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Today in
history
EDITORIAL s 4

Heartbreaker
at Point
SPORTS s 6

WEATHER s 5

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 13, Volume 71

Tuesday, January 24, 2017 s 50¢

Basketball fans dash for cash

Eastern
Board names
Ridenour,
Will as
President, VP
Staff Report
TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Flyod
Ridenour was named
president of the Eastern
Local Board of Education
during last week’s regular
meeting, with Adam Will
to serve as vice president.
In addition, Will was
named as the legislative
liaison for the 2017 calendar year and Samantha
Mugrage as the student
achievement liaison.
Committees for the
2017 calendar year are as
follows: Policy — Brandon Buckley and Tom
Morrissey; building and
Grounds —Ridenour and
See BOARD | 2

Alex Hawley/Sentinel

Basketball fans around Meigs County are continuing to crawl around the gym floor in search of cash as part of the 22nd annual Home National Bank family nights and
dash for cash event. The second of three events took place on Friday evening at Meigs High School during the Wellston versus Meigs boys basketball game. Contests
during the event include a skills shot competition, dash for cash and a new competition which has yet to be named. A naming contest is currently underway on the
Home National Bank Facebook page to name the contest which has been taking place during halftime of the freshmen game. In that contest, each contestant has a
basketball and has to race to make a basket first. Once their basket has been made they race back to the HNB$ pads placed on the court. The last contestant to shoot
is out, with the game playing out until there was only one contestant left. The final Home National Bank Family Night is scheduled for Tuesday (today) at Eastern High
School. Admission is free at the games on family night.

Body
identified as
missing St.
Albans man
By Beth Sergent
bsergent@civitasmedia.com

Inspired by an idea
By Miranda Wood

mwood@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY —Three
local artists stole the show
during the San Quentin Prison
Project exhibition at the Huntington Museum of Art.
The Huntington Museum
of Art (HMOA) invited 11
regional artists to take part
in the San Quentin Project
presented by Jack and Angie
Bourdelais. These 11 regional
artists were to use the imagery
and information in San Quentin record books as a starting
place for the creation of artworks for the show.
The San Quentin Prison in
California held many famous
inmates such as Charles Manson, Merle Haggard, Eldridge
Cleave and Danny Trejo. The
prison currently serves a
holding facility for the largest

“I imagine people who
were afraid but deep
inside were full of hope
of being rehabilitated. I
imagined humans just like
you and me.”
—Gerry Enrico

group of death-row inmates in
the country. it is also the place
where Johnny Cash played his
ﬁrst prison concert in 1958.
Three of these 11 artists
reside in the Point Pleasant,
W.Va. and Gallia County, Ohio
regions.
Benjy Davies resides in Gallipolis, Ohio and is a professor
of art and chair of the School
of Arts and Letters at the University of Rio Grande. Gerry
Enrico born in the Philippines,
now residing in Point Pleasant, offers art classes in the

INDEX
Obituaries: 2
News: 3
Editorial: 4
Weather: 5
Sports: 6
Classifieds: 8
Comics: 9

See BODY | 3

Miranda Wood/OVP

Enrico pictured with his graphite drawing titled, “We Judge.”

tri-state area. Jamie Sloane
born in Huntington, W.Va.,
now resides in Point Pleasant,
where he works as an artist in
his historic apartment.
The artists drew inspiration
for their artwork by viewing two record books of the

San Quentin Prison. These
records span the years of 1918
into 1930. The record books
included photographs, personal information about the
inmate, and the reasoning for
See INSPIRED | 3

OU appoints interim president
Staff Report

well as for his advocacy on behalf of
the regional campus faculty, and he
served two terms on faculty senate.
ATHENS — The Ohio Univer“David Descutner is well-known
sity Board of Trustees today
and respected in many circles
appointed Dr. David Descutner
here at Ohio University and
as Interim President of the
will make a great interim presiUniversity, effective Feb. 18.
dent,” Board of Trustees chairBefore his retirement from
man David Wolfort said. “The
OU in 2015, Descutner served
Board is conﬁdent that Dr.
as the Dean of University
Descutner will transition into
College and Executive Vice
this new role effortlessly and
Descutner
Provost for Undergraduate
provide stability to the instituEducation. A professor of comtion as we ﬁnalize our search
munication studies,Descutner started for our 21st president. We are thankhis career with Ohio University as
ful for his continued commitment to
a member of the faculty in 1979.
Ohio University.”
He was recognized numerous times
As Dean of University College,
for his teaching and mentoring, as
See PRESIDENT | 5

TDSnews@civitasmedia.com

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

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The body of
a man pulled from the
Kanawha River on Jan.
14 at Point Pleasant,
W.Va. has been identiﬁed.
James T. Brammer,
37, was reported missing to the St. Albans,
W.Va. Police Department
back in November 2016.
On Monday, Sgt. Joe
Finnicum, local post commander with the West
Virginia State Police
in Mason County, said
Brammer’s remains had
been ofﬁcially identiﬁed
by the ofﬁce of the Chief
Medical Examiner in
Charleston, W.Va.
After a preliminary

OU Board
of Trustees
approves
tuition
increase
Staff Report

ATHENS — The
Ohio University Board
of Trustees approved a
tuition increase during
last week’s meeting.
Executive Vice
President and Provost
Pam Benoit and Vice
President for Finance and
Administration Deborah Shaffer walked the
trustees through various
forecasting assumptions
underpinning the FY2018
budget planning during
a joint meeting of the
academics and resources
committees on Thursday. Shaffer also shared
See TUITION | 5

�OBITUARIES/NEWS

2 Tuesday, January 24, 2017

MEIGS BRIEFS

Daily Sentinel

SARVER

OBITUARIES

Editor’s Note: Meigs Briefs will only list event
information that is open to the public and will be
printed on a space-available basis.

Meigs Museum
Open House
POMEROY — The Meigs County Museum
kicks off 2017 with its open house on Friday, Jan.
27 from 5-8 p.m.

Road
Closure
LONG BOTTOM — One lane of State Route
124 in Meigs County is closed 0.5 miles north of
Township Road 402 (Barr Hollow) for an emergency landslide repair. Temporary trafﬁc signals
are in place. The estimated completion date is
June 30, 2017.

MARY CUNDIFF
SYRACUSE — Mary
Cundiff, 89, of Syracuse,
passed away, at 3:15 a.m.
on Sunday, Jan. 22, 2017,
at the Arbors at Pomeroy.
Born Dec. 7, 1927, in Syracuse, she was the daughter of the late Hershel
and Belle Borham Diddle.
She was a homemaker.
Mary is survived by her
daughter, Penny (Manuel) Rodriguez, of Knoxville, Tennessee; two
sons, Joe (Tammy) Cundiff, of Racine, Jeff (Sherri) Cundiff, of Moline,
Ohio. Four grandchildren,
eight great-grandchildren
and numerous nieces and
nephews also survive.

In addition to her parents, Mary is preceded
in death by her husband,
William Cundiff Sr.,
whom she married on
Dec. 17, 1946, in and
preceded her on Feb. 25,
2005; a son, William Cundiff, Jr.; three brothers;
and two sisters.
Graveside services
will be held on at 1 p.m.
on Wednesday, Jan. 25,
2017, in the Letart Falls
Cemetery. Pastor Jan
Lavender will ofﬁciate.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the
family by visiting www.
cremeensfuneralhomes.
com.

Board

PORTLAND — Judith
“Judy” Rockhold, of
Portland, passed away on
Sunday, Jan. 22, 2017.
She was born on April
18, 1948, in Duncansville,
Pennsylvania, to the
late Roger and Florence
(White) Hite. Judy was a
nurses aide at the Ravenswood Care Center and
an active and founding
member of the Stiversville Community Church.
She is survived by her
children, Gary R. Holter,
Rebecah A. Kern (Curtis
Miller); grandchildren,
Teela D. Lemley, Colten
Sprague and Milo L. Miller; a very special friend,
Paul Carroll; and several
nieces, nephews, stepchildren and families.
She is preceded in
death by her parents,

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CONTACT US

EDWARDS
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. — Mary Edwards, 78, of New
Haven, W.Va., passed away Saturday January 21, 2017
at Pleasant Valley Hospital, Pleasant Valley, W.Va.
Funeral service will be conducted 1 p.m. Wednesday, January 25, 2017 at Hall Funeral Home and
Crematory, Proctorville. Burial will follow in Rome
Cemetery, Proctorville. Visitation will be held one
hour prior to the service at the funeral home.

PROCTORVILLE — Nicholas James Boggs, 88, of
Proctorville,, formerly of Huntington, W.Va., passed
away Friday January 20, 2017 at Wygate at River’s
Edge, Proctorville.
Funeral service will be conducted 1 p.m. Wednesday
January 25, 2017 at First Baptist Church, Huntington.
Burial will follow in Spring Hill Cemetery, Huntington. Visitation will be held from 11 a.m. until the service at the church. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory,
Proctorville, is in charge of arrangements.

DUNCAN
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Donald Duncan, 78,
of Point Pleasant, West Virginia, passed away January
20, 2017.
Funeral services were Monday, January 23, 2017 at
2 p.m. at Deal Funeral Home, with Joe Knott ofﬁciating. Burial with full military graveside rites conducted
by the American Legion Post 23 at Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Friends visited the family from noon to
2 p.m. on Monday at the funeral home.

