The location of the
proposed injection well is the
NOTICE FOR THE VILLAGE
Harris C &amp; W #1 well, P# 3637,
OF RACINE
Sec.
16, Lebanon Township, Meigs
The Village of Racine will be
County, Ohio. The proposed
meeting on 4/24/14 at 6:30
well
P.M.to work on the following
agenda: Item 1- Recess Coun- will inject into the Clinton
formation at a depth of 5554 to
cil Session..
5599 feet. The average injection is
Item 2- PUBLIC HEARING
estimated to be 2000 barrels
FOR THE APPROVED, BY
A
Miscellaneous
PASSING VOTE IN THE 2013 per
day. The maximum injection
GENERAL ELECTION, GOVADOPTION
loving couple pressure
excited to expand
family. Little league
/ atis estimated
to be
ERNMENTAL
ENERGYNYOPTpsi.secure. Expenses paid. Aimee &amp;
OUT
AGGREGATION
OF
RE- mom.1280
torney
dad, stay at home / school
volunteer
Financially
Further information can be
TAIL
FrankELECTRIC
(866) 575-9668 LOADS &amp;
obtained by contacting Roscoe
LIMITATIONS.
ADOPTION
ADOPTION - A loving
alternative
to unplanned
pregnancy.
Mills,
or the
Division
of Oil You
and
choose the AND
family for
your child.
Gas of waiting/approved couples. Living
SECOND
FINAL
OFReceive pictures/info
Resources Management. The
TWO
PUBLIC
expense
assistance.HEARINGS
1-866-236-7638
address of the Division is: Ohio
BUSINESS
SERVICES
REACH
2
MILLION
NEWSPAPER READERS
with one ad
placeDepartment
of Natural
ReAll citizens are invited to atment.
ONLY
$295.00.
Ohio’s
best
community
newspapers.
Call Mitch at AdOhio Statewide Classources,
tend the hearing.
sified Network, 614-486-6677, or E-MAIL at: mcolton@adohio.net
check
out Gas
our website
Division of orOil
and
Re-at:
www.adohio.net.
sources
David
Spencer, Clerk/TreasManagement, 2045 Morse
urer
BUSINESS SERVICES
REACH OVER 1 MILLION OHIO ADULTS with one ad placement.
Road,
Village of Racine.(04,10,17
Only $995.00. Ask your local newspaper about our
2X2 DisplayFNetwork
and our 2X4 Display
Building
-2, Columbus,
Ohio
Network $1860 or Call Mitch at 614-486-6677/E-mail
mcolton@adohio.net.
check out our
43229-6693,
(614)or 265-6922.
website: www.adohio.net.
For full
consideration,
alloncomments
HELP WANTED
Dedicated Team Truck
Drivers. $2,000 Sign
bonus. Hogan is
and
Hiring Teams! $.57 CPM Split!, Up to $78,000/year,objections
Flexible Home time!,
No
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Freight. Call by
must be received
866-560-6443
the
Division,
in writing,
within
fifHELP WANTED
“Partners in Excellence”
OTR Drivers.
APU Equipped
Pre-Pass
teen
EZ-pass passenger policy. 2012 &amp; Newer equipment.
100% NO touch. Butler Transport 1-800calendar days of the last date
528-7825 www.butlertransport.com
of this
published
legal
HELP WANTED
Flatbed Drivers Starting
Mileage Pay
up to .41 cpm, Health Ins.,
401K, $59 daily Per Diem pay , Home Weekends. notice.(04),08,09,10,11,15
800-648-9915 or www.boydandsons.com
HELP WANTED
Tantara Transportation Corp. is hiring Flatbed Truck Drivers and
Owner Operators. Regional and OTR Lanes Available. Call us @ 800-650-0292 or apply online
at www.tantara.us
HELP WANTED
$1,000/wk. Pay Guarantee. $500 Sign On Bonus. Weekly home
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Drivers: Need Contract Drivers, CDL A or B to transfer commercial vehicles from local body plants to various locations throughout U.S. - No forced dispatch,
Apply online at www.mamotransportation.com under Careers or call 1-800-501-3783 to speak
with a recruiter.
HELP WANTED
Daily Express needs Contractors for Stepdeck &amp; Lowboy hauls!
FREE TRAILERS! “New” Daily Expedited Fleet! Also Heavy Haul and Specialized Division Available. www.dailyrecruiting.com or 800-669-6414
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The Pay Increase for Students! Apply@AverittCareers.com EOE - Females, minorities, protected
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HELP WANTED
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DD Wkly Settlements CDL-A 1 Yr. Experience 888-888-7996
HELP WANTED
Hiring OTR Professionals who want Consistent Miles - average
2,700+; consistent pay - average $51,400 per year; 2011 or newer trucks; Call Fischer Trucking
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HELP WANTED
PICKUP TRUCKS NEEDED NOW! Move RV trailers from Indiana
and delivery all over the USA and CANADA. Many trips headed EAST! Go to: horizontransport.
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HELP WANTED
Tractor Trailer Owner Operators, Regional Operations, FLAT &amp;
VAN, Financially stable/weekly settlements, Quality Home Time. Truck One Inc. CALL: 877-5436930 www.Truckone.net
MISC.
Our Sportsman will pay top dollar to hunt your land. Call for a
free Base Camp Leasing Info Packet &amp; Quote. 866-309-1507 www.BaseCampleasing.com
Misc.
VACATION CABINS FOR RENT IN CANADA. Fish for walleyes,
perch, northerns. Boats, motors, gasoline included. Call Hugh 1-800-426-2550 for free
brochure. Website www.bestfishing.com
MISC.
SAWMILLS from only $4897.00- MAKE &amp; SAVE MONEY with
your own bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension. In stock, ready to ship. Free Info/DVD: www.
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MISC.
AIRLINE JOBS begin here-Get Trained as FAA certified Aviation
Technician. Housing/Financial aid for qualified students. Job Placement assistance. Aviation
Institute of Maintenance. 1-877-676-3836
SCHOOL/INSTRUCTION
WERNER NEEDS DRIVER TRAINEES! Drivers are IN DEMAND.
We need YOU! No CDL? No Problem! 16-Day CDL training available! Opportunity Awaits. CALL
TODAY! 866-203-8445
60495476

