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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

We don’t want
you to swim in the
river... Page 4

Thunderstorms.
High near 69. Low
around 38... Page 2

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SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Local spring sports
action... Page 5

Linda Sue Crump, 62
Nancy Douglas, 81
Adria E. Eblen, 93
James Haggerty, 83

TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 2014

Vol. 64, No. 62

Connie S. Miracle, 65
Vivian K. Moore, 87
Ricky A. Thomas, 55
Jerry W. Starcher, 63
Lawrence Wolfe, 7
50 cents daily

Resolution on Highway Patrol practices passed
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — A resolution calling for the Ohio State Highway
Patrol to discontinue practices
of “setting up speed traps inside
corporation limits — sometimes
on county roads, and even within
villages” — was passed by members of the Racine Grange at a
recent meeting.
In a report on the meeting
from Keith Ashley, legislative
agent for the Grange, it was stated that for the Ohio State Highway Patrol to work within village
corporation limits is a “waste of
taxpayers money since all the villages have police officers.”
Members also discussed infor-

mation on the laws of the state
that, according to Ashley, say
there is no such thing as a “vehicular accident” — that when
an accident is investigated by
the Ohio Highway Patrol, they
have to issue a citation no matter
what. Members reportedly cited
instances in which innocent drivers were allegedly ticketed for
this reason. The Grange voted to
ask for a change in Ohio law to
end the practice of “requiring a
traffic citation at every vehicular
mishap,” Ashley said.
A discussion on the current
waste in the federal government occurred at the meeting, where it was
pointed out by the legislative agent
that under federal law, “any money

allotted in the federal budget must
be completely spent by the end
of the fiscal year causing federal
bureaucracies to rush in the last
month of the fiscal year to spend
any money remaining — often
wasting it.” The members voted to
ask for a change in federal law to
stop the requirement of spending
all money budgeted to federal agencies, except the military.
Three new members were
voted into membership and will
be inducted at the April meeting.
At that meeting a baking contest
will also be held.
The Grange youth recently
took a trip to an Ohio University hockey game. The Grange is
looking at the possibility of one

of its youth members participating as a trumpet girl in the 7th
degree at National Grange session in November.
The agriculture chairman reported that the national farm bill
has been passed, but that details
have not been released. A recent
study found that bumblebees
are now experiencing the same
deadly disease that is causing
colony collapse. This puts crops
that need pollination in danger, it
was reported. Also it was noted
that Asian carp are almost to the
Great Lakes. These fish kill all
the rest of the fish, and fishing is
important to the Great Lakes.
It was announced that Josephine Hill received the Degree of

Pomona recently. The degree will
be given again at Star Grange in
September for those that need it
to get the higher degrees.
After months of waiting, the
Ohio Auditor’s Office has finally
granted Racine Grange an exemption on real estate taxes. Thanks
were extended to the Meigs
County auditor, Mary Dyer-Hill,
for her help in getting this done.
The grange will now begin working on its incorporation.
A card was sent to the Reiber
family. Members welcomed twoday old Lynn Elaine Yost, daughter of Stephen and Samantha
Yost, to her first meeting. There
will be a potluck dinner prior to
the April Grange meeting.

Southern students participating in the Math and Scienve Olympaid were, left to right, front, Parker Corbitt, Avery King, Valerie Ritchart, Phoenix Cleland and Sydney Roush; middle row,
Joe Cornell, Riley Roush, Cameron Gruesser, Miranda Greenlee,
Randy Moore, David Dunfee, Austin McKibben, Erin Lisle and
Megan Edwards; and back Mallory Johnson, Hannah Evans,
Marissa Brooker, Madison Lisle, Tori Chaney, Sydney Cleland,
Andee Hill, Emily Phillips, Julia Montgomery and Jonah Hoback.
Not pictured were Connor Thomas and Courtney Ginther.

Southern students score
at Science Olympaid

Submitted photos

Accompanying Darien Diddle to the recognition ceremony held in Columbus were family members, from the left, her
grandmother Linda Diddle, (Darien), her mother, Gina Diddle, and her other grandmother, Sharon McClellan.

Southern student awarded Franklin B. Walter award
RACINE — The Ohio Educational Service Center Association
recognized 82 of Ohio’s top students from across the state during
the
25th annual Franklin B. Walter
All-Scholastic Awards program
April 9 in Columbus.
Darien Diddle, a senior at
Southern High School, was the
Meigs County winner from the
Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center.
The awards program, named in
honor of Ohio’s 31st state superintendent of public instruction,
Franklin B. Walter, was established in 1989 by OESCA to promote and recognize outstanding
student leaders for their academic
achievement and service to their
schools and communities.
One senior from each county in
Ohio was eligible to receive the
annual honor.
Eligible applicants must be a
high school senior enrolled in a
public school within an ESC’s service region. Recipients were required to demonstrate outstanding academic achievement as
indicated by high school grades,
test scores, and school activities
and awards.
Approximately 400 students,
parents and educators attended
the event, which was part of
the OESCA Spring Conference
and 100th anniversary celebration of Ohio’s ESCs, which were
established as county offices of
education in 1914. Among the
attendees was state Rep. Tony
Burkley,R-82nd House District,
who delivered the invocation, and
Ohio’s State superintendent of
public instruction, Dr. Richard A.
Ross.
“It was an honor to have Rep.
Burkley and Superintendent Ross
address the students and families,” said Rick Edwards, Athens-

RACINE — Southern Local School District students
received multiple awards at the Science Olympiad that
took place recently at Marietta College.
Earlier, the teams had a school-wide Math and Science
Olympiad, preparing for the regional competition. The
teams were coached by Joe Cornell, Megan Edwards,
Courtney Ginther and Erin Lisle.
Receiving gold medals at the Olympaid were Marissa
Brooker and Madison Lisle in Shock Value and Hannah
Evans and Miranda Greenlee in Water Quality. Receiving
silver medals were Parker Corbitt and Mallory Johnson
for Anatomy. Receiving bronze medals were Tori Chaney
and Emily Phillips with Entomology and Jonah Hoback
and Julia Montgomery in Shock Value.
Other students placing were Sydney Cleland, Andee
Hill, Connor Thomas, Riley Roush, Randy Moore, Austin
McKibben, Sydney Roush and Avery King.

‘Road Angels’
to host auto fair
First-of-its-kind
event planned
By Mindy Kearns

Special to the Register
PPRnews@civitasmedia.com

Darien Diddle was Meigs County’s winner of the Franklin B. Walter All-Scholastic Award.

Meigs ESC superintendent.
“Given the ongoing support and
commitment to ESCs from the
Ohio General Assembly, it was
only fitting to have a member of
the Ohio House address the students and deliver the invocation.”
Over the past 25 years, OESCA
has recognized more than 2,000
scholars and student leaders during this event.

“For 100 years, ESCs have provided technical assistance and
support to Ohio’s schools and
students,” Edwards said. “We
look forward to another century
of service, in partnership with
school district leadership, ensuring all students have the tools and
resources necessary to succeed
regardless of where they live and
attend school.”

POINT PLEASANT —
The Mason County Fairgrounds will come alive
with car enthusiasts the
first weekend in May for a
first-of-its-kind event to the
area.
The New Haven Road
Angels, a local auto club,
will be hosting the West
Virginia Auto Fair on Friday, May 2 through Sunday, May 4. The fair will
feature a swap meet, car
show and car corral.
The swap meet will be
held all three days and
will give participants the
opportunity to buy, sell or
trade all things automotive.
Hot rods, muscle cars, classics, antiques, trucks, and
drag and dirt racers will be
represented.
A car corral will be available the entire weekend,
as well. It will afford those
with vehicles to sell an opportunity to reach fellow
car lovers.
On Sunday, a car show
will be held. Registration
begins at 10 a.m. and tro-

phies will be presented at 2
p.m. There will be cash and
trophies for best of show in
various categories. Door
prizes will also be given.
The event has been set
to coincide with other
activities that weekend,
according to Ed Carson,
a Road Angels member.
There will be motocross
racing Saturday night on
the fairgrounds. Directly
across Fairground Road
at the West Virginia State
Farm Museum, the Spring
Gas and Steam Engine
Show will be Saturday and
Sunday.
Carson said although
there are fees for the swap
meet, corral and car show,
proceeds benefit local
schools and charities. He
said the Road Angels present scholarships to high
school seniors and are contributors to events such as
the Special Olympics and
others.
Gates will be open for
the auto fair on Friday from
1 to 8 p.m.; Saturday from
9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and Sunday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. General admission to the fair is
$5, with children under 12
being free. For other fees
or for more information,
contact the Road Angels
at (304) 675-0975 or (304)
593-9665.

�Page 2 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Meigs County Community Calendar

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 51.65
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 24.85
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 97.41
Big Lots (NYSE) — 39.46
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 44.21
BorgWarner (NYSE) —63.13
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 13.76
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.510
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.53
Collins (NYSE) — 79.13
DuPont (NYSE) — 67.03
US Bank (NYSE) — 40.38
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.59
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 67.54
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 55.03
Kroger (NYSE) — 44.71
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 53.90
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 96.89
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 21.60
BBT (NYSE) — 37.80

Thursday, April 24
SYRACUSE — The Ladies of the
Meigs County Republican Party will
meet at 6:30 p.m. at Carlton School
in Syracuse. Rhea Lantz, wife of Daniel Lantz, will be the guest speaker.
POMEROY – The Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District Board
of Supervisors will meet in regular
session at 11:30 a.m. Thursday at the
district office at 113 East Memorial
Drive, Suite D.

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 25.74
Pepsico (NYSE) — 85.91
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.30
Rockwell (NYSE) — 127.75
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.22
Royal Dutch Shell — 75.58
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 39.60
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 77.60
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.47
WesBanco (NYSE) — 30.31
Worthington (NYSE) — 37.17
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions April 21, 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.

Civitas Media, LLC
(USPS 436-840)

SWITCHBOARD: 740-992-2155
Annual local subscription price for The Pomeroy Daily Sentinel is $250. Please
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CONTACT US
EDITOR:
Michael Johnson
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740-446-2342
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Birthdays
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.

Monday, April 28
POMEROY — Meigs County Veterans Service Coimmission, 9 a.m. at office, 117 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.

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.

