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                  <text>log onto www.mydailysentinel.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

Modern Woodmen
present check to
Chester-Shade .... Page 2

Rain. High near
49. Low around 41.
........ Page 2

Prep bball
action
.... Page 6

OBITUARIES
Kenneth Birchfield, 70
Eugene Call, 62
Thelma Folden, 79

50 cents daily

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 33

Curney Heib, Jr., 82
Erma Hersman, 78
Nola McDade, 77
Dorothy Spencer, 75

Trial date continued in Gardner murder case
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — A Middleport
man accused of murdering his
father appeared in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court for a pretrial hearing on Monday morning.
James E. Gardner, 41 — represented by Athens-based public
defender Herman Carson — appeared before Judge I. Carson
Crow for the hearing.
Gardner faces one count of aggravated murder in the death of

his father, James W. Gardner, on
Nov. 11, 2013. He is also charged
with three counts of aggravated
robbery.
Carson stated that he was filing a motion to continue with
the previously set trial date of
March 5 to allow more time to
investigate and prepare. Gardner
agreed to waive his right to a
speedy trial to allow for the continuance.
Crow set a new trial date for
April 9, with a final pre-trial
hearing to be held at 1:45 p.m.

on Monday, March 25.
James W. Gardner’s body was
found at the residence where the
two lived on Wells Road near
the Meigs-Gallia County line in
the evening hours of Nov. 11. In
the days following the death, the
younger Gardner was labeled a
person of interest in the suspicious death.
Then Meigs County Sheriff
Robert Beegle stated, at that
time, the unofficial cause of
death was blunt force trauma.
The elder Gardner’s truck, with

a red ATV in the bed, was missing from the property when the
his body was found. Witnesses
claimed to have seen the younger
Gardner driving the truck across
the Silver Memorial Bridge just
hours following the apparent homicide. Those vehicles, in addition to a motorcycle and a yellow
ATV, were recovered in southern
Gallia County over the course of
the past month.
Gardner remained on the run
from authorities until Dec. 7
when he was taken into custody

by Gallia County Sheriff’s deputies.
He has been in the custody of
the Meigs County Sheriff’s Office since that time.
A four-wheeler which had been
in the possession of the state as
part of the case was released to
the family of the deceased as
part of a court entry during the
hearing. Neither party objected
to the release of the four-wheeler.
Gardner remains in the custody of the Meigs County Sheriff
on $900,000 bond.

Commissioners plan to
meet with legislators
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

Submitted photo

Sgt. Frank Stewart of the Middleport Police Department, assisted by Meigs County Commissioner Randy Smith,
demonstrate self-defense techniques.

The art of self-defense
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

MIDDLEPORT — Instruction on how to protect
oneself in the event of a personal attack was offered
in a self-defense course last week as part of the ongoing neighborhood Watch program being offered by
the Middleport Police Department.
According to Sgt. Frank Stewart, along with Meigs
County Commissioner Randy Smith, were instructors for the class in the absence of Det. Rick Smith
who was unable to attend. About 30 citizens from
around the county attended the self-defense training.
Because of the good response another class has been
scheduled for May, the date to be announced later.
The course is a component of the Neighborhood
Watch program which began earlier this year by the
police Police Department. The program deals with
all sorts of unacceptable activity in a community
which threatens self protection, and provides information on everything from how to work with the
police in reporting suspicious activity to protecting
yourself on the street or in your home. It also deals
with victims assistance and how to talk to children
to make them aware of danger on the street particularly if it relates to sex offenders.
Sessions of the program which has as its goal to
prevent and reduce crime in the village are held on
the third Thursday of each month at 6 p.m. in the Meigs County Commissioner Randy Smith explains the
self-defense technique being demonstrated.
gymnasium at Middleport Village Hall.

Science Fair winners announced
RACINE — Seventh
and eighth grade students
at Southern Elementary
recently held their annual
Science Fair.
Sydney Cleland received
Best of Show, and Austin
McKibben was named first
runner-up. Spencer Harrison and Miranda Greenlee
tied for second runner-up.
Cleland’s project was
titled, “Is purified pond
water better than bottled
water?”; Mckibben’s project was titled, “Moldy
French fries”; Harrison’s
project was titled, “Cleaning pennies with ketchup”; Greenlee’s project
was titled, “Fluffy marshmallow.”
The goal of a science
fair project is to extend a
student’s understanding of
science. Science is handson by nature, and there
is no doubt that hands-on
experiences facilitate the
learning process.
The scientific method

Submitted photo

Southern Science Fair winners were Best of Show — Sydney Cleland; first runner-up — Austin
McKibben; tied for second runner-up — Spencer Harrison and Miranda Greenlee.

allows student scientists
to collect and analyze
data in a fun and hands on
manner. When students
use the scientific method
to design and execute
a project, they use the
same steps professional

researchers use to gather
new information. More
importantly, science projects make science more
fun and relevant to the
student. Every student,
regardless of aptitude,
can benefit from planning

and executing an inquirybased science project.
A science project can
be a great way to spark a
student’s interest in science or to help a student
develop a broader interest
in research.

POMEROY — The Meigs
County Commissioners approved several agenda items
during Thursday’s meeting,
and will meet with state legislators early this week.
Misty Casto and Bret
Allphin from Buckeye HillHocking Valley Regional
Development District meet
with the commissioners to
request support for the Development Services Agency
(DSA) Appalachia Assistance Fund Line Items.
According the a resolution
the commissioners passed
to support the fund, the Appalachian Regional Commission and DSA Appalachia
Assistance Fund provides
funding for business development, education and job
training,
telecommunications, infrastructure and
community
development
among other things.
The resolution was approved by a 3-0 vote.
Casto also spoke about
the 2015 Innovative Readiness Training Program
which will provide real
world training opportunities for service members
and units to prepare them
for their wartime missions
while supporting the needs
of America’s underserved
communities. This could
also include medically underserved communities.
A second resolution was
passed at the request of
Gary Cooper as required by
the OPRA Park Road Improvement Policy. The resolution allows for funding of

improvements to public
park roadways maintained
by the park district.
The resolution was approved 3-0.
Appropriation
adjustments were approved as
follows, an increase of
$165,000 in B036-B01,
private rehab; and increase
of $31,000 in B036-B05
Administration; a decrease
from $5,000 to $4,000 in
B038-B04, Fair Housing; a
decrease from $29,000 to
$24,000 in B038-B05, Administration.
A transfer of $1,000
from A004-B14, contract
services to A402-B12, other expenses coroner was
approved.
The commissioners will
join other commissioners
from the region in meeting
with state legislators from
the 30th Senate District on
Tuesday in Athens County.
The meeting is hosted
by the County Commissioners Association of
Ohio to provide legislators, county commissioners, county executives, and
county council members
the opportunity to discuss
legislative issues which
can impact the counties.
“Recognizing that it will
be a tight state budget
and there has been limited
growth in local revenue,
it is essential that state
and county governments
work together closely and
cooperatively for the good
of their mutual constituents, the people of Ohio,”
said Commissioner Randy
Smith.

Preliminary hearing set
for substitute teacher
Beth Sergent

bsergent@civitasmedia.com

MASON COUNTY — A preliminary hearing has been
scheduled this week for a substitute teacher accused of
becoming inappropriately involved with one of his students at Hannan Junior/Senior High School.
James P. Hadinger, 43, Gallipolis Ferry, is slated to appear for his preliminary hearing at 11 a.m., Thursday,
Feb. 28 in front of Mason County Magistrate Cheryl
Miller Ross. Preliminary hearings determine if there is,
or is not, probable cause to send the case on to further
proceedings in Mason County Circuit Court.
Last week, Hadinger was charged with two counts of
sexual abuse by a parent, guardian or person in a position
of trust to a child. Magistrate Gail Roush set his bond at
$200,000 — $100,000 for each count. Since his arrest,
Hadinger was transported to the Western Regional Jail,
where he remained at press time on Monday.
The criminal complaint filed in Mason County Magistrate Court alleges Hadinger, who has been a substitute
teacher at Hannan Junior/Senior High School over the
last several weeks, became involved with a female student. On Feb. 12, the complaint states Hadinger and the
minor traveled to Hannan Junior/Senior High School to
watch a basketball game. Hadinger and the minor then
reportedly left the game early with Hadinger driving to
an abandoned house on Ball Chapel Rd. in Ashton where
Hadinger engaged in sexual contact with the minor, according to the complaint.
A written confession was reportedly obtained from
Hadinger, according to the complaint, though it should
be noted he has not yet had a preliminary hearing at this
point and has not entered a formal plea to the charges.
Hadinger’s employment as a substitute teacher for the
2012-13 school year was approved on July 24, 2012 by the
Mason County Board of Education. Hadinger was also
approved on Nov. 13, 2012, as the seventh grade girls’
basketball coach, at Point Pleasant Junior/Senior High
School for the 2012-13 school year.

�Tuesday, February 26, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Community Calendar Local Briefs
Tuesday, Feb. 26
POMEROY — The Meigs County Tea Party will meet
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Senior Citizens Center. Emphasis of the meeting will be on the New World Order
with a discussion on the new international language,l the
U.N. Agenda and the ICLEI -USA and PCSD projects.
POMEROY — A Relay for Life tram captains’ meeting
will be held at 5:30 p.m. at the Rio Grande Community
College Meigs Branch. Light refreshments will be served.
Information will be provided and support for new and returning teams will be offered. There will be training for
on-line registration.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Emergency Planning
Committee (LEPC) will meet at 11 a.m. in the Senior
Citizens conference room. Lunch will be available.