Roscoe Mills, 53549 Great
Bend
Road, Portland, Ohio 45770,
(740)
843-1072 is applying to permit
a
well for the injection of brine
water
produced in association with oil
and
natural gas. The location of the
proposed injection well is the
Harris C &amp; W #1 well, P# 3637,
Sec.
16, Lebanon Township, Meigs
County, Ohio. The proposed
well
will inject into the Clinton
formation atLEGALS
a depth of 5554 to
5599 feet. The average injection is
estimated to be 2000 barrels
per
day. The maximum injection
pressure is estimated to be
1280 psi.
Further information can be
obtained by contacting Roscoe
Mills, or the Division of Oil and
Gas
Resources Management. The
address of the Division is: Ohio
Department of Natural Resources,
Division of Oil and Gas Resources
Management, 2045 Morse
Road,
Building F -2, Columbus, Ohio
43229-6693, (614) 265-6922.
For full
consideration, all comments
and
objections must be received by
the
Division, in writing, within fifteen
calendar days of the last date
of this
published legal
notice.(04),08,09,10,11,15
ANNOUNCEMENTS

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.
Yard Sale
GARAGE SALE
Sat. April 12, 8AM-5PM
14 N. Main St Rutland,OH
Moving Sale Saturday April 12.
3006 Meadowbrook Drive, Pt.
Pleasant. Starting at 8 a.m.
Whole House Yard Sale 1190
Starcher Rd, Gallipolis. Fri-Sat
9-5
SERVICES

Lawn Service
Lawn Care Service, Mowing,
Trimming, Free estimates. Call
740-645-0546 or 740-4411333
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

FINANCIAL SERVICES

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)

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted General
Local Commercial Power
Wash Co. Looking for F/T and
P/T workers Thursday through
Sunday long hours. Email resume to
erockpowerwash@gmail.com
Busy Office practice is seeking LPN/RN. Duties include
taking vitals, patient intake, pediatric and adult vaccinations
and assisting in minor procedures. Excellent Computer and
Communication skills are a
must. Job will include prolonged standing, walking and
some lifting.
Send Resumes to:
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel-WPT
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769.

