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                  <text>On this
day in
history
EDITORIAL s 4

8 AM

2 PM

8 PM

30°

37°

32°

Mostly cloudy and chilly today. Snow
tonight. High 40° / Low 27°

Today’s
weather
forecast

Lady
Eagles
sweep

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 21, Volume 72

Tuesday, February 6, 2018 s 50¢

Barnhart sentenced to 14 years in prison

By Sarah Hawley

shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

POMEROY — A
Pomeroy man was
sentenced to 14 years
behind bars after being
convicted of ﬁve felony
charges, including aggravated vehicular homicide, during a two-day
jury trial last week in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Richard Barnhart Jr.,
32, was found guilty of
two counts of aggravated
vehicular homicide,
one count of vehicular
manslaughter, and two

counts of operating a
vehicle under the inﬂuence (OVI). All of the
charges related to a
single incident, therefore
merged for the purpose
of sentencing.
The most serious
offense — ﬁrst-degree
felony aggravated vehicular homicide — carried
a mandatory minimum
sentence of 10 years in
prison, with a maximum
of 15 years.
Judge I. Carson Crow
sentenced Barnhart to
11 years on the charge
of aggravated vehicular
homicide, plus three

years on the speciﬁcation
attached to the charge
for prior OVI offenses.
Prosecutor James K.
Stanley asked the court
to sentence Barnhart to
the maximum possible
of 18 years in prison,
citing his prior four OVI
convictions, as well as
the ﬁfth offense causing
the death of another individual.
“He has a long history of such behavior,”
said Stanley, adding
that Barnhart did not
learn from his previous
offenses.
Anytime a person kills

another it is a serious
offense Stanley told the
court in asking for the
maximum sentence.
Defense attorney
Charles Knight stated
that his client has no
memory of the events
of the night the crash
occurred. Knight asked
that Barnhart receive
the minimum mandatory
sentence in the case.
Several family members of both the late
Jesse Carr and Barnhart,
as well as friends of the
men, addressed the court
on behalf of Barnhart.
Carr’s father addressed

the court, stating that
Barnhart was like a second son to him. He asked
that something positive
be allowed to come from
this rather than a prison
sentence. Carr suggested
that Barnhart be ordered
to community service
or go to local schools to
share his story. “Prison
just makes people
worse,” said Carr.
Carr’s aunt had prepared a written statement which was read by
Victim Advocate Theda
Petrasko. The statement
read in part that Carr
was loyal to his friends

and family, “Ride or
Die as he called it.” She
called the decision of
both to get in the car
that night a choice made
by both, and something
she did not condone.
All of those who spoke
said that the pain of living with the fact that he
killed his best friend that
night was punishment
enough for Barnhart.
Carr’s family expressed
that sending Barnhart to
prison is not something
that Jesse Carr would
have wanted in the case.

See BARNHART | 5

Man arrested
after domestic
incident
Staff Report

VINTON — A Vinton man was arrested on
Saturday after allegedly holding the mother of his
children at gunpoint.
According to a news release from the Meigs
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce, William L. Garnes, 31,
was arrested after deputies were dispatched to
a domestic violence complaint on Price Strong
Road, Vinton.
Deputies Campbell and Stewart arrived at the
residence and while Deputy Stewart approached
the front door of the residence the front door
See INCIDENT | 2

Search locates
alleged drugs, Active shooter training held
paraphernalia
Sheriff Keith Wood speaking to the audience about the necessity of being prepared for the worst.

By Erin Perkins

eperkins@aimmediamidwest.com

Staff Report

SYRACUSE — The execution of a search warrant at a Syracuse residence has located alleged
drugs and drug paraphernalia.
In a news release, Sheriff Keith Wood stated that
a search warrant was executed on Friday evening,
Feb. 2, at a residence on Second Street, Syracuse.
The warrant was obtained by the Major Crimes
Task Force of Gallia-Meigs with the assistance
of Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney James K.
Stanley. The warrant was obtained by the Task
Force and the Sheriff’s Ofﬁce through intelligence
and investigations.
Meigs County Deputies and the Major Crimes
See DRUGS | 5

INDEX
Obituary: 2
News: 3
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

RACINE — Members
of several local churches
recently came together
to receive information
about church security.
Members of CarmelSutton United Methodist Church in Racine
welcomed Meigs County
Sheriff Keith Wood,
Dan Arnold of Bradford
Church of Christ, Kevin
Frith of Ohio University
Police Department, and
Charlie Mansﬁeld, of the
Meigs County Sheriff’s
Ofﬁce and a minister
with a background in

police work, to inform
them, and members of
other churches, about
active shooter training.
Wood explained his
goal for the evening was
to help guests formulate
a basic plan for their
church’s security and
informed them he is trying to get out and help
any church within the
county wanting to book
an active training shooting seminar.
“Developing a plan is
the ﬁrst thing we need to
do,” said Wood.
Arnold shared instances from his churches
active shooter training

seminar. Wood said
Arnold chose the sheep
dogs, the protectors, for
his church. Arnold gave
examples of what sheep
dogs need to be aware
of and what they need to
do when guarding their
ﬂock. He recommended
the use of radios, so the
church could be guarded
from the inside and the
outside. Arnold also recommended reading material for anyone considering being a sheep dog for
their church.
“Choosing the right
person…that’s a difﬁcult
job. It’s something all of
you should pray about

Erin Perkins | OVP

and say, ‘Lord, lay it
on my heart, am I the
one that you want to do
this,’” said Mansﬁeld.
“It’s okay to kill, it’s all
through the bible, but
we don’t want to murder,
yet, we need someone
who doesn’t want to kill,
but is willing.”
Mansﬁeld shared with
the audience the physical
effects of an individual
when they are in the
presence of gun ﬁre and
how individuals need
to have their mind and
bodies prepared for such
instances.

See SHOOTER | 5

Meigs to sell former football field
By Sarah Hawley
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.

POMEROY — Meigs
Local is once again preparing to sell the former
home of the Meigs football team.
During its recent meeting, the Meigs Local
Board of Education 4-0
to approve a resolution
authorizing the sale of
the former Meigs High
School Football Stadium
(Bob Roberts Field) in
Pomeroy.
District Treasurer Roy

Johnson said the next
step for the district is the
advertise the property for
bid, allowing the public
to place bids on the site.
“The property will be
publicly bid and obviously we will reserve the
right to accept/reject
any or all bids,” stated
Johnson.
The board previously
advertised the property
for sale back in 2013
with no bids received.
Other than the ﬁeld
being used for the ﬂag
football program each

fall, the ﬁeld and property are considered to
be a liability from an
insurance point for the
district.
The ﬁrst game on the
Pomeroy ﬁeld was played
in 1950. In 1990, the
ﬁeld and stadium were
rededicated and named
for longtime educator,
coach, and athletic booster Bob Roberts.
The stadium was home
to the Pomeroy Panthers
football team from 19501966 and the Marauders
from 1967-2011, when

the team moved to the
new stadium at Rocksprings.
In other business, the
resignation of Christy
D. Ramsburg as cook at
the middle school was
accepted effective March
1 for retirement purposes.
The resignation of
Marinda Young as a
teacher at the intermediate school was accepted
effective May 31 for
retirement purposes.
See FOOTBALL | 3

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, February 6, 2018

OBITUARIES
TERESA R. GILLILAN
POMEROY — Teresa
R. Gillilan, Pomeroy,
Ohio, passed away on Saturday, Feb. 3, 2018 at the
Holzer Meigs Emergency
Department. She was
born on Nov. 30, 1958,
in Gallipolis, to Kathryn
(Dill) Wildermuth Meredith and the late Charles
Wildermuth.
She was married to her
loving husband Timothy
“Tim” Gillilan for 22
years. She adored her
grandchildren and would
do anything for them.

She is preceded in
death by her father; son,
Zackery Tillis; and mother-in-law, Mary Gillilan.
Funeral services will
be held on Tuesday, Feb.
6, 2018 at 1 p.m. at the
Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Burial will follow
at the Meigs Memory
Gardens. Visitation will
be held from 11:30 a.m.-1
p.m. at the funeral home.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

SHOEMAKER

WEARS

GALLIPOLIS — Robert K.(Bobby) Shoemaker, 58,
of Gallipolis, passed away on Friday February 2, 2018
at his residence.
Memorial Services for Bobby will be 11 a.m. Saturday February 10, 2018 at the Chapel of Hope at
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the
chapel on Saturday one hour prior to services. WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home is assisting the family. A
complete obituary will be published in a later edition.

MIDDLEPORT — Bontye Lee Wears of Middleport
died on Feb. 2, 2018, at her residence. Cremation services are under the direction of the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home.

CLONCH
GALLIPOLIS — Randall Wayne Clonch, 61, of Gallipolis, died on Sunday, February 4, 2018 at his residence. At his request, there will be no services. Willis
Funeral Home is assisting the family.
FARLEY II

VINTON — Terry “Bud” Farley II, 45 of Vinton,
passed away Saturday February 3, 2018 at OSU Medical Center East, Columbus.
crossword puzzles, readTOLEDO — EleaFuneral services will be conducted noon Saturday
ing, and going out to
nor L. Walter, age 89,
February 10, 2018 in the McCoy-Moore Funeral
lunch with her friends.
of Toledo, Ohio, died
Home, Vinton. Burial will follow in Brush Ridge CemEleanor also collected
Feb. 4, 2018. She was
etery, Vinton. Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore
Kewpie dolls but found
born Oct. 19, 1928, in
Funeral Home, Vinton on Friday February 9, 2018 5-8
Pomeroy to the late John her greatest joy in spend- p.m.
ing time with her family.
Albert and Ethel May
Surviving her daugh(Pullins) Smith. She marMORRIS
ried Homer R. Walter on ters, Melinda Walczak
(Mark) and Suella WalApril 13, 1949, and he
CHESAPEAKE — Betty Ann Morris, 71, of Chesapreceded her in death in ter (Martin Backler);
peake, passed away Friday February 2, 2018 at home.
granddaughter, Adrienne Funeral service will be conducted 2 p.m. Wednesday
2002. Two brothers and
two sisters also preceded Armstrong; and great
February 7, 2018 at Hall Funeral Home and Cremagrandchildren, Audrey
her in death.
tory, Proctorville. Burial will follow in White Chapel
and William Armstrong. Memorial Gardens, Barboursville, W.Va. Visitation
Eleanor was a regisServices will take place will be held from 1 to 2 p.m. Wednesday February 7,
tered nurse for more
in Toledo, Ohio.
than 30 years. In her
2018 at the funeral home.
walkerfuneralhomes.
free time, she enjoyed
com
sewing, knitting, doing
ROACH
ELEANOR L. WALTER

BRANNEN
CROWN CITY — Keith Brannen, 68, of Crown
City, died Monday, February 5, 2018 at the VA Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va. Arrangements will be
announced later by the Willis Funeral Home.
GILLENWATER
GALLIPOLIS — Shannon Gillenwater, 40, of Gallipolis, died Sunday, February 4, 2018.
Arrangements will be announced later by the Willis
Funeral Home.
UNDERWOOD
GALLIPOLIS — Velva Mae Underwood, 98, Gallipolis, died at 6 p.m. Friday, February 2, 2018 in the
Holzer Senior Care Center.
Family and friends may call from 6 - 8 p.m. Tuesday, February 6, 2018, at the Cremeens-King Funeral
Home. Funeral services will be at 1 p.m. Wednesday,
February 7, 2018 at the funeral home. Interment will
be in the Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire.

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EDITOR
Beth Sergent, Ext. 1992
bsergent@aimmediamidwest.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Derrick Morrison, Ext. 2097
dmorrison@aimmediamidwest.com

MANAGING EDITOR
Sarah Hawley, Ext. 2555
shawley@aimmediamidwest.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 109 West Second Street, Pomeroy, OH, 45769.

HARTFORD — Donald Ernest Roach, 83, of Hartford, W.Va., died Feb. 3, 2018, at Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Service will be 11 a.m., Friday, Feb. 9, 2018, at the
Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va., with Pastor
Jeff Mead ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in Zerkle Cemetery, Letart, W.Va. Visitation will be Thursday from
6-8 p.m. at the funeral home.
MITCHELL
APPLE GROVE, W.Va. — Ottmer Bruce Mitchell,
born on August 19, 1944, died February 2, 2018.
Funeral service will be at 3 p.m. Tuesday, February
6th at Waybright Funeral Home, Ripley, W.Va. Visitation will be from 1 p.m. until the time of service.
Burial with military rites performed by the Jackson
County Honor Guard will be in the Independence
Cemetery, Sandyville, W.Va.

