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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

Memorial Day is
a call to political
responsibility... Page 4

Mostly cloudy.
High near 82. Low
around 63... Page 2

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Local spring sports
action... Page 6

Retta Mae Arnett, 87
Theodore B. Flood, 90
Ava M. Lasseter, 6 months
Howard L. Keyser, 84
Gary L. Sergent, 59
Frances L. Taylor, 70

50 cents daily

TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014

Vol. 64, No. 84

Legionnaires holds Memorial Day services
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — The importance of remembering those who served in the military, those who came back , and those who
didn’t, was an emphasis of Army Veteran
David Hall, national vice commander of
the American Legion, when he spoke at
Memorial Day services held on the Pomeroy parking lot Monday.
Introduced by John Hood, commander
of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, Hall emphasized the importance of
Memorial Day and the emphasis it places
on those who have served over the years
in the military. He said wars have always

been with us noting that in the Civil War
1.8 million people lost their lives, and another 1 1/2 million were wounded.
He said today there are 88,000 Americans
who are classified as either prisoners of war
or missing in action. “Families are suffering
today because they don’t know where their
loved ones are. He spoke of the high suicide
rate among some who are returning from action and the debt we owe them in the way
of helping then move back into society here.
Hall emphasized that freedom is not
free and called on America to remember
those who serve now on foreign soil and
here in America.
Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

See SERVICES | 3 Patriotic music was presented by the Southern Local Band.

Photos submitted by Scott Wolfe

Southern High School Class of 2014 on graduation night.

Graduation night for the Southern
High School Class of 2014
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — “Keep a positive attitude, surround yourself with the right
people, and always remember that excellence is not a coincidence, it’s hard
work.”
That was the advice of Darien
Diddle, valedictorian, and Sarah Lawrence, salutatorian, in a dual speech
to the 50 Southern High School graduating students Saturday night.
The auditorium was filled with family and friends for the ceremony that
began with the processional to music
by the school band directed by Chad
Dodson. There was a welcome from
Ryan Daugherty, class president,
the invocation by Jamie O’Brien,
secretary-treasurer, and the pledge
of allegiance led by Sarah Lawrence,
Student Council president.
In their speech, Diddle and Lawrence talked about the familiar advice.
“If you don’t have anything nice to
say, don’t say anything at all” noting
that it usually leads to regrets. They
suggested “think before you speak or
just keep your mouth shut and you
won’t have to worry about getting
your foot out of it later.”
They called on the graduates to remember the four things you can’t recover — “the stone after it’s thrown,
the word after it’s been said, the occasion after it’s missed, and the time
after it’s gone.”
Daniel Otto, principal, recognized
See SOUTHERN | 3

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Music for the Eastern graduation program was provided by the High School Concert
Band under the direction of Cris Kuhn.

Eastern High School
graduates 54 students
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

Hunter Johnson, Trenton Deem, and Taylor McNickle in the processional.

Having fun as get it all together on
graduation night are Tristin Diddle, Jack
Unbankes, Jordan Hutton, Steven Batey
and Devon Cundiff.

REEDSVILLE — Proud parents
and others filled the gymnasium of
Eastern High School Sunday afternoon when the members of the Class
of 2014 received their graduation diplomas.
In their green and white robes, the
class members marched into the gymnasium to “Pomp and Circumstance”
played by the Eastern High School
Concert Band. Taking part in the
opening ceremony were Tyler Barber,
who led in the Pledge of Allegiance;
Alex Victory, who gave the invocation; and Zachary Browning, who
extended the welcome. Erin Swatzel
introduced the speakers, including
Dakota O’Brien, valedictorian, and
Katie Keller, salutatorian.
In his address, O’Brien thanked
the teachers for sharing their time,
talent and knowledge, and to the
parents who supported their children
in so many ways, from helping with
homework, paying class fees, listening to complaints and putting up the
daily drama while allowing students
enough space to learn how to work
things out for themselves.
He talked about the army of people
who have supported and propelled
them through their high school career, about the change from child to
adult, the falling and failing to be
See EASTERN | 3

These boys were all decked out in their
robes just waiting for the call to move
into the precessional line.

Kate Keller, class valedictorian, helps
Kendra Fick in adjusting her cap.

Brothers in arms and life are remembered Saturday
By Mindy Kearns

Special to The Register
PPRnews@civitasmedia.com

NEW HAVEN — Two New Haven
brothers who were held as prisoners
of war during World War II were honored posthumously Saturday when a
bridge was named in their memory.
The Layne Street Bridge on Old
Route 33 in New Haven was renamed
the Ord Brothers Memorial Bridge in
honor of Charles Richard “Dick” Ord
and Milton “Mit” Ord.
The ceremony was attended by
Dick Ord’s three children, Dickie
Ord, Bonnie Smith and Glenndalyn
Fradd, as well as a host of other relatives and friends. Speaking were Del-

egates Scott Cadle and Jim Butler,
who were instrumental in completing
the project, and Ray Varian, member
of the Stewart-Johnson V.F.W. Post
9926 of Mason and State Assistant
P.O.W. Chairman.
Butler told the crowd, “It is important to remember our history.”
He read the citation from the West
Virginia Legislature that officially renamed the bridge.
Cadle stated they were there because of the service the Ord brothers
did for us all.
“They volunteered their service,”
Cadle said, speaking of the fact that
both men enlisted in the Army as opposed to being drafted. “As prison-

ers of war, they were served a cup of
soup a day.”
Cadle told of talking to Dick Ord
about his time as a prisoner.
“Dick said there was a building
where he was being held that had a
barrel of salt in it,” he said. “Dick
said he remembered reading in the
Bible about salt losing its savour.
Dick said that salt had no flavor but
they ate it to have something in their
mouths.”
Cadle concluded by saying he felt
there are not enough bridges and roads
in the state to name after the many vetPhoto by Mindy Kearns
erans who served our country.
Chase Ord, grandson of Dick Ord, is pictured as he unveils the
sign naming the former Layne Street Bridge in New Haven as

See BROTHERS | 3 the Ord Brothers Memorial Bridge.

�Page 2 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Ohio Valley Forecast

Meigs County Community Calendar

Tuesday: Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly after
2 p.m. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 82. West wind 5 to
9 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent. New rainfall
amounts of less than a tenth of an inch, except higher amounts
possible in thunderstorms.
Tuesday night: Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm
before 7 p.m., then a chance of showers and thunderstorms
after 7 p.m. Some of the storms could produce heavy rainfall.
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 63. Southwest wind around
6 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent. New rainfall
amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Wednesday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms, then
showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm after 2 p.m. Some
of the storms could produce heavy rainfall. Mostly cloudy, with
a high near 82. Light southwest wind becoming west 5 to 10
mph in the morning. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent. New
rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Wednesday night: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 64. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.

Tuesday, May 27
POMEROY — Revival
services at the Calvary
Pilgrim Chapel, S.R.
143, Pomeroy, May27 to

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 24.28
Pepsico (NYSE) — 85.83
Premier (NASDAQ) — 14.62
Rockwell (NYSE) — 121.26
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.37
Royal Dutch Shell — 79.09
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 37.64
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 75.61
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.28
WesBanco (NYSE) — 29.41
Worthington (NYSE) — 40.25
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions May 23, 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.

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Civitas Media, LLC
(USPS 436-840)

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

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

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Ext. 25
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Sarah Hawley
740-992-2155
Ext. 13

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

information 992=2952.
Birthdays
POMEROY — Marjorie Reuter will ob-

serve her 90th birthday
on May 29. Cards may
be sent to her at 138
Beech Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

Meigs County Church Calendar
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 through-

out 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.
Comfort Club — 9 a.m.-noon Wednesday.
Food Pantry — 9-11 a.m. Tuesday-Friday.
Shape-Up — 9-11 a.m. and 5-7 p.m. Tuesday and
Thursday.

Meigs County Local Briefs

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 51.41
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 25.09
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 103.00
Big Lots (NYSE) — 37.97
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 47.13
BorgWarner (NYSE) —62.17
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 13.84
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.421
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 42.73
Collins (NYSE) — 76.81
DuPont (NYSE) — 68.10
US Bank (NYSE) — 41.45
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.51
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 71.71
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 54.53
Kroger (NYSE) — 46.85
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 57.32
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 99.20
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 21.91
BBT (NYSE) — 37.73

May 31, 7 p.m. June 1
service, 6:30 p.m. Evangelist Bill McCoy . Pastor Charles McKenzie
can be called for more

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

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

Relay for Life luminary orders
POMEROY — The last day to order luminaries for the 2014 Meigs
Co. Relay for Life is Saturday, May
31. They can be dropped off at the
Meigs County Health Department
before 4 p.m. on Friday, May 30, or
between 8 a.m. and noon on Monday,
June 2. The Health Department is
located at 112 E Memorial Drive in
Pomeroy.
Yard Sale
CHESTER — The Chester Courthouse and Museum will have a yard
sale on June 6 and 7, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
at the courthouse. Clean items are
needed to put into the sale which will
benefit the historical buildings.
Route 143 yard sale
HARRISONVILLE — The fifth annual Route 143 yard sale, described
as “21 miles of fun and treasures,”
will be held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday, May 31, Scipio and Columbia Township Volunteer Fire Departments selling food, even homemade
ice cream along the way. Rest rooms
available. Call 740-742=2819 for a
space to rent or other information.
Rumpke Collection Schedule
POMEROY — Rumpke waste removal and recycling collection service will be delayed one day during
the week because of Memorial Day.
Regular collection will resume the
week of June 2.
Senior Citizens Trip
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Council on Aging is planning a all
trip to Niagara Falls and Toronto, but

the deadline for signing up to attend
is May 27. The trip will be by motor coach and the four-night, five-day
trip will be from Sept. 22 to Sept. 26.
Included in the price of $485 (per
person double occupancy) will be
motor coach transportation, eight
meals, guided tours of Niagara Falls
and Toronto, a journey to the Falls
on a Hornblower Niagara Cruise,
gaming at Fallsview Casino, a visit to
Niagara on the Lake and Queen Victoria Park, and a visit to Casa Loma,
Canada’s most magnificent castle.
Payment of $75 is required when
signing up.
Kids fishing derby
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Fish and Game Association will have
its annual kids fishing derby 8 a.m.
to noon June 14. Age for participation is 15 years of younger and children must be accompanied by an
adult. A rod and reel will be provided
for each child who doesn’t have one
to bring.. Since local merchants help
sponsor the event, there will be free
food, drinks and prizes. To reach the
site, take Ohio 7 north from Pomeroy, turn left on Texas Road and follow the derby signs. For more information, call Dave Doerfer, 992-0026
or 416-9333.
Southern Memory Books
RACINE — The Southern High
School Class of 1964 has compiled
a memory book for its 50th class reunion project. Biographies of the 64
students who graduated that year,
along with many pictures and mementos, are included. The cost for
the spiral-bound and professionally

printed book is $20. Those interested in getting a copy are asked to contact Carol Reed, 949-2910, or Sharon
Cottrill, 992-4275.
Health Department Change
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department has extended hours for public visits. On the
first Tuesday of each month, the
office will be open until 6 p.m. Services available will include nursing
(immunization clinic, etc.) environmental health and vital statistics. The duration of the extended
services will depend on public use.
The WIC clinic will also be serving
clients on each Tuesday from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. beginning today. Call
EIC for an appointment at (740)
992-0392.
Red Cross CPR Class
CHESHIRE — AEP, Gavin Plant,
is holding a free CPR class at their
facility in Cheshire on June 14. The
class will run from 7:30 a.m. until 4
p.m. and will include CPR and AED
adult and child, as well as First Aid.
Upon completion of the class, students will be certified. Lunch will
be provided. Seating is limited and
pre-registration is required. To register call the American Red Cross
of Southeastern Ohio at (740) 5935273.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will conduct an
immunization clinic Tuesday from
9-11 a.m.and 1-3 p.m. Children must
be accompanied by a parent or guardian and bring shot records.