DAVIS
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Dorothy Jean Davis,
74, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., passed away on Saturday,
January 21, 2017 at Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
Funeral service will be held on Friday, January 27,
2017 at the Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant.
Burial will be in the Apple Grove Memory Gardens,
Apple Grove, W.Va. Friends can visit the family from
noon to 1 p.m. at the funeral home on Friday.

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CHESAPEAKE — Billy Ray Shockley, 64, of Chesapeake, passed away Monday, January 23, 2017 at
home.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is
in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete.

CHESAPEAKE, Va. — Mildred Bailey Stiff, 92, formerly of Bladen, Ohio, died January 20, 2017.
The family will receive friends at Altmeyer Funeral
Home, Chesapeake, Va. on Wednesday from 6 p.m.
FISHER
until 7 p.m. A life celebration service will immediately
follow. Burial will be held at a later date at Barrancas
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — Emma Anna Fisher,
National Cemetery.
85, of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., went to be with her
Lord Saturday, January 21, 2017, at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
A funeral service will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, January 25, 2017, at Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant, with Pastor Josh Fisher ofﬁciating. Burial
will follow at Apple Grove Memorial Gardens in
Apple Grove, W.Va. Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m.
Tuesday at the funeral home.

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husbands, Robert “Gary”
Holter, Timothy Kern,
and Kenneth Rockhold;
sister, Nancy K (Hite)
Snyder.
Funeral services will be
held on Thursday, Jan.
26, 2017, at 11 a.m. at
the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Pastors Missy
and Bryan Dailey ofﬁciating. Burial will follow in
the Meigs Memory Gardens. Visitation will be
held on Wednesday, Jan.
25, 2017, from 5-8 p.m. at
the funeral home.
In lieu of ﬂowers donations may be made to the
funeral home to help with
the expense.
A registry is available
at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

STIFF

BROADCAST

STOCKS

SHOCKLEY

BOGGS

JUDITH ROCKHOLD
approved with have the
price covered by a donation from the athletic
boosters.
From page 1
The senior trip was
Morrissey; Personnel
approved to Washing— Will and Morrissey; ton D.C.
Public Relations —
The transfer of
Buckley and Mugrage.
funds between student
In addition, a ﬁnance/ activity accounts was
audit committee was
approved.
appointed to meet periSubstitute teachodically with the board ers were approved as
treasurer and superfollows, Asa Garland,
intendent to monitor
Scott Hardy, Joseph
the district’s ﬁnancial
McCall, Brittany Newstatus. Committee
some, Eric Simon and
members are Will and
Amy Wilson.
Buckley.
DJ Maxon was
The board approved
approved as a volunteer
the bond for the treaseventh grade basketsurer in the amount of
ball coach. Bryan Durst
$50,000.
was approved as the
Regular board meethead girls varsity softings were set for the
ball coach. Sam Thompthird Wednesday of
son was approved as the
each month at 6:30
junior high track coach.
p.m. in the elemenThree dock days were
tary library conference
approved fro Paula
room. Meetings are sub- Buckley.
ject to change.
An electricity purDuring the regular
chasing agreement with
meeting, which folDirect Energy Business
lowed the organization- LLC was approved
al meeting, the board
through May 30, 2020.
approved minutes of
Open enrollment stuthe December meeting dents were approved for
and ﬁnancial reports as the current school year.
submitted. The board
The board has a speapproved an amendcial meeting scheduled
ment to the permanent for 5:30 p.m. on Tuesappropriation resolution day for the purpose of
and to certify the revaccepting a resignation.
enue adjustments to the
The next regular
Meigs County Auditor. meeting is currently
The purchase of a
scheduled for 6:30 p.m.
new wrestling mat was on Wednesday, Feb. 15.

PROCTORVILLE — Richard Sarver, 70, of Proctorville, passed away Monday, January 23, 2017 at St.
Mary’s Medical Center, Huntington, W.Va.
Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville, is
in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete.

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bhunt@civitasmedia.com

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
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TVM
Sossaman. TVMA
his girlfriend and avenge his death. TV14
(5:00)
Love
(:15) Burnt (2015, Comedy/Drama) Sienna Miller, Omar Sy, Inside the NFL "2016
Actually ('03, Rom) Emma Bradley Cooper. A chef heads to London in order to redeem Playoff Week 3" (N)
Thompson. TVM
himself and earn three Michelin stars. TV14

10

PM

10:30

Real Sports Jon Frankel
talks about former NFL
player Kevin Turner. (N)
The Conjuring ('13,
Hor) Vera Farmiga, Patrick
Wilson. TVMA
Homeland "The Man in the
Basement" Carrie and Reda
fight for their client.

�NEWS

Inspired

previously shown work
in the HMOA during a
juried show.
Davies chose the
From page 1
subjects of his drawtheir incarceration.
ings through a variety
Racial epithets are
of subject matters and
used to describe many
objects of the San Quenof the prisoners in these tin Prison. Some were
record books as well
portraits of the inmates
as a vast array of reaand some were artifacts
sons for incarceration
found in the prison.
ranging from theft, to
Davies included modern
assault, and murder, but aspects of the prison as
also for offenses that
well as ideas taken from
would not be considthe old record books.
ered crimes today, such Much of Davies’ work
as adultery and political included text with his
or labor union activist
drawings.
activity.
“I was really interestVarious media was
ed in the stories of the
displayed for this exhib- prisoners I portrayed
it, which runs through
and did a great deal of
May 28 at the Hunting- research in regards to
ton Museum of Art.
the prisoners I choose
Photography, paintings, to depict,” Davies said.
drawings, ceramics, and “I included quite a lot
multi-media pieces were of texts with my drawincluded. All the artist’s ings too, for instance,
work varied in style
some have why they
from one another and
were in prison, how old
sometimes in their mes- they were, whether they
sages, but every piece
were executed or not,
was cohesive in that the how long they were on
artists were depicting
death row.”
some aspect of the lives
Davies gave permisof prisoners or the lives sion to the museum
of individuals that were curators to put his work
affect by those incarcer- up how they saw ﬁt.
ated by the San Quentin
prison.
The opening reception to the San Quentin
Prison Project brought
out a large number of
individuals. Walking
through the gallery
there were people wall
to wall discussing art
and attempting to catch
a glimpse, among the
crowd, of the artwork
that was displayed.
Davies was asked to
join this exhibit about
a year ago when he had

Typically he puts his
work in chronological
order.
The San Quentin
Drawings are in extension of Davies’ “Daily
Drawings” project.
Working every evening over a period of
months, he created dozens of individual drawings. With these small
drawings Davies hopes
to capture fragments
of the “complexity and
horror” of the institution.
Enrico was recommended by Jack Bourdelais to exhibit work
in the San Quentin
project. Enrico has two
pieces displayed.
Enrico explained
his process in picking
inmates to portray in
his portraits for this
exhibit:
“I looked up their ethnicity background and
their crimes and disassembled them,” Enrico
said. “We judge the
inmates by their inmate
identiﬁcation number,
we only see a number.
We don’t know what
their background is.
They have families, they

have children. Many
were immigrants that
came to America to ﬁnd
a good job and a better
life.”
Each inmate in his
drawings is only identiﬁed by their prison
identiﬁcation and the
hat that he or she was
wearing at the time.
Enrico said: “I imagine people who were
afraid but deep inside
were full of hope of
being rehabilitated. I
imagined humans just
like you and me.”
Sloane was asked to
join the San Quentin
Project by the HMOA
when they viewed other

Tuesday, January 24, 2017 3

work of Sloane’s from
his “Visiteurs” project.
Sloane examined the
two books of mugshots
from inmates at San
Quentin prison. Sloane
took 77 photographs
of the mugshots back
to his studio in Point
Pleasant. There, he
studied each photograph. Sloane was to
only choose three mugshots to recreate. He
stated that he wanted to
“reﬂect upon the photographs objectively.” He
was inﬂuenced by which
photographs to choose
for his artwork by how
the faces in the mugshots ﬁguratively “spoke

to him.” Sloane further
explained he wanted
to, “subconsciously”
choose a photo and to
choose a photo that had
a face that he deemed
“intriguing.”
While trying to ﬁgure
out which photographs
to use for his work,
he did not look at the
inmate’s record. He
wanted to be “nondiscriminatory” in his
selection.
To ﬁnd out more
information about the
San Quentin Project
presented by Jack and
Angie Bourdelais visit
the HMOA websitehmoa.org

60701843

Daily Sentinel

Body
From page 1

examination of the
remains shortly after they
were found, and prior to
being sent to the medical
examiner, Finnicum said
there was no evidence
at that time that foul
play was involved in the
man’s death. However, he
said the body had to be
examined by the medical
examiner’s ofﬁce to determine cause of death as
well as assist in making
a positive identiﬁcation.
On Monday, Finnicum
explained more test
results from the medical
examiner were still pending in the case which is
open and under investigation by the state police.
As previously reported,
a riverboat captain spotted the body in debris,
ﬂoating in the water. The
body was found in the
Kanawha River on the
Point Pleasant side of the
river, across from barges
docked at Henderson.
The Point Pleasant Fire
Department, with assistance from the Gallipolis
Fire Department, helped
recover the remains from
the water. Also on the
scene to assist troopers,
the Mason County Sheriff’s Department and the
Point Pleasant City Police
Department.

60701740

CRAWL FOR

CASH
SOUTHERN VS WAHAMA

at Southern High School Jan 24, 2017

We are also hosting a non-perishable food drive contest at the game. The two schools and their fans will go head-to-head to see which school can bring in
the most food. The school that brings in the most food will have $250 donated to their Athletic Boosters. The donated food will go to a local food bank.

