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                  <text>On this
day in
history

Rain.
High of
63, low 30

Defenders
win
OCSAA

OPINION s 4

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

C_ZZb[fehjFec[heo"�E^_e

Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 34, Volume 70

Kay Hill
brings years
of experience
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Kay Hill is completing her third
term as Meigs County recorder, and she’s hoping the
local community, on March 15, will elect her for her
fourth.
Hill, a longtime resident of Syracuse, is running
as a Republican on the March 15 ballot, and said
her experience is what helps her stand out as a
candidate. As a graduate of Southern High School,
Hill’s other jobs included working
at the business formerly known as
Chapman and Canady Shoe Store
and Elberfelds, with Emmogene
Hamilton. Hamilton went on to
become deputy recorder and invited
Hill to join the ofﬁce as well. From
there, she served as deputy recorder
under Hamilton and Judy King before
Hill
taking the position in 2005 — the
position she’s come to know and love.
“I like the public, working for the people — I just
like my job, I like what I do,” she said. “(Getting this
job) made me feel fortunate to stay in the county. A
lot of people have to leave the county to get jobs, but
I was one of the fortunate ones to stay in the county.”
As Meigs County recorder, Hill does exactly that
— she and her two employees, First Deputy Wanda
Shank and Second Deputy Elizabeth Wolfe, record
documents for residents of the county for records,
including deeds, mortgages and leases, among others
document types. She said because of her job she
has a good relationship with both the Meigs County
commissioners and Meigs County Auditor Mary
T. Byer Hill, as the deeds make their way to the
commissioners’ and auditor’s ofﬁce before reaching
Hill and her employees. She also cited a good
relationship with Meigs County Treasurer Peggy
Yost, as Yost’s ofﬁce makes sure that taxes are paid
on properties brought to the recorder’s ofﬁce.
Hill said she has three projects in the works as
recorder. Her ﬁrst project, with the help of the Meigs
County Highway Department, have scanned all of
Meigs County’s maps ranging from today to the 19th
century. The local garage took photos of the maps
and put those photos on a disc. This way, anyone
coming into the ofﬁce can view the maps without
having to handle potentially delicate paper. Hill said
she eventually wants to get the maps incorporated
onto the ofﬁce’s computer system to make them even
more accessible to the public.
Hill’s other future project she would like to achieve
is working with Meigs County Veterans Services to
create cards for local veterans to carry in their wallet.
Hill said this would be an easier alternative than for
veterans to carry their service discharge papers to be
properly identiﬁed as a veteran. Finally, as her third
project, Hill hopes for the Meigs County Recorder’s
Ofﬁce to have more of an online presence.
Along with recording, Hill attends continuing
education classes for Ohio Recorders and other
conferences for the ofﬁce.
Along with her career, she is a member of the
Ohio Recorders Association, Republican Central
Committee-Syracuse, Syracuse-Racine Regional
Sewer Board member, Racine Eastern Star 134
member, and a member of Racine United Methodist
Church.
She and husband, Henry Hill, have two daughters,
Mindy (Terry) Patterson and Monica Freeman, and
three grandchildren — grandsons Cody and Dalton
Patterson and granddaughter Katey Patterson.
Hill is challenged by Republican candidate for
the position Huey Eason for the position of Meigs
County Recorder in the March 15 primary.
Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Wrestling: 6
Schedule: 6
— FEATURES
Classified: 7
Comics: 9
Television: 10

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
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today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
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share your thoughts.

Tuesday, March 1, 2016 s 50¢

Ohio AG warns of tax scams

Staff Report

personal information to resolve the
COLUMBUS — Ohio
supposed problem.
Attorney General Mike
Since Jan. 1,
DeWine warned Ohioans the Ohio Attorney
about two of the most
General’s Ofﬁce
common tax-related scams has received more
reported to the Ohio
than 1,400 reports DeWine
Attorney General’s Ofﬁce about IRS scams.
— the “IRS” phone scam
Most people who report
and tax identity theft.
the scam haven’t lost
The IRS phone scam
money, but nationally,
generally begins with a
since October 2013, more
call claiming the recipient than 5,000 victims colis in trouble with the IRS lectively have paid over
and must call a certain
$26.5 million as a result
phone number to avoid
of the scam, according
arrest or legal action.
to the U.S. Treasury
Eventually, the person is
Inspector General for Tax
Administration.
asked to send money or

“I think many
people hear ‘IRS’
and are scared to
death,” DeWine
said. “Scam artists rely on that.
Sometimes they
threaten you. They
tell you how much
you owe, tell you to buy a
prepaid card, and ask you
to give the card number
over the phone. The real
IRS won’t call to demand
immediate payment over
the phone without ever
sending you written information.”
Tax identity theft,
another commonly

reported problem, generally occurs when an
imposter ﬁles a fraudulent tax return using
someone else’s Social
Security number in order
to obtain that person’s tax
refund. In 2015, the Ohio
Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Section
received more than 700
complaints about taxrelated identity theft.
(To resolve this type of
identity theft, individuals generally must work
with the IRS or state tax
department.)
See SCAMS | 5

Mugrage
develops
digital
plans
for clerks
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

established structure, the covering
is carefully examined for tears and
leaks. A special type of plastic is
also used on the ﬂoors.
Heating, irrigation and ventilation systems are checked and
necessary repairs made before the
planting begins. Most hothouses
in the area are heated with natural
gas, allowing for a more consistent

POMEROY — Samantha
(Sammi) Mugrage is running as
a Republican candidate for the
Clerk of Courts position in the
March 15 primary.
Mugrage has been working as
a court reporter
in the Meigs
County Common
Pleas Court for
more than 17
years and said
her experience in
working alongMugrage
side the clerk of
courts ofﬁce every
day has made her familiar with
many aspects of the job.
“Through my years of court
experience, I know the court’s
requirements and the public’s
expectations for the clerk of
courts,” she said. “I feel I possess
these qualities, and I will meet
and exceed these expectations. I
ﬁrmly believe I am the right person for the right reason.”
The clerk of courts is responsible for collecting all revenue
relating to court costs, bonds,
ﬁnes and forfeitures and disbursing other monies which are
directed to various accounts of
the county and state. The clerk
processes Notary Public applications and serves as a passport
agent for the federal government. The clerk also processes
titled vehicles through the Title
Division.
“The clerk is described as the
‘keeper of the records’ for both
the common pleas court and the
court of appeals,” Mugrage said.
“Basically, this means the clerk
records all the paperwork ﬁled
through the courts and keeps
the records for civil, domestic
and felony criminal cases.”
Mugrage said she believes
the clerk’s ofﬁce exists to provide a public service, and there
are changes and upgrades she
would like to make, including
a one-stop service for the BMV
and the title ofﬁce, the ability
to have passport photos taken
on-site when making the application at the clerk of courts ofﬁce

See PLANTING | 5

See MUGRAGE | 5

Photos by Lorna Hart | Daily Sentinel

This greenhouse holds trays of flower sprouts and hanging baskets, all forecast to be
blooming by early May.

Hothouse planting season
begins in the Ohio Valley
By Lorna Hart
lhart@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY— Consumers enjoy fresh vegetables and
ready-to-plant ﬂowers as a result
of months of effort on the part of
farmers, but few are exposed to
the process it takes to get them to
market.
In nature, seeds are subject to
ever-changing weather conditions. Greenhouses, or as they are
referred to in southeastern Ohio
— hothouses — make it possible
for farmers to sow seeds at any
time of year.
No longer dependent on nature
to germinate seeds, hothouses
enable farmers with more options
of when to plant.
After the seeds have germinated,
hothouse temperatures can regulate the speed of growth to some
degree. In cases of extreme weather changes during planting season,
they can also be kept safely in the
hothouse to avoid damage by frost
or freezing temperatures.
Work begins in January, as hothouses are readied for planting.
Plastic has replaced glass for covering greenhouses, and if using an

Rows of newly sprouted plants are cared
for in ideal greenhouse environments until
ready for planting.

�LOCAL

2 Tuesday, March 1, 2016

OBITUARIES

DEATH NOTICES

WILLIE CAUSEY SR.
POMEROY — Willie
Causey Sr., 85, of Pomeroy, passed away Sunday,
Feb. 28, 2016, at Arbors
at Pomeroy.
He was born Aug. 2,
1930, in Hazard, Ky., son
of the late Dewey and
Florence Joseph Causey.
He is survived by his
wife, Shirley Lewis Causey; nine sons: Grady
Vaness, William Causey,
James Causey, Jerald Causey, Tony Causey, Richard
Causey, George Causey,
Junior Causey and Willie Causey, Jr.; three
daughters, Vicky McFann,
Penny Causey and Barbara Causey; a brother,
Oscar Causey; and sev-

eral grandchildren; greatgrandchildren; and greatgreat-grandchildren.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded
in death by a daughter,
Jacqueline Howery; and a
brother, John Causey.
Funeral services will
be 11 a.m. Wednesday,
March 2, 2016, at WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home
in Coolville, with Pastor
George Horner ofﬁciating. Burial will be in the
Fairview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home Tuesday
from 5-7 p.m.
You may sign the online
guestbook at www.whiteschwarzelfh.com.