State seeks ways to trim costs for trimming grass
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)
— The state is spending roughly $1 million in
search of a less costly and

Friday, May 30th 2014
11:00AM - 1:00PM

easier way to cut the grass
and manage the trees and
shrubs along Ohio’s interstates and highways.
The Dayton Daily News
reports that the effort began last year with the state
putting up $177,000 for
the first phase of a consulting contract with the Kentbased Davey Resource
Group. The company’s
recommended changes included spraying chemicals
in certain areas to limit the
growth of grass and weeds.
But the project’s second
phase is pricier. The latest contract with the company will cost taxpayers
$1,002,048, the newspaper
reports.
A state transportation
official says Ohio is trying
to be more efficient with
vegetation management,
while ensuring that animals are kept off the highway.
“We have wildlife that
tends to make its home

in high grass,” said Scott
Kasler, an administrator
with Ohio Department of
Transportation District 7.
The consultant is expected to present alternatives to mowing the grass
at the state’s usual rate of
four times a year, along
with ideas to manage
heavy bushes, shrubs and
trees along highways. The
project is slated to take
three years before final recommendations are made
to the state’s transportation department.
The effort comes after
a recommendation from
the state auditor, who said
the transportation agency
could save an estimated
$4.4 million a year by reducing mowing.
With four complete cuts
annually, Ohio mows more
often than other states in
the region, according to
the newspaper. Indiana
and Kentucky mow three
times each year and Illi-

nois cuts twice.
Kasler said much of the
cost for the project’s second
phase is for equipment and
chemicals recommended by
the consultant. Less grass
cutting also will be examined.
One county engineer
said he believed the consulting contract was a
waste.
“You could go out for
$70,000 or $80,000 and
hire an expert to work for
you and it would be a lot
cheaper than a million dollars,” said Greene County
Engineer Bob Geyer.
Part-time retirees mow
the western county’s roads
four-to-five times throughout the summer.
Geyer said experiments
with chemicals on the
county’s grass and brush
weren’t successful.
“It is just not a viable
option,” he said. “The cost
was prohibitive compared
to just mow an extra time
or two.”

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The Daily Sentinel

Page 3

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

The honor guard of Drew-Webster Post 39, America Legion, stands at attention while the flag is being raised

Services
From Page 1
As for Memorial Day,
he said it was established
in 1865 for observance on
May 30, and then he pointed out, priorities changed
and the date of observance
was moved to the last
Monday to fit into a three
day weekend.
Prayer to open the service was given by Legionnaire Joe Struble, Gladys
Cumings of the Legion
Auxiliary read “In Flanders Field”and patriotic
music was provided by
the Southern High School
Band directed by Chad
Dodson.
A wreath in remembrance of those who died
at sea was placed in the
Ohio River, and the program concluded with firing of guns by the Legion
honor guard.

Speaker David Hall, National Vice Commander of
the American Legion, gives
tribute to veterans.

Southern
From Page 1
the honorians of the class and others, after
which Tony Deem, superintendent, presented the class to Denny Evans, president
of the Southern Local Board of Education
who handed out the diplomas. After the
class president, Ryan Daugherty, led in
the changing of the tassels, the Alma Mater was played, Cameron Harmon gave the
benediction and the band played “Pomp
and Circumstance” for the recessional.
Students in the graduating class were
Austin Barton, Christopher Barton, Tyler
Barton, Riley Beegle, Zachariah Beegle,
Robin Bennett, Robert Blankenship, Kelsi
Casto, Hannah Conley, Ryan Daugherty,

Trenton Deem, Darien Diddle, Jacob
Dixon, Jeffrey Dowell, Chandler Drummer, Sarah Eakins, Brandon Grueser,
Cameron Harmon, Shyanne Harper, Celestia Hendrix, Rowan Holsinger, Jordan
Huddleston, Baylee Hupp, Lacey Hupp,
Wyatt Jarrell, Katie Jenkins, Hunter Johnson, Joshua Justis, Travis Kimes, Sarah
Lawrence, Nathan Leamond, Damon Ledford, Devon Ledford, Jamal Lee, Drewlyn
Lemley, Ciera Marcinko, Taylor McNickle,
Brandon Moodispaugh, Dylan Matson, Jamie O’Brien, Aaron Payne, Casey Pickens,
Ashlyn Pickett, Alexander Sayre, Allison
Taylor, Dennis Teaford, Colten Walters,
Photo submitted by Scott Wolfe
Jason Warner, Joyce Weddle and Christo- Marking the end as classmates but not of friendships as they move on are Ashlyn Pickett,
pher Yeater.
Drewlyn Lemley, Joyce Weddle, Ciera Marcinko.

Eastern
From Page 1
faced, and the challenge to “pick
yourself up, dust yourself off and
try all over again.”
Keller, in her salutatorian
speech, talked about finding a
passion in life describing it as
“not going to be easy, not going
to be instant.” She made reference to the temptation of “settling” for something less, of the
need for connecting with someone who encourages creativity,
and of the persistence needed by
never giving up.
She spoke of the influence
technology plays in life today, of

the dependency on things like
cell phones, social media and
search engines, and cautioned
that the answer is not there.
“Trying to figure out what you
want to do with your life is one
of the most important challenges
you will face,” she said, adding
that it won’t happen instantly,
and it won’t be easy but it will be
worthwhile, and then suggested
that a good thing to do is to put
the phone down and think for
yourself.
Principal Shawn Bush recognized the top 10 scholars, and
then presented the Class of 2014
to Superintendent Scot Gheen,

who handed the job of conferring diplomas to Floyd Ridenour,
president of the Eastern Local
Board of Education. He then presented diplomas to the graduating class members.
After turning their tassels and
the benediction, the graduates
left the auditorium to the recessional march played by the Eastern High School Concert Band.
Members of the Eastern High
School graduation class of 2014
were: Tyler McKenley Barber,
Courtney Michelle Bauerbach,
Latham Chase Bissell, Zachary James Bixby, Zachary Levi
Browning, Roger William Bunce,

Jena Lynn Burdette, Haileigh
Sabrina Bush, Garrett Morgen
Caldwell, Cassidy Meredith Cleland, Paige Marie Cline, Samantha Marie Cline, Thunder Joe Clonch, Brandon William Coleman,
Chase, Nathaniel Cook, Molly
Jessica Dunlap, Kendra Eileen
Fick, Austin Tyler Fitzgerald,
Dylan Anthony Forester, David
Alan Frank, Aliyah Rose Gantt,
Austin Fredrick Gheen, Hannah Alyssa Hawley, Tyler Austin
Hensley, Katilynn Renea Hoffman, Jenna Lynn Hysell, Tanner
Chase Jenkins, Autumn Elaine
Johnson, Katie Rose Keller, Jordan Lane Koblentz, Jonathon

Nolan Kuhn, Olivia Marie Lane,
Keri Ann Lawrence, Veronica
Lynn McGovern, Noah Jacob
Miller, Amber Dawn Moodispaugh, Emily Kate Moore, Dakota Reid O’Brien, Jordan Anne
Parker, Joshua James Parker,
Lindsey Gail Putman, Cody Edward Rayburn, Justin Thomas
Rees, Madison Taylor Rigsby,
Benjamin Tyler Sampson, Zackary Lee Scowden, Eden Shaye
Selbee, Jasmine Paige Swatzel,
Brianna Kay Teaford, Alex Nathaniel Victory, David Ray Warner, Wyatt Edward Westfall and
Lindsay Nichole Wolf .

Brothers
From Page 1
Following the ceremony,
a gun salute was given
by the 130th Airlift Wing
of Charleston, including
Chief Master Sgt. Chris
Butler of Glenwood; Master Sgt. Michael Pritt of
Elkview; Airman First
Class Brad Morris of St.
Albans; and Senior Airman
Travis Ferrell of Summersville. Chase Ord, grandson
of Dick Ord, unveiled the
signs signifying the new
name of the bridge.
All of Dick Ord’s children were very proud of
their dad’s and uncle’s service, and pleased by Saturday’s ceremony.
“This is a great honor
for dad and Uncle Mit,”
Dickie Ord stated. “It
shows the community is
very grateful for all the
veterans who gave their
service in all wars.”
Dickie’s sister Bonnie
agreed. “Dad would be so

proud,” she said. “He was
really proud of his country.”
“It makes me proud of
the service dad and my
uncle gave to the country,” said Dick’s daughter
Glenndalyn. “He would be
very happy.”
She concluded, “Young
kids don’t appreciate what
they went through. Someone told me ‘freedom is
not free’ and it isn’t.”
The Ord brothers had a
unique story in that they
joined the service at different times and were captured in different places
- Dick in Germany during
the Battle of the Bulge and
Mit in Africa. They were
held in different P.O.W.
camps. The brothers were
liberated by different countries - Dick by the U.S.
troops and Mit by the Russians. Yet three days later
the two found each other
in the same camp, awaiting
a trip to France that would
eventually return them to

Photo by Mindy Kearns

Dick Ord’s three children, from left, Bonnie Smith, Glenndalyn
Fradd, and Dickie Ord were presented copies of the citation by
the West Virginia Legislature, re-naming the bridge on Old Route
33 in New Haven the Ord Brothers Memorial Bridge. Shown making the presentation are Delegates Scott Cadle and Jim Butler.

the United States.
Dick and Mit remained
together until they reached
New Haven. Dick went
on to finish his service in
Arkansas. He attended col-

lege and later served as
president of Mason County Bank for many years.
Dick died in 2013. Mit reenlisted in the Army and
died in the 1970s.