Meigs County Local Briefs
Tea Party meeting
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Tea Party
will meet at 7:30 p.m. today at the Meigs Co. Senior Center, 112 Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy.
An open forum will be
held on national government current events. Tom
Gannaway will present
“Constitutional Tidbits.”
Any of our local government officials present are
always welcome to inform
us of local current events.
Anyone present at 7:15
p.m. is welcome to join
in a voluntary prayer session for our country, both
nationally and locally. Dr.
Kelly Kohls, president of
the Ohio School Boards
Leadership Council, will
be speaking at the May 13

OBITUARIES:
740-992-2155

$

Thursday, April 29
CHESTER — The Shade River
Lodge 453 will hold special meeting,
7 p.m. for the purpose of conferring
entered apprentice degree on one
candidte. Refreshments to follow.

Friday, April 25
SALEM CENTER — The Meigs
County Grange Banquet will be 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.

Meigs County Church Calendar

The Daily Sentinel

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

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

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Tea Party meeting.
Snacks and Sweet LiberTea will be served. Anyone
is welcome to attend.
Road Closures
MEIGS COUNTY —
The Ohio Department of
Transportation has announced that beginning
May 12, Ohio 733 between
U.S. 33 and Ohio 124 will
be closed to allow Meigs
County highway crews to
perform a tree trimming
operations. The road will
be closed Monday through
Friday, 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
each day. Weather permitting, the road will reopen
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. to 4
p.m. April 29 at the Rut-

land 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.
Rotary Pancake Event
POMEROY — The
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club will stage its
annual pancake breakfast
from 7-11 a.m. April 26 at

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(740) 593-3279

(740) 653-2827

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Rio Grande, Ohio

Classic Car Show (Sunday)
Antique Tractor Show
Cosmetology Services
Craft Show
Greenhouse Sales
Ham Radio Demos
Health Care Checks
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment Demos
Numerous Business/Industry
Exhibits
Adult Education Display
Vendor Displays of Services &amp;
Equipment
Motorcycle Show (Saturday 1:00-3:00)
Health Net Helicopter

•
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Ohio Army National Guard
Rockwall
Croquet &amp; Corn Toss
Children’s Story Time &amp; Activities
Basketball Hoop Shoot Contest
Fingerprinting of Children
Games &amp; Bounce House for
Children
Crank-it-Up Contest
4-Wheeler Displays
Live Entertainment (local talent)
5K Run/Walk (Sunday)
10K Run (Sunday)

$//2 02):%3 s -!3#/43

Schedule Subject to Change

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Today: Showers and
thunderstorms likely before 1 p.m., then a slight
chance of showers between
1 p.m. and 2 p.m. Cloudy,
then gradually becoming
mostly sunny, with a high
near 69. Northwest wind
7 to 14 mph, with gusts as
high as 25 mph. Chance of
precipitation is 60 percent.
New rainfall amounts of
less than a tenth of an inch,
except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Tonight: Mostly clear,
with a low around 38.
Northwest wind 11 to 13
mph, with gusts as high as
23 mph.
Wednesday: Sunny, with
a high near 66. Northwest
wind 9 to 11 mph, with
gusts as high as 21 mph.
Wednesday
night:
Mostly clear, with a low
around 39.

2014 Buckeye Hills
Ohio Valley EXPO
APRIL 26 &amp; 27

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Your Friendly Outdoor Power Equipment and Tractor Superstore

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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 a school
counselor or call Delmar
Pullins at 985-3669.

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cubcadet.com
60493698

$50.00 Drawing at 4:00 P.M.
Saturday and Sunday

$20.00 Hourly Cash Giveaway

REGISTER TO WIN THE GRAND PRIZE!
$100.00 Gift Certificate to Foodland
Drawing at 4:00 P.M. on Sunday

Career-Technical Programs
Demos and Displays
Student-Constructed
Modular Home on Display

60491818

LTX KW LAWN TRACTORS

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.

Forecast

MARCH 15 – JUNE 15

SERIES 1000

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.

BAKED STEAK DINNER (SATURDAY) * FRIED CHICKEN DINNER (SUNDAY ) FAST FOODS DAILY

�Tuesday, April 22, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
children, Genevieve (Carl)
DeLong, Kenneth (Ellie)
Eblen and Doris Murray;
and her friend, Walt. Also
surviving are seven grandchildren, eight great-grandchildren and six greatgreat-grandchildren.
Services will be noon
Wednesday, April 23, 2014,
at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Visitation will be at the funeral home one hour prior
to services.

JAMES EDWIN HAGGERTY
MILTON, W.Va. —
James Edwin “Hagg” Haggerty, 83, of Milton, went
home to be with the Lord
on Sunday, April 20, 2014,
at Emogene Dolin Jones
Hospice House.
He was born July 6,
1930, in Belington, W.Va., a
son of the late Edwin Curry
Haggerty and Martha Haggerty.
In addition to he parents, he was preceded in
death by his wife, Phyllis J.
Haggerty; daughters Cathy
Batey, Cindy Ray and Carla
Leadman; and great-grandson Trenton Roush.
He is survived by one
daughter, Connie (Curtis) Roush; one son, Cur-

ry (Brooke) Haggerty;
10 grandchildren: Tyler,
Casey, Kevin, Ryan, Jason,
Jodi, Chad, Eric, Tracie
and Haley; and 10 greatgrandchildren.
Visitation will be 6-9
p.m. Tuesday, April 22,
2014, at Wallace Funeral
Home in Milton. Funeral
services will be conducted at 1 p.m. Wednesday,
April 23, 2014, at Wallace
Funeral Home by Pastor
Terry Blake and Pastor
Paul Meadows. Burial will
be in Forest Memorial
Park. Condolences may be
expressed to the family at
www.timeformemory.com/
wallace.

CONNIE SUE MIRACLE
MIDDLEPORT — Connie Sue Miracle, 65, of
Middleport, and formerly
of Vinton, passed away
Saturday, April 19, 2014,
at Overbrook Care Center
in Middleport. She was
born Oct. 31, 1949, in Logan, W.Va., the daughter
of Mary Lou Gilliam Williams, of Middleport, and
the late Don Williams.
Connie married Douglas (Mose) Miracle on
Dec. 19, 1966. He preceded her in death in 2010.
In addition to Doug
and her father Don, she
was preceded in death by
daughter Pamela L. Miracle; sister Janet Kuhn;
brother Terry Williams;
and twin great-grandchildren Dalton and Chloe
Kuhn.
Connie is survived by
four children: Kimberly
Kuhn, of Middleport,
Brenda Miracle, of Lima,
Ohio, Amanda Miracle,

of Middleport, and Terry Miracle, of Canton,
Mich., and grandchildren
Bobby, David, Jennifer
and Heather Kuhn, Patricia, Megan, Brittany and
Brandon Russell, Tyler,
Gabriela and Khloe Miracle; and Landon Miracle;
and nine great-grandchildren.
Also surviving are sister Sharon (Gary) Brock,
of Nancy, Ky.; and brothers Don (Elizabeth) Williams Jr., of Dallas, James
(Sherry) Williams, of
Middleport, and Robert
(Dawn) Williams, Lansing, Mich.
Services will be 11 a.m.
Wednesday, April 23,
2014, at McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home in Vinton.
Burial will follow in Pendleton-Marcum Cemetery
near Vinton.
Friends may call at the
funeral home on Tuesday
from 5-8 p.m.

LAWRENCE ROBERT “LARRY”
“LITTLE FOOZE” WOLFE
RACINE — Lawrence
Robert “Larry” “Little
Fooze” Wolfe, 77, of Racine, died Saturday, April
19, 2014, at Riverside
Methodist Hospital in Columbus, where he passed
away peacefully after an
extended illness with his
family at his side.
Funeral services will be
held at Anderson-McDaniel
Funeral Home in Racine.
Officiating will be Pastor Bill Marshall. Viewing

Page 3

Death Notices

ADRIA E. ‘SUE’ EBLEN
POMEROY — Adria
E. “Sue” Eblen, 93, went
home to Heaven on Monday, April 21, 2014.
She was preceded in
death by her parents, William S. and Nora Bobo, of
Langsville, Ohio; and her
husband of 65 years, Arthur Eblen. Also preceding her in death were one
grandson, three sisters,
one brother and a dear
daughter-in-law, Donna.
She is survived by three

The Daily Sentinel

hours will be Tuesday 2-4
p.m. and 7 -9 p.m. The funeral will be Wednesday at
2 p.m. Burial will follow at
Letart Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, friends
are asked to make donations in the name of Larry
Wolfe to the Southern
Athletic Department, with
proceeds designated to
varsity baseball and girls
basketball, the team varsity
sports he coached at Southern.

CRUMP
ONA, W.Va. — Linda
Sue Crump, 62, of Ona,
passed away Friday, April
18, 2014, at the Emmogene Dolin Jones Hospice
House in Huntington.
Graveside funeral services
will be 1 p.m. Monday,
April 21, 2014, at Sunrise
Cemetery. A registry is
available at www.andersonfh.com.
DOUGLAS
PARKERSBURG
—
Nancy Penrose Roney
Douglas, 81, of Parkersburg, died Saturday, April

19, 2014, at Camden Clark
Medical Center. Funeral
services were 2 p.m. Monday, April 21, 2014, at
Sunset Memorial Funeral
Home in Parkersburg.
Burial followed in Sunset
Memory Gardens. Visitation was from noon to 2
p.m. Monday at the funeral
home.
MOORE
GALLIPOLIS — Vivian
K. Moore, 87, of Gallipolis,
passed away Sunday, April
20, 2014, at the home of
her son, Rick.
Services will be 1 p.m.

Thursday, April 24, 2014,
at Willis Funeral Home
with Minister Tim Gainer
officiating. Burial will follow in Ridgelawn Cemetery. Friends may call at
Willis Funeral Home from
6-8 p.m. Wednesday, April
23, 2014. In lieu of flowers,
please consider a donation
to the American Cancer
Society and/or Holzer Hospice.
STARCHER
MASON, W.Va. — Jerry
Wayne Starcher, 63, of Mason, died at the home of his
sisters in Middleport, Ohio.

At his request, there will be
no visitation. Service and
burial will be at the convenience of the family.
THOMAS
HENDERSON,
W.Va
— Ricky Allen Thomas,
55, of Henderson, died
Monday, April 21, 2013, at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Funeral services will be
2 p.m. Wednesday, April
23, 2014, at Deal Funeral
Home, Burial will be at the
convenience of the family.
Friends may call from 1-2
p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home.