GENEVA L. WIGAL
POMEROY — Geneva
L. Wigal, 67, of Pomeroy,
formerly of New Marshﬁeld, died Sunday, Feb.
28, 2016, at Holzer Meigs
Emergency Department,
Pomeroy.
Born Oct. 15, 1948,
in Zaleski, she was the
daughter of the late Ray
Barber and Phyllis Elaine
Stump Barber.
A graduate of Waterloo
High School, she was a
homemaker. Early in life,
she had worked as a waitress and a babysitter. She
was a member of the New
Marshﬁeld Church of
Christ and the Pomeroy
Church of Christ. She had
been a resident of Pomeroy for several years.
Geneva is survived by a
daughter, Phyllis E. Wigal
Meek, of Virginia Beach,
Va.; two grandchildren,
Brittani Kelzenberg and
Courtani Weir; a greatgrandchild, Eliza Marie
Weir; a stepdaughter,
Roberta Dewald, of
Sandusky, Ohio; a stepson, Lewis (Darlene)
Wigal, of Reston, Va.;

Daily Sentinel

eight stepgrandchildren:
Michael Gorby, Bobby
Gorby, Brian Gorby, Mark
Murray, Peggy Murray,
Stephen Murray, Victoria
Wigal and Loralee Wigal;
several stepgreat-grandchildren; her longtime
companion, Ronnie Trimmer, of Pomeroy; and a
cousin, Adda Mills, of
Albany.
Besides her parents,
she was preceded in
death by her husband,
John D. Wigal, in 1989;
a stepdaughter, Deanna
Murray; a sister, Lydia
M. Barber; and a brother,
Sylvester A. Barber.
Funeral service will be
11 a.m. Friday, March 5,
2016, at Jagers &amp; Sons
Funeral Home, Athens,
with Buford Brown ofﬁciating. Burial will be in
New Marshﬁeld Cemetery. Friends may call
the funeral home between
6-8 p.m. Thursday.
Please share a memory,
a note of condolence or
sign the online register
book at www.jagersfuneralhome.com.

D. CAMP
RACINE, Ohio — David Lee Camp, 54, of
Racine, died Feb. 28, 2016. Funeral services will be
1 p.m. Thursday, March 3, 2016, at Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Burial will be in Kirkland Memorial Gardens, Point Pleasant. Friends
may visit the family at the funeral home between 6-8
p.m. Wednesday.
N. CAMP
MASON, W.Va. — Norma “Jeanie” Camp, 82, of
Mason, died Feb. 27, 2016. Funeral services will be
1 p.m. Thursday, March 3, 2016, at Deal Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Burial will follow
in Kirkland Memorial Gardens, Point Pleasant.
Friends may visit the family at the funeral home
between 6-8 p.m. Wednesday.
FRAZEE
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — William Franklin Frazee,
85, of Gallipolis, died Sunday, Feb. 28, 2016. A
memorial service will be 4 p.m. Sunday, March 6,
2016, at New Life Lutheran Church. Military funeral
honors will be presented at the church.
MOORE
NELSONVILLE, Ohio — Randall Samuel Moore,
69, of Nelsonville, and formerly of Gallipolis, Ohio,
died Friday, Feb. 26, 2016. Funeral services will be
1 p.m. Wednesday, March 2, 2016, at Waugh-Halley-

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PAULEY
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. — Nellie Pauley, 92,
of Gallipolis Ferry, died Feb. 26, 2016. Services were
1 p.m. Monday, Feb. 29, 2016, at New Hope Bible
Baptist Church in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Burial followed in Beale Chapel Cemetery in Apple Grove,
W.Va. Visitation at the church was Monday between
11 a.m. and 1 p.m.
SAUNDERS
CRAB ORCHARD, W.Va. — Eunice Evelyn Saunders, 86, Crab Orchard, and formerly of Vinton,
Ohio, died Saturday, Feb. 27, 2016. Funeral service
will be noon Wednesday, March 2, 2016, at McCoyMoore Funeral Home, Vinton chapel. Friends may
call the funeral home between 11 a.m. and the time
of service.
STEPHENSON
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Beatrice “Bea” Stephenson, 91, of Gallipolis, died Sunday, Feb. 28, 2016.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m. Saturday, March 5,
2016, at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home. Burial
will follow in Pine Street Cemetery. Friends may call
the funeral home between 6-9 p.m. Friday and noon
to 1 p.m. Saturday.

USDA announces restoration project
By Jim Freeman
For the Sentinel

POMEROY — If you
own woodland in southeastern Ohio, it most
likely includes oak and
hickory trees.
It is also likely you’ve
noticed a new type of
tree growing among the
oaks and hickories, the
showy and highly invasive non-native tree of
heaven.
If you watch birds, it
is equally likely that you
may struggle to ﬁnd a
cerulean warbler, a small
sky-blue bird that perches among the treetops.
Since 1966, the population of this warbler has
declined by 70 percent,
due primarily to the loss
oak-hickory forest.
In an effort to restore

oak-hickory woodlands,
the U.S. Department
of Agriculture’s Forest
Service, the Natural
Resources Conservation
Service and the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources teamed up to
create the Collaborative
Oak Management project in southeastern Ohio.
The project area
includes the Wayne
National Forest and Ohio
State forests, as well
as privately held forest
land. Approximately 73
percent of the land within the Wayne National
Forest is privately owned
and interspersed within
the forest boundaries.
However, the boundaries of private and public
land don’t exist for invasive species and wildlife.

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Wood Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Crown
City Cemetery, Crown City, Ohio.

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Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
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Prices are subject to change at any time.

CONTACT US
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michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

SPORTS EDITOR
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bwalters@civitasmedia.com

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jschultz@civitasmedia.com

The Collaborative Oak
Management project
provides a mechanism
to restore oak-hickory
woodlands seamlessly
across both public and
private land.
Last year, NRCS created a special Environmental Quality Incentives
program as part of the
Collaborative Oak Management project to help
restoring oak-hickory
woodlands owned privately. Woodland owners
in the project area can
receive both technical
assistance from professional foresters, and
ﬁnancial assistance to
implement conservation
measures recommended
by foresters using EQIP.
Conservation measures
that promote oak and
hickory growth include
the control of invasive
plants and undesirable
trees that outcompete
oaks and hickories.
Woodland owners in
Adams, Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Jackson,
Lawrence, Meigs,
Scioto, Vinton, Morgan,
Monroe, Muskingum,
Noble, Perry, Pike, Ross
and Washington counties may apply for the
EQIP Oak Management
program. Ohio NRCS
allocated $300,000 again
this year for the EQIP
Oak Management Pro-

gram.
Oak-hickory woodlands across the project
area are at a tipping
point in our life-times.
Private woodland
owners, the U.S. Forest Service, the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources, and NRCS
have a chance right now
to help the forest become
a healthy oak-hickory forest instead of something
else altogether.
Individuals interested in applying for
the EQIP Oak Management program should
make an appointment
with the local NRCS
conservationist to start
the application process.
In Meigs County, woodland owners can contact
Carrie Crislip, NRCS
district conservationist,
at 740-992-4282 or stop
in at the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District-NRCS Ofﬁce at 113
East Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, across from the
old Veterans Memorial
Hospital building, weekdays from 8 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. A list of county
ofﬁce telephone numbers
is also available on-line
at http://www.nrcs.usda.
gov/wps/portal/nrcs/
main/oh/contact/local/.
To receive consideration for funding this
year, apply by March 18.

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�LOCAL/STATE

Tuesday, March 1, 2016 3

MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS

FOR THE RECORD

Editor’s Note: The Meigs Briefs will only list
ration for spring cleanup and mowing season no
event information that is open to the public and will later than March 20.
be printed on a space-available basis.

Domestic
An action of divorce without children was ﬁled by
Matthew Ryan Myers and Ruby Ranae Myers.

Chester Township cemetery
Rutland Township cemetery
decorations removal
decorations removal
CHESTER TOWNSHIP — The Rutland TownRUTLAND TOWNSHIP — The Rutland Township Trustees request that all decorations be
removed from cemeteries in the township by March
11 in preparation for spring cleanup and mowing
season. They request nothing be put back on the
graves until March 24.

Salisbury Township cemetery
decorations removal
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP — The Salisbury
Township Trustees request that all decorations be
removed from cemetaries in the township in prepa-

ship Trustees request that all decorations be removed
from cemeteries in Chester Township by March 11 in
preparation for spring cleanup and mowing season.

Calvin “Bud”
Simpson card shower
RACINE — Calvin “Bud” Simpson will be
celebrating his 90th birthday March 8. He is currently residing in Florida, but was born and raised
in Meigs County, and considers himself a “Purple
Tornado.” Cards can be mailed to: 459 Coco Plum,
Ellenton, FL 34222.