Prom dress sale
postponed
POMEROY — Due to
the Meigs High School
boys playing in the district
tournament on Saturday,
the prom dress sale will
not be held this Saturday.
Friday hours will remain
3 to 7 p.m. The prom
dress sale will be extended
through March 9. Anyone
wanting to sell a dress is
asked to take it to the high
school during school hours
or call 992-2158 (Mrs.
Wednesday, Feb. 27
POMEROY — A community dinner will be held from VanReeth) for an evening
4:30-6 p.m. at New Beginnings United Methodist Church.
The menu will be chicken and noodles, mashed potatoes,
peas, biscuit and dessert. The public is invited.
Friday, March 1
MARIETTA — The Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development District Executive Committee will
meet at 11:30 a.m. at 1400 Pike Street, Marietta, Ohio.
For more information contact (740) 376-1025.

appt. Dresses will be for
sale any school day from 3
to 6 p.m.
District Legion
Conference Saturday
POMEROY — The
Eighth District Spring
Conference of the American Legion will be held at
the Pomeroy Post 39 location on Saturday, March 3.
According to an announcement from Commander
John Hood, about 14 legion posts will be represented at the conference.

An executive committee
meeting will take place at
9:30 a.m. prior to the conference. There will also
be a meeting of the Past
Commanders Club at 10
a.m. with the next session
at 12:45 p.m. All legion
members are welcome to
attend.
Post Everlasting
services
MIDDLEPORT
—
Feeney-Bennett
Post
128, American Legion, in
Middleport, will be con-

ducting Post Everlasting
services on Feb. 27, at the
annex on Mill Street. A
dinner will be served at
6 p.m.w ith the ceremony
immediately
following.
The ceremony is to honor
the deceased members of
the past year who have
transferred to the Post
Everlasting. The families
of the deceased members
are invited to attend the
dinner and the ceremony
following. Post members
and guests are urged to
attend.

Saturday, March 2
BIDWELL — Modern Woodsmen of America Chapter 6335 will meet from 10 a.m. to noon at the Wounded
Goose in Bidwell.
Monday, March 4
SYRACUSE — The Sutton Township Trustees will
meet at 7 p.m. at Syracuse Village Hall.
POMEROY — The Meigs County Cancer Initiative
Inc. (MCCI) will meet at noon in the conference room
of the Meigs County Health Department. New members
welcome.

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 45.68
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 21.25
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 74.80
Big Lots (NYSE) — 32.64
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 39.74
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 72.78
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 8.10
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.23
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 37.67
Collins (NYSE) — 57.92
DuPont (NYSE) — 46.43
US Bank (NYSE) — 33.34
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 22.81
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 50.65
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 47.70
Kroger (NYSE) — 28.35
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 42.85
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 71.44
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 18.65
BBT (NYSE) — 29.89

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 21.42
Pepsico (NYSE) — 75.19
Premier (NASDAQ) — 11.55
Rockwell (NYSE) — 88.16
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 13.75
Royal Dutch Shell — 64.53
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 46.03
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 70.44
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.45
WesBanco (NYSE) — 22.99
Worthington (NYSE) — 27.03
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for February 25, 2013, 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.

Diane Wolfe of Modern Woodmen, second from left, presents a check representing proceeds from a matching fund project
carried out by the Chester-Shade Historical Assn. Shown accepting the check from Wolfe are Wendy Hannum Linda Blosser
and Pam Schatz.

Modern Woodmen presents check to Chester-Shade
CHESTER — Diane
Wolfe, representing the
Modern Woodmen of
America, presented a
check to the ChesterShade Historical Association at a recent meeting of
the group at the Chester
Courthouse.

The money represented
a matching fund reward on
a fund-raising project carried out by Chester Shade.
Diane Wolfe made the
presentation to representatives of the association,
Wendy Hannum, education committee chairman,
Linda Blosser, Museum
committee
chairperson,
and Pam Schatz who works
with her.
Jim Stewart presided
at the meeting at which

time arrangements were
made for Chester-Shade
to be represented with the
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce at the Tourism
Expo which will be held
at the University of Rio
Grande on Saturday.
It was announced that
the South Central Ohio
Preservation
Group
known as SCOPES will
be having a meeting at
the Chester Courthouse
and Academy at 2 p.m.

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on April 21. They will be
discussing the research
materials of Emmett Conway. The public is invited
to the meeting.
David Schatz discussed
making plans to raise
money for the Foundation
of Appalachian Ohio. The
Chester-Shade Historical
Association, organized 16
years ago, has an endowment with the Foundation
which needs to grow, he
said.

Weather
Tuesday: Rain, mainly
after 7 a.m. High near 49.
East wind 9 to 16 mph.
Chance of precipitation is
100 percent. New precipitation amounts between a
quarter and half of an inch
possible.
Tuesday Night: A chance
of showers, mainly after
8 p.m. Cloudy, with a low
around 41. Southeast wind
around 11 mph becoming
southwest after midnight.
Winds could gust as high as
21 mph. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent.
Wednesday: A chance
of showers. Cloudy, with
a high near 43. Southwest
wind 8 to 13 mph, with
gusts as high as 23 mph.
Chance of precipitation is
50 percent. New precipitation amounts of less than a
tenth of an inch possible.
Wednesday Night: Rain
and snow showers likely,
becoming all snow after
11 p.m. Cloudy, with a low
around 31. Southwest wind
around 10 mph. Chance of
precipitation is 60 percent.
New precipitation amounts
between a tenth and quarter
of an inch possible.
Thursday: Rain and
snow showers likely before
3 p.m., then a chance of rain
showers between 3 p.m.
and 4 p.m., then a chance of
rain and snow showers after
4 p.m. Cloudy, with a high
near 38. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent. New
precipitation amounts of
less than a tenth of an inch
possible.
Thursday Night: A
chance of snow showers.
Cloudy, with a low around
30. Chance of precipitation
is 40 percent.
Friday: A chance of rain
and snow showers. Cloudy,
with a high near 36. Chance
of precipitation is 40 percent.
Friday Night: A chance
of snow showers. Cloudy,
with a low around 27.
Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.
Saturday: Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 35.
Saturday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
25.

�Tuesday, February 26, 2013

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Find out the real
truth about C8 claims
Meet With

Bobby Kennedy
and the

original C8 attorneys
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
6:00 p.m.

Meigs High School
Gymnasium
42353 Charles Chancey Drive
Pomeroy, OH
If you suffer from,
or have lost a loved one as a result of,
any one or more diseases
caused by C-8 exposure,
our attorneys and staff will be present
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Responsible Attorney: Harry Deitzler
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�The Daily Sentinel

Opinion

Page 4
Tuesday, February 26, 2013

GOP governors
MacFarlane proves he’s an
take a pragmatic turn Oscar guy in hosting gig
Ken Thomas
Steve Peoples

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON
—
Many Republican governors who worked to thwart
much of President Barack
Obama’s first-term agenda
are shifting gears and softening their rhetoric now
that his run was extended
for four more years and
they’re facing their own reelection.
These state leaders are
offering greater cooperation on health care and
skipping the tough talk on
immigration, taking a cue
from voters who in last
November’s election expressed their opposition to
partisan gridlock in Washington.
For many governors,
the new approach reflects
not just the specific needs
of their states but also the
realities of the political calendar: Nearly two dozen
GOP governors elected in
2009 and 2010 could face
the voters again.
“People may agree or
disagree with my position
on this social issue or that
social issue, but as long
as I’m not rubbing it in
their face all the time and
instead talking about jobs
and balancing the budget
in a way that’s relevant to
their lives, that’s where
the real focal point is,”
said Wisconsin Gov. Scott
Walker in an interview during the weekend’s National
Governors
Association
meeting.
Walker, who survived
a high-profile union-led
recall challenge last year,
said his marching orders
are clear: “We’ve got to be
relevant.”
The shift is most pronounced on health care,
where seven states led by
Republican governors are
pushing to expand their
Medicaid program under
Obama’s health care law.
Such a move once was considered anathema in the
party.
Under the terms of the
deal, Washington pays the

full cost of the expansion
for the first three years,
gradually phasing down to
90 percent. The changes
would cover millions of
low-income people, mostly
uninsured adults.
Last week, Florida Gov.
Rick Scott, a former health
care executive who rallied
opposition to the law, became the latest Republican
to make the move. He said
the Supreme Court’s decision in the health care case
and Obama’s re-election
had made the president’s
“health care mandates the
law of the land.”
Scott’s Medicaid decision followed similar pivots by Govs. John Kasich
of Ohio and Rick Snyder
of Michigan. Each leads a
state that Obama won last
year and each has struggled with approval ratings
below 50 percent.
With Obama and Republicans in Congress at loggerheads over $85 billion
in mandatory spending
cuts set to take place Friday, governors from both
parties are encouraging a
deal that would delay cuts
that could hurt their local
economies.
GOP Gov. Bobby Jindal
of Louisiana has opposed
the Medicaid expansion
and the health overhaul.
On Sunday, he suggested
on NBC’s “Meet the Press”
that Congress could delay
that expansion and the establishment of health care
exchanges under the law
and save billions without
“even cutting a program
that’s started yet — just
delay it.”
On CBS’s “Face the Nation,” Republican Gov.
Bob McDonnell of Virginia joined with Democratic
Gov. Martin O’Malley
of Maryland to call for
Congress to prevent impending defense cuts that
would hit their states
hard.
Another case study
can be found in Arizona,
where Gov. Jan Brewer
was labeled a conservative firebrand in 2010 for
supporting her state’s