Four ex-W.Va. guards, four inmates charged in death plot
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) —
Four former Western Regional Jail
correctional officers and four inmates have been charged in a plot to
kill another prisoner.
A four-count indictment alleges
that the plot occurred last October
and targeted Zachary Matthew Lawson. Lawson, who was 18 at the time,
was in custody at the jail in Barboursville awaiting trial on sexual abuse
and assault charges in Mason County
involving a 12-year-old boy. He has
since been moved to the South Central Regional Jail in South Charleston.
Inmates Steven Lee Adkins Jr.,
of Apple Grove, James Dennis Galloway, of Charleston, James Roy
Michael Keeney, of Huntington, and
Jared I. Harris, of West Hamlin, are
each charged with attempted firstdegree murder and conspiracy. All

four inmates are serving sentences
for other crimes.
Former correctional officers Benjamin Browning, of Kermit, John
Bruhin, of Huntington, and Jeffrey
Winkler, of Chesapeake, Ohio, are
charged with aiding and abetting attempted murder. Former correctional
officer Steven D. Adkins, of Milton, is
charged with accessory before the fact
to attempted first-degree murder.
Media outlets report that the Cabell
County indictment was unsealed Friday.
The correctional officers are no
longer employed by the authority,
said Joe DeLong, the authority’s executive director.
“All correctional officers are held to
a very high standard,” DeLong said.
“When I believe people have committed acts within our facilities that are
improper or illegal, I’m not going to

terminate those people and move on.
We are going to work to prosecute
people who commit criminal activity
within our facilities, whether those
people are current inmates or members of our staff.”
DeLong said at least one of the former officers filed a grievance.
He and Cabell County prosecutors
declined to comment on details of
the investigation.
Internal affairs personnel with the
West Virginia Jail Authority led the
investigation, DeLong said.
Adkins remains at the Western
Regional Jail. Keeney is now at the
Southwestern Regional Jail in Logan
County, while Harris is imprisoned
at the Martinsburg Correctional Center. Galloway is now at the South
Central Regional Jail.

No contest plea expected in rape case
STEUBENVILLE, Ohio
(AP) — A former volunteer
coach whose house was
the scene of an underage
drinking party before the
2012 rape of a girl by two
high school football players
plans to plead no contest to
charges connected to the
case, law enforcement officials said Monday.
Defendant Matt Belardine is expected to plead
no contest Tuesday to one
count of making a false
statement and one count of
enabling underage drinking, said Dan Tierney,
spokesman for Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine.
Counts of obstructing official business and contributing to the delinquency of
a child are expected to be
dismissed, Tierney said.
A message left with Belardine’s attorney seeking
comment wasn’t immediately returned.
Belardine was one of six
people charged last year by
a grand jury investigating
whether other laws were
broken in the case of the
16-year-old West Virginia
girl who was raped after an
alcohol-fueled house party
in August 2012.
With Belardine’s expected plea, four of those cases
have been resolved. The
players were convicted in
March 2013 and sentenced
to the state’s juvenile de-

tention system.
On April 11, DeWine announced that a teacher and
coach charged with a single
misdemeanor count of failure to report child abuse
or neglect involving the
rape will have the charge
dismissed in exchange for
community service at a do-

mestic violence shelter.
In February, a former
school worker pleaded
guilty to stealing computer
equipment in a case that
arose from the grand jury
investigation but wasn’t related to the girl’s rape.
In January, DeWine announced charges would be

dropped against a Steubenville elementary school principal official in exchange for
community service related
to rape awareness. The principal was accused of failing
to report rumors of a teenage sex and drinking party
in April 2012 unrelated to
the later rape.

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has scheduled local hearings in Case No.
13-2385-EL-SSO, In the Matter of the Application of Ohio Power Company for Authority
to Establish a Standard Service Offer Pursuant to R.C. 4928.143, in the Form of an
Electric Security Plan, and Case No. 13-2386-EL-AAM, In the Matter of the Application
of Ohio Power Company for Approval of Certain Accounting Authority. In the application,
Ohio Power Company d/b/a AEP Ohio seeks Commission approval of an electric security
plan filed on December 20, 2013, and matters related to the company’s procurement of
power for the period of June 1, 2015 through May 31, 2018. According to the application,
for all customer classes, customers are expected to experience average annual rate
changes ranging from -27 percent to 6 percent during the electric security plan period.
The application proposes the recovery of other costs through riders during the term of
the electric security plan, although the costs and subsequent rate impacts are unknown
at this time. In addition, the application contains provisions addressing distribution
service, economic development, alternative energy resource requirements, and energy
efficiency requirements. The local hearings are scheduled for the purpose of providing
an opportunity for interested members of the public to testify in this proceeding. The local
hearings will be held as follows:
(a) Tuesday, April 29, 2014, at 6:00 p.m., at Wolfe Park Shelter House, 105 Park
Drive, Columbus, Ohio 43209.
(b) Wednesday, April 30, 2014, 6:00 p.m., at Lima Municipal Center, City Council Chambers, 50 Town Square, 1st Floor, Lima, Ohio 45801.
(c) Tuesday, May 6, 2014, at 12:30 p.m., at the offices of the Commission, 180 East Broad
Street, Hearing Room 11-C, Columbus, Ohio 43215.
(d) Wednesday, May 14, 2014, at 6:00 p.m., at Canton City Hall, Council Chambers, 218
Cleveland Avenue SW, 1st Floor, Canton, Ohio 44702.
(e) Tuesday, May 20, 2014, at 6:00 p.m., at Washington State Community College, Arts
&amp; Science Building, Harvey Graham Auditorium, 710 Colegate Drive, Marietta, Ohio
45750.
The evidentiary hearing will commence on June 3, 2014, at 10:00 a.m., at the offices of the
Commission, Hearing Room 11-A, 180 East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215. Further
information may be obtained by contacting the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, 180
East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215-3793, viewing the Commission’s web page at
http://www.puco.ohio.gov, or contacting the Commission’s hotline at 1-800-686-7826.
60499271

60497303

�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Page 4
TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 2014

We don’t want you to swim in the river
By Kathy Kelly
In early April, 2014, the U.S.
Navy unveiled its Mach 7 Magnetic
Mangler, “a railgun straight out of
Star Trek that can take out targets
at 100 miles with a projectile flying
at nearly 7,000 feet per second.” So
far, the U.S. military has spent $240
million developing the railgun over
a period of 10 years. CBS News reports that the railgun won’t go to
sea until 2016, but one article, published in The Gazette, suggests that
the U.S. military may have decided
to show off the Magnetic Mangler
in order to send a message to the
Russian government.
While the American public gets
to see the weapon, so do America’s
enemies. The military in recent
years has timed the unveiling of
new technology to global events.
The last time North Korea got
frisky, the Navy showed off an antimissile laser.
Now, with the crisis continuing
in the Ukraine, the Navy is showing
off something even scarier.
In advance of the University
of Wisconsin’s recent “Resources
for Peace” conference, a professor
friend asked participants to consider whether the increasing competi-

tion for depleted global resources,
for goods to meet essential human
needs, would tend inevitably to
make people less humane. She was
thinking particularly about what
she termed “the shrinking humanism” seen in dystopian novels and
films that portray cruelty and violence among people who fear for
their survival.
I posed her question to Buddy
Bell, one of my young friends here at
Voices, who has traveled to several
war zones and has worked steadily
among people suffering displacement and poverty in the United
States. “Well,” he said, after a long
pause, “there are precedents for dramatic and selfless service on behalf
of sustaining a community, even in a
time of desperation and war.” Then
he went to his room and got me a
CD. “Listen to the story Utah Phillips tells on Track 3,” he said.
Utah Phillips, a folksinger and
storyteller, had been a U.S. soldier
in Korea. His son asked if he had
ever shot anyone. He said he didn’t
know, but that whether or not he
shot anyone wasn’t the story. He
told his son about a day when he
was longing to take a swim in the
Imjin River. His clothes and boots
were rotting, and he had mold

growing on his body. Chinese soldiers on the other side were having
a wonderful time swimming. Why,
then, were the local Koreans insisting he must not swim in the river?
“A young Korean told me, ‘You
know, when we get married here,
the young married couple moves in
with the elders, they move in with
the grandparents, but there’s nothing growing! Everything’s been
destroyed, there’s no food. So, the
first baby that’s born, the oldest,
the old man, goes out with a jug
of water and a blanket, sits on the
bank of the river and waits to die.
Then, when he dies, he’ll roll over
the bank and into the Imjin River
and his body will be carried out
to sea. And we don’t want you to
swim in the river because our elders are floating out to sea.”
Utah Phillips seemed to want
his son to understand that leaving people with nothing when
you have everything is as serious
a crime as shooting them. Utah
Phillips, at least, consented not to
use a resource he could have decided was free to everyone, out of
respect for the cost his use would
impose on people already giving
up everything so that their young
could survive with next to noth-

ing. Kevin Seiff, reporting for the
Washington Post, has written several articles about risks to Afghan
civilians, especially children, posed
by undetonated grenades, rockets
and mortar shells the U.S. military
leaves behind as it vacates scores of
firing ranges in Afghanistan.
Dozens of children have been
killed or wounded as they have
stumbled upon the ordnance at
the sites, which are often poorly
marked. Casualties are likely to increase sharply; the U.S. military has
removed the munitions from only 3
percent of the territory covered by
its sprawling ranges, officials said.
Clearing the rest of the contaminated land — which in total is
twice as big as New York City —
could take two to five years. U.S.
military officials say they intend to
clean up the ranges. But because
of a lack of planning, officials say,
funding has not yet been approved
for the monumental effort, which is
expected to cost $250 million.
According to the Mine Action
Program in Afghanistan, this presents a “significant obstacle in a
country where 70 percent of the labor force earns an income through
farming or animal husbandry.”
Among the main casualties of

