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

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INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

A visit to the
president’s
office... Page 4

Rain. High of 44. Low
around 25... Page 2

Local sports
action... Page 6

John Perry Abbott, 22
Grace Ball, 92
Jeffrey Bolden, 52

Delores Calvert, 61
Joanna Rae Lucas, 74
Ershel L. Riffle, 90
Bryan Workman 38
50 cents daily

TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

Vol. 64, No. 58

Counties receive 8th casino revenue tax payment
By Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — Gallia and
Meigs counties will soon see a
boost in funds, as all 88 Ohio
counties are set to receive payments from the casino revenue
tax later this month.
Gallia County will receive
$89,439.54, with Meigs County
receiving $68,628.43 at the end
of April.
Payment amounts are down
from the past few received by
each county.
In January, Gallia County re-

ceived $93,187.83, while Meigs
County received $71,596.36. In
October 2013, Gallia County
received $95,294.41 and Meigs
County received $73,214.85.
Payments had increased each
quarter from July 2012 until July
2013, with a slight decline in October 2013.
The payment received later
this month will be the eighth
from the casino revenue tax fund.
Meigs County received a total of $267,277.38 in the 2013
calendar year. Gallia County’s
four payments in 2013 totaled

$348,225.30. The initial payment
received by the counties in July
2012 was approximately 3.5 times
less than the current payments.
Money distributed to the
counties is not earmarked by the
state for a specific purpose and is
placed into the general fund.
Cuyahoga County will receive
the largest amount at $1.84 million,
and Vinton County will receive the
least at $38,777.29. Funding is determined by population.
Meigs County’s population
is listed as 23,593, while Gallia County has a population of

30,708. Population figures are
from the 2012 census date provided by the Ohio Department
of Taxation.
Payments are also made to school
districts in Ohio on a semi-annual
basis. These payments began Jan.
31, 2013. The second payment was
made Aug. 31. Payments continue
in January and August of each year.
Payments were not made to school
districts in 2012.
In January, Gallia County
Schools received the largest
payment at $58,278.16. Gallipolis City Schools received a

payment of $56,905.05. Meigs
Local School District received
$46,684.85. Eastern Local School
District received $20,254.48,
while Southern Local received a
payment of $18,716.83.
Payments to the counties are
based on population, and payments to the districts are based
on enrollment.
The Casino Tax Revenue is
a result of the constitutional
amendment passed in 2009 that
allowed for the four casinos to be
placed in Ohio.
See PAYMENT | 3

Local board reviews
accomplishments
and hires personnel
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Egg hunt a hit with youngsters
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY —About 200 children
turned out at Dreams Park on Saturday
for an Easter egg hunt staged annually
by the Pomeroy Merchants Association.
About 3,000 colored eggs were hidden on the open field in three different
sections for children divided into age
groups. The children scrambled over
the area in their hunt for eggs, and
many returned with well-filled bags and
baskets.
For each egg found, a novelty prize
was awarded to the child. For the finder
of the golden eggs, one of which was
hidden in each section, the finders were
awarded large Easter baskets. The big
winners were Braelynn Hubbard, Hunter Day and Aaliyah Ogdin.
Preceding the egg hunt, the Meigs
County Prayer Task Force served free
hot dogs and beverages to everyone attending.
Before the hunt began, Dodger
Vaughan gave devotions emphasizing
the real meaning of Easter. He told the
story of the crucifixion and resurrection of Christ and how it impacts the
lives of all of us.

See BOARD | 3

Michael Johnson | Daily Sentinel

Greg Howard, Democratic candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives 6th Congressional District seat, speaks to Democrats Saturday night at the annual Kennedy Day Dinner at the
Gallipolis Quality Inn.

Garrison talks election during dinner
By Michael Johnson

michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — Jennifer Garrison believes she has
want it takes to bring people together.
Garrison, a Democratic candidate for the 6th Congressional
District that includes Gallia and Meigs counties, told fellow
Democrats at the annual Kennedy Day Dinner on Saturday night
at the Gallipolis Quality Inn that her experience as an attorney,
mediator, small business woman and three-term Ohio state representative (2005-10), is the right mix to bring people together.
“Politics should be a noble profession. We elect our community leaders to represent us, to work toward common
goals, and sadly we turn on the TV today and all we see
is the bad, the bickering and the fighting,” she said. “You
know, wages are stagnant, jobs are being shipped overseas
and our political leaders are too busy fighting with one another to look out for the best interests of everyone.
“It’s not too late. We can do better if we elect leaders
who are focused on delivering results rather than sound
bites, rhetoric and gridlock,” Garrison added. “I am here
to tell you that I have a history of bringing people together to achieve results, and I plan on bring those same qualities to Congress if I’m elected.”

POMEROY — Reflecting on accomplishments of past
years, the revised school calendar, and looking toward
personnel and programming for the 2014-15 school year
was an emphasis of the recent meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of Education.
Reports on programming were given by Matt Simpson
and Michael Barnett reported on technology advancements in the school and the Common Core programs advanced during this school year. The online testing system
being integrated into Meigs Local and its acceptance into
the system was noted and it was reported that the district has been selected to participate in an ongoing pilot
program being conducted by the Department of Education. Tim Lawson, who has chaired the Race to the Top
program in the schools, gave a report on that ongoing program and the benefits it brings to the schools.
The revised calender for the remainder of the school
year, necessitated by weather-related absences, was presented by Superintendent Rusty Bookman to the board.
Spring break begins on Good Friday and is back in session April 21. On May 9, there will be a two-hour early
dismal, on May 23 will be graduation and on May 29
will be the last day for students and staff. Bookman said
should any more days be missed, they will be added at the
end of May. Students graduating will not be required to
return to school after graduation.

Michael Johnson | Daily Sentinel

Jennifer Garrison, Democratic candidate for the 6th Congressional District, talks to fellow Democrats from Gallia and
Meigs counties Saturday night during the annual Kennedy
Day Dinner at the Gallipolis Quality Inn. Garrison will face fellow Democrat Greg Howard in the May 6 primary. The winner
will move on to face incumbent U.S. Rep. Bill Johnson in the
See GARRISON | 3 November general election.

Howard outlines blueprint
for Congressional run
By Michael Johnson

michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS — Greg
Howard has several points
for what he calls a “blueprint
for a Democratic and economically sound society.”
Howard, who along with
his wife, Gerry, operate a
small farm in Meigs County, was a guest speaker
Saturday night at the Gallipolis Quality Inn for the
Democrats’ annual Kennedy Day Dinner. He is running for the U.S. House of
Representatives’ 6th Congressional District.
First, Howard will square
off against fellow Democrat
Jennifer Garrison in the May
6 primary. The winner will
face Republican incumbent
U.S. Rep. Bill Johnson in the
November general election.
The first item on his blueprint calls for no cuts to

Medicare or Social Security.
“People need to know
the things I took for granted,” he said. “Medicare
and Social Security are not
entitlements. We pay for
them and they shouldn’t be
messing with them.”
Howard also believes
in job creation and plans
to call for the end to the
North American Free
Trade Agreement and the
Trans-Pacific Partnership.
“I’ve looked at (NAFTA) pretty hard,” he said.
“It promised 600,000 to
800,000 jobs and we’ve
lost 1 million. Mexico
hates it, too. They were
in the streets not too
long ago protesting it. It
only benefits a few guys
on Wall Street. As far as
I’m concerned, (NAFTA)
needs to go away.
See HOWARD | 3

�Page 2 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Meigs County Community Calendar
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. Call 992-3214 two
days ahead with the number attending.
The speaker will be Beth Shaver, director of the Meigs County Council on Aging. Members are asked to bring in paper
products and personal care products for

the women’s shelter.
Friday, April 18
POMEROY — Secretary of State Jon
Husted’s regional representative will conduct
open office hours from 1-3 p.m. at the Meigs
County District Public Library in Pomeroy.
Saturday, April 19
SALEM CENTER — Star Grange #778
and Star Junior Grange #878 will hold

their fun night and potluck supper with
potluck supper at 6:30 p.m. followed by
fun night. All members and interested
persons are urged to attend.
Friday, April 25
SALEM CENTER — The Meigs County
Grange Banquet will be held at 6:30 p.m. at
Meigs High School cafeteria. Tickets are required and should be purchased by April 16
by contacting Opal Dyer at 742-2805. Rick

Smith will be the speaker on drug awareness.
Birthdays
MIDDLEPORT — Pauline Mayer will
observe her 93rd birthday on April 16.
Cards may be sent to her at Overbrook Center, 333 Page St., Middleport, OH 45760.
MIDDLEPORT — Wendell Eblin will
observe his 82nd birthday on April 26.
Cards may be sent to him at 809 S. Second Ave., Middleport, OH 45760.

Ohio Valley Forecast

Meigs County Church Calendar

Today: Showers, mainly before 10 a.m. High near 44.
Northwest wind around 14 mph. Chance of precipitation
is 80 percent. New precipitation amounts between a tenth
and quarter of an inch possible.
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a low around 25. Northwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
Wednesday: Sunny, with a high near 56. Northeast
wind around 6 mph.
Wednesday night: Mostly clear, with a low around 35.
Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 69.
Thursday night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 41.
Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 71.
Friday night: A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with
a low around 48. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Saturday: A chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a
high near 67. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Saturday night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 47.
Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 66.

Easter Week Services
MIDDLEPORT — Easter services at First Baptist Church of Middleport will include the following: 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 evening
service.
POMEROY —Maundy Thursday services will be held at St.
Paul Lutheran Church in Pomeroy
beginning at 7 p.m. April 17. Holy
Communion will be celebrated. The
general public is always cordially invited.
POMEROY — Good Friday services will be at St. Paul Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy beginning at 7
p.m. April 18. The public is invited
to attend.
RACINE — Southern Charge
United Methodist Church Maundy

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 51.28
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.37
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 95.03
Big Lots (NYSE) — 38.48
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 44.70
BorgWarner (NYSE) —60.36
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 13.32
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.470
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 42.26
Collins (NYSE) — 76.79
DuPont (NYSE) — 66.59
US Bank (NYSE) — 40.61
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 25.71
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 65.22
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 54.96
Kroger (NYSE) — 44.58
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 54.07
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 93.80
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.10
BBT (NYSE) — 38.84

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 25.27
Pepsico (NYSE) — 83.55
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.06
Rockwell (NYSE) — 121.45
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.31
Royal Dutch Shell — 74.09
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 31.71
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 77.38
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.37
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.13
Worthington (NYSE) — 36.08
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions April 14, 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.

The Daily Sentinel
Civitas Media, LLC
(USPS 436-840)

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michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

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Sarah Hawley
740-992-2155
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ADVERTISING:
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Brenda Davis
740-992-2155
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Thursday Service will be held at 6
p.m. April 17 at Bethany UMC with
dinner and service to follow.
RACINE — Southern Charge
UMC Good Friday Services will be
7 p.m. at Morning Star UMC.
RACINE — Easter Sunrise Service Southern Charge UMC will be
7 a.m. at Bethany UMC with breakfast to follow; 8:30 a.m. Sunrise
breakfast at Morning Star UMC; 7
a.m. at Carmel-Sutton UMC Sunrise
Service, dinner theater style. Southern Charge Pastor Arland King invites the public to attend any or all
of the Holy Week services.
LONG BOTTOM — Easter Services at the Long Bottom U. Methodist Church: Sunrise Service 7
a.m.; Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m.

Special Singing
LONG BOTTOM — Faith Full
Gospel Church, Ohio 124 in Long
Bottom will host special singing and
preaching each Friday.
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.

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 County Local Briefs
Road Closures
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
— Chester Township Road
94, East Shade Road, will
be closed from 7 a.m. to 5
p.m. April 16-17 for slip repair. The closure is almost
one mile east of Ohio 7.
MEIGS COUNTY —
The Ohio Department of
Transportation has announced that beginning
Monday, May 12, Ohio
733, located between U.S.
33 and Ohio 124, will be
closed to allow Meigs
County highway crews to
perform a tree trimming
operation. The road will be
closed Monday thru Friday
7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Weather permitting, the road will
reopen on May 20. Official
detour: U.S. 33 to Ohio
833 back to Ohio 733.
Women’s Health Day
MEIGS COUNTY —
The Susan G. Komen
Think Pink Program and
the OSU Mobile Van will
conduct a Women’s Health
Day from 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m.

April 29 at the Rutland
Church of God. For appointments, call Carolyn at
992-5469 or 992-3853.
Chamber
Spring Dinner
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce is hosting
its annual spring dinner
April 25. Doors open at 6
p.m. and dinner will start
at 7 p.m. There will be a
live auction as well as a
silent auction. Following
dinner and the auctions is
the game, Member Feud,
where teams consisting of
four to five members will
compete. Tickets are $25.
For advance tickets, call
(740) 992-5005 or contact
a board member. Tickets
will be available at the
door. RSVP by Monday if
possible.
Boil Advisory
RUTLAND — Water
customers in the village of
Rutland are under a boil
advisory until further no-

tice. The advisory will be
lifted after the results of
samples collected become
available, possibly on Tuesday (today).
Rotary Pancake Event
POMEROY — The
Middleport-Pomeroy 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.
Cemetery Cleanups
LEBANON TOWNSHIP
— Lebanon Township will
be doing their spring cemetery lot cleanup. Items
that people don’t want
thrown away must be removed from gravesites by
April 28.
Shade River Lodge
Scholarships
CHESTER — Shade Riv-

er 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.

Tops No. 2013 holds meeting

OBITUARIES:
740-992-2155
SUBSCRIPTION SERVICES:
740-992-2155

TUPPERS PLAINS — Tops No.
2013 Tuppers Plains recently met
with 14 members present.
Nancy Wilford was the weekly
best weight loss winner. She received a certificate and the contents from the fruit/veggie basket.
For March, the two “Monthly Best
Weight Loss’ winners were Erin
Allocco and Pat Hall. The quartly

111 Court Street.
Periodical postage paid in Pomeroy, Ohio
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: The Daily Sentinel,
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

“Best Weight Loss” winner was Pat
Hall. They all received certificates
for their achievements.
The group agreed to participate
in the Meigs County Relay for Life
on June 13 and 14. Roberta Henderson was the winner of the split
the pot. The group attended the
State Recnogation Days near Cincinnati. The theme will be “Chase

Your Dreams with Tops.”
Tops meets every Monday night
at the St. Paul U.M. Church Basement on Ohio 7 in Tuppers Plains.
Weigh-in begins at 4:45 to 5:45 p.m.
with the meeting beginning at 6
p.m. Tops is a good weight loss support group. Anyone interested can
contact Pat Snedden at 662-2633 or
attend a free meeting

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EVERY CHILD DESERVES A HAPPY
CHILDHOOD BUT SADLY THAT
DOESN’T ALWAYS HAPPEN.
THE MEIGS COUNTY DEPARTMENT
OF JOB AND FAMILY SERVICES
REMINDS YOU THAT APRIL IS
NATIONAL CHILD ABUSE AND
NEGLECT PREVENTION MONTH.
IF YOU HAVE WITNESSED OR
SUSPECT CHILD ABUSE OR
NEGLECT PLEASE CALL 800-992-2608.
THIS HOT LINE NUMBER IS OPEN 24
HOURS AND 7 DAYS A WEEK.
YOUR CALL WILL REMAIN
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�Tuesday, April 15, 2014

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The Daily Sentinel

Page 3

Judge to Ohio: Recognize out-of-state gay marriage
By Amanda Lee Myers
Associated Press

CINCINNATI — A federal
judge on Monday ordered Ohio
to recognize the marriages of
same-sex couples performed in
other states, and civil rights attorneys and gay marriage supporters immediately began looking ahead to their next fight: a
lawsuit seeking to force Ohio to
allow gay couples to marry.
Judge Timothy Black’s ruling
was a partial but significant victory for gay rights supporters,
who called it a stepping stone for
full marriage equality in Ohio.
Black ruled that Ohio’s refusal
to recognize gay marriage is a

violation of constitutional rights
and “unenforceable in all circumstances.”
“The record before this court
… is staggeringly devoid of any
legitimate justification for the
state’s ongoing arbitrary discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation,” Black wrote.
The state plans to appeal
Black’s ruling, arguing that Ohio
has a sovereign right to ban gay
marriage, which voters did overwhelmingly in 2004.
Al Gerhardstein, the Cincinnati civil rights attorney who filed
the lawsuit that led to Black’s ruling, said Monday that he’s been
speaking with several gay couples who want to win the right to

marry in Ohio. He plans to file a
lawsuit in the matter in the next
couple weeks.
He called Black’s ruling “a
sweeping declaration” in favor
of gay marriage and thinks the
judge has given a clear indication that he would rule in favor of
forcing Ohio to allow gay couples
to marry in the state.
Black delayed deciding whether
to issue a stay of Monday’s ruling
pending appeal until after attorneys on both sides present arguments on the issue by Tuesday.
However, Black said he’s inclined to put the ruling on hold
pending appeal, except for a
portion that applies to the four
gay couples who filed the Febru-

ary lawsuit that led to the court
case. That would mean the state
would immediately have to recognize their marriages and list
both spouses as parents on their
children’s birth certificates.
If Black declines to stay his
ruling, that would allow gay couples in Ohio to obtain the same
benefits as any other married
couple in the state, including
property rights and the right to
make some medical decisions for
their partner.
Ed FitzGerald, the presumptive Democratic nominee for
governor in the November election, said Black’s ruling “begins
to open the door to full marriage
equality in Ohio” and criticized

Payment
From Page 1
According to the Ohio
Department of Taxation
website, the Ohio Casino
Control Commission is
responsible for licensing
and regulating casino operators, their employees
and gaming-related vendors.
The Ohio Department of
Taxation is responsible for
administering the gross ca-

Republican Gov. John Kasich for
opposing equal rights.
Kasich spokesman Rob Nichols said in a statement: “The
governor believes that marriage
is between a man and a woman,
he supports Ohio’s constitutional
ban on same-sex marriage, and
we’re glad the attorney general is
appealing the ruling.”
Ohio Attorney General Mike
DeWine told The Associated
Press last week that his job is to
defend Ohio’s statutes and constitutional provisions and that he
will continue to do so.
He declined to speculate what
the outcome of the state’s appeal
will be or the future of gay marriage rights as a whole.

Howard
sino revenue tax and for ensuring compliance with all
pertinent state tax laws, as
well as administrative rules
and policies as they apply to
other taxes administered by
the Department of Taxation.
The gross casino revenue
tax is imposed on licensed
casino operators at the rate
of 33 percent. “Gross casino
revenue” is the total amount
of money exchanged for tokens, chips and tickets at a

casino facility, less any winnings paid out to wagerers.
The operators of each casino facility are required to file
daily returns with the taxation department and remit
payments for the related tax
liabilities every day that banks
are open for business. Each
return reflects casino gaming
activity over a 24-hour period.
The tax revenue collected
from the gross casino revenue tax is split among seven

funds benefiting the counties and certain large cities,
school districts, host cities,
the Casino Control Commission, the Ohio State Racing
Commission, law enforcement training and problem
gambling and addictions.
Distributions to localities
occur on a quarterly basis,
except for school districts,
which will receive their semiannual distributions.

Board
From Page 1
Personnel was hired and resignations
were accepted during the meeting.
Re-employed on one-year contracts
were the following teachers: Samantha
Barr, Brent Bissell, Tom Cremeans,
Heidi DeLong, Joshua Eddy, Abby Harris, Elizabeth Harrison, Janel Kennedy,
Shelby Leatherman, Sarah Lee, Erica
Ousley, Sara Pavkovich, Krista Sinclair,
Ricky Smith, Amanda Tope, Chris Van
Reeth and Megan Wise.
Re-employed on three-year contracts
were Denise Lamponen, Bruce Martin,
Kayla McCarthy, Amber Ridenour, Lisa
Roback, Emily Schmaltz and Kevin
Sheppard.
Re-employed on a three-year contract
was Carol Mahr.
Re-employed on five-year contracts

were: Cara Bullington, Michael Chancey, Deborah Davis, Toney Dingess,
Uretta Jo Dunn, Shannon Korn, Timothy Lawson, Susan Miller, Jim Oliphant, Kristi Powell, Jean Powers, Christopher Saber, John Sharp, Pam Vogt,
Jessica Welker and Betty Ann Wolfe.
The board accepted the resignations
for retirement purposes of Carmen
Manuel, science teacher at Meigs Middle School, and Rita Simmons, fifthgrade teacher at Meigs Intermediate.
They were given the option to return
to their positions as per the negotiated
agreement with the Meigs Local Teachers Association. Also the resignation of
Carl Wolfe, CBI teacher at Meigs High
School, was accepted as was the resignation of Lauren Ramsburg effective at
the end of the current school year.
Hired as substitute custodians for the

remainder of the school year were David
Hysell, Carrie Morris and Adam Tillis as
per the recommendation of Paul McElroy, director of operations. Mary Hawk
was hired as a substitute teacher for the
remainder of the 2013-14 school year.
All of the current supplemental contracts were non-renewed and the positions will be posted with applications being accepted for the coming school year.
Bylaws and policies were reviewed
and a decision made to delete, renew or
revise several new policies was recommended.
An executive session for the purpose
of discussing hiring and compensation
of personnel, and negotiations followed
the regular meeting.
Attending were board members Ryan
Mahr, Heather Hawley, Roger Abbott,
Todd Snowden and Larry Tucker.

From Page 1
“The Trans-Pacific Partnership should not even get
started,” Howard added. “We need to review all these
trade laws and start creating legislation for the American people.”
Howard said monetary reform is in need to build infrastructure in the U.S.
“High-speed broadband is a necessity, not a luxury,”
he said. “Companies won’t come here if there is no access to it. The fast Internet — the gigabit system, does
not exist in District 6 or anywhere in Ohio.”
Howard also said many highways and bridges are
needed.
“Many of our state, county and township bridges
have been de-rated,” he said. “This limits growth at the
grass roots level. We need a program to bring them up
to highway standard.”
Howard also believes money should stay away from
politics.
“Government is not broken, it is ‘fixed,’” he said. “It
is working just as Big Money intends. The Supreme
Court decision, Citizens United vs. FEC, of 2010, has
allowed corporations to flood the political scene with
money. This drowns out the voices of individuals and
effectively silences them. No longer is it ‘one person,
one vote.’”
Other points on Howard’s blueprint include employment, energy, agriculture and education.
“Congress has worked diligently at keeping unemployment high,” he said. “High unemployment equates
to high corporate profits.”
Howard, of Albany, was born in Chillicothe and raised
in Cheshire. He graduated from Kyger Creek High
School and went on to Ohio State University, where he
earned a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering.

Garrison
From Page 1
Garrison, of Marietta, is gearing her
campaign toward a showdown with incumbent U.S. Rep. Bill Johnson, R-6th
District. First, she will go up against fellow Democrat Greg Howard in the May 6
primary.
Garrison said the 6th Congressional
District needs a representative who will
look out for their needs — creating jobs
and providing educational opportunities
— not someone who is “simply interested
in continuing the broken political system
in Washington.”
Having been raised in a family of prounion workers, Garrison said she came to
realize those unions were the backbone of
the middle class.
“(Unions) provide a living wage, they
provide health care, and they provide an
ability to retire in dignity,” she said.
Garrison talked about her family’s affordable mortgage, how her parents were
able to help with their children’s respective college tuitions, and her family’s ability to afford one yearly vacation together.
“That middle-class upbringing that I
had used to be the promise of America,
but sadly this American dream is becoming less and less realized,” she said. “We’re
passing along a country of less promise
and less opportunity for future generations.”
While serving in the state Legislature,
Garrison said she began the Southeastern
Ohio Landowners’ Association, where
she has successfully negotiated more than
$300 million of shale oil and gas mineral
leases, providing landowners with some
of the best financial outcomes, while also
protecting their land and water.
She is also a member of the Ohio Oil
and Gas Association and the Washington
County Ohio Shale Task Force. Working
with SEOLA and these organizations, she
is helping to ensure that generations of
Ohioans will have safe, well-paying union
jobs while landowners’ rights are protected.

cubcadet.com

“We have 1,200 landowners in our
group. We bargained as a group, much like
a union,” she said. “When people stick together, they get a better deal.”
Garrison said he was able to work with
energy companies on behalf of the group
“But Congressman Johnson, he is only
on the side of the energy companies, I
assure you,” she said. “(The energy companies) were doing fundraisers for (Johnson) while they were negotiating with me.
“When (Johnson) is in D.C. the last
three years voting 40 times against the
Affordable Care Act … I was here working with landowners, helping them get
a better deal and becoming a part of the
economic boon so that jobs could be created versus just being in D.C. complaining
about the other side.”
Garrison said the people of the 6th Congressional District need to elect someone
with a history of bringing people together.
“(This year) is definitely time to change
who is leading this state.”
Garrison said campaign finance reform
is needed to make the political process fair.
“We need campaign finance reform so
that ‘one person, one vote’ does not become ‘one dollar, one vote.’ I am so afraid
that this is the direction our country is going,” she said.
Garrison also said equal pay for women
is a top issue.
“As a working woman and a proud mother of a very successful daughter, women
should receive the same pay for the same
work as a man,” she said. “In 2014, it is
absolutely unbelievable that we are actually debating this issue. Why would it be
OK for a woman to earn 77 cents to every
dollar that a man earns in the same work
environment doing the very same work?
It’s just not right.”
While praising her primary election opponent, Garrison said she feels she is the
strongest candidate to take on Johnson in
the November general election.
“He’s been in office now for three years,
and I think this is a good time to send him
home,” she said.

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�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

A visit to the college president
By Daris Howard
It was my second year of
college, and I was attending a religious university.
As with any such university,
there were strong guidelines
for admittance. These included modest dress, proper
grooming, honesty, and a
strong moral code.
Before each student came,
a paper had to be signed that
we, on our honor, would
obey these guidelines. I was
happy to sign it, and even
happier to live it. I enjoyed
that type of environment
and the association with
other young people who
lived those same standards.
But one day I received a
call that surprised me. My
roommate, Bryce, answered
the phone, and the lady told
him she was calling from
the honor office and needed
to speak to me. Bryce was
shocked that I would receive
such a call. He handed over
the phone and then quickly
informed all of my other
roommates about it.
Immediately they all gathered around, staring at me,
making me very self-conscious. I said hello into the
phone, and the lady on the
other end spoke very businesslike. “Mr. Howard, this
is Becky from the Honor Office. We have been informed
that you are in violation of
the school honor code.”
My heart started to
pound, and I could hardly
breathe. I thought hard,
trying to remember something I might have done that

was against the rules, but I
couldn’t think of anything.
“What?” was all I could say.
“It is inappropriate to discuss something of this great
magnitude over the phone,”
Becky said. “We need you to
come in.”
“When?” I asked.
“Something like this
needs to be dealt with immediately. Are you free right
now?”
“Uh, yeah. I think I could
come.”
“This particular matter is
of grave concern,” she said.
“We are not going to be dealing with this ourselves. You
need to talk directly to the
college president.”
“The college president?” I
gasped.
“Yes, the president,” she
replied. “May I inform him
that you are on your way and
will be there shortly?”
“Yes, Ma’am.”
“Thank you,” she replied.
“He will be expecting you.”
When I hung up the
phone, my roommates were
all staring at me. Although
they had only heard one end
of the conversation, that,
along with the shocked look
on my face, was enough.
“I have to meet with the
president!”
“Wow!” Bruce said. “What
did you do?”
“Nothing,” I said, but by
their smirks, I knew they
didn’t believe me.
The walk to the president’s
office was a long one. The
wait in the reception area
was worse. Finally, the president came out and ushered

me into his office. He spoke
sternly to me, speaking to me
about rules and the importance of having and obeying
them. I fidgeted a lot, wondering when he would finally
tell me what violation I had
been called in for.
But he never did. Instead,
he stopped, and glared at
me, so I timidly asked, “Will
you please tell me what it
was that I did?”
His expression remained
unchanged. “As if you didn’t
know,” he growled.
He stared sternly at me
for another brief moment,
then he suddenly started to
smile, and then to laugh. He
laughed and laughed. Finally
he stopped and wiped his
eyes. “You ought to see your
face,” he said.
He then reached over and
hit a button on his phone.
“Iris,” he said, “I think you
need to come in here.”
With that, my aunt came
in the door. I instantly remembered that she was the
president’s personal secretary, even though I had never seen her in that capacity.
She pulled me into her arms
and gave me a hug. “You
know, you never come up to
see me, so I thought an April
Fool’s joke was in order.”
I smiled, and then I
laughed, remembering that
my roommates didn’t know
anything yet, and it was still
April first.
Daris Howard, award-winning, syndicated columnist, playwright, and
author, can be contacted at daris@
darishoward.com.

Page 4
TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

When Obamacare was ‘doomed’
By E.J. Dionne
When the health care website went haywire last fall, conservatives were absolutely certain this technological failure meant
the entire reform effort was doomed.
Is there any accountability in American
politics for being completely wrong? Is
there any cost to those who say things that
turn out not to be true and then, when
their fabrications or false predictions are
exposed, calmly move on to concocting
new claims as if they had never made the
old ones?
The fact that the Affordable Care Act hit
its original goal of signing up more than
7 million people through its insurance exchanges ought to be a moment of truth —
literally as well as figuratively. It ought to
give everyone, particularly members of the
news media, pause over how reckless the
opponents of change have been in making
instant judgments and outlandish charges.
If you doubt this, try a Google search
keyed to that period relating the word
“doomed” to the health care law.
It should be said that the general public
was much wiser. Their representatives in
Washington, moderate conservatives as
well as the tea party’s loyalists, followed
the base’s lead. In mid-November, for example, Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, told
Fox News flatly that the law is “destined
to fail,” “fundamentally flawed” and “not
ready for prime time.” House Speaker
John Boehner predicted dire outcomes
before the website fiasco. He repeatedly
insisted, as he did in July, that “even the
Obama administration knows the train
wreck will only get worse.”
At this point, the etiquette of commentary typically requires a “to be sure” paragraph, as in: To be sure, the law could still
face other problems, blah, blah, blah. But
such paragraphs are timid and often insincere hedges. After all, every successful
program, even well-established ones such
as Medicare, Social Security and food

stamps, confronts ongoing challenges.
So let’s say it out loud: The ACA is
doing exactly what its supporters said it
would do. It is getting health insurance to
millions (right now, it looks like around
10 million) who didn’t have it before. And
it’s working especially well in places such
as Kentucky where state officials threw
themselves fully and competently behind
the cause of signing up the uninsured.
Those who want to repeal the law will
have to admit that they are willing to deprive these people, or some large percentage of them, of insurance.
Too many conservatives would prefer
not to say up-front what they really believe: They don’t want the federal government to spend the significant sums
of money needed to get everyone covered. Admitting this can sound cruel, so
they insist that their objections are to
the ACA’s alleged unworkability, or to “a
Washington takeover of the health system” (which makes you wonder what they
think of Medicare, a far more centralized
program). Or they peddle isolated horror
stories that the fact-checkers usually discover are untrue or misleading.
Thus the moment of truth, about the
facts and about our purposes.
From now on, will there be more
healthy skepticism about conservative
claims against the ACA? Given how many
times the law’s enemies have said the sky
was falling when it wasn’t, will there be
tougher interrogation of their next round
of apocalyptic predictions? Will their socalled alternatives be analyzed closely to
see how many now-insured people would
actually lose coverage under the “replacement” plans?
Perhaps more importantly, will we finally be honest about the real argument
here: Do we or do we not want to put in
the effort and money it takes to guarantee
all Americans health insurance? If we do and we should - let’s get on with doing it
the best way we can.

On IRS’s Lois Lerner, circus is in session
By Dana Milbank
Dave Camp had a secret.
The House Ways and
Means Committee chairman was ready to send the
panel’s files on former IRS
official Lois Lerner to the
Justice Department for
a possible prosecution, a
handover that could have
been accomplished with a
simple phone call to the attorney general.
Instead, Camp put on a
show. The Michigan Republican invited the press
and the public to the committee’s storied hearing

room Wednesday, only to
call an immediate vote to
kick them out. This way, the
panel could meet in a closed
session to debate Lerner’s
fate - a dramatic but meaningless gesture because the
sole purpose of the secret
meeting was to authorize
releasing the committee’s
files on Lerner to the public.
Republicans said the
closed session was required to make the information public, but the
panel’s ranking Democrat,
Michigan’s Sandy Levin,
said the debate should be
held in the open.

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“Mr. Chairman?” he inquired after the plan to
go into secret session was
announced. Camp ignored
Levin. “The clerk will call
the roll,” he said. “Mr.
Chairman?” “The clerk
will call the roll.” “Mr.
Chairman?” “The clerk
will call the roll.”
Levin pressed on, patiently raising a point of
order.
“Just chill out,” the
60-year-old Camp finally
snapped at his 82-year-old
colleague. “I’m very chilled
out,” Levin replied.
This was true. Levin

hadn’t raised his voice at
all. Camp, on the other
hand, was agitated — for
good reason. The lawmaker, who is retiring at the
end of this term, has built
a solid reputation over
the years, and he recently
won plaudits for releasing a thoughtful proposal
to overhaul the tax code.
Camp was on course to
retire with dignity, at least
until he allowed his committee room to be turned
into a circus tent Wednesday. It was a folly wrapped
in a charade and shrouded
by farce.

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

Folly: There was no need
to have a formal hearing to
convey the information to
the Justice Department,
which is already investigating the IRS’s targeting of
conservative groups.
Charade: The committee made a big show of
having its secret hearing,
even though it was a foregone conclusion that the
members would vote along
party lines to release its
“secret” information —
including the transcript of
the secret hearing — to
the public.
Farce: Camp said Lerner
could be prosecuted for
releasing private taxpayer
information. Yet in making
public its Lerner files, the
committee used its authority to do legally the same
thing it accused her of doing illegally: releasing confidential taxpayer information. That hadn’t been
done in at least 40 years.
Of course, the taxpayers whose information was
released — mostly related
to Karl Rove’s Crossroads
GPS group — may not
mind, because they have
an interest in seeing somebody pay for the IRS’ targeting of a disproportionate number of tea party
groups for extra scrutiny.
The IRS scandal didn’t
come close to the “culture
of corruption” Camp promised or the “targeting of
the president’s political enemies” and cover-up alleged
by Darrell Issa, R-Calif.,
whose committee is holding
a contempt vote. Instead,
the investigations didn’t go
beyond Lerner, a civil servant who led the agency’s
tax-exempt division.
“This was a career employee in the IRS poten-

tially who did all these
things,” Camp said after
Wednesday’s secret session. “So we have to make
sure that the signal goes
out that this doesn’t happen again.”
That’s a reasonable sentiment, and one shared by
Levin, who on Wednesday
said Lerner had been guilty
of “clear mismanagement.”
Democrats objected not
to Camp turning over
the committee’s information on Lerner, but to the
cloak-and-dagger hearing
followed by the wholesale
release of tax records.
The
AP’s
Stephen
Ohlemacher asked Camp
why he didn’t just “pick
up the phone” rather than
make private taxpayer files
public. Camp agreed that
such a release was unprecedented but said, “This is
so important that I think
the public has a right to
know.”
But the chairman’s
claims of importance were
undermined by his committee’s antics, including
its showy secrecy. Reporters, waiting out the twohour closed session in the
hallway, were treated to
Krispy Kreme doughnuts
by the committee’s staff.
But inside the room, other
staffers were unplugging
the journalists’ cables, just
to be sure nobody pierced
the veil.
When Camp reconvened
the hearing after the secret
session, cameramen called
out for him to wait as they
reassembled their equipment. Rep. Paul Ryan, RWis., complained. “Are you
guys ready?” he moaned.
But Camp waited, which
was wise. What good is a
farce if it isn’t on film?

�Tuesday, April 15, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 5

Death Notices
ABBOTT
RIPLEY, W.Va. — John
Perry Abbott, 22, of Ripley,
died Friday, April 11, 2014,
of injuries sustained in an
automobile accident in Fairplain. Services were 7 p.m.
Monday, April 14, 2014, at
Casto Funeral Home chapel in Ravenswood, W.Va.,
with the Rev. Chuck Brayer
officiating. Interment was
in Blaine Memorial Cemetery in Cottageville, W.Va.
Visitation was from 5 p.m.
until time of service at the
funeral home.
BALL
LETART, W.Va. — Grace
Carmen Ball, 92, of Letart,
died April 13, 2014, in the
Pleasant Valley Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center
in Point Pleasant, following an extended illness.
Service will be noon
Wednesday, April 16,
2014, at Casto Funeral
Home chapel in Evans,
W.Va., with the Rev. Brian
Groves, pastor of Church
of God of Prophecy in
Sand Fork, W.Va, officiating. Burial will follow in
Jackson County Memory
Gardens in Cottageville,
W.Va. Visitation will be
from 10 a.m. until time of
service at the funeral home
on Wednesday.
BOLDEN
SOUTH POINT, Ohio
— Jeffrey Brent Bolden,
52, of South Point, died
Friday, April 11, 2014, at
King’s Daughters Medical Center in Ashland, Ky.
Funeral services will be
2 p.m. Wednesday, April
16, 2014, at Hall Funeral
Home and Crematory in
Proctorville, Ohio. Burial
will follow in Good Hope
Cemetery in Crown City,
Ohio. Visitation will be 1
to 2 p.m. Wednesday, April
16, 2014, at Hall Funeral

Home and Crematory.
CALVERT
ATHENS, Ohio — Delores Calvert, 61, of Athens, died Friday, April 11,
2014, at The Ohio State
University Hospital in Columbus.
Services will be 1 p.m.
Friday, April 18, 2014, at
White-Schwarzel Funeral
Home in Coolville, Ohio,
with Pastor Gene Goodwin officiating. Burial will
be in the Fairview Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home Friday
one hour prior to service.
LUCAS
KITTS HILL, Ohio —
Joanna Rae Lucas, 74,
of Kitts Hill, Ohio, died
Sunday, April 13, 2014, at
Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House in Huntington,
W.Va. Funeral service will
be 1 p.m. Thursday, April
17, 2014, at Hall Funeral
Home and Crematory in
Proctorville, Ohio. Burial
will follow in Miller Memorial Gardens in Miller,
Ohio. Visitation will be 6
to 8 p.m. Wednesday, April
16, 2014, at Hall Funeral
Home and Crematory.
RIFFLE
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Ershel L. Riffle, 90, of New
Haven, died Sunday, April
13, 2014, at Pleasant Valley
Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center in Point Pleasant.
His family is hosting a remembrance reception from
6-8 p.m. Thursday, April
17, 2014, at the New Haven
Community Building.
WORKMAN
SPOTSYLVANIA, Va.
— Bryan Randall Workman, 38, of Spotsylvania,
formerly of Ceredo-Kenova, W.Va., passed away
Thursday, April 10, 2014,
at Spotsylvania Regional

Donors return to Crossroads,
give $5m in March
WASHINGTON (AP) —
After a stretch of anemic
fundraising, the Karl Rovebacked American Crossroads super PAC raised
more cash in March than
it did during the previous
14 months combined, according to summaries of
campaign filings released
Monday.
The GOP establishment’s favorite super PAC
raised almost $5.2 million
last month and had more
than $6.3 million in the
bank as of March 31, according to the report summary. That cash will be
used as the outside group
tries to help Republicans
pick up the six seats they
need to win control of the
Senate. American Crossroads has been running ads
supporting establishment
GOP candidates in Alaska
and North Carolina and is
expected to support former
Massachusetts Sen. Scott
Brown in his bid to unseat
Democrat Jeanne Shaheen
in New Hampshire.
“There’s been a noticeable rise in enthusiasm among our donors,”
American Crossroads chief
Steven Law said, crediting candidates challenging
Democratic incumbents.
“These numbers put us
in a solid position to continue impacting key Senate races where we can
help elect Republicans
who will clean up the mess
that President Obama and
Harry Reid are making in
Washington,” Law said in a
statement.
The uptick in donations
could signal establishmentminded Republicans are
returning to Crossroads
after a disappointing 2012
and a very quiet 2013.
Crossroads spent heavily
on races in 2012 and came
up short; 11 of the 13 Senate races where Crossroads
spent money were won by
Democrats, and GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney failed to defeat President Barack Obama.
In all, American Crossroads spent more than
$116 million between Jan
1, 2011, and Dec. 31, 2012.
The group accepts unlimited donations.
Fundraising slowed in
2013, as is often the case in
non-election years. Donors
gave American Crossroads
almost $1.9 million during the first six months of

2013, and just $1.7 million
in the six months that followed.

Medical Center.
A Celebration of Life will
take place at 11 a.m. Friday,
April 18, 2014, at Willis
Funeral Home in Gallipolis

with Pastor Alvis Pollard
officiating. Friends may
call at the funeral home
from 10-10:45 a.m. Friday.
A graveside service will fol-

low at 2 p.m. Friday at Hillcrest Cemetery in Kenova,
W.Va., with Dr. Jerry C.
Workman officiating.
In lieu of flowers, dona-

tions can be made to the college fund of his son, Derek
Workman, at BB&amp;T Bank
in Point Pleasant or at any
BB&amp;T Bank location.

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S. Wars "Pay Storage
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Battleship (2012, Sci-Fi) Alexander Skarsgard, Rhianna, Taylor Game of Thrones "The Lion Silicon
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Valley "The Choice"
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Bill Maher
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reinforcements. TVPG
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The Godfather II (1974, Drama) Robert De
There's Something About Mary ('98, Com) Cameron
The Purge ('13, Hor)
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50/ 50 ('11,
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60496351

�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

TUESDAY,
APRIL 15, 2014

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

White Falcons split DH with Spartans
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

MASON, W.Va. — You win some
and you lose some. That’s just the way
the game goes.
The Wahama baseball team split a
doubleheader with visiting Alexander
Saturday after suffering a 7-6 setback
in the opener and following with an
11-4 victory in the night cap of a nonconference twin-bill in Mason County.
The White Falcons (4-4) never led in
the opener, as the hosts trailed 4-1 after
three innings before scoring twice in the
fourth to close to within a run at 4-3.
The Spartans (4-1), however, answered with a run in the fifth and two
more in the sixth to secure a 7-3 edge
headed into the finale. WHS plated three
runs in the home half of the seventh to
again close to within a run, but the hosts
never came closer the rest of the way.
AHS outhit Wahama by a small 6-5
overall margin and left just four run-

ners on base, compared to nine by the
White Falcons. WHS also committed
all four errors in the contest.
Hunter Bradley led the hosts with
two hits, followed by Mason Hicks,
Demetrius Serevicz and Garrett Miller
with one safety apiece. Tyler Grimm
drove in a team-best two RBIs, while
Hicks, Miller and Kane Roush also
drove in a run apiece.
Howard and Harris led AHS with
two hits apiece, while McGrath and
Grigsby chipped in a safety each.
Grigsby drove in a team-best three
RBIs and McGrath added two RBIs to
the winning cause.
Both teams had a home run in the
opening contest. Miller hit his solo
homer in the seventh to pull the hosts
to within one, while Grigsby hit a solo
shot in the fifth for Alexander’s final
run of the game.
The White Falcons rebounded nicely in the night cap, as the hosts jumped
out to leads of 4-2 after one inning and

11-4 through three complete. Neither
team scored again and the game ended
after six innings of play.
Wahama was outhit 8-6 in the finale,
but the hosts stranded only four baserunners — compared to 11 by the Spartans. Alexander also committed four of
the seven errors in the contest.
Garrett Miller paced WHS with two
hits and four RBIs, while Hicks, Bradley, Wyatt Zuspan and Wesley Harrison
also added a safety apiece to the winning cause. Hicks also drove in two
RBIs, while Bradley and Roush each
scored twice in the triumph.
Linder paced AHS with three hits
and scored twice, while McGrath
chipped in two hits. Russell drove in a
team-best two RBIs in the setback.
Zuspan was the winning pitcher of
record in Game 2 after allowing four
runs, eight hits and three walks over
six innings while striking out six. Hicks
also hit a two-run homer in the bottom
of the first inning to tie the game at two.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Point Pleasant sophomore Karissa Cochran releases a pitch
during a Friday, April 11 softball contest against Logan in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.

Lady Knights split
DH at Magnolia
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

NEW MARTINSVILLE,
W.Va. — The Point Pleasant softball team finished
with a .500 record Saturday
afternoon during a pair of
non-conference games at
the Magnolia Tournament
in Wetzel County.
The
Lady
Knights
claimed a 2-0 victory over
Edison in their first contest, but then dropped a
2-1 decision to Musselman
in the finale. PPHS fell to
9-5 overall this season with
the split decisions.
Karissa Cochran went
seven innings against EHS
for the win, allowing just
two hits and a walk while
striking out 13. Point
Pleasant outhit the Lady
Wildcats by an 8-2 overall
margin, while Edison also
had the only error in the
game.
Cochran delivered a
double in the fourth and
Megan Hamond singled
her home for a 1-0 lead,
then Hamond walked to
start the seventh and later
scored on a single by Payton Fetty — wrapping up
the 2-0 decision.
Cochran and Hamond
each had two hits for the
victors, while Fetty, Rebekah Darst, Makinley

Higginbotham and Michaela Cottrill added a safety
apiece.
The Lady Knights left six
on base and EHS stranded
four on the bags. Stewart
had both safeties for the
hosts.
PPHS led briefly in the
top of the second of Game
2, but Musselman rallied
with a run in its half of the
second for a one-all contest. The Lady Applemen
scored the game-winner in
the fifth after a two-out error allowed Victoria Butler
to reach third, then Haley
Fischer singled home Butler for the 2-1 advantage.
Both teams had five hits
and PPHS committed two
of the three errors in the
game. The Lady Knights
left eight on base and MHS
stranded six. Cochran took
the loss after allowing one
runs and two hits over
three innings of relief while
striking out seven.
Fetty, Darst, Higginbotham, Hamond and Cami
Hesson each had a hit in
the setback. Hesson had
the lone RBI for the Lady
Knights and Hamond
scored the team’s only run.
Butler, Fischer, Sabrina
Shroades, Ashley Bentley
and Kelcie Jenkins each
had safety for the victors.

OVP Sports Schedule

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

River Valley junior Ramsey Warren, right, distances herself away from the pack during a running of the 100-meter
dash at OVB Track and Field in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Winfield girls, Cabell Midland boys win Paul Wood Invitational
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — The
Cabell Midland boys and Winfield girls
came away with top honors Saturday
at the 2014 Paul Wood Track and Field
Invitational held at Ohio Valley Bank
Track and Field on the campus of Point
Pleasant Junior-Senior High School in
Mason County.
The Scarlet Knights scored 122 points
and posted a four-point victory over Winfield (118) in the boys division, while the
Lady Generals scored 166 points en route
to a 56-point triumph over second place
Hurricane (110) in the girls competition.
There were 18 events in each division,
with 13 girls teams and 11 boys team taking part in the annual competition.
Gallia Academy led the locals in the
girls division by placing third overall
with 79.5 points, while River Valley
(50) and Point Pleasant (43.5) respectively placed fourth and fifth. Ohio Valley Christian was eighth overall with 17
points, while Wahama tied two other
teams for 11th place with one point.
See INVITATIONAL | 10

Tuesday, April 15
Baseball
Southern at River Valley, 5 p.m.
East Chester at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Trimble, 5 p.m.
Softball
Southern at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Roane County at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Trimble, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg South, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Oak Hill, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
River Valley, Gallia Academy at South Gallia, 4:30
Meigs at Jackson, 4:30
Hannan, Wahama at Point Pleasant, 4:30
Eastern at Vinton County, 4 p.m.
Tennis
Marietta at Gallia Academy, 4:30
Huntington St. Joe at Point Pleasant, 4:30
Wednesday, April 16
Baseball
Warren at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Wahama at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Chapmanville at Point Pleasant, 6:30
Southern vs. White Oak at URG, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Coal Grove, 5 p.m.
Softball
Warren at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Wahama at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Southern at Roane County, 5 p.m.
Hannan at Cabell Midland JV (DH), 5:30
Eastern at Trimble, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Coal Grove, 5 p.m.
Tennis
Valley at Gallia Academy, 4:30
Point Pleasant at Huntington St. Joe, 4:30

Point Pleasant junior Noah Morgan releases a throw during the
shot put event at OVB Track and Field in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Lady Vikings take two from RVHS
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

CHESHIRE, Ohio — It wasn’t for
a lack of offense.
The River Valley softball team
scored 22 runs in 17 innings Saturday afternoon, but visiting Vinton
County still claimed a doubleheader
sweep with decisions of 13-9 and 1813 during a pair of non-conference
matchups in Gallia County.
The host Lady Raiders (2-6) never
owned a lead in either contest, as
the Lady Vikings (2-5) stormed out
to a 10-3 advantage through three innings of the opener and never looked
back. RVHS closed to within 13-7
through four complete and tacked on
two more in the sixth, but ultimately
never came closer the rest of the way.
VCHS outhit the hosts by a 13-10
margin in Game 1, with each squad
hitting three home runs apiece in the
opener. Vinton County committed
two errors and stranded 10 on base,
while the Lady Raiders committed
four errors and left four on the bags.
Allen was the winning pitcher of
record after allowing one walk over
seven innings while striking out five.
Bethany Gilbert took the loss after
surrendering nine runs and a walk

over 2.2 innings while fanning six.
Chelsea Copley led RVHS with
three hits — two of which were
home runs — and team-highs of four
RBIs and three runs scored.
Libby Leach and Cori Williams
were next with two safeties apiece,
with Leach also hitting a home run
in the setback. Amanda Eddy, Katie
Mares and Bethany Gilbert also had
a hit each for the hosts.
Owings and Womeldorf each had
three hits to lead the Lady Vikings.
Owings hit two homers and four
RBIs, while Womeldorf had a homer
as well. Ward, Park and Allen each
had two hits for the victors.
Both teams were tied at one
through two innings of Game 2, but
VCHS plated four runs in the third
and five more in the fourth for a sizable 10-1 lead through four complete.
The Lady Raiders, however, answered with seven runs in the sixth
to close to within 10-8, then outscored the Lady Vikings 3-1 in the
seventh to force extra innings by tying the game at 11.
Both teams plated two runs apiece
in the eighth for a 13-all affair, but
Vinton County scored five times in
the top of the 10th to wrap up the
sweep with the five-run triumph.

There were a total of eight home
runs in the finale, six of which were
blasted out by the guests. VCHS outhit River Valley by a 14-12 overall
margin and committed seven of the
dozen errors in Game 2. The hosts
also stranded 11 runners on base,
compared to nine by the Lady Vikings.
Ward was the winning pitchers
after walking seven and fanning five
over 10 frames, while Gilmore suffered the loss after issuing five walks
and striking out two over three innings.
Bethany Gilbert led RVHS with
three hits and four RBIs, which included a three-run homer in the
seventh to tie the game at 11. Katie
Mares also had a three-run homer
and two hits totals while driving in
three.
Alexis Hurt and Libby Leach also
had two hits apiece in the setback,
while Gilmore, Chelsea Copley and
Cori Williams chipped in a safety
each.
Owings led VCHS with four hits,
five RBIs and four runs scored,
thanks in large part to three homers
in the triumph. Park and Thomas
also had two hits each, which included a home run apiece.

�Tuesday, April 15, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 7

Lady Tornadoes sweep Wahama in twinbill
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

HARTFORD, W.Va. — A win
is a win and a loss is a loss, regardless of the score.
The Southern softball team
earned a pair of Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division victories on Friday evening, with a
15-1 win in game one and a 4-3
triumph in game two.
The Lady Tornadoes (5-2, 5-1
TVC Hocking) got things going
in the opening game with five
runs in the first inning on the
strength of five hits.
Wahama (1-11, 1-4) cut into
the SHS lead with a run in the
second inning but Southern

countered with two in the top
of the third. Over the final two
innings Southern scored nine
runs, while holding the Lady Falcons without a baserunner and
the Lady Tornadoes claimed the
15-1 triumph.
Jordan Huddleston earned the
pitching victory after allowing
just one run on three hits and
a walk, while striking out four.
Taylor McGrew suffered the loss
for Wahama.
The Southern offensive attack was led by Cierra Turley
and Ali Deem with three hits
apiece, followed by Baylee Hupp
and Jordan Huddleston with two
hits each. Caitlyn Holter, Darien

Meigs competes
at Mingo Relays
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

LOGAN, Ohio — Lady Marauders take seventh, MHS
boys finish eighth at Mingo Relays at Logan high school.
The girls team competition was won by Fairfield Union
with 110.5 points, followed by Logan (97) and Warren
(80). Athens was fourth (78.5), Unioto was fifth (72),
Marietta finsihed sixth (51), Meigs was seventh (24) and
Nelsonville-York rounded out the field (23).
The Lady Marauders won the 1600m sprint medley
with a time of 4:49.31 posted by Adrianna Rowe, Morgan Russell, Gracie Hoffman and Haley Kennedy. The
Meigs 4x100m relay team of Morgan Russell, Amanda
Cole, Adrianna Rowe and Keira McCourt posted a time of
1:16.69, good enough for third.
The boys team winner was Logan with 123 points, followed by Unioto (97), Warren (86) and Fairfield Union
(66). Marietta was fifth (52), Athens and NelsonvilleYorker were sixth (46), and Meigs rounded out the eight
team field (25).
The Marauders were second in the 4x1600m realy with
a time of 21:00 by the team of Jake Swindell, Brandon
Mahr, Mitchell Howard and Dillon Mahr, while the Meigs
4x100m relay team of Nate Hoover, Devon Cundiff, Jordan
Hutton and Isaiah English was fourth with a time of 47.48.
Complete results of the Mingo Relays can be found online at www.baumspage.com

Diddle and Autumn Porter each
marked one hit in the win.
Turley scored four runs for the
Purple and Gold, Huddleston
crossed the plate three times,
while Hannah Hill, Hupp, and
Diddle each scored twice. Deem
and Holter each scored two runs,
while Hupp led the team with
three runs batted in. Autumn
Porter drove home two runs,
while Hannah Hill and Diddle
each had and RBI.
Elisabeth Hendrick, Darian
Weaver and Taylor McGrew each
had a hit, while Weaver had the
lone WHS score.
The second game was scoreless through three innings and

Wahama took the one run advantage in the top of the fourth.
Southern countered in the home
half of the fourth with two runs,
but the Lady Falcons retook the
lead with two scores in the top of
the fourth. The Purple and Gold
tied the game in the bottom of
the sixth to tie the game, while
Hannah Hill scored the winning
run on Darien Diddle’s walkoff in
the seventh.
Huddleston took the win after throwing 2 innings in relief
in which she allowed one hit and
struck out one. Turley was given
a no decision after allowing three
runs on eight hits and two walks
in five innings, while striking out

one. Shaylin Greer suffered the
loss for Wahama after allowing
four runs on 10 hits and two walks.
The Lady Tornado offense was
led by Hupp, Diddle and Hannah
Hill with two hits each, followed
by Deem, Holter, Autumn Porter
and Haley Hill each had one hit.
Hupp and Diddle each had an
RBI, while Holter, Hannah Hill,
Hupp and Turley each scored.
Wahama’s offense was led by
Weaver, Morgan Harrison and
Sierra Carmichael with two hits
each, while Greer, Cynthia Hendrick and Karson Tolliver each
had one hit. Carmichael, Harrison and Weaver each scored for
the Red and White.

White Falcons soar past Southern, 14-6
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

MASON, W.Va. — The longball
is nice but sometimes it takes
more than just homeruns to win
games.
The Wahama baseball team surrendered two homeruns Friday
night but still managed to defeated Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division guest Southern by a
count of 14-6.
The White Falcons (3-3, 3-1
TVC Hocking) scored first in the
home half of the opening inning
when Kane Roush crossed the
plate on the Wesley Harrison double. Southern (3-3, 3-2) answered
in the top of the second with four
runs, highlighted by the two-run
homerun off the bat of Hunter
Johnson.
Mason Hicks led off the Wahama third inning with a solo homerun, cutting the deficit to 4-2.
Three Tornado errors helped the
White Falcons score seven runs in

the bottom of the fourth and take
the convincing 9-4 lead.
The Purple and Gold trimmed
the deficit to three runs with a
Trenton Deem two run homerun
in the top of the fifth, but Wahama
scored three in the fifth to extend
the lead to 12-6. The White Falcons added two runs in the sixth
inning to seal the 14-6 win.
Garrett Miller earned the pitching victory after allowing six runs,
two earned, on seven hits and one
walk. Miller hit four batters and
struck out four.
The losing pitcher of record
was Colten Walters, who threw
3.2 innings and allowed nine runs,
eight earned, on seven hits, two
walks and one hit batter. Brandon
Moodispaugh pitched 1.2 innings
and surrendered five runs, three
earned, on four hits and three
walks, while Blake Johnson threw
1.2 innings and allowed one walk.
Walters struck out six batters,
while Moodispaugh and Johnson
both fanned two.

The White Falcon offense was
led by Hunter Bradley Mason
Hicks, Wesley Harrison, Demetrius Serevicz and Tyler Grimm
with two hits each, while Kane
Roush had one. Roush scored
three times, while Hicks, Zuspan
and Grimm each crossed the plate
twice and Serevicz, Bradley, Ryan
Thomas, Kristopher Clark and
Jared Oliver each scored once.
Harrison drove in four runs,
Hicks brought home two, while
Roush, Zuspan, Serevicz, Bradley
and Grimm each added one RBI.
The Tornadoes were led by
Hunter Johnson with two hits,
followed by Trenton Deem, Paul
Ramthun, Colten Walters, Blake
Johnson and Zac Beegle with
one each. Hunter Johnson scored
twice, while Deem, Walters, Blake
Johnson and Beegle all scored one
run. Deem and Hunter Johnson
had two RBIs each, while Beegle
had one.
These teams will meet again on
May 2, in Racine.

Rio Grande softball splits doubleheader with St. Catharine
By Randy Payton
Special to OVP

ST. CATHARINE, Ky. — Jenna
Jones tossed a complete game fivehitter and Kim Rollins drove in a
pair of runs to lead the University
of Rio Grande to a game two win
and a doubleheader split St. Catharine College, Saturday afternoon,
in Mid-South Conference softball
action at Salt River Electric Field.
The RedStorm posted a 5-2 win
in the back end of the twinbill after

the Patriots posted a 7-2 victory in
the opener. The two teams also
divided their doubleheader in Rio
Grande last month.
The split left Rio Grande at 2011 overall and 12-8 in the MSC,
while St. Catharine finished the
day at 12-21 overall and 8-16 in
league play.
Jones, a freshman from Lancaster, Ohio, allowed just a first inning
RBI single by Taylor Steff and a
solo home run by Krystal Cammuse en route to her 11th win in 19

decisions. The right-hander walked
one and struck out three, while
helping her own cause at the plate
with a fifth inning sacrifice fly.
Rollins, a sophomore from Cincinnati, Ohio, sealed the win with
a two-run double in the seventh
inning, while freshman Cheyenne
Hamaker (Hilliard, OH) and junior
Haley Gwin (Troy, OH) added two
hits each. Junior Jessi Robinson
(Wilmington, OH) and Hamaker
both scored two runs each.
Cammuse had two hits in the

loss for the Patriots, while Brittany McKee started and took the
loss inside the pitcher’s circle.
In the opener, St. Catharine
took a 1-0 lead in the second inning thanks to an RBI double by
McKee, before adding two runs in
the third inning and four runs in
the sixth on a Brandi Hood grand
slam home run.
Rio Grande, which managed just
one hit off of Cammuse through
the first six innings, avoided a
shutout in the seventh when Jones

doubled, moved to third on a
passed ball and scored on a throwing error. Two outs later, Gwin hit
her third home run of the year.
McKee had a pair of doubles to
the St. Catharine offensive attack.
Cammuse improved to 4-9 with
the victory, while Jones started
and went the distance in the loss
for the RedStorm.
Rio Grande returns to action on
Sunday at Campbellsville University. First pitch is set for 2 p.m.

Tigers hold off Rio Grande rally but nip RedStorm

By Randy Payton
Special to OVP

CAMPBELLSVILLE, Ky. — Campbellsville University methodically built a four-run
lead and then held off a late rally by the University of Rio Grande for a 4-3 win, Saturday
night, in Mid-South Conference baseball action at HIG Field.
The Tigers, who eliminated Rio Grande
from last year’s MSC Tournament, won for
the sixth straight time and improved to 2214 overall and 11-7 in the MSC.
The RedStorm slipped to 17-23 overall
and 4-15 in league play with the loss - their
11th setback by two runs or less among the
15 conference losses.

Campbellsville scored single markers in
the second, third, fifth and eighth innings
to back a solid pitching performance from
starter Brett DeRooy, who took a five-hit
shutout into the ninth inning.
Rio Grande shaved the deficit to one in
the ninth by scoring three times on five hits,
but T.R. Dunne came on to record the final
out for his second save of the season.
Jaime Valle had a run-scoring single in
the second inning and a throwing error in
the third gave the Tigers a 2-0 lead, before
Alex Kline added an RBI single in the sixth
and Steve Ferraro plated what proved to be
a big insurance run with a pinch-hit single
in the home half of the eighth.
Rio more than made it interesting in the ninth.

Sophomores Chris Ford (Athens, OH)
and Kirk Yates (Chillicothe, OH) opened
the inning with back-to-back singles and
both scored on a double by freshman Luis
Jimenez (Salinas, Puerto Rico), who was
thrown out at third trying to stretch the hit
into a triple.
Freshman Daryin Lewis (Circleville, OH)
followed with a single to right-center and,
one out later, moved to second on a single
by junior Kevin Arroyo (Toa Baja, Puerto
Rico). DeRooy was lifted in favor of Dunne,
who surrendered a grounder to third off
the bat of junior Grant Tamane (Pickering,
Ontario, Canada) which was errored, with
Lewis scoring and Arroyo and Tamane ending up at third and second, respectively.

Dunne then struck out senior Marcus
Makuch (Baltimore, OH) to end both the
threat and the game.
Tamane had three hits and Yates finished
2-for-4 to lead Rio Grande at the plate in the
loss. Senior Mike Deitsch (Cincinnati, OH)
took the loss in a route-going performance
on the mound.
Kline had three hits, while Carlos Torres
had two hits and scored twice for Campbellsville.
DeRooy allowed 10 hits and three runs two of which were earned - while walking
one and striking out 12 to get the win.
The two teams will conclude the weekend series with a doubleheader on Sunday
beginning at 1 p.m.

Bubba Watson wins another green jacket at Augusta
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) —
One of golf’s most exciting
players squeezed most of
the drama out of the Masters on Sunday. That’s just
fine with Bubba Watson.
All he cared about was
slipping into that green
jacket.
Instead of hitting a 40yard hook out of a forest
of Georgia pines — the
signature shot in his playoff victory two years ago
— the final act Sunday
at Augusta National took
place on the 18th green.
Watson had a three-shot
lead and consulted with
his caddie on a 15-foot
birdie putt.
“I went over to him and
I said, ‘I’m not very good
at math, but we’ve got
four putts, right?’” Watson said.
This was more about
great golf than Bubba
golf.
Watson kept his poise
during an early burst of
birdies from 20-year-old
Jordan Spieth, turned
the tournament in his
favor with consecutive
two-shot swings to close
out the front nine, and
coasted to a 3-under 69 to

win the Masters by three
shots over Spieth and Jonas Blixt of Sweden.
“Small-town guy named
Bubba now has two green
jackets,” Watson said.
“It’s pretty wild.”
Watson made it look
routine over the final
hour. On a Sunday when
Spieth was trying to become the youngest winner in Masters history and
50-year-old Miguel Angel
Jimenez had a chance to
become the oldest major
champion, Watson turned
in another masterpiece
and joined an elite group
as the 17th player to win
multiple Masters.
Surprisingly for Augusta, the most compelling action was on the front nine.
His only nervous moment was a drive so mammoth around the corner
on the 13th hole that it
clipped a few trees and
still went some 360 yards,
leaving just a sand wedge
into the par 5. That was
his lone birdie on the back
nine. No one got closer
than three shots the rest of
the way.
“The shot out of the
woods made me famous,”

Watson said. “But this one
was a lot better for me and
my nerves.”
This was nothing like
the Masters he won two
years ago, especially when
it was over.
His wife and newly
adopted son were home
in Florida in 2012 when
Watson made four straight
birdies on the back nine
and won on the second
playoff hole with his great
escape out of the trees.
When he tapped in for
par on 18, there was 2-yearold Caleb — decked out in
a green-and-white striped
Masters shirt and green
tennis shoes — walking
Jeff Siner | Charlotte Observer | MCT
toward him. Watson had
tears streaming down his Bubba Watson hits his ball from a sand trap along the 10th green during The Masters golf
face when he scooped him tournament at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Ga., Sunday, April 13. Watson won the
up, a prize as great as the tournament.
green jacket.
“Seeing him back there a year ago.
bunker on No. 4, and mak- first 6 on his card all week
… what an amazing feeling
“After giving it away last ing back-to-back birdies — as Watson got up-andas a parent,” he said. “And year, I wanted it back,” to build a two-shot lead down for birdie to tie
then throw on the green Watson said. “I told Adam through seven holes. Bid- for the lead. Spieth then
jacket on top of it just we could just swap it back ding to become the first made a rookie mistake,
changes everything.”
player in 35 years to win a leaving his approach beAfter high-fiving the and forth every year.”
green jacket in his first try, low the flagstick on No. 9
Spieth
could
only
watch
crowd on his way to sign
Spieth looked to be well on and watching it roll back
from
the
side
of
the
green.
his card, Watson returned
into the fairway, setting
He dazzled the massive his way.
to Butler Cabin to take
But he three-putted for up another bogey and
back that green jacket after crowd early by holing out
slipping it on Adam Scott for birdie from the front bogey on No. 8 — the two-shot swing.

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

PUBLIC NOTICE

LEGALS

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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 at 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,
BuildingMiscellaneous
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
Too
Much
notice.(04),08,09,10,11,15

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 at 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 LEGALS
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
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Ronan leads
RedStorm at All-Ohio
By Randy Payton
Special to OVP

CINCINNATI, Ohio — Charlie Ronan had a pair of top
15 finishes, while Kyle Sanborn had a sixth place finish to
lead the University of Rio Grande at the All-Ohio Track &amp;
Field Championships hosted by the University of Cincinnati.
Ronan, a freshman from Cincinnati, Ohio, placed 11th
in the men’s 100m dash with a time of 11.01 and was 15th
in the 200m dash with a time of 22.92.
Sanborn, a sophomore from Dover, Ohio, took sixth
in the men’s 800m run after crossing the finish line in
1:55.37.
Rio Grande, which finished 14th in the men’s team
competition, also got a seventh place finish from freshman Brandon Ray (Columbus, OH) in the men’s triple
jump with a leap of 11.79m and a seventh place showing
in the men’s 4x400 relay with a time of 3:40.23. The foursome was comprised of Sanborn, sophomore Tim Warner
(Pomeroy, OH), freshman Aaron Evancho (Zanesville,
OH) and freshman Adrian Shields (Fleming, OH).
Other top 15 showings for the RedStorm were provided
by senior Kaleb Kimber (Salisbury, NC), who was 10th in
the men’s high jump with a leap of 1.89m; freshman Issac
Andrews (Nelsonville, OH), who was 12th in the men’s
shot put with a toss of 13.38m; and freshman Austin Wilson (Gallipolis, OH), who was 13th in the men’s 100m
dash with a time of 11.19.
Rio also got a 12th place finish from its women’s 4x400
relay team, who finished in 4:24.62. The quartet included
freshman Shelby Pickens (Racine, OH), freshman Katie
Glover (Ashville, OH), freshman Alex Ellis (Ona, WV)
and freshman Clarrisa Johnson (Hillsboro, OH).
Akron won the men’s team title with 205 points, with
Cincinnati (138) and Miami-Ohio (129.5) rounding out
the top three.
Akron also won the women’s title with 199 points, with
Cincinnati (109.5) and Miami-Ohio (97) completing the
top three.
Rio Grande returns to action on April 25 in the MidSouth Conference Championships at the University of the
Cumberlands.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

TD runs by Dunn, Ball lift Gray past Scarlet
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
With several of his best players
either injured or held out of Ohio
State’s spring game, coach Urban
Meyer had to look at the progress
of individuals instead of the big
picture.
“I’m not trying to evaluate an
offense. Who cares?” Meyer said
after the Gray squad slipped by
the Scarlet 17-7 on Saturday before a crowd of 61,058 at sunny
Ohio Stadium. “There’s guys out
there who will never play or are
not ready to play now. I wanted to
see who’s going to compete, who’s
going to make plays, not who’s going to fit into the team concept.
Because we all know what we saw
out there. And that’s not the Ohio
State Buckeyes. That’s a bunch of
people all over the place.”
Bri’onte Dunn and Warren Ball
ran for touchdowns to lead the
Gray squad on a day in which
most of the most notable Buckeyes stayed on the sidelines.
Quarterback Braxton Miller,
Ohio State’s All-Big Ten quarterback, sat out spring workouts after surgery on his (right) throwing shoulder. Wide receiver Evan
Spencer (ankle) and safety Vonn
Bell (knee) also missed the game,
along with tight end Jeff Heuerman, wide-out Jalin Marshall, Hback Dontre Wilson and starting
offensive tackle Taylor Decker.
“You have the first-team offense
playing together the whole spring
and they’re jelling together. When
you mix it up like we did today,
it’s hard to get used to,” said tight

end Nick Vannett. “Offensively
you need to have that mesh to
move the ball down field and
make plays. And as you saw, we
had a tough day.”
Down by three points, Scarlet
had a prime chance to take the
lead on the first play of the fourth
quarter but wide receiver Corey
Smith, on an end around, fumbled
through the end zone for a touchback.
Ball then scored on a 4-yard run
with 4:30 left to close the scoring.
He led all rushers with 55 yards
on eight carries, Dunn had 35 on
six and Ezekiel Elliott, expected
to have the inside track at the tailback position when camp resumes
in August, had 16 yards on only
three attempts.
Gray quarterback J.T. Barrett, a
redshirt freshman, completed 17
of 33 passes for 155 yards without
a touchdown. Scarlet quarterback
Cardale Jones was 14 of 31 for
126 yards.
“It was pretty cool,” said Jones,
a redshirt junior, of his first real
chance to play an extended period. “I’ve been waiting for a long
time and I’ve still got work to do
to enhance my abilities.”
The Buckeyes lose four starters
on defense and six on offense from
a 12-2 team that won a schoolrecord 24 games in a row before
losing the Big Ten championship
game to Michigan State 34-24 and
the Orange Bowl to Clemson 4035.
The crowd dwindled after
halftime on a day with tempera-

tures in the mid-70s.
Miller stood on the field behind
the offenses watching the play
close up, a mobile camera on his
hat.
Gray led 10-7 at the half, with
Barrett — who got off to a rocky
start — leading the charge to all
10 points.
On the Gray’s first snap, Barrett
was hit by lineman Rashad Frazier, knocking the ball loose in the
end zone. Frazier then tracked the
ball down and fell on it for a quick
7-0 Scarlet lead.
Whether it was the fault of spotty offense or having turned the
corner after an abysmal finish a
year ago, the defense played well.
Safety Tyvis Powell credited a
simplified game plan.
“It’s more condensed. The playbook isn’t that wide right now. We
only have, like, six calls. But today
we were very basic, we only had
two calls,” he said.
Powell was asked how many
calls there were by the defense a
year ago when the unit was getting savaged for 38.3 points and
539 yards in the last three games
last season.
“Too many,” he said.
While Scarlet’s offense faltered
— it was forced to punt on its
first three possessions of the half
and ran out of down on the fourth
— the Gray squad drove from its
own 48 to a 36-yard field goal by
freshman Sean Nuernberger.
Barrett led the Gray on an 80yard drive early in the second quarter, capped by Dunn’s 2-yard run.

Millard throws two TD passes in WVU’s spring game
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP) — Rotating three
quarterbacks during West
Virginia’s spring practices
while Clint Trickett mends
from offseason shoulder
surgery did nothing to help
coach Dana Holgorsen
come closer to sorting out
the unstable position.
That will have to wait

until fall camp.
Paul Millard threw two
touchdown passes and
West Virginia wrapped up
its spring work as the offense beat the defense 3727 on Saturday.
West Virginia went 4-8
overall last season, including 2-7 in the Big 12. Three
quarterbacks combined to

throw for 16 touchdowns
and 16 interceptions with
a combined average of 264
yards per game.
Millard, who started
three games last fall before being relegated to a
backup role, completed
14 of 19 passes for 129
yards Saturday in rotating
with junior college transfer

Skyler Howard and Logan
Moore, who was moved to
quarterback this spring.
Recruit William Crest
will join Trickett, who
started seven games last
year, and the others when
practice starts in August.
Mario Alford returned
the opening kickoff 99
yards for a touchdown, but
Holgorsen was disappointed that Alford and some
other offensive playmakers
didn’t get more work.
“We need to get those
guys the ball a little more.
I was disappointed with
that,” Holgorsen said.
“Once we get settled on a
quarterback; that will help.
When you’re rotating quarterbacks and you’re playing a bunch of different
people, it’s hard to get in a
rhythm.”
“So obviously that is

going to have to be something that we focus on all
summer and as quickly as
we can in August to let
them develop a relationship with all those guys.”
Alford isn’t worried
about the uncertainty at
quarterback.
“It’s not a big issue,” he
said. “You have to make
plays when the ball comes
to you and adjust to the
quarterback, and then
you’ll be pretty good.”
Jordan Thompson led all
receivers with 57 yards on
four receptions, while Kevin White had five catches
for 42 yards and a score.
Daikiel Shorts and K.J. Myers had four catches apiece.
Dustin
Garrison,
plagued by injuries the
past two seasons, led a
crowded group of running
backs with 47 yards on

10 carries. Wendell Smallwood added 45 yards and
Pittsburgh transfer Rushel
Shell ran for 42. Two others expected to be in the
mix in the fall, Andrew
Buie and Dreamius Smith,
didn’t get a carry.
Josh Lambert kicked
three field goals, including
a 53-yarder.
The defense earned
points based on specific
achievements, and Holgorsen liked what he saw
from unit that has been the
team’s biggest problem the
past two seasons.
The “first-team defense
played excellent, so I started to take a lot of those
guys out,” Holgorsen said.
“Once we started taking
those guys out, offensively,
we moved the ball a little
bit, which as a head coach
is what you want to see.”

Invitational
From Page 6
GAHS senior Hannah Watts was one of
only two local females to win an event title, doing so twice in both the 400m dash
(59.33) and 800m run (2:20.40). Mary
Watts was also second in the 1600m run
with a mark of 5:53.29.
Madie Oiler was third in the 300m hurdles with a time of 52.13 seconds, while
Haleigh Caldwell placed third in the pole
vault with an even height of 8 feet. Taylor Queen was also third in the long jump
with a leap of 15 feet, 1.25 inches.
Elizabeth Holley was fourth in the
3200m run with a time of 14:35.26. The
4x400m relay team was second with a
time of 4:26.18, while both the 4x100m relay (55.55) and 4x800m relay (11:10.68)
squads respectively placed third for
GAHS.
Ramsey Warren led the Lady Raiders
with a second place finish in the 100m
dash (13.49) and a third place effort in the
200m dash (28.20). Rachael Smith was
also third in the 100m dash with a mark of
13.77 seconds.
RVHS placed second in both the
4x100m (53.05) and 4x200m (1:54.00)
relays, while the 4x102.5 shuttle hurdles
relay squad placed fourth overall with a
mark of 1:22.75.
Aislyn Hayman scored an event title for
PPHS in the discus with a heave of 117
feet, 2 inches and also placed second in
the shot put with a throw of 32 feet, 2
inches.
Whitney Layton was second in the discus (95-5) and fourth in the shot put (318), while Morgan Roush was third in both
the shot put (31-10) and discus (95-4)
event for the Lady Knights.
Bekah Sargent also scored a fourth

place finish for OVCS with a time of 13.89
seconds in the 100m dash.
On the boys side of things, Gallia Academy led the locals with a third place finish
with 91 points. River Valley was eighth
overall with 22 points, while Point Pleasant (17) and Wahama (4) respectively finished ninth and 10th overall.
The Blue Devils had the only two event
champions from the OVP area. Logan Allison won the long jump (21-3) and also finished third in the high jump (5-10), while
Jacob Click won the 110m hurdles with a
mark of 16.06 seconds. Click also placed
second in both the 200m dash (23.47) and
the long jump (20-8.25).
Quenton McKinniss was third in both
the 110m hurdles (17.30) and 300m hurdles (45.42), and also placed fourth overall in the pole vault with a cleared height
of 11 feet, 6 inches.
Winston Wade was fourth in the 400m
dash (54.82) and also fourth in the 800m
run (2:06.21). Wes Jarrell also placed
fourth in the high jump with a leap of 5
feet, 10 inches.
The Blue Devils were third in both the
4x400m relay (3:41.28) and 4x800m relay
(9:13.25). GAHS also placed fourth in the
4x100m relay with a mark of 46.74 seconds.
Andrew Moffett paced the Raiders
with a third place effort in the 100m dash
(11.83), while the 4x200m relay squad finished third with a mark of 1:38.25.
Noah Morgan led the host Big Blacks
by finishing second in the shot put with
a throw of 45 feet, 9 inches. The PPHS
4x100m relay squad also placed third with
a time of 46.69 seconds.
Complete results of the 2014 Paul Wood
Invitational are available on the web at
runwv.com

Find us online, anytime at:
www.mydailysentinel.com
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