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
will be 3-6 p.m. If you have not
already schedued your conference, call 740-992-2158 to schedule.
CHILLICOTHE — The Southern Ohio Council of Governments
board meeting, 10 a.m. in Room
A of the Ross County Service
Center, 475 Western Ave., Chillicothe. For more information, call
740-775-5030, ext. 103.
POMEROY — Townhall meeting-candidate forum for Meigs
County candidates in the March
Wednesday, March 2
15 primary election at the Meigs
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Records Commission will Senior Center, 112 E. Memorial
meet at 2 p.m. at the county audi- Dr., Pomeroy. Doors open at 7:15
p.m.; forum begins at 7:30 p.m.
tor’s ofﬁce.
Public is encouraged to attend.
POMEROY — The Meigs
POMEROY — The Meigs
County Board of Elections will
County Prosecuting Attorney’s
conduct their reorganization
Ofﬁce is hosting a free Fraud
meeting at 8:30 a.m.
Awareness Training at noon at
OLIVE TOWNSHIP — Olive
Wolfe Mountain Entertainment.
Township Trustees will meet at
6:30 p.m. at the Township Garage Lunch will be provided. Please
RSVP by 10 a.m. Thursday mornon Joppa Road.
ing by calling the Prosecuting
Attorney’s Ofﬁce at 740-992-6371.
Thursday, March 3
CHESTER — Chester Shade
POMEROY — Meigs High
School parent-teacher conferences Historical Association annual
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 space-available basis and in
chronological order. Events can be
emailed to: TDSnews@civitasmedia.com.

meeting, 6:30 p.m. in the Academy Dining room.
Friday, March 4
POMEROY —Pomeroy Sacred
Heart Church will conduct their K
of C Fish Fry from noon to 7 p.m.
Saturday, March 5
ORANGE TOWNSHIP — The
Orange Township Trustees will
hold their regular meeting, 9 a.m.
at the township building located
on State Route 681.
Sunday, March 6
POMEROY — New Beginnings
United Methodist Church, 112
E. Second St., Pomeroy, will host
Evangelist Ronn Jones for an evening of worship. Doors open at 5
p.m., and service begins at 6 p.m.
Everyone is invited to attend.
Monday, March 7
POMEROY — Regular meeting of the Meigs County Agricultural Society at 7 p.m. at the
fairgrounds in the Coonhunter’s
building.

OHIO STATE BRIEFS

Final defendant pleads
in egg farm trafficking case

challenging the validity of the initiative’s petition signatures.
In a complaint ﬁled Monday with the Ohio Supreme
Court, opponents including the Ohio Manufacturers’
Association claim that petition circulators failed to comTOLEDO (AP) — The last of four defendants
indicted together on federal charges for a human-traf- ply with four areas of Ohio law and certain signatures
ﬁcking ring that lured Guatemalan migrants to work collected should be tossed.
The opponents say that without those signatures, the
at Ohio egg farms has pleaded guilty.
so-called Drug Price Relief Act lacks the required numTwenty-two-year-old Ana Angelica Pedro Juan
ber to be considered by the General Assembly.
entered her plea Monday in Toledo to federal labor
The AIDS Healthcare Foundation is backing the
trafﬁcking conspiracy. She and the others were indictproposal, which is aimed at keeping state agencies from
ed last year on charges related to forcing workers,
paying more for a prescription drug than the negotiated
some as young as 14, to live in dilapidated trailers
and work long hours doing difﬁcult, dirty jobs on egg price paid by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
The foundation’s president, Michael Weinstein, says
farms in Marion. Eight minors and two adults were
the proposal has met Ohio’s requirements twice.
identiﬁed as victims of a trafﬁcking conspiracy.
Some of the victims were unaccompanied minors
who had arrived at the border. Authorities say Pedro
Juan told government ofﬁcials they were family
friends and would be attending school so they’d be
released to her custody.
CINCINNATI (AP) — Two men have pleaded
Her attorney declined to comment Monday. No
guilty
to charges in connection with an armed
sentencing date has been scheduled.
break-in at the suburban Cincinnati home of a federal judge.
The Cincinnati Enquirer reports that Darrell Kinney of Evanston and Terry Jackson Jr. of Mount
Airy pleaded guilty Monday in Cincinnati to charges
including aggravated burglary, aggravated robbery
COLUMBUS (AP) — Opponents of a proposal to
and kidnapping.
control the price Ohio pays for prescription drugs are

Probate Court
Marriage licenses was recently issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Quentez DeShawn Lee
Garnes and Suretta Samantha Cade, both of Rutland;
James Lee Garnes Jr. and Jennifer Rose Young, both
of Pomeroy; Ryan Scott Jeffers, of Middleport, and
Deanna Faye Lemley, of Pomeroy; Joshua Martin
Broderick and Debra Lynn Siek, both of Syracuse;
Brian Christopher Young, of Pomeroy, and Sari Elizabeth Colleen Suttle, of Long Bottom; Benjamin Cameron Hawk, of New Haven, W.Va., and Michaela Renee
Dawn Hupp, of Pomeroy; and Christopher Matthew
Delong and Doreen Ruth Carpenter, both of Pomeroy.
Land Transfers
To view speciﬁc land transfer records, visit the
Recorder’s Ofﬁce at the Meigs County Courthouse
during regular hours.

4 hurt in shooting
at Ohio school
By Lisa Cornwell
Associated Press

MADISON TOWNSHIP — A 14-year-old
boy pulled out a gun in a
southwestern Ohio school
cafeteria on Monday and
opened ﬁre, hitting two
students, authorities said.
Two other Madison
Local Schools students
were injured in another
way. None of the injuries
appeared to be life-threatening, said Butler County
Sheriff Richard Jones.
The shooter ran from
the school, threw the gun
down and was apprehended nearby, authorities said. Jones said the
14-year-old was a student
and there was a motive to
the shooting which he did
not identify.
Students were eating
in the cafeteria when
the shooting happened
around 11:30 a.m., Jones
said.
Thirteen-year-old Shelby Kinnin said she heard
“a couple of bangs” and
realized she was near the
shooter.
“I didn’t really know
it was gunshots until I
looked over and a kid was
grabbing his leg and falling over,” she said.
Many people ran
from the scene, and the
shooter went out a door,

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she said. She recognized
him as a boy who was in
a class with her last year,
though she wasn’t sure of
his name.
Her stepmother, Stephanie Kinnin, said it was
unnerving to see emergency responders swarm
the school.
“There is no feeling like
that in the world,” she
said. “But my eyes found
the children walking out
looking for parents, and
that was heartbreaking.
Their eyes just told the
story.”
The students who were
shot were 14 and 15 years
old and were taken to a
hospital, investigators
said. It was unclear how
the students who weren’t
shot got hurt, Jones said.
“We don’t know if it
was from the shooting or
from exiting the school or
because of the shrapnel
from the bullets hitting
into that small of an
area,” Jones said.
Students who were in
the cafeteria at the time
said they didn’t immediately recognize the
sounds as gunshots. Some
students ran outside to a
ﬁeld before being brought
back inside.
A sheriff’s deputy stationed in the school had
just been in the cafeteria,
Jones said.

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Daily Sentinel

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4 Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Why a Millennial
appreciates
Reagan’s legacy
By Dustin Howard
Contributing Columnist

I remember where I was when Ronald Reagan
died almost 12 years ago. I was more ambivalent
than sad to receive the news from the radio.
I was born during the last 12 months of the
Reagan’s term. The ﬁrst president I remember
was Bill Clinton, who my blue collar parents voted
for. Why would I identify with someone I did not
remember?
To tell you that, I ﬁrst have to tell you how my
family became conservative.
In the nineties, my parents eventually soured
on the Clintons, shocked that these people were
going to take over their healthcare. As a couple
years went on, and scandals blossomed into
impeachment hearings, the Howard house, like so
much of Missouri, came to distrust Democrats. A
couple years later, we awoke to see New York and
the Pentagon on ﬁre, and suddenly the President
that was barely better than Al Gore became
someone special to us; George W. Bush became
someone we trusted as we were saddened and
sobered by the realities of terrorism and war.
While I was still too young, the rest of my family
voted for Bush in 2004. We weren’t conservative
ideologues, but we knew America wouldn’t be in
safe hands if it were left to John Kerry. In 2005,
my dad gave us a treat, and added us to his XM
radio package. At 17, while the news cycle was
spinning, I turned on Sean Hannity to hear a
different perspective on the coverage of Hurricane
Katrina, when the media was attacking President
Bush as if he personally caused the disaster.
I was hooked, as talk radio opened my world to
a new perspective on what was going on around
me. Sean Hannity was just the gateway drug. Mark
Levin ﬁlled in for him that Christmas Eve, before
Levin himself had been nationally syndicated, and
suddenly I was listening to him every night online;
he started out on just four stations. From there, I
even started listening to Rush Limbaugh, ﬁnding
that the reproach on talk radio was not valid, but a
product of others’ disdain.
These men, derided as entertainers, introduced
me not only to my conservatism, but to the best
President of their lifetime, Ronald Reagan. The
ﬁrst time I heard Ronald Reagan’s “A Time for
Choosing” speech was on the Mark Levin Show.
Like the generation before me, I was blown
away by his common sense, humor and belief in
preserving American freedom, under assault by
foreign ideas believed in both distant capitals,
and our own. Without Mark Levin, and his belief
in the Reagan legacy, I probably would not have
heard it.
Ronald Reagan, as a public ﬁgure and as
President, inﬂuenced these men in numerous
ways, giving them the courage and conﬁdence to
devote their lives to a greater ideal, America. Not
the America that the left caricatured as a horrible
place, but the real America, where hard work pays
off and success is attainable, not immoral.
I didn’t have to hide under my desk in Cold War
era drills or live in fear of nuclear annihilation.
I wasn’t drafted to stand guard against a
communist invasion, or be sent to a warzone
where communists were trying to subjugate the
next country. More to my circumstance — I had
articulate people on the radio to offer me an
alternative to so many misguided interpretations
of my surroundings, because the so-called
“Fairness Doctrine” that muzzled alternatives to
liberal media was gone. I have President Reagan to
thank for that.
In this election, so many of Millennials’ minds
are held captive by socialism, the envious notion
that was imported from Europe by the American
left. In this time for choosing, the only way to
break the bonds of their captivity is to show them
that the freedom they crave is incompatible with
a state that would manage their lives. In order to
do that, they need to choose from bold colors, not
pale pastels, to quote Reagan’s speech to Young
Americans for Freedom in 1975.
To this day, none of my household supports
left-wing candidates anymore. The ripple effect of
the Reagan legacy matters. If it could change the
course of my life, it could change the course of
other millennials, too.
Dustin Howard is a contributing editor to Americans for Limited
Government.

Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:

740.992.2155

THEIR VIEW

The ghost who comforted me
eyes locked onto mine, he
The inevitability of dying
said he would watch over
haunted me during my teen
me. He hugged me and
years.
vanished. It wasn’t a dream.
My bedtime prayers
His hug was as real as the
didn’t alleviate or even
dark chocolate I’m eating as
lessen the phobia. Saying,
I write this column.
“Now I lay me down to
Grandpa showing himself
sleep. I pray the Lord my
Michele
soul to keep. If I should die Z. Marcum to me as a rational and conbefore I wake, I pray the
Contributing scious person, although in a
more transparent form than
Lord my soul take,” served Columnist
I’d ever seen him or anyone
to increase my apprehenelse, comforted me. The
sion about the subject.
experience gave me a bonaﬁde reaAs soon as I’d nod off at bedson to think that, I too, would still
time, I’d jerk awake. I’d worry
be “Me” when I died.
about leaving my body no matter
Grandpa had a desire to protect
what the circumstances. Even
me, and he possessed the faculthe idea of crossing over via a
ties to express that desire. He was
peaceful sleep made me shudder.
dead, yet he knew who he was. He
I didn’t want to exist in oblivion
was my grandpa, and he was able
and was petriﬁed to think I may
to manifest himself so that I could
not possess my own identity once
recognize him.
I passed away.
Several years later, Grandpa
I wanted to stay coherent and
self-aware. I wanted to believe that appeared to me in a dream lookI’d always be aware of my thoughts ing about 40 years old. He was
standing by the ocean, tropical
and in control of my body, regardshirt blowing in the breeze in what
less of what my celestial form
looked like Hawaii. He just looked
would look like.
at me and smiled — no words
In my late teens, my Grandpa
needed. He wanted me to know he
Happy died from a heart attack
was still around somewhere in the
and a few nights later, there he
cosmos and happy. I woke knowwas, in spirit form, sitting on my
ing I had really seen him.
bed telling me hello. As his hazel

I love Grandpa as much today as
I did when he was physically here,
living and breathing and driving
me to a Barbara Mandrell concert
or through McClure’s drive-thru
for a milkshake.
My love for Grandpa transcends
time just like I believe the essence
of my soul will when I die, and
thanks to a ghostly visit from him,
I stopped dreading bedtime.
Now, I slumber knowing that
even if my heart stops beating, the
love inside of me will leap through
my consciousness, connecting me
to not only my loved ones who’ve
passed into higher realms, but to
the ones I’ve left behind.
I hope my holographic appearance to my descendants will be
as reassuring as Grandpa’s was to
me, but in the meantime, while
I’m still three dimensional, I’ll be
whispering a more positive prayer
in my grandbabies’ ears.
“Now I lay me down to sleep.
I pray the Lord my soul to keep.
Watch me safely through the night.
Wake me with the morning light
— even if it’s in a new dimension.”
Michele Zirkle Marcum is a native of Meigs
County and an author. Her column appears
each Tuesday.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Tuesday,
March 1, the 61st day of
2016. There are 305 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On March 1, 1966, the
Soviet space probe Venera
3 impacted the surface
of Venus, becoming the
ﬁrst spacecraft to reach
another planet; however,
Venera was unable to
transmit any data, its
communications system
having failed.
On this date:
In 1565, the city of Rio
de Janeiro was founded
by Portuguese knight
Estacio de Sa.
In 1790, President
George Washington
signed a measure authorizing the ﬁrst U.S. Census.
In 1815, Napoleon, having escaped exile in Elba,
arrived in Cannes, France,
and headed for Paris to
begin his “Hundred Days”
rule.
In 1867, Nebraska
became the 37th state.
In 1890, J.P. Lippincott
published the ﬁrst U.S.
edition of the Sherlock
Holmes mystery “A Study
in Scarlet” by Arthur
Conan Doyle.
In 1932, Charles
A. Lindbergh Jr., the
20-month-old son of

Charles and Anne Lindbergh, was kidnapped
from the family home
near Hopewell, New Jersey. (Remains identiﬁed
as those of the child were
found the following May.)
In 1940, “Native Son”
by Richard Wright was
ﬁrst published by Harper
&amp; Brothers.
In 1954, four Puerto
Rican nationalists opened
ﬁre from the spectators’
gallery of the U.S. House
of Representatives,
wounding ﬁve members
of Congress. The United
States detonated a dryfuel hydrogen bomb,
codenamed Castle Bravo,
at Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands.
In 1961, President John
F. Kennedy signed an
executive order establishing the Peace Corps.
In 1971, a bomb went
off inside a men’s room
at the U.S. Capitol; the
radical group Weather
Underground claimed
responsibility for the predawn blast.
In 1981, Irish Republican Army member Bobby
Sands began a hunger
strike at the Maze Prison
in Northern Ireland; he
died 65 days later.
In 1996, President Bill
Clinton slapped economic
sanctions on Colombia,

concluding that Colombian authorities had not
fully cooperated with the
U.S. war on drugs. The
Food and Drug Administration approved a
powerful new AIDS drug,
saying ritonavir could
prolong slightly the lives
of severely ill patients.
Ten years ago: President George W. Bush, en
route to India and Pakistan, made a surprise visit
to Afghanistan to show
U.S. support for the country’s ﬂedgling democracy.
Actor Jack Wild, who’d
played the Artful Dodger
in the 1968 movie musical
“Oliver!,” died in Bedfordshire, England, at age 53.
Five years ago:
Yemen’s embattled president, Ali Abdullah Saleh,
accused the U.S., his closest ally, of instigating the
mounting protests against
him, but the gambit failed
to slow the momentum
of his ouster (he later
apologized to Washington). The House handily
passed legislation to cut
the federal budget by $4
billion and avert a partial
shutdown of the government for two weeks. (The
Senate passed the stopgap
funding bill the next day.)
Today’s Birthdays:
Actor Robert Clary is 90.
Singer Harry Belafonte is

89. Actor Robert Conrad
is 81. Rock singer Mike
D’Abo (Manfred Mann)
is 72. Former Sen. John
Breaux, D-La., is 72. Rock
singer Roger Daltrey is
72. Actor Dirk Benedict
is 71. Actor Alan Thicke
is 69. Actor-director Ron
Howard is 62. Actress
Catherine Bach is 62.
Country singer Janis Gill
(aka Janis Oliver Cummins) (Sweethearts of the
Rodeo) is 62. Actor Tim
Daly is 60. Singer-musician Jon Carroll is 59.
Rock musician Bill Leen
is 54. Actor Bryan Batt is
53. Actor Maurice Bernard is 53. Actor Russell
Wong is 53. Actor Chris
Eigeman is 51. Actor
John David Cullum is 50.
Actor George Eads is 49.
Actor Javier Bardem is
47. Actor Jack Davenport
is 43. Rock musician
Ryan Peake (Nickelback)
is 43. Actor Mark-Paul
Gosselaar is 42. Singer
Tate Stevens is 41. Actor
Jensen Ackles is 38. TV
host Donovan Patton is
38. Rock musician Sean
Woolstenhulme (WOOL’sten-hyoolm) is 35.
Actress Lupita Nyong’o
is 33. Pop singer Kesha
(formerly Ke$ha) is 29.
Rhythm-and-blues singer
Sammie is 29. Pop singer
Justin Bieber is 22.

�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Scams
From Page 1

To avoid scams during tax season,
consumers should take steps to protect
themselves, including:File your tax return
promptly. This makes it less likely that an
imposter will be able to ﬁle a return in your
name to steal your refund.
Don’t respond to threatening robocalls.
If you receive an unexpected phone call
from someone who threatens to arrest you
for not paying taxes, it’s probably a scam.
Don’t respond to the call, and don’t provide
payment or personal information over the
phone.
Look into call-blocking options. Check
with your phone carrier and third-party
services to determine whether call-blocking
services could help you stop unwanted
calls.
Make sure you trust your tax ﬁler. Before
giving out any personal information, check
a tax preparer’s credentials. For example,

From Page 1

and easier-to-maintain heating system than the previous
coal-burning stoves. A good
circulation system is necessary or plants may suffer
from fungal diseases and
a reliable source of water
is essential to maintaining
seed germination and continued plant growth.
Most seeds are hand-sewn
in plastic trays with individual cells ﬁlled with a mix of
vermiculite and peat moss.
The most common cause of
failure when starting seeds
is desiccation, or drying out,
and vermiculite’s moisture
retaining properties keep
the soil materials evenly
damp even under hot, sunny
conditions, enhancing seed
germination.
Temperatures must be
regulated so that each type
of plant receives the proper
climate. Some need to be
cooler than others, so like
crops must be planted in
the same hothouse for best
results.
Cabbage is a cold-weather

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

58°

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.