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, April 10, 2014

RedStorm shakes slow start, routs Cougars
By Randy Payton

URG Sports Information

LANCASTER, Ohio —
Kirk Yates had three hits
and drove in three runs,
while teammate Kevin Arroyo added two hits and four
RBIs to lead the University
of Rio Grande in a 16-3 mercy rule-shortened win over
Ohio University-Lancaster,
Tuesday evening, in nonconference baseball action
at Beavers Field.
Senior Marcus Makuch
(Baltimore, OH) and freshman Luis Jimenez (Salinas,
Puerto Rico) also had two
RBIs each for the RedStorm, who improved to 1722 for the season.
The Cougars dropped to
7-6 with the loss.
Rio Grande scored 16 unanswered runs - four in both
the fourth and sixth innings
and eight in the seventh - after OU-L bolted to a 3-0 just
five batters into the contest.
Drew Wollenberg reached
on a one-out infield single
against Rio sophomore
starter Kyle Miller (Wilmington, OH) and moved to
second when Ben Kerr drew
a walk, setting the stage for
a two-run double along the
right field line by Dalton
McKee. McKee was thrown

out at third on the same play
trying to stretch his runscoring hit into a triple.
Luis Mejia followed with
a rocket over the fence in
left to give the Cougars a
3-0 lead.
But from that point on, it
was all Rio Grande.
Miller, who collected
his third win in seven decisions, limited OU-L to just
two hits and three total
baserunners over his final
5-2/3 innings of work and
junior right-hander Landon
Hutchison (Baltimore, OH)
worked a perfect seventh inning to wrap things up.
Meanwhile, after being
no-hit for 3-1/3 innings by
OU-L starter Mitch Harding, the RedStorm began
their comeback in the
fourth.
Junior Kyle Findley
(Cincinnati, OH) struck
out to begin the inning,
but reached base safely on
a throwing error after a
dropped third strike. He
scored moments later after
a trio of wild pitches by
Harding.
Senior David Steele (Kettering, OH) then reached
on a walk and, one out later,
moved to third following a
single by Yates - Rio’s first

Submitted photo

Rio Grande’s Kirk Yates had three hits and three runs batted
in, leading the RedStorm to a 16-3 win over Ohio-Lancaster,
Tuesday evening, at Beavers Field in Lancaster. Yates’ three
hits also included his first home run of the season.

of the game - and a walk to
Jimenez.
Harding was lifted in favor of former Rio Grande
pitcher Donson Dearth,
who promptly uncorked

a wild pitch of his own to
make it 3-2. One out later,
freshman Clark Rice (Louisa, KY) was hit by a pitch to
reload the bases and Arroyo
followed with a single to left

to score Yates and Jimenez
and give Rio a 4-3 lead.
The RedStorm tacked on
four more runs in the sixth
- all of the unearned variety
- thanks to three hits and as
many Cougar errors.
Jimenez began the inning with bunt that Dearth
bobbled for an error, moved
to second on a bloop single
to right by freshman Daryin
Lewis (Circleville, OH) and
scored when Dearth threw
wildly past first base on a sacrifice bunt attempt by Rice.
Freshman Carlos Flores
(Guayanilla, Puerto Rico)
came on to run for Rice and
immediately stole second
base, setting the stage for a
two-run double to right-center by Makuch, who scored
himself two batters later on
a single to right by Steele,
extending the lead to 8-3.
Rio Grande then puts itself in position for the runrule victory by exploding for
eight runs in the seventh.
Yates, a sophomore from
Chillicothe, Ohio, greeted
reliever Matt Leckrone with
a home run to right-center
to make it 9-3. Jimenez followed with a walk and, two
outs later, rode home on
a home run to left field by
Arroyo - the first longball