60701941

Four students will be randomly selected to crawl for cash while being blindfolded. They will have 30 seconds to collect as much cash as possible...of course
they get to keep all the cash they collect. A total of $250 will be placed at center court. Students will be guided by Farmers Bank employees. The crawl will
take place during halftime of the men’s varsity game.

�E ditorial
4 Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

A dog’s purpose
may be connected
to our own
By Mitch Albom
Contributing Columnist

In a week where the
big theme was how
we are going to treat
each other, two stories
jumped out about how
we treat our dogs.
The ﬁrst became an
internet tornado after
a leaked video from
the set of the movie “A
Dog’s Purpose” was
released through TMZ.
That video shows
a German shepherd
named Hercules being
forced into a pool of
churning water, meant
to simulate a rushing
river.
The clearly reluctant
dog is lowered into the
artiﬁcial rapids, pulled
back and forcibly lowered again.
The video then cuts
to the dog in the water
reaching the end of the
pool and his head brieﬂy
submerging, with set
workers rushing and
someone yelling, “Cut
it!”
Viewers were outraged. The comments
were furious. Not
surprisingly, PETA
(People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals)
immediately called for
a boycott of the ﬁlm,
“in order to send the
message that dogs and
other animals should be
treated humanely, not as
movie props.”
And despite the fact
that the video was clearly edited, and that the
person who released it
waited 15 months to do
so, and that after viewing the entire footage
of the shooting day, the
director, writer/producer and others involved
came out saying the
video was deliberately
misleading, the animal
was well-protected, and
Hercules is safe, happy
and not in any way hurt
— nonetheless, the studio canceled the movie’s
premiere and its press
junket.
That fast.
The second incident
happened closer to
home, here in Detroit,
where the Michigan
Humane Society got a
call about a brown Rottweiler who appeared to
have had his ears and
nose cut off.
A photo of the dog,
which also had deep cuts
to its legs and tail, went
viral. Stories ran around
the country. It is impossible to look at this picture and not feel a sense
of horror and empathy.
It literally looks as if
someone sliced off body
parts as if carving up a
carcass.
“This is something
that everyone should
take seriously, whether
a victim is a child or a
dog,” Matt Pepper, the
CEO of the Michigan
Humane Society, told
me last week. “Victims
are victims. And violence is violence. There
is a signiﬁcant amount
of evidence that connects animal cruelty to
human violence.
“The person who is
capable of doing this
(to a dog) is capable of
doing this to a person. …
This is an unfathomable

“It seems far easier
to stir compassion
for dogs these
days than for one
another. Whether
it’s a rush to
judgment on a
movie set video
or nationwide
outrage through a
single photo of a
wounded dog, we
are, clearly, capable
of empathy, shared
empathy, one that
doesn’t have to
originate with us
or be defined by a
party, a position or
anything else.”
crime.”
He’s right. The image
was horriﬁc. It stays
with me as I write this.
It must have done the
same to many others, as
the reward being offered
toward the arrest of
the perpetrator is now,
thanks to donations,
north of $32,000.
A $32,000 reward —
for an animal no one
knows.
Why do I bring
these stories up today?
Perhaps because, in a
week in which a new
president’s inauguration stirred such anger
between us, we should
remember the value of
another human trait:
compassion.
It seems far easier
to stir compassion for
dogs these days than for
one another. Whether
it’s a rush to judgment
on a movie set video
or nationwide outrage
through a single photo
of a wounded dog, we
are, clearly, capable of
empathy, shared empathy, one that doesn’t
have to originate with us
or be deﬁned by a party,
a position or anything
else.
Even though the
movie outrage may
have been premature,
the urge to protect that
German shepherd and
concern for the wounded
Rottweiler comes from
good intent. But it’s
something we need to
pull from the quiver of
“only for animals” and
somehow employ in the
rest of our lives.
I don’t know about
you, but by this point
in the weekend, I could
use a brief break from
stories about President
Donald Trump: good,
bad, praising, critical,
analytical, hypocritical.
It all feels like so much
noise, a blaring of horns
that won’t stop today or
tomorrow or the next
day.
So maybe there is
comfort is something
simpler: the uniting concern we show our furrier
friends. As last week’s
incidents prove, we are,
as humans, capable of
great cruelty, but of even
greater kindness. Maybe
that’s a Dog’s Purpose. It
certainly should be ours.
Mitch Albom is a columnist for the
Detroit Free Press. Readers may
write to him at: Detroit Free Press,
600 West Fort Street, Detroit,
Mich. 48226, or via email at
malbom@freepress.com.

THEIR VIEW

Heidi Stevens: Barron Trump should be left alone
By Heidi Stevens
Contributing columnist

Let’s go ahead and
agree that Barron Trump
should be off-limits.
He’s a 10-year-old child
and, unlike President
Donald Trump’s other
offspring, highly unlikely
to advise his dad on
ﬁnancial or political matters. He hasn’t behaved
in a way that invites
judgment or rebuke. He
asked for none of this.
We’re not off to a bangup start. “Modern Family” actress Julie Bowen
is catching heat for a
series of tweets poking
fun at his inauguration
demeanor. “Saturday
Night Live” writer
Katie Rich, a Chicago
native, tweeted a tasteless (now deleted) joke
about Barron becoming
the nation’s ﬁrst “homeschool shooter.”
Chelsea Clinton, the
subject of terrible taunts
during her White House
stint, hopped on Twitter over the weekend to
call foul. “Barron Trump
deserves the chance
every child does — to be

a kid,” she wrote.
(She also added,
“Standing up for every
kid also means opposing
@POTUS policies that
hurt kids,” which critics
say muddled her message. But let’s stay on
point here.)
We have a long and
lousy history of being
jerks about presidential
kids. Before famously
calling Chelsea Clinton
“the White House dog,”
radio blowhard Rush
Limbaugh called Jimmy
Carter’s daughter “the
most unattractive presidential daughter in the
history of the country”
and later corrected himself, saying he’d forgotten
about Harry Truman’s
daughter, Margaret.
Congressional aide
Elizabeth Lauten stepped
down from her Tennessee GOP post in 2014
after ridiculing Barack
Obama’s daughters for
their perfectly benign
behavior at a turkey pardon.
We can do better this
time.
We can pause before
we poke fun at a kid

“Chelsea Clinton, the subject of terrible
taunts during her White House stint, hopped
on Twitter over the weekend to call foul.
‘Barron Trump deserves the chance every
child does — to be a kid,’ she wrote.”
and ask ourselves what
we value. Kindness and
empathy toward children
should be high on the
list.
By many measures,
Barron’s life has been,
and will continue to be,
easy. He is shielded from
physical harm. He has
access to well-funded,
high-performing schools.
He will likely never go
hungry. When he needs
it, he will receive the
best medical care available.
If it bothers you that
other children don’t
have those things, well,
it should. It is this
nation’s greatest failing
that access to education,
health care, food and
safety is so wildly disparate from one child to the
next. But we’d be far better served to invest our
energy in solving those
deﬁciencies, rather than

tearing down a child
whose bloodline shields
him from them.
Few of us would have
relished the spotlight
at age 10 — certainly
not the spotlight that
accompanies a parent
in political ofﬁce. As
Devorah Heitner writes
in “Screenwise: Helping Kids Thrive (and
Survive) in Their Digital
World” (Routledge):
“Do you wish there were
more pictures of you as a
tween? Probably not.”
No more Barron
Trump taunts. They’re
lazy. They’re mean.
They’re counterproductive.
And seriously. A school
shooting joke?
Do better.
Heidi Stevens is a columnist for
the Chicago Tribune. Readers
may email her at hstevens@
chicagotribune.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Jan.
24, the 24th day of 2017.
There are 341 days left
in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Jan. 24, 1942,
the Roberts Commission placed much of
the blame for America’s
lack of preparedness for
Imperial Japan’s attack
on Pearl Harbor on Rear
Adm. Husband E. Kimmel and Lt. Gen. Walter
C. Short, the Navy and
Army commanders.
On this date:
In 1742, Charles VII
was elected Holy Roman
Emperor during the War
of the Austrian Succession.
In 1848, James W.
Marshall discovered a
gold nugget at Sutter’s
Mill in northern California, a discovery that led
to the gold rush of ‘49.
In 1908, the Boy
Scouts movement began
in England under the
aegis of Robert BadenPowell.
In 1924, the Russian
city of Petrograd (formerly St. Petersburg)

was renamed Leningrad
in honor of the late
revolutionary leader.
(However, it has since
been renamed St. Petersburg.)
In 1939, at least
28,000 people were
killed by an earthquake
that devastated the city
of Chillan in Chile.
In 1945, Associated
Press war correspondent
Joseph Morton was
among a group of captives executed by the
Germans at the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp in Austria.
In 1961, a U.S. Air
Force B-52 crashed near
Goldsboro, North Carolina, dropping its payload
of two nuclear bombs,
neither of which went
off; three crew members
were killed.
In 1963, a U.S. Air
Force B-52 on a training
mission crashed into
Elephant Mountain in
Maine; seven of the nine
crew members were
killed.
In 1965, British statesman Winston Churchill
died in London at age
90.
In 1975, the extremist

THOUGHT FOR TODAY
“All men wish to have truth on their side; but
few to be on the side of truth.”
— Richard Whately,
British theologian (1787-1863)

group FALN bombed
Fraunces Tavern in New
York City, killing four
people.
In 1989, confessed
serial killer Theodore
Bundy was executed in
Florida’s electric chair.
In 1992, a judge in
El Salvador sentenced
an army colonel and a
lieutenant to 30 years
in prison for their part
in the 1989 massacre
of six Jesuit priests,
their housekeeper and
her daughter. (However, Col. Guillermo
Alfredo Benavides and
Lt. Yusshy Mendoza
were freed in April 1993
under an amnesty law.)
Ten years ago: The
Democratic-controlled
Senate Foreign Relations Committee passed
a nonbinding measure,
12-9, dismissing President George W. Bush’s
plans for a troop buildup

in Iraq as “not in the
national interest” of the
United States. Colorado’s Joe Sakic (SAK’ihk) had four assists to
lead the Western Conference to a 12-9 victory in
the NHL All-Star game.
Five years ago: Declaring the American dream
under siege, President
Barack Obama used
his State of the Union
address to deliver a
populist challenge to
shrink the gap between
rich and poor, promising to tax the wealthy
more and help jobless
Americans get work and
hang onto their homes.
Republican presidential
candidate Mitt Romney
released his 2010 tax
returns, showing that his
annual income topped
$20 million and that he
had paid about $3 million in federal income
taxes.