THE MEIGS COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF JOB AND FAMILY
SERVICES REMINDS YOU THAT MAY IS FRAUD PREVENTION
MONTH. IF YOU SUSPECT WELFARE FRAUD, PLEASE
CALL 800-992-2608. YOUR CALL WILL REMAIN
CONFIDENTIAL AND ANONYMOUS. THE MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF JOB AND FAMILY SERVICES NEEDS
YOUR HELP ... FRAUD COSTS ALL OF US.
OFFICE HOURS MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:00AM-4:30PM
60498992

�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Page 4
TUESDAY, MAY 27 2014

Memorial Day is a call to political responsibility
By E.J. Dionne
Memorial Day is a peculiarly
appropriate holiday for our times.
Its origins lie in the Civil War,
which resulted from the failure of
a deeply polarized political system
to settle the question of slavery.
Reading the history of the
period leading up to the war is
jarring because its political conflicts bear eerie similarities to
our own — for the sharp regional
differences over how the federal
government’s powers should be
regarded; for the way in which
advocates of slavery relied on
“constitutional” claims to justify
its survival and spread; for the
refusal of pro-slavery forces to accept the need for compromise in
the wake of the outcome of the
1860 election; and for the fierce
disagreements over how the very
words “morality,” “patriotism”
and “freedom” should be defined.
Our nation argued over what
the Founders really intended
and over the Supreme Court’s

authority to impose a particular
political view — in the case of
the Dred Scott decision, it was
the pro-slavery view — and to
override growing popular opposition to slavery’s expansion.
Religious people sundered their
ties with each other over the political implications of faith and
biblical teachings. And, yes, we
struggled over race and racism.
We are not on the verge of a
new civil war, and no single issue in our moment matches
slavery either in its morally
evocative power or as a dividing line splitting the nation into
two distinct social systems. But
Memorial Day might encourage
us to re-engage with the story of
the pre-Civil War period (the late
David M. Potter’s Pulitzer Prizewinning history of the era, “The
Impending Crisis,” has helpfully
been reissued) for clues from the
past as to how we might understand the present.
The holiday itself and how it was
transformed over the years also

carry political lessons for us now.
Memorial Day, as veterans are
always the first to remind us, is
not the same as Veterans’ Day.
Memorial Day honors the war
dead; Veterans’ Day honors all
vets. Memorial Day started as
Decoration Day on May 5, 1868,
initiated by the Grand Army of
the Republic, the vast and politically influential organization of
Union veterans. The idea was to
decorate the graves of the Union
dead with flowers. Students of
the holiday believe that Gen.
John A. Logan, the commander
in chief of the GAR (and the Republican vice presidential nominee in 1884), eventually set May
30 as its date because that would
be when flowers were in bloom
across the country.
The South, of course, saluted
the Confederate war dead. A
group of women in Columbus,
Miss., for example, decorated
the graves of the Southern dead
at the Battle of Shiloh on April
25, 1866. This and other compa-

Chipotle trips up yet again
By Esther Cepeda
Corporate America has
its place in our economy
and culture — as does its
stream of irresistible products — but that place is not
to be arbiters of ideology or
intellectual tastemakers.
A great many people instinctively understand this.
They don’t buy their burgers, sneakers or computers based on the religious
or political beliefs of the
people producing the goods
or services. They can feel
strongly about certain issues and yet still be confident enough to patronize
certain brands and not feel
a lick of guilt about it.
Take Josh Hune of New
York City as an example.
He’s gay, but he’s also happy
that the Chick-fil-A fast food
chain, which came under
fire when its president admitted he opposed same-sex
marriage, is about to open
shops in the Big Apple.
An item in The New
York Post had Hune posing
with a fried chicken patty
in a bun. In reference to a
friend’s reaction to his politically incorrect poultry
allegiance, Hune remarked:
“He told me I was the worst
gay in NYC. But I personal-

ly don’t think my money or
my going there is me saying
I hate gays as well. I don’t
think about it like that $7 is
going to some foundation
to stop gay marriage. For
me, it’s just food.”
Imagine that.
Now, let’s take Hune’s
lead and apply the same
logic to Chipotle Mexican
Grill, the purveyor of burritos and guacamole, which
has had a rough few weeks.
Not only has the chain
offended gun lovers by
asking them not to openly
display their firearms in
its dining rooms, but now
management has ticked off
what few Mexicans hadn’t
already vowed to despise
Chipotle for elevating the
humble taco stand to something that has about as
much cultural relevance to
Mexico as Taco Bell.
Here’s where Chipotle
fumbled: The company decided that in addition to
pushing its organic, sustainable, locally sourced
“Food With Integrity,”
it would also jazz up the
cups and takeout bags with
short stories by prominent
authors.
Chipotle’s
“Cultivating Thought” campaign
seemed like a slam-dunk

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for the type of clientele the
eatery tries to cultivate —
mainly, I imagine, people
who think of themselves
as being just a little fancier
than others.
But while the chain likes
to boast about its culinary
artistry and “in-depth understanding of cooking,
seasoning, knife skills and
grilling techniques,” its
leadership clearly doesn’t
have an in-depth understanding of how idiotic it
appears when it completely
overlooks the people whose
food it replicates.
Yes, Chipotle forgot to include any Mexican authors
in its selection of literature.
Cue the upset Mexicans.
Fox News Latino reports
that two writers, Lisa Alvarez and Alex Espinoza,
created “Cultivating Invisibility: Chipotle’s Missing
Mexicans,” a Facebook
page “where upset authors
and others can voice their
complaints with Chipotle’s
refried rebuff.”
“Here’s the thing. I exist.
I am full of stories. Just ask
me, and I’ll tell you. But
you have to ask,” Espinoza
wrote. “Don’t ignore me.
Don’t eat my food and think
you know me.”
Oh, brother.
Instead of bemoaning the
chain’s obvious ignorance,
I’ll stick to simply feeling
sorry for diners who have
no other option — i.e., actual Mexican family members to cook for them or access to authentic Mexican
restaurants — than to have
to dine at this yuppified
fancy-Mex franchise.
But if Hispanics really
want to counteract this
oversight, a Facebook page
is too easy an out. Instead
of clicking “Like,” why not
instead vow to become voracious readers, arbiters of
contemporary literature,
and drivers of book sales
out of all proportion to the
Hispanic percentage of the
U.S. population?
Better yet: Let’s not settle for a handful of “Mexican writers” who could be
featured on a paper sack.
Let’s actively cultivate
the next Toni Morrison,
Malcolm Gladwell or Michael Lewis — authors notable for the beauty of their
words or the power of their
journalism and not simply
for their racial or ethnic
backgrounds — and conspicuously read their books
at our favorite taco dive.

rable ceremonies led to a vigorous competition over where the
holiday originated.
It was only after World War
I that Memorial Day was established as a holiday commemorating the fallen in all American
wars. And it was not until 1966
that President Lyndon Johnson
declared Waterloo, N.Y., as the official birthplace of Memorial Day,
although that has not stopped the
disputes over where it began.
Seen one way, the Memorial
Day story traces a heartening
journey: a nation whose Civil
War took the lives of an estimated 750,000 Americans (more
than 2 percent of the U.S. population then) could and did gradually come back together. A holiday
that was initially a remembrance
of those who died because the
nation was so riven is now a unifying anniversary whose origins
are largely forgotten.
Marking Memorial Day, moreover, may now be more of a moral imperative than it ever was.

As a nation, we rely entirely on
a military made up of volunteers.
We are calling on a very small
percentage of our fellow citizens
to risk and give their lives on
behalf of us all. We should recognize how much we have asked of
so few, particularly in the years
since 2001.
But it would be a mistake to
ignore the roots of Memorial
Day in our Civil War. Memorial
Day is a call to political responsibility, even more so in some
ways than the Fourth of July.
The graves that Logan asked his
contemporaries to decorate were
a reminder that politics can have
dire consequences.
Distorting political reality (the
pro-secession forces, for example,
wrongly insisting that the resolutely moderate Abraham Lincoln
was a radical) makes resolving
differences impossible. As we
honor our war dead, let us pause
to consider how we are discharging our obligations to their legacy.

Putin’s pivot to Asia is a big deal
By Charles Krauthammer
Last week, it finally happened —
the pivot to Asia.
No, not the United States. It was
Russia that turned East.
In Shanghai, Russian President
Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping signed a spectacular
energy deal — $400 billion of Siberian natural gas to be exported to
China over 30 years.
This is huge. By indelibly linking producer and consumer — the
pipeline alone is a $70 billion infrastructure project — it deflates the
post-Ukraine Western threat (mostly empty, but still very loud) to cut
European imports of Russian gas.
Putin has just defiantly demonstrated that he has other places to go.
The Russia-China deal also makes
a mockery of U.S. boasts to have
isolated Russia because of Ukraine.
Not even Germany wants to risk a
serious rupture with Russia (hence
the absence of significant sanctions). And now Putin has just ostentatiously unveiled a signal 30year energy partnership with the
world’s second-largest economy.
Some isolation.
The contrast with President
Obama’s own vaunted pivot to Asia
is embarrassing. He went to Japan
last month also seeking a major trade
agreement that would symbolize and
cement a pivotal strategic alliance.
He came home empty-handed.
Does the Obama foreign policy
team even understand what is happening? For them, the Russia-China
alliance is simply more retrograde,
19th-century, balance-of-power maneuvering by men of the past oblivious to the reality of a 21st century
governed by law and norms. A place
where, for example, one simply
doesn’t annex a neighbor’s territory. Indeed, Obama scolds Russia
and China for not living up to their
obligations as major stakeholders in
this new interdependent world.
The Chinese and Russians can
only roll their eyes. These norms and
rules mean nothing to them. They
see these alleged norms as forms
of velvet-glove imperialism, clever
extensions of a Western hegemony
meant to keep Russia in its reduced
post-Soviet condition and China contained by a dominant U.S. military.
Obama cites modern rules; Russia and China, animated by resurgent nationalism, are governed by
ancient maps. Putin refers to eastern and southern Ukraine by the old
czarist term of “New Russia.” And
China’s foreign minister justifies
vast territorial claims that violate
maritime law by citing traditional

(“nine-dash”) maps that grant
China dominion over the East and
South China Seas.
Which makes this alignment of
the world’s two leading anti-Western powers all the more significant.
It marks a major alteration in the
global balance of power.
Putin to Shanghai reprises Nixon
to China. To be sure, it’s not the surprise that Henry Kissinger pulled
off in secret. But it is the capstone
of a gradual — now accelerated —
Russia-China rapprochement that
essentially undoes the KissingerNixon achievement.
Their 1972 strategic coup fundamentally turned the geopolitical
tables on Moscow. Putin has now
turned the same tables on us. China
and Russia together represent the
core of a new coalition of anti-democratic autocracies challenging the
Western-imposed, post-Cold War status quo. Their enhanced partnership
marks the first emergence of a global
coalition against American hegemony since the fall of the Berlin wall.
Indeed, at last week’s Asian cooperation conference, Xi proposed a
brand-new continental security system to include Russia and Iran (lest
anyone mistake its anti-imperialist
essence) and exclude America. This
is an open challenge to the postCold War, U.S.-dominated world
that Obama inherited and then
weakened beyond imagining.
If carried through, it would mark
the end of a quarter-century of
unipolarity. And herald a return to
a form of bipolarity — two global
coalitions: one free, one not —
though, with communism dead, not
as structurally rigid or ideologically
dangerous as Cold War bipolarity. Not a fight to the finish, but a
struggle nonetheless — for dominion and domination.
To which Obama, who once proclaimed that “no one nation can or
should try to dominate another nation,” is passive, perhaps even oblivious. His pivot to Asia remains a dead
letter. Yet his withdrawal from the
Middle East — where from Egypt to
Saudi Arabia, from Libya to Syria,
U.S. influence is at its lowest ebb in
40 years — is a fait accompli.
The retreat is compounded by
Obama’s proposed major cuts in
defense spending (down to below
3 percent of GDP by 2017) even as
Russia is rearming and China is creating a sophisticated military soon
capable of denying America access
to the waters of the Pacific Rim.
Decline is not a condition. Decline is a choice, Obama’s choice.
And it’s the one area where he is
succeeding splendidly.