Knights

Oaks

Higginbotham, Bateman and
was later driven in by Megan Hammond. Payton Fetty was plated by Cochran paced the Lady Knights
crossed the plate twice, while Re- Makinley Higginbotham in the with two hits each, while Fetty,
bekah Darst and Cochran scored fourth, while Hesson and Michaela Barker, Hammond, Hesson and
one run apiece.
Cottrill were driven in by Bateman Cottrill each had one hit. HamWahama’s lone hit came off the and Fetty respectively in the fifth
mond marked a game-best three
bat of Sierra Carmichael in the frame.
runs batted in, Darst and Higfirst at bat of the game, while BaiHigginbotham hammered a solo
ley Hicks and Cynthia Hendrick homerun to open the Lady Knight’s ginbotham both plated two runs,
scored for WHS.
sixth inning, while Cochran and while Fetty and Bateman added an
Wahama will host the Lady Madison Barker were driven in by RBI apiece. Cochran and Hesson
Knights in a rematch on April 22.
Hammond to secure the 9-1 mercy each scored twice, Fetty, HigginThe second game of the evening rule triumph.
botham, Barker, Cottrill and Bateopened with Poca’s Casey Skeens
Cochran earned the pitching vic- man each crossed the plate one,
reaching on an error, stealing sec- tory, giving up just one unearned while Bateman had the lone steal
ond and third and finally scoring run on one hit and a walk in six for PPHS.
on Sarah Fisher’s one-out double.
innings. Cochran struck out eight
The only hit for the Putnam
The Lady Dots (5-7) held the Lady Dots in the win.
County natives was the Sarah
lead until the bottom of the second
Jasmine Luikart was the losing
when Point Pleasant senior Re- pitcher of record after allowing Fisher RBI double in the opening
bekah Darst drove in Cami Hesson nine runs, four earned, on 11 hits inning, while Casey Skeens scored
and Elizabeth Bateman, giving the and a walk in five innings. Luikart the lone PHS run. Skeens’ two stoLady Knights a 2-1 edge.
struck out two and did pitch in the len bases were Poca’s only steals.
PPHS will look to sweep the
a batKarissa Cochran doubled to sixth inning withoutIFretiring
YOU HAVE
A ROCKING
open the bottom of the third Expanding
and ter. Home Health CHAIR. WE HAVE THELady Dots on April 21, in Poca.
FRONT PORCH FOR YOU!
Agency is now acceptBEST VIEW IS FROM
ing applications for RN's, THE
THE FRONT PORCH LOOKLPN's and Home Health ING IN. BRICK HOME. NEW
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METAL ROOF. LIVING
package includes BC/BS ROOM. LARGE FAMILY
KITCHEN/DINING
Health Insurance, Dent- ROOM,
AREA, BIRCH CABINETS.
al/Vision,
paid
APPLIANCES,
BEDROOMS.
Help Wanted General
Medical / Health
Houses 3For
Sale
Apartments/Townhouses
vacations/holidays, and
1 1/2 BATHS. ONE CAR GARBusy Office practice in Park- flexible schedules.
Ideal downtown location for
AGE. FULL BASEMENT.
ersburg, WV is seeking
CORNER LOT, CENTRAL AIR single or professional couple.
E-mail
resumes
to
LPN/RN. Duties include taking
Newly renovated, 2 bedrooms,
AND HEAT,SECURITY SYShealthceo@aol.com or
vitals, patient intake, pediatric
1 1/2 baths, spacious living
TEM, CABLE READY. IN
and adult vaccinations and as- fax to 740-377-9591.
and dining area, kitchen with
GALLIPOLIS CITY LIMITS.
sisting in minor procedures.
appliances included and launPRICED TO SELL. QUALIYou may also come by
Excellent Computer and Comdry with w/d hookup. No
FIED BUYERS ONLY. ALL
the
office
and
pick
up
an
munication skills are a must.
smoking or pets. Deposit and
YOU HAVE TO DO IS BRING
application at 146 Third
Job will include prolonged
YOUR ROCKING CHAIR AND references required. Call 740Avenue, Gallipolis or call MOVE IN. MUST SEE TO AP- 446-7654
standing, walking and some
lifting.
PRECIATE! CONTACT 1-740740-446-3808.
Pleasant Valley Apartments is

From Page 6

From Page 6

in a Rio uniform for the junior transfer from Toa Baja,
Puerto Rico.
Makuch and Findley then
drew consecutive walks and,
after Leckrone was lifted in
favor of Zane Campbell,
Steele was hit by a pitch to
load the bases. Flores drew
a pinch-hit walk to force
home another run and Yates
added a two-run double to
right-center to make it 14-3.
Jimenez closed out the
scoring with a two-run
double of his own to rightcenter.
Harding, the first of five
OU-L pitchers, suffered
the loss. The Cougars hurt
their cause by issuing eight
walks, four wild pitches, a
passed ball, two hit batsmen
and committing four errors.
The two teams will meet
again in the RedStorm’s regular season finale - a doubleheader on April 29 at Bob
Evans Field in Rio Grande.
Rio Grande returns to action on Friday night when
it opens a three-game MidSouth Conference series at
Campbellsville University.
First pitch is set for 6 p.m.
EDT.
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the University of
Rio Grande.