�NEWS/WEATHER

Daily Sentinel

increases.
“Tuition and state
appropriations are our
two primary revenue
sources, but are also
important to understand
in the context of one
another because SSI
exists to subsidize the
cost of education for the
residents of the state of
Ohio,” Shaffer said.
Such budget discussions continued to
illustrate the university’s
stated commitment to a
multi-year budget planning process and greater
transparency of potential
costs and revenues. Shaffer stressed that, although
current budget numbers
are preliminary, beginning these discussions
earlier in the year allows
for more informed and
thoughtful strategic plan-

ning at the college level
under Responsibility Centered Management.
The budget discussion
likewise provided context
as the trustees considered
increases to tuition, room
and board rates.
The Board went on
to approve increases of
3.3 percent to the undergraduate guaranteed
tuition and fee rate for
the incoming cohort; 3.5
percent to Residential
Housing rates; and 2 percent to Culinary Services
rates.
These increases only
apply to the incoming
Athens Campus cohort
under The OHIO Guarantee, and the new rate will
be locked for that group
for the next four years.
Consistent with the principles of the program, stu-

community since I taught
my ﬁrst classroom full of
students in 1979, and I do
not take this role lightly. I
From page 1
am committed to providing
Descutner worked with
stability and leadership as
student affairs, the regiswe continue through this
trar’s ofﬁce, enrollment
transitional phase toward
management, university
libraries and student senate, the end of selecting our 21st
among others, to help Ohio President.”
During his time at OU,
University receive militaryDescutner
also served in the
friendly school designation
School
of
Communication
and to establish the James
Abraham and Arlene Green- Studies as director of studies for the honors tutorial
ﬁeld Veterans and Military
Student Services Center. He college, as director of the
managed the undergraduate undergraduate program,
as director of the graduate
learning part of the 1804
Fund, and he also collaborat- program, and as interim
ed with the Ohio University director of the school. He
was responsible for ﬁrst-year
Foundation to launch the
Konneker Fund for Learning experience programs and
academic support programs,
and Discovery in 2012.
Descutner also served as including Bobcat Student
Orientation, the Learning
chair of the Vision OHIO
Communities Program, the
Steering Committee, and
Academic Advancement
from 2012-14 was the
Center, the Allen Student
Interim Vice Provost for
Diversity and Inclusion. He Help Center, student accessibility services, as well as
partnered with university
the Army and Air Force
libraries to establish the
ROTC programs. He was
Ohio Fellows Program in
the university’s representa2012.
“I am honored to serve as tive to the Ohio Board of
Regents on undergraduate
Interim President of Ohio
University,” said Descutner. issues from 2001-2015.
After retiring in 2015, he
“I have been proud to be a
member of the university
was named Interim Chair

of the Department of Social
Medicine in the Ohio University Heritage College
of Osteopathic Medicine.
He currently is the Special
Assistant for Faculty Affairs
and Academic Planning to
the Executive Dean in The
Heritage College.
Descutner and his spouse,
Dr. DeLysa Burnier, a professor in Ohio University’s
Department of Political Science since 1983, have been
very active in philanthropic
endeavors with Ohio University, the University of
Illinois, Slippery Rock State
University, and many local
nonproﬁt entities. He is a
member of the board for
United Campus Ministry.
He earned his bachelor’s
degree from Slippery Rock
State University and his
master’s and doctoral
degrees from the University
of Illinois.
As announced to the
university community on
Dec. 9, 2016, President, Dr.
Roderick J. McDavis, has
accepted a position as Managing Principal and Chief
Executive Ofﬁcer of AGB
Search effective March 1.
His ﬁnal day at Ohio University will be Feb. 17.

From page 1

information on tuition
and state appropriations
— two primary revenue
sources available to public institutions to support
instructional missions.
Shaffer stated that
increases in these areas,
or lack thereof, directly
correlates to an institution’s need to impact the
other.
Benoit also noted that
the State of Ohio has
experienced the lowest
rate of tuition increases
during the period of
FY2008-FY2015 (Ohio is
tied with three others),
while its rate of state
appropriations changes
has shown modest

President

TODAY
8 AM

WEATHER

43°

2 PM

46°

ALMANAC

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

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.

High/low
Normal high/low
Record high
Record low

Precipitation

55°/48°
42°/25°
70° in 1999
-12° in 1936

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.37
Month to date/normal
3.57/2.19
Year to date/normal
3.57/2.19

Snowfall

(in inches)

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.

1

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.0
Month to date/normal
2.3/4.9
Season to date/normal
4.1/9.5

WEATHER TRIVIA™

SUN &amp; MOON

Q: What is the combination of freezing
drizzle and snow ﬂurries named?

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Wed.
7:40 a.m.
5:42 p.m.
5:39 a.m.
3:51 p.m.

MOON PHASES
New

Jan 27

First

Feb 3

Full

Last

Feb 10 Feb 18

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

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

Major
8:38a
9:21a
10:07a
10:56a
11:17a
12:10p
1:08a

Minor
2:25a
3:09a
3:55a
4:43a
5:34a
6:26a
7:21a

Major
9:02p
9:46p
10:33p
11:21p
---12:39p
1:33p

Minor
2:50p
3:34p
4:20p
5:08p
5:59p
6:51p
7:45p

WEATHER HISTORY
Snowstorms hit the Paciﬁc Northwest
and New England on Jan. 24, 1935.
Winthrop, Wash., received 52 inches
of snow in 24 hours, and Portland,
Maine, had 23.2 inches.

The ofﬁcial tourism guide to Meigs County
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel and
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce
60701316

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

AIR QUALITY
0 50 100 150 200

300

37°
25°

35°
22°

38°
23°

Warmer with times of
clouds and sun

Cloudy and cooler
with a stray shower

Cloudy and chilly with
snow showers

Mostly cloudy, snow
showers; chilly

Low clouds may
break, snow showers

Mostly cloudy with a
few ﬂurries

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

Logan
48/39

Adelphi
48/40
Chillicothe
48/40

NATIONAL CITIES

Waverly
48/40
Lucasville
50/40
Portsmouth
51/40

Marietta
48/39

Murray City
48/38
Belpre
49/39

Athens
48/37

McArthur
48/37

500

Primary pollutant: Particulates
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 12.44 -0.02
Marietta
34 21.20 -0.23
Parkersburg
36 23.88 -0.16
Belleville
35 12.84 +0.05
Racine
41 12.96 +0.14
Point Pleasant
40 26.23 -0.35
Gallipolis
50 12.10 -0.12
Huntington
50 30.78 -1.29
Ashland
52 36.95 -0.65
Lloyd Greenup
54 12.85 +0.25
Portsmouth
50 30.00 -2.00
Maysville
50 36.30 -0.90
Meldahl Dam
51 31.30 -2.50
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017

MONDAY

39°
25°

St. Marys
48/38

Parkersburg
49/38

Coolville
49/38

Wilkesville
50/37
POMEROY
Jackson
51/38
50/38
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
50/39
51/39
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
47/40
GALLIPOLIS
52/39
51/39
51/39

South Shore Greenup
51/40
50/39

37

SUNDAY

45°
31°

Elizabeth
49/38

Spencer
49/38

A: Snizzle.

Today
7:41 a.m.
5:41 p.m.
4:48 a.m.
3:02 p.m.

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

Visitors Guide 2017

63°
39°

0

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

Ohio Guarantee.
All increases are subject
to ﬁnal provisions in the
State of Ohio’s 2018-19
Biennium budget bill.