The ayatollahs’ overlooked anti-WMD fatwas
By Sheldon Richman
When the Obama administration refused to grant a visa to Iran’s designated ambassador to the United Nations,
Hamid Aboutalebi, it was continuing a
long-running hostile U.S. policy toward
the Islamic Republic. After the 1979
Islamic revolution in Iran, a group of
Iranians held 52 Americans hostage
in the former U.S. embassy for more
than a year. Aboutalebi served as an
occasional translator for the hostagetakers, but this hardly makes him “an
acknowledged terrorist,” as anti-Iran
hawk Sen. Ted Cruz has alleged.
One can condemn the hostage-taking and still recognize that the American government did terrible things to
the Iranian people from 1953 to 1979.
And it has kept on doing them. There
have been far more aggrieved Iranians
than Americans in the two countries’
relationship.
The visa denial seems strange considering that the Obama administration is negotiating with Iran about its
nuclear-power program. Progress is being made, despite the vigorous lobbying
of those in America who apparently will
stop at nothing to scuttle the talks.
But even with the hopeful negotiations, the Obama administration refuses to talk straight about Iran’s nuclear
intentions.
For example, in 2007 and 2011,
America’s 16 intelligence agencies issued national-security estimates finding that any research the Iranians had
been doing on nuclear weapons was
terminated in 2003 — perhaps not
coincidentally, the same year the U.S.
military overthrew Iran’s archenemy,
Saddam Hussein of Iraq.
President Barack Obama, Secretary
of State John Kerry, and the main-

stream media never tell the American
people this. Wouldn’t you think that’s a
critical piece of information for evaluating the U.S.-Iran relationship?
This is not all that American officialdom and the media are quiet about.
But thanks to investigative journalist
Gareth Porter and his new book, Manufactured Crisis: The Untold Story of
the Iran Nuclear Scare, much more
of this important information is now
available to all.
For example, did you know that
Iran’s two supreme leaders since the
revolution, Ayatollahs Ruhollah Khomeini and Ali Khamenei, each in his
time issued fatwas against weapons of
mass destruction? Khomeini specifically addressed chemical weapons, while
Khamenei’s declaration was aimed at
nuclear weapons.
The story behind Khomeini’s antichemical-weapons fatwa, which Porter
relates, is worth knowing. In 1980 Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein launched
an attack and a brutal eight-year war
against Iran. Among the weapons
Saddam used against Iranian forces —
with the help of American intelligence
relevant to targeting and damage assessment — were chemical agents.
Yet Iran never responded in kind. It
certainly could have. “Iran’s chemical
sector was quite advanced and perfectly capable of producing the same range
of chemical weapons that Iraq was using in the war,” Porter writes. He continues, “The real reason for Iran’s failure to use chemical weapons was not
the inability to formulate the necessary
mix of chemicals but the fact that Ayatollah Khomeini had forbidden it on
the grounds of Islamic jurisprudence.”
Porter notes that, according to a senior foreign-ministry officer, military
leaders wanted to discuss a chemical

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retaliation against Iraq, “but Khomeini
refused to allow it on the ground that it
was forbidden by Islam.”
How is this relevant to today? Porter
writes,
The fact that Iran was constrained
by Khomeini’s interpretation of Islamic law during the duration of the
war sheds light on the role of Khomeini’s successor as supreme leader, Ali
Khamenei, in declaring nuclear weapons also forbidden by Islam.
Porter points out that Khamenei had
it easier than his predecessor because
there was already political opposition
to the acquisition of nuclear weapons.
Long before Khamenei took office,
Khomeini had condemned nukes on the
grounds that they were signature weapons of the superpowers he disdained:
the United States and Soviet Union.
Moreover, Iran’s leading politicians
realized that nuclear weapons would
be useless. “Those two points — the
inutility of nuclear weapons, which
implied their irrelevance to regional
politics, and the fact that other powers
would still have many times more such
weapons — represented the core elements of a ‘realist’ strategic argument
against possession of nuclear weapons
that would later be articulated in greater depth.”
In early 2003, Khamenei “began
to couch his anti-nuclear weapons
stance in terms of Islamic principles.”
Of course this was entirely consistent
with his predecessor’s fatwa against
chemical weapons — as well as with
all the hard evidence anyone has been
able to produce.
Americans should know this.
Sheldon Richman is vice president and editor at
The Future of Freedom Foundation in Fairfax, Va.
(www.fff.org).

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

war are those who starve and fall
ill when valuable farmland is left as
minefields.
Some people pull together in
the face of scarcity; some demand
everything even when others have
nothing. Today’s crop of grim, dystopian novels and films, the concern of my professor friend, may
at times ignore the kindness and
solidarity that can occur among the
dispossessed.
When many impoverished people, worldwide, don’t want “the
haves” to invade them, when, as
‘have-nots,’ they say, ‘please, this
is ours, it is almost all that we
have, we cannot have you storming in and claiming it just because
you can,’ we are astonishingly illequipped to register their objection
and honor their need.
These weapons we tout aren’t
futuristic; they announce our lack
of a future. But everywhere around
us, we can spot people who are volunteering to live simply so that others can simply live. And that choice
is, in reality, open to each of us.
Kathy Kelly writes for PeaceVoice and cocoordinates Voices for Creative Nonviolence (www.vcnv.org) When in Afghanistan,
she is a guest of the Afghan Peace Volunteers (ourjournetytosmile.com).

Clean water is key
to business success
By Jenn Vervier
Our company depends on clean water for our success.
That’s why we’re pleased that the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) issued new draft rules for enforcement of the
Clean Water Act last month.
Since the Supreme Court handed down decisions in 2001
and 2006, enforcement of the Clean Water Act’s provisions
has become incredibly complex, leaving businesses and consumers without clarity. This action by the EPA will give us
the confidence we need to know that our access to clean water will be protected.
So many businesses rely on clean water: industries from
manufacturing to agriculture to tourism can only survive if
bodies of water are protected. In our case, clean water is essential to great-tasting beer. Losing access to clean water as
a resource can make the difference between a company thriving and failing. What the EPA is doing will save jobs.
We believe that clarity in regulation and the protection of
natural resources are keys to economic development. Our
own journey in crafting world class beers over the past 23
years and growth to over 525 co-workers attest to the fact
that when smart regulation exists for all - and when clean
water is available for all — business thrives.
For centuries, brewers have depended on clean, plentiful water supplies to craft great beers. Our water supplies
depend on responsible regulations that limit pollution and
protect drinking water at its source by keeping small streams
and wetlands healthy. Simply put: craft brewers like New Belgium depend on a clean and abundant water supply.
Brewers as also rely on clean water nationwide to be available for barley, hop and other agricultural products. Whether
drawn from lakes, rivers, groundwater or a local water system, brewers rely on the protections of the Clean Water Act
to ensure the quality of our main ingredient. Beer, after all,
is 90 percent water. Fouling of our water supply — whether
we draw directly from a water source or from a municipal
supply — threatens our ability to produce our great-tasting
beer and our bottom line.
However, loopholes in the current Clean Water Act have
made it possible to dump waste into many small streams
and tributaries without fear of prosecution. In many cases,
the loophole has rendered the EPA (and its sister agency
on clean water issues, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)
unable to protect communities. Lawsuits and weak policies
left over from the 1980’s have left many streams without adequate protection
Under the new safeguards proposed by the Obama administration, hundreds of communities will now enjoy the full
protections of our nation’s clean water laws. Bringing these
streams and wetlands under the umbrella of the Clean Water
Act will also help protect drinking water for 117 million people. It will safeguard natural flood protection, since wetlands
and streams help catch and soak up rain. This is no small
benefit; 9.6 million homes and $360 billion dollars-worth of
properties lie in flood-prone areas. Similarly, brewers rely on
clean water to sustain their businesses and are cheering the
new protections, as are hunters, anglers and wildlife-lovers
The EPA has done a terrific job of coming up with these
new rules. They don’t give the agency any additional power
that isn’t already granted to them by the 1972 Clean Water
Act. They’re based on a thorough review of more than 1,000
pieces of scientific literature. And they’ll give the business
community a much-needed dose of certainty going forward.
Business organizations, such as the American Sustainable
Business Council, of which our company is a member, have
endorsed the rules.
While the rules won’t be finalized until after a 90-day
comment period — to be determined soon — there’s a lot
here for businesses to like, and very little not to like. Protecting our waterways is good for business, specifically
businesses that rely on clean water to make great beer.
There is no substitute for clean and abundant water for
our business, for communities and for individuals. These
proposed rules will offer the clarity and certainty that we
need to continue to grow.
Vervier is director of sustainability and strategy for New Belgium Brewing
Co., the third-largest craft brewery in the U.S.

�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

TUESDAY,
APRIL 22, 2014

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

White Falcons sweep Waterford in league DH
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

WATERFORD, Ohio — Road warriors.
The Wahama baseball team handed
host Waterford its first two league losses
of the season Friday night following wins
of 8-0 and 3-1 during a Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division doubleheader in
Washington County.
The White Falcons (8-4, 7-1 TVC
Hocking) picked up their fifth straight
win while also claiming sole possession
of second place, trailing only Trimble in
the league standings. The Wildcats fell to
4-2 within the TVC Hocking after being
swept at home.
Wahama received a pitching gem from
starter Garrett Miller in the opener as the
junior allowed just one hit and zero walks
Photo by Barry Miller | Logan Daily News over seven innings while striking out 10.
Seth Wills throws a pitch in the seventh inning of Gallia Academy’s The guests also pounded out 11 hits in
6-0 Southeastern Ohio Athletic League baseball victory over Logan. the wire-to-wire victory.
Wahama plated the eventual gamewinning run in the first after a leadoff

Blue Devils
sweep Logan, 6-0
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

LOGAN, Ohio — Gallia Academy junior Seth
Wills tossed a no-hitter
Friday night during a 6-0
victory over host Logan in
a Southeastern Ohio Athletic League matchup in
Hocking County.
The visiting Blue Devils (10-1, 6-0 SEOAL) received a gem from their
No. 3 starter as Wills
struck out 14 and walked
six over seven innings of
work. GAHS — winners
of eight straight — also allowed only two Chieftains
to reach second base in the
contest.
Gallia Academy pounded
out seven hits and left five
runners stranded on base,
compared to seven by LHS.
Logan (0-9, 0-4) also committed two of the three errors in the contest.
The Blue Devils took a
1-0 lead in the top of the
first after a leadoff walk to
Ty Warnimont turned into

a quick score. Warnimont
stole second and advanced
to third on an overthrow
during the play. Warnimont
scored the eventual gamewinning run on a ground
out by Gage Childers.
The guests added two
runs in the third and two
more in the fifth for a 5-0
edge, then tacked on an insurance run in the seventh
to wrap up the six-run decision. GAHS also claimed
a season sweep of Logan
after posting a 9-5 win
at Eastman Ball Field on
April 4.
Warnimont and Childers
led the Blue Devils with
two hits apiece, followed
by Wills, Gustin Graham
and Matt Bailey with a
safety apiece. Childers led
the guests with two RBIs
and Warnimont had a teambest three runs scored.
Kevin Vorhees suffered
the setback for Logan after
surrendering five earned
runs and six walks over
seven frames while striking
out four.