tered by sending 10 batters to the plate in the top of the fifth
— which resulted in six runs on four hits, two walks and an
error. SHS went scoreless in its half of the fifth, allowing Oak
Hill to secure a permanent lead at 7-3.
OHHS tacked on four more runs in the top half of the sixth,
thanks to two hits and two costly Southern errors. The Tornadoes added a run in the sixth and each teams scored two more
runs in the seventh to wrap up the seven-run finale.
Oak Hill outhit the hosts by a 12-10 overall margin and both
teams issued seven walks apiece in the contest. Southern and
the Oaks also committed three errors apiece in the contest.
Nick Murphy was the winning pitcher of record after allowing a run, two hits and two walks over 1.2 innings of relief
work, while Paul Ramthun took the loss after surrendering
five runs, five hits and five walks over four-plus frames while
striking out six. Oak Hill had 10 batters strikeout in the contest, compared to just four for SHS.
Trenton Deem led the Tornadoes with three hits, followed
by Brandon Moodispaugh and Jack Lemley with two safeties
apiece. Paul Ramthun, Trey Pickens and Blake Johnson also
had a hit each in the setback. Deem and Johnson each scored
twice for Southern.
Garrin Stiltner paced Oak Hill with four hits and three runs
scored, while Matt Gilliland and Zach Walls added two safeties each. Walls, Gilliland and Kyle Cox also scored twice for
the victors.

Classifieds - Continued from page A7

Part-Time Site Manager. Pt.
Pleasant area. Multifamily Apt.
complex. Tax credit knowledge a plus but not necessary.
ADA/EOE Fax resumes to:
(866)579-6151
Ravenswood Care Center
1113 Washington St.
Ravenswood WV 26164
PT Positions:
RN Assistant Director of
Nursing in a Progressive
Assisted Living Facility
LPN
Warehouse/Delivery Person
Needed, Full Time Position,
Apply in Person,
LifeStyle Furniture, 856 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, 9:30-5:00
Monday Thru Friday.
No Phone Calls Please

446-7874.

EDUCATION

Land (Acreage)

Business &amp; Trade School

2 Acres with a 3 Bdrm / 2 bath
mobile home, No Land Contract. Call 740-256-1087

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

REAL ESTATE SALES

Houses For Sale

Nice 2yr old 3BR House, Appliances, 2 1/2 BA, large detached Garage, Concrete
drive, privacy fence. Gallipolis
area. No Closing Cost, No
down payment if qualified
$110,000 740-446-9966
Medical / Health
IF YOU HAVE A ROCKING
Expanding Home Health CHAIR. WE HAVE THE
FRONT PORCH FOR YOU!
Agency is now acceptBEST VIEW IS FROM
ing applications for RN's, THE
THE FRONT PORCH LOOKLPN's and Home Health ING IN. BRICK HOME. NEW
Aides. Total benefit
METAL ROOF. LIVING
package includes BC/BS ROOM. LARGE FAMILY
KITCHEN/DINING
Health Insurance, Dent- ROOM,
AREA, BIRCH CABINETS.
al/Vision, paid
APPLIANCES, 3 BEDROOMS.
vacations/holidays, and
1 1/2 BATHS. ONE CAR GARAGE. FULL BASEMENT.
flexible schedules.
Help
GeneralLOT, CENTRAL AIR
E-mail resumes
toWantedCORNER
AND HEAT,SECURITY SYShealthceo@aol.com or
TEM, CABLE READY. IN
fax
740-377-9591.
ThetoMeigs
County Department
of Job
and
Family
GALLIPOLIS
CITY
LIMITS.
PRICED
TO SELL. QUALIYou
may also
come byqualified
Services
is seeking
applicants
to
fill a
FIED BUYERS ONLY. ALL
the
officeServices
and pickWorker
up an position
Social
YOU HAVEin
TOthe
DO children
IS BRING
application at 146 Third
YOUR
ROCKING CHAIR AND
servicesGallipolis
division. orMINIMUM
QUALIFICATIONS:
Avenue,
call MOVE
IN. MUST SEE TO APA bachelor’s degree inPRECIATE!
social work,
human
CONTACT
1-740740-446-3808.
446-7874.
services or closely related
field of study is

required.