All ad prices include full color
Ad space deadline: February 6th, 2017
Contact Brenda or Sarah
@ 740-992-2155

WEDNESDAY

Mild today with a thick cloud cover. Partly
cloudy tonight. High 52° / Low 39°

approved a 2 percent
tuition increase for continuing students who
were enrolled prior to the
implementation of The

MEIGS COUNTY

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

48°

dents within an existing
OHIO Guarantee cohort
will not experience any
increase to their rates.
The Board also

Buffalo
51/39

Ironton
51/40

Ashland
50/41
Grayson
52/40

Milton
51/39

St. Albans
51/39

Huntington
52/39

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
45/36
90s
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
54/41
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
56/41
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

Clendenin
48/37
Charleston
50/38

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
27/19

Billings
26/11

Denver
33/12

Minneapolis
38/32

Toronto
37/28
Detroit
44/38

Chicago
Kansas City 43/37
56/34

Montreal
28/28

New York
42/36
Washington
51/38

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

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
40/22/s
33/25/sn
61/45/s
44/37/r
47/35/r
26/11/c
30/14/c
45/36/r
50/38/c
64/40/s
24/13/sn
43/37/c
49/38/c
43/39/c
49/40/c
76/41/s
33/12/sn
43/35/r
44/38/c
80/70/pc
81/62/s
47/38/pc
56/34/pc
50/35/pc
65/47/s
56/41/c
53/42/pc
79/58/s
38/32/sn
57/47/s
71/58/s
42/36/r
68/30/s
72/46/s
43/35/r
56/38/pc
45/37/c
36/34/i
61/40/s
55/38/pc
55/44/pc
31/23/sn
54/41/pc
45/36/pc
51/38/pc

Hi/Lo/W
39/17/pc
35/26/sn
67/43/pc
51/47/s
55/42/s
29/16/pc
29/10/pc
48/39/s
63/38/pc
67/54/s
28/14/c
44/31/sh
55/35/pc
53/36/pc
55/38/sh
58/31/s
33/13/pc
36/25/sf
50/35/c
81/68/s
71/44/pc
52/31/pc
36/21/sf
49/35/s
56/31/s
60/42/s
60/36/pc
81/63/pc
35/27/sn
64/37/pc
77/48/sh
49/43/s
49/26/s
78/59/s
53/44/s
57/38/s
54/37/r
42/29/pc
67/57/s
64/51/s
47/33/pc
28/16/sn
55/43/pc
47/34/pc
60/45/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY

Chihuahua
75/38

National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
61/45

El Paso
53/32

High
Low

81° in Marathon, FL
-5° in Bannack, MT

Global
High
Low

Houston
81/62
Monterrey
93/60

Miami
79/58

112° in Hay, Australia
-65° in Susuman, Russia

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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Tuesday, January 24, 2017 5

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, January 24, 2017 s 6

Southern falls to
Falcons, 75-64
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

HEMLOCK, Ohio
— Too little, too late.
The Southern
boys basketball team
scored 28 points
over the ﬁnal eight
minutes of play, on
Friday night in Perry
County, but it wasn’t
enough, as Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking
Division host Miller
claimed a 75-64 triumph.
The Falcons (5-7,
5-4 TVC Hocking)
— winners of three
straight — soared to
a 21-10 lead by the
conclusion of the ﬁrst
quarter, and led 34-22
at halftime.
Miller outscored the
Tornadoes (6-7, 5-4)
by a 23-14 clip in the
third quarter, pushing the hosts lead to
57-36.
Southern had 13
successful ﬁeld goal
attempts in the ﬁrst
three quarters combined, but turned
up the offense for
10 ﬁeld goals in the
fourth quarter. Southern’s 28-point period
was answered by 18
points by Miller, sealing the 75-64 MHS
victory.
For the game,
Southern held a 32-to27 rebounding advantage, with the Falcons
winning the offensive
glass by a 10-to-9 clip.
The victors turned
the ball over 12 times,
while Southern gave
away possession 16
times. As a team,
the Purple and Gold
recorded 13 assists
and seven steals.
SHS was 23-of-53
(43.4 percent) from
the ﬁeld, including
8-of-24 from threepoint range. Meanwhile, MHS was
27-of-51 (52.9 percent) from the ﬁeld,
including 5-of-9 (55.6
percent) from deep.
Miller made 16-of32 (50 percent) free
throw attempts, while
Southern was 10-of18 (55.6 percent)

Point falls

from the line.
SHS junior Dylan
Smith led the guests
with 17 points, ﬁve
rebounds and six
assists. Tylar Blevins
poured in 14 points
and came up with a
team-high three steals
for Southern, while
Trey Pickens added
10 points and a teambest eight rebounds.
Trey McNickle
scored six points
for the Purple and
Gold, Blake Johnson
and Weston Thorla
both contributed ﬁve
points, while Crenson Rogers and Kody
Greene rounded out
the SHS total with
four and three points
respectively.
Blevins and Pickens
both made two threepointers for the Tornadoes, while Johnson, McNickle, Thorla
and Greene each
drained one triple.
Alec Eveland led
the Falcons with
19 points, followed
by Carson Starlin
with 18 and Seattle
Compston with 17.
Collin Pargeon scored
eight points, Colby
Bartley added six,
while Colton Brown
marked four, Cole
Geil chipped in with
two and Drew Starlin contributed one
point.
Southern has now
lost back-to-back
games and falls below
.500 for the ﬁrst time
this season.
The Miller win
evens the season
series between these
teams at one game
apiece, as the Purple
and Gold claimed a
74-47 win over the
Falcons on December
9, in Racine.
Southern returns
to action at home
on Tuesday, when it
hosts Wahama, which
owns a one-point victory over SHS from a
December 13 matchup on Gary Clark
Court.

Ravenswood outlasts Big Blacks, 49-47

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

Raiders 8th, Meigs 13th at Deno Invite

By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — If Ravenswood
was the measuring stick,
then the Big Blacks came
up about one inch short
of overachieving.
Doug Workman’s
potential game-winning
three-pointer bounced off
the front iron just before
time expired as visiting
Ravenswood escaped
The Dungeon with a
thrilling 49-47 decision
over the Point Pleasant
boys basketball on Friday
night in a non-conference
boys basketball contest
in Mason County.
The Big Blacks (9-4)
never led in the ﬁrst
three quarters and were
down by as many as 11
points with 6:51 remaining in the third period,
but the hosts closed the
canto with a pivotal 16-4
charge that resulted in a
41-40 deﬁcit headed into
the ﬁnale.
Parker Rairden drilled
a trifecta 33 seconds into
the fourth for Point’s
ﬁrst lead of the game at
43-41, then the senior
canned another triple
roughly a minute later —
allowing PPHS to secure
its largest lead of the

Wednesday, January 25
Wrestling
Gallia Academy in OHSAA Regional Dual at
New Lexington, 5 p.m.
River Valley in OHSAA Regional Dual at Nelsonville-York, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Waterford
Girls Basketball
Vinton County at Meigs, 6:30 p.m.
Thursday, January 26
Boys Basketball
Wahama at Wirt County, 7:30
Girls Basketball
Wahama at Eastern, 7:30
Belpre at Southern, 7:30
Wellston at Meigs, 7:30
Ironton at Gallia Academy, 7:30
River Valley at Alexander, 7:30
South Gallia at Trimble, 7 p.m.
Wrestling
East Fairmont at Point Pleasant, TBA

Point Pleasant sophomore Trace Derenberger (50) hauls in a
rebound during the first half of Friday night’s non-conference boys
basketball contest against Ravenswood in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

later, wrapping up the
narrow two-point outcome.
The Red Devils —
who have now won nine
straight decisions — had
twice scored triple digits
previously this year, but
they were held under 61
points for the ﬁrst time
at PPHS. The hosts also
held Ravenswood to just
eight points in each of
the ﬁnal two cantos.
Despite another gutsy
effort from his troops,
PPHS coach Josh Williams couldn’t help but
be disappointed with the

ﬁnal outcome. But as
he put it afterwards, it
wasn’t because of effort.
“The turnovers and the
second chances they got
with offensive rebounds
hurt us a little bit in the
ﬁrst half, but the guys
continued to play hard
through all of it. We went
in at halftime and challenged our kids to just
play our game and do
the things we do, and I
thought the kids really
stepped up to the challenge,” Williams said.
“We left everything we
See POINT | 7

Paul Boggs/OVP Sports

pboggs@civitasmedia.com

Tuesday, January 24
Boys Basketball
Wahama at Southern, 7:30
Trimble at South Gallia, 7:30
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 7:30
Gallia Academy at Chesapeake, 7:30
River Valley at Athens, 7:30
Hannan at Herbert Hoover, 7:15
Girls Basketball
Point Pleasant at Riverside, 7 p.m.

Bryan Walters/OVP Sports

Meigs sophomore Clayton Hanna (bottom) placed seventh in the 106-pound weight class as part of Saturday’s John Deno Wrestling
Invitational at Athens High School.