RICKARD
MASON — Beverly Lynn (Morgan) Rickard, 75, of
Mason, W.Va., died Saturday, Feb. 3, 2018 at Pleasant
Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Graveside service will be 1 p.m., Wednesday, Feb.
7, 2018, at Suncrest Cemetery, Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
with Pastor Mike Finnicum ofﬁciating.
WILSON JR.
RACINE — Charles D. Wilson Jr., 65, Racine, died
Friday, Feb. 2, 2018 at his residence. Funeral services
will be 11 a.m., Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018, in the
Cremeens-King Funeral Home, Racine. Rev. Jim Satterﬁeld will ofﬁciate. Burial will be in the Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m., Tuesday at
the funeral home.
STANLEY
POINT PLEASANT — Sherry Renee Stanley, 57,
of Point Pleasant, died Friday, February 2, 2018 at
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation in Point
Pleasant.
There will be no public services. Burial will be held
at the convenience of her family. Arrangements are
under the direction of the Wilcoxen Funeral Home in
Point Pleasant.
WISEMAN
PROCTORVILLE — Brenda J. Wiseman, 70, of
Proctorville, passed away Sunday February 4, 2018
at the Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House of Huntington, W.Va. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory,
Proctorville, is in charge of arrangements which are
incomplete.
CASEY
GALLIPOLIS — Daniel T. Casey, 71, of Gallipolis, died Monday, February 5, 2018 at his residence.
Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday, February 8, 2018
at Grace United Methodist Church. Friends may call
on Thursday at the church from noon until the time
of the services. Burial will follow in Centenary Cemetery. Willis Funeral Home is assisting the family.
WEIMANN
MIDDLEPORT — Carl Leonard Weimann, Middleport, died on Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2018. Cremation
services are under the direction of the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home.

MEIGS CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Editor’s Note: The Daily Sentinel
appreciates your input to the community calendar. To make sure
items can receive proper attention,
all information should be received
by the newspaper at least ﬁve business days prior to an event. All
coming events print on a spaceavailable basis and in chronological order. Events can be emailed
to: TDSnews@aimmediamidwest.
com.

Tuesday, Feb. 6
REEDSVILLE — The Eastern
Local Board of Education will
be holding a special Board meet-

Incident
From page 1

swung open and a female
reportedly came running
from the residence. Deputy Stewart advised her

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ing at 6:30 p.m. in the Eastern
Elementary Library conference
room. The purpose of the meeting will be to accept the resignation of a Board member.

Wednesday, Feb. 7
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Health Department’s
Creating Healthy Communities
Coalition will host an Active
Transportation Kick off Meeting at the Pomeroy Library at 11
a.m.
POMEROY — No nursing services will be available at Meigs
County Health Department from

to show her hands which
she did and then she was
advised to run to safety
behind Stewart’s patrol
vehicle. Within approximately 10 seconds the
three children reportedly
ran from the residence
and in the direction of
their mother. Deputy
Stewart advised the
children to run to their
mother and stay behind
the patrol vehicle.
At this time approximately 30-40 seconds
passed as deputies were
calling for Garnes to
slowly exit the front door
of the residence with his
hands above his head.
After 30-40 seconds,
Garnes came out with his
hands around his pockets. Garnes was ordered
to put his hands above
his head at which time
he complied and then
onto his stomach with his
hands above his head at
which time he complied.
Deputies Campbell and
Stewart moved in on Garnes and Deputy Campbell
secured him in handcuffs.
Deputies went inside
the residence and cleared
it for other persons and
no one else was located
inside. Garnes was
placed in the backseat of
Deputy Campbell’s patrol

11 a.m.-4 p.m. The nurses will be
participating in CPR training.

Thursday, Feb. 8
CHESTER —The next regular
meeting of the Chester Shade
Historical Association will be at
6:30 p.m. at the Chester Academy.

Monday, Feb. 12
ROCKSPRINGS — The next
regular meeting of the Meigs
County Agricultural Society/Fairboard will be at 7 p.m. at the Meigs
County Extension Ofﬁce.

car.
While deputies interviewed the victim, she
reportedly stated Garnes
had allegedly punched
her on the head, but he
didn’t harm the children.
The victim further stated
that she was able to send
a text out to a friend who
made the call to the sheriff’s ofﬁce advising that
she was allegedly being
held at gunpoint and not
allowed to leave, according to the sheriff’s ofﬁce.
The text messages
read “I need you to come
now” and “He had me
at gun point come here
now at Williams,” according to the news release.
The victim stated that
Garnes allegedly pointed
what she believed was a
.45 caliber handgun at
her head while on top of
her in the front yard and
pulled the trigger. The
victim stated she heard
the gun click as if it had
jammed or there was not
a round in the chamber
of the pistol, according
to the press release. She
also stated that prior to
him getting on top of her,
Garnes and his father
were allegedly rolling
around ﬁghting in the
front yard and four shots
were ﬁred.

Deputies then went
back to the front yard of
the residence and recovered four shell casings.
Garnes was given
his Miranda rights and
while speaking to him,
Garnes stated that he had
allegedly hidden the .45
caliber handgun underneath some clothing in
the master bedroom.
Garnes signed a consent
to search form and upon
a brief search of the master bedroom, deputies
reportedly located, photographed and collected
a .45 caliber “Fire Storm”
handgun.
Deputies transported
the victim and her three
children, ages 10, 7 and
6 years old to the Meigs
County Sheriff’s Ofﬁce
to obtain statements.
Child Protective Services
was requested and came
to the sheriff’s ofﬁce
to address the fact that
Garnes allegedly had
temporary custody of the
children. Child Protective
Services contacted the
judge who gave emergency custody to the mother.
Garnes was booked in
for one count of kidnapping and one count of
domestic violence. He
is being held pending a
court appearance.

�NEWS

Daily Sentinel

MEIGS BRIEFS

Organizational meeting held
LEADING CREEK — Leading Creek Conservancy
District held their organizational board meeting on
Jan. 30, 2018, with Collin Roush elected president and
John Hood as vice president. Regular board meetings
will be held the fourth Tuesday of each month at 4 p.m.

Immunization clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department will conduct an Immunization Clinic on Tuesday
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. at 112 E. Memorial Drive
in Pomeroy. Please bring child(ren)’s shot records.
Children must be accompanied by a parent/legal
guardian. A $15 donation is appreciated for immunization administration; however, no one will be denied
services because of an inability to pay an administration fee for state-funded childhood vaccines. Please
bring medical cards and/or commercial insurance
cards, if applicable. Zostavax (shingles); pneumonia
and inﬂuenza vaccines are also available. Call for eligibility determination and availability or visit our website at www.meigs-health.com to see a list of accepted
commercial insurances and Medicaid for adults.

RACO winter yard sale set
RACINE — The RACO indoor winter yard sale is
set for Feb. 8-9 at the Racine American Legion from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily. There will be no clothing, just
other miscellaneous and furniture and appliance
items. Money goes into the fund for Southern High
School scholarships. The Legion will be serving food
for purchase during the event.

RACO Games to be held
RACO Games at the Syracuse Community Center
will be held on Feb. 22. Doors open at 5 p.m. games
start at 6 p.m. Purses, cookware, dishes, and many
other nice items. Syracuse Community Center will be
serving food for sale. Tickets may be purchased from
Gina Hart Hill, Kim Romine at 740-992-7079 or 740992-2067, Racine Optometric Clinic at 740-949-2078
or from any RACO member.

Football

tral and North Central
Conference in Chicago,
Illinois, from Feb. 14-17.
Paul Dailey was
From page 1
approved as a substitute
for the remainder of
Professional leave was
approved for intermediate the school year. Brandy
Roush and Cindy Eblin
assistant principal Lorri
were approved as substiLightle to attend a mandated SFA Conference in tute secretaries for the
remainder of the school
Phoenix, Arizona, from
year.
Feb. 10-15. Professional
Revised permanent
leave was also approved
appropriations were
for middle school music
approved in the amount
teacher Metra Peterson
to attend the ACDA Cen- of $30,643,537.

Tuesday, February 6, 2018 3

RACO discusses events
businesses next year to this display. RACO gave 300 Christmas
treats to community members.
RACINE — The Racine Area
Allen Graham donated to
Community Organization held
their regular monthly meeting on RACO money made while playing
Monday, Jan. 22. Dr. Doug Hunt- Santa at various events.
In new business, RACO diser had prayer before our meal.
Secretary and Treasurer’s reports cussed their winter yard sale to
were presented and approved. In be held on Thursday, Feb. 8 and
Friday, Feb. 9 (9 a.m.-3 p.m.) at
old business the winners of the
the American Legion building.
RACO Christmas Lights DecoThe Legion members will be sellrating Contest were reviewed:
ing food those days. RACO will
ﬁrst place — Cheryl Marnhout
be having their annual RACO
($100); second place — Doug
aad Phyllis Rees ($75); and third games held at Syracuse Community Center on Thursday,
place — Jonathan and Dawana
Feb. 22 at 6 p.m. (doors open at
Dunn. The Thorla family light
5 p.m.). The prizes will include
display in the park was a huge
success and enjoyed by many over several designer purses and
the Christmas season. The Christ- kitchen items, etc.. As always the
Syracuse Community Center will
mas village buildings displayed
be selling refreshments. Tickets
this year was also very popular.
RACO hopes to add several more for the games may be purchased

Staff Report

by contacting Bev Cummins (9493099), Alice Wolfe (949-2286),
Kim Romine (992-2067 or 9927079), or Dale Hart (949-2656).
There will be an early bird prize.
Tickets can also be purchased at
the door that evening. RACO will
also be planning their Spring yard
sale in May.
RACO will be taking scholarship applications to Southern
High School to be handed out
on Thursday, March 1. Any student continuing their education
beyond high school is eligible to
apply.
Dale Hart led in the Pledge
to the Flag to close our meeting. There were 12 members in
attendance. The next meeting
is scheduled for Tuesday, Feb.
27 at 6:30p.m. (location to be
announced).

Trump calls Dems not cheering ‘un-American’
By Ken Thomas And
Darlene Superville

he remained silent about
the day’s gyrations durAssociated Press
ing his appearance at
an Ohio company that
makes cylinders.
BLUE ASH, Ohio —
Trump and his wife,
President Donald Trump
Melania, made it a
accused Democrats on
his-and-hers domestic
Monday of being “unAmerican” and perhaps policy day. The ﬁrst
lady accompanied the
even “treasonous”
president to Ohio, but
for refusing to cheer
she peeled off to visit
positive news during
Cincinnati’s children’s
his State of the Union
address, as he turned an hospital to be briefed
appearance arranged to on the opioid epidemic
while he pitched the tax
promote new tax cuts
cuts he signed into law
into a session bashing
the political opposition. just before Christmas.
During what turned
Even as Trump celinto a wide-ranging
ebrated the tax cuts
speech, Trump critiand the economy, the
cized House Democratic
Dow Jones Industrial
leader Nancy Pelosi for
Average took a wild
describing as “crumbs”
ride during his nearly
hour-long speech, falling the bonuses of $1,000 or
more than 1,000 points, more that some companies, including the one
recouping some losses,
he spoke at, are giving
then falling again.
their workers as a result
Trump has frequently
of the tax cuts.
commented on gains in
He also accused
the market during his
Democrats of being
ﬁrst year in ofﬁce, but

Evan Vucci | AP

President Donald Trump delivers remarks Monday at Sheffer
Corporation to promote his tax policy in Blue Ash, Ohio.

“un-American” for not
clapping during his
address to the nation
last week, in contrast to
fellow Republicans, who
Trump said were “going
totally crazy wild” over
everything he said.
“They were like death.
And un-American,”
Trump said about the
Democrats. “Somebody
said treasonous. Can we
call that treason? Why
not?”

“They certainly didn’t
seem to love our country
very much,” the president said.
As for Pelosi, who represents San Francisco,
Trump said, “She’s a
rich woman who lives in
a big beautiful house.”
He said the “crumbs”
remark was not a “good
day” for Pelosi, whom
he referred to as the
Republicans’ “secret
weapon.”