Precipitation

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.07
Month to date/normal
5.47/3.18
Year to date/normal
7.46/6.15

Snowfall

(in inches)

3

SUN &amp; MOON

Q: If today’s weather roared, what will
happen?

MOON PHASES
Last

New

Mar 1

First

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

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

Major
5:07a
5:55a
6:43a
7:31a
8:19a
9:08a
9:58a

Minor
11:19a
12:07p
12:30a
1:18a
2:06a
2:54a
3:44a

Major
5:31p
6:20p
7:09p
7:58p
8:47p
9:36p
10:26p

AIR QUALITY

Minor
11:43p
---12:56p
1:44p
2:33p
3:22p
4:12p

WEATHER HISTORY
On March 1, 1983, the temperature
dropped to 59 in Honolulu while
heavy rain hit California. When the jet
stream dips far south, Hawaii is cool
while California is wet.

Clouds limiting
sunshine

38
300

500

48°
33°

Mostly cloudy, a
shower in the p.m.

After a cloudy start,
sun returns

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER

Marietta
62/27

Murray City
55/25
Belpre
63/28

Athens
58/26

St. Marys
63/28

Parkersburg
62/28

Coolville
61/27

Elizabeth
64/29

Spencer
64/29

Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Flood
24-hr.
Location
Stage Level Chg.
Willow Island
37 12.32 +0.08
Marietta
34 21.63 -1.31
Parkersburg
36 24.69 -1.59
Belleville
35 12.72 -0.47
Racine
41 13.09 +0.29
Point Pleasant
40 27.41 -3.17
Gallipolis
50 12.35 -2.52
Huntington
50 34.95 -2.56
Ashland
52 39.63 -1.94
Lloyd Greenup 54 12.56 -0.75
Portsmouth
50 36.60 -3.70
Maysville
50 39.60 -1.50
Meldahl Dam
51 38.90 -1.70
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016

Let’s Talk
About Your

Buffalo
64/30
Milton
65/31

St. Albans
67/32

Huntington
65/31

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
90s
Seattle
80s
55/45
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
20s
San Francisco
10s
66/51
0s
-0s
-10s
Los Angeles
80/52
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

MONDAY

56°
42°
Mostly cloudy

NATIONAL CITIES

Ironton
64/30

Ashland
64/30
Grayson
64/30

SUNDAY

47°
33°

Wilkesville
60/27
POMEROY
Jackson
62/29
58/27
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
63/30
61/29
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
51/25
GALLIPOLIS
63/30
64/30
62/29

South Shore Greenup
63/30
59/29

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.

SOLUNAR TABLE

Lucasville
58/28
Portsmouth
60/29

Primary pollutant: Particulates

Mar 8 Mar 15 Mar 23

Logan
54/25

SATURDAY

46°
28°

Mostly cloudy, chilly;
a p.m. shower

McArthur
56/25

Waverly
54/26

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

0 50 100 150 200

Full

BBT (NYSE) —32.16
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 17.84
Pepsico (NYSE) —97.82
Premier (NASDAQ) —15.50
Rockwell (NYSE) — 104.09
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) —11.51
Royal Dutch Shell — 45.48
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 17.47
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 66.34
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 9.37
WesBanco (NYSE) — 28.27
Worthington (NYSE) —31.11
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Feb. 29, 2016, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

A: March will go out like a lamb.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

Chillicothe
53/26

FRIDAY

44°
34°

Adelphi
54/25

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™

Wed.
6:59 a.m.
6:23 p.m.
1:46 a.m.
12:07 p.m.

Mostly cloudy and
much colder

1

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
0.0
Month to date/normal
7.0/7.6
Season to date/normal
21.2/19.1

Today
7:01 a.m.
6:22 p.m.
12:52 a.m.
11:23 a.m.

THURSDAY

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

AccuWeather.com Cold Index™

(in inches)

WEDNESDAY

51°

HEALTH TODAY
61°/44°
51°/31°
77° in 1976
15° in 1980

AEP (NYSE) — 61.75
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 19.46
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 95.29
Big Lots (NYSE) — 40.45
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) —42.91
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 32.68
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 7.15
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.150
City Holding (NASDAQ) —44.07
Collins (NYSE) —87.57
DuPont (NYSE) — 60.87
US Bank (NYSE) — 38.52
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 29.12
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 43.17
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 56.29
Kroger (NYSE) —39.91
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 84.79
Norfolk So (NYSE) —73.17
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 22.50

EXTENDED FORECAST

A few showers this morning, then a little rain.
Rain, then snow tonight. High 63° / Low 30°

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9922155 Ext. 2551

LOCAL STOCKS

38°
24°
40°

outside of Chester with
her husband and two
daughters. She currently serves as student
achievement liaison
for the Eastern Local
School Board, project
director of Angela
Eason Memorial Park
and is a member of the
Syracuse Community
Center.
“My family’s roots
run deep in Meigs
County as we are all
lifelong residents,” she
said. “My husband and
I were raised here, and
this is where we want
to raise our daughters
in the hopes that one
day, they too can raise
their families here. I
am devoted to helping and serving others
and being involved in
preserving a future for
our county and its residents.”
Mugrage is challenging Republican incumbent Diane Lynch for
the position of Meigs
County Clerk of Courts
in the March 15 primary.

Contact Lorna Hart at 740-9922155 Ext. 2551

8 PM

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

hardware upgrades to
Courtview, the case
management system
From Page 1
used by the clerk of
courts and common
and a redesign of cerpleas court, would be
tain parts of the legal
on Mugrage’s agenda.
ofﬁce to make it more
“By updating the
inviting and usable to
server and software,
the public.
printers, PCs, moni“At this time, many
tors, scanners and a
of Ohio’s counties
document imaging
already provide these
system by using a techservices and are maknology grant available
ing their ofﬁces more
through the Supreme
user-friendly,” she said. Court of Ohio,
“I am working to ﬁnd
upgrades, which will
out what can be done
beneﬁt both the Clerk’s
to accomplish this in
Ofﬁce and the Common
Meigs County.”
Pleas Court, could be
Mugrage shared
made,” she said.
that she would like to
Mugrage also sugupgrade the current
gested using a resource
clerk of court’s website currently available
to include useful infor- called the Ohio Courts
mation such as legal
Network. This system
and title forms, links
or network would
to other county ofﬁces, make available court
local rules of court and case information,
ePay information.
inmate and supervision
“Electronic ﬁling is
information, criminal
right around the corner history information
for our county and an
and driver’s license
up-to-date website is
and vehicle registravital.”
tion information to
Making records and
the courts, probation
services of the clerk’s
departments and law
ofﬁce more readily
enforcement agencies.
available to the pubRaised in Syracuse,
lic by software and
Mugrage now lives

into the ﬁelds, they must be
readied for life outside the
ideal conditions of the hothouse in what is known as a
hardening process
“Hardening off” gradually
introduces the tender plants
to the change that will occur
when they are placed in
their permanent outdoor
environment. This process
thickens the cuticles on the
leaves and as a result, they
lose less water and acclimate
to ﬂuctuating temperature
and water conditions.
Plants that have not been
properly hardened can
experience transplant shock,
causing them to languish.
This makes them more
susceptible to disease, their
growth can become stunted
and many times the plants
die before reaching maturity.
Finally, the plants are
ready to be put into the
ground; the hothouses are
empty, and another aspect
of farming begins. Next
month, we will explore the
proper planting conditions
for a successful harvest.

crop, which means it prefers
a cooler growing season.
Seeds are sewn in February and the temperature
is kept around 80 degrees
through germination. Once
sprouts begin showing,
temperatures are dropped to
around 65 degrees. Cabbage
can usually be put into the
ground by the end of March
to early April.
Tomatoes, peppers,
melons, cucumbers and
squash are warm-weather
crops, and seeds are sewn
around mid-April. Germinating temperatures must
be kept between 85 and 90
degrees. After sprouting, the
temperature is set around
75 degrees. Warm-weather
crops are more sensitive to
temperature changes than
cold-weather crops, and
must be planted later to
avoid drops in temperature,
usually in late May.
Flower plants require temperatures to be maintained
at between 50 to 60 degrees,
depending on the type of
plant.
About two weeks before
the plants are either shipped
to market or transplanted

TODAY

Mugrage

review information in the IRS’s directory of
federal tax return preparers.
Protect your information online. When
entering sensitive tax information online,
use a secure Internet connection; avoid
using free public Wi-Fi. Be wary of email
messages that appear to come from a legitimate organization but ask you to verify
your information by clicking on a link or
providing personal information. The message may be part of a phishing scam.
IRS or U.S. Treasury impersonation
scams can be reported to the U.S. Treasury
Inspector General for Tax Administration
at www.treasury.gov/tigta or 800-366-4484.
Tax identity theft should be reported to the
IRS (for federal taxes) or the Ohio Department of Taxation (for state taxes).
Consumers who want help detecting a
potential scam should contact the Ohio
Attorney General’s Ofﬁce at www.OhioAttorneyGeneral.gov or 800-282-0515.
Audio of a reported “IRS” scam call is
available on the Ohio Attorney General’s
website.

Clendenin
66/33
Charleston
67/34

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
9/-9

Billings
55/38

Montreal
Toronto
17/14
26/15
New York
Detroit
47/41
Chicago 34/19
30/16

Minneapolis
27/17

Denver
58/37

Kansas City
45/26

Washington
62/47

Today

Wed.