By Paul Boggs

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE

night at 46-41 with 6:34
left in regulation.
The Red Devils (11-1),
however, countered with
eight straight points over
the next three minutes to
reclaim the lead at 49-46,
then the hosts got a free
throw from Workman
with 2:48 left to cut the
deﬁcit down to two.
Neither team scored
the rest of the way, but
it wasn’t for a lack of
opportunities.
RHS owned possession
at midcourt with 31.5
seconds remaining, but
the guests committed a
turnover — then Point
Pleasant called timeout
with 17.2 seconds left.
On their ﬁnal possession, Rairden dribbled
past a defender and into
the lane while drawing
in extra defenders. When
the defense collapsed,
the ball was kicked out
to Workman at the top of
the key.
Workman’s 22-footer
bounced off the front
of the rim and went
airborne, which resulted
in a slew of players from
both teams going after
the rebound.
Stephen Dawson
eventually came down
with carom and the clock
expired a brief moment

THE PLAINS, Ohio
— Competing against
quality competition can
only make your program
better.
That’s what the River
Valley Raiders and Meigs
Marauders hope to beneﬁt from — as both clubs
competed in Saturday’s
John Deno Wrestling
Invitational at Athens
High School.
Of the 17 teams which
scored points, the Raiders placed eighth with
136 — while the Marauders were 13th with 84.
River Valley had six
wrestlers place and captured one weight-class
championship, while
Meigs mustered ﬁve placers — with one weightclass runner-up.
Of the Raiders’ six
placers, only one ﬁnished
outside of the top four in
his weight class.
Most of the squads
on Saturday are among
the same sectional and/
or district tournaments
in which either Meigs
(Division II) or River

Valley (Division III) will
be a part of.
New Lexington won
the team championship
with 292 points, while
Nelsonville-York was the
runner-up with 266.
Morgan was third with
203, followed by fourthplace ﬁnishers Westfall
and host Athens.
Both the Bulldogs and
Westfall ﬁnished with
168 points.
Hillsboro (sixth with
166) and Vinton County
(seventh with 141) ﬁnished just ahead of River
Valley (136) — while
West Muskingum (ninth
with 132.5), Jackson
(10th with 123.5), Zanesville (11th with 93.5)
and Dayton Thurgood
Marshall (12th with 85)
all placed ahead of Meigs
(84).
Rounding out the scoring teams were Fairland
(65), Trimble (36), Marietta (18) and Federal
Hocking (14).
River Valley sophomore Jacob Edwards
amassed the 113-pound
weight class championship, posting a perfect

5-0 record with three
pinfall wins — and two
different victories over
New Lexington’s Blake
Sheppard.
Edwards gained the
championship triumph
with a pin over Sheppard
— taking the 113 title
tilt in two minutes and
26 seconds.
In the second round,
Edwards shut out Sheppard with a 4-0 decision — after opening
the competition with a
pin in 27 seconds over
Trimble’s Eric Everett.
Edwards earned his
second pinfall in the
semiﬁnals — defeating
Bill Wallace of Athens
in three minutes and 33
seconds.
His middle victory, in
the third round, was a
6-4 decision over West
Muskingum’s Andrew
Knaup.
River Valley senior
Grant Gilmore garnered
third at 170, winning his
third-place match by a
13-4 major decision over
Nelsonville-York’s Logan
Bruce.
Joseph Burns at 120,

Jeremiah Dobbins at 138
and Robert Drummond
at heavyweight all ﬁnished fourth for the Raiders, while Derek Johnson
placed seventh at 182.
For the Marauders, senior Trae Hood
claimed runner-up honors at 220 — losing his
championship bout by a
19-6 major decision to
Donovan McCollister of
Nelsonville-York.
Hood had won his ﬁrst
four matches, including
his ﬁrst three with pinfalls — before defeating
Mason Cox of Fairland
with an 11-1 major decision in the semiﬁnals.
Hood had pinfall wins
over Donnie McCain
of Federal Hocking (55
seconds), Jared Conn
of Hillsboro (4:55) and
Antoine Brandon of
Zanesville (3:33).
Meigs’ other placers
were Nathaniel Gearheart (5th at 138), Keynath Rowe (7th at 170),
Brock Roush (8th at 182)
and Tucker Smith (8th at
132).
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

�SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Lady Eagles roll
past Miller, 62-27
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio — Now that’s
making the most of
your weekend.
The Eastern girls basketball team picked up
its second largest victory of the season, on
Saturday at ‘The Nest’,
defeating Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking
Division guest Miller
by a 62-27 count.
The Lady Eagles (142, 10-1 TVC Hocking)
— winners of three
straight — led 17-4 at
the end of the opening
stanza. Eastern pushed
its lead to 34-11 by
halftime, with a 17-to-7
second quarter spurt.
The Green, White
and Gold went on an
18-to-7 run in the the
third period and led
52-18 headed into the
ﬁnale. EHS outscored
the Lady Falcons (5-10,
4-7) by a 10-to-9 tally in
the fourth quarter, capping off Eastern’s 62-27
victory.
The win is Eastern’s
sixth straight within the
TVC Hocking. Miller
has now dropped backto-back games overall
and in the league. To
this point in the season,
this is the second largest margin of defeat for
MHS.
Eastern senior Laura
Pullins led all scorers
with 25 points, followed
by EHS sophomore
Alyson Bailey with 14

Point
From page 6

had on the ﬂoor against
a really good Ravenswood team and they
made the one extra play
that we didn’t make.
“We aren’t into moral
victories, but this
team showed as much
character tonight as
any team I’ve coached
here. I’m really proud of
their effort tonight, but
we obviously still have
some room for improvement.”
The Big Blacks were
outrebounded by a
24-20 overall margin,
which included a 12-6
discrepancy on the
offensive glass. The
hosts also committed 13
of the 21 turnovers in
the contest, with 10 of
those coming before the
intermission.
The biggest difference in the outcome,
however, may have
occurred at the free
throw line. RHS was
perfect on all ﬁve of its
attempts, while the Big
Blacks went just 5-of-12
at the charity stripe for
42 percent — including
a 1-of-4 effort at the line
in the fourth quarter.
The Red Devils
jumped out to an early
5-0 lead just 90 seconds
into regulation, but
PPHS responded with
a 9-5 run over the next
ﬁve-plus minutes to
close to within 10-9.
RHS ended the ﬁnal
minute of the ﬁrst
period with a 5-3 spurt
to secure a 15-12 edge
after eight minutes of
play.
Will Harbour capped
a 7-4 run with a basket
at the 5:40 mark of the
second frame, allowing
the hosts to knot things
up 19-all. Rairden nailed
a trifecta at the 2:44
mark to again tie things
up at 23, but the guests
reeled off the ﬁnal 10
points of the ﬁrst half
en route to securing a
33-23 advantage at the
break.

points. Becca Pullins
and Jess Parker both
scored eight points
for the victors, while
Elizabeth Collins and
Kaitlyn Hawk marked
four and three points
respectively.
Both Laura Pullins
and Becca Pullins both
connected on two
three-pointers in the
win, while Bailey and
Hawk each made one
trifecta. Miller came up
empty from beyond the
arc.
EHS made 6-of-9 free
throws for 66.7 percent,
while Miller was 9-of15 from the line for 60
percent.
Haille Joseph led
the Lady Falcons with
seven points, followed
by Olivia Houk with
six and Ashley Spencer
with ﬁve. Next for MHS
was Autumn McFann
with four points, followed by Lacey Alexander with three and
Sierra Banik with two.
Eastern also defeated
the Lady Falcons on
December 8, by a 56-36
count, in Hemlock.
After visiting Southern on Monday, the
Lady Eagles will return
to ‘The Nest’ on Thursday, when Wahama visits. After hosting Belpre
on Monday, MHS will
be back on the road,
visiting Berne Union on
Wednesday.
Alex Hawley can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2100.

Cason Payne opened
the third period with a
basket at the 7:08 mark,
but Dawson answered
with an old-fashioned
three-point play at the
6:51 mark — giving the
guests their largest lead
at 36-25.
Ravenswood missed
its next six shot
attempts while the
hosts opened the canto
by hitting ﬁve of the
their ﬁrst seven shots
while closing back to
within 38-37 with 2:58
left. Both teams traded
trifectas the rest of the
way as Ravenswood
took a slim 41-40 edge
into the ﬁnale.
The Big Blacks connected on 16-of-33
ﬁeld goal attempts for
48 percent, including
a 10-of-21 effort from
behind the arc for 48
percent.
Rairden led PPHS
with a game-high 17
points, followed by
Payne with 14 points
and Workman with 10
markers. Austin Liptrap
and Harbour rounded
out the scoring with
respective efforts of
four and two points.
Harbour hauled in a
team-high six rebounds,
followed by Rairden
with four boards and
Workman with three
caroms.
The Red Devils
netted 19-of-46 shot
attempts for 41 percent,
including a 6-of-18
effort from behind the
arc for 33 percent.
Riley Heatherington
led the guests with 13
points, followed by
Dawson and Hayden
Mandrake with 11
markers apiece. Isaiah
Morgan was next with
nine points, while
Jayden Rhodes rounded
out the tally with ﬁve
points.
Dawson hauled
in a game-high nine
rebounds, with Heatherington and Morgan
respectively hauling in
ﬁve and four caroms.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Tuesday, January 24, 2017 7

Point, Wahama compete at WSAZ
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
— No titles, but a ton of
quality experience.
Point Pleasant, Gallia
Academy and Wahama
all came away with mixed
results this past Friday
and Saturday during the
2017 WSAZ Wrestling
Invitational held at Big
Sandy Superstore Arena
in Cabell County.
A total of 43 teams
converged on the annual
weekend event, and none
of the three Ohio Valley
Publishing programs
managed to end up in the
top-10 of the ﬁnal results.
The Big Blacks had the
highest local ﬁnish after
placing 14th overall with
94.5 points, while the
Blue Devils were just one
behind in 15th place with
93.5 points. The White
Falcons also placed 32nd
overall with 35 points.
Independence came
away with top team
honors after winning a
tournament-best four
individual titles while
posting a winning tally of
255.5 points.
Ripley was the overall runner-up with 164
points, while Johnson
Central (155.5), Huntington (153.5) and East
Fairmont (149) rounded
out the top ﬁve team
positions.
Point Pleasant scored
13 pinfall wins and came
away with an overall
record of 36-31 while
earning four top-eight
ﬁnishes.
Grant Safford went 4-1,
scored two pinfalls and
ﬁnished second overall
in the 182-pound weight
class, while George Smith
went 4-2 overall at 113
pounds and placed ﬁfth.