2018 Faith &amp; Family
Faith and Family is a project designed to reach out to
people in need and at the same time reach out to the
community with a message of hope. We want to form
a stronger alliance with the church community and do
more meaningful job of helping local churches spread
their message to people who are looking for answers and
inspiration. We need your help to do this.

COMPREHENSIVE
WOUND CARE IN A
CARING &amp; CONVENIENT
ENVIRONMENT

We will publish an inspirational full color magazine that we have entitled Faith and Family. This publication,
with your help, will list all our churches and carry a message of hope. As your local newspaper we want
to use our resources to help get your message to those in need. The magazine will carry profiles of local
churches and testimonials from local readers who have experienced a change in life as the result of their
faith and beliefs. These stories can be a powerful influence in raising the consonances of the reader looking
for answers and in need of a church to help heal. This publication will also increase the strength and unity
among the local church community.

THE WOUND CARE CENTER AT PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

provides patients in the Point Pleasant area with quicker and more
direct access to the most comprehensive wound treatments in
the area. Highly-specialized care, state-of-the-ar t therapies and
leading-edge wound modalities are all available close to home at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

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YOU MAY NEED WOUND CARE
TREATMENT IF YOU ARE EXPERIENCING
ANY OF THE FOLLOWING:
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o�$ISPOJD�OPO�IFBMJOH�
wounds
o�%JBCFUJD�GPPU�VMDFST
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Deadline: Feb. 7th, 2018

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

Pomeroy
Daily Sentinel

740-446-2342

740-992-2155

www.mydailytribune.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

304-675-1333
www.mydailyregister.com

Arthur Fine, MD, FACS
Marshall General Surgeon
Board-Certified
Wound Care Surgeon

OH-70027672

OH-70026519

Point Pleasant
Register

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disease
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destruction
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CONDITIONS TREATED AT THE PLEASANT
VALLEY HOSPITAL WOUND CARE CENTER
INCLUDE:
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30 days old with
failed treatments
and therapies
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spider bite
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lacerations
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surgical wounds

Gretchen Hammond,
FNP-BC

Whitney Watterson,
FNP-BC

Wound Care
Nurse Practitioner

Wound Care
Nurse Practitioner

FOOR MORE INFOORMAATIION OR TO SCHEDDULE AN APPOINTTMEENT,
PLEAASE CAALL 304.6755.6098.

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Scientists:
They’re not
who you think
“You have a degree in what?” I get that question frequently because I work in the construction business, and no one expects that I have
a bachelor’s in physics. As federal
lawmakers iron out details of the
Joe
ﬁscal year 2018 budget, they
Iadarola
should keep in mind that science
Contributing
deserves strong support, since it
columnist
trains people like me for so many
different careers that propel the
American economy.
Myths abound when it comes to science and
career options; let me shatter four of them.
First, we’re not who you think we are. The
vast majority of us with bachelor’s degrees in
physics don’t work in universities; 60 percent
of us work in the private sector. And that’s true
of all science degree holders. We’re not in ivory
towers at gated universities. Instead, we’re
in construction, agriculture and manufacturing. We develop and build for this country. So,
the next time you see someone in a hard hat,
remember that person might be a scientist.
Second, science degree holders are not all
super geniuses. Maybe you’ve watched the “Big
Bang Theory,” and you think we’re all Sheldon
Cooper. I have a passion for science, but the
similarity stops there. We don’t all ace high
school calculus. The fact is, science is open to
being pursued by anyone
who has the desire and
Science is a sureinterest.
fire way to diverse
Third, my interest in
employment
science wasn’t a tempaths. Career
porary enthusiasm. I
didn’t look back on my
opportunities
life and say: “Whew,
abound. The pay
I’m glad I got that out
of my system.” Instead, is great. And the
rewards are long
during high school, I
lasting.
honed my electrical
skills while working for
a master electrician in
Silver Spring, Md. Later,
at his urging, I took the exam to also become
a master electrician after getting my degree. I
recall having a good understanding of calculations, including the physical factors that play a
part in them, as well as the importance of wire
conductivity.
While working as an electrician, my science
background was crucial to understanding LEDs
(light-emitting diodes), including how to wire
them and deal with their limitations. I also comprehend the wavelength of light that LEDs emit
and how it differs from an incandescent bulb.
Today, I work at Cooper Construction Services in Gaithersburg, Md., as an estimator, a
person who consults with clients to determine
general construction costs.
And my physics degree keeps paying dividends through critical-thinking skills and the
comprehension of spreadsheets and budgets.
So, like many in my generation who graduated from college in 2008, I haven’t followed
a straight and predictable career path. In an
increasingly competitive economy, having a
background in science is worth every nickel.
For example, the unemployment rate of science
degree holders is just a few percent, and the
jobs we ﬁll have competitive starting salaries.
Compare that to ﬁlm study majors who have
unemployment rates near 13 percent.
The employment success in science is easily
explained, and it shatters the last myth: A science degree doesn’t close doors; it throws them
wide open. I didn’t know where I would end up,
but I knew that a science degree would take me
there. I’m a proud graduate of the University of
Maryland, and I knew that my degree in physics wasn’t going to narrow my options. Instead,
I knew that I’d learn the problem-solving skills
and practical laboratory nuts-and-bolts that
would open up a range of career paths.
I have the federal government to thank for
making a lot of this possible. The University
of Maryland provides one of the country’s best
programs in physics, in part, because it has a
research environment supported by the National
Science Foundation, the National Institute of
Standards and Technology and the Ofﬁce of Science at the Department of Energy. The federal
funding of science enables students to participate in undergraduate research opportunities
that prepare them for the diverse career opportunities ahead.
As President Donald Trump and Congress
ﬁnalize the federal budget, and as parents and
students make decisions on schools and majors,
remember that science is a sure-ﬁre way to
diverse employment paths. Career opportunities
abound. The pay is great. And the rewards are
long lasting.
Joe Iadarola is an estimator at Cooper Construction Services. He
wrote this for the Baltimore Sun.

THEIR VIEW

World needs all-out effort for flu vaccine
The following editorial
was written by the editorial board at Newsday.
This ﬂu season is
a rough one. But you
knew that.
New York’s health
department reported
2,221 new hospitalizations and 11,683 labconﬁrmed cases for the
week ending Jan. 27.
Those are the highest
weekly numbers statewide since reporting
began in 2004. Nationally, it could be the worst
season since 2014-15,
when 34 million Americans got the ﬂu and
about 56,000 died.
That’s bad, but not
apocalyptic. Apocalyptic
would be something like
the inﬂuenza pandemic
100 years ago in which
more than 50 million
people died worldwide.
While that sounds like
something that could
happen only in the bad
old days, epidemiologists warn that a lethal
virus like the one that
exploded in 1918 could

sible, and slow progress
is being made by several
academic teams.
An all-hands-on-deck
“Manhattan Project”
response with investments and organizational help from world
governments and philanthropies, and ﬁnancial
rewards for developing
the vaccine, is the best
way to reach the goal.
For now, however, there
is little alternative to
vaccination, frequent
hand-washing and discreet sneezes. Stay home
from work or school
when you’re sick, get
tested and take antiviral
medications when diagnosed with the ﬂu.
These are largely ineffective solutions to a
potentially catastrophic
problem. And if we wait
for the next pandemic,
or depend entirely on
the proﬁt motivations
of the pharmaceutical
industry for protection,
the carnage could be
unlike anything we’ve
seen for a century.

recur, with airplane travel and modern population density enabling its
spread. A century later,
a dangerous ﬂu strain
could kill 200 million
to 400 million people
worldwide.
The lack of one has
to do with two reasons
— the difﬁculty of targeting an ever-evolving
set of viruses, and the
structure of proﬁt-based
pharmacology.
Traditional vaccines
like those for measles,
mumps and rubella, or
yellow fever work very
well. They are over
97 percent effective.
The worst thing about
them for pharmaceutical manufacturers is
that they work well for
many, many years. There
isn’t much proﬁt in a
drug people take once
or twice. As a result,
there’s little commercial
incentive to invent a ﬂu
vaccine that works well
against every possible
strain of the disease.
A different way of

funding the hunt is
needed and it won’t be
easy because right now,
the drug companies are
quite happy making $3
billion a year on annual
ﬂu vaccines that usually aren’t that effective,
as anyone who had the
shot and still got ill can
attest. Twice in the past
two weeks, Gov. Andrew
M. Cuomo has urged
New Yorkers to get ﬂu
vaccinations, and while
it would tamp down the
spread if everyone did,
it’s a tough sell at an
estimated 17 percent
rate of effectiveness.
While ﬂu viruses
mutate, there are common traits all of them
share. A long-lasting
“universal ﬂu vaccine”
that provides immunity
against against the core
of all strains, including
those that humans could
catch from animals, is
what’s needed. While
the common traits are
the hardest traits to target, scientists believe a
universal vaccine is pos-

In 1943, a Los Angeles jury acquitted actor
Errol Flynn of three
counts of statutory rape.
In 1952, Britain’s King
George VI, 56, died at
Sandringham House in
Norfolk, England; he was
succeeded as monarch
by his 25-year-old elder
daughter, who became
Queen Elizabeth II.
In 1968, the Winter
Olympic Games were
opened in Grenoble,
France, by French President Charles de Gaulle.
In 1973, Dixy Lee
Ray was appointed by
President Richard Nixon
to be the ﬁrst woman to
head the Atomic Energy
Commission.
In 1987, Wall Street
Journal reporter Gerald
Seib (syb) was released
after being detained six
days by Iran, accused of
being a spy for Israel;
Iran said the detention
was a result of misunderstandings.
In 1993, tennis Hall of
Famer and human rights
advocate Arthur Ashe
died in New York at age
49.
In 1998, President
Bill Clinton signed a
bill changing the name
of Washington National
Airport to Ronald Rea-

THOUGHT FOR TODAY

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Feb.
6, the 37th day of 2018.
There are 328 days left in
the year.
Today’s Highlight in History
On Feb. 6, 1778, during the American Revolutionary War, the United
States won ofﬁcial
recognition and military
support from France with
the signing of a Treaty of
Alliance in Paris.
On this date
In 1788, Massachusetts became the sixth
state to ratify the U.S.
Constitution.
In 1899, a peace treaty
between the United
States and Spain was
ratiﬁed by the U.S. Senate.
In 1911, Ronald Wilson Reagan, the 40th
president of the United
States, was born in Tampico, Illinois.
In 1922, Cardinal
Archille Ratti was
elected pope; he took the
name Pius XI.
In 1933, the 20th
Amendment to the
U.S. Constitution, the
so-called “lame duck”
amendment, was proclaimed in effect by
Secretary of State Henry
Stimson.

“The first duty of a leader is to make himself
be loved without courting love. To be loved
without ‘playing up’ to anyone — even to
himself.”
— Andre Malraux
French author (1901-1976)

gan Washington National
Airport. Pop music star
Falco, who had a 1986
hit with “Rock Me Amadeus,” died in a trafﬁc
accident in the Dominican Republic; he was 40.
Carl Wilson, a founding
member of The Beach
Boys, died in Los Angeles at age 51.
Ten years ago: At least
57 deaths were reported
after two days of tornadoes that plowed across
Arkansas, Tennessee,
Kentucky and Alabama.
The Bush White House
defended the use of the
interrogation technique
known as waterboarding, saying it was legal
— not torture as critics
argued — and had saved
American lives. The
Phoenix Suns acquired
Shaquille O’Neal in a
stunning blockbuster
deal that sent four-time
All-Star Shawn Marion
and Marcus Banks to the

Miami Heat.
Five years ago: The
U.S. Postal Service
proposed eliminating
Saturday mail delivery, an announcement
that immediately drew
protests from some
lawmakers. At least nine
people were killed by a
tsunami that smashed
into villages in the
Solomon Islands, ﬂattening dozens of homes
in the South Paciﬁc
island chain. Toy maker
Hasbro Inc. announced
that Monopoly fans had
voted online to add a cat
token to the board game,
replacing the iron.
One year ago: President Donald Trump
accused the media of
deliberately minimizing
coverage of the threat
posed by the Islamic
State group; the president did not immediately
offer evidence to support
his claim.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

Drugs
From page 1

Task Force of GalliaMeigs served the search
warrant at the residence
and one person was
detained. Upon completing a search of the
residence, alleged pills
and drug paraphernalia
were seized. The items
seized from the search
warrant will be sent to
the BCI Crime Lab for
testing. Once the testing
is completed the case
will be presented to the
Meigs County Prosecutor’s Ofﬁce for grand jury

Shooter

considerations.
The Major Crimes Task
Force of Gallia-Meigs is
a state task force under
the jurisdiction of the
Ohio Organized Crime
Investigations Commission which is part of the
Ohio Attorney General
Ofﬁce, the task force was
formed in September
2013 and consists of the
Meigs and Gallia County
Sheriff Ofﬁces, Ohio
Bureau of Criminal Investigation, the Middleport
Police Department, the
Gallipolis City Police
Department and both the
Meigs and Gallia County
Prosecutor Ofﬁces.