Hi/Lo/W
70/40/s
34/21/c
71/39/pc
52/44/pc
59/46/pc
55/38/pc
64/40/c
43/34/pc
67/34/pc
68/43/pc
51/39/pc
30/16/sn
55/27/t
45/24/sn
56/26/r
69/41/s
58/37/pc
31/23/sn
34/19/sn
81/64/pc
80/50/t
52/23/r
45/26/c
81/55/s
66/37/t
80/52/pc
59/30/t
79/66/pc
27/17/pc
66/34/t
79/53/t
47/41/pc
63/36/s
82/58/s
57/46/pc
89/59/s
59/28/r
36/26/pc
71/51/pc
67/50/pc
53/27/r
63/42/pc
66/51/pc
55/45/r
62/47/pc

Hi/Lo/W
73/41/s
34/18/pc
55/36/pc
47/28/sh
50/26/pc
54/31/pc
59/40/s
50/19/r
38/26/sf
55/30/pc
55/31/pc
30/23/pc
38/27/pc
28/21/sf
34/24/c
71/57/s
63/32/pc
41/32/pc
31/19/c
79/64/s
72/55/s
39/28/pc
63/41/s
82/55/pc
62/49/s
76/50/pc
43/32/pc
83/66/pc
34/24/pc
48/36/pc
68/50/s
51/24/r
70/44/s
82/55/pc
51/26/r
90/60/s
31/19/sf
49/12/r
54/29/pc
53/27/pc
50/41/pc
60/38/s
66/55/pc
55/45/pc
49/29/pc

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
National for the 48 contiguous states

Atlanta
71/39
El Paso
79/47
Chihuahua
81/37

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

High
Low

87° in Palm Springs, CA
-11° in Flag Island, MN

Global
High
Low

Houston
80/50
Monterrey
88/58

GOALS

Miami
79/66

113° in Nguigmi, Niger
-56° in Delinde, Russia

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589

Planting

Tuesday, March 1, 2016 5

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 1, 2016 s Page 6

GA’s Reynolds advances to state
By Paul Boggs

It is his ﬁrst, and only, state
qualiﬁcation — as he cracked
the top four in the district meet
UHRICHSVILLE — Once
to automatically move on.
again, Gallia Academy is
His season record stands at
going to be represented at
47-9.
“The Schott”.
Reynolds wrestles in the
That’s because Blue Devil
182-pound weight class, and
wrestling senior Justin Reyn- will be joined at the state
olds, by ﬁnishing fourth in the meet by Jackson junior Billy
Division II district meet on
Cooper, who edged him on a
Saturday at Claymont High
3-2 decision in the third-place
School, has qualiﬁed for this
match.
week’s state wrestling tournaThe top two 182-pounders
ment.
from Saturday’s district meet
Reynolds represents the
featured Jud Ramage of MeadBlue Devil program for the
owbrook pinning Mathieu
fourth year in a row in the
Holt of Granville in only 44
state,
and
was
the
only
GAHS
seconds for the championship.
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
As a team, the Blue DevGallia Academy senior Anthony Sipple maintains leverage on an opponent during a grappler of eight at the disils ﬁnished ninth with 63.5
trict meet to advance.
195-pound match at the 2015 Coach’s Corner Classic in Centenary, Ohio.
pboggs@civitasmedia.com

points, as host Claymont
clipped Steubenville for the
team championship by a mere
two-and-a-half points (168.5
to 165).
In all, half of the Blue Devils’ eight wrestlers placed in
the top six, as junior Jared
Stevens — by ﬁnishing ﬁfth in
the 113-pound weight class —
is actually a state alternate.
Hunter Jacks — at 160
pounds — placed sixth, while
senior Anthony Sipple did the
same at 195.
However, only Reynolds
returns to next week’s state
competition, which begins on
Thursday inside Value City
Arena in Columbus.
See STATE | 10

Loving’s 25
points help
OSU stun Iowa
COLUMBUS (AP) —
A handful of big plays
erased an afternoon of
mistakes as Ohio State
rallied to stun No. 8
Iowa 68-64 on Sunday.
Marc Loving, Kam
Williams and Keita
Bates-Diop all scored in
double ﬁgures for the
Buckeyes, and all three
had big plays down the
stretch as they ﬁnished
the game on a 12-2 run.
“To put it in perspective, this was a great
win because, a, we won
the game, but b, how
we had to win it,” Ohio
State coach Thad Matta
said. “Being down and
ﬁghting and scraping
and clawing. We came
together. Timeouts got
electric. The huddles on
the ﬂoor were electric.”
He was especially
encouraged because the
Buckeyes won for the
ﬁrst time after losing
spiritual leader Jae’Sean
Tate to a season-ending
shoulder injury. They
were humbled 81-62 by
No. 6 Michigan State on
the same ﬂoor ﬁve days
earlier in their ﬁrst game
without Tate.
“That (energy is)
something a guy like
Jae’Sean Tate usually
brought to the table,”
Matta said, adding the
team connected with
Tate via FaceTime from
the locker room after the
game.
“I don’t think he’ll

remember tomorrow
but we did do it,” Matta
said.
Multiple Buckeyes
were indispensable
down the stretch.
Loving hit both ends
of a 1-and-1 with less
than 2 seconds to go to
ﬁnish with 25 points and
ice the game.
Bates-Diop added 19
points and preserved a
two-point lead for Ohio
State (19-11, 11-6 Big
Ten) by blocking Mike
Gesell’s layup with
under 5 seconds to go.
Williams gave the
Buckeyes a 63-62 lead
with a jumper with 2:04
left after Iowa led for
most of the second half.
The last of his 11
points came on a
3-pointer a little over a
minute later to stretch
Ohio State’s lead to four.
The Buckeyes won
despite committing 15
turnovers — all in the
ﬁrst 25 minutes of the
game.
“I’m just proud of our
overall team effort,” Williams said. “Everybody
stepped up in a big way
this game, especially
after all the turnovers.
It’s good to see us keep
ﬁghting possession after
possession and we got a
good result.”
Gesell and Jarrod
Uthoff led Iowa (20-8,
11-5) with 16 points
apiece while Peter Jok
had 12.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Tuesday, March 1
Boys basketball
(2) South Gallia vs. (6) Western at Ohio University, 8 p.m.
Hannan at Wahama, 7:30
Wednesday, March 2
Boys Basketball
PPHS-Nitro winner at Hurricane, 7 p.m.
Thursday, March 3
Boys Basketball
Wahama-Hannan winner vs. Huntington SJ at
Nitro HS, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
OHSAA state championships, 3 p.m.
Friday, March 4
Wrestling
OHSAA state championships, 10 a.m.
Saturday, March 5
Wrestling
OHSAA state championships, 10 a.m.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

Pictured above are members of the 2015-16 OCSAA State Champion Ohio Valley Christian boys basketball team. Standing in the front
row, from left, are head coach Steve Rice, Justin Sizemore, Justin Beaver, Elijah McDonald, Marshall Hood, Michael Gruber, Bryce Gruber
and assistant coach Chris Ellcessor. Standing in the back are Austin Ragan, Andrew Sims, Josh McDonald and Dillon Ragan.

Defenders win OCSAA state title
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

CIRCLEVILLE — Defense, and
Defenders, win championships.
The Ohio Valley Christian boys
basketball team rolled to a 49-28 victory over Dayton Temple Christian
in the OCSAA State Championship
on Saturday at Ohio Christian University’s Maxwell Center.
The Defenders (21-6) — who
last claimed a state championship
in 2004 under the ACSI banner —
surrendered the game’s opening
basket to the Tigers, but answered
with seven straight points and never
relinquished the lead.
OVCS led 10-5 at the conclusion
of the ﬁrst quarter, after shooting
4-of-12 from the ﬁeld, while holding
the TCS to 1-of-8 shooting.
Ohio Valley Christian’s offense
got going even more in the second
quarter, making 6-of-7 ﬁeld goal
attempts, including all three of its
three-point tries. The Tiger offense
doubled its ﬁrst quarter effort with
10 points in the second stanza, but
trailed 25-15 at halftime.
Both teams pulled in 11 rebounds
in the ﬁrst half, but Temple Christian held a 5-to-2 advantage on the
offensive glass. OVCS committed
four turnovers in the opening half,
one fewer than the Tigers. The
Defenders made 10-of-19 ﬁrst half
ﬁeld goal attempts, while Temple
made just 5-of-20 shots from the
ﬁeld.
Ohio Valley Christian made sure
that Saturday wasn’t going to be a
tale of two halves, as the Gallipolis
natives began the second half with a
9-2 run that pushed the lead to 34-17
with 3:50 left in the third quarter.
OVCS outscored Temple Christian
by a 6-5 clip over the remainder of
the third and took a 40-22 advantage
into the ﬁnale.
Ohio Valley Christian allowed just

six points over the ﬁnal eight minutes, while scoring nine to cap off
the 49-28 victory and the Defenders
ﬁrst-ever OCSAA State Championship.
“These boys have worked so
hard,” OVCS head coach Steve Rice
said. “I’m so excited for the seniors,
they really deserve it. I told them
‘we’re going to win it on the defensive end’. We took care of the ball,
played good defense and we had a
good gameplan going in.”
For the game, OVCS outrebounded the Tigers by a 23-to-22 edge,
but TCS held a 12-to-4 advantage in
offensive boards. Both teams committed 13 turnovers in the game,
but Ohio Valley Christian held a
14-to-6 advantage in assists, an 8-to7 advantage in steals and an 8-to-1
advantage in blocked shots.
“We played really good defense,
we rebounded well and our defensive rotation was much better
tonight,” Rice said. “Offensively,
we hit our ﬁrst couple of threes and
they had to loosen up, which opened
up our middle. Everything worked
the way that you want it to work.”
For the game, the Defenders —
who made their only free throw
attempt of the night — shot 21-of-37
(56.8 percent) from the ﬁeld, including 6-of-15 (40 percent) from threepoint range. Temple Christian made
7-of-10 (70 percent) free throw tries
and 9-of-42 (21.4 percent) ﬁeld goal
attempts, including 3-of-15 (20 percent) three-point tries.
OVCS senior Marshall Hood —
who is the lone Defender to compete in four ﬁnal fours — led the
state champs with a double-double
effort of 14 points and 11 rebounds
to go with three assists, two steals
and four blocks.
Defenders junior Austin Ragan
posted 11 points in the win, while
freshman Justin Beaver added eight
points, three steals and two blocks.