Bryan Walters/OVP Sports

Point Pleasant senior Grant Safford locks in a hold on an opponent during a 182-pound match at a
quad meet on January 11 in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Logan Southall (126)
scored two pinfalls and
went 4-3 while ﬁnishing
eighth. Brian Gillispie
(285) earned three pinfall
wins and went 3-3 overall
while also placing eighth.
Justin Cornell (106)
went 3-2 overall with two
pinfall wins, while Caleb
Lane (120), Jacob Bryant
(145), Tyler Clendenin
(170), Andrew Roach
(195) and Thomas Jeffrey (285) all went 2-2 in
their respective divisions.
Roach and Jeffrey also
recorded a pinfall win
apiece.
Nazar Abass (160)
and Colton Carr (152)
each earned a pinfall win
as well at the event for
PPHS.
Gallia Academy scored
17 pinfall wins and came
away with an overall
record of 35-36 while
earning four top-eight
ﬁnishes.
Jared Stevens went 4-1,
scored four pinfalls and
ﬁnished second overall
in the 120-pound weight

class, while Hunter Jacks
went 6-2 overall at 170
pounds and placed fourth.
Kaleb Crisenbery was
ﬁfth at 145 pounds with
three pinfall wins and a
5-3 overall mark, while
Kyle Greenlee ﬁnished
3-2 with two pinfall wins
and placed seventh at 113
pounds.
Jason Stroud (106),
Kenton Ramsey (106),
Will McCarty (126),
Justin Day (132), Boo
Pullins (152) and Kaden
Ehman (145) all went 2-2
in their respective divisions. Pullins and Ehman
each earned a pair of pinfall wins, while Day also
had one pinfall win.
Morgan Stanley (138),
Andrew Mullins (160)
and Chris Matthews
(182) also scored a pinfall
win apiece for GAHS.
Wahama scored 10 pinfall wins and came away
with an overall record
of 14-17 while earning a
single top-eight ﬁnish.
Dalton Kearns came
away with eighth place at

132 pounds after posting
a 4-3 overall record and
scoring two pinfall wins.
Braden Weaver (285)
had three pinfall wins
and Brady Powell (152)
had two pinfall wins as
each White Falcon grappler posted identical 3-2
marks.
Antonio Serevicz also
went 2-2 and had two pinfall wins at 195 pounds,
while Trey Peters also
scored a pinfall victory at
120 pounds.
St. Albans trailed
only Independence after
winning three different
weight class crowns. East
Fairmont, St. Joseph
Academy, Huntington,
John Hardin, Ripley,
Nitro and Cabell Midland
also came away with an
individual championship
apiece.
Complete results of the
2017 WSAZ Invitational
are available on the web
at wvmat.com
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

Belpre knocks off White Falcons
By Paul Boggs

Eagles amassed 22 fourthperiod points to pull out
the win.
MASON, W. Va. —
Belpre, by winning the
Simply put, the Golden
third frame 14-9, got to
Eagles ﬂew higher than
within 38-35 — before
the White Falcons in the
stymieing the White
second half.
Falcons to only a dozen
That’s because, in
points in the ﬁnal period.
being outscored 36-21 in
The Golden Eagles
the second 16 minutes,
edged Wahama 23-20 in
the host Wahama White
total ﬁeld goals, while
Falcons were upended by the White Falcons shot a
Belpre 57-50 on Friday
poor 44-percent (7-of-16)
night in a Tri-Valley Con- from the free-throw line.
ference Hocking Division
With the win, Belpre
boys basketball tilt at
raised its record to 5-9
Gary Clark Court.
— and 5-4 in the TVCWhile Wahama won
Hocking.
the opening two quarters,
The loss left Wahama
including the second
at 5-7 — and 4-5 in the
stanza 13-7 to lead 29-22 league.
Noah Litchﬁeld led
at halftime — the Golden

pboggs@civitasmedia.com

the White Falcons with
a game-high 20 points,
pouring in nine ﬁeld goals
and 2-of-5 free throws.
Travis Kearns, on four
ﬁeld goals, netted nine
points— while Mason
Hildreth (eight points)
and Philip Hoffman
(seven points) had three
ﬁeld goals and one free
throw apiece.
Kearns and Hildreth hit
one three-pointer apiece
— along with one and a
freebie from Jacob Lloyd
(four points).
Randy Lantz landed
a pair of free throws for
the only other Wahama
points.
The Golden Eagles’
Mythius Houghton had

three baskets and 8-of-10
foul shots for 14 points,
while Deijon Bedgood
and Nate Godfrey each
scored six buckets and a
free throw for 13.
Logan Adams, Ryan
Simoniette and Brandon
Simoniette sank two
ﬁeld goals apiece for four
points, while Cole Knotts
knocked in a three and
Jesse Collins collected a
two.
The White Falcons
return to TVC-Hocking
Division action tonight
(Tuesday, Jan. 24) —
when they travel to
Southern.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

Northwestern wins in Columbus
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) —
Scottie Lindsey said the fact that
Northwestern won in Columbus
for the ﬁrst time in 40 years on
Sunday was not a huge deal to
him. What is huge is another
important Big Ten win for the
Wildcats, who are pushing for an
NCAA Tournament bid for the
ﬁrst time in school history.
Lindsey scored 21 points
and Bryant McIntosh had 17 as
Northwestern (16-4, 5-2 Big Ten)
beat Ohio State 74-72 for a fourth
straight win.
“This team, history doesn’t
deﬁne us,” Lindsey said. “The
past things that have happened
with this program, it doesn’t
really matter to this team. We
push through that type of stuff.
We’ve been through a lot of tough
games, a lot of close games. We’ve
learned so much that we can go
into hostile arenas and environments and pull out a win.”
Ohio State was within two
points three times in the ﬁnal
minute of the game but weren’t
able to overcome the Wildcats’
lead after being forced to start

fouling.
The Buckeyes cut the lead to
two points on a Micah Potter
3-pointer with 24 seconds left.
But C.J. Jackson had to foul Vic
Law, who sank both foul shots to
make it 72-68. Marc Loving got it
back to two with a layup with 10
seconds on the clock, but a pair of
foul shots by Lindsey put Northwestern ahead by four. Potter got
the ﬁnal points for Ohio State
with a dunk with one second left.
Law scored 10 points and Sanjay Lumpkin grabbed 11 rebounds
as Northwestern won despite
shooting just 37.5 percent. Ohio
State committed 13 turnovers
leading to 17 Northwestern
points.
“It’s no secret, this has kind of
been a house of horrors for us for
a long time, especially since I’ve
been here,” Northwestern coach
Chris Collins said. “We haven’t
had a lot of success in this building. Our guys were really determined today to try to come out
and make the plays necessary to
get a win.”
Jae’Sean Tate led Ohio State

(12-8, 2-5) with 14 points,
JaQuan Lyle added 13 and Trevor
Thompson had 11 points and
15 rebounds. The Buckeyes shot
52.2 percent and outrebounded
the Wildcats 40-39.
“It just leaves a bitter taste,”
Thompson said of the errors and
inconsistent effort Sunday after
Ohio State had won two straight.
“I would hope it leaves a bitter
taste in all our mouths because
how we’ve been playing coming
up to this, then to play how we
played and come out like we came
out today is just mind-boggling.”
Northwestern took a 36-31 lead
at the half after Ohio State had
led by as many as six. A Lindsey layup tied it at 23 with 6:46
remaining, and Northwestern
went on a 13-8 run from there to
take the ﬁve-point lead.
Ohio State climbed back and
took a 55-52 lead on a 3-pointer
from Jackson with 8:41 left but
couldn’t maintain it. After a foul
shot from Thompson tied it at 56,
Northwestern took the lead for
good on a Lindsey 3-pointer with
4:32 to go.

�SPORTS/CLASSIFIEDS

8 Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Rebels roll past winless Lancers They’re Back: Brady and Patriots
By Paul Boggs
Curtis Haner hit
frame for a 22-4 outwin AFC, 36-17 vs Steelers
put, posting an insur- three treys and two
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

STEWART, Ohio —
In one fell swoop on
Saturday, the Rebels
got a league win —
and their shot at the
winless Federal Hocking Lancers.
That’s because visiting South Gallia, by
amassing at least 19
points in each of the
opening three quarters, gained its first
conference victory of
the entire season —
as it defeated Federal
Hocking 69-39 in a
Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division boys
basketball bout.
The contest —
held inside McInturf
Gymnasium in Stewart — was a makeup
matchup from Friday,
Jan. 6, when it was
postponed due to
inclement weather.
The Rebels raced
out to a 19-11 lead
after the first period,
then poured on 21
more points in the
second stanza for a
40-21 advantage at
halftime.
South Gallia then
erupted in the third

Help Wanted General

twos for 13 points,
while Nick Klaiber
— on three total field
goals and a free throw
— collected nine.
Klaiber canned the
Rebels’ other two triples, as Eli Ellis added
four third-quarter field
goals for eight points.
Colton Bowers, Josh
Henry and Harley Lay
lauded one basket
apiece, as Henry and
Lay landed theirs in
the fourth — along
with Stapleton’s second trifecta.
Jared Hawk, on
eight total field goals
and 5-of-6 foul shots,
dropped in a gamehigh 22 points to pace
the Lancers.
He along with
Walker Church, who
had three buckets for
six points, chalked up
a hoop apiece in the
Lancers’ four-point
third.
The Rebels return
home, and return to
TVC-Hocking Division action, tonight
(Tuesday, Jan. 24)
against Trimble.

mountable 62-25 command at that point.
The Lancers did
double up the Rebels
14-7 in the fourth
quarter, but South
Gallia was playing its
reserves by then.
The win was the
Rebels’ first in the
TVC-Hocking in eight
attempts, part of a
now 2-11 mark overall.
Federal Hocking
has yet to win a game
in 15 tries, including now nine in the
league.
South Gallia garnered double-figure
scoring from three
players — and almost
made it four or five.
The Rebels doubled
up the Lancers in total
field goals 28-14, and
drained seven threes
compared to Federal
Hocking’s two.
Caleb Henry hit six
field goals and 5-of8 free throws for 17
points, while Austin
Stapleton sank seven
total field goals —
including a pair of
three-pointers — for
16.