Frith explained he
demonstrates scenarios

TUESDAY EVENING
3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10 (WBNS)
11 (WVAH)

13 (WOWK)

Barnhart

WEATHER

2 PM

37°

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

(in inches)

Q: What is the U.S. snowfall record for
24 hours?

Feb 7

New

First

Feb 15 Feb 23

Full

Mar 1

SOLUNAR TABLE
The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for ﬁsh and game.

Today
Wed.
Thu.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Mon.

Major
4:33a
5:20a
6:05a
6:48a
7:31a
8:13a
8:56a

Minor
10:44a
11:31a
12:16p
12:36a
1:19a
2:01a
2:44a

Major
4:56p
5:43p
6:28p
7:11p
7:54p
8:37p
9:20p

Minor
11:07p
11:54p
---1:00p
1:43p
2:25p
3:08p

WEATHER HISTORY
The “Blizzard of ‘78” was in its early
stages on this date in 1978. A proliﬁc
snow producer, it dumped 14 inches
in Baltimore, 16 inches in Philadelphia and 18 inches in New York City.

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

(A&amp;E)

52 (ANPL)
57

(OXY)

58
60
61

(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)

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

6 PM

6:30

7 PM

6:30

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Ellen's Game of Games "I
See Dizzy People" (N)
Ellen's Game of Games "I
See Dizzy People" (N)
The Middle Fresh Off the
Boat (N)
(N)
We'll Meet Again "Lost
Children of Vietnam" (N)

This Is Us "Across the
Chicago Med "On Shaky
Border" (N)
Ground" (N)
This Is Us "Across the
Chicago Med "On Shaky
Border" (N)
Ground" (N)
Black-ish (N) Modern
Kevin (Probably) Saves the
Family
World "Fishtail" (N)
American Experience "The Gilded Age" A compelling and
complex story of one of the most convulsive eras in
American history. (N)
The Middle Fresh Off the Black-ish (N) Modern
Kevin (Probably) Saves the
Boat (N)
Family
World "Fishtail" (N)
(N)
Bull "Keep Your Friends
NCIS: New Orleans "A New
NCIS "Keep Your Friends
Close" (N)
Close" (N)
Dawn" (N)
LA to Vegas The Mick (N) Eyewitness News at 10
Lethal Weapon "An
Inconvenient Ruth" (N)
p.m. (N)
(N)
We'll Meet Again "Lost
American Experience "The Gilded Age" A compelling and
Children of Vietnam" (N)
complex story of one of the most convulsive eras in
American history. (N)
NCIS "Keep Your Friends
Bull "Keep Your Friends
NCIS: New Orleans "A New
Close" (N)
Close" (N)
Dawn" (N)

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

7 PM

7:30

450 (MAX)

500 (SHOW)

40

Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.81 +0.26
Marietta
34 15.88 -0.26
Parkersburg
36 21.86 -0.63
Belleville
35 12.31 -0.26
Racine
41 12.65 -0.03
Point Pleasant
40 24.90 -0.21
Gallipolis
50 12.28 +0.24
Huntington
50 27.58 -0.47
Ashland
52 35.32 -0.27
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.77 +0.07
Portsmouth
50 22.40 none
Maysville
50 35.00 none
Meldahl Dam
51 22.60 none

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Vice News
Tonight (N)

EXTENDED FORECAST
WEDNESDAY

Cloudy, a little snow,
some ice early

THURSDAY

Logan
34/23

Lucasville
39/28
Portsmouth
40/28

51°
31°

50°
42°

41°
18°

Cloudy with rain
possible

Marietta
37/25

Murray City
35/24
Belpre
38/27

Athens
36/24

St. Marys
37/26

Parkersburg
37/25

Coolville
37/25

Elizabeth
39/27

Spencer
39/27

Buffalo
41/29

Ironton
42/31

Milton
42/30

Clendenin
41/30

St. Albans
42/30

Huntington
41/30

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
50/46
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
69/52
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
76/56
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

55°
33°

Cloudy, rain and
drizzle in the p.m.

Wilkesville
38/25
POMEROY
Jackson
39/26
38/26
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
40/28
40/27
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
33/26
GALLIPOLIS
40/27
40/28
40/28

Ashland
42/32
Grayson
42/32

SUNDAY

Mostly cloudy and
cooler

NATIONAL CITIES

McArthur
36/23

Waverly
36/25

SATURDAY

Partly sunny and cold Some brightening and
milder

Adelphi
34/25
Chillicothe
34/25

FRIDAY

36°
23°

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates

8 PM

Charlie's Angels II: Full Throttle Three
(:50) Divorce (:20) High
(:50) 2 Dope
with a severe illness runs away from home
detectives investigate the theft of a database "Breaking the Maintenance Queens
Ice"
"Namaste"
to experience what life has to offer. TVPG
from the Witness Protection Program.
(:15)
Yes Man (‘08, Com) Zooey Deschanel, Bradley
Big Business (‘88, Com) Bette
(:40)
Nine to Five Three female
Cooper, Jim Carrey. A man's life is turned upside-down
Midler. Mismatched twins are pitted against employees find a way to turn the tables on
when he is required to say yes to every opportunity. TV14 each other to save their hometown. TVPG their sexist and egotistical boss. TV14
(5:30) Sleepless (‘17, Act)
(:15)
Hell or High Water (‘16, Dra) Ben Foster,
Inside the NFL "2017 Super The Chi "Quaking Grass"
Bowl Recap"
Brandon seeks refuge after
Michelle Monaghan, Jamie Chris Pine. Two brothers rob branches of a bank that
Foxx. TV14
threatened to foreclose on their family land. TVMA
Jerrika kicks him out.

South Shore Greenup
42/31
39/27

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

9 PM

Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
WWE Super Smackdown
Chrisley
Chrisley
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Detour (N)
Anderson Cooper 360
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Tonight
NBA Basketball Washington Wizards at Philadelphia 76ers (L)
NBA Basket.
(4:00)
The Green Mile (1999, Drama) David Morse,
Enemy of the State (1998, Action) Gene Hackman, Jon Voight, Will Smith. A
Bonnie Hunt, Tom Hanks. TV14
successful lawyer is pursued by a treacherous National Security Agency official. TVMA
Moonshiners
Moonshiners
Moonshiners: Cuts (N)
Moonshiners (N)
(:05) Moonshiners (N)
The First 48 "In the Line of Intervention "The Heroin
Intervention "The Heroin
Intervention "The Heroin
Undercover High "Bullied"
Fire/ Over the Edge"
Triangle: Chapter #4"
Triangle: Chapter #5"
Triangle: Chapter #6" (N)
(N)
River Monsters
Killer Whales: The Mega Hunt
River Monsters: American Killers
Chicago P.D. "A Little Devil Chicago P.D. "Erin's Mom" Chicago P.D. "What Do You Chicago P.D. "What Puts
Chicago P.D. "Say Her Real
Complex"
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LawOrder "Attorney Client" Law &amp; Order "Oxymoron" Law &amp; Order "Patriot"
Law &amp; Order
Law &amp; Order
(5:00) Mean Girls TV14
E! News (N)
10 Things I Hate About You Heath Ledger. TV14 The Kardashians
M*A*S*H
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Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
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Mom
Mom
The Getaway "Jack
Wild Hawaii "Land of Fire" Tut's Treasures "Tales from Lost Treasures of the Maya Stonehenge Decoded
McBrayer in Hawaii"
the Tomb"
Snake King (N)
(5:)SpeedSkate All Access
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey Minnesota Wild at St. Louis Blues Site: Scottrade Center (L) (:45) Overtime
Race Hub
NCAA Basketball Xavier at Butler (L)
NCAA Basketball Georgetown at Providence (L)
Hoops Extra
The Curse of Oak Island
The Curse of Oak Island
Curse of Oak Island "A Key The Curse of Oak Island
(:05) Hunt Hitler "Lurking
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to the Mystery" (N)
Beneath the Surface" (N)
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Beverly Hills
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BethFred (N) Beth-Fredrik
(4:00) All About the Ben... (:05)
Big Momma's House 2 (2006, Comedy) Nia Long, Martin Lawrence. TVPG
The Quad (N)
Fixer Upper
Fixer Upper
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Restored (N) H.Hunt (N)
(5:00)
The Legend of
The Last Witch Hunter (2015, Action) Rose Leslie,
The Chronicles of Riddick (2004, Sci-Fi) Judi
Hercules Kellan Lutz. TV14 Elijah Wood, Vin Diesel. TV14
Dench, Colm Feore, Vin Diesel. TV14

6 PM

400 (HBO)

AIR QUALITY
300

8:30

M*A*S*H
Edge of Tomorrow (‘14, Sci-Fi) Emily Blunt, Tom Cruise. TV14
Bellevue (N)
NHL Hockey Vegas Golden Knights at Pittsburgh Penguins (L)
Post-game PengPuls
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NCAA Basketball Tennessee at Kentucky (L)
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This Time Next Year "No
to Heaven"
"Honeymoons" 1/2
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First Si. (N) "Move-Ins" (N)
Pain, No Gain" (N)
(5:30)
The Bounty Hunter (2010, Action) Gerard
The Wedding Planner (2001, Romance) Matthew
The Fosters "Scars" (N)
Butler, Joel Garland, Jennifer Aniston. TV14
McConaughey, Bridgette Wilson, Jennifer Lopez. TVPG
Friends
Friends
Friends
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Ink Master "Step It Up"
Ink Master (N)

(5:50) Everything, Everything A teenager

0-2 Low; 3-4 Moderate; 5-6 High; 7-8 Very High; 9-10 Extreme

0 50 100 150 200

8 PM

Wheel of
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Fortune (N) (N)
Wheel of
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Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight
Newshour. A summary of
the day's national and
international news. (N)
News at 6
ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm(N)
News (N)
ent Tonight
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
at 6 p.m. (N) News (N)
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Fortune (N)
Daily Mail
Eyewitness The Big Bang The Big Bang
TV
News (N)
Theory
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing inLegislature Nightly
Today
Business
depth analysis of current
events. (N)
Report (N)
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
6:00 p.m. (N) News (N)
7:00 p.m. (N) Edition

PREMIUM

A: 76 inches at Silver Lake, Colo., April
14-15, 1921

MOON PHASES
Last

39

1

SUN &amp; MOON
Wed.
7:29 a.m.
5:57 p.m.
12:47 a.m.
11:49 a.m.

NBC Nightly
News (N)
NBC Nightly
News (N)
ABC World
News (N)
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(N)

7:30

31 (NICK) Nicky
H.Danger
Hunter (N)
SpongeBob
34 (USA) NCIS "Hometown Hero"
NCIS "Switch"
35 (TBS) Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang
37 (CNN) The Situation Room
OutFront
38 (TNT) (5:30)
Need for Speed (‘14, Act) Aaron Paul. TV14

The AccuWeather.com Cold
Index combines the effects of local
weather with a number of demographic factors to provide a scale
showing the overall probability of transmission
and symptom severity of the common cold.

WEATHER TRIVIA™

Today
7:30 a.m.
5:56 p.m.
none
11:17 a.m.