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crackdown on illegal immigration. Now, halfway
through her first term,
she’s softened her tone
on immigration as Obama
and Congress pursue a
comprehensive overhaul.
In an interview, Brewer
said it was easy to hold fast
to ideological convictions
as a candidate, but when
“you have to govern for
the whole state you have
to be very pragmatic with
your decision-making. You
govern. And you have to
make the trains run and
the lights work and make
tough decisions. You can’t
please everybody all the
time, but you have to be
much more pragmatic.”
Pragmatism hasn’t always been found in abundance.
During Obama’s first
term, Republicans fought
the health overhaul in
court and outside. Others refused federal money
to develop high-speed rail
lines or pressed to undermine the power of unions.
During his campaign for
governor in 2010, Scott
frequently called Obama’s
health care plan a “jobkiller” that would hurt
Florida.
Walker drew the ire of
Democrats when he successfully pushed for restrictions to collective bargaining rights for public
sector workers. That led
unions and Democrats to
push for his recall. Walker
survived the recall election, but emerged with a
change in tone and a focus
on issues such as improving roads and bridges,
education and workforce
development.
“The big thing I keep
pushing is relevance,” he
said. “Where we connect
with voters, and where we
connect now that we’re in
office, is by continuing to
talk about and deal with
things that are relevant in
peoples’ lives.”
Many Republicans say
the approach simply reflects the need to tackle
problems that are most relevant to their states.

Frazier Moore

AP Television Writer

NEW YORK — He ruffled feathers. He
maybe even turned some viewers off.
But it’s likely no one turned off Seth
MacFarlane.
Best-known until recently as the badboy creator and character voice behind
“Family Guy” and last summer’s hit film
“Ted,” MacFarlane seized the camera Sunday as host of ABC’s Oscarcast and proved
to its vast audience that he’s a ridiculously
versatile entertainer, a guy who can be
as charming as he is famously irreverent,
even polarizing.
Here’s a guy who could toss off a joke
Bob Hope might have delivered decades
ago (“It’s Sunday. Everybody’s dressed
up. This is like church — only with more
people praying”), then carry off a deliberate groaner like his wisecrack that, while,
an actor like Daniel Day-Lewis really
captured Abraham Lincoln in his Oscarwinning performance, “I would argue that
the actor who really got inside Abraham
Lincoln’s head was John Wilkes Booth.”
Viewers could have gotten fair warning
of what to expect from MacFarlane last
fall when he hosted “Saturday Night Live”
with skill.
But this Oscars hosting gig was the
Main Event, and he earned a large measure of credit for keeping the show in satisfying equilibrium.
This was an elegant affair, including a
surprise appearance by first lady Michelle
Obama, live from the White House, who
announced the best picture.
The lovely stage setting glowed and
shimmered. And it was put to good use in
a show-stopping production number saluting movie musicals including “Chicago,”
”Dreamgirls” and “Les Miserables,” performed by stars from those films.
On a program that honored the 50th anniversary of the James Bond films, Adele
wailed the theme song from the newest,
“Skyfall.” Far juicier, Shirley Bassey belted
out the theme from “Goldfinger” about as
forcefully as she did in 1964.
And accompanying the In Memoriam
tribute, in a year that saw the passing of
composer-songwriter Marvin Hamlisch,
Barbra Streisand made a rare television
appearance to sing “The Way We Were”
in his honor.
(If any of the studio-perfect performances raised suspicions of lip-syncing,
the academy declared all the singing was
done live.)
Speaking of music, the orchestra got
surprisingly aggressive forcing off winners in mid-acceptance, often with the
sinister theme from “Jaws,” of all things.
But silver-tressed Claudio Miranda, accepting the best cinematography Oscar
for “Life of Pi,” didn’t need the hook. Be-

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

Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words.
All letters are subject to editing, must be signed and
include address and telephone number. No unsigned
letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities. “Thank You” letters will not be
accepted for publication.

ginning with “Aw, gee, wow,” he seemed
to be channeling Diane Keaton in “Annie
Hall” as he gratefully stumbled through
his thank-yous with a series of gasps, sentence fragments, and finally his own selfimposed wrap-up, “Oh, my God, I can’t
even speak.” In his brief appearance, he
became the patron saint of any viewer
who was ever forced to speak in public
from the heart — and crumbled.
Few presenters knocked it out of the
park in their fleeting turns, but none had
viewers’ teeth grinding.
Perhaps inevitably, Mark Wahlberg was
reunited with his “Ted” co-star, a digitally
rendered Teddy bear voiced by MacFarlane. Ted, at his politically incorrect best,
wondered aloud where the post-Oscars
orgy would be (“Jack Nicholson’s house,”
Wahlberg finally replied) and professed
that he was Jewish to ensure he would
“work in this town.”
Yes, MacFarlane had his moments of
dubious taste. What did anybody expect
who’d ever spent a moment with “Family
Guy”?
But did he really cross the line when
he described “Django Unchained” as “the
story of a man fighting to get back his
woman who’s been subjected to unthinkable violence — or, as Chris Brown and
Rihanna call it, a date movie”?
Especially on a night where everyone
else seemed to be on their best behavior,
MacFarlane’s strategic misbehavior furnished welcome relief.
In interviews beforehand, he had spoken
of his hope to strike a balance between respect for Hollywood and some necessary
sass. Mission accomplished.
Leading-man handsome with a gleaming smile, he began the broadcast without
a net and looking totally relaxed: Alone on
the stage, he delivered a series of one-liners, most of which scored. (The Oscarcast
was being watched by “close to a billion
people worldwide,” he intoned, “which is
why Jodie Foster will be up here in a bit to
ask for her privacy.”)
Then he opened the door to his reputation for raunch with the appearance on a
video screen of William Shatner as “Star
Trek’s” Captain Kirk, who had arrived
from the future to scold MacFarland in advance for the hosting performance he was
just starting.
“The show’s a disaster,” declared Shatner.
As evidence, he pointed to an “incredibly offensive song that upsets a lot of actresses in the audience.”
With that, a pre-taped production number featured MacFarlane singing “We Saw
Your Boobs,” saluting a roster of actresses
who have bared themselves in their films.
But then, in an effort to atone, MacFarlane sang a classy rendition of “The Way
You Look Tonight” accompanied by Charlize Theron and Channing Tatum in dance.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Newspapers
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
740-446-3242, ext. 15
slopez@civitasmedia.com
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Tuesday, February 26, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituary
Erma Mulford Hersman

Erma Mulford Hersman, 78, of Vinton, Ohio, passed
away in Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis, on Sunday
evening, February 24, 2013. She was born in Middleport,
Ohio, on December 12, 1934, daughter of the late Theodore W. Whittington and Dorothy Bartrum Whittington.
She regularly attended the Fellowship Baptist Church in
Gallipolis and she was a faithful volunteer at the Vinton
Baptist Church Food Pantry.
Erma was preceded in death by her husband, Charles
Mulford in 1961. Surviving this union are two children,
Dennis (Pam) Mulford, of Elkhart, Indiana, and Debbie
(Rick) Moore of Gallipolis. Also surviving are grandchil-

dren, Chris (Sheena) Moore, Jason (Candace) Moore,
Bridgett Dugan, Jessica Dugan, Tammy Batch, Angie
Hite; great-grandchildren, Kylie and Brayden Moore,
Madelyn Moore, Corina Harlan, Scott Harlan, Taylor Dugan, Branden Fannian; and great, great-granddaughter,
Serenity Harlan.
In addition she is survived by a sister-in-law, Yvonne
Whittington of Middleport; a special friend, Tom Treleaven of Bidwell; and several nieces and nephews
Erma was also preceded in death by her husband, Eugene Hersman; four brothers, Charles, Clifford, Louis
and Leslie Whittington; and two sisters, Marie Buck and
Wilma Whittington.

Funeral services will be held 11 a.m., Wednesday, February 27, 2013, at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton, Ohio, with Pastor Phillip Walker officiating. Burial
will follow in the Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire.
Friends may call from 5-8 p.m. on Tuesday at the Funeral Home.
In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts may be sent to the
Fellowship Baptist Church, 600 McCormick Rd. Gallipolis, OH 45631 or the Vinton Baptist Church Food Pantry,
11818 SR 160, Vinton, OH 45686.
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home is honored to serve the
family of Erma Hersman where condolences may be sent
to www.mccoymoore.com.

Death Notices
Birchfield

Kenneth R. Birchfield,
70, of Patriot, died Sunday, February 24, 2013, at
the Holzer Medical Center
Emergency Room.
Arrangements will be
announced later by Willis
Funeral Home.

Call

Campaign Contribution Limits

Campaign contribution limits announced
COLUMBUS — Secretary of State Jon
Husted has announced the 2013 Adjusted
Campaign Contribution Limits for Ohio.
The updated limits took effect Monday,
February 25, 2013.
“Full disclosure and transparency in
campaign contribution filings is important to the success of our democracy and
is dependent upon all key players being
aware of the rules,” Husted said. “To that
end, I encourage all candidates and donors
to familiarize themselves with the updated contribution limits.”
In accordance with R.C. 3517.104, campaign contribution limits are adjusted
for inflation in each odd numbered year

by the Ohio Secretary of State’s office.
Adjustments are based on the Consumer
Price Index (CPI) for All Urban Consumers and certified by the Auditor of State.
Per the statutory formula, current contribution limits were multiplied by the
five and three-tenths percent increase
in the Consumer Price Index from 2010
to 2012 and the product was then added
to the existing contribution limits. The
limits will remain in effect until February of 2015, when the next adjustment
is scheduled. The numbers are no longer
rounded due to changes made in House
Bill 1 of the 126th General Assembly,
Special Session.