Dillon Ragan marked seven points,
four assists and two steals, Elijah
McDonald came away with six
points, ﬁve rebounds, six assists and
two blocks, while Justin Sizemore
rounded out the OVCS scoring with
three points.
“Temple’s only player that was
averaging double ﬁgures was (Jordan Kirkland),” Rice said. “We knew
that he was going to take a majority
of the shots and we knew that if we
could take him out of the game and
make the rest of their team beat us,
then we had a good shot.”
Kirkland, a 6-4 senior, paced the
runners-up with 16 points, seven
rebounds and three steals, while
Andy Timmons added ﬁve points
and one block. Ma’Sone Miller came
away with three points and three
assists, while Joe Timmons and Eli
Howder each scored two points.
This season marks the 25th anniversary of Ohio Valley Christian’s
ﬁrst boys basketball state championship, which under the WVCEA
banner.
This marks the ﬁnal game in the
careers of OVCS seniors Marshall
Hood, Andrew Sims, Dillon Ragan
and Justin Sizemore.
“That’s the way you always dream
about ending your career,” Rice said
of his seniors. “Very few get to end
on top, but they do. The younger
guys are hoping to be back here
again. We’ve been here four straight
years and ﬁve of the last six. I know
they’re going to be hungry to get
back here and have the same feeling
when they’re seniors.”
Eligible to return for the Defenders next season are Elijah McDonald, Austin Ragan, Michael Gruber,
Justin Beaver, Josh McDonald and
Bryce Gruber.
Alex Hawley can be reached at 740-446-2342,
ext. 2100.

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Notices
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LEGALS

Rentals

The Village of Middleport is
accepting sealed bids for the
installation of an AMI water
metering system. Bids may be
mailed or delivered to the
Village Hall until March 14th,
2016 4:00 P.M.; please mark
attention to Joe Woodall,
Village Administrator; 659
Pearl Street Middleport, OH
45760. A complete Bid
Specification list may be
picked up at the Middleport
Public Works Water Office.
For more info call
1-740-992-2827.
2/28/16-3/1/16-3/2/16-3/3/163/4/16-3/5/16-3/6/16-3/8/163/9/16-3/10/16-3/11/163/13/16

For Rent:
2 bedroom house on 5th
street. Rent $450 a month
plus deposit and utilities.
and Upstairs Apt. on Viand St.
$350.00 plus deposit and
utilities.Call for details
304-812-4350

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.
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Rental
4 Bay Garage
with professional paint booth.
$1500 month
call 740-446-3481
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

Miscellaneous

Tuesday, March 1, 2016 7

PASS TIME IN LINE.

READ THE NEWSPAPER.

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

Musical Instruments
For Sale:
$750
Kimball Piano
Good Condition
(304)458-1083
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

In Print. Online. In Touch.
Notices

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

Help Wanted General
Rio Styles
Hair &amp; Tanning Salon
focus on Client Services and
Customer Satisfaction is
Seeking a Talented
Hair Stylist and / or Nail Tech
To Be Come Part
of Our Team in Rio Grande
Please Contact Jeana Haislop
at 740-645-0322 or
740-245-5007
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

For Sale By Owner
Sale by owner
2700 Lincoln Avenue
Corner lot,3 bedroom,
2 baths, family room,
living room, kitchen and
covered deck.
Many extras.
Contact 304-544-9704
Apartments/Townhouses
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Beautiful 1BR apartment in the
country freshly painted very
clean W/D hook up nice
country setting only 10 mins.
from town. Must see to
appreciate. Water/Trash pd.
$399/mo 740-645-5953 or
614-595-7773
60583312

LEGALS
Letart Township is taking bids
beginning February 22 to
March 4, 2016 for demolition
of Letart Elementary School in
Racine, Ohio. Interested
parties may contact for bid
specifications.
Call 740-416-0571
or 704-416-6422.
2/24/16-2/25/16-2/26/163/1/16-3/2/16-3/3/16-3/4/16
The Village of Pomeroy will
accept sealed bids for the
purpose of awarding a
contract for mowing Beech
Grove Cemetery 13 times
throughout the season. Bids
will be opened at the March
7th Council Meeting. Deadline
for bids is 4pm on March 7th.
Please mail or deliver bids to
660 E. Main Street, Suite A,
Pomeroy, OH 45760.
2/21/16-2/25/16-2/26/162/28/16-3/1/16-3/2/16

FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
Nice Clean 2 Bedroom
Conveniently Located
Reference &amp; Deposit -No Pets
(304) 675-5162

60641821

�8 Tuesday, March 1, 2016

SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

The Point Pleasant Big Blacks win 2 state titles
By Bryan Walters

Point Pleasant won an
individual state championship.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
The underclassmen
— Going out in style.
duo allowed the Red,
After four years of triBlack and White to
als and tribulations at
double the program’s
the Class AAA level, the AAA title count from
Point Pleasant wrestling two to four, as well as
program enjoyed one
earning the school’s 20th
last hurrah with the big
and 21st championships
boys this past weekend
overall.
at the 2016 WVSSAC
Safford and Smith are
state championships held the 15th and 16th chamat Big Sandy Superstore pions in PPHS history
Arena in Cabell County.
and also join Alex Reed
The Big Blacks — who (1998) and Trevor Hill
return to Class AA-A
(2013) as the program’s
competition in the fall of only AAA champions.
2016 — made program
Senior Tannor Hill
history by sending three wasn’t as fortunate in his
grapplers to Championﬁnal match after dropship Saturday in the AAA ping a 5-2 decision in the
ranks, which eventually
220-pound ﬁnal. Senior
led to another ﬁrst as
Hunter White also ﬁnPPHS came away a pair
ished the weekend third
of state titles at the same overall in the 170-pound
AAA meet.
division.
Point Pleasant junior
With a 17-10 overall
Grant Safford captured a mark, four podium ﬁnish10-8 decision to win the
es and two state champi182-pound crown, while ons from their eight state
qualiﬁers, the Big Blacks
freshman George Smith
earned eighth place out
scored a third period
of 34 scoring teams with
escape with 12 seconds
left to win the 106-pound 89 points. It was the
title. It was also the ﬁrst fourth consecutive year
that PPHS — currently
time since 2013 that

bwalters@civitasmedia.com

the smallest AAA school
in West Virginia — ﬁnished the state tournament in the top-10.
Needless to say,
seventh-year Point Pleasant coach John Bonecutter was pleased with a
majority of the results
from the weekend … particularly at midway point
of the tournament.
“First, I want to say
that the kids wrestled
their tails off this weekend and I’m so proud of
all eight of those guys,”
Bonecutter said. “This
tournament can be tough
early on and Friday night
can be very cruel to a
program, so we really
felt like we had some
momentum after winning
all four matches in that
third session. The four
that went into Saturday
represented us well until
the very end, so I’m
proud — overall — of
how things went for us
this weekend.”
The Big Blacks were
9-9 overall and down to
four wrestlers entering
Friday night’s matches,
but PPHS won all four
of its third session con-

tests before going on to
win four of its ﬁnal ﬁve
bouts. Point Pleasant
had previously gone 7-17
overall in Friday night
matches over the previous three AAA tournaments.
Safford — who was a
state runner-up at 195
pounds a year ago —
redeemed himself with a
hard-fought 10-8 decision
over Parkersburg South’s
Hunter DeLong in the
182 division, Point’s ﬁrst
of three matches Saturday night.
Safford trailed 2-1
at the end of the ﬁrst
period and was down
4-2 through two periods,
but the junior earned an
escape and a takedown
in the opening minute of
the third — giving him
a 6-4 advantage. Safford
twice increased his lead
to three at 8-5 and again
at 10-7 before ultimately
claiming the two-point
victory.
After being on the
other side of the spectrum 365 days ago, Safford — who ﬁnished the
year with a 41-2 overall
mark — was humble in