Applicants should submit a cover letter, three
written references from non-relatives, a current
resume and a copy of his/her college transcripts.
The deadline for submission is April 15, 2014
at 4:00pm. The application packet should be
hand-delivered or mailed to: Meigs County
Department of Job and Family Services, Human
Resources 3rd floor, P O Box 191-175 Race
Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760.
60495559

For Sale 36 Acres with Fixer
Upper. No Land Contracts
740-256-1087

now taking applications for 2,
3, &amp; 4 Bedroom HUD Subsidized Apartments. Applications
are taken Monday through
Thursday 9:00 am-1:00pm. Office is located at 1151 Evergreen Drive, Point Pleasant,
WV. (304) 675-5806.

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.

Two houses for rent. 2 bedrooms have all appliances.
Must have deposit and first
months months rent. Located
on Crab Creek. Call (304)5326707 or (304)675-2897

DISH:
DISH TV Retailer. Starting at
$19.99/month (for 12 mos.) &amp;
High Speed Internet starting at
$14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About
Same Day Installation! CALL
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1-800-734-5524

MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Rentals
3 Bdrm / 2 bath Mobile Home
$500/mo - $500 deposit Plus a
Doublewide $800/rent
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Thursday, April 10, 2014

Blue Devils blast Symmes Valley, 18-5
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

CENTENARY, Ohio — Early
and often.
The Gallia Academy baseball
team pounded out 13 hits and
scored at least three runs in each
of its four innings at the plate
Tuesday night en route to an
18-5 victory in five innings over
visiting Symmes Valley in a nonconference matchup at Eastman
Ball Field in Gallia County.
The Blue Devils (3-1) never
trailed in the contest as the hosts

scored five times in the first and
three times in the second to secure a commanding 8-0 advantage through two complete.
The Vikings countered with a
run in the top half of the third,
but GAHS responded with a
five-run explosion in its half of
the third for a resounding 13-1
cushion.
SVHS sent nine batters to the
plate in the fourth, which resulted in four runs on three hits, two
walks and an error — making it
a 13-5 contest.
Gallia Academy — which sent

White Falcons soar
past Eastern, 9-1
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

MASON, W.Va. — The Wahama baseball team
evened its overall record to .500 Monday night
following a 9-1 victory over visiting Eastern in a
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division matchup in Mason County.
The White Falcons (2-2, 2-0 TVC Hocking)
trailed 1-0 after a half-inning of play, but the
hosts responded with three runs in the first and
another in the second to secure a 4-1 cushion
through two complete.
WHS then followed by sending nine batters
to the plate in the fourth, which resulted in five
runs on five hits and an error — allowing the
Red and White to take a commanding 9-1 cushion through four full frames.
The Eagles (0-3, 0-2) — thanks to a Wahama
error — managed only baserunner over the final three innings, which ultimately allowed the
White Falcons to claim their second straight win
with the eight-run triumph.
Wahama outhit the guests by a 12-1 overall
margin and both teams committed four errors
in the contest. Garrett Miller was the winning
pitcher after allowing just three walks over
seven innings while striking out three. Brandon
Coleman took the loss after surrendering just
one walk over six frames while fanning four.
Wyatt Zuspan and Wesley Harrison each led
WHS with three hits apiece, followed by Kane
Roush and Demtrius Serevicz with two safeties
each. Hunter Bradley and Mason Hicks also had
a hit each for the victors.
Zuspan led the hosts with four RBIs and
Harrison followed with three RBIs. Roush also
scored a team-best three runs in the decision.
Coleman had the lone hit and lone RBI for the
Eagles. Tyler Morris walked and scored the only
run in the first inning.

at least 10 batters to the plate in
every inning except the second
— retaliated with five runs on
three hits and three walks, giving the hosts a sizable 18-5 edge
after four full frames.
The Vikings had the bases
loaded with two outs in the top
of the fifth, but Mays grounded
out to end the game at its mercyrule conclusion.
The Blue Devils outhit the
guests by a 13-4 overall margin
and committed three errors in
the triumph, one fewer than
SVHS. The Vikings stranded