Paul Boggs can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2106

Automotive

Money To Lend

Rentals

Best Deal New &amp; Used

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

2 nice 3 BR homes
for rent. Call 740-446-3644
for more info.
3 Bedroom mobile
home Bidwell area.
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MARK PORTER FORD
Home of the Car Fairy

Amy Carter
Product Specialist
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BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
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independent contractor under
an agreement with

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s Be your own boss
s 5 day delivery
s Delivery times is approx.
3 hours daily
s Must be 18 years of age
s Must have a valid driver’s
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s Must provide your own
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OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH
For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
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Notices

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
Personals
For Sale $12,000 20x30
Double wide Building 1/2 bath
electric heat &amp; Ac may be used
for an office Richard Neal
740-367-7150 Addison FWB
Church
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

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Brady said, pointing to his teammates
and ignoring mentions of “Deﬂategate.” ”The boys showed up to play
today.”
Brady’s main weapon was Chris
Hogan. The previously unheralded
receiver found open spaces everywhere
on the ﬁeld against a leaky secondary.
Hogan caught nine balls for 180 yards
and two scores.
“It’s been a long journey, but I’ve
worked really hard to get to this point,”
said the product of Monmouth — yes,
Monmouth. “I couldn’t be happier to
get to be a part of this thing, this team
— this whole thing.”
Top wideout Julian Edelman added
eight receptions for 118 yards and a
touchdown as Brady tied Joe Montana’s playoff record with nine three-TD
passing performances. Brady also had
his 11th 300-yard postseason game,
extending his NFL record, completing
32 of 42 throws.
“We won a lot of different ways under
a lot of different circumstances,” Brady
said. “Mental toughness is what it is
all about and this team has got it. We’ll
see if we can write the perfect ending.”
The ending for Pittsburgh (13-6) was
anything but perfect. It lost star running back Le’Veon Bell late in the ﬁrst
quarter to a groin injury.
That didn’t seem to matter much in
a record 16th conference title match
for the Steelers, who made mistakes
in every facet of Sunday’s game. The
19-point loss ended their nine-game
winning streak

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

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

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
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304-882-3017
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Call 740-441-7875
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

Help Wanted General
Office Coordinator/Medical Assistant

60583312

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) — The
Tom Brady redemption tour is headed
to the Super Bowl.
After beginning the 2016 season
suspended for four games for his role
in the “Deﬂategate” scandal, the New
England quarterback relentlessly carried the Patriots to an unprecedented
ninth appearance in the title game, and
his seventh.
Brady threw for a franchise playoffbest 384 yards and three touchdowns
in a 36-17 rout of the helpless Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday in New England’s sixth consecutive AFC championship game.
The Patriots, who have won nine in a
row, are early 3-point favorites heading
to face Atlanta in two weeks in Houston, seeking their ﬁfth NFL title with
Brady at quarterback and Bill Belichick
as coach. Belichick’s seventh appearance in a Super Bowl will be a record
for a head coach.
Brady was banned by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell when New
England (16-2) went 3-1 to open the
schedule.
Since his return in Week 5, the only
defeat came at home to Seattle, and
Brady, 39, had one of the best seasons
of a Hall of Fame-caliber career.
He punctuated that in dreary weather
similar to the 2014 conference title
game that precipitated the deﬂated
footballs investigation by ﬂattening
Pittsburgh’s secondary.
“This is my motivation right here, all
these fellas in front of me, these guys,”

A full-time split position is open for an Office CoordinatorCertified Medical Assistant with Valley Health. This position will
consist of three days at our Gallipolis Ferry office in the Office
Coordinator role where the duties include but are not limited to;
responsible for the day-to-day operations of the office; ordering
supplies, working to assure that patientҋs needs are met in a
timely manner. An additional two days will be scheduled at our
Milton office in a medical assistant role where the duties include
triage, lab work, charting and other clinical duties as needed.
Medical Assistant Certification is required.
Apply online at www.valleyhealth.org.
EOE/Drug-Free Workplace.

Help Wanted General
Employment Opportunity - Service and Support Administrator
wanted. Bachelorҋs degree in Human Services related field
required, prefer experience working with individuals with d
evelopmental disabilities, families and agencies; developing,
coordinating and monitoring individualized service plans.
Position requires strong written and verbal skills. Great working
environment; health, dental, vision and life insurance; sick,
vacation and personal leave. Send resume by January 25th to:
Meigs County Board of Developmental Disabilities,
P.O. Box 307, Syracuse, Ohio 45779.
LEGALS

The following matters are the subject of this public notice by the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. The complete public
notice, including any additional instructions for submitting
comments, requesting information, a public hearing, or filing an
appeal may be obtained at:
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk, Ohio
EPA, 50 W. Town St. P.O. Box 1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-3037 email: HClerk@epa.ohio.gov
Annual Health District Survey
Meigs County Health Department 112 E Memorial Drive Suite A,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ID #: HD5300 Date of Action: 01/18/2017
On January 17, 2017, the Director of the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency determined that Meigs County General
Health District is in substantial compliance and hereby places
Meigs County General Health District on Ohio EPA's approved
list of health districts authorized to administer and enforce the
solid and infectious waste and construction and demolition
debris laws and rules in accordance with Ohio Revised Code
(ORC) Chapters 3734., 3714. and applicable Ohio Administrative Code (OAC) Rules. The survey was completed on October
6, 2016. This approval is subject to all the rules, regulations, and
specified conditions.
1/24/17

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�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Tuesday, January 24, 2017 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

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

By Vic Lee

by Dave Green

By Dave Green

8

7 9
1
5
8
8

6
5

4

2

3

4

6
9 3

5
7 8
1/24

Difficulty Level

By Bil and Jeff Keane

1/24

5
2
7
3
8
1
9
6
4

9
8
1
5
4
6
3
2
7

4
3
6
2
9
7
1
5
8

7
9
8
1
2
5
4
3
6

6
4
3
8
7
9
5
1
2

2
1
5
4
6
3
8
7
9

2017 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

8
5
4
6
1
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3

By Bunny Hoest &amp; John Reiner

Today’s Solution

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Difficulty Level

Hank Ketcham’s

2017 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

By Hilary Price

1

3
6
9
7
5
4
2
8
1

RHYMES WITH ORANGE

6

5 9
3
2
4
1

�10 Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Daily Sentinel

Hometown Spotlight

Kathryn Hart

The Hart of a community
Yard sales, food drives, festivals and
parades.
For Kathryn Hart, the past 20-plus years
have been spent planning and organizing
many such events in the village of Racine
to beneﬁt the community as a whole and
the graduating seniors from Southern High
School.
Herself a graduate of Southern High
School, Kathryn and her husband, Dale,
have been residents since they returned to
the community in 1977 when he retired
from the military.
In 1992, Kathryn Hart began as
president of the Racine Area Community
Organization (RACO) when it was founded.
Over the years the organization has grown,
but the mission has remained the same,
making Racine a better place.
Since 1993, RACO has awarded
scholarships to graduating seniors from

Southern High School, beginning with just
two, $200 scholarships that ﬁrst year. Now,
more than $24,000 is awarded annually,
with more than $200,000 awarded since its
beginning.
It is the tireless work of Kathryn and the
other RACO volunteers that make these
scholarships possible. From the RACO yard
sale twice a year to basket games and many
other projects
As a board member of Star Mill Park in
Racine Village, she has spearheaded many
fundraisers that have led to improvements
to the park.
Star Mill Park is the venue for Racine’s
Party in the Park, of which Hart is also
a board member. Party in the Park is
a family-oriented festival that features
entertainment, amusement park rides, food
and crafts that has become a huge event in
the village for the past 11 years.

Hart and her husband are members of
the Racine American Legion, where they
assist in hosting dinners that support
veterans. The pair are also active volunteers
at Legion events.
Bethany United Methodist Church ofﬁcials
say they believe strongly in supporting their
community, and their efforts have beneﬁted
from Hart’s assistance in organizing
fundraisers to beneﬁt local projects.
Hart also assists with Sonshine Circle,
which is a group of people who bring
some sunshine to those around them by
preparing packages for soldiers, holding
food drives for local food pantries and
delivering “Baskets of Joy” to those who
remain in their homes around Christmas
time.
Hart, and RACO, are currently planning
their next event, RACO Basket Games,
which is set for Feb. 9.

60701073

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financial needs, but small enough to know your first name.
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Our community is very
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Kathryn
Thank you for all you do!

57 Years of Quality

60701148

Thanks Kathryn for ALL You Do
For Our Community!
60701294

MELANIE A. WEESE, O.D.
Optometrist

Racine Optometric Clinic
109 N. Third Street
Racine, Ohio 45771
740-949-2078

60701295

Ready Mix
1960-2017

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