OVP Sports Schedule
Tuesday, April 22
Baseball
River Valley at Southern, 5 p.m.
Rock Hill at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Lincoln County at Hannan, 5:30
Eastern vs. Warren, 5 p.m.
Softball
River Valley at Southern, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Belpre at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
South Gallia, Southern, Meigs at Eastern, 4 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 4:30
Wednesday, April 23
Baseball
South Gallia at Southern, 5 p.m.
Belpre at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Miller, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Warren, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Rock Hill, 5 p.m.
Softball
South Gallia at Southern, 5 p.m.
Belpre at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Miller at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Warren, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Rock Hill, 5 p.m.
Tennis
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy, 4:30
Thursday, April 24
Baseball
Nelsonville-York at Meigs, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Sciotoville East, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca, 6:30
Softball
Nelsonville-York at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Warren at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Marietta, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Sciotoville East, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Gallia Academy, Eastern at Chillicothe, 4:30
Friday, April 25
Baseball
Eastern at Southern, 5 p.m.
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Miller at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Calhoun County, 4:30
Point Pleasant at Charleston Catholic, 6:30
River Valley at South Point, 5 p.m.
Softball
Eastern at Southern, 5 p.m.
Huntington at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Miller at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
River Valley, South Gallia, Wahama, Southern at Meigs,
4 p.m.
Tennis
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth Clay, 4:30

walk to Kane Roush turned into a 1-0 lead
following a two-out RBI double by Wesley Harrison. Wahama added two runs in
the third and two more in the fifth for a
5-0 edge, then tacked on a run in the sixth
and two more in the seventh to wrap up
the 8-0 decision.
Wyatt Zuspan, Wesley Harrison, Demetrius Serevicz and Tyler Grimm each
had two hits to lead the guests, followed
by Roush, Mason Hicks and Brent Larck
with a safety apiece. Zuspan drove in a
team-high two RBIs, while Roush scored
a team-best two runs in the opener.
Bosner had the lone hit for Waterford,
which committed five errors and left four
runners stranded on base. Wahama committed two errors and stranded nine on
the bags.
The White Falcons outhit Waterford by
a 7-4 margin and never trailed in the night
cap as the guests stromed out to an early
2-0 advantage through three complete.
The hosts answered with a run in the
fourth to pull to within a run, but the
White Falcons retaliated with an insur-

ance run in the fifth to wrap up the 3-1
outcome.
Wahama stranded seven runners on
base in Game 2, while the hosts committed the game’s only error while leaving five on the bags. Huffman suffered
the setback for Waterford after allowing
four walks and striking out seven in six
innings of work.
Tyler Grimm was the winning pitcher
of record after allowing one run, two hits
and a walk over four innings while fanning one. Mason Hicks picked up the
save after allowing two hits and a walk
over two frames while striking out three.
Zuspan and Hunter Bradley led Wahama with two hits apiece, followed by
Roush, Harrison and Serevicz with a safety each. Zuspan and Harrison each drove
in an RBI, while Roush scored twice and
Zuspan added a run scored.
Shriver paced Waterford with two
hits, followed by B. Ginther and M.
Ginther with a safety apiece. M.
Ginther also drove in B. Ginther for
the hosts’ lone run.

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Eastern senior Cassidy Cleland signs her letter of intent on Friday in the EHS lobby. Sitting in the front, from left are
Charlie Cleland, Cassidy Cleland and Heather Cleland. Standing in the back are EHS principal Shawn Bush, Eagles
track coach Josh Fogle and Eastern athletic director Sam Thompson.

Eastern’s Cleland commits to Ohio University
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio — Lady Eagles track
and field standout Cassidy Cleland will be switching
to a different shade of green next year, as the EHS
senior has signed her letter of intent to join Ohio
University.
“I’ve loved track since eighth grade,” Cassidy Cleland said. “I chose Ohio because it is the best fit for
me. I really love their coaching staff and I have been
working with their throws coach since last year,
through his spring clinics. It’s close to home for me
so it’s comfortable.”
The Bobcats have won three Mid-American Conference championships, the last of which came in 1994.
Cleland holds a 4.135 GPA on a weighted scale and
plans to major in political science at Ohio University
with intent on pursuing a degree in law.
“She’s one of the hardest workers on the track
team,” Eastern head coach Josh Fogle said. “She’s
been here everyday over the winter, in the weight
room and throwing when it was nice out. From what
she threw her freshman year to what she throws now
is pretty remarkable.”
Cassidy is a two-time Tri-Valley Conference champion in the discus and qualified for regionals in discus and shotput last season. Cleland finished runnerup in the discus at regionals and secured a spot in the
state championships.
“Although there are very few of us, we are very supportive and we all contribute a lot,” Cleland said of
being on Eastern’s track and field team. “You know
that you have to do your part or we’re not going to
win or do well.”
Cassidy won the discus throw at the 43rd annual
Shadyside Relays on Saturday and is working on another successful season at EHS.
“I think she’ll do really well at OU, but we’re still
expecting a lot out of her this year,” said Fogle. “She’s Eastern’s Cassidy Cleland throws a 110 meter discus last
throwing 125 feet, we’re hoping she can get high season to finish 13th in the State final at Jesse Owens
130s, and hopefully higher when they get her at OU.” Stadium in Columbus.

Meigs splits twinbill with Mustangs
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

ROCKSPRING, Ohio — On the day
before Easter it was the Mustangs that
put all its eggs in one basket.
The Westfall baseball team took a 1710 victory in Saturday’s opening game
in Meigs County, but the Mustangs
were shutout the Marauders in the second game and Meigs earned the split.
In the first game, Westfall marked
two runs in the top of the first but
Meigs answered with seven runs in the
bottom of the second. the Mustangs rallied back with two runs in the third and
five in the fourth to take the lead. MHS
trimmed the deficit to one with a run
in the bottom of the fourth but WHS
marked two in the top of the fifth.
Westfall marked five runs in the sixth
and one in the seventh, while Meigs
had one in the sixth and the Mustangs

claimed the 17-10 triumph.
Luke Musser suffered the loss after
allowing nine runs on 11 hits in four innings. Kaileb Sheets threw two innings
and allowed seven runs on seven hits,
while Cody Bartrum allowed one run
on one hit in one inning. Musser struck
out one and walked one, Sheets struck
out two and walked two, while Bartrum
walked one.
Luke Musser, Cody Bartrum and
Chase Whitlatch each marked two
hits to lead MHS, followed by Damon
Jones, Ty Phelps, Taylor Rowe and Michael Davis with one hit each. Bartrum
and Rowe each drove in two runs, while
Jones and Musser each had an RBI.
Whitlatch and Davis both scored twice,
while Bartrum, Phelps, Musser, Jones,
Trenton Cook and Bradley Helton each
scored once. Phelps, Helton and Davis
each stole one base.
Meigs marked two runs in the first

inning, and one in second to jump out
to the early lead. The Maroon and Gold
scored three runs in the third and three
more in the fourth, while bringing one
run home in the fifth inning to seal the
mercy rule win.
Ty Phelps earned the victory after
allowing just two hits in a complete
game effort. Phelps struck out eight and
walked four.
Helton, Phelps, Rowe and Davis each
had two hits, while Cook, Musser and
Whitlatch each marked one. Cook had
a game-high three RBIs, Musser added
two, while Bartrum and Phelps each
drove home one run. Bartrum, Phelps
and Davis each had two runs scored,
while Jones, Helton, Rowe and Whitlatch each scored once.
The triumph in the second game
snapped a three-game skid by MHS.
Meigs is now 5-2 in non-conference
games this season.

�Page 6 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Point Pleasant holds off Red Dragons, 7-4
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

Submitted Photo

Rio Grande’s Jenna Jones throws a pitch during her game one
no-hitter on Friday afternoon against Bluefield College. The
no-hitter was the second in the collegiate career of the Lancaster, Ohio freshman.

ST. ALBANS, W.Va. — The Big
Blacks claim their first sweep of
the season.
For the second time this season the Point Pleasant baseball
team claimed a victory over St.
Albans, this time by a 7-4 count in
Kanawha County.
Point Pleasant (11-5) began the
game in style, scoring four runs in
the top of the first inning. The Red
Dragons (8-7) managed their first
run in the bottom of the third inning but the Big Blacks answered
back with three runs in the top of
the fifth. SAHS scored two in the
sixth and one in the seventh but
the Red, White and Black held on
for the 7-4 triumph.
Austen Toler earned the victory
on the mound for the Big Blacks,

pitching six innings in which he
allowed three runs, one earned,
on six hits and five walks. Evan
Potter earned the save, throwing
one inning and allowing just one
run n two hits. Toler struck out 10
Red Dragons, while Potter fanned
two.
Hunter Chandler suffered the
loss after allowing seven runs on
six hits and seven walks in 4.1 innings. Chase Bishop allowed just
four hits in 2.2 innings of relief
work, while Chandler struck out
four batters.
The PPHS offense was led by
Alex Somerville with three hits,
including a triple and a double,
followed by Cody Sockwell, Bruce
McDermitt and Evan Potter with
two hits each. Toler helped himself with one hit in the triumph.
Somerville, Sockwell and Potter each scored twice, followed

by Kaleb Beckner with one run
scored. Toler drove in a gamehigh three runs, Potter plated
two, while McDermitt finished
with one RBI. Sockwell had the
game’s lone stolen base.
The St. Albans offensive attack
was led by Chandler with three
hits and Peter Theodos with two.
Adam Bowen, Mitchell Laton and
Josh Burks each added one saftey
in the setback. Chandler, Burks,
Laton and Joseph Call each had a
run scored, while Burks, Chandler
and Bowen each drove in a run.
The Big Blacks finished with
seven runs, 10 hits, two errors
and four runners left on base,
while the Red Dragons had four
runs, eight hits, two errors and 10
runners left on base.
St. Albans also fell to the Big
Blacks on March 24, in Point
Pleasant by a count of 10-6.