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RACINE, Ohio — It’s not how you
start something, but rather how you
finish it.
The Meigs softball team broke
away from a three-all tie by scoring
10 runs in the top of the fifth Tuesday night en route to a 13-3 victory
in five innings over host Southern
in a non-conference matchup at Star
Mill Park in Meigs County.
It was an even battle for four innings, as both the Lady Tornadoes
(2-1) and visiting Lady Marauders
(3-2) took turns trading leads before
finding themselves deadlocked at
three.
MHS — which has now won three
straight decisions — sent 13 batters

Andrus and Katie Gilkey led Meigs
with two hits apiece, followed by Ellis and Devyn Oliver with a safety
each. Pullins, Andrus, Fox, Morris,
Ellis and Gilkey also scored two runs
each in the triumph.
Ali Deem and Hannah Hill paced
Southern with two hits apiece, while
Cierra Turley, Jordan Huddleston,
Darien Diddle, Baylee Hupp and Haley Hill added one safety each. Diddle
drove in a team-best two RBIs, while
Hannah Hill led the hosts with two
runs scored.
Destinee Blackwell was the winning pitcher of record after allowing
three runs, nine hits and zero walks
over five frames while fanning six.
Huddleston took the loss after fanning three and walking three in fourplus innings of work.

Blue Angels fall to Rock Hill, 5-2
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

PEDRO, Ohio — Its always tough to defeat good teams
on the the road.
The Gallia Academy softball team dropped a 5-2 decision to non-conference host Rock Hill, Tuesday night in a
non-conference tilt in Lawrence County.
The Blue Angels got on the board first with a run in
the top of the fourth but the Redwomen of Rock Hill
answered with three runs in the bottom of the inning.
RHHS pushed the lead to 5-1 with two runs in the sixth
and GAHS had one chance left. Gallia Academy marked
one run in the seventh but couldn’t rally back and Rock
Hill claimed the 5-2 win.
The winning pitcher of record was Sami Nixon with a

complete game effort, allowing two runs on seven hits.
Nixon struck out seven Blue Angles and did not surrender a base on balls.
Violet Pelfrey suffered the loss after giving up five runs
on six hits and a walk, while striking out four in six innings.
Pelfrey and Hannah Roach each marked a solo homerun to lead GAHS, while Micah Curfman was 2-for-3 at
the plate. Kendra Barnes marked a triple, while Makenzie
Barr and Kiersten Stanley each added a hit in the loss.
Rock Hill’s offense was led by Kenzie Harrah with two
hits, followed by Brooke Hanshaw, Riann Keating, Kaci
Russell and Brooklynn Massie with a hit apiece.
This is the lone scheduled meeting between RHHS and
GAHS this season.

Spring Valley storms past Lady Knights
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — The
Lady Timberwolves defend home
court.
The Spring Valley girls tennis
team defeated non-conference guest
Point Pleasant 6-1 at Ritter Park on
Tuesday night.
Katie Swan gave Spring Valley the
lead with an 8-0 victory over Valerie
Smith in the first singles match, while

Kelsey Allbright evened the match
with a 9-7 victory over Meredith Hall
in the second singles match.
In the third singles match Spring
Valley’s Abby Chaffins defeated Kaitlyn Dunn 8-2, while Hannah Ray
topped Gretchen Nibert 8-0 in the
final singles match.
In the first doubles match Swan
and Hall gave SVHS the 8-2 victory
over Smith and Allbright. Chaffins

and Shelby Wellman defeated Dunn
and Nibert in the second doubles
match, while Ray and McKenzie
Wright topped Ealisha Ebert and
Macy Adkins 8-1 in the final doubles
match.
Spring Valley also defeated PPHS
6-1 on March 27 in Mason County.
The lone Lady Knights victor on that
night was Kelsey Allbright with an
8-5 triumph over Meredith Hall.