�Tuesday, May 27, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituary

Death Notices

RETTA MAE ARNETT
MANSFIELD — Retta
Mae Arnett, 87, of Mansfield, went to be with the
Lord following a brief illness on Saturday, May 24,
2014, while surrounded by
her loving family.
Retta was born Nov. 13,
1926, in Pomeroy, to the
late John and Grace (Bumgardner) Dill. She married
Dallas Arnett on July 23,
1948.
Retta enjoyed being a
homemaker and devoted
her life to her family. She
loved her flower gardens,
cooking and her pets, but
most importantly, she
loved spending time with
her family.
She is survived by
daughters Carolyn Arnett, Peggy Smith, Brenda
Lovelace and Marlene Lee,
all of Mansfield; son Mickie (Patty) Arnett, of Mansfield; eight grandchildren,
Nicky Theocharakis, of
Largo, Fla., Matthew (Cari)
Smith, of Lucas, and Ryan
Arnett, Jamie Arnett, Megan Lee, Emily Lovelace,
Amanda Lovelace, Joseph
Lee and Andrew Arnett,
all of Mansfield; six greatgrandchildren,
Austin,
Taylor, Kagan, Dallas and

Page 5

The Daily Sentinel

Charlie Smith and Kendyll
Lee; sister Faye Watson, of
Reedsville, Ohio; and many
nieces, nephews, greatnieces, great-nephews, special friends and neighbors.
Retta was preceded
in death by her parents;
husband Dallas Arnett
in 1974; two grandsons,
Dallas Smith and Jarod
Arnett; a great-grandson,
Chance Lee; stepdaughter
and son-in-law Wanda and
Nick Theocharakis; five
brothers, Elsworth, John,
Charles, Carl and Willard
Dill; and four sisters, Esther Dill, Mary Starcher,
Kathrine Evans and Frances Carleton.
Funeral services will be
10 a.m. Thursday, May 29,
2014, at Diamond Street
Home of Wappner Funeral
Directors, 98 S. Diamond
St., Mansfield, conducted
by Chaplain Alden Thibeau. Friends may call one
hour prior to the service at
the funeral home. Graveside services will follow in
Rocksprings Cemetery in
Pomeroy at 4 p.m.
Memorial contributions
may be made to the Humane Society of Richland
County.

FLOOD
GALLIPOLIS — Theodore Blanchard “Ted”
Flood, 90, of Gallipolis,
died Thursday, May 22,
2014.
Calling hours will be
5:30-7 p.m. Thursday, May
29, 2014, at Willis Funeral
Home.
KEYSER
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. —
Howard Lee Keyser, 84, of
New Haven, died Sunday,
May 25, 2014, at Arbors at
Gallipolis.
A funeral service will
be 11 a.m. Wednesday,
May 28, 2014, at the Gospel Lighthouse Church in
Point Pleasant, with the
Rev. Junior Mayes officiating. Burial will follow at

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LASSETER
GALLIPOLIS — Ava
Mae Lasseter, six-month
old daughter of Brandon
and Bre Ann Lasseter,
died Friday, May 23, 2014,
at Cincinnati’s Children’s
Hospital after a courageous battle with several
complex congenital heart
defects.
Funeral services will be
11 a.m. Wednesday, May
28, 2014, at Willis Funeral
Home with the Rev. Loren
Wilson officiating. Burial
will follow in Forest Hills
Cemetery, Mason County,

W.Va. Friends may call
Willis Funeral Home on
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
from 5-8 pm. In lieu of
flowers the family requests
memorial
contributions
be made to “Benefit for
Ava” at any Peoples Bank
location. This fund will be
used to pay it forward to
other families affected by
congenital heart defects in
memory of Ava.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send
e-mail condolences.
SERGENT
HENDERSON,
W.Va.
— Gary L. Sergent, 59, of
Henderson, died Saturday,
May 24, 2014, at home following an illness.
Funeral arrangements

are incomplete and will be
announced by the Wilcoxen Funeral Home of Point
Pleasant.
TAYLOR
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. —
Frances Louise (Weaver)
Taylor, 70, of New Haven,
died Saturday, May 24,
2014, at St. Mary’s Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
Visitation will be 11 a.m.
to 1 p.m. Tuesday, May 27,
2014, at Foglesong-Roush
Funeral Home in Mason,
W.Va. Services will be 1
p.m. Officiating will be
Father Anthony, following
to Kirkland Cemetery in
Lakin, W.Va. People may
send condolences to foglesongroushfh.com.

Obama leads country in celebrating Memorial Day
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama led the nation in commemorating Memorial
Day, declaring the United States
has reached “a pivotal moment” in
Afghanistan with the end of war
approaching.
Obama, who returned just
hours earlier from a surprise visit
with U.S. troops at Bagram Air
Field in Afghanistan, paid tribute
to those lost in battle there and
elsewhere over history. He called
them “patriots who made the ultimate sacrifice” for their country.
“Early this morning, I returned
from Afghanistan,” Obama told
the audience of several thousand
people. “Yesterday, I visited with
some of our men and women
serving there — 7,000 miles from
home. For more than 12 years,
men and women like those I met
with have borne the burden of our
nation’s security. Now, because of
their profound sacrifice, because
of the progress they have made,
we’re at a pivotal moment.”
“Our troops are coming home.
By the end of this year, our war
in Afghanistan will finally come
to end,” the president said to applause. “And yesterday at Bagram,
and here today at Arlington, we
pay tribute to the nearly 2,200
American patriots who’ve made
the ultimate sacrifice in Afghanistan. We will honor them, always.”
The president made a fleeting
reference to the widening scandal involving reports of poor performance by the Department of
Veterans Affairs, which is facing

Ohio programs win funds to
help drug-addicted moms
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Four programs in Ohio are
receiving grant money to help pregnant women who are
addicted to heroin or other opiates as the state looks to
combat drug abuse and its effects on children.
The $4.2 million, three-year pilot project is expected to
help close to 300 women who are addicted to prescription
painkillers and heroin. The state recently awarded some
funds to treatment and counseling programs in Cuyahoga,
Athens, Franklin and Hamilton counties.
Ohio officials hope to reach the expectant mothers early
in their pregnancies and work with them through their
recovery process.
“If we can intervene early and make an impact, then the
more likely we are to create a situation where the mom is
not as reliant on crisis services and emergency services,
and the same for the young child,” said Brad DeCamp,
the state’s policy and program chief for opioid treatment.
The project is among a variety of initiatives the state
has launched in recent years to target heroin and prescription painkiller abuse.
In 2007, fatal drug overdoses surpassed car crashes as
the leading cause of accidental death in Ohio.
Ohio also has seen an increase in the number of drugaddicted babies, state data show. The state had 88 cases
per 10,000 live births in 2011. That’s more than six times
the rate in 2004, which was 14 cases per 10,000 live births.
Babies born to mothers who are addicted to painkillers or other opiates experience neonatal abstinence syndrome. Their symptoms include drug withdrawal, respiratory complications, feeding difficulties and sometimes
even seizures.
Caring for the drug-addicted newborns and their mothers can be costly.
Health care expenses associated with treating babies
with neonatal abstinence syndrome topped $70 million in
2011, according to the Ohio Hospital Association.
The mothers and babies are often on Medicaid, the taxpayer-funded health program for the poor and disabled.
DeCamp said the project is expected to curb the costs
of specialized care for newborns by helping their mothers
get drug treatment and reducing the babies’ length of stay
in the intensive care unit.
Women in the project will undergo a combination of
counseling and medication-assisted treatment for their
addiction, along with help to prevent relapses after their
babies are born. They could get vouchers for transitional
housing as well as transportation or brief baby-sitting for
medical and treatment appointments.
State officials are using a combination of federal and
Ohio dollars to pay for the pilot project.
DeCamp said the programs recently received a portion
of the funds and are expected to begin helping mothers
this summer.
The program winners are MetroHealth Medical Center
in Cleveland; Health Recovery Services Inc. in Athens;
CompDrug Inc. in Columbus; and First Step Home in
Cincinnati.

Union Cemetery in New
Haven. Visitation will be
6-8 p.m. Tuesday at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant.

AP Photo

President Barack Obama shakes hands during a troop rally after arriving at Bagram Air Field for an unannounced visit on Sunday north of Kabul, Afghanistan.

allegations of delayed treatments,
and even deaths in Arizona.
“As we’ve been reminded in recent days — we must do more to
keep faith with our veterans and
their families, and ensure they
get the care and benefits and opportunities that they’ve earned
and that they deserve,” said the
president. Embattled Veterans
Secretary Eric Shinseki, a retired
Army general, was present.
“These Americans have done
their duty,” Obama said. “They
ask nothing more than that our
country does ours — now and
for decades to come,” he added,
drawing more applause.
Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric

Shinseki was among those attending the ceremony. Lawmakers
from both parties have pressed for
policy changes and better management at the department.
The Arlington remembrance was
duplicated in villages, towns, cities
and counties across the country.
There was a holiday weekend reunion of some of the last surviving
members of the Tuskegee Airmen in
upstate New York. More than 3,000
volunteers placed flags at the graves
of 120,000 veterans at the Florida
National Cemetery. And in Mississippi, the annual Vicksburg Memorial Day parade was being accompanied by a wreath-laying ceremony at
Vicksburg National Cemetery.

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(:45) MLS Soccer Sporting Kansas City at New York Red Bulls (L)
(:55) FIFA Soccer
(5:00) Clara's Deadly Secret Petals on the Wind Cathy returns to Foxworth Hall to
Little Women: LA "The 'M' True Tori "Stay or Go" (N)
TV14
confront her grandmother &amp; seek revenge on her mother... Word" (N)
Forrest Gump ('94, Comedy/Drama) Sally Field, Gary Sinise, Tom Hanks. A simple
Uncle Buck An irresponsible bachelor is asked to take
man finds himself in extraordinary situations throughout the course of his life. TV14
care of his nephew and nieces for a few days. TVPG
Beverly Hills Cop ('84, Com) Eddie Murphy. A Detroit police
Coming to America Eddie Murphy. An African prince travels to
officer goes to Los Angeles to track down his best friend's killer. TVM
America to avoid an arranged marriage and find a new bride. TVMA
SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Sam &amp; Cat Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Law &amp; Order: SVU "Snitch" Law&amp;O.:SVU "Impulsive"
Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam House (N)
Modern Fam
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
(5:00) Sit.Room Crossfire
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Special Report (N)
CNN Tonight
Castle "The Lives of Others" Castle
NBA Tip-Off
NBA Basketball Playoffs San Antonio vs Oklahoma (L)
(5:30) Get Smart An inept spy battles an evil organization Freakshow
Freakshow Freakshow Freakshow Freakshow Freakshow
(N)
(N)
with the help of his intelligent female partner. TV14
D. Catch "Against the Law" Catch "On The Rocks" (N) Catch "Out of Bounds" (N) D. Catch "Falling Down" (N) Bush "Fight of Flight" (N)
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage W. Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
"LBC U LTR" Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Wars
Dirty Jobs "Exotic Nanny" Man-Eating Super Squid
Devoured Super Snake
Man-Eating Super Wolves Man-Eating Zombie Cats
Bad Girls Club
Bad Girls Club Seven 'bad' Bad Girls Club "A Change Bad Girls Club "A Change Tattoos "Bad Tattoos After
girls live under one roof.
for the Bad!"
for the Bad!"
Girls"
Dark
LawOrder "Double Blind" Law &amp; Order "Deadbeat"
Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order
Sex &amp; City
Sex &amp; City
E! News
Giuliana and Bill (N)
THS "Reality Ex Wives"
Divas "Digging a Hole"
(:20) Roseanne
Roseanne
(:35) Rose.
(:10) Rose.
(:50) Hot In
(:25) Hot In "The Undead"
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Wicked Tuna "Bad Blood" Kentucky Justice "Drug
Alaska State Troopers
Alaska State Troopers
Wicked Tuna "Sharks and
Bust Shootout"
"Knife Fight"
"Hammered on the Holiday" Recreation"
(5:30) FB Talk NHL Top 10 NHL Live!
NHL Hockey Stanley Cup Playoffs N.Y. Rangers vs Montreal (L)
Overtime
America's Pre-game (L)
WPT Poker Alpha8
MLB 162 (N) BackShop (N) Pecos Lg
Pecos Lg (N) MLB Whiparound (L)
American Pickers "Captain The World Wars "Trial by Fire" An assassin's bullet sparks Wars "A Rising Threat" The fighting may have stopped,
Quirk"
a global conflict that turns into a deadly war.
but tensions around the world continue to simmer. (N)
Married to Medicine
The Real Housewives
Wives "The Ramona Trip" The Real Housewives (N)
Couch (N)
Couch
106 &amp; Park (N)
Comic View Comic View
The Cookout ('04, Com) Ja Rule. TVPG
Comic V (N) Comic View
House
House
House
House Hunt. Flip or Flop Flip or Flop FlipFlop (N) Flip or Flop House Hunt. House
Scare Tactics
Red Riding Hood ('11, Fant) Amanda Seyfried. To her family's
Heroes of Cosplay "Stan
Wil Wheaton Heroes of
displeasure, a young girl falls in love with an orphaned woodcutter. TV14 Lee's Comikaze" (N)
(P) (N)
Cosplay