Jones’ no-hitter fuels
RedStorm’s sweep of Rams
By Randy Payton
URG Sports Information

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— Simply being good on
Good Friday was not good
enough for the University of Rio Grande’s Jenna
Jones.
The freshman righthander from Lancaster,
Ohio was, for lack of a better term, great inside the
pitcher’s circle.
Jones fired the second
no-hitter of her collegiate
career to fuel a game one
win and spark the RedStorm’s
doubleheader
sweep of Bluefield (Va.)
College in Mid-South Conference action at a sunsplashed Rio Softball Park.
Rio Grande, which won
the opener 4-0 before posting an 11-4 triumph in
the nightcap, improved to
24-13 overall and 16-10 in
league play with the victories.
Bluefield, which saw
its losing streak reach 17
straight games by day’s
end, dropped to 3-41 overall and 1-29 in the MSC.
Jones, who lost a no-hit
bid against the Rams on
March 22 with two outs
in the seventh inning, retired the final 16 batters
she faced on Friday. She allowed only a two-out walk
in each of the first two innings, while BC’s only other baserunner also reached
in the second inning as a
result of an error.
Jones had previously nohit the University of Pikeville on March 21 - Rio’s
first no-hitter in nearly five
years.
The RedStorm backed
up Jones’ pitching performance by scoring once in
the third inning, twice in
the fourth and once more
in the sixth against Bluefield starter Ali Bartley.
Freshman Brittany Walk
(Unionville Center, OH)
reached on a three-base error to start the third inning
and scored moments later
on a Bartley wild pitch,
while freshman Alex Kuhn
(Oak Hill, OH) had an RBI

triple and freshman Kari
Jenkins (Jackson, OH) followed with a run-scoring
single in the fourth.
Jenkins added a sacrifice
fly in the sixth inning for
the game’s final run.
Kuhn finished 2-for-3 in
the win, while sophomore
Kim Rollins (Cincinnati,
OH) added a double in the
winning effort.
Bartley (0-5) allowed
just six hits and three
earned runs while striking
out two in the loss for the
Rams.
In the nightcap, Rio
Grande spotted BC a 2-0
first inning lead before
roaring back with three
runs in the third inning
and five runs in the fifth to
open up a 9-2 advantage.
Kuhn had a two-run triple to highlight the threerun third, while junior
Haley Gwin (Troy, OH)
had a run-scoring triple
and Kuhn followed with an
RBI single to kickstart the
five-run fifth.
The Rams, who parlayed
two hits and three Rio errors into their two first
inning runs, scored twice
more in the sixth to pull
within 9-4, but the RedStorm got the runs back in
the bottom of the frame on
sacrifice flies by Gwin and
Kuhn.
Kuhn finished 3-for-3
with four RBIs, while Gwin
had two hits and knocked
in three runs. Jones also
had three hits, including a
double, while Jenkins finished 2-for-4 and freshman
Shanea Long (Wellston,
OH) had a pair of RBIs.
Freshman Tiffany Bise
(Circleville, OH) earned
her 11th win in 14 decisions, allowing six hits and
two earned runs over 5-2/3
innings.
Anna Davis went the distance in the circle for BC,
slipping to 1-10 on the season.
Morgan Stephens had
two hits and drove in a run
for the Rams, while Kasey
Holcomb also had two hits
and Madison Fielder drove
in a run in the loss.

Submitted Photo

Rio Grande’s Michael Deitsch allowed just one run over 7.2 innings in the final home start of his career, helping the RedStorm
to a 2-1 win over Lindsey Wilson College, Friday afternoon, at Bob Evans Field.

Rio Grande baseball nips Blue Raiders
By Randy Payton

URG Sports Information

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Senior Mike
Deitsch’s final appearance on the mound
at Bob Evans Field is one he won’t forget
anytime soon.
The right-hander from Cincinnati, Ohio
limited visiting Lindsey Wilson College to
just one run over 7-2/3 innings and fellow
senior David Steele recorded the final four
outs to give the University of Rio Grande
a 2-1 win over the Blue Raiders, Friday
afternoon, in Mid-South Conference baseball action.
The RedStorm, who won for the second straight time, improved to 19-25
overall and 5-17 in conference play, keeping their faint post-season hopes afloat in
the process.
Lindsey Wilson slipped to 25-23 overall
and 11-10 in the MSC with the loss.
“Our senior pitchers threw extremely
well and we played great defense behind
them,” said Rio head coach Brad Warnimont. “We needed Mike and David to
step up and that’s exactly what they did.
This time of year, every game means
something.”
And then some.
Despite the win, the magic number to
eliminate the RedStorm from the MSC
tourney dropped to four after the University of the Cumberlands scratched out a
3-2 win over St. Catharine.
In order to reach the post-season, Rio
Grande needs to pass Cumberlands and
the University of Pikeville, who were tied
with each other for the eighth and the final tournament berth at day’s beginning.

While the Patriots posted their one-run
win, the Bears were the victim of a ninth
inning walkoff win at Shawnee State.
Regardless of what happened elsewhere,
Rio Grande took care of business on its end
thanks to its duo of senior hurlers.
Deitsch, who recorded the final two
outs for a save in Wednesday night’s win
over NCAA Division I Ohio University,
scattered seven singles over his 7-2/3 innings of work, but was constantly forced
to wiggle out of trouble as a result of four
walks and a career-high five hit batsmen.
The win was the third in eight decisions for Deitsch this season.
Steele, a right-hander from Kettering,
Ohio, came on to record the final out in
the eighth inning and strand a pair of runners on base. He issued a leadoff walk to
pinch-hitter Nick Hoffman in the ninth,
but coaxed Kory weeks to ground into a
4-6-3 double-play and Michael Rosario to
fly out to center to seal the win and notch
his second save.
Lindsey Wilson stranded a season-high
16 runners on base, including eight in
scoring position.
Still, it was the Blue Raiders who drew
first blood by using the speed of Derek
Shugart to push across a third inning run.
Shugart and Mitchell Osnowitz began
the inning with consecutive singles and
Jeandro Andino reached moments later
when Deitsch’s throw to third on his sacrifice bunt attempt was late in an effort to
retire Shugart.
One out later, Jordan Berry hit a popup
that junior second baseman Grant Tamane
(Pickering, Ontario, Canada) managed to
track down with a nice over-the-shoulder

catch in shallow right-center field, but
Shugart took advantage of his speed and
Tamane’s momentum taking him away
from the infield to tag from third and beat
the throw home.
Rio Grande, which managed just four
hits on the afternoon against LWC starter
England Smith, rebounded to erase the
deficit in the bottom of the fourth.
Junior Kevin Arroyo (Toa Baja, Puerto
Rico) led off with a single and promptly
moved to second when Smith errored Tamane’s subsequent bunt attempt.
Senior Marcus Makuch (Baltimore,
OH) then bunted both runners into scoring
position and both scored when sophomore
Kirk Yates’ (Chillicothe, OH) grounder to
shortstop was misplayed for an error.
Aside from the two runners who scored
in the fourth, though, Rio Grande advanced
just one other runner beyond first base the
rest of the day - freshman Carlos Flores
(Guayanilla, Puerto Rico), who led off the
home eighth with a single and was bunted
into scoring position before being stranded.
Smith was the hard-luck loser for the
Blue Raiders, allowing the four hits and
the two unearned runs in a complete
game effort. He did not walk a batter and
struck out five.
Osnowitz and Andino both had two
hits in a losing cause for LWC.
The two teams will wrap up the weekend series - and for Rio Grande its final
home series as a member of the MSC with a Saturday afternoon doubleheader.
First pitch for the nine-inning opener
is set for noon. A seven-inning finale will
follow approximately 30 minutes after the
conclusion of game one.

Rio baseball splits pair with Blue Raiders
By Randy Payton

URG Sports Information

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— Grant Tamane drove in
three runs, including the
game-winner with a oneout squeeze bunt in the
bottom of the seventh inning, to give the University
of Rio Grande a 6-5 game
two victory and doubleheader split with Lindsey
Wilson College, Saturday
afternoon, in Mid-South
Conference baseball action
at Bob Evans Field.
The dramatic win came
after the Blue Raiders rallied to win the opener, 7-6
in 12 innings.
Rio Grande finished the
day at 20-26 overall and
6-18 in the MSC, keeping
its slim post-season hopes
alive in the process.
In order to reach the
MSC Tournament, the
RedStorm would need a
sweep of Cumberland University next weekend in
Lebanon, Tenn., as well as
a Lindsey Wilson sweep of
the University of the Cumberlands and a sweep by
Georgetown College over

the University of Pikeville.
“We know we have to
have a lot of things happen
in order for us to make it,
but we’re still alive. There’s
breath in the body,” said
Rio Grande head coach
Brad Warnimont. “Our guys
battled all day long. They
deserve a lot of credit.”
The split, coupled with
a 2-1 win on Friday, gave
Rio its second MSC series
win this season. All three
games were decided by
just one run.
Through the first six innings of the seven-inning
nightcap, a dramatic finish
was nowhere in the script,
but Lindsey Wilson (2624, 12-11 MSC) rallied to
scored four times in its final at bat to knot the score
at 5-5.
In the home half of the
seventh, freshman Daulton
Kenyon (West Portsmouth, OH) reached on a
single, moved to second on
a wild pitch by LWC reliever Keith Patton and moved
to third on a bloop single
by junior Kevin Arroyo
(Toa Baja, Puerto Rico),
who took second on the

throw toward home.
Mitchell Osnowitz was
then brought on to face Tamane, a junior from Pickering, Ontario Canada.
Tamane put down a bunt
in front of the plate which
Osnowitz fielded and tried
to flip to catcher Russ
Morse, but Morse couldn’t
handle the flip cleanly as
Kenyon slid in safely with
the game-winning run.
The Blue Raiders actually took a 1-0 lead in the
first inning on an RBI
double by Osnowitz, but
Rio countered with three
runs in the third - two of
which scored on a single
by Tamane - to take a tworun lead.
The RedStorm extended
their cushion to 5-1 thanks
to a two-run single by
freshman Luis Jimenez
(Salinas, Puerto Rico) in
the sixth, but LWC parlayed three hits, two walks,
an error and a wild pitch
into four seventh inning
runs and set the stage for
the dramatic finish.
Arroyo and Jimenez
both had two hits in the
win for Rio Grande, while

sophomore Kirk Yates
(Chillicothe, OH) - the last
of the RedStorm’s three
pitchers - earned his fourth
win in five decisions.
Jacob Roberts had two
hits in a losing cause for
the Blue Raiders and Patton suffered his third loss
in four decisions.
Game one was a near
four-hour marathon which
saw both teams surrender
the lead early on.
Rio Grande jumped
to a 1-0 first inning lead
with an unearned run that
crossed as a result of a
sacrifice fly by senior Marcus Makuch (Baltimore,
OH), but the Blue Raiders struck for four runs in
the third - three of which
scored on a two-out home
run by Jeandro Andino - to
take their first lead.
The RedStorm started
the road back in the home
third when sophomore
Chris Ford (Athens, OH)
scored on a double by
Yates to make it 4-2. A runscoring double by freshman Carlos Flores (Guayanilla, Puerto Rico) and an
RBI groundout by Tamane