WSAZ News
3 (N)
WTAP News
at Six (N)
ABC 6 News
at 6pm (N)
Arthur

0

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.2
Month to date/normal
0.2/1.5
Season to date/normal
7.4/13.0

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

30 (SPIKE)

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.04
Month to date/normal
0.72/0.54
Year to date/normal
3.63/3.51

Snowfall

29 (FREE)

32°

HEALTH TODAY

Precipitation

27 (LIFE)

Mostly cloudy and chilly today. Snow tonight.
High 40° / Low 27°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

32°/18°
44°/26°
69° in 1986
-6° in 1996

7 PM

38°
19°
30°

Erin Perkins is a staff writer for
Ohio Valley Publishing.

M*A*S*H
18 (WGN) M*A*S*H
24 (ROOT) In the Room Pre-game
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter (N)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption

8 PM

ALMANAC
High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

6:30

CABLE

and be prepared to make
very serious decisions if
those scenarios were to
come to pass.

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6

6 PM

BROADCAST

a year ago on the charges
which stemmed from a
crash that occurred on
Jan. 13, 2017 on State
From page 1
Route 143 at Horner Hill
Barnhart’s grandmother near Harrisonville.
“The vehicle Barnhart
addressed the court on
drove veered off the roadbehalf of her grandson,
stating that last week for way, struck the guardrail
two days the court heard twice, struck several mailboxes, drove through a
a lot of negatives about
yard, struck a utility pole
him, but she wanted to
and snapped it in half,
share a few of his good
and continued on further
points.
She recalled her grand- into the yard before coming to a rest. The vehicle
son being helpful, intelsuffered extensive damligent, a good worker
and funny, but having an age. The passenger of the
vehicle, Jesse Carr, died
alcohol problem.
as a result of the crash.
She said that after the
ﬁrst or second offense she Barnhart’s blood alcohol
content was 0.269, which
wished there was someis well over three times
thing that would have
been done as an interven- the 0.08 legal limit in the
tion or placement in treat- State of Ohio. At the time
of the crash, Barnhart
ment, which may have
kept everyone from being was driving under four
where they were on Mon- separate driver’s license
day. “Maybe we wouldn’t suspensions. Additionally, Barnhart had the
be here with broken
following prior OVI conhearts,” she stated.
“There are no winners victions: 2008 in Meigs
County, 2011 in Athens
here no matter how this
County, 2015 in Meigs
comes out,” said the
County, and 2015 in Wargrandmother. She asked
ren County,” read a porthat her grandson be
tion of the news release
sentenced to something
where he can get the help on Monday from the
Meigs County Prosecuhe needs for alcoholism.
tor’s Ofﬁce.
Barnhart was indicted

8 AM

training skills to youth in
fourth grade for ﬁghting
skills and kindergarten
for defense skills.
Wood stated individuals must be prepared for
the worst case scenarios

and uses a PowerPoint
presentation when
teaching active shooter
training seminars. He
said the O.U. police
department is wanting
to implement certain

From page 1

12 (WVPB)

TODAY

Tuesday, February 6, 2018 5

Charleston
41/29

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
5/-11

Billings
26/11

Minneapolis
9/5

Chicago
20/12
Denver
44/21

Montreal
25/5

Toronto
23/11

Detroit
25/16

New York
39/30
Washington
46/31

Kansas City
20/11

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
62/29/pc
30/17/sn
63/53/pc
42/30/pc
42/26/pc
26/11/pc
51/34/pc
37/24/pc
41/29/c
59/47/pc
38/21/pc
20/12/pc
36/26/c
26/16/c
33/24/c
54/38/r
44/21/c
17/8/pc
25/16/c
79/67/t
71/62/t
30/21/c
20/11/sn
74/46/s
42/33/r
76/56/pc
41/31/c
80/72/pc
9/5/pc
49/44/r
72/64/t
39/30/pc
35/19/i
79/61/pc
42/28/pc
80/52/s
31/19/c
34/18/pc
57/42/pc
53/32/pc
31/20/c
49/34/pc
69/52/s
50/46/c
46/31/pc

Hi/Lo/W
54/29/s
28/10/s
63/39/r
48/31/r
44/26/i
40/29/c
54/37/pc
36/27/sn
43/21/r
61/38/r
42/32/s
22/5/pc
35/14/sn
27/18/sn
31/18/sn
51/32/pc
51/33/s
21/14/s
26/8/sn
80/67/sh
63/41/r
31/11/pc
29/17/s
70/47/s
45/23/c
81/55/s
39/19/c
81/69/pc
17/2/pc
44/24/r
74/46/r
40/29/sn
42/22/s
80/63/pc
44/26/sn
80/51/s
34/13/sn
31/22/sn
64/36/r
58/32/r
32/18/pc
54/36/pc
69/51/s
52/46/c
46/26/r

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
63/53

High
Low

El Paso
75/46
Chihuahua
75/46

City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

84° in Tamiami, FL
-23° in Black River Falls, WI

Global
High 109° in Twee Rivieren, South Africa
Low -60° in Summit Station, Greenland

Houston
71/62
Monterrey
81/61

Miami
80/72

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

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�Sports
6 s Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Daily Sentinel

Lady Eagles sweep SG, 68-16
By Scott Jones
sjones@aimmediamidwest.com

Scott Jones | OVP Sports

Eastern freshman Olivia Barber (20) drives for a layup against Lady Rebels
freshman Makayla Waugh (22), during the second half of the Lady Eagles 68-16
victory on Saturday in Mercerville, Ohio.

MERCERVILLE, Ohio —
Early momentum can often
make all the difference.
The Eastern girls basketball
team returned to the winning
column on Saturday afternoon
after defeating Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division host
South Gallia by a ﬁnal of 68-16
in Gallia County.
Eastern (13-6, 11-3 TVC
Hocking) made 9-of-17 ﬁeld
goals in the ﬁrst period, as
South Gallia (6-13, 3-12) converted on just 2-of-11 from the
ﬁeld. The Lady Eagles scored
eight consecutive points to
start a 20-5 run, beginning
their charge to a 52-point vic-

tory.
The win for the EHS provided a season sweep, having
defeated SGHS by 60-24 count
on Dec. 4, 2017 in Tuppers
Plains.
The visitors’ lead extended
to 28-5 by the 4:19 mark of the
second quarter, but a threepointer by Alyssa Cremeans
ended the South Gallia scoring
drought with 4:04 remaining in
the half.
That trifecta proved to be the
Lady Rebels’ only points of the
second period, as the Green
and White entered the locker
room with a 30-8 advantage.
Eastern made 14-of-33 shots
from the ﬁeld for 42 percent,
including 1-of-7 from beyond
the arc for 14 percent. The

Lady Eagles gathered 17
rebounds and committed nine
turnovers.
The Lady Rebels connected
on just 3-of-20 ﬁeld goals for
15 percent, including a 1-of-8
performance from three-point
range. SGHS has 13 rebounds
and turned the ball over 16
times.
The hosts were held scoreless through the ﬁrst 3:14 of
the second half, as EHS extended the lead to 30 points with an
8-0 run.
South Gallia ended its scoreless drought with a three-pointer at the 4:46 mark of the third,
but the guests made a 12-1
run to end the period holding
See SWEEP | 7

Lady Marauders
sweep Wellston
on road, 53-32
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

WELLSTON, Ohio — By halftime, the Lady
Marauders had all but sealed the win.
The Meigs girls basketball team outscored TriValley Conference Ohio Division host Wellston by
a 29-to-9 count in the ﬁrst half on Friday evening,
and the Maroon and Gold cruised to a 53-32 victory.
The Lady Marauders (10-10, 6-5 TVC Ohio)
outscored the Lady Rockets (8-10, 2-8) by a 13-to5 count in the opening quarter and bettered their
performance in the second, going on a 16-to-4
run.
Wellston outscored the guests by a 13-12 clip in
the third quarter, making Meigs’ lead 41-22 with
eight minutes to play. The Lady Marauders closed
the game with a 12-to-10 spurt, capping off the
53-32 victory and ending their two-game skid.
Nine Lady Marauders marked in the scoring
column, led by junior Kassidy Betzing with 17
points on seven ﬁeld goals and a pair of free
throws. Madison Fields was next with 11 points,
followed by Madison Hendricks with six.
Jacynda Glover and Marissa Noble both scored
ﬁve points for the guests, Kylee Robinson came
up with three points, while Kylee Blanks, Jerrica
Smith and Taylor Swartz each had two points.
Betzing, Hendricks, Noble and Swartz each
made a three-pointer in the win.
WHS sophomore Sydney Spencer led the Lady
Rockets with nine points, followed by Tory Doles
and Ashley Compston with ﬁve apiece. Daycee
Clemons scored three points in the setback, while
Kaylee Taynor, Mya Bouska, Emily Kisor, Sydney
Mullins and Alexis Bouska had two points each.
The Maroon and Gold were 5-of-10 (50 percent) from the free throw line, while the hosts
were 8-of-17 (47.1 percent).
Meigs also defeated Wellston in the ﬁrst clash
this season, winning 62-37 on Dec. 11 in Rocksprings.
After wrapping up TVC Ohio play on Monday
against Nelsonville-York, the Lady Marauders will
welcome Warren for their regular season ﬁnale on
Thursday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, Feb. 6
Boys Basketball
Wahama at Eastern, 7:30
Alexander at Meigs, 7:30
Fairland at Gallia
Academy, 7:30
Nelsonville-York at River
Valley, 7:30
South Gallia at Waterford,
7:30
Hannan at Teays Valley
Christian, 7 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Rose Hill Christian at Ohio
Valley Christian, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Scott, 6 p.m.
Wayne at Point Pleasant,
7 p.m.
Rio Grande Athletics
Women’s Basketball at
IU-East, 5:30
Men’s Basketball at IUEast, 7:30
Wednesday, Feb. 7
Girls Basketball
Ironton St. Joseph at
Hannan, 6 p.m.

Wrestling
Gallia Academy at Meigs,
6 p.m.
South Gallia, Waterford,
Huntington at Eastern, 6
p.m.

Thursday, Feb. 8
Girls Basketball
Wahama at South Gallia,
7:30
Chesapeake at Gallia
Academy, 7:30
Vinton County at River
Valley, 7:30
Waterford at Eastern, 7:30
Ripley at Point Pleasant,
7 p.m.
Warren at Meigs, 7:30
Southern at Belpre, 7:30
Boys Basketball
Jamie Darren at Hannan,
6 p.m.
Wahama at Waterford,
7:30
Wrestling
River Valley at Alexander,
5 p.m.

Eric Gay | AP

Philadelphia Eagles defensive end Derek Barnett runs past New England Patriots center David Andrews after recovering a fumble during
the second half of Super Bowl 52 on Sunday in Minneapolis.

Eagles soar past Pats for 1st Super Bowl
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
— As their delirious fans
sang their theme song
and their owner lifted the
Lombardi Trophy, the
Philadelphia Eagles’ ﬁnally could breathe freely.
Yo, Philly, you really
did beat Tom Brady and
the New England Patriots
in a thrilling Super Bowl
that rewrote the offensive
record book.
Nick Foles guided the
drive of a lifetime, Zach
Ertz made a bobbling
touchdown catch that had
to survive replay review,
and an exhausted defense
came up with not one but
two stands in the ﬁnal
moments Sunday for a
41-33 victory. For the
ﬁrst time since 1960, the
Eagles are NFL champions.
“Fly Eagles Fly,”
indeed.
“We’ve played this
game since we were little
kids, we dreamed about
this moment,” game MVP
Foles said. “There’s plenty of kids watching this
game right now dreaming
about this moment and
someday will be here.”
In a record-setting
shootout between backup
QB Foles and ﬁve-time
champ Brady of the
favored Patriots, Foles led
a pressure-packed 75-yard
drive to the winning
touchdown, 11 yards to
Ertz with 2:21 to go .
Then Brandon Graham
strip-sacked Brady and
Derek Barnett recovered,
setting up rookie Jake
Elliot’s 46-yard ﬁeld goal
for an 8-point lead.
Brady got his team
to midﬁeld, but his desperation pass fell to the
ground in the end zone.
“For us, it was all about

one stop we had to make.
We went out here and
made that one stop,” Graham said.
The underdog Eagles
(16-3), even injured starting quarterback Carson
Wentz, came bolting off
the sideline in ecstasy
while Brady sat on the
ground, disconsolate.
It was the ﬁrst Super
Bowl title for Philadelphia (16-3), which went
from 7-9 last season.
“If there’s a word (it’s)
called everything,” Eagles
owner Jeffrey Lurie said.
“That’s what it means to
Eagles fans everywhere.
And for Eagles fans
everywhere, this is for
them.”
Super Bowl MVP Foles
orchestrated the victory
with the kind of drive
NFL MVP Brady, a ﬁvetime champion, is known
for. The drive covered 14
plays, including a fourthdown conversion.
“I felt calm. I mean, we
have such a great group
of guys, such a great
coaching staff,” Foles
said. “We felt conﬁdent
coming in, and we just
went out there and played
football.”
The Eagles had to
survive a video replay
because ball pop into the
air as Ertz crossed the
goal line.
“If they would have
overturned that, I don’t
know what would have
happened to the city of
Philadelphia,” Ertz said.
“But I’m so glad they
didn’t overturn it.”
The touchdown stood
— and so did thousands
of green-clad Eagles fans
who weren’t going to
mind the frigid conditions outside US Bank