Smoking
cessation
sessions
offered

Eugene Lee Call, 62, of
Gallia County, died February 24, 2013, surrounded
by his family.
Funeral services will
be held at 11 a.m., Thursday, February 28, 2013,
at Fellowship of Faith
Church 20344 SR 554,
Rio Grande, Ohio, with
Pastor Greg Scott and
Michael Denney officiating. Burial will follow in
the Hill Cemetery, Centerville, Ohio. Friends
may call from 5-8 p.m. on
Wednesday at the Fellowship of Faith Church.
The McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton is
honored to serve the Call
family.

Folden

Thelma Darlene Folden,

Transfer Any
Prescription

79, of Bidwell, died Sunday, February 24, 2013, at
Holzer Medical Center.
Services will be held at 1
p.m., Thursday, February
28, 2013, at Willis Funeral
Home with Pastor Dean
Warner officiating. Burial
will follow in Centenary
Cemetery. Friends may call
from 6-8 p.m. on Wednesday, February 27, 2013, at
the funeral home.

Heib

Curney Leonard Heib,
Jr., 82, died at his residence
in Point Pleasant. Arrangements are incomplete and
will be announced at the
convenience of the family.

McDade

Nola Ellastine McDade,
77, of Leon, W.Va., died
Sunday, February 24, 2013,
at her home surrounded by
her loving family.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, February 27, 2013,
at the Deal Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
with Rev. Sampy Hart officiating. Burial will follow
in Forest Hills Cemetery

&amp;

Wait Time for Single Prescription
LESS THAN 15 Min.

in Flatrock, W.Va. Friends
may visit the family from
6-8 p.m. on Tuesday, February 26, at the funeral
home.

Spencer

Dorothy Jean “Dot” (Litchfield) Spencer, 75, of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., died
Sunday, February 24, 2013,
at her home, with her family by her side.
Dot’s life will be remembered at 11 a.m.,
Wednesday, February 27,
2013, at the Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home, with Rev.
Mike Lambert officiating. Burial will follow in
Suncrest Cemetery. Visitation will be held from
6-8 p.m. on Tuesday, February 26, 2013, at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, the
family suggests that memorial contributions be
made to the Krebs Chapel
Church, c/o Judy Holland,
2616 Jackson Ave., Point
Pleasant, WV, 25550.
Dot’s care has been entrusted to Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home.

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60393686

Email us Your
Community Calendar
And News Events

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Cancer Initiative, (MCCI), partnering with American Cancer
Society, is offering a bimonthly smoking cessation
program.
The program is called
Fresh Start, and consists
of four, one-hour sessions
over a two- to four-week period. The program teaches
techniques and strategies
to help a person quit smoking. Others in the group,
who also want to quit, offer support and encouragement to each other make
the commitment to get
started.
Fresh Start is a free program, can offer nicotine
patches, and is open to all
residents of Meigs County
who want to quit smoking.
Reservations are required
since the class size is limited. The next session is
scheduled to begin on Monday, March 11 in Pomeroy.
To sign up for the class or
for further information, call
the Fresh Start Facilitator
Jill Johnson at 992-2947 or
the Meigs County Health
Dept at 992-6626.

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

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�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY 26, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

Lady Defenders advance to final four
Madison Crank becomes OVCS all-time leading scorer
Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Tic tac toe.
The Ohio Valley Christian girls
basketball team earned it’s third consecutive trip to the Ohio Christian
School Athletic Association final four
with a 44-29 victory over Coshocton
Christian in the regional final in Gallia County Saturday night.
Both sides of the ball were efficient
for OVCS (6-13) in the opening period, as the Lady Defenders out scored
CCS 14-5 over the opening eight minutes. Ohio Valley Christian doubled
up the Lady Wildcats in the second

with a 10-to-5 run that set the OVCS
advantage at 24-10 at halftime.
The Lady defenders added nine
to their lead in the third period, out
scoring Coshocton Christian 13-to4 in the quarter. Trailing by 23 the
Lady Wildcats marked 15 points in
the fourth quarter, while OVCS added
seven to its total. Ohio Valley Christian claimed the 44-29 triumph and
the trip to Circleville.
Madison Crank led the Lady Defenders with 19 points in the game,
while becoming the Lady Defenders
career all-time leading scorer at the
1,130 point mark.
Emily Carman marked 15 points in

the game, Bekah Sargent added four,
while Sarah Schoonover finished with
three. Rachel Sargent with two points
and Teah Elliott with one rounded out
the Lady Defenders total.
Ohio Valley Christian shot 9-of-21
(42.9 percent) from the free throw
line in the triumph.
The Lady Wildcats were led by
Sarah McCreery with 15 points,
Lizzy Egbert with seven and Jesse
Hedstram with six. Ashley Johnson
finished with one point to round out
the CCS total.
The Lady Wildcats finished 7-of-11
(63.6 percent) from the free throw
line.
Ohio Valley Christian will face
Submitted photo
Northwest region champion Emanuel Members of the Ohio Valley Christian girls basketball team
Christian at 3 p.m. Friday at Ohio pose after winning the OCSAA Southeast Regional title SaturChristian University in Circleville.
day in Gallipolis with a 44-29 victory over Coshocton Christian.

Bryan Walters | Daily Sentinel

Wahama junior Kane Roush, back, locks in a hold on Matthew Bailey of Liberty Raleigh during a Class AA-A 160-pound
match Friday night at Big Sandy Superstore Arena in Huntington, W.Va.

Wahama grapplers
finish 10th at state Meigs wins sectional title

Photos by Alex Hawley | Daily Sentiinel

Members of the Meigs boys basketball team pose after winning the sectional championship 57-51 over Federal Hocking at Athens High School.

Holds off Lancers 57-51

Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — A banner season, just without
the banner.
The Wahama wrestling program capped a stellar 2012-13
campaign with a school-best finish at the state level, as the
White Falcons placed 10th overall as a team in the Class AA-A
standings this past weekend at the 66th annual WVSSAC
State Wrestling Tournament held at Big Sandy Superstore
Arena in Cabell County.
The White Falcons finished the three-day event with 67
points, which set a new scoring mark for WHS at the state
level. The previous record of 23 points was set in 2005 by
third-place finisher Perry Ellis.
Wahama failed to land its first state champion individually,
but the Red and White did have four of its five grapplers finish
the weekend on the podium — another record for WHS. The
White Falcons, in all, came away with a third-, a fourth-, a fifthand a sixth-place effort en route to a combined 17-10 record.
The top finish came from junior Kane Roush, who earned
third-place in the 160-pound weight class. Roush — a state
runner-up one year ago — finished the weekend with a 5-1
overall mark.
Senior Crandale Neal placed fourth overall in the 170 division after posting a 4-2 record over the weekend, while junior
Randall Robie was fifth with a 4-2 mark in the 126-pound
weight class.
Junior Colton Neal finished sixth with a 2-3 record in the
182-pound weight class, while sophomore Demetrius Serevicz
finished 2-2 overall and did not place in the 195 division.
Wahama coach Ryan Russell wanted a record-setting weekend for his troops, which is exactly what he received. He admitted that he was hoping someone would win the school’s
first individual state crown, but he also noted that the collective experience gained this weekend was going to pay big dividends down the road.
“We actually came in with some higher expectations, but
the boys didn’t quit and they kept battling to get where they
ended up,” Russell said. “We’re currently rewriting the history
books, and we only lose one senior … so we still think our best
wrestling is ahead of us.
“The program is definitely headed in the right direction,
now we just need to keep building on our successes. We have
learned a lot from this weekend, and now we know what we
need to do between now and next year to make ourselves even
more of a threat at this level.”
Greenbrier West won the Class AA-A championship with
131.5 points, followed by runner-up Independence with 119.5
points. East Fairmont (106.5), North Marion (91) and Clay
(89) rounded out the top-five team spots.
Complete results of the 2013 WVSSAC State Wrestling
Tournament are available on the web at wvmat.com

OVP Sports Schedule
Tuesday, Feb. 26
Boys Basketball
Eastern vs. Southern at
Meigs HS, 6:15
OVCS at Parkersburg
Christian, 7:30
Girls Basketball
OVCS at Parkersburg
Christian, 5:45
Wednesday, Feb. 27
Boys Basketball
South Gallia vs. Pike
Eastern at Meigs HS, 6:15
Wahama at Buffalo, 7:30
PPHS-St. Albans winner
at Hurricane, 7:30
Hannan-Huntington SJ

winner at Chas Catholic,
7:30
Thursday, Feb. 28
Wrestling
GAHS at OHSAA D-2
Championships, 10 a.m.
Friday, March 1
Boys Basketball
OVCS vs. Emmanuel
Christian at OCU, 6 p.m.
Girls Basketball
OVCS vs. Emmanuel
Christian at OCU, 3 p.m.
Wrestling
GAHS at OHSAA D-2
Championships, 10 a.m.