6

PM

6:30

Real Sports With Bryant
Gumbel

7

PM

7:30

Real Time With Bill Maher

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

The Heat ('13, Com) Melissa McCarthy, Sandra
Bullock. An FBI agent is sent to Boston to track down a
drug lord with the help of a local cop. TV14
(5:15)
(:40)
Road Trip Friends go on a road (:15) The Watch ('12, Comedy) Vince Vaughn, Jonah Hill,
Freeloaders trip to find an illicit videotape mistakenly
Ben Stiller. Four men attempting to escape their domestic
TVMA
sent to a girlfriend. TV14
responsibilities form a neighborhood watch. TVMA
(:15) Nurse
(:45)
(:15)
Django Unchained (2012, Western) Christoph Waltz, Leonardo DiCaprio,
Jackie "Rat Californica- Jamie Foxx. A slave teams up with a bounty hunter rescues his wife from her plantation
on a Cheeto" tion "Smile" owner. TVMA

10

PM

10:30

The Hangover Part III
('13, Com) Zach Galifianakis,
Bradley Cooper. TVMA
Two Guns ('13, Act)
Mark Wahlberg, Denzel
Washington. TV14
Penny Dreadful
"Resurrection"

�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

TUESDAY,
MAY 27, 2014

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Eastern Lady Eagles falls to Lady Titans, 5-0
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

MINFORD, Ohio — All good things
must come to an end.
The Eastern softball team had its
magical season come to a close Saturday afternoon following a 5-0 setback to
Portsmouth Notre Dame in a Division IV
district championship game at Minford
High School in Scioto County.
The top-seeded Lady Eagles (233) were not their typical selves as the
hosts committed three errors in the
contest, and the second-seeded Lady
Titans (22-3) took full advantage of
those extra opportunities.
Eastern committed one error in the
third and two in the sixth, and the guests
scored over half of their runs during those
two frames at the plate. EHS also mustered only three baserunners past first

base offensively, with one of those ultimately reaching third safely.
Overall, it was a tough day for the Lady
Eagles — who had a nine-game postseason winning streak snapped, dating back
to the district volleyball tournament. Still,
after reaching the district final, posting
23 wins and winning a share of the TVC
Hocking crown, Saturday’s outcome did
not take away from any of those accomplishments.
Or, at least, first-year EHS softball coach
Bryan Durst believed so.
“We just never seemed to get rolling today like we typically had. We had been hitting the ball well and playing good defense
over the last few weeks, but we didn’t have
our best stuff today,” Durst said. “When we
did hit the ball hard, it was right at somebody and Notre Dame made the plays.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Wahama junior Johnnie Ohlinger hits full stride during the
Class A 4x800m relay event held Friday at Laidley Field in
Charleston, W.Va.

Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

Eastern senior Hannah Hawley belts out a single during the fifth inning of Saturday’s Division IV
See EAGLES | 7 district championship softball game against Portsmouth Notre Dame at Minford High School.

Photos by Bryan Walters | OVP Sports

The Point Pleasant trio of Noah Morgan, Tannor Hill and Cody Mitchell, from left, collectively watch a throw in the
Class AAA discus event held Friday at Laidley Field in Charleston, W.Va.

Point boys 8th, girls 20th at state meet

Wahama, Hannan tie
for 23rd at state meet

Tannor Hill wins
AAA title in shot put

By Bryan Walters

By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

CHARLESTON, W.Va. —
Common ground.
The boys teams from Wahama and Hannan tied for
23rd place overall this weekend at the Class A track and
field championships held at
Laidley Field on the campus of
the University of Charleston in
Kanawha County.
Both the White Falcons
and the Wildcats scored two
points apiece at the 100th annual event, joining 24 other
programs to score at least one
point at the two-day competition. Doddridge County won
the Class A crown with 111
team points, while Buffalo (67)
and Williamstown (57) rounded out the top three finishes.
Hannan had only one
competitor at the Class A
meet, with senior Zack Killingsworth earning those two
points after placing fifth in
the shot put with a throw of
44 feet, 1.25 inches. Killingsworth also took part in the
discus final, where he placed
10th overall with a throw of
108 feet, 9 inches.
The White Falcons had a
pair of sixth place efforts that
resulted in one point apiece.
Junior Johnnie Ohlinger was
sixth in the 800m run with
a time of 2:05.33, while the
quartet of Ohlinger, Michael
Hendricks, Jacob Ryan and
Jared Nutter placed sixth in

the 4x400m relay with a mark
of 3:41.62.
Ian Kapp finished eighth in
the 3200m run with a time of
10:50.64, while Austin Juelfs
was 10th in the long jump with
a distance of 17 feet, 10.25
inches. Anthony Howard did
not reach a qualifying height
in the high jump and did not
earn a place in the event.
The foursome of Ohlinger,
Hendricks, Howard and Kapp
placed ninth overall in the
4x800m relay event. The quartet of Nutter, Juelfs, Ryan and
Colton Zuspan placed 15th
overall in the 4x100m relay
with a time of 58.54 seconds.
On the girls side of things,
Williamstown captured the
Class A crown with 118
points. Charleston Catholic
was the overall runner-up with
67 points, while Tucker County rounded out the top three
with 66 points.
A total of 22 teams scored
in the Class A girls division,
but Wahama was not one of
them — despite two different
chances for the same person.
Hannan did not have a girl athlete qualify for state.
Junior Karson Tolliver
placed eighth in the 200m
dash with a time of 27.83 seconds and was also 10th in the
long jump with a distance of
14 feet, 5.75 inches.
Complete results of the 2014
Class A WVSSAC Track and
Field Championships are available on the web at runwv.com

OVP Sports Schedule
Tuesday, May 27
Baseball
Point Pleasant at Nitro, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Buffalo, 6:30 p.m.

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — A
charm indeed.
For the third consecutive postseason, the Point Pleasant track
and field program earned at least
one state title during the 100th annual Class AAA WVSSAC Track and
Field Championships held Friday and
Saturday at Laidley Field on the campus of the University of Charleston.
The Big Blacks finished eighth out
of 32 scoring teams by racking up 20
points, with half of those points coming from their latest state champion.
Sophomore Tannor Hill posted a winning throw of 49 feet, 6 inches in the
shot put event, giving PPHS its fifth
state crown in the last three years.
Hill — who suffered a separated
shoulder while finishing second at
195 pounds in the 2014 Class AAA
state wrestling meet — also scored
two more points in the discus after
placing fifth with a heave of 148
feet, 8 inches.
The other eight team points
came from fellow PPHS sophomore Cody Mitchell, who finished
second in the discus with a throw
of 152 feet, 6 inches. All three final
distances were personal records for
Hill and Mitchell.
Junior Noah Morgan did not place
in either of two events. Morgan was
ninth in the shot put (42-8.5) competition and 14th overall in the discus
with a throw of 130 feet even.
Parkersburg won the Class AAA
boys crown with 93 points, followed
by runner-up Jefferson with 80
points. Parkersburg South rounded
out the third spot with 42 points.
On the girls side of things, Hurricane won the Class AAA title

with 80 points. George Washington was the runner-up with 56.5
points, with Winfield claiming
third with 54 points.
The Lady Knights were one of the
24 programs to score at least one
point at the state meet. PPHS ended
the weekend by finishing 20th overall
with six points.
The half-dozen points came from
freshman Aislyn Hayman, who
placed third in the discus event with
a throw of 123 feet, 1 inch — a new
personal record. Hayman was also
ninth in the shot put with a heave of
33 feet, 9.5 inches.
Brooklyn Blankenship was 11th
overall in the discus with a throw
of 102 feet even, while Morgan

Roush placed 16th in the shot put
with a heave of 28 feet, 9 inches.
Cassie Jordan was also 13th overall in the 100m hurdles with a time
of 16.64 seconds.
The quartet of Jordan, Kennedy
Young, Sierra Toles and Carlee Dabney suffered some bad luck in the
4x102.5m shuttle hurdles relay after
being disqualified for a false start.
Caleb Riffle won the Class AAA
800m run for PPHS last year, while
the Big Blacks came away with Class
AA crowns in the 4x100m, 4x200m
and 4x400m relays in 2012.
Complete results of the 2014 Class
AAA WVSSAC Track and Field
Championships are available on the
web at runwv.com

Oregon St. No. 1 seed for NCAA baseball tournament

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) —
Oregon State has proved itself
as the best in the West. The
NCAA Division I Baseball
Committee also thinks the
Beavers are best in the nation.
Thursday, May 29
The committee on MonTrack and Field
Division II regionals at Muskingum University, 4 p.m. day made the Pac-12 champions the top seed for the
NCAA tournament over
Friday, May 30
SEC regular-season winner
Track and Field
Florida and a Virginia team
Division III regionals at Fairfield Union HS, 5 p.m.
that’s been one of the most
consistent in the nation but
Saturday, May 31
failed to win an ACC title.
Track and Field
“I thought if you took
Division II regionals at Muskingum University, 11:30 a.m.
Wednesday, May 28
Track and Field
Division III regionals at Fairfield Union HS, 4 p.m.

Point Pleasant freshman Aislyn Hayman prepares to release a throw in the
Class AAA discus final held Friday at Laidley Field in Charleston, W.Va.

Florida and Oregon State
and Virginia, you could find
a reason for any of them to
be the (No. 1) seed,” Beavers coach Pat Casey said.
“When it came down to the
fact neither Florida or Virginia were automatic qualifiers, I thought that might
swing it our way.”
The other five national
seeds, in order, are: Indiana,
Florida State, Louisiana-Lafayette, TCU and LSU.
Oregon State (42-12) is
the No. 1 seed for the first

time after being No. 3 a year
ago. The Beavers have one
of the nation’s best starting
rotations in Ben Wetzler,
Jace Fry and Andrew Moore
and one of the top offensive
players in the country in left
fielder Michael Conforto.
Florida (40-21) won the
SEC regular-season title for
the third time in five years
and reached the conference
tournament final. The Gators’ schedule ranks as toughest in the country, and they’re
16-5 in one-run games.