6041270

reaching the pinnacle of
this sport.
“After getting to the
state ﬁnals last year and
losing, I can tell you
that I truly appreciate
how much this moment
means right now,” said
Safford, who owns a
career mark of 125-22.
“To work so hard after
last year and get back to
the state ﬁnal is something to be proud of. To
actually win it, this is
truly the best feeling in
the world. It’s deﬁnitely
much better than last
year.”
Smith — who ﬁnished
his ﬁrst varsity campaign
with a 43-4 mark —
became the program’s
ﬁrst freshman champion
at the AAA level after
earning an exciting 1-0
decision at 106 pounds.
Scoreless through two
periods against Parkersburg South’s Tucker
Windland, Smith started
the third on bottom.
After a constant battle to
maintain leverage, Smith
managed to escape Windland’s hold with a mere
12 seconds — which
ultimately provided the
bout’s only score.
In joining Rusty
Maness — Point’s only
four-time state champion
(2008-11) — as the only
freshmen to win state
titles for the Big Blacks,
Smith was overwhelmed
by what he had just done.
“I’m blown away. I’m
so excited to be able to
accomplish this,” Smith
said. “I really need to
thank my teammates,
my coaches and my dad,
because they have all
put a lot of work into me
this season and over the
years. I was fortunate
there at the end, but I
stuck to what I had been
taught and it worked
out for us. I’m just really
thrilled and don’t know
what else to say right
now.”
The middle match Saturday night proved heartbreaking, and just not in
the result itself.
Hill — the 195-pound
AAA runner-up in 2014
— and Wheeling Park’s
Isaiah Myers battled to a
scoreless tie through the
ﬁrst period of their 220pound bout, but Myers
scored a takedown early
in the second period for
a 2-0 edge.
Hill lost his footing
while trying to reverse a
hold, and Myers capitalized by scoring a nearfall — making it a 5-0
contest. Hill eventually
escaped to score a point
for a 5-1 deﬁcit headed
into the ﬁnal period.
Hill managed to escape
from the down position
in the third period for
a 5-2 contest, but ultimately ran out of time in
the three-point loss. Hill
ﬁnished the year with a
136-30 career mark and
went 41-8 during his
senior campaign.
White — who lost
a second round championship match (8-5)
to eventual 170-pound
runner-up T.J. Lambiotte
of Parkersburg South
— ﬁnished the weekend
with a 5-1 overall mark,
including wins in his
ﬁnal four bouts.
The senior — who was
named the AAA Region 4
Most Outstanding Wrestler — ended up picking
up his 150th career win
en route to his third place
ﬁnish. White completed
his ﬁnal season at PPHS
with a 44-6 mark.
Senior Scotty Wilcox
— a three-time state
qualiﬁer — also earned
points for the Big Blacks
after going 1-2 overall at
120 pounds. Point’s other
two seniors — Chris
Lush (145) and James
Patterson (195) —
joined sophomore Brian
Gillispie (285) with 0-2

marks in their ﬁrst state
tournament appearances.
The Big Blacks’ best
Class AAA season came
in 2014 after earning six
podium ﬁnishes while
placing sixth with 107
points. PPHS was also
sixth with 101 points
and ﬁve podium efforts
in 2013, while last year’s
squad had three podium
ﬁnishes and placed ninth
with 77 points.
After winning three
straight team championships at the Class AA-A
level before moving up
to big-school division
in 2013, Bonecutter
acknowledged that the
last four years have
tested his program — for
better and for worse.
He also notes that,
despite what he considers a solid showing over
the last four years, it will
be nice to head back to
the Class AA-A ranks.
“I will say that in being
at the AAA level the last
four years, I think we as
a program have earned
a lot of respect from our
peers in the state,” Bonecutter said. “It’s certainly
tested us, going from
three straight team championships to four top-10
ﬁnishes. I also think that
we have become a better
program for it.
“In moving forward,
we don’t see next year as
a chance to defend our
titles from four years ago.
We want to get back to
where we were and there
are a lot of good doubleA teams waiting for us.
Independence is the top
dog right now, we simply
want what they have …
the same as everyone
else.”
Parkersburg South
won the Class AAA title
with 198.5 points, with
Huntington (134.5) and
Cabell Midland (132)
rounding out the top
three spots.
Point Pleasant joined
Parkersburg, Parkersburg
South and Cabell Midland as the only AAA
programs with multiple
state champions at the
2016 event.
Saint Albans, George
Washington, University, Ripley, BuchannonUpshur and Wheeling
Park also earned a state
title apiece in the bigschool division.
Wahama did not score
at the Class AA-A level
for the ﬁrst time in seven
years as sophomore Ethan
Herdman — the White
Falcons’ only state qualiﬁer
— went 0-2 at 145 pounds.
Independence won
the Class AA-A title
with 254.5 points, while
Roane County (131) and
East Fairmont (122.5)
rounded out the top-three
of 42 scoring programs.
Independence led the
AA-A ﬁeld with four state
champions, followed by
East Fairmont with three
and Greenbrier West
with two titles. Roane
County, Oak Glen, North
Marion, Calhoun County
and Mooreﬁeld also won
a title apiece in the smaller school division.
Huntington’s Rob
Archer was named AAA
Coach of the Year and
Hunter Jones of George
Washington (160) earned
the AAA Outstanding
Wrestler Award.
Cliff Warden of Independence was named the
AA-A Coach of the Year,
while the duo of Logan
Robertson of Greenbrier
West (126) and Cam
Moore of Roane County
(120) shared AA-A
Outstanding Wrestler
honors.
Complete results of the
69th annual WVSSAC
state wrestling tournament are available on the
web at wvmat.com
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

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Tuesday, March 1, 2016 9

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3/01

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10 Tuesday, March 1, 2016

State
From Page 6

Perhaps most impressive was his battling
back all the way through
the consolation bracket,
following Friday’s ﬁrst-

round loss to Holt.
Reynolds lost that match
in a 9-2 decision, meaning
one more defeat before the
consolation semiﬁnals and
he would not have placed.
In the ﬁrst consolation,
Reynolds pinned Andrew
Hammon of Lakewood in

two minutes and 47 seconds, before decisioning
Blake Bollon of New Philadelphia 5-2 in the second
consolation.
Reynolds then won an
8-3 decision over Sam
Allen of New Lexington in
the third consolation.

He then captured the
consolation semiﬁnal to
ofﬁcially punch his ticket
to the state meet, pinning
Garrett Robinson of Licking Valley in four minutes
and 32 seconds.
Wrestling Jackson’s Cooper for the fourth time this

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year, Reynolds narrowly
lost to Cooper for the third
time — all by decisions.
In fact, the ﬁrst three
contests against Cooper
were all 5-2 decisions
and all for the 182-pound
championship, as Reynolds won the host Coaches’ Corner Invitational on
Dec. 29.
Cooper claimed the
matches at the Vinton
County Invitational 10
days earlier (Dec. 19), and
at the Division II sectional
meet 10 days ago.
For Stevens, he ﬁnished
46-5 this season, and
earned the 113-pound
ﬁfth-place by pinning
Jacob Williams of Columbus Hartley in 3:25.
He opened his competition by pinning Ray Huber
of Lakewood in a minuteand-a-half, then needed
exactly 18 fewer seconds
to pin Brady O’Connor of
Indian Valley in Friday’s
quarterﬁnal.
Stevens then dropped
into the consolation bracket
after losing a 14-3 major
decision in the semiﬁnal,
but also lost the consolation
semiﬁnal by a 4-2 decision
to Alex Lucas of Minerva.
Jacks at 160 and Sipple
at 195 also lost in the consolation semis, then lost
their ﬁfth-place bouts.
It was the ﬁnal GAHS
match for Sipple, who
ﬁnished his senior season
at 42-13 — after going an
even 3-3 at the district.
Stevens, Sipple and
senior Ryan Terry all won
their 100th career matches
this season, including
Sipple and Terry, who did
so in the Ohio Valley Conference triangular meet on
Senior Night.
Jacks, a junior, also went
3-3 at the district meet.
The other four Blue
Devil district qualiﬁers
— Terry at 170, Caleb
Greenlee at 106, Kyle
Greenlee at 120 and Kaleb
Crisenbery at 145 — did
not place.
Terry, Crisenbery and
Caleb Greenlee were all

sectional champions, while
Kyle Greenlee was the sectional runner-up.
Meigs had two district
qualiﬁers in junior Trae
Hood and senior Gino
Casci, but neither placed
in the 220-pound and
285-pound weight classes
respectively.
River Valley wrestled
at the Division III district meet at Heath High
School, and freshman
Jacob Edwards — at 113
pounds — ﬁnished ﬁfth.
Edwards is an alternate
to the state meet, having
secured a 7-5 decision
over Andrew Halko of
Columbus Ready in the
ﬁfth-place match.
Edwards opened his
competition by blanking
Halko with a 13-0 major
decision, but was pinned
in the quarterﬁnal by Shadyside’s Greg Quinn.
After falling to the consolation bracket, he pinned
Joey Buckland of West
Jefferson in three-and-ahalf minutes in the second
consolation, then decisioned Levi Pemberton of
Caldwell 9-5 in the third.
Nelsonville-York’s Cody
Welch won the consolation
semiﬁnal against Edwards,
shutting him out 5-0.
Edwards, the Division
III sectional runner-up
at 113, ended his year at
35-7.
The other three Raiders
which wrestled at the district were senior George
Williams at 145, freshman
Eric Weber at 170, and
sophomore Jeremiah Dobbins at 132.
None of those three
placed, as Williams was
the sectional runner-up.
Reynolds will wrestle
on Thursday at 4:10 p.m.,
as part of the Division II
opening round.
If he wins his ﬁrst
match, he returns to action
on Friday in the quarterﬁnals, but will wrestle in
Thursday night’s ﬁrst consolation should he lose.
Paul Boggs can be reached at 740446-2342, ext. 2106

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