Alex Hawley

ahawley@civitasmedia.com

THE PLAINS, Ohio — Momentum has a funny
way of running out at the right time.
The Meigs boys basketball team, which had lost
five of its last six games, defeated Federal Hocking,
which was on a four-game winning streak, by a count
of 57-51 in the sectional final at Charles McAfee
Gymnasium on the campus of Athens High School
Saturday night.
The Marauders (10-11) jumped out to an early
lead with a 7-0 run but Federal Hocking (17-6)
answered with 5-to-3 run that cut the lead to five.
Meigs ended the first period with five unanswered
points, that put the lead at 15-5.
The second stanza was back and forth most of the
way, the Lancers started with a 6-to-3 run, Meigs
answered with a 6-to-1 spurt and FHHS closed the
half on a 7-4 run that cut the MHS lead to nine at
halftime.
The Marauders allowed just one field goal in the
third period, while out scoring Federal Hocking 11to-9 in the quarter, making the advantage 11 with
eight minutes remaining.
The Lancers rallied back to pull within three points
of Meigs with just under two minutes remaining in
regulation but MHS finished the game with a 7-to-4
run, that put the cap on the 57-51 sectional title.
Meigs senior Treay McKinney (3) shoots a three-pointer
“Tonight personified what we’re building at Meigs over Federal Hocking senior Corey Rex (4) during the MaSee MEIGS ‌| 8 rauders 57-51 victory at Athens High School Saturday night.

Johnson wins 2nd Daytona 500; Patrick finishes 8th
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) —
A big first for Danica Patrick, but an
even bigger second for Jimmie Johnson.
Patrick made history up front at the
Daytona 500 Sunday, only to see Johnson make a late push ahead of her and
reclaim his spot at the top of his sport.
It was the second Daytona victory
for Johnson, a five-time NASCAR
champion who first won “The Great
American Race” in 2006.
Patrick, the first woman to win the
pole, also became the first woman to
lead the race. She was running third
on the last lap, but faded to eighth at
the finish.
There were several crashes during
the race, none approaching the magnitude of the wreck that injured more
than two dozen fans a day earlier in a
second-tier race on the same track.
Johnson raced past defending NASCAR champion Brad Keselowski on
the final restart and pulled out to a sizable lead that nobody challenged over
the final six laps.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. settled for second as Hendrick Motorsports drivers
went 1-2 in the new Chevrolet SS.
Mark Martin was third in a Michael
Waltrip Racing Toyota.
Keselowski, who overcame two accidents earlier in the race, wound up

fourth in the new Ford that Penske
Racing is fielding this year.
Patrick was clearly disappointed
with her finish. But she admitted she
wasn’t sure what move to make if she
was going to try for the win.
“You know I kept thinking about it
the whole time,” she said. “You spend
a lot of time thinking what to do when
the opportunity comes.”
Patrick became the first woman in
history to lead laps in the 500 when
she passed Michael Waltrip on a restart on Lap 90. She stayed on the
point for two laps, then was shuffled
back to third. She ended up leading
five laps, another groundbreaking
moment for Patrick, who in 2005 as a
rookie became the first woman to lead
the Indianapolis 500.
Janet Guthrie was the first woman
to lead laps at NASCAR’s top Cup Series, in 1977 at Ontario, where she led
five laps under caution.
The field was weakened by an early
nine-car accident that knocked out
race favorite Kevin Harvick and sentimental favorite Tony Stewart.
Harvick had won two support races
coming into the 500 to cement himself
as the driver to beat, but the accident
sent him home with a 42nd place finish.
Stewart, meanwhile, dropped to

0-for-15 in one of the few races the
three-time NASCAR champion has
never won.
“If I didn’t tell you I was heartbroken and disappointed, I’d be lying to
you,” Stewart said.
That accident also took former
winner Jamie McMurray, his Chip
Ganassi Racing teammate Juan Pablo
Montoya, and Kasey Kahne out of
contention.
The next accident — involving
nine cars — came 105 laps later and
brought a thankful end to Speedweeks
for Carl Edwards. He was caught in his
fifth accident since testing last month,
and this wreck collected six other Ford
drivers.
The field suddenly had six Toyota
drivers at the front as Joe Gibbs Racing and Michael Waltrip Racing drivers took control of the race. But JGR’s
day blew up — literally — when the
team was running 1-2-3 with Matt
Kenseth, Denny Hamlin and Kyle
Busch setting the pace.
Kenseth went to pit road first with
a transmission issue, and Busch was
right behind him with a blown engine.
Busch was already in street clothes
watching as Hamlin led the field.
“It’s a little devastating when you
are running 1-2-3 like that,” Busch
said.

�Tuesday, February 26, 2013

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Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.

Professional Services

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Help Wanted General

Housekeeper available: I have
many years of experience with
references. My hours are flexible and my rate is reasonable.
Please Call Heather 740-6458121

Miscellaneous

rice
Our P

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

www.mydailysentinel.com

Mention Code: MB

Looking for salesperson
for lawn, garden, and
Ag. equipment at
Bridgeport Equipment
and Tool in Bidwell,
Ohio. Sales and equipment
experience preferred
but not required. 740446-2412
Management / Supervisory
The Ohio Valley Newspapers
of Civitas Media is seeking an
Advertising Manager to lead
our sales team. The Advertising Manager would lead the
staff at our three daily newspapers The Gallipolis (OH) Daily
Tribune, The Daily Sentinel in
Pomeroy, OH and The Point
Pleasant (WV) Register. As the
Advertising Manager this talented leader will be part of the
management team of the
newspapers and will help improve the quality of our newspapers and online products.
The Advertising Manager will
be responsible for the increasing revenue for our daily newspapers and related internet,
mobile and other products we
publish. Ideal candidates are
self-motivated, detail oriented
and enjoy meeting people.
The job has a base salary and
bonus based on sales performance. We also offer a comprehensive benefits package including medical, dental, life insurance and a company
matched 401K retirement plan.
Interested applicants should
email resume, and a letter of
interest to slopez@civitasmedia.com Sammy M. Lopez publisher. Or Apply online @
myownjobmatch.com

FINANCIAL SERVICES

EDUCATION

Money To Lend

Business &amp; Trade School

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)

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

EMPLOYMENT
Drivers &amp; Delivery
Over the road truck driver,
home weekly, must have 2 yrs
exp, at least 23 yrs of age.
Send resume in care of The
Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
R&amp;J Trucking is seeking qualified CDL drivers for local and
regional routes with our SemiDumps and regional driving
positions with our Bulk Tanker
division. We feature weekend
home time for our regional
drivers, we offer health &amp; dental insurance, vacation and bonus pays, 401(K) and safety
awards. Applicants must be
over 23 yrs., &amp; have at least 2
yr. commercial driving exp.
Haz-Mat Cert., and a clean
driving record. Contact Kent at
800-462-9365. EOE.

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

REAL ESTATE SALES
For Sale By Owner
2 Bdrm -2 bath Mobile Home
Bradenton ,Flordia Turn Key
gated park community. Tastefully furnished, W/D &amp; all appliances, Cement covered Carport &amp; Patio, Fruit Trees, Outside storage shed. $15,000.00
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All accessories for camping.
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304-593-5123.
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from AEP Plant. $44,900.00
304-940-0223
REAL ESTATE RENTALS

Notices

5¢ Coupon for Alumn. Cans
Paying Top Prices for
Copper, Brass, Aluminum, &amp;
or Copper
Aluminum Cans.
Autos, Appliances,
s. Cash for Junk Au
Tin,
Iron.
n, Sheet
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Mon-Fri 8am - 11pm • Sat 9am - 8pm • Sun 10am - 6pm EST

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128

740-446-7300
We Offer
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Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
1 BR, nicely furnished Apartment, quiet area, suitable for 1
Adult, private driveway with
carport. 740(446-4782

2 BR apt in Syracuse, water,
sewage &amp; trash included, $450
mo, $250 dep. Available immediately. 740-591-1578
3 BR apt, $425 mo plus utilities, plus dep, no pets, 3rd St,
Racine, OH. 740-247-4292

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Downtown Apartment for rent.
1 Bedroom no pets. 304-675388
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

Furnished 1 bedroom Apartment - Racine Oh, NO PETS,
740-591-5174
Nice 1 BR unfurnished apartment. Refrig. &amp; new range
provided. Water, sewage &amp;
garbage paid. Deposit required. Call 740-709-0072

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

Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425 Month.
446-1599.

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
304-675-6679
Houses For Rent
14 X 70 trailer on lg ind lot,
free nat gas heat, $400 mo
plus $400 dep. Ref req. 740992-6144
2 Bdrm $500mo &amp; $500 deposit plus utilities, Home located in the Gallipolis Area. 256
-6661
2 Bedroom 2 Bath for rent
Rt.#2 North
304-675-7770 or
304-895-3129
Beautiful, up to date 3 BR/2
bath Approx.2200 sq ft. Near
Holzer $1,000.00 a mo.
$1000.00 sec. dep. Call 740645-2192
MANUFACTURED
HOUSING
Rentals
Office Space for Rent in the
Gallipolis Area $350 mo &amp;
$350 deposit plus utilities 2566661
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

RESORT PROPERTY
ANIMALS
Pets
FOUND: 1st Ave. Totally white
male Dog with a curled up Tail.
15lbs. Contact the Gallia Co.
Animal Shelter. as of 2/22/13
Want To Buy
Oiler's Towing now buying
Junk Cars Paying $1.00 to
$700.00 388-0011 or 4417870
AGRICULTURE

�Tuesday, February 26, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8

www.mydailysentinel.com

OVP Sports Briefs
2013 basketball
statistics needed

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio —
All Ohio varsity basketball coaches in Gallia and
Meigs counties are asked
to submit regular season
statistics from their respective teams to the Ohio
Valley Publishing sports
department for district
considerations with the
Ohio Associated Press.
Along with the stats,
please include the heights,
positions played and grade
of each nominee — as well
as an order of recommendation for possible selections.
Submissions should be
mailed to the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, c/o Alex
Hawley, 825 Third Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Statistics may also be
emailed to ahawley@civitasmedia.com or sent via
fax to (740) 446-3008.
All statistics and nominations must be received
before 5 p.m. on Tuesday,
Feb. 26, for consideration.