Stadium once they
headed out to celebrate.
But not before a rousing rendition of “Fly
Eagles Fly” reverberated
throughout the stands
once the trophy was presented to Lurie. Later,
fans danced along with
the “Gonna Fly Now,” the
theme from “Rocky,” the
city’s best-known ﬁctional
underdog.
The Patriots (15-4)
seemed ready to take
their sixth championship
with Brady and coach Bill
Belichick in eight Super
Bowls. Brady threw for
a game-record 505 yards
and three TDs, hitting
Rob Gronkowski for 4
yards before Stephen
Gostkowski’s extra point
gave New England its
ﬁrst lead, 33-32.
Then Foles made them
forget Wentz — and least
for now — with the gutsiest drive of his life.
“We couldn’t make a
play to give the ball back
to the offense,” Patriots
cornerback Stephon
Gilmore said.
Foles has been something of a journeyman in
his six pro seasons, but
he has been spectacular
in four career playoff
games. He ﬁnished 28
of 43 for 373 yards and
three TDs.
The combined 1,151
yards were the most in
any modern NFL game,
and Brady’s 505 were the
most in any playoff contest. The 40-year-old master ﬁnished 28 of 48 and
picked apart the Eagles
until the ﬁnal two series.
Brady indicated he will
return for a 19th season
even as Gronkowski was
hedging on his future.
“I mean it’s 15 minutes

after the game ended,
so I’d like to process this
a little bit,” Brady said.
“I wouldn’t see why I
wouldn’t be back.”
Gronkowski, who has
played eight superb but
injury-riddled years, said
“I am deﬁnitely going to
look at my future.”
It was such a wild game
that Foles caught a touchdown pass , and Brady
was on the opposite end
of a Danny Amendola
throw that went off his
ﬁngertips.
Eagles coach Doug
Pederson brought home
the championship in his
second year in charge.
Belichick is 5-3 in Super
Bowls and his teams have
only a plus-4 overall margin in those games.
So this one was in
keeping with that trend:
breathtaking and even a
bit bizarre.
Brady and the Patriots
looked ready for another
comeback by opening
the second half with a
75-yard touchdown drive.
Gronkowski was unstoppable, grabbing four passes for 69 yards, including
the 5-yard score.
Philly didn’t ﬂinch,
answering with a precise
75-yard march and three
more third-down conversions; the Eagles were
10 for 16. The last was
on Foles’ perfect pass
to Clement over double
coverage. The rookie’s
reception was upheld by
review, and the Eagles
were back on top by 10.
Brady shrugged and,
getting steadfast protection, connected with
Chris Hogan from the 26
for another touchdown.
See EAGLES | 7

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

NBA

Boston
Toronto
Cleveland
Washington
Milwaukee
Indiana
Miami
Philadelphia
Detroit
Charlotte
New York
Brooklyn
Chicago
Atlanta
Orlando

W
39
36
30
30
29
30
29
25
25
23
23
19
18
16
15

L
15
16
21
22
23
24
24
25
26
29
31
35
34
37
36

Golden State
Houston
San Antonio
Minnesota
Oklahoma City
Portland
New Orleans
Denver
L.A. Clippers
Utah
L.A. Lakers
Memphis
Phoenix
Dallas
Sacramento

W
41
38
34
34
30
29
28
28
26
24
21
18
18
17
16

L
12
13
21
22
24
24
24
25
25
28
31
34
36
36
36

All Times EST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Pct
GB
L10
Str
.722
—
5-5
W-4
.692
2
7-3
W-2
.588
7½
4-6
L-1
.577
8
6-4
W-4
.558
9
7-3
W-2
.556
9
6-4
W-1
.547
9½
4-6
L-3
.500
12
5-5
L-1
.490 12½
3-7
W-3
.442
15
6-4
W-3
.426
16
3-7
L-3
.352
20
3-7
L-2
.346
20
3-7
L-6
.302 22½ 4-6
W-1
.294 22½
3-7
L-1
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Pct
GB
L10
Str
.774
—
7-3
L-1
.745
2
8-2
W-4
.618
8
5-5
L-2
.607
8½
5-5
W-2
.556 11½
6-4
L-4
.547
12
7-3
L-2
.538 12½
6-4
L-1
.528
13
6-4
W-2
.510
14
6-4
W-1
.462 16½
7-3
W-5
.404 19½
6-4
W-2
.346 22½ 4-6
L-3
.333 23½
2-8
L-2
.321
24
2-8
W-1
.308 24½
3-7
L-2

Home
21-8
21-4
19-7
17-9
18-9
19-10
13-10
13-10
16-10
15-14
16-10
11-17
11-14
11-16
9-14

Away
18-7
15-12
11-14
13-13
11-14
11-14
16-14
12-15
9-16
8-15
7-21
8-18
7-20
5-21
6-22

Conf
24-10
20-7
23-11
17-12
16-16
20-14
20-14
13-13
15-18
12-17
11-19
12-20
16-15
7-26
8-22

Home
19-6
20-6
22-6
22-6
19-9
15-10
14-11
21-7
15-12
15-9
12-14
13-15
9-19
10-18
7-16

Away
22-6
18-7
12-15
12-16
11-15
14-14
14-13
7-18
11-13
9-19
9-17
5-19
9-17
7-18
9-20

Conf
22-9
22-8
19-11
25-9
15-16
16-14
14-18
18-17
19-16
14-14
9-21
15-19
12-20
9-24
9-22

NHL
All Times EST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Home
Away
Div
Tampa Bay
52 36 13 3 75 187 134
17-5-1
19-8-2
9-3-1
Boston
50 31 11 8 70 164 121 18-6-4
13-5-4
11-1-2
Toronto
54 30 19 5 65 172 150 14-8-2
16-11-3
6-5-1
Florida
50 22 22 6 50 143 163 12-8-3
10-14-3
8-4-1
Detroit
51 21 22 8 50 134 151 11-10-7
10-12-1
6-10-2
Montreal
53 22 25 6 50 139 164 14-10-5
8-15-1
10-6-2
Ottawa
51 17 25 9 43 132 176 10-11-5
7-14-4
5-9-3
Buffalo
52 14 29 9 37 117 171 6-15-3
8-14-6
3-6-2
Metropolitan Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Home
Away
Div
Washington
52 30 17 5 65 162 152 19-8-1
11-9-4
9-5-3
New Jersey
51 27 16 8 62 154 151 15-8-3
12-8-5
7-6-1
Pittsburgh
54 29 22 3 61 164 162
19-7-1
10-15-2
11-5-0
Columbus
52 27 21 4 58 137 147 16-9-1
11-12-3
8-6-2
Philadelphia 52 24 19 9 57 150 154 13-9-5
11-10-4
5-4-4
N.Y. Islanders 53 26 22 5 57 177 192 14-8-3
12-14-2
8-7-1
Carolina
53 24 21 8 56 143 162 12-9-4
12-12-4
6-5-3
N.Y. Rangers 52 25 22 5 55 155 160 17-9-3
8-13-2
7-6-3
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Home
Away
Div
Winnipeg
53 31 13 9 71 172 140 19-3-2
12-10-7
8-5-2
Nashville
50 31 12 7 69 156 127 18-5-3
13-7-4
10-4-2
St. Louis
54 32 19 3 67 153 134 18-10-0
14-9-3
7-4-1
Dallas
53 30 19 4 64 165 139 18-8-1
12-11-3
8-10-0
Minnesota
52 28 19 5 61 153 150 18-4-4
10-15-1
8-9-0
Colorado
51 28 19 4 60 164 149
18-7-1
10-12-3
7-7-1
Chicago
52 24 20 8 56 153 145 12-10-3 12-10-5
6-7-2
Pacific Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Home
Away
Div
Vegas
52 35 13 4 74 177 140 19-3-2
16-10-2
12-1-1
San Jose
52 28 16 8 64 152 142 14-7-3
14-9-5
12-2-3
Los Angeles
52 28 19 5 61 148 126 13-9-3
15-10-2
7-9-3
Calgary
52 26 18 8 60 147 149 13-13-3
13-5-5
8-6-3
Anaheim
53 25 18 10 60 147 149 14-9-3
11-9-7
8-5-5
Edmonton
50 22 24 4 48 138 161 11-13-2
11-11-2
10-2-0
Vancouver
52 21 25 6 48 137 168 10-14-3
11-11-3
5-9-1
Arizona
52 12 31 9 33 119 182 6-16-3
6-15-6
1-8-5
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Top three teams in each division
and two wild cards per conference advance to playoffs.

Lewis, Moss, Owens,
Urlacher highlight
8-person Hall class
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Ray Lewis and Brian
Urlacher terrorized opposing offenses from the middle of the ﬁeld. Randy Moss and Terrell Owens did
the same to defenses on the outside.
The two hard-hitting linebackers and two big-play
receivers highlighted an eight-person class voted into
the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday. Safety
Brian Dawkins also received at least 80 percent support from the 47 Hall of Fame voters, along with contributor Bobby Beathard and senior nominees Jerry
Kramer and Robert Brazile.
But the biggest stars of the class are the two linebackers that made it on their ﬁrst tries, and the pair
of lightning-rod receiver who sometimes caused as
many problems for their own teams as for the opposition. Moss also made it on his ﬁrst try, while Owens
needed to wait for his third year on the ballot to get
enough support.
“I’ve been going a long time. And now I can ﬁnally
rest,” Lewis said. “I want to go ﬁshing with a cigar
now and just sit back. I don’t want to work out every
day now.”

Sweep

At the free throw line,
EHS was 5-of-13 for 38
percent, while SGHS shot
From page 6
4-of-8 for 50 percent.
The Lady Eagles
outrebounded the Lady
a 50-12 lead. The Lady
Rebels 38-19. The Red
Eagles closed the ﬁnale
on an 18-4 run to wrap up and Gold committed 30
turnovers, compared to
the season sweep.
19 by the visitors.
“I’m very proud of
Eastern senior Elizathe girls,” Eastern head
beth Collins led the way
coach Jacob Parker said
in victory with 14 points.
following the game. “We
Alyson Bailey provided
are coming off of a very
12 markers and Kelsey
tough loss where some
things didn’t go our way. Casto chipped in 10
points.
I really looked forward
Kaitlyn Hawk was next
to seeing how we would
with eight markers, while
respond.
Cass Casto dropped in six
“The one thing we
points. Jess Parker, Madihoped for was for them
son Williams, Ashton
to come out today with
Guthrie and Olivia each
intensity. We came out
ﬁnished with four points
and executed plays and
our transition game. The apiece, respectively.
Sydney Sanders rounddefense really stepped
up. The way our defense ed out the scoring for
EHS with two markers.
played allowed us to get
For SGHS, Erin Evans
easy buckets.”
ﬁnished the night with
Eastern shot 30-of-60
six markers. Alyssa
for 50 percent from the
ﬁeld, including 3-of-14 for Cremeans was next
with three points, while
21 percent from beyond
Makayla Waugh, Aaliyah
the arc. Meanwhile,
Howell and Kiley StapleSouth Gallia was 5-of-45
ton chipped in two points
for 11 percent from the
apiece. Faith Poling
ﬁeld, including 2-of-20
rounded out the scoring
for 10 percent from long
with one marker.
distance.