Virginia (44-13) has the
ACC’s top pitching staff,
headed by sophomore lefthander Nathan Kirby, but
the Cavaliers lost four of
their last six games.
The tournament opens
Friday with 16 four-team,
double-elimination regionals. Best-of-three super
regionals will be held next
week, with those winners
moving to the College
World Series in Omaha.
See NCAA | 7

�Tuesday, May 27, 2014

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Page 7

OVP Sports Briefs
SGHS boys basketball
bingo games
MERCERVILLE, Ohio — South
Gallia Boys Basketball Bingo Games,
5 p.m., at South Gallia High School.
Game packet cost is $20. Children
under the age of 18 can play if accompanied by an adult. Prizes include 31,
Longaberger and business donations.
Paper cards will be used. Bring your
own daubers or buy one at the door.
Refreshments will be available. Proceeds benefit the South Gallia boys
basketball team. For more information, call (304) 633-3016.
Kiwanis junior golf
tournament at Cliffside
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — The Cliffside Golf Club will be hosting the
sixth annual Kiwanis juniors at Cliffside golf tournament for golfers ages
9-18 on Thursday, July 10, at 1 p.m.
The competitors will be divided into
age groups of 9-10, 11-12, 13-15 and
16-18 and there is a fee. Awards will
be presented to the top three golfers
in each age group. Spectators are allowed, while hole sponsors and volunteers are needed. To enter please contact the clubhouse at (740) 446-4653
or Ed Caudill at (740) 245-5919 or
(740) 645-4381.
Wahama Athletic
HOF basketball camp
MASON, W.Va. — The Wahama
Athletic Hall of Fame will be sponsoring a youth basketball camp for
all boys and girls entering grades 1
through 8 from June 11-13 at the high
school gymnasium. The camp will be
conducted by WHS boys basketball
coach Ron Bradley and will run in two
different sessions, with grades 1-4 going from 9 a.m. until noon and grades
5-8 will go from 1 p.m. until 4 p.m.
Fundamentals and individual attention will be emphasized at the camp,
which costs $40 per camper. Each
camper will also receive a regulation
size basketball. For more information,
contact Ron Bradley at (304) 7735539.
GAHS Athletic
HOF meeting
CENTENARY, Ohio — Gallia Academy is currently accepting
nominations for the GAHS Athletic
Hall of Fame Class of 2014 from now
until Friday, July 18. Individuals may
obtain HOF application forms from
the school website. Boys applications
will be accepted for any athlete who
played prior to the 1991-92 season,

while the girls are accepting applications from any athlete who played
prior to the 1995-96 campaign. The
2014 HOF ceremonies will be held on
Friday, Oct. 3, before the start of the
home football contest against Belfry,
with the awards banquet happening
the following night at GAHS.
2014 URG soccer camps
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The
University of Rio Grande soccer programs have announced their 2014
summer camp schedule.
A youth camp, for boys and girls
age 4-11, is set for June 2-5, from
6-8 p.m. each night. Cost is $95 per
camper.
Residential team camps for middle
school squads and for high school
teams from West Virginia are scheduled for June 8-12 and June 15-19.
Cost is $305. The camps fall during
the three-week, out-of-season workout
period for prep programs from the
Mountain State.
A team camp for girls’ high school
squads is planned for July 6-9, with a
boys’ high school team camp slated for
July 13-17. Cost for the girls’ camp is
$270, while the boys’ camp has a fee
of $305.
Fees for the residential camps
include lodging, meals, training sessions and tournament play.
Camp directors are URG men’s soccer head coach Scott Morrissey, men’s
assistant coach Tony Daniels and Rio
women’s soccer head coach Callum
Morris.
The camp brochure is available on
the men’s soccer link of the school’s
athletic website, www.rioredstorm.
com. Online registration and payment
is available at www.rioredstormsoccercamps.com.
Registration forms should be
mailed to URG Lyne Center, P.O. Box
500, Rio Grande, OH 45674. Checks
should be made payable to Scott Morrissey.
For more information, contact
Morrissey at (740) 245-7126, (740)
645-6438 or e-mail scottm@rio.edu;
Daniels at (740) 245-7493, (740)
645-0377 or e-mail tdaniels@rio.edu;
or Morris at (740) 853-2639 or cmorris@rio.edu.
URG men’s basketball
camp/shootouts
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio Grande men’s basketball
program has announced its extensive
summer camp schedule for 2014.
The Little Storm Day Camp is

scheduled for June 9-11, from 9 a.m.noon each day, at the Lyne Center on
the URG campus. The camp is open
to boys and girls, ages 6-9, and the
cost is $60.
The camp will focus on the fundamentals of the game and will be conducted by Rio Grande head coach Ken
French, his staff and current players.
There are also openings still available for a handful of one-day shootouts.
A junior varsity only shootout is set
for Sunday, June 8, while coaches who
would like to bring both their varsity
and junior varsity teams can do so
during shootouts scheduled for June
6, 12, 13, 19 and 20. Cost is $170 and
teams will again receive at least four
games. Efforts will be made to avoid
conflicting game times.
All games for the team shootouts
will take place inside the Lyne Center,
using both the upper (Newt Oliver
Arena) and lower gyms. A coaches
hospitality room will also be available.
A Point Guard Camp for boys and
girls age 12-18 is set for Saturday, June
14, from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Cost is $30.
There will also be a shooting camp
for both boys and girls, age 8-18, June
16-18, from 9 a.m.-noon each day.
Cost is $60 per camper.
The crown jewel of the camp schedule is the annual Hard Work Camp,
which is scheduled for Sunday, June
22-Friday, June 27. The individual
camp is for boys only, age 10-16.
Cost is $200 for commuters and
$285 for overnight campers. Fees include lodging, meals, awards, a reversible camp jersey and a camp t-shirt.
The camp emphasizes offensive
and defensive fundamentals, team
play and work ethic. It also features
“The Triple”, the only triple-elimination tournament in the country, which
begins around noon on the 26th and
concludes in the early morning hours
of the 27th.
The awards ceremony, in which
parents are encouraged to attend, is
scheduled for Friday, June 27, from
9:30-11 a.m., and will conclude the
camp.
Online registration for all of the
camps is available through the men’s
basketball link on the school’s athletic
website, www.rioredstorm.com. Registration forms are also available in the
lobby of the Lyne Center during regular business hours.
Registration forms should be
mailed to Rio Grande Men’s Basketball, P.O. Box 500, Rio Grande, OH
45674. Checks should be made pay-

able to Big Red Basketball Camp.
For more information, contact
French at (740) 245-7294, 1-800-2827201 (ext. 7294), or send e-mail to
kfrench@rio.edu.
2014 URG volleyball camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio Grande will host its
2014 Summer Volleyball Camp, June
29-July 1, at the Lyne Center on the
URG campus.
The camp is open to girls in grades
6-12. There will be two divisions for
campers – grade 6-8 and grade 9-12.
Campers will receive instruction in
fundamentals and various drills from
a staff that will include a former AllAmerican, as well as All-Ohio and
Player of the Year honorees and NAIA
national leaders in their area of specialty.
Campers will also be divided into
teams for tournament play to conclude the camp.
Cost is $200 per camper, which includes overnight lodging, meals and
awards.
Registration forms and a camp
schedule is available on the volleyball
link of the school’s athletic website,
www.rioredstorm.com.
Registration forms and a $100 deposit should be mailed to Billina Donaldson, Volleyball Coach, P.O. Box
500, Rio Grande, OH 45674. Checks
should be made payable to Billina
Donaldson Volleyball Camp.
For questions or concerns, call
Donaldson at (740) 988-6497 or send
e-mail to billinad@rio.edu.
URG women’s
basketball camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio Grande’s 2014 Women’s
Basketball Camp is scheduled for July
6-9 at the Lyne Center on the URG
campus.
The overnight instructional camp
is open to girls in grades 4-12. Cost
is $275 per camper, which includes
lodging, meals, a certificate of participation and a t-shirt.
Campers will also receive 24-hour
supervision from coaches and counselors; lecture/discussion groups and
film sessions; daily instruction on
shooting, ball-handling, post play and
defense; and use of the school’s swimming pool.
There will also be a camp store featuring drinks, snacks, pizza and Rio
Grande apparel for sale each day.
Veteran Rio Grande women’s basketball head coach David Smalley,

who ranks among the top 10 coaches
on the active wins list with more than
400, will be the camp director.
Online registration is available
through the women’s basketball link
on the school’s athletic website, www.
rioredstorm.com. Registration forms
are available in the lobby of the Lyne
Center during regular business hours.
Registration forms should be
mailed to David Smalley, Rio Grande
Women’s Basketball Camp, P.O. Box
500, Rio Grande, OH 45674. Checks
should be made payable to Women’s
Basketball Camp.
For more information, contact
Smalley at (740) 245-7491, 1-800-2827201, or send e-mail to dsmalley@rio.
edu.
URG distance running camp
RIO GRANDE, Ohio — The University of Rio Grande Track &amp; Field
program will host its 2014 Distance
Camp, July 6-10, on the URG campus.
The objective of the camp is to increase the standards and knowledge
of distance running and to provide
current knowledge in techniques that
will result in life-long benefits.
Campers will hear from a number
of guest speakers.
Long-time Rio Grande track &amp;
field/cross country head coach Bob
Willey will be the camp director. Willey has over 40 years of coaching at
the collegiate level and has fostered a
program of more than 100 cross country/track &amp; field All-Americans.
Cost is $250 per runner, which includes room, meals and recreation facilities. A $25 discount is available to
members of a school with five or more
athletes attending. A $25 deposit is
required with the return of a camp application, with the balance payable on
the participant’s arrival at camp.
On-site registration will take place
on Sunday, July 6, from 1-1:30 p.m.,
at Bob Evans Farm Hall on the URG
campus.
Registration forms and the camp
brochure are available on the track
&amp; field and cross country links of the
school’s athletic website, www.rioredstorm.com.
Registration forms and the non-refundable deposit should be mailed to
URG Lyne Center, P.O. Box 500, Rio
Grande, OH 45674. Checks should be
made payable to Coach Bob Willey.
Deadline for early registration is
July 1.
For questions or concerns, send email to rwilley@rio.edu or call (740)
245-7487.