Wahama
Bleacher Project

MASON, W.Va. — Wahama High School Principal Kenny Bond has announced the first phase of

the new bleacher project
at Wahama’s Bachtel Stadium.
There will be an organizational meeting at 3 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 28, at the
football field for anyone
interested in volunteering
for demolition of the existing wooden bleachers. For
more information, contact
Steve Halstead at (304)
895-3691.

Meigs Alumni
Basketball games

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
— Meigs High School will
be hosting a trio of Alumni
Basketball games on Friday, March 8, at Larry R.
Morrison
Gymnasium.
There will be three divisions of contests, including a women’s game, a
young men’s game and an
old men’s game.
The women will start
the evening’s festivities at
6 p.m., while the young
men (2003-2012) will play
at 7:15 p.m. and the old
men (years prior to 2002)
will tip-off the finale at
8:30 p.m. Even-year grads
are asked to wear a maroon t-shirt, while odd-year
graduates should wear a
white t-shirt.
There is a participation

fee for all players, and advanced notice is appreciated. Players need to register either by phone, email
or by facebook.
Contact Amber Ridenour by phone at (740)
992-2158 or by email at
amber.ridenour@meigslocal.org to sign up, or
search Meigs Alumni Basketball Game on facebook.
There is a small fee for
fans and the concession
stand will be open.

Pomeroy Youth
League signups

POMEROY, Ohio —
The
Pomeroy
Youth
League will have baseball and softball signups
for ages 4-to-18 at the
Pomeroy fire department.
Signups will be held on
Saturday March 2nd and
Saturday March 9th from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. as well as
Wednesday March the 6th
from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
For more info contact Ken
at 740-416-8901.

Middleport Youth
League signups

MIDDLEPORT, Ohio
— The Middleport Youth
League will be holding
baseball and softball signups for boys and girls, ages

5-to-18. Signups will be
held on Saturdays March
the 2nd and 9th from 9:00
a.m. untill 4:00 p.m. at the
Middleport City Building (The old Middleport
Elementary). For any
information call Dave at
740-590-0438, Jackie at
740-416-1261, or Tanya at
740-992-5481.

GPR
baseball-softball
signups

GALLIPOLIS,
Ohio
— The Gallipolis Parks
and Recreation Department will hold baseball
and
softball
signups
from Wednesday February 27th to Friday March
8th. Signups will be held
at the Justice Center, 518
Second Avenue, any day
from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
as well as Tuesday March
5th and Thursday March
7th from 4 p.m. to 6:30
p.m. There is a registration fee and perticipants
must be between the ages
of 4-and-15. Registration
can be mailed to Recreation Dept. P.O. Box 339
Gallipolis, OH 45631 and
it must be postmarked by
March 8th. For more information contact Brett
Bostic at 740-441-6022.

Craft’s 21 lead No. 18 OSU
past No. 4 MSU, 68-60
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — All year long Ohio State’s
fans wondered whether Aaron Craft — one of the nation’s
top defenders — would ever make major contributions at
the other end of the court.
He picked the perfect time to finally break loose.
Craft continually slashed through the lane for a careerhigh 21 points on Sunday — more than he had scored in
the last three games combined — to lead the 18th-ranked
Buckeyes to to a 68-60 victory over No. 4 Michigan State.
“Give Aaron Craft credit. In the second half, he tore
us apart,” Spartans coach Tom Izzo said. “It was Aaron
Craft. He beat us every way you could beat us.”
The pesty, bothersome junior defensive specialist hit
7 of 12 shots — almost all of them on drives through a
thicket of players in the paint.
The loss crippled the Spartans’ hopes of catching up
with top-ranked Indiana, which now leads the Big Ten
race by two full games with four remaining.
Freshman Gary Harris had 14 points, Derrick Nix 12
and Adreian Payne 12 points and 15 rebounds for the
Spartans (22-6, 11-4), who have dropped two in a row
after winning 11 of 12.
It also boosted Ohio State’s flagging postseason resume. The Buckeyes came in having won just a single
game in eight starts against teams in the Associated Press
Top 25 — but were 18-0 against unranked teams.
Counting a 56-53 win over No. 2-ranked Michigan on
Jan. 13, it was the first time that Ohio State has ever beaten two top-5 teams at home in the same season.
No wonder the fans sang, “We don’t give a damn for the
whole state of Michigan” in the final minutes.
The big win came a week after the Buckeyes looked
listless in an embarrassing 71-49 loss at Wisconsin. They
took the first step with a convincing 71-45 win over Minnesota before topping the Spartans.

Meigs
From Page 6
basketball right now,” said first
year Marauders coach David
Kight. “The way we play is just
hard-nose for 32 minutes of basketball, we’re not going to quit,
cave in or fold, we’re going to
play through it and come out
successful”
The Marauders were led by
freshman Kaileb Sheets with
17 points and senior Dillon
Boyer with 16. Treay McKinney
chipped in with 12 points, including the Marauders only two
three-pointers. Dustin Ulbrich
marked six points, Jordan Hutton added four, while Ty Phelps
finished with two points, rounding out the MHS total.
Phelps led the rebounding for
Meigs with 12 boards, followed
by Cody Stewart with five. Boyer and Ulbrich each had four rebounds. Phelps and Boyer led the
Marauders in assists with five,

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repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
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while Sheets with three steals
and Stewart with two blocks led
the MHS defense.
Meigs shot 16-of-43 (37.2 percent) from the field, including
2-of-11 (18.1 percent) from beyond the arc. MHS was 19-of-31
(61.3 percent) from the free throw
line, including 12-of-22 (54.4 percent) in the fourth period. As a
team the Marauders 35 rebounds,
seven assists, five steals and six
blocked shots. Meigs committed
10 turnovers and 20 fouls in the
game. Stewart was the lone Marauder to foul out.
The Lancers never led in the
game and, aside from 0-0, the
game was never tied. 13 points
near the start of the fourth period was the Marauders biggest
lead in the game.
“I thought Meigs beat us every
which way they could beat us,”
Federal Hocking coach Howie
Caldwell said. “It seemed like we
were running up hill the whole

entire night and it was about like
a marathon runner running 26
miles, we were exhausted. We
came out very tenative and if you
play like that in the tournament
you’re not going to win.My hat’s
off to Meigs, they did everything
that they could do to beat us and
they did beat us.”
The Lancers were led by
Shawn Parsons with 11 points
and Alfy Nichols with 10. Nichols and Parsons each made one
three-pointer for Federal Hocking. Ivan Santiago and Terrance
Mayle each marked eight points,
Corey Rex finished with four,
while Peyton Seel added three.
Max Carney, Pete Crum and Cliff
Bonner each finished with two
points in the game.
Mayle led Federal Hocking on
the boards with 10 rebounds, followed by Parsons and Rex with
six each. Parsons finished with a
game-high five assists, followed
by Nichols with three. Parsons

also led the FHHS defense with a
pair of steals, while Bonner had
the lone Lancer rejection.
Federal Hocking was 15-of-54
(27.8 percent) on shots from
the field, including 2-of-14 (14.3
percent) from three-point range.
The Lancers were 19-of-29 (65.5
percent) from the free throw
line in the loss. As a team FHHS
had 41 rebounds, nine assists,
three steals and one block. Federal Hocking committed 11 turnovers and 22 fouls in the game.
Nichols, Parsons and Santiago
all fouled out for FHHS.
The Marauders, who finished
2-19 last season were eliminated
by Wellston in last season’s sectional final.
“They believe now that they
belong there, they’ve gotten
over the mind set that we’re not
“just Meigs”, we are Meigs,”
said Kight. “I have a great group
of boys, I have a great coaching staff, it’s a dream situation

and all the credit goes to them.
They’re the ones who put in the
hard work, got the stops and the
buckets.”
This marks the fifth sectional
title in Meigs, the last came in
2011. The Marauders will face
Oak Hill on Saturday at 1:45 p.m.
at the Convocation Center on the
campus of Ohio University. The
Oaks come in with a 19-4 record
on the season. Oak Hill has not
won a sectional title since 2009
when the Oaks were a Division
IV school. OHHS won the state
title that season.
“I’ll find out everything I can
about Oak Hill over the next
couple days,” Kight said. “I know
that Norm Pearson is the head
coach and that’s about all I know
right now.”
The Lancers are eliminated at
the sectional final for the second
straight year but they did win
the Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division this season.

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

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Want to buy Junk Cars, Call
740-388-0884

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Manufactured Homes
Get A NEW HOME! Zero
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your land or family land
(740)446-3570

Miscellaneous
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Guarantee. Local references.
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Mobile Home / Point Pleasant
Area / $400mo. Call 304-2385127
Mobile Homes For Rent
Water/Trash paid. NO PETS!
Great Location @ Johnson's
MH Park! Call 740-578-4177

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BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
Cougar T
BigBang
Conan (N)
(4:00) The Situation Room OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Tonight
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
Castle "Ghosts"
Castle "Little Girl Lost"
Castle
Castle "Hell Hath No Fury" Castle
Southland "Heat"
(5:30) ��� Signs ('02, Thril) Mel Gibson.
�� The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Sean Connery.
�� Constantine Keanu Reeves.
Alaska/Last "Fall Feast"
Survival "Twin Peaks"
Dual Survival "Meltdown" Survival "Castaways" (N) Survival "Romania" (N)
Survival "Castaways"
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage (N) Storage (N) Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Bigfoot "Frozen Bigfoot" Wild West Alaska
Viking "Life on the Edge" Viking Wilderness
Viking "Race for Life"
Viking "Life on the Edge"
Bad Girls Club
Bad Girls Club
Bad Girls Club (N)
The Face (N)
Bad Girls Club
The Face
Charmed
Charmed
CSI: Miami "Shootout"
CSI "One Night Stand"
CSI: Miami "Identity"
CSI:Miami "Money Plane"
(5:30) Fashion Police
E! News
E! News
K&amp;KMia. "Bitch Slapped" Fashion "The 2013 Academy Awards"
C. Lately
E! News
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Cosby Show Cosby Show Cosby Show Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Queens
Queens
Diggers
Diggers
Doomsday Bugged
Tuna "Shark Attack"
Doomsday Preppers
Diggers (N) Diggers (N) Doomsday Preppers
Crossover
Crossover
NHL Live!
NHL Hockey Boston Bruins vs. New York Islanders (L)
NHL Live!
Crossover
Pro FB Talk Overtime
NASCAR Race Hub
Pass Time
Pass Time
GearZ
GearZ
Dreams To
Dreams To
Translogic
The List
GearZ
GearZ
Ultimate Soldier
Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Top Gear
Ultimate Soldier
Top Gear
Vanderpump Rules
VanderpumpR "Last Call" Beverly Hills
Beverly Hills
Millionaire (N)
Watch (N)
Millionaire
106 &amp; Park (N)
�� Love and Basketball ('00, Rom) Omar Epps, Sanaa Lathan.
Husbands
Husbands
Wayans (N) Husbands
Wayans
House
House
House
House Hunt. Property
Property
Income Property
House Hunt. House
Income Property
Face Off "Eye Candy"
Face Off
Face Off "Bugging Out"
Face Off (N)
Robot Combat League (N) Face Off
(5:15) Red Riding Hood
�� New Year's Eve ('11, Rom) Sarah Jessica Parker.
Parade's End Pt. 1 of 4 (N) (:05) Parade's End 2/5 (N) (:05) Girls
Movie
(5:45) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2
��� The Bone Collector Denzel Washington.
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Movie
I Will Follow ('11, Dra) Tracie Thoms.
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�Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

COMICS/ENTERTAINMENT
Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s HOROSCOPE

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday,
Feb. 26, 2013:
This year you often find yourself
caught in the middle of arguments.
You can see the pros and cons of
each side, but you might not feel
confident enough to offer your opinion. A relationship needs tending if
you want it to work. A dear friend or
partner plays a significant role. If you
are single, you might be challenged to
meet the right person. You are likely
to meet this person sometime after
spring, and he or she could become
a part of your life history. Incorporate
a stressbuster into your daily life.
VIRGO understands much more than
he or she lets on.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHH Express your thoughts clearly; otherwise, you could come off as
being too sarcastic. Be careful. You
can be sure that others have many
different thoughts, and they might feel
frustrated enough to wage war. Avoid
that type of mess at all costs. Tonight:
Take a brisk walk.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHH Your creativity emerges,
which makes nearly anything possible. Your friends and/or associates
could be defiant, as confusion marks
a situation. You also might feel hurt
that someone has turned down an
invitation. Tonight: Do what feels right
to you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHH You could head in a certain
direction if you so choose, despite
what is happening around you.
Certain circumstances could trigger
you, but you don’t need to take action.
It would be wiser to do nothing and
come from a focused point of view.
Tonight: Happy at home
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH You might try to clear up a
situation, only to find that it has more
complications than you originally
thought. Unless you have strong conversational skills, the problem could
worsen. You aren’t going to convince
anyone of the rightness of your ways.
Tonight: Hang out.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH Recognize what needs to
happen in order to make a situation
work. Your fiery personality could factor into your decision-making. How
would you like to change the course
that you’re presently on? Weigh the
pros and cons first, then decide.
Tonight: Your treat.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHH You feel more in tune with
others than you have in a while. Try
not to get upset by the inevitable
disagreements that could pop up
from out of nowhere. You know that
sometimes, the less said, the better.
Open up to conversations. Tonight:
Whatever feels like the right thing to
do.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHH Take your time when making a decision. Someone’s comments
might surprise you. Whether you take
what this person says personally is
your call. Avoid sarcastic and angry
people, if possible. Opportunities
come once you detach. Tonight: You
need a time-out from certain people.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHHH You know what you want,
and you know what feels right. After
engaging in a conversation in which
you had thought everyone was on
the same page, you might find out
otherwise. The discussion might have
caused some controversy. Tonight:
Where your friends are.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHH You will assume a greater
role in a project, and you’ll have your
share of obstacles to jump. Don’t get
too tied up in a situation involving
property or a domestic matter, as you
could feel torn between two possibilities. Be aware of your limitations.
Tonight: A must appearance.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH Reach out to someone at
a distance. Excitement surrounds an
idea, but you might not know how to
proceed. Just when you think you’ve
reached a mutual understanding,
you could discover otherwise. Avoid
becoming a part of the problem.
Tonight: Hop on the computer.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHHH Someone might make an
extra effort to get to know you. Don’t
assume that this person’s assertiveness will last forever. You could
discover that his or her decision is
changing quickly. Decide how you’d
like to proceed. Tonight: Share today
with a dear friend.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHH Allow others to do their thing.
You might want to try a different attitude or approach. Now is not the time
to sit back and say little. A volatile
tone could exist within your interactions, so don’t be surprised if someone loses his or her cool. Tonight:
Follow someone else’s lead.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Tuesday, February 26, 2013

The Daily Sentinel • Page 10

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bryan Walters | Daily Sentinel

Point Pleasant senior Trevor Hill, top, drives the face of Ripley’s Nate Starkey into the mat during their Class AAA 170-pound championship match Saturday night at Big Sandy Superstore
Arena in Huntington, W.Va.

Trevor Hill wins 170
title for Point Pleasant
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. — No team title,
but plenty of team history — and a state
champion too.
The Point Pleasant wrestling program is
without a team championship for the first
time in four seasons, but the Big Blacks
still had one individual champion and a
school-best sixth-place finish in the Class
AAA standings Saturday after the conclusion of the 2013 WVSSAC State Wrestling
Tournament held at Big Sandy Superstore
Arena in Cabell County.
The Big Blacks — who won three consecutive Class AA-A crowns before being
moved up to the AAA level this school
year — eclipsed the century mark for the
first time in school history at the AAA
level, as PPHS posted a team tally of 101
points from its dozen qualifiers.
Point Pleasant was 99 points back of
eventual-champion Huntington (200),
while Parkersburg (160.5), Parkersburg
South (138), Ripley (128.5) and Washington (105.5) rounded out the top-five team
spots.
Only one of Point’s 12 qualifiers advanced to a state final, but senior Trevor
‘Reno’ Hill made the most of his first career championship match by completing
a 4-0 weekend with an 8-2 decision over
Ripley’s Nate Starkey for the 170-pound
title in Class AAA.
Hill’s feat allowed the senior to become
the program’s 19th state champion in history while also becoming the 12th grappler at PPHS to win a crown. Hill joins
Alex Reed (1998) — the program’s first
state champion — as the only wrestlers to
win an individual state championship at
the Class AAA level.
Hill never trailed in his finale Saturday
night against Starkey, and his victory allowed the Big Blacks to secure their ninth
straight postseason with at least one state
champion. The four points earned from
that decision also pushed PPHS ahead
of Wheeling Park (98) in the final team
standings, as Point’s previous-best finish
at state was seventh in the AAA level.
For a senior in his final match, Hill was
thrilled with the way he was leaving the
PPHS program — on top of the podium.
“Coach told me going into the match
not tire myself out and work as hard as
you can go,” Hill said. “I did exactly what
he told me and what he has taught me all
year, and it worked. It’s an unbelievable
feeling to be a champion. It’s like standing
on top of the world.”
Hill’s victory cast a bright silver lining

on an otherwise uncommon weekend for
the Big Blacks, who had only five grapplers make it to the podium. PPHS also
earned a third-place finish, two fourthplace efforts and a fifth-place finish.
Brycen Reymond posted a pair of wins
Saturday in the 182-pound weight class,
allowing the junior to finish third overall with a 4-1 record. Juniors John Raike
(113) and Guy Fisher (120) both placed
fourth with identical 3-2 marks, while senior Noah Searls — the 2012 Class AA-A
champion at 132 pounds — placed fifth in
the 138 division with a 4-2 record.
Caleb Leslie (106), Micah Powell (126),
Steven Porter (132), Josh Hudson (145),
Austin Rutter (152), Jacob Starcher (195)
and Jacob Duncan (220) were all eliminated from podium-contention on Friday.
The Big Blacks finished the weekend
with a combined 25-21 overall mark, and
only two grapplers failed to score a win
this weekend at the AAA level. So, even
though it wasn’t a typical weekend for
Point Pleasant, it was still a rewarding one
for fourth-year coach John Bonecutter.
“This has been the hardest year of my
coaching career, by far,” Bonecutter said.
“We have faced so much adversity this
year as a team, but we always tried to
communicate that when you go through a
rough stretch — you’ll be stronger for it
in the end.
“We may not be stronger on the scoreboard this year, but the boys never quit
and we still managed to set some school
records at the AAA level — which is really
like another feather in our cap. I’m really
proud of these guys.”
It was the final weekend for seniors
Micah Powell, Noah Searls, Colby Sayre,
Steven Porter and Trevor Hill as PPHS
wrestlers, and Bonecutter was quick
to point out how much these guys have
meant to the program over the years.
“Our seniors have won three state titles
and also finished with the highest placement ever at a Class AAA tournament as
a team. Each of them has also wrestled in
a state championship match over the last
four years,” Bonecutter said. “They have
been part of each of my four seasons as
varsity coach and two more years when I
coached them in junior high.
“They have been a part of some of the
greatest things we have ever done as a program and they have left quite a legacy. I
just wouldn’t be able to say enough about
them, but I do love them and I am going
to miss them.”
Complete results of the 2013 WVSSAC
State Wrestling Tournament are available
on the web at wvmat.com

Small-school guys get shot at NFL combine
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Armonty
Bryant gets those awkward looks every
time he tells someone he attends college
at ECU.
Naturally, the first inclination is to ask
about East Carolina. When he explains
the school name is actually East Central,
the next question, naturally, is East Central what?
No, Bryant is not the most prominent
defensive lineman at this year’s annual
NFL scouting combine and he doesn’t
come from a school most football fans have
even heard of. Yet he impressed enough of
the right people to earn one of 333 invites
to the NFL’s annual scouting combine so
he can compete against all those big-name
guys he’s been watching on television the
last few years.
“I hear it all the time. They think it’s
supposed to be East Central Michigan or
something,” he said. “East Central is in

Ada, Okla. I like to say it’s in the middle
of nowhere.”
Here, all 29 players form the non-Football Bowl Subdivision schools have a story.
Some, such as Tennessee Tech receiver
Da’Rick Rogers, are actually FBS transplants. Rogers landed with Tech, Jim
Youngblood’s alma mater, last August after getting booted off Tennessee’s team
for failing a drug test.
Others, such as Bryant and Azusa Pacific offensive lineman Luke Marquardt,
outgrew their small-school monikers
long ago but never got a chance to face
the bigger-name players until now. Bryant
was listed at 6-foot-4 and 250 pounds last
season. Scouts believe he can play either
defensive end or outside linebacker.
Marquardt came to Indianapolis at 6-8½
and 315 pounds and did 31 reps at 225
pounds on the bench press Friday.
The only real difference between them
and their higher-profile colleagues? Probably visibility.

Bryan Walters | Daily Sentinel

South Gallia freshman Mikayla Poling (00) dribbles past Ironton St. Joe defender Lynsey
Booker (34) during the first half of Thursday night’s Division IV district semifinal contest at
Jackson High School.

Lady Rebels outlast
Ironton St. Joe, 33-29
Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

JACKSON, Ohio — Not
necessarily pretty, but incredibly rewarding nonetheless.
The South Gallia girls
basketball team held off a
late rally by Ironton Saint
Joseph while earning just
its second district championship appearance in
school history Thursday
night during a 33-29 victory in a Division IV district
semifinal contest at Jackson
High School.
The third-seeded Lady
Rebels (19-5) and the
second-seeded Lady Flyers
(19-4) battled through two
ties and five lead changes in
the opening half, but SGHS
took a permanent lead
with 4:10 left in the second
canto after a Sara Bailey trifecta gave the guests an 8-5
cushion.
Ironton St. Joe — which
trailed 15-8 at the intermission — shot just 15 percent
from the field (6-of-43)
through three quarters and
seven minutes of play, and
the hosts trailed by as much
as 29-18 with 57 seconds
left in regulation. Then,
the Lady Flyers caught
fire — making their final
four shots of the contest
while trimming their deficit
down to 31-29 with 10 seconds remaining.
ISJHS, however, committed an intentional foul
on the ensuing inbounds
pass to Ellie Bostic, and
the SGHS senior netted
both free throws with 4.2
seconds left — allowing
South Gallia to wrap up
the four-point decision and
the program’s first district
championship game since
the 1997-98 campaign.
The Lady Rebels, with
the win, will face top-seeded Eastern in the Division
IV district final at 6 p.m.
Sunday, March 3, at the
Convocation Center in Athens, Ohio.
South Gallia — which
lost to North Adams in its
only other district championship contest — lost to
the Lady Eagles (20-4) in
their two Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
matchups by scores of 6325 and 73-44 during the
regular season.
Following the game,
SGHS coach Brett Bostic

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was excited that his troops
found a way to win when
the pressure was at its peak.
Then again, Bostic also
seemed a little relieved to
finally have his first district
tournament victory.
“It was ugly, and a little
nerve-racking there at the
end, but it is a satisfying
victory. And this time of
year, a victory is a victory,”
Bostic said. “We did a good
job of keeping the (Hannah) Miller girl shut down
for most of the night, which
was something we really
focused on. We made some
plays when we needed
them and we made some
free throws when we needed them, and that was the
difference in the outcome.”
Both teams attempted 38
shots apiece in the contest,
and neither squad managed
to make more than 32 percent of those opportunities
— which was evident in the
quarter-by-quarter scoring.
There was one tie and
two lead changes in the
opening eight minutes of
regulation, and each team
held the lead once before
SGHS secured a 3-2 edge at
the end of the first quarter.
Hannah Miller started
the second quarter scoring with a field goal at the
7:39 mark, giving ISJHS its
final lead of the night at 4-3.
The Lady Flyers, however,
missed their next 10 shot
attempts, and the Lady
Rebels hit four straight
shots to start the period for
a 13-6 cushion with 2:51
left in the half.
Both teams traded a field
goal over the final two minutes of the first half, allowing South Gallia to take a
seven-point lead into the intermission. Ironton St. Joe
had four turnovers at the
break, half as many as the
Lady Rebels’ tally of eight
turnovers.
SGHS was 6-of-21 from
the field in the opening half
for 29 percent, including
a 2-of-6 effort from threepoint range for 33 percent.
The Lady Flyers, conversely, netted 3-of-23 shot attempts in the first half for
13 percent — including a
0-for-7 effort from behind
the arc.
St. Joe made a 6-0 run to
start the third quarter, as a
Hannah Miller field goal at
the 5:22 mark allowed the
hosts to pull within one
point at 15-14. It was also
as close as ISJHS would
come the rest of the night.
Jasmyne Johnson ended
the Lady Rebels’ scoring
drought at the 4:47 mark
with a field goal, which
sparked a 7-1 surge over the
next 2:44 for a 22-15 cushion. Amber Neal netted a
trifecta with 1:30 left in the
period, cutting St. Joe’s deficit down to 22-18 headed
into the finale.
Rachel Johnson’s field

goal at the 2:31 mark of
the fourth gave SGHS its
first double-digit lead of the
night at 28-18, and a free
throw Lesley Small with 57
seconds left in regulation
handed the Lady Rebels an
11-point advantage — their
biggest lead of the night.
Neal hit a three-pointer
with 46 seconds left for a
29-21 contest, then Miller
answered with a field goal
and a three-pointer — allowing the hosts to cut
their deficit down to 29-26
with 27 seconds left.
Johnson converted a pair
of free throws with 18 seconds left to extend South
Gallia’s lead back out to
five, but Miller countered
with a trifecta eight seconds later for a 31-29 deficit with 10 seconds left in
regulation.
The Lady Rebels connected on 12-of-38 field
goal attempts for just under
32 percent, including a 3-of10 effort from three-point
range for 30 percent. The
guests committed 17 turnovers and also went 6-of-8
at the free throw line for 75
percent.
Jasmyne Johnson led
SGHS with eight points, followed by Ellie Bostic with
seven markers. Mikayla Poling and Meghan Caldwell
each contributed six points
to the winning cause, while
Sara Bailey added three
markers. Rachel Johnson
and Lesley Small rounded
out the respective scoring
with two points and one
marker.
The Lady Flyers sank 10of-38 shot attempts for 26
percent, including a 5-of-14
effort from behind the arc
for 36 percent. The hosts
committed 10 turnovers
and also went 4-of-15 at the
charity stripe for 27 percent. ISJHS was also 2-of9 at the free throw line in
the second half, including
a 0-for-4 performance in the
fourth quarter.
Amber Neal and Hannah
Miller each had 12 points
to pace Ironton St. Joe, followed by Hannah Martin
and Lynsey Booker with
two markers apiece. Molly
Miller also had one point to
round out the scoring.
Bostic
acknowledged
that this win was special
for many reasons, but he
wouldn’t go as far as to call
it his biggest win as South
Gallia girls basketball
coach.
“Yes, this is a special win
for me and the program —
but it’s no different than my
first win or my 100th win.
They have all meant something special to me,” Bostic
said. “It’s a nice win for the
kids. We get to extend our
season and we get to play at
the Convo for the first time
in girls history. I know the
girls are excited about the
opportunity.”

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