Reds beat Cardinals 4-0, avoid sweep

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to the plate in the top of the fifth,
which resulted in 10 runs on eight
hits and two walks. Southern stranded a baserunner in its half of the fifth,
which allowed Meigs to wrap up the
mercy-rule decision.
Southern led 1-0 after one inning
of play, then both squads plated two
runs apiece in the third for a 3-2
contest. Meigs tied the game in the
fourth after a two-out error allowed
Danielle Morris to score from third.
The Lady Marauders outhit SHS
by a 12-9 overall margin and committed just one error in the contest, compared to two miscues by the hosts.
MHS also received a solo home run
from Ariel Ellis in the second and a
two-run homer from Sadie Fox in the
fifth.
Morris, Fox, Alliyah Pullins, Brook

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ST. LOUIS (AP) — Billy
Hamilton had three hits
and his first two steals, and
scored easily after tagging
up on a shallow outfield pop
fly to support a strong outing from Mike Leake in the
Cincinnati Reds’ 4-0 victory
over the St. Louis Cardinals
on Wednesday.
Leake (1-1) allowed four
hits and a walk in eight scoreless innings and Devin Mesoraco hit a two-run home
run for the Reds, who avoided a three-game sweep after
dropping their ninth series
in their last 10 in St. Louis.

They’re 2-4 against the Cardinals, their NL Central rival,
and wrapped up a 2-4 trip.
Shelby Miller (0-2) allowed his fourth homer in
two starts and faced trouble
most of his six innings, but
held the Reds hitless in nine
at-bats with runners in scoring position. Mesoraco hit
his first homer in the fourth
after doubling twice Tuesday in his first start after
coming off the 15-day disabled list.
Hamilton entered batting
.091 with two hits and seven
strikeouts in 22 at-bats and

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left town batting .192. He
reached safely his first three
trips beginning with a triple
to open the game when left
fielder Matt Holliday missed
on a diving catch in the gap.
After singling to start the
fifth he put on a show with
his legs, stealing second without a throw, going to third on
a flyout to shallow right and
scoring easily to beat Jon
Jay’s’ relay on Bruce’s pop fly
to even shallower right and
put the Reds up 3-0.
Hamilton bunted for a
hit in the ninth against Pat
Neshek and stole second,
then scored without a throw
on Brandon Phillips’ oneout single to make it 4-0.
Leake retired nine of the
first 10 hitters and benefited
from three double-play balls,
two of them in a run of five
straight three-up, threedown innings from the second through sixth. Leake
was 0-2 in three starts last
year against St. Louis while
allowing 15 earned runs
in 16 1-3 innings and beat
them for the first time since

Aug. 25, 2012.
Miller’s best work came
in the first when he struck
out Brandon Phillips and
Joey Votto and got Bruce
on a groundout to strand
Hamilton at third. He gave
up three runs on seven hits.
Cardinals third baseman
Matt Carpenter made an
outstanding diving stop on
Leake’s grounder down the
line in the third.
Notes: Slumping cleanup
man Allen Craig (.097) was
not in the lineup for the Cardinals and the Reds gave
Zack Cozart (.038) a day off.
Together, those two are 4
for 57. … Both teams have a
day off Thursday. The Reds
open a six-game homestand
Friday with Johnny Cueto
(0-1, 1.93) opposing the
Rays and David Price (1-0,
4.05) and the Cardinals and
Joe Kelly (1-0, 1.69) begin a
three-game series with the
Cubs and Jeff Samardzija
(0-1, 1.29). … Miller was a
15-game winner last year as
a rookie, going 10-3 with a
1.75 ERA at home.

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runs scored. Warnimont, Graham, White, Carter and Eric
Sheets also scored twice each in
the triumph.
Wills was the winning pitcher of
record, allowing five runs, two hits
and eight walks over 3.2 innings
while striking out seven. Thompson took the loss after surrendering five runs, four hits and a walk
over an inning-plus of work.
Mays, Klaiber, Carpenter and
Dial each had a hit for Symmes
Valley. Mays also drove in a
team-high four RBIs, while Jarrell scored twice in the setback.

Lady Marauders roll past Southern, 13-3

Staff Report

THE REAL DEAL!

10 runners on base, compared
to eight left on by the Blue and
White.
Eight different players had at
least one hit for the hosts, with
Ty Warnimont leading the way
with three hits. Gustin Graham,
Anthony Sipple and Kole Carter
also had two safeties apiece for
the victors.
Gage Childers, Alex White,
Seth Wills and Ryan Terry also
had a hit apiece for GAHS.
Sipple and Wills led the hosts
with three RBIs apiece, while
Childers added a team-high four

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