Eagles
From Page 6
“I’m very proud of this
team and what we’ve been
able to do this year. I take
my hat off to these seniors and what they have
been able to accomplish
over their careers. Those
upperclassmen will be
missed, but we also have
a good part of this team
coming back. We’ll just
have to work a little harder to get back here again
next spring.”
Eastern — which was
aiming for its sixth district championship and
first since 2003 — mustered five hits in the contest, with four of those
coming in the fifth and
sixth frames. Amber
Moodispaugh had the
first Lady Eagle hit with
two outs in the second,
but was ultimately left
stranded at first.
After two scoreless innings, PNDHS finally
struck first blood in the
top of the third after an
error and a double resulted in a 1-0 advantage. Hagen Shaefer reached on

an infield error and later
scored on a double by Katie Stevenson, giving the
Lady Titans what would
prove to be the eventual
game-winning run.
Madi Phillips started
the fourth with a triple
and scored one batter
later following a single by
Brooke Pierron, making
it a 2-0 contest. Tori Harr
added a single that plated
Pierron, giving the guests
a 3-0 cushion through
four complete.
The Lady Titans started the sixth with a hit
by Phillips and Pierron
reached on a walk, putting runners at first and
second with nobody out.
Elyana Born followed
with a fly ball to right
that was dropped by Jordan Parker, but Parker
made up for her error by
firing a strike to home
plate to get Phillips out
by 10 feet.
Harr followed with a
single that allowed Pierron to score for a 4-0 contest, and Born later came
around on a single by
Juda Corns for a 5-0 lead

after six complete. EHS
went down in order in the
seventh, allowing Notre
Dame to move on to the
round of 16.
The Lady Titans outhit
Eastern by a 9-5 overall
margin and committed
one error in the contest,
compared to three by the
hosts. The Lady Eagles
left six on base while the
guests stranded seven on
the bags.
Harr was the winning
pitcher of record after allowing one walk over seven innings while striking
out four. Grace Edwards
suffered the setback after
surrendering three walks
over seven frames while
fanning five.
Moodispaugh,
Edwards, Paige Cline, Katlyn Barber and Hannah
Hawley each had a hit for
EHS. Jourdan Griffin received a walk in the third
and Cline also reached on
an error in the third.
Phillips paced Notre
Dame with three hits,
followed by Stevenson
and Harr with two safeties apiece. Pierron and

Corns also had a hit each
for the victors.
It was the final game

for seniors Erin Swatzel, Jordan Parker, Hannah Hawley, Paige Cline,

Shaye Selbee and Amber Moodispaugh in the
Green and Gold.

Holzer is proud to
announce that
Khai Vu, DO,
Board Certified
Internal Medicine
Physician, has joined
our team of highly
skilled professionals.

NCAA
From Page 6
National seeds that win their regionals
play at home in super regionals.
The Southeastern Conference has 10
teams in the tournament, the most ever by
a conference. The Atlantic Coast Conference is represented by seven schools, the
Big 12 and Pac-12 by five apiece and the
Big West by four.
Kennesaw State of the Atlantic Sun
Conference and Sacramento State of the
Western Athletic Conference are in the
tournament for the first time.
Thirty-two of the 64 teams were in the
field last year.
Miami is in the field for the 42nd
straight year, extending its own record.
Florida State is in for the 37th season in a
row, second all-time.
Three teams with losing records are
in after winning conference tournament
titles: Youngstown State (16-36), Siena
(25-31) and Bethune-Cookman (26-31).
UCLA (25-30-1) will not get a chance to
defend its national title. The Bruins didn’t
make the tournament for the first time
since 2009 after finishing ninth in the Pac12 in an injury-plagued season.
Oregon State starts the tournament
against Summit League champion North
Dakota State. UC Irvine and UNLV also
are in the Corvallis, Oregon, regional.

Casey said his team’s No. 1 seeding
didn’t come with an easy path to Omaha.
Barring an upset, the Beavers would be
matched against Big 12 regular-season
champion Oklahoma State in a super regional.
“I have no complaints,” Casey said. “It’s
a tough job, trying to balance it out. You
could take every regional, and everybody
would have something to say.”
Miami coach Jim Morris isn’t pleased
with the prospect of his ACC regularseason champion team having to play at
Florida in a super regional. Though Farrell
listed Rice and Vanderbilt as teams that
were edged out for national seeds, Miami
was in the running for one before it lost
two of three in the ACC tournament.
“You never know the rhyme or reason
for where you’re going to go,” Morris said
on the ESPNU selection show. “It makes
no sense to me, if we’re on the borderline,
to be going to possibly the No. 2 seed.”
Florida will be challenged this weekend.
It will be hosting the Big West’s secondplace team in Long Beach State, a North
Carolina squad with lots of postseason experience, and a 41-win College of Charleston that’s the bottom seed in the regional.
“This is probably a regional we need,”
Gators coach Kevin O’Sullivan said. “We
tend to play up to our competition or
sometimes down to our competition.”

Prior to joining Holzer, Dr. Vu was with Columbus Neighborhood
Health Center in Columbus, Ohio. He received his medical education
at Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine in Athens, Ohio.
Dr. Vu completed his internship at BiCounty Community/Detroit
Riverview Hospital, Warren, Michigan, and his residency at
Riverside Methodist Hospital and Doctors Hospital in Columbus,
Ohio. Dr. Vu is Board Certified in Internal Medicine.
Dr. Vu is accepting new patients at our Holzer Meigs location at
88 East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, OH. Call 1-855-4HOLZER to
schedule an appointment today!
60505361

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

Professional Services

60508241

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

740-591-8044
Please leave a message
Lost &amp; Found
LOST-Female Red Doberman
tail docked, ears not cropped
pink collar. Missing from the
Patriot Area-REWARD Needs
medication PLEASE HELP Us
find her. 740-794-0796 or 740379-2921
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

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

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

SALE
CARPET &amp; VINYL
$5.95 and Up
*While Supplies Last*
MOLLOHAN CARPET
740-446-7444
Child / Elderly Care
Needed someone to care for
elderly mother in my home. In
the Racine area 4 days a
week. Call 740-949-0053 after
5.
Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee. Local References. Established in 1975. Call 24HRS
740-446-0870. Rogers Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Help Wanted General

Apartments/Townhouses

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Hairdresser wanted for busy
Salon, Booth Rent 740-6450807
Instructor Needed
Gallipolis Career College is
seeking an instructor for its
business administration program. A minimum of a master's
degree is required. Send resumes to director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu, or mail to
1176 Jackson Pike, Suite 312,
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Instructor Needed
Gallipolis Career College is
seeking an instructor for its office and medical office administration programs. Applicants
must have experience in office
administrative applications including medical office, computerized medical manager, and
keyboarding skills. Send resumes to director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu, or mail to
1176 Jackson Pike, Suite 312,
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Local company seeking
counter person in parts division. Must have knowledge of
truck and engine parts. Sales
experience, some computer
skills. Able to work with the
public. Background check and
pre-employment drug test required. Health insurance and
vacation benefits. Pay compensable with experience. If
interested apply in person at
2150 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis, OH.
Part-Time Site Manager. Pt.
Pleasant area. Multifamily apt.
complex. Tax credit knowledge a plus but not necessary.
ADA/EOE Fax resumes TO:
(866)579-6151 Call: (304)6100776 Email: jrhoads@pisonmanagement.com
Red Door Residential is accepting applications for direct
service positions in Gallia and
Jackson Counties. These positions will provide services for
adults with developmental disabilities. Experience preferred.
Apply at 300 Second Avenue,
CrossChx Office. Between 4-6
PM, Monday-Friday
The Gallia county Board of Developmental Disabilities is now
accepting applications for the
following full-time postion:
Service Support Administrator.
Please submit resume and
three letters of reference to the
Superintendent, Rosalie
Durbin, via email at rosaliedurbin@galliadd.com or apply in
person to Gallia county Board
of DD, 77 Mill Creek Road,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 prior to
May 28, 2014 Gallia County
Board of Developmental Disabilities is an equal opportunity employer

1BR Apt. 2nd Flr., Util pd.,
$450 + Dep., Wash &amp; Dry
avail. 740-446-3667
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Apartment available Now. Riverbend Apts. New Haven
Wva. Now accepting applications for HUD -subsidized, One
bedroom Apts. Utilities included. Based on 30% of adjusted income. Call 304-8823121. Available for Senior and
Disabled people.

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CANADA DRUG:
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will provide you with savings of
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medication needs. Call
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Management / Supervisory
Looking to hire an experienced person to supervise
three local restaurants in Mason &amp; Gallia Counties. Serious
applicants please send resume to : PO Box 928, Mason
WV 25260
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Houses For Sale
2 Story - 6 Bdrm House - 30 x
40 barn with 2-16x40 leanto,
40x72 shop - 57 acres woods
&amp; pasture. $235,000.00 Home
located at 2265 Patriot Road,
between Cadmus and Patriot.
For Sale 1997 Clayton Mobile
Home 16 x 76 3 BR,
2 Bath on Rented lot 304-5932413
Nice 2 yr old 3-Bdrm &amp; 2 1/2
bath home / lg detached Garage $110,000.00 Seller pays
closing cost - 1-740-446-9966
VERY NICE BRICK HOME,
CLOSE TO WALMART.
3 BEDROOMS, 1 1/2 BATHS,
1 CAR GARAGE, FULL
BASEMENT, CENTRAL AIR.
CONTACT 1-740-446-7874.
Land (Acreage)
LOT FOR SALE
3533 McComas Branch Rd
Milton
Great Location for Doublewide
Home Aeration Unit on site
1/2 acre m/l
Utilities Available
Assessed Value $20,900.00
Bargain Price
For Quick Sale
$2,500.00
304-295-9090

FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
2-Story, 3- Bdrm Home with
Big Back Yard located 0n 3rd
Ave $550/mo. plus deposit
708-214-5829
Mobile Home For Rent Two
and three bedroom mobile
homes, excellent condition, No
Pets, Ref. required. Sand Hill
Road, Phone 304-675-3834
One Br house. Must See! Deposit &amp; References. $400.
Nancy 675-4024 or 675-0799
Homestead Realty Broker

MEDICAL GUARDIAN:
Medical Alert for Seniors 24/7 monitoring.
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Auto - Classic / Antiques
1948 WILLYS JEEP CJ2A,
4x4, All Original! Great Condition! Asking $9,000 740-4461272
Miscellaneous
FIREWOOD $20 a pick-up
load You cut and Haul 740339-9145

Trucks/SUVs/Vans
2011 Dark Green Jeep Grand
Cherokee Laredo, one owner,
50,000 miles, new tires, sunroof, cloth interior, $22,900
740-416-4517
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

We will pick old Stove, Dryer,
&amp; Washers, also old cars and
scrap metal. Call 740-6694240 or 614-989-7341

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2 (5 oz.) Filet Mignons
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Let Consolidated Credit Help You:

Motorcycles
1974 Suzuki Motorcycle GT
250 - Registers for 140 miles
per hr. $850 call 740-256-1102
ask for Junior
2004 Honda Goldwing $10,000
- 43,000 miles lots of extras on
and off the bike. Also have a
1973 Honda CB350F $1,000
Needs carburetor work Call
740-441-0638 ask for Harold.