Tuesday, February 6, 2018 7

Tornadoes turn back Point Pleasant
By Alex Hawley

and taking a 39-33 lead into the
ﬁnale. Southern closed out the
52-43 win with a 13-to-10 run in
the fourth.
RACINE, Ohio — Momentum
SHS junior Weston Thorla
matters.
was responsible for all-3 of the
The Southern boys basketball
Tornadoes’ triples and ﬁnished
team picked up its sixth straight
with a team-high 19 points, 10 of
victory on Saturday night in
Meigs County, defeating non-con- which came in the third quarter.
Brayden Cunningham contributed
ference guest Point Pleasant by
13 points to the winning cause,
a 52-43 count and giving the Big
Blacks their 11th straight setback. Trey McNickle chipped in with
10, while Dylan Smith and Austin
Point Pleasant (1-13) led by
Baker added ﬁve points apiece.
a 15-12 count after hitting six
PPHS sophomore Kade Oliver
ﬁeld goals in the opening eight
led the guests with 11 points,
minutes. Southern (12-5) cut its
deﬁcit to two points, at 24-22, by six of which came in the ﬁnal
eight minutes. Trace Derenberger
halftime, outscoring PPHS by a
10-to-9 clip in the second quarter. poured in nine points for the Big
The Tornadoes made their run Blacks, Camron Long recorded
six, while Malik Butler and Huntin the third period, outscoring
the Big Blacks by a 17-to-9 count er Bush had ﬁve points apiece.

ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

Point Pleasant’s scoring column was rounded out by Kyle
Martin and Evan Cobb with four
and three points respectively.
Derenberger, Long, Butler, Bush
and Cobb each made one threepointer in the game.
At the free throw line, Southern
was 13-of-23 (56.5 percent) and
PPHS was 6-of-11 (54.5 percent).
After hosting Ripley on Monday, the Big Blacks will travel to
West Virginia State University to
meet with George Washington on
Tuesday at 8:45.
Southern resumes Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division play
on Friday when they host rival
Eastern.

Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.

OVCS outlasts Lady Tartans, 32-28
By Scott Jones

beyond the arc.
Free throws proved
the difference-maker
SCIOTOVILLE, Ohio as OVCS combined to
shoot 6-of-10 for 60
— It is often said that
percent. East made
patience is a virtue.
the only charity toss it
The Ohio Valley
attempted.
Christian girls basketThe Blue and Gold led
ball team earned a long
the contest after 5-2 run
overdue 32-28 victory
in the ﬁrst period, but
over host Sciotoville
the Lady Tartans went
East on Saturday in
on 10-8 second quarter
Scioto County.
run to cut the deﬁcit
The Lady Defenders
down to one point at
(3-11) made 11 ﬁeld
intermission.
goals in the contest
The Defenders car— including three triried their 13-12 edge
fectas — to edge past
into the third frame,
the Lady Tartans, who
sank 12 total ﬁeld goals and both teams scored
and a trio of makes from eight points apiece to

sjones@aimmediamidwest.com

push the score to 21-20.
OVCS closed out the
last eight minutes on an
11-8 run to secure the
four-point win.
Emily Childers led
the way for the Lady
Defenders with 15
points, including a 6-of8 performance at the
charity stripe.
Kristen Durst was
next with eight markers and Cori Hutchison
chipped in ﬁve points.
Lauren Ragan followed with three points
and Acacia Peck scored
one point to conclude
the OVCS scoring.
The Lady Defenders

made 11-of-45 from the
ﬁeld for 24 percent,
including 3-of-21 from
three-point range for 14
percent.
Lexi Stone led the
Lady Tartans with 11
points, followed by V.
Escamilla with eight
points and Ali Escamilla
with seven markers.
Kelsey Settey completed
the East tally with two
markers.
OVCS returns to
action on Monday when
it travels to Covenant
Christian.
Scott Jones can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2106

Hannan splits with Calvary, Covenant
By Bryan Walters

shot attempts overall, including
a 14-of-36 effort from behind the
arc for 39 percent. The hosts were
also 5-of-12 at the free throw line
ASHTON, W.Va. — Given the
for 42 percent.
two options, the Wildcats were
Cade — who ﬁnished the night
deﬁnitely living by the three.
8-of-14 from behind the arc —
The Hannan boys basketball
team nailed 14 three-pointers and led HHS and all scorers with
shot 45 percent from the ﬁeld on 34 points, followed by Coleman
Saturday night en route to a 77-34 with a double-double effort of 21
points and 10 assists. Qualls also
victory over Covenant Christian
Academy in a non-conference con- had 18 points — including four
triples — and nine rebounds.
test in Mason County.
Logan Nibert and Andrew
The Wildcats (4-7) picked up
Gillispie completed the winning
their second straight home win
tally with two points apiece.
and third overall victory in four
Nibert hauled in a team-high 11
outings, as the hosts led by double digits after eight minutes and rebounds and Gillispie led the
way with two blocks. Cade also
ultimately never looked back.
came away with six steals.
HHS had a monster evening
The Eagles made 15 total ﬁeld
from three-headed monster of
goals — including two trifectas
Malachi Cade, Dalton Coleman
— and also went 2-of-4 at the
and Matthew Qualls, each of
whom poured in at least 18 points charity stripe for 50 percent.
Braden Roten paced Calvary
and two three-pointers during the
with 12 points, followed by Stetriumph.
Hannan stormed out to an early ven Lucas and Jon Turley with
six markers apiece. Ryan Davis
16-5 ﬁrst quarter lead, but the
and Nate Beilstein were next
Eagles kept things a little closer
with three points each, with Josh
in the second frame as the hosts
Roten and Justin Hartley completonly made an 11-8 run to enter
ing things with two points apiece.
halftime with a 27-13 cushion.
The Wildcats had a two-game
Cade hit four trifectas and
winning streak snapped on Friday
scored 14 points during a 19-13
third quarter surge that extended night as host Calvary Baptist
the lead out to 46-26 entering the Academy claimed a season sweep
with its 18-point victory.
ﬁnale. Qualls tallied 11 points
HHS trailed only 14-12 after
down the stretch as part of a 31-8
eight minutes of play, but the
charge to end regulation and the
Patriots answered with a 21-8
43-point outcome.
second quarter surge that gave
The Wildcats made 29-of-65

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Eagles

required an over-theshoulder grab and the
ball fell off Brady’s outstretched hands.
From page 6
Brady got back to
passing after a wild
When all the Eagles
interception. Alshon
could manage was
Jeffery nearly made a
Elliott’s 42-yarder for a
spectacular catch near
32-26 lead, it seemed
the Patriots’ goal line,
inevitable the Patriots
only to juggle the ball
would go in front, then
into the air. Duron
become the ﬁrst repeat
Super Bowl winner since Harmon picked it off at
the 10. Moments later,
they did it in the 2004
Brady was connecting
and ‘05 games.
with Chris Hogan for 42
Foles, Ertz, and — at
yards.
last — a revitalized
James White broke
defense said otherwise.
several tackles with a
The weird image of
Brady ambling downﬁeld brilliant 26-yard run and
it was 15-12. That gave
on a pass pattern came
White seven touchdowns
three plays after New
in his past three postseaEngland lost receiver
son games, including the
Brandin Cooks to a
overtime winner in last
concussion on a vicious
but clean hit by Malcolm year’s Super Bowl.
But the Eagles still
Jenkins in the second
quarter. Amendola’s pass had 2:04 left in the half

the Red and Blue a sizable 35-20
intermission advantage.
Hannan made a 13-12 third
period run to close to within
47-33, but ultimately never came
closer than four possessions the
rest of the way as CBA ended
regulation with a 17-13 run.
The Blue and White made 15
total ﬁeld goals — including
seven three-pointers — and also
went 9-of-15 at the free throw line
for 60 percent.
Cade led the guests with 20
points, followed by Coleman
with 15 points to go along with
team-bests of ﬁve assists and four
steals. Coleman also grabbed six
boards in the setback.
Nibert and Gillispie were next
with four points apiece, with
Nibert also hauling in a teamhigh 11 rebounds. Devrick Burris
completed the scoring with three
markers.
Issac Massey paced Calvary
with 20 points and Cole Kirkpatrick added 11 to the winning
cause.
The Patriots defeated Hannan
in the season opener in Ashton
by a 81-59 count back on Dec. 5,
2017.
Hannan traveled to Elk Valley
Christian on Monday and heads
to Teays Valley Christian on Tuesday before welcoming Jamie Darren on Thursday at 6 p.m..
Bryan Walters can be reached at 740-4462342, ext. 2101.

— and some more magic
in their bag.
A short third-down
throw to rookie Corey
Clement on a circle route
turned into a 55-yard
explosion down to the
Patriots 8. Philly got
to the 1 and on fourth
down, it was Foles’ turn
to morph into a receiver.
He did better than
Brady. On fourth down,
Clement took a direct
snap, pitched to tight
end Trey Burton, and the
former Florida QB hit
an uncovered Foles. The
Eagles were up 22-12
at halftime, the most
points New England has
allowed in the opening
half of a Super Bowl
under Belichick.
Each team started
with 67-yard drives to
ﬁeld goals — New England had never scored a

ﬁrst-quarter point with
Brady in a Super Bowl.
Each kicker later
faltered, with Elliott
missing the extra point,
his ﬁfth failed PAT this
season, after Jeffery’s
34-yard touchdown.
Then Gostkowski hit
the left upright with a
26-yard ﬁeld goal after
holder Ryan Allen mishandled the snap. Gostkowski also missed an
extra point.
When LeGarrette
Blount, who won the
title last season with
the Patriots, scored on a
21-yard burst, Pederson
went for 2, but the pass
failed, making it 15-3.
The Eagles and Pederson brushed it off and
stayed with their usual
aggressive approach.
Breathtakingly, it eventually paid off.

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Daily Sentinel

No. 17 Ohio State holds off pesky Illinois to win 75-67
There were other outstanding moments in the game for
Bates-Diop , who ﬁnished
with a career-high 35 points.
His 13 rebounds gave him
his 10th double-double of the
season.
He drained a 3-pointer with
5:04 left in the game to tie
the score at 63 . He made 13
of 15 free throws, including
three in a row in the ﬁnal 37
seconds to seal the game for
the Buckeyes.
“I think Keita showed why

he’s MVP of the league,” Illinois coach Brad Underwood
said. “We knew that coming
in. He’s a very, very difﬁcult
matchup for us.”
Jae’Sean Tate scored 11
points, and Kaleb Wesson had
10 points and 10 rebounds
for the Buckeyes (20-5, 11-1),
who have won three straight
and 10 of their last 11. They
move on to a showdown with
No. 3 Purdue on Wednesday
to determine ﬁrst place in the
Big Ten.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
— With Illinois leading by 11
points with 8:45 left in the
ﬁrst half, Ohio’s State’s Keita
Bates-Diop went to work.
Playing in his 100th game
for the Buckeyes, Bates-Diop
reeled off 11 unanswered
points including a pair of
dunks , a 3-pointer and a tipin off an offensive rebound.
No. 17 Ohio State ended the
half up by four and outlasted
the pesky Illini in the second
half to win 75-67 on Sunday.