Submitted Photo

Rio Grande’s Kevin Arroyo forces out Lindsey Wilson’s Jordan
Berry at second base during the first inning of Saturday’s doubleheader against the Blue Raiders at Bob Evans Field. The RedStorm
lost game one, 7-6 in 12 innings, before winning the nightcap, 6-5.

in the fourth tied the game
at 4-4.
Rio then regained the
lead in the fifth thanks to a
two-run single by freshman
Daryin Lewis (Circleville,
OH), but Lindsey Wilson
would eventually tie the
game at 6-6 on solo home
runs by Alex Bautista in the
sixth and eighth innings.
The game stayed deadlocked until the Lindsey
Wilson 12th when Bautista
led off with a walk, moved
to second on a sacrifice
bunt and scored when Trey
Davis’ grounder to shortstop was errored.
LWC reliever Jason

Turner retired the side in
order in the bottom of the
inning to wrap up the victory.
Derek Shugart and Jordan Berry had three hits
each for the Blue Radiers,
while Osnowitz, Andino
and Bautista all finished
with two hits each.
Turner improved to 6-4,
allowing just two hits over
6-2/3 shutout innings in relief of starter Scott Sebald.
Arroyo and Ford had
three hits each for Rio
Grande, while Yates and
Lewis both had two hits.
See RIO | 7

�Tuesday, April 22, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 7

RedStorm softball
records sweep of UPike
By Randy Payton
Special to OVP

RIO GRANDE, Ohio — Freshman Alex Kuhn delivered a twoout, game-winning single in the bottom half of the seventh inning
to lift the University of Rio Grande to a 4-3 game two win and
a doubleheader sweep of the University of Pikeville, Saturday
afternoon, in Mid-South Conference action at Rio Softball Park.
The RedStorm parlayed two early runs and a strong pitching
performance by freshman Jenna Jones (Lancaster, OH) into a
3-1 opening game triumph.
Rio Grande, which has now won each of the first six games on
its final homestand of the season, improved to 26-13 overall and
18-10 in league play.
Pikeville, which entered the weekend hoping to overtake St.
Catharine College for the eighth and final spot in the upcoming
MSC Tournament, slipped to 13-26 overall and 9-21 in the MSC.
The sweep, coupled with two losses at Shawnee State on Friday,
leaves the Bears two games behind the Patriots.
Rio Grande was forced to rally from a 3-1 deficit in game two
in order to complete the sweep.
Freshman Kari Jenkins (Jackson, OH) had a game-tying, tworun single in the bottom of the fourth inning to knot the score at
3-3 and that’s how things stayed until the home half of the seventh.
Miranda Owens, who came on in relief of starter Sydney
Morris in the fourth inning, retired each of the first two batters
routinely before issuing back-to-back walks to Jones and junior
Haley Gwin (Troy, OH) and throwing a wild pitch that put both
runners in scoring position.
Kuhn (Oak Hill, OH) followed with her heroics moments later,
lining a 1-0 pitch into center field and scoring Jones with the
game-winner.
Both teams scored in the first inning thanks to sacrifice flies
- by Pikeville’s Hollie Hinkle and Rio Grande sophomore Kim
Rollins (Cincinnati, OH) - before the Bears got an RBI triple by
Taylor Weeks in the third and scored on a wild pitch by Rio starter Tiffany Bise (Circleville, OH) to take a 3-1 lead.
After the RedStorm tied the game in the fourth, both teams
coughed up opportunities to re-take the lead.
Pikeville left the bases loaded in both the fifth and seventh innings, while Rio left a pair of runners on in the fifth.
Kuhn finished 2-for-4 in the win and was one of four RedStorm
players to record two hits. Jones, Gwin and freshman Cheyenne
Hamaker (Hilliard, OH) also had two hits each and all had a double.
Jones earned the win as the pitcher after coming into to record
the final two outs in the top of the seventh, running her season
mark to 15-9.
Emily Castle had four hits, including a double, while Weeks
had two hits and an RBI in the loss for UPike.
In the opener, Rio Grande scored twice in the second inning
and added another run in the fifth to take a 3-0 lead. Jenkins and
sophomore Mattie Lanham (Rio Grande, OH) had run-scoring
hits in the second and Rollins added an RBI hit in the fifth.
UPike had just two baserunners in the first three innings
against Jones - one thanks to an error and the other as a result
of a hit batsman - but mounted a bit more of threat in the fourth.
Castle ended up at second base after her apparent inning-ending routine flyball to right was dropped for an error. Sara Browning followed with a single to right - the Bears’ first hit of the game
- but Castle was ruled out at the plate in a controversial call trying
to score on the hit and the threat died.
UPike did score on a Courtney Morgan fielder’s choice in the
sixth, but left runners at second and third base as the inning ended.
Jones surrendered a two-out infield single to Kayla Brown in
the seventh, but struck out Brandi Jo Howard to seal the win.
Jones tossed a complete game three-hitter, walking one and
striking out three.
Morris, who transferred to UPike from Rio Grande following
her freshman season, was the hard-luck loser. She allowed just
five hits - all singles - while walking three and striking out three
in a complete game effort.
Rio Grande returns to action on Monday afternoon when
eighth-ranked Lindsey Wilson College pays a visit. The two
teams were originally scheduled to play on the opening weekend
of the season, but inclement weather has forced the twinbill to be
rescheduled three times.

Photos by Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

GAHS senior Maggie Westfall signs her letter of intent on Thursday at GAHS. Sitting from left to right, are Jackie
Dennison, Valerie Westfall, Maggie Westfall and James Westfall.

Blue Angel’s Westfall commits to Marshall
By Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

CENTENARY, Ohio — Blue Angel fans wanting
to watch Maggie Westfall play volleyball next season
won’t have far to go.
The Gallia Academy standout has decided to take
her talents to Huntington and join the Marshall
Thundering Herd volleyball team.
“I’m kind of a homebody, so I like to be near my
home and I wanted my family to be able to come watch
me,” Maggie Westfall said. “Really, I loved the coaching staff and I loved the atmosphere at Marshall.”
Westfall will be joining a Marshall team that has
brought two Conference USA championship trophies to Huntington since joining the league in 2005.
Mitch Jacobs leads the Herd and has been head coach
at Marshall since 2002.
Westfall plans on majoring in communication disorders for her undergrad and will take speech pathology for her grad program. Maggie is currently 16th in
the senior class at GAHS with a 3.95 GPA.
On the court Maggie will be an outside hitter and
a defensive specialist for the Herd.
Maggie was named All-Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League player of the year this past fall and led the
Blue Angles to the SEOAL title. Westfall was also
named the District 13 player of the year and was on
first team All-SEOAL for the second straight season.
“I’d obviously like to thank my mom and dad, and
my lord and savior because without them I couldn’t
be where I am,” Westfall said. “I especially want to
thank my grandma for being my biggest fan.”
Maggie has played varsity volleyball for five seaGallia Academy’s Maggie Westfall spikes the ball during a
game at GAHS this season in Centenary.
sons, two at Ohio Valley Christian and three at GAHS.

Wahama unlucky
against Irish, 13-5

TUESDAY EVENING
3

(WSAZ)

By Bryan Walters

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

MASON, W.Va. — You can’t
win them all.
The Wahama baseball team
had its five-game winning
streak come to an end Saturday afternoon following a 13-5
setback to visiting Charleston
Catholic in a non-conference
matchup in Mason County.
The host White Falcons (85) never led in the contest, as
the Irish stormed out to a 4-1
lead after one inning and never
looked back. CCHS followed by
plating seven runs in the top of
the third for an 11-1 cushion,
but Wahama countered with
four scores in its half of the
third for an 11-5 deficit.
WHS, however, never came
closer the rest of the way as
Charleston Catholic (10-4)
tacked on two insurance runs
in the fifth to wrap up the
eight-run outcome. The Irish
also claimed a season sweep
after posting a 12-8 home win
back on March 26.
Catholic made the most of
its chances as the guests left
just six runners stranded on
base, compared to a dozen
by the White Falcons. CCHS
also outhit Wahama by a 13-

10 overall margin and had six
stolen bases, compared to just
three by the hosts. Both teams
also committed one error in
the contest.
Wesley Harrison took the
loss after allowing three runs,
one hit and two walks in the
first inning without recording
an out. Alex Belcher was credited with the win after surrendering five runs, seven hits and
three walks over three innings
of work while striking out two.
Harrison and Brent Larck
led WHS with two hits apiece,
followed by Kane Roush, Mason Hicks, Wyatt Zuspan,
Demetrius Serevicz, Hunter
Bradley and Garrett Miller
with a safety each.
Larck drove in two RBIs
and Bradley also added an
RBI. Roush, Hicks, Harrison,
Bradley and Miller each scored
once in the setback.
Connor Golden paced
CCHS with three hits, three
runs and five RBIs, followed
by Sam McKown, Michael
Martin, David Hamilton and
Domonic Marsico with two
safeties apiece. McKown and
Jordan Covelli each drove in
two runs, while Covelli and
Thad Jameson each scored
twice in the triumph.

BROADCAST

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TUESDAY, APRIL 22
7

PM

7:30

Wheel of
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Fortune
Health Forum "Emergency
Department"
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
Judge Judy Entertainment Tonight
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Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
13 News at Inside
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Edition

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

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Eliminations" (N)
The Voice "Live
Eliminations" (N)
Agent SHIELD "The Only
Light in the Darkness" (N)
Pioneers of Television
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Agent SHIELD "The Only
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NCIS "Better Angels"

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

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10

PM

10:30

Boy "About a Fisher "Desk/
Kiss" (N)
Job" (N)
Boy "About a Fisher "Desk/
Kiss" (N)
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The
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Green Fire" (N)

Chicago Fire "Rhymes With
Shout"
Chicago Fire "Rhymes With
Shout"
Celebrity Wife Swap "Robin
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Frontline "Solitary Nation"
Learn about America's use of
solitary confinement. (N)
The
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Goldbergs
Leach/ Eric Roberts" (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles "The
Person of Interest "Mors
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"Menus"
Project (N)
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Learn about America's use of
solitary confinement. (N)
NCIS: Los Angeles "The
Person of Interest "Mors
Frozen Lake"
Praematura"

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
24 (FXSP) Cavaliers (N) Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption
27 (LIFE)
29

(FAM)

30 (SPIKE)
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Rio

58
60
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From Page 6

62 (NGEO)

Junior Landon Hutchison (Baltimore, OH) took the
loss, despite pitching well in relief of senior starter David
Steele (Kettering, OH).
Hutchison allowed four hits and the one run, while
walking three and fanning two in four innings of work.
“Hutch threw the ball well. You can’t fault what he did
on the mound. We just came up short,” Warnimont said.
“In the second game, you can’t overlook the single in the
seventh by Kenyon, the bunt that Grant put down or the
job that Yates did to get us out of the jam in the top of
the seventh. We had different guys step up. Everybody
battled. It was an emotional day, no doubt. But we’re still
alive and that’s all we can ask for.”
Rio Grande returns to action on Tuesday afternoon,
hosting Miami-Hamilton in a non-conference tilt at Bob
Evans Field.
First pitch is set for 4:45 p.m.