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Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid
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LOT FOR SALE
Whitten Estates, Milton
1.92 Acres
Great location for DW
Nice Area
Utilities Available
Assessed Value $26,700.00
Priced
For Quick Sale
$12,500.00
304-295-9090

3-Bdrm / 2 bath Mobile Home
$500/mo &amp; $500 deposit 740645-5975
CONDO for Rent - North
Myrtle Beach call 740-4468657 - June Openings

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

Miscellaneous

Land (Acreage)

Rentals

Want To Buy

Slow Computers
E-Mail &amp; Printer Problems
Spyware &amp; Viruses
Mobile Device Training

Call Now For
Immediate Help

$

2500

OFF SERVICE
MENTION CODE: MB

800-416-5406

�Tuesday, May 27, 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

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

THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE

By John Hambrock

BABY BLUES

ZITS

By Jerry Scott &amp; Rick Kirkman

By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

PARDON MY PLANET

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

Today’s Solution

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
By Bil and Jeff Keane

5/27

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�Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Ibaka, Thunder top Spurs
106-97, cut lead to 2-1
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Serge Ibaka knew playing
on his injured leg would be painful.
He didn’t care.
Oklahoma City’s defensive star made a dramatic return
Sunday night from what was thought to be a season-ending
left calf strain. He started and scored 15 points to help the
Thunder defeat the San Antonio Spurs 106-97 and cut the
Spurs’ lead in the Western Conference finals series to 2-1.
Ibaka had mentally prepared for the discomfort in the
days leading up to the game. He said the pain was relative,
given his early life struggles in the Republic of Congo.
“Well, pain is pain, and I don’t want to be here to talk
about the pain,” he said after the game. “Most importantly,
we got that win tonight, and the focus is about next game.”
Ibaka missed the first two games of the series. The Thunder originally said he would miss the rest of the playoffs,
but changed course Friday. He participated in the team’s
shootaround Sunday morning, then got positive feedback
from the team’s medical staff as the game approached.
The crowd roared when Ibaka’s name was announced
during pregame introductions, and it got even louder when
Ibaka started playing. He scored the first points of the
game on a 19-foot jumper.
“Words can’t describe it,” Thunder forward Caron Butler
said. “It was a great moment. We just kind of rode that energy from the crowd, from the beginning, right out till the
fourth quarter.”
Ibaka had eight points, three rebounds and two blocks in
just over six minutes of play in the first quarter. He went to
an elliptical machine when he was not playing to stay loose.
At one point, he took a fall and came up limping slightly
before walking it off.
It was all worth it. Oklahoma City coach Scott Brooks
took him out with 3:17 remaining and the Thunder ahead
by 20.
“I was just trying to do my job, stay focused, do the best
I can do to help my team,” Ibaka said.
He made six of seven shots and his presence eased the
pressure on Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook. Westbrook had 26 points, eight rebounds and seven assists, and
Durant added 25 points and 10 rebounds.
On defense, Ibaka blocked and altered shots and used
his still formidable mobility to close out on shooters. He
had seven rebounds, four blocks and a seemingly endless
amount of energy.
“Serge has put so much work in throughout the season
that missing a couple of days didn’t hurt him,” Westbrook
said. “Tonight, he jumped right back into where he was.”
Manu Ginobili scored 23 points and Tim Duncan added
16 points and eight rebounds for the Spurs.
Game 4 is Tuesday night at Oklahoma City.
The Thunder outrebounded the Spurs 52-36 after losing
the battle of the boards in the first two games. San Antonio, which shot at least 50 percent in the first two games,
shot just 40 percent on Sunday night. The first two games
looked like a layup drill for the Spurs. This time, they were
forced to reset numerous times. The passes were not as
quick or as easy.
“I was very disappointed that we didn’t come out with
more of a foot-in-the-neck sort of attitude,” San Antonio
coach Gregg Popovich said. “They killed us on the boards,
they beat us in 50-50 balls and that’s very disappointing to
me.”
San Antonio had humiliated the Thunder 112-77 in
Game 2.
“I knew that we were a better team than losing by 30,”
Brooks said. “It’s not us. It was us that night, but we’re a
much better team than that. I have a lot of respect for San
Antonio, but they’re not that much better than us.”
Things were different from the start with Ibaka’s return.
Brooks also inserted speedy Reggie Jackson into the starting lineup in Thabo Sefolosha’s place. Jackson finished
with 15 points.
Twice in the final minute of the first half, Ginobili hit
3-pointers, and both times, Westbrook answered with
a 3-pointer. The last one, with 0.6 seconds left, gave the
Thunder a 57-53 lead. Oklahoma City shot 56 percent in
the first half but turned the ball over 12 times. Ginobili had
20 points and made 5 of 7 3-pointers before the break to
keep the Spurs close.
Oklahoma City extended its lead to 83-76 at the end of
the third quarter. A runner by Durant, then a 3-pointer by
Caron Butler pushed the Thunder lead to 90-76 with just
over 10 minutes to play.
“Hopefully we realize that if we’re not intense, not very
sharp and don’t hustle like crazy, we’re not going to win
here,” Ginobili said. “They showed us reality. Hopefully, we
react in game four and play a much better game.”
NOTES: Thunder C Kendrick Perkins picked up his third
foul eight minutes into the game. He played just 13 minutes
and finished with four points and three rebounds. Backup
center Steven Adams, a rookie, had seven points and nine
rebounds. … Thunder G Derek Fisher took a hit and was
bleeding from the top of his head in the first quarter. He got
six stitches. … The Thunder shot 63 percent from the field
in the first quarter, but trailed 29-28 at the end of the period. … Ginobili scored just three points in the second half.

Jeff Siner | Charlotte Observer | MCT photo

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Jimmie Johnson (48) wins the 55th Annual Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor
Speedway on Sunday, May 25, 2014.

Johnson ends drought at Coca-Cola 600
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) — About
the only one not worried about Jimmie Johnson’s victory drought this
season was the Sprint Cup defending champion. After his dominating show this weekend at Charlotte
Motor Speedway, Johnson gave his
competitors plenty to worry about.
Johnson reached Victory Lane for
the first time this season at the CocaCola 600, finishing off a dominating
week at a track many have called
“Jimmie’s House.”
“It’s great to win, but believe me,
and I promise you, all the hype and
all the concern and worry, that was
elsewhere. That wasn’t in my head,”
Johnson said.
Now, Johnson can think about his
record-breaking seventh Cup win at
Charlotte, about his 13th straight
NASCAR season with a victory or
about his fourth 600 victory to trail
only Darrell Waltrip’s five in the series’ longest race. And maybe throw
a scare into opponents that Johnson’s run at top isn’t over yet.
“They know we are awake,” Johnson said. “Hopefully, the 48 is heading that way and we can give other
people something to think about.”
This time, Johnson swept past
Matt Kenseth nine laps from the end
and was never pressured after that.
Johnson earned the pole Thursday
night, was strong at practice Saturday and led 165 of 400 laps Sunday.
Kevin Harvick, who led 100 laps,
was second. Kenseth finished third
with Carl Edwards fourth. Jamie
McMurray, the All-Star race winner
last weekend at the track, was fifth.
Kurt Busch’s attempt at motorsports history ended with 129 laps to
go when he blew an engine. Busch
finished sixth in the Indianapolis
500, but could not complete the 600
and become just the second racer

ever — Tony Stewart was the first
— to navigate all 1,100 miles on
auto racing’s biggest weekend.
Harvick had won two of the past
three 600s and led 100 laps this
time. He fell back in the latter stages
as he dealt with car problems and
could not get back to the front.
“We needed a 700-mile race to
get back to where we needed to be,”
Harvick said.
Brad Keselowski held the lead
and appeared to have out-pitted
Johnson’s No. 48 group with a final
stop 55 laps from the end. But a vibration in the Penske machine sent
Keselowski back to the pits and a lap
down.
Much of the pre-race attention
was centered on whether Busch or
points leader Jeff Gordon would
make to the starting line. Busch
because of his 850-mile trek South
from Indiana and Gordon because of
back spasms that cropped up Thursday after qualifying and were still
severe enough Saturday for him to
leave the track early after just a few
laps of practice.
But both were there when the
green flag dropped, although Busch’s
arrival was far more dramatic with
the helicopter circling the track and
landing on the infield close to the
start-finish line about an hour before
the race began.
He received loud cheers and plenty of high-fives from fans and took a
seat on the bench where driver introductions were made. As colleagues
and competitors made their way up
the steps, most made sure to chat up
Busch or shake his hand on a job well
done.
Busch had a bit of luck to stay on
the lead lap, twice earning a lucky
dog bid after going a lap down to
return among the leaders. He even-

tually reached the top 10 and was
running 16th when smoke started
pouring out of his Stewart-Haas
Chevrolet and sent him behind the
wall and to a 40th-place finish.
“Kind of a shame, kind of symbolizes how it’s been for the Haas Automation team,” Busch said. “We gave
it our all with the way we were clawing our way up there.”
The 42-year-old Gordon, a fourtime series champion, has dealt with
back problems before and his No.
24 team had driver Regan Smith on
standby if Gordon couldn’t go.
But if Gordon’s back bothered
him during the race, he didn’t show
it with his performance. He spent
much of the night in the top 10 and
was out front until Kenseth passed
him on a restart 16 laps from the
end. Gordon finished seventh, his
ninth top-10 finish in 12 events this
year.
“It was tough. I was aching in
there. There was one time when I
got on the brakes into (Turn) 1 and
it triggered something. I didn’t know
what was going to happen after that,
but it settled down,” Gordon said.
Gordon maintained his points
lead by 11 over second-place Kenseth.
Danica Patrick had hopes of a
strong showing after qualifying
fourth, her best starting spot of the
season. But like Busch, she too, was
out early with a blown engine 119
laps from the end. She was 39th, her
poorest finish in three 600s.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. came into this
one with seven top 10s in 11 races
and the hope he could finally win
a points race at his beloved home
track. He led 13 laps late in the race
before he had engine problems as
well and faded from contention. He
ended 19th.

Australian champ Wawrinka stunned in French opener
PARIS (AP) — The positive vibes and big-deal victories began for Stan Wawrinka
at last year’s U.S. Open, back
when he still went by “Stanislas,” and picked up steam at
this year’s Australian Open,
where he earned the right to
forever be called “major champion.”
And yet all of that seemed
so far away late Monday at

the French Open as dusk
approached — and defeat
became apparent — in Wawrinka’s first Grand Slam match
since winning his first major
title.
Surprisingly,
Wawrinka
looked listless. More stunningly, he looked very little
like a guy who was seeded No.
3 behind Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic and proclaimed

himself “one of the favorites”
just a few days earlier. In by
far the biggest development
of the tournament’s first two
days, Wawrinka lost in the
first round at Roland Garros
with a 6-4, 5-7, 6-2, 6-0 defeat
to 41st-ranked Guillermo Garcia-Lopez of Spain.
“I was trying to find my
game, trying … to be aggressive, trying to find anything.

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And I didn’t,” said Wawrinka,
whose trademark one-handed
backhanded was off-target
throughout. “I was completely
flat.”
He is the first Australian
Open champ to exit in the first
round of that year’s French
Open since Petr Korda in
1998.
Garcia-Lopez has never
been past the third round at a
major.
During a pre-tournament
news conference Friday, Wawrinka spoke about deriving
confidence from his recent
spate of success.
Long in the shadow of
Roger Federer, his Swiss Davis Cup and Olympic teammate, not to mention good
friend, Wawrinka reached his
first major semifinal in New
York last September, beating
defending champion Andy
Murray before losing a fivesetter to Djokovic. In January,
Wawrinka topped Nadal in the
Australian Open final.
Boosting his clay-court
bona fides heading to Paris,
Wawrinka defeated Federer in
April’s final at the Monte Carlo
Masters.
While he’s never been
beyond the quarterfinals at
the French Open, Wawrinka
seemed primed to do so.
Instead, he lost in the first
round in Paris for the first
time since 2006, when he was
only 21.
“I need to put the puzzle
back together, but differently
than in the past,” Wawrinka
said, “because now — after
winning a Grand Slam, (Monte Carlo), being No. 3 in the
world — everything is different.”
Wawrinka — who recently
told the ATP he’d rather go by
the shortened version of his
first name — finished with 62
unforced errors, 34 more than
Garcia-Lopez.

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