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Chris Holtmann said.
The loss snapped a twogame winning streak for the
Illini (12-12, 2-9), who have
yet to come away with a road
victory this season. Mark
Alstork paced Illinois with
19 points, and Trent Frazier
chipped in 12.
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at Ohio State after a successful run at Butler, now has won
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It was anything but easy
for the Buckeyes, who were
playing without suspended
guard Kam Williams. They
committed 15 turnovers that
would lead to 16 Illinois
points and were just 3 for 16
from beyond the 3-point line.
They wouldn’t get the game
in hand until Wesson grabbed
an offensive rebound and put
it back up to open the lead to
72-67 with 48 seconds left.
“That one was as tough as
it comes,” Ohio State coach

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LEGAL NOTICE
REQUEST FOR BOND RELEASE
PERMIT NUMBER D-0355
MINING YEARS 1, 3, 14, 19, and 20
Date Issued November 28, 1984
CONSOL Mining Company LLC is requesting the following reclamation Phase Bond releases for acreage affected by the
aforementioned coal mining and reclamation permit:
A Phase 2 and Phase 3 Bond Release for 2.2 acres located in
Section 36 of Salem Township, Meigs County, Ohio. Reclamation was completed on September 1, 2006 in accordance
with the approved reclamation plan. $2,750 bond is on deposit,
of which $2,750 is sought to be released. (Mining Year 1).
A Phase 2 and Phase 3 Bond Release for 1.0 acres located in
Section 29 of Salem Township, Meigs County, Ohio. Reclamation was completed on September 1, 2006 in accordance
with the approved reclamation plan. $1,250 bond is on deposit,
of which $1,250 is sought to be released. (Mining Year 3).
A Phase 2 and Phase 3 Bond Release for 3.0 acres located in
Section 35 of Salem Township, Meigs County, Ohio. Reclamation was completed on September 1, 2006 in accordance
with the approved reclamation plan. $3,750 bond is on deposit,
of which $3,750 is sought to be released. (Mining Year 14).
A Phase 2 and Phase 3 Bond Release for 0.80 acres located in
Section 4E of Wilkesville Township, Vinton County, Ohio. Reclamation was completed on September 1, 2006 in accordance
with the approved reclamation plan. $1,000 bond is on deposit,
of which $1,000 is sought to be released. (Mining Year 19).
A Phase 2 and Phase 3 Bond Release for 2.3 acres located in
Fraction 33 of Columbia Township, Meigs County, Ohio. Reclamation was completed on September 1, 2006 in accordance
with the approved reclamation plan. $2,875 bond is on deposit,
of which $2,875 is sought to be released. (Mining Year 20).
Written objections, comments or requests for a bond release
conference may be submitted to the Chief of the Ohio Division
of Mineral Resources Management, 2045 Morse Road, Building
H-2 &amp; H-3, Columbus, Ohio 43229-6693, Attn: CHIEF, in accordance with paragraph (F) (6) of Revised Code Section
1513.16. Written objections or requests for bond release conferences must be filed with the Chief within 30 days after the
last date of this publication.
1/30/18,2/6/18,2/13/18,2/20/18

LEGAL NOTICE
REQUEST FOR BOND RELEASE
PERMIT NUMBER D-0463
MINING YEARS 6, 11, 14, and 18
Date Issued April 9, 1985
CONSOL Mining Company LLC is requesting the following reclamation Phase Bond releases for acreage affected by the
aforementioned coal mining and reclamation permit:
A Phase 2 and Phase 3 Bond Release for 0.20 acres located in
Fraction 36 of Wilkesville Township, Vinton County, Ohio. Reclamation was completed on September 1, 2006 in accordance
with the approved reclamation plan. $250 bond is on deposit,
of which $250 is sought to be released. (Mining Year 6)
A Phase 2 and Phase 3 Bond Release for 33.5 acres located in
Section 15 and Fraction(s) 30, 36 of Wilkesville Township, Vinton County, Ohio. Reclamation was completed on September
1, 2006 in accordance with the approved reclamation plan.
$41,875 bond is on deposit, of which $41,875 is sought to be
released. (Mining Year 11)
A Phase 2 and Phase 3 Bond Release for 10.7 acres located in
Fraction(s) 24, 36 of Wilkesville Township, Vinton County,
Ohio. Reclamation was completed on September 1, 2006 in
accordance with the approved reclamation plan. $13,375 bond
is on deposit, of which $13,375 is sought to be released.
(Mining Year 14)
A Phase 1, 2 and 3 Bond Release for 15.2 acres located in
Section 3 and Fraction(s) 30, 36 of Wilkesville Township, Vinton County, and Section(s) 25, 30 and 32 of Salem Township,
Meigs County, Ohio. Reclamation was completed on September 1, 2006 in accordance with the approved reclamation plan.
$38,000 bond is on deposit of which $38,000 is sought to be released. (Mining Year 18)
Written objections, comments or requests for a bond release
conference may be submitted to the Chief of the Ohio Division
of Mineral Resources Management, 2045 Morse Road, Building
H-2 &amp; H-3, Columbus, Ohio 43229-6693, Attn: CHIEF, in accordance with paragraph (F) (6) of Revised Code Section
1513.16. Written objections or requests for bond release conferences must be filed with the Chief within 30 days after the
last date of this publication.
1/30/18,2/6/18,2/13/18,2/20/18

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, February 6, 2018 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker

Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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
By Vic Lee

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
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jobmatchohio.com

�SPORTS

10 Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Lady Vikings top GA
By Bryan Walters

Barnes led the Blue and White with
20 points, followed by Cremeans with
15 points and Ryelee Sipple with six
markers.
WILLOW WOOD, Ohio — Just a
Maddy Petro was next with three
little too tough in the middle.
points, while Macey Siders and Koren
The Gallia Academy girls basketball
team won the ﬁrst and fourth quarters, Truance completed the scoring with
two points apiece.
but host Symmes Valley made a 33-19
Sipple hauled in a team-best 12
surge in the middle periods Saturday
rebounds and Petro grabbed 10 boards.
and ultimately held on for a 53-48 nonconference victory in Lawrence County. Cremeans led GAHS with ﬁve steals,
while Ashton Webb added team-highs
The Blue Angels (9-11) started off
well as the guests received eight points of ﬁve assists and two blocks to go
along with seven rebounds.
from Abby Cremeans during a 13-10
The Lady Vikings netted 16-of-66
ﬁrst quarter run, but the Lady Vikings
shot attempts for 24 percent, including
(11-8) countered with a 20-9 charge to
secure a 30-22 cushion headed into the a 4-of-15 effort from behind the arc for
27 percent. The hosts were also 17-ofbreak.
26 at the charity stripe for 65 percent.
SVHS made a small 13-10 to start
Rachael Hayes paced SVHS with
the second half for a 43-32 edge headed
a game-high 22 points, followed by
into the ﬁnale, but the Blue and White
Jensyn Shepherd with a double-double
closed regulation with a 16-10 run effort of 13 points and 13 caroms. Kylie
with Alex Barnes leading that charge
Deer was next with eight points, while
with a dozen points.
Kaitlyn Crabtree added seven markers
GAHS, however, was never closer
than a possession before eventually run- and 13 rebounds.
Taylor Sells contributed two points
ning out of time.
to go along with ﬁve steals and four
Symmes Valley outrebounded the
assists. Hailee Littlejohn completed the
guests by a 47-41 overall margin and
also committed 19 turnovers, compared winning tally with one point.
Gallia Academy returns to action
to 21 miscues by the Blue Angels.
Monday when it travels to Portsmouth
Gallia Academy made 16-of-50 ﬁeld
goals for 32 percent, including a 4-of-21 for an OVC contest at 7 p.m.
effort from three-point range for 19 perBryan Walters can be reached at 740-446-2342, ext.
cent. The guests were also 12-of-19 at
2101.
the free throw line for 63 percent.

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

Daily Sentinel

Lady Raiders fall at
Alexander, 60-20
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@aimmediamidwest.com

ALBANY, Ohio — If
nothing else, it was 20
points better than the
last time.
After dropping an
86-26 decision to the
Lady Spartans on Dec.
11 in Bidwell, the River
Valley girls basketball
team fell to Alexander
again in Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division
play on Saturday, this
time by a 60-20 count at
‘The Alley’.
Lady Raiders (0-18,
0-10 TVC Ohio) were
held to two points in
each of the ﬁrst two
quarters and trailed
41-to-4 at halftime.
River Valley had its

best offensive quarter
of the game in the third,
scoring nine points on
four ﬁeld goals. However, Alexander (13-6, 7-3)
scored 17 in the third
and led 58-13 with eight
minutes to play.
RVHS closed out the
Lady Spartans’ 60-20
win with a 7-to-2 fourth
quarter run.
River Valley senior
Jaden Neal made one
three-pointer and ﬁnished with a team-best
11 points, nine of which
came after the half. Kaylee Tucker scored three
points on a triple, while
Cierra Roberts, Jordan
Garrison and Beth Gillman each had two points
in the setback.
Kenna Rice led the

Lady Spartans with
21 points, followed by
Jadyn Mace and Kristin
Taylor with 12 each.
Rachel Richardson
contributed 10 points
to the winning cause,
Sydnie Bolin added
three points, while Taylor Meadows chipped in
with two points.
Alexander was 7-of-10
(70 percent) from the
free throw line, with
the Lady Raiders not
attempting a foul shot in
the contest.
After visiting Wellston
on Monday, the Silver
and Black will wrap up
league play at home on
Thursday against Vinton
County.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

MEIGS COUNTY

Visitors Guide 2018

Courtesy photo

Members of the Point Pleasant varsity wrestling team pose for a photo after winning the 2018
version of the Battle for the Shield on Friday night at Ripley High School in Ripley, W.Va.

Point retains Shield, beats Vikings
By Bryan Walters

led to the 35-point triumph.
Christopher Smith
RIPLEY, W.Va — Two (106), Mitchell Freeman
(126), Logan Southall
in a row.
(152), Jacob Roub
The Point Pleasant
(160), Clayton Hill
wrestling team came
away with the hardware (182) and Juan Marquez (195) all recorded
for a second consecupinfall victories for six
tive season following
points apiece, while
a 54-19 victory over
host Ripley in the 2018 Jacob Muncy scored six
points by forfeit in the
Battle for the Shield
heavyweight division.
dual held Friday night
Justin Cornell scored
in Jackson County.
a major decision at 113
The Big Blacks are
pounds, while George
now 5-2 all-time in the
Smith scored a techannual head-to-head
nical fall win at 120
contest as the guests
pounds. Wyatt Wilson
became the ﬁrst program to win the ‘Shield’ also earned a decision
in consecutive years - as win at 138 pounds.
Jacob Bryant (170)
well as the ﬁrst road
team to come away vic- and Wyatt Stanley
(220) both lost by pintorious.
fall, while Riley Oliver
PPHS won 40-27 in
dropped a major deci2011, 43-27 in 2013,
sion at 132 pounds. Zac
40-34 in 2015 and
Samson lost a heart40-33 last year. Ripley
breaker at 145 pounds
collected wins in 2012
(46-24) and also won in after surrendering a
2016 by a 61-12 margin. single point in the ﬁnal
The 2014 dual was post- seconds that resulted in
poned due to inclement a one-point setback by
decision.
weather.
A list of the ﬁnal
The Red and Black
results, by weight class.
posted a 10-4 overall
106: Christopher
mark and recorded six
Smith (PP) def. Nate
pinfall wins in individual competition, which Cox (R), pin.

bwalters@aimmediamidwest.com

all ad prices include full color
Ad space deadline: February 12th, 2018
Contact Brenda or Sarah
@ 740-992-2155
The ofﬁcial tourism guide to Meigs County
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel and
Meigs Chamber of Commerce

113: Justin Cornell
(PP) def. Luke Miller
(R), m-dec.
120: George Smith
(PP) def. Ethan Koontz
(R), t-fall.
126: Mitchell Freeman (PP) def. Evan
Shouldis (R), pin.
132: Evan King (R)
def. Riley Oliver (PP),
m-dec.
138: Wyatt Wilson
(PP) def. Jake Tolbert
(R), dec.
145: Hunter Burdette
(R) def. Zac Samson
(PP), dec.
152: Logan Southall
(PP) def. Hunter Cesteric (R), pin.
160: Jacob Roub (PP)
def. Austin Boggess
(R), pin
170: Nate Starkey (R)
def. Jacob Bryant (PP),
pin.
182: Clayton Hill
(PP) def. Tanner Ross
(R), pin.
195: Juan Marquez
(PP) def. Keith Bryant
(R), pin.
220: B.J. Haynes (R)
def. Wyatt Stanley (PP),
pin.
285: Jake Muncy (PP)
wins by forfeit.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

OH-70026527

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www.KeblerFinancial.com
keblerk@hdvest.net
Phone: 740-992-7270

Gary Woodland
beats Chez Reavie in
Phoenix Open playoff
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz.
(AP) — Gary Woodland
was surprised to see
infant son Jaxson with
wife Gabby late Sunday
afternoon at the Waste
Management Phoenix
Open.
“My wife kind of surprised me with him,”
Woodland said. “I didn’t
think he was going to be
there. I thought it would
just be her. For her to
bring him out, that was
special and something

I’ll never forget.”
Jaxson was born prematurely in June after
a twin girl was lost in a
miscarriage. On Sunday
at TPC Scottsdale, he
was in his father’s arms
at the trophy celebration
after a playoff victory.
“For him to be here,
it’s obviously a miracle,”
Woodland said. “I’m just
so excited to share this
with him and my family.
Hopefully, it’s the start
of something special.”

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