6

(E!)
(TVL)

64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM

400 (HBO)
450 (MAX)
500 (SHOW)

Salem
Kill Bill Vol. 1 ('03, Act) Lucy Liu, Uma Thurman. TVM
Salem "The Vow"
MLB Baseball Cincinnati Reds at Pittsburgh Pirates Site: PNC Park -- Pittsburgh, Pa. (L) Postgame
CupOfCoffee
30 for 30
Outside the Lines
SportsCenter SportsCenter NFL "2014 Draft Academy"
SportsCenter
SportsC. "On the Clock" (L) 30 for 30 (N)
Baseball Tonight (L)
Wife Swap "Lovazzano/
Dance Moms "Lights!
Dance Moms "Presenting
Dance Moms "Seeing Red True Tori "The Fairytale
Clover"
Camera! Dance!"
my New Team"
(Reunion Special)" (N)
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Who Framed Roger Rabbit? A Hollywood detective
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix Daniel Radcliffe. After using magic
attempts to prove a cartoon character's innocence in a m... outside of school, Harry faces trial and may be expelled from Hogwarts. TVPG
Ink Master "X Men's Hugh Ink Master "2 on 1 TatInk Master "Artist
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Ink Master "Fighting Dirty"
Jackman"
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Slaughter"
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SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Sam &amp; Cat Full House
Full House
Full House
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Law&amp;O.:SVU "Control"
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Escape"
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Chrisley (N) Modern Fam
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
Inside Man "Futurism"
Castle
Castle "Always Buy Retail" NBA Basketball Playoffs (L)
NBA Basket.
(5:00)
Jaws 2 (1978, Horror) Lorraine
Next of Kin ('89, Cri) Patrick Swayze. A police officer takes justice
Game of Arms "Battle for
Gary, Murray Hamilton, Roy Scheider. TV14 into his own hands when his brother is killed by a mobster. TV14
the Belt" (N)
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Wars
in the Hole" "San Burrito" Wars
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Wild Russia "Kamchatka" African Cats (2011, Documentary) Samuel L. Jackson. TVG Monsters "Lethal Legends"
Bad Girls Club "Cowgirl.
Bad Girls Club "Tropical
Bad Girls Club "Paradise
Bad Girls Club "Best
Chasing
Celebrities
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Punch"
Lost"
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Maria Me (N) Undercov (N)
Law &amp; Order "Trust"
Law &amp; Order "Vengeance" Law &amp; Order
LawOrder "Cradle to Grave" Law &amp; Order
Sex and the City
E! News (N)
Giuliana "Up in the Air" (N)
Maid in Manhattan ('02, Com) Jennifer Lopez. TV14
A. Griffith
A. Griffith
(:05) Gilligan (:45) Gilligan (:20) Gilligan's Island
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
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Loves Ray
Southern Justice "Bath
Filthy Riches "Harvest
Alaska State Troopers
Alaska State Troopers
Life Below Zero "Winter's
Sales and Battery"
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"Shotgun Standoff"
"Meth, Knives, &amp; Spears"
Warning"
(5:30) FB Talk NHL Live! "Quarter-finals" NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs Boston Bruins at Detroit Red Wings (L) NHL Hockey
America's Pre-game (L)
WPT Poker Alpha8
Rise As (N) UFC Unleashed
MLB 162 (N) MLB Whiparound (L)
Counting
CountCars
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
Counting
Restoration American
Cars
"Old School" Cars
Cars
Cars
Cars
Cars
Cars
"Beer Bell-y" Restoration
The Real Housewives
The Real Housewives
Housewives Atl. "Reunion" Housewives "Fireworks" (N) Couch (N)
Million (N)
106 &amp; Park (N)
Phat Girlz ('06, Com) Jimmy Jean-Louis, Mo'nique. TVPG
The Game
Game (N)
Together (N)
House
House
House
House Hunt. Flip or Flop Flip or Flop FlipFlop (N) Flip or Flop HouseH (N) House (N)
Face Off "Industrial
Face Off "Bloodsuckers"
Face Off "Cry Wolf"
Face Off "Heavenly Bodies" CreatureShopChalleng
Revolution"
(N)
"Life in Motion" (N)

6

PM

6:30

7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

Fever Pitch ('05, Real Time With Bill Maher Game of Thrones "Breaker Silicon
Veep "Alicia"
of Chains" Sam realizes that Valley
Comedy) Jimmy Fallon, Ione The outspoken comedian
Skye, Drew Barrymore. TVPG discusses hot topics.
Castle Black isn't safe.
(3:35)
(:35) Broken City ('12, Cri) Russell Crowe, Catherine ZetaThe Purge ('13, Hor) Ethan Hawke. A
Heat Al
Jones, Mark Wahlberg. After being framed by the Mayor, family is held hostage for harboring the
Pacino. TV14 an ex-cop seeks revenge and redemption. TV14
target of a murderous syndicate. TV14
(4:30) Salmon (:25)
Gone Amanda Seyfried. A
Years of Living
Years of Living
Fishing in ... woman is convinced her kidnapper has
Dangerously
Dangerously "End of the
returned when her sister goes missing. TV14
Woods"
(5:15)

10

PM

10:30

Real Sports With Bryant
Gumbel (N)
This Is 40 (2012,
Comedy) Leslie Mann,
Megan Fox, Paul Rudd. TV14
Mad Dog: Inside the Secret
World of Moammar
Gaddafi ('14, Doc) TVMA

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Notices

Yard Sale

Money To Lend

Business &amp; Trade School

GUN SHOW

Yard Sale April 24-26. 27867
Huntington Rd. Apple Grove,
WV, Yellow House Behind
Post Office. Some Antiques. 9
a.m. - 6 p.m.

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
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know, and NOT to send Money
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The Syracuse Racine Regional Sewer District will be accepting sealed bids for a 1987 Ford
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Monday May 19, 2014 at the
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The SRRSD has the right to
accept or reject any or all bids.
There are no written or expressed warranties, will be as
is. Inspection of the truck will
be by appointment only
Monday thru Friday 10am to
2pm by calling 740-949-2897
during the hours of 8am to
2pm. (04),22,23,24,25

Lawn Service
J&amp;M Total Lawn Care &amp; Pressure Washing. Serving
Gallia &amp; Point. Free Est 304593-4070 or 304-444-7911.
Lawn Care Service, Mowing,
Trimming, Free estimates. Call
740-645-0546 or 740-4411333
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EXT 25
Help Wanted General
“The Village of Middleport is
accepting applications for the
position of Economic Development Director to perform
the services of grant administration and economic improvement on a part-time basis for
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Please send applications
and/or resumes with proof of
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Place. (04),22,27
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1113 Washington St.
Ravenswood WV 26164
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740)446-3570

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Trucks/SUVs/Vans

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$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
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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
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304-882-3017
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446-1599.
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Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
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elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Land (Acreage)
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740-256-1087

2-Bdrm - 1 bath, Nice, NO
PETS. $375/mo &amp; Deposit.
740-446-7275

Installation / Maintenace / Repair

For rent 2 bedroom apartment
in Gallipolis $460.00 per
month plus deposit. For rent 3
bedroom house in Pomeroy
$450.00 plus deposit. Call 3880188 and leave message and
call back number.

Experienced HVAC Installer
needed excellent pay based on
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Safford School Rd. Gallipolis,
Oh.

For rent 2 bedroom apartment
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month plus deposit. For rent 3
bedroom house in Pomeroy
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call back number.

Help Wanted General

888-781-3386

2500 �%%��$.2("$

$

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2004 Buick Rendezvous, 3.4
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New tires,shocks,brakes &amp; battery 81k miles $5900 OBO
Gallipolis,Oh 740-441-1677 or
441-7620
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

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Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

We will pick up your Scap
Metal, broken down Cars, old
Stove, Dryer, &amp; Washer, call
740-669-4240, 614-989-7341

Medical Staff
Coordinator

Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing

Degree, 5+ years’ experience in a
diverse medical practice, medical staff
credentialing/onboarding preferred.
Competitive salary and benefits.
Email CV to
David Brown, HR Director,
Pleasant Valley Hospital,
2520 Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550,
dbrown@pvalley.org.

Want To Buy
Want to Buy a Red or Blue
Heller pup, male or female.
740-643-0817, if no answer
leave message
Autos for Sale

Rentals
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

Call

Auto For Sale Cavaliers, Saturns, Trucks, Hondas, SUVs,
Vans, Focus's, 740-446-7278
or 740-645-2287

60498676

Professional &amp; Business

Stanley
Tree Trimming
&amp; Removal
• Prompt and Quality Work
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured
• Experienced
• References Available

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Pleasant Valley Hospital is a partner of Cabell Huntington Hospital and the
Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine. EOE: M/F/D/V

�Tuesday, April 22, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Page 9

The Daily Sentinel

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

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By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

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PARDON MY PLANET

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

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RHYMES WITH ORANGE

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2
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4/22

Difficulty Level

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

4/22

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�Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Five-Star Recipient for

Hip Fracture Treatment in 2014

Five-Star Recipient for Treatment
of Respiratory Failure for

Three Years in a Row
2012 ~ 2013 ~ 2014

Holzer Gallipolis

Holzer Medical
Center - Jackson

Recipient of the Healthgrades

Joint Replacement
Excellence Award™ in 2014
Recognized Among the

Top 10% in the Nation

for Joint Replacement in 2014
Five-Star Recipient for
Total Knee Replacement for

Two Years in a Row
2013 ~ 2014

1-855-4HOLZER ~ www.holzer.